Saturday, May 26, 2012

289 - Memorial Day: Remembering Why We Are Free

Spirituality Column #289
May 29, 2012
Current in Carmel – Westfield – Noblesville – Fishers – Zionsville

Memorial Day: Remembering Why We Are Free
By Bob Walters

Honoring those who died in the cause of freedom animates our American tradition of Memorial Day.  Its history and meaning are profound.

After the Civil War, both the South and the North – independently of each other and with efforts driven primarily by women’s groups – decorated the graves of fallen soldiers.  States of the Confederacy and the Union began informally setting aside various “Decoration Day” and “Memorial Day” holidays to remember their war dead.  Events were generally in the spring, mostly in May, and largely local.   

Union General John Logan is credited with declaring the first “Memorial Day” and on May 30, 1868, Union and Confederate graves at Arlington National Cemetery near Washington D.C. were decorated with flowers.  The date stuck.  Scattered observances became an annual, cohesive, and inclusive American memorial to the cost of freedom.

Since 1911 Indianapolis has been host to the Mother of All Memorial Day Celebrations, the Indianapolis 500 Mile Race.  Dubbed “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing” in the 1950s by “Voice of the 500” radio announcer Sid Collins, the “500” was on Memorial Day only because in 1910 Indianapolis organizers had run day-long, multi-race events on the three summer holidays, and Memorial Day had the largest crowd.

So in 1911, promoters decided to have just one race date, Memorial Day, with just one spectacular race.  Wanting an all-day event for the picnicking spectators, and knowing that cars of the era raced 75-80 miles per hour, organizers rounded the math (7 hours at 75 to 80 miles per hour) and inaugurated a 500-mile race called “The International Sweepstakes.”  Over time it became known as The Indianapolis 500.

But I digress.  And that’s my point.

Too often, easily, and quickly, we identify with the fun, secular trappings of holidays: Easter eggs, Thanksgiving turkeys, Christmas trees, the “500”, etc.  We focus on the party.  And personally, I love the “500.”  But deeper truths about humanity and our relationship with God undergird the significance of this particular holiday.

Memorial Day isn’t just the fact of honoring American war dead at a public event.  It’s the reverent act of remembering why they died.  And “why they died” is freedom.

War reveals more about human nature than about God’s eternal plan.  In our fallen earthly existence human freedom is something for which we have to fight and sometimes die.  Jesus Christ on the Cross fulfilled God’s loving plan to defeat death (John 3:16) and restore eternal freedom (Galatians 5:1).  As Americans on Memorial Day, let’s remember that eternal freedom is what motivated America’s founders.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com), who goes to the 500 instead of church on race day, wishes the Archbishop would pray in the name of Jesus at the race.  Just sayin’.
Monday, May 21, 2012

288 - The Truth of the Coming Election

Spirituality Column #288
May 22, 2012
Current in Carmel – Westfield – Noblesville – Fishers – Zionsville

The Truth of the Coming Election
By Bob Walters

Who created truth – God or Man?

How one answers that question reveals much about one’s intellectual point of view in spiritual, political, and moral matters but very little about the reality of God.

I bring this up because I have a hunch that man’s truth is going to take a real beating over the next several months as America enters into the throes of a debilitating rather than glorifying presidential election.  Thankfully, God’s truth won’t change.

Please know that I am not here to write about candidates or politics; I’m here to write about Jesus Christ and truth.  And please know I am generally optimistic about America and Americans.  But I am pessimistic – at this moment – about our overall cultural inclination, and indeed even our ability, to deal with truth as a “God thing.”  The loudest academic and cultural voices out there want us to think truth is a “Man thing.”

And that makes dealing with each other exceptionally difficult.  Rancor is nothing new in politics, nor, for that matter, within Christendom.  But our technical ability to quickly and massively communicate ideas – right or wrong, truth or lie, helpful or hurtful, pious or impious – make the flares of insincerity and mistrust burn all the hotter.

I will be among my many Christian brothers and sisters close to hyperventilation at various points in the coming months as common-sense social conventions (family, marriage, life, faith, et al) are assaulted with intellectually, spiritually, and socially specious – but politically expedient – “truth.”  We will be bombarded, as G.K. Chesterton once wrote, with “truisms that are simply not true.”

Satan’s most devastating temptation is to suggest that man should be God’s equal when it comes to the knowledge of good and evil, i.e., truth.  Starting in Genesis 3 and for the rest of the Bible up to Revelation 20 when Satan is finally defeated, we are taught that man’s idea of his own superior truth is a “truism that isn’t true.”

What I do know is what God says: “I, the Lord, speak the truth” (Isaiah 45:19).  And I know what Jesus said: “I am the way and the truth and the life” (John 14:6).  And I know that “Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever” (Hebrews 13:8) and that “our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory” (2 Corinthians 4:17).

And I know that that glory is God’s.  And that’s the truth.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com), who each Friday publishes one of his old “Classic” columns free at www.commonchristianity.blogspot.com, has to work overtime to convince himself that his political opinions don’t really matter.  Bob's book, Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary, is available at (click) Amazon.com and Lulu.com.
Monday, May 14, 2012

287 - Sin and God's Savings Plan

Spirituality Column #287
May 15, 2012
Current in CarmelWestfield – Noblesville – Fishers – Zionsville

Sin and God’s Savings Plan
By Bob Walters

Plenty of Christians look up and out from their Bible or Church and see a world full of sinners who ought to be punished.

Much of that world looks back at Christians, shakes its collective head, and wonders, “If Christianity is about sin and guilt and fear and punishment, how is that better than the life I’m leading right now where I don’t judge anyone … and I don’t fear anyone or anything judging me?”

I’m afraid I know this one to be true: that a Christian with a heart full of zeal to save sinners can be the worst witness of the saving grace of Jesus Christ.  That’s because, to the non-believing world, the suffering Christ up there on the Cross of Crucifixion is anything but a picture of love.  And I know that any conversation that starts, “Let me tell about how Jesus died for your sins,” contains the presumption of condemnation, as in: “Hi, how do you do?  You’re a sinner.  You’re condemned.  And this guy, Jesus, died for you.”  Huh?

I’d wonder, “Well, if that guy really died for me, why am I still condemned?  And hey, who are you calling a sinner?”

It is the Christian who is supposed to understand that the first and worst sinner he or she sees every day is the one staring back at him or her from the mirror.  And as a believing, studying Christian, I know that Christ’s work on the cross was a whole lot more involved, and important, than just forgiving and covering my many sins.

Christ on the Cross restored and reconciled the fallen world with the Creator God Almighty.   At the cross – in grace not transaction – the eternal destiny of all mankind was set upright.  At the cross, everything changed.   At the cross Christ …

... restored our our relationship with God, defined our proper fellowship with each other, defeated death, adopted us as children into the Kingdom of Heaven, revealed the truth and the true God, hastened the arrival of the comfort of the Holy Spirit, and defined our human lives in terms of sacrifice, service, and most importantly, love.

Christ gave us the peace of repentance, freedom from guilt and fear, and blessed us with the joy of hope and fullness to replace the despair of regret and emptiness.  And, oh yeah, our sins were forgiven, too.

Don’t sell Christ short thinking His death was solely about sin.  God’s savings plan is about a world full of sinners who need to be – and ought to be – loved.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) shakes his head at how many Christians condemn others rather than love others.  Buy Bob's book, Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary at Amazon.com or Lulu.com .
Tuesday, May 8, 2012

286 - Demons, Redemption, and Perfection

Spirituality Column #286
May 8, 2012
Current in CarmelWestfield – Noblesville – Fishers – Zionsville

Demons, Redemption, and Perfection
By Bob Walters

I read a lot, see a lot, possess an impressive (some would say annoying) mental stash of utterly useless but infallibly entertaining (at least to me) information, keep up on current events, and generally feel very informed.

But upon hearing the news of Thomas Kinkade’s death April 6, I was floored to find out that this wildly popular artist whose serene, light-infused paintings seemed to have been around most of my adult life was a) a committed Christian believer; b) actually a couple of years younger than me; c) a multimillionaire with both family and financial problems; and d) an alcoholic who died after a night of hard drinking and Valium

I had no idea; I couldn’t believe it.

Reaching farther back in history, I was in journalism school (Franklin College, ’76) during the Nixon Watergate scandals.  Chuck Colson, a Christian leader who died April 21, back in the 1970s was just another name on a long list of Watergate miscreants whose fierce pride, misplaced loyalties, and blind political will helped animate one of our nation’s great, sclerotic meltdowns of cynicism, incivility, and civic malfeasance that left a lasting taint on the public’s trust of politicians and journalists.

When Colson, in 1973 after being arrested, “got religion,” I didn’t believe it.  And when, after seven months in prison for his Watergate shenanigans, Colson founded “Prison Fellowship Ministries,” I skeptically didn’t believe or trust that either.

Kinkade’s and Colson’s lives are both superlative examples of what lives in Christ can look like.  How often those lives are not what we expect, nor easily accept.

Kinkade was a 70s-vintage California hippie who found his faith in Christ while in art school.  In his own words, he made it his life’s work “to portray a world without the fall.”  It is a stinging irony that Kinkade could paint beautiful images of a world untainted by sin and corruption, while demons dragged him into a bottle.  That makes a lot of people doubt God really exists, because “God wouldn’t do that” to Thomas Kinkade.

In Colson’s 35 years of committed Christian service, his world-wide prison ministry left a positive effect on thousands of the least and the lost.  Further, Colson’s theological and intellectual depth made him a leading, loving, lucid voice of Christian evangelism.  Yet because of his Watergate woes, some think, “God wouldn’t want Him.”

Cynics need to pay close attention to Kinkade and Colson.  God’s glory shined through both of their imperfect lives thanks to a perfect redeemer in Jesus Christ.

That’s something you can believe.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) is good at crossword puzzles.  His book, Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary is available at Amazon.com and Lulu.com.

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