Monday, November 28, 2016

524 - The Gift of Freedom, Part 1

Spirituality Column No. 524
November 29, 2016
Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

The Gift of Freedom, Part 1
By Bob Walters

“Liberty cannot be established without morality, nor morality without faith.” ― Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America

Alexis de Tocqueville, that great, perceptive French social observer of mid-1800s America, noticed and admired America’s citizen-by-citizen freedom of association.

Citizens in America, de Tocqueville marveled, were free to form affiliations in pursuit of common goals.  This freedom from royal government rules, power, edicts, ownership and interference – a novel fundamental of the U.S. Constitution – fueled the engine of young America’s exploding-in-all-directions prosperity, power, discovery, manufacturing, technology and Christian faith.

These U.S. citizens were not serfs or colonists or mere inhabitant caretakers unattached to their land but for whatever meager sustenance it provided; they were unshackled owners who freely and fiercely defended property and provenance.   America was resource-rich, providentially indulged and intellectually unleashed.

That’s how de Tocqueville saw America’s 1830s present.  Here is how he assessed her future:

"I sought for the greatness and genius of America in her commodious harbors and her ample rivers – and it was not there … in her fertile fields and boundless forests and it was not there … in her rich mines and her vast world commerce – and it was not there . . . in her democratic Congress and her matchless Constitution – and it was not there. Not until I went into the churches of America and heard her pulpits aflame with righteousness did I understand the secret of her genius and power. America is great because she is good, and if America ever ceases to be good, she will cease to be great.” – Democracy in America

Those “pulpits aflame with righteousness” were the rolling thunder of the early nineteenth century’s Second Great Awakening, the miracle of Christian revivalism and biblical blanketing of the expanding American frontier.  We were not then a nation of theologians nor are we now, but Jesus Christ was the unrivaled moral compass of the age and culture.  The civil and political freedoms de Tocqueville so eloquently lauded could only be preserved, he forewarned, by the moral resolve of a faithful citizenry.

Freedom is a specifically divine gift when first we insist that freedom be of benefit and comfort to others.  It is your insistence on my freedom, and vice versa, that describes and assigns a free community’s love for each other and exemplifies our trust in God’s goodness.  It requires the humility, resolve and strength exemplified by Jesus.

Exceptions abound in our national morality play – we are an imperfect nation of imperfect people.  We are at our best when we use our freedom to come together and attach our liberty to Christ.  Goodness grounded in righteousness never goes wrong.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) cites de Tocqueville’s observation that the “secret weapon” of America’s greatness lay in the superiority of her women.
Monday, November 21, 2016

523 - Yours Truly

Spirituality Column No. 523
November 22, 2016
Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

Yours Truly
By Bob Walters

In a season of loud opinions measured against this annual week of humble thanksgiving, I am thankful for truth.

Real truth.  Objective truth.  Divine truth.  The truth of Jesus Christ.

Identifying truth in the world is always done at a human handicap – people in all times, places and cultures have little more than opinions to work with from whence they unapologetically extrapolate intractable but regularly flawed moral judgments.  At this American moment in history, identifying truth is all the more confusing, perhaps impossible, amid a boisterous, rancorous, apparently endless and thoroughly polarized political season.  Do I have hope for our nation?  Yes I do.  Is “hope” a “truth?”  No, in this context it’s merely a contentious point of view.

So in this chattering national conversational climate of crossed purposes and obstinate opinions, why does truth seem so elusive?

Because, I would suggest, we are looking for truth in all the wrong places.

The real deal capital-T truth only exists where the majority of people don’t want to look: in the person of Jesus Christ.  Legal truth, political truth, academic truth, social truth and virtually any other human-generated worldly truth may lead us to pleasant or unpleasant situational and physical realities, but the worst place to look for capital T truth is in a human heart and maybe, especially our own. Let me explain.

“Be true to your heart” can be good or bad or terrible advice.  Although Jesus may well be alive in your heart, never forget Satan is too.  Pride, fear, power, reprisal, greed, faction and many other sins are all heart temptations that make “my truth” vs. “your opinion” an incendiary, love-throttling cocktail.  Arrogance, you see, is unaffiliated with truth because arrogance lacks love.  Jesus, one notices, was pretty humble.

Don’t panic or be offended that Satan is hanging near; he sidled up to Jesus, too.  Just know that truth isn’t the invasive bodily and spiritual temptations of Satan; truth is the person of Jesus Christ: His mercy, compassion, patience, love and glory.

We fumble the ball when we mistake our own opinion for the will of God, and I hate when I do that.  God may reveal His will to us, but we must be aware he reveals it to others as well.  That’s why the holy person of Jesus factors heavily in the truth equation because He is the only truth.  In His own words: “I am the way and the truth and the life…” (John 14:6), and He meant it.  Most likely you know the rest.

Our discernment of truth does not rely on our clever and energetic arguments but on our faith, trust and love of Jesus.

When one possesses all that, thankfully, opinions don’t matter.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) prays that only the grateful, charitable love and truth of Jesus converge at your Thanksgiving table.  (I know… good luck with that.)
Monday, November 14, 2016

522 - Controlling Interest

Spirituality Column No. 522
November 15, 2016
Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary
 
Controlling Interest
By Bob Walters
 
“God is in control.”
 
How many times have you heard this uttered through a prayerful but nonetheless held breath?  It is a thoroughly Christian response to tough times, surprising circumstances, incomprehensible challenges or recently and with undue panic, the election of Donald J. Trump as president of the United States.
 
But while everyone else is discussing the election, I want to discuss “God is in control.” 
 
Indeed He is. God hung the stars, set the heavens in motion and is the Creator and judge of all things.  Yet considering our wide-ranging human freedom designed and ordained by God, one has to admit that we have plenty of control of our own.  The truth of saying “God is in control” may be more defined by its admonishment to trust God than merely a prayerful surrender to the will of God.
 
God’s will, you see, is for Him to be glorified; and God is glorified when our free will is entrusted in love, by us, to Jesus Christ.  We mustn’t simply hand-off our “light and momentary” troubles to God to solve them, but to truly trust God in all circumstances, especially awful circumstances that can overcome faith.
 
The Apostle Paul was lashed, stoned, beaten, shipwrecked, jailed, ridiculed and more than once left for dead.  Yet that meant nothing to Paul compared with the glory of God that is in Christ (2 Corinthians 11:23-29).  Christians are pressed, perplexed, persecuted and struck down (2 Corinthians 4:8-10, 17), yet must fix our eyes not on what is seen and temporary, but on what is unseen and eternal.  Paul thus describes the eternal glory of God that outweighs all human experience, good or bad.
 
Never forget, human experience is something of which we are in control because God designed it that way.  God’s glory requires that we be entirely free, challenged greatly and yet still find our first love in Jesus Christ.  Do we “pray continually”? (1 Thessalonians 5:17)  That’s code for keeping God ever close.
 
What if we don’t keep God close?  Well, Adam and Eve listened to Satan instead of God in the Garden, creating endless trouble.  Conversely, Jesus answered Satan with God’s word in the desert, harkening eternal salvation.  That comparison is a tad uneven given Adam and Eve (i.e. humanity) were merely God’s image while Jesus is God incarnate.  But the lesson is that when we are challenged, we mustn’t just assume “God takes control.”  He can, certainly, but God liberally lets us figure things out for ourselves.  What God is wondering is, do our faith and love survive?
 
Our ultimate test is not in merely and reflexively looking to God for solutions, but whether in tribulation or triumph we humbly and always trust Jesus Christ with our entire life and for all strength, endurance, perseverance, peace and most importantly, love.
 
God, I believe, is always as close as we allow Him to be.  We can control that.
 
Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) today, Nov. 15, marks the nine-year anniversary of the funeral of dear friend and preacher of the Gospel Russ Blowers, loved by many. 
Monday, November 7, 2016

521 - Where's the Love?

Spirituality Column No. 521
November 8, 2016
Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

Where’s the Love?
By Bob Walters

Life basics: God is love, Jesus has all authority, and the Holy Spirit dwells among us providing divine knowledge and comfort.

With these resources, with this truth – our lives of faith should be easy and joyous.  Instead we opt for contention and confusion both inside and outside the faith.

Christians will ball up a fist and hit you repeatedly in the face reminding you of your sin and shame.  Then they’ll ball up the other first and hit you repeatedly with guilt because of Jesus having to “pay a price” for your salvation with a hideous death on the cross.  They’ll then insist this is evidence of God’s tender love and represents a solid foundation on which to enter into a divine, loving, eternal relationship with Jesus to the glory of God.  The themes may be biblically defensible, but the “pitch” is relationally warped.  Love – true love – never comes from accusation or transaction.  It comes from freedom, compassion, mercy and grace; the things that make life easier.

Meanwhile, Jesus-mocking Western-world secularists accuse Christians of arrogance and hypocrisy on one hand and taunt them for a lack of reason, intelligence and sophistication on the other.  Secularists are humans who might give God and Christ a chance if only someone could “prove it” to them.  Two things in the Bible they believe: they’ll go to heaven, and “Don’t judge.”

Though these secular (non-religious) folks are deaf to the Holy Spirit’s call for Christ and the infinite, eternal love or God, they still are able to love others and do good works; and they’ll defend to the death what they love. Privately they may wonder if God exists, but publicly know it’s easier to go along to get along within the ever-diminishing piety of political, social, academic, scientific and cultural norms not having to explain Jesus in their lives.  Odd though how they believe they belong in heaven, the eternal Kingdom home of Jesus in whom they neither believe nor place their trust and love.

Atheists, whom I perceive in actuality to be few in number, militantly reject any notion of a supreme being, though I sense that many public displays of atheism are more fashion than substance.  We are all wired to believe something, and believing in no God is still a belief.  Atheists will argue no, they don’t believe in anything, and some Christians will argue back, yes, they do.  But one divinely important thing I notice is that atheists are perfectly and demonstrably capable of loving others and doing good deeds.

Satan, interestingly enough, is not an atheist.  Satan absolutely knows God exists and what God is all about.  Satan simply does not love and does no good deeds.

So remember, as a Christian, that anywhere you see selfless, self-sacrificing love, you are seeing God.  God is always where the love is.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) reminds all that 1) God loves and judges on His terms, not ours; and 2) Showing love works better than arguing faith.

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