Monday, February 24, 2014

380 - Sweating the Wrong Details

Spirituality Column #380
February 25, 2014
Current in Carmel-Westfield-Noblesville-Fishers-Zionsville

Sweating the Wrong Details
By Bob Walters

I find it fascinating and comforting to learn how much intellectual horsepower has been dedicated to Christianity over the past 2,000 years.

It starts of course with Jesus Christ himself, moves on to disciples like Luke and John, to the Apostle Paul, proceeds to second century doctrinists like Origen and Tertullian, to Athanasius, to the church fathers east and west, to John Chrysostom, Augustine, Maximus and so many others.  The unbroken line of intellect and faith includes scholars, bishops, archbishops, Popes, emperors, rebels, monks, martyrs, philosophers, preachers, missionaries and so many others who have been loyal to the Trinity, the faith, the Bible, the Church, and the fellowship of all believers.

Today’s hip, modernist culture seems wholly unaware of the overwhelming intellectual wealth that tracks Christianity on a provable, consistent, faithful line back to the living, breathing days of Jesus.  The Bible in some quarters is mistakenly regarded as a discontinuous book that reaches over history to a legend of long ago, allowing us to define – culturally and politically – what we want Jesus to be today.

But Jesus Christ reaches straight through the heart of history.  His body and blood are as real today as when He was crucified, buried and resurrected.

Admittedly, it’s not been all smooth sailing.  Many religious figures through the years have made it difficult to enjoy the simplicity of Jesus because they have made such a muddle of trying to define Jesus.  Doctrines, dogmas, creeds, concepts, systems, legalisms, disciplines and liturgies have been created trying to define the undefinable – the living, loving, servant-hearted, death-defeating, God-glorifying eternal salvation that Jesus Christ brought to a fallen, groaning, dying world.

It’s easy for Christians to sweat the wrong details, stumbling over doctrines only to wind up worshiping or reviling a religious idea instead of focusing on the reality of Christ.  Are you Roman Catholic or Orthodox?  Protestant or Catholic?  Calvinist or Arminian?  Do you prostrate yourself in sin and shame, or praise God for His grace and love?  Do you prefer pipe organs or guitars?  Where do you stand on tribulation, end times and rapture?  Is Hell real?  Are abortion and gay marriage the church’s business?

The main thing above all is Jesus Christ.  But after offering a robust “Amen” to freedom in Christ, we’ll start a church-rattling Sunday school brawl over a concept, like whether we can lose our salvation.  We insist on definitions, but the Bible plainly says we can’t define God (Isaiah 55:8), and that innocent, uncomplicated faith in Christ is the key to God’s Kingdom (Matthew 18:1-4).

Christ himself – not a doctrine, concept, or rule – is our peace (Ephesians 2:14).

That’s a detail worth sweating.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) encourages knowing Jesus more than knowing doctrines.
Monday, February 17, 2014

379 - A Facebook Friend in Jesus

Spirituality Column #379
February 18, 2014
Current in Carmel-Westfield-Noblesville-Fishers-Zionsville

A Facebook Friend in Jesus
By Bob Walters

Social media, with its unbridled global connectedness and two-way open road of mass-communicated random neural firings, had a birthday of sorts recently.

Facebook turned 10 years old.

After Mark Zuckerberg’s brainchild went live in 2004, Smartphone technology emerged broadening the reach and intensifying the frantic immediacy of several killer messaging apps.  Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram, Pinterest and others put portable, global, creative and instantaneous connectedness at our fingertips 24/7/365.

A recent newspaper commentary surveyed the upsides and downsides of social media’s interpersonal and community communications explosion.  The writer concluded he is “optimistic that a connected humanity will find a way to uplift itself.”

That gave me pause.  We don’t need Facebook or “killer apps” to uplift humanity.  Jesus Christ did that 2,000 years ago.  And is still doing it, eternally.

In 2007 I wrote a column regarding community formation and faith (link: Big City, Big God Problem) citing an erudite piece in The Economist magazine (May 2007) reporting that for the first time in human history, fully half of the world’s population lived in large cities.  In 1900, large-city global population was just 13 percent. Now it’s beyond 50 percent.  It follows that people in closer proximity to each other would provide opportunities for spiritual communication, including productive religious proselytizing.

While that starts to make sense, The Economist report differs.  The observed tendency in dense, urban populations is that God typically is shuffled to the sidelines.  As more people live in closer proximity to each other, other priorities overtake religion as society’s cornerstone of community formation.  Things like arts and culture among the wealthy and surviving squalor among the poor replace divine worship.

God, on average, seems to do best one-on-one out in the country.

As much as we Christians want to evangelize and share the good news of the Gospel of Jesus Christ with our online neighbors, the noisy presence of constant, competing human communications distorts and displaces the personal mystery and wonder of God’s eternal love, Christ’s eternal sacrifice, and the Holy Spirit’s presence in our daily lives.  People tend to worship what they see and attend to the needs they feel.

The internet and social media, perhaps the greatest community formation technologies in human history, provide unprecedented access to Bibles, teaching, preaching, commentary, and everything else one could possibly need to learn about Christ.  But knowing about Christ isn’t the same as knowing Christ.  The overwhelming secularism of social media doesn’t secure connectedness in the Kingdom.

But I wonder: if Jesus had a Facebook page, would you friend him?  And as for Twitter, consider how many times Jesus commands, “Follow me.”

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) counts 21 “Follow me’s” in the ESV.  Jesus, though, requires more than a click.
Monday, February 10, 2014

378 - How Do You Know You Know Him?

Spirituality Column #378
February 11, 2014
Current in Carmel-Westfield-Noblesville-Fishers-Zionsville

How Do You Know You Know Him?
By Bob Walters

It’s easy to go to church, read the Bible, give some money, say a prayer, sing a song, serve in the Kingdom, perform a kindness and profess faith.
 
What’s hard is knowing that you know God, Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit.
 
The theological, doctrinal, church word for this is “discernment” – the ability or awareness to discern, distinguish, determine, discriminate and detect the presence, leading, and will of God.  Most of the time when somebody says they have “heard God speak,” they are saying they have received a truth, a comfort, a direction, or quite possibly even a challenge from God.  And the way they received it was discernment.

Christians 100 percent “get” this, or at least we should, and for sure accessing communication with God ought to be the primary goal of every human being.  It shouldn’t be all that surprising that God who created us, the divine Jesus who was a living, breathing man, and the Holy Spirit who was sent to help us “discern” God (John 14:15-22, Acts 2:1-2), can communicate in sometimes startlingly plain terms with our living, breathing, stumbling lives in this world.
 
Philosophically modern man – and that term means “man who believes he has helped to create and define God” (seriously, that’s what “modernism” means”) – usually winces when he hears anyone mention “talking to God.”  It crosses a line of worldly rationality into otherworldly faith that shouldn’t really be there – can’t be there – if God is simply something conjured as a self-medicating mental prescriptive for man’s everyday confusion about the meaning of life, where we come from, where we fit in, where we are going, and why we are here.
 
Knowing Christ doesn’t mean we will escape confusion, always act right, or know all the answers.  Non-believers are quick to say that God is a delusion, an illusion, even a deception.  Yet, God does amazing things with our minds.  A trusting believer will entertain occasional doubts and ask questions, but discernment is as real as a sunrise.
 
The first tests of discerning God are selfless love and divine peace (Philippians 4:4-9).  Things that “build up” His Kingdom tend to be from God.  Conversely, hatred, anger and fear tend to indicate self-directed worldly interests, Satan’s favorite playground.
 
As for Christ?  When you know Him for real, you’ll feel His presence continually, church becomes a state of mind not just a Sunday destination, the Bible makes increasingly more sense, and prayer is a time of joy.  This is how God talks to us.
 
Never doubt God is knowable, but first you have to talk to Him.
 
Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) heard a good sermon recently that ended with, “Do you know Him?”
Monday, February 3, 2014

377 - When Opposites Attack

Spirituality Column #377
February 4, 2014
Current in Carmel-Westfield-Noblesville-Fishers-Zionsville

When Opposites Attack
By Bob Walters

"Truth, of course, must of necessity be stranger than fiction, for we have made fiction to suit ourselves.” – G.K. Chesterton, Heretics, 1905

Almost 110 years ago Christian apologist and British essayist G.K. Chesterton whimsically railed against society in his book Heretics, pointing out that contemporary thought had most things backwards when it came to right and wrong.

Things we ought to know are right – the love of Christ, the sanctity of marriage, the innocence of children, the obligation of hard work, the personal responsibility of political freedom, the truth of the Bible, and reflecting the servant-hearted love of Christ in our dealings with others  – are declared wrong.  Heresy becomes orthodoxy, and vice versa.  Opposites attack the truth.

Chesterton’s England was overtaken by made-up morality of the moment put forth by the academic, economic, political, artistic and media elite.  Sound familiar?

Among the  great intellectual issues Chesterton described were the growing primacy of Darwin and Evolution displacing God’s Creation, the marginalization of the Church, the general disappearance of the population’s day to day common Christian faith, Marxism and the nascent menace of early communism, the precursive imperialist aspirations of Germany which would soon result in two world wars, and the “progressive” view of truth – much as it exists today – that believes true liberty means being free from the responsibility of concrete behavioral ideals.

Chesterton noted Henrik Ibsen’s maxim, “The Golden Rule is that there is no Golden Rule.”  We had a way of saying it in the 1960s: “If it feels good, do it.”

Here in America, things did change dramatically in the 1960s.  That decade saw the ouster of school prayer, ascendance of global communism, Viet Nam, the Kennedy and King assassinations, the broad emergence of “The Pill” contraceptive, civil rights tension, and a complete overhaul of popular music – the language of the times – on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean.  The 1970s with legalized abortion, and then homosexual normalization over the decades, has us in a cultural place today Chesterton would easily recognize.

I don’t see where “Progressive thought” – the systematic lie of convenient and libertine personal preference favored over sovereign God’s enduring absolute truth – has helped mankind progress at all.  Progress for mankind was Jesus Christ on the Cross; that restored relationship with God.  The Old Testament tells us of God, Creation, and Humanity, and the New Testament tells us the truth of divine love, our sin, forgiveness in Christ, and the everlasting glory of God.

Society resists truth that glorifies eternal God and embraces fiction that glorifies temporal man.  No wonder the world seems so strange … still.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) remembers watching the Beatles’ first appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show Feb. 8, 1964, 50 years ago.

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