Spirituality Column #441
April 28, 2015
Current in Carmel-Westfield-Noblesville-Fishers-Zionsville
Balancing the News
By Bob Walters
“The good news makes no sense if you
don’t know the bad news.” – Sunday school adage.
Our church
is spending several weeks focusing on, discussing and teaching about Christian
“Doubt.”
Granted,
any church worthy of its pulpit is addressing Doubt all the time. People frequently experience a life – in the
words of secular Enlightenment philosopher Thomas Hobbes – that is “nasty,
brutish and short.” Doubting the
existence of eternal good seems natural.
The Kingdom of God, with its salvation
in Jesus Christ and indwelling of the Holy Spirit – in faith – is a very
different and vastly superior place; startlingly and unbelievably different
from a typical fallen person’s typical fallen day on this fallen earth.
Faith may be better, but doubt is
easier.
Doubt requires little effort, no
discipline, owes nothing to authority and maintains the boundaries of this life
and nothing more. Only when one wants to
step up into the free air of eternal hope, love, joy, grace and life does doubt
become a problem.
Thing is,
we know the “free air” is there. It is
faith; the divine yearning God put into every human heart. Because the “free air” of our redeemer Jesus
Christ is not where Satan, the Lord of this World, wants us to be, Satan is
quick with his challenge:
“It is too
good to be true.” And … we doubt.
The truth of our earthly existence is
that we were created in God’s perfect image, but with freedom in our souls so
that we might learn to love God: it’s what God wants for us, and what God wants
for Himself. Freedom allows the possibility
of love but has a brutal downside: it also allows Satan’s temptation.
So, we have
this great news of the Gospel – the redeeming truth that God had a plan all
along to save fallen, broken humanity from its sinful wallowings with the
grace, mercy, love and sacrifice of Jesus on the Cross. Our sins are forgiven and we’re adopted back
into the Kingdom of God. Whew!
But then
there is this bad news; the awful truth – Jesus on the Cross is what we look
like to God without being covered in the redeeming blood of Jesus; a picture of
our sin, shame, guilt, fear, death, Hell … all the bad stuff the mind can
conger or the body can experience.
It is awful to face the truth of what
we are without Jesus Christ, but it explains the enormity of the good news of
who we are with Jesus Christ.
Some people
ignore it, others water it down. But the
truth is truth.
Better not
doubt that.
Walters (rlwcom@aol.com), a one-time reporter, didn’t know the good news or the bad news most of
his life.
Spirituality Column #440
April 21, 2015
Current in Carmel-Westfield-Noblesville-Fishers-Zionsville
Because We Can
By Bob Walters
“Commandment” is a word our modern
ear hears as a militaristic, non-negotiable, subservient-signifying,
dread-invoking, hellfire and damnation-laden directive:
“Do this or else.”
Scripture actually communicates a
more subtle, more circumspect and more loving message than that. The Greek and Hebrew words translated in
modern English as “commandment” each contains an ethical component in the ancient
meaning. A “command” – an “entolay” in Greek or “mitzvah” in Hebrew – is more than just a
directive; it is “the right thing to do” in the Greek or even a “good deed” in
the Hebrew.
So what Jesus or Moses or anyone
else with a Godly “commandment” was saying was “Here is the right way” – “Here is God’s way” – to do something.
The
Biblical Jesus left only a few instructions and no laws. The few commands Jesus verbalized are not
commands limiting our freedom. They are
Godly, ethical and wise parameters allowing us to realize our freedom,
appreciate His sacrifice and participate in the divine love. We obey His commands because it is the right
thing to do.
Jesus isn’t a “Do this or else”
kind of Savior. His bidding is an
invitation, “Follow me,” and a promise, “I tell you the truth.” He provides information – “God so loved the
world” – not orders; warnings – the narrow gate, etc. – not ultimatums.
In love and in truth Jesus teaches
humanity to honor Him, thereby glorifying God.
In words and example, Jesus teaches that the “two greatest commandments”
are to love God and love others (Matthew 22:36-40). Why? It
is how humanity functions best in God’s creation.
When we follow Jesus and do as He
commands, our actions help us better understand Jesus’s life, sacrifice, love,
and God’s Kingdom. Our Christian
relationship is enriched. Our goal
becomes God’s glory, not our own. We
obey not by fear, but by love; in wisdom, not ignorance. We obey because we can.
Jesus tells us that our yoke and
burden with Him are “easy” and “light.” His
commands help us help others: “do unto others as you would have them do unto you,” “don’t hinder a child’s faith,” “help the
least of these,” “remember the prisoners,” “help the poor,” “feed the hungry,”
“be hospitable to strangers,” “love your enemies,” “carry your cross,” “feed my
sheep.”
And then there is this one … “Do
this in remembrance of me” (Luke 22:19).
This last one, from the last
supper, is Jesus sharing bread and wine – His body and blood – with the
disciples. We know this rite today as
communion, and our joy should always be in remembering Christ.
Not because we have to, but because
we can. Cosmically, it’s the smart play.
Walters
(rlwcom@aol.com) reminds: it is Satan who says. “…or else.”
Spirituality Column #439
April 14, 2015
Current in Carmel-Westfield-Noblesville-Fishers-Zionsville
Praying for Parables
By Bob Walters
I have a
not-always-appreciated-by-others gift for sarcastic retort, penchant for
sardonic response, talent for nimble-minded quips, and unrepentant respect for
a well-turned phrase.
But like many
a confessing Christian recently, my rhetorical savoir-faire has been more than a bit flummoxed as Indiana’s
originally unremarkable, copycat RFRA law tipped over into the brightly lit,
nationally tumultuous ditch of unrelentingly politically correct and factually
preposterous assault and over-reaction.
What began
as a wise, future-looking legal hedge against as yet unexperienced
discrimination became an intellectually D-Day-esque battle royale of hysterical, accusational, Bible-warping, religion
bashing histrionics of exactly the kind the law was meant to thwart. Ironically, the assault was mounted on behalf
of LGBT and presumably other groups that are currently among the most
civil-rights protected and socially normative minorities in American culture.
Never mind that over the past 50
years virtually every vestige of Christian moral instruction has been tossed
out of public schools, higher academia and the political marketplace of
common-sense good advice. It is not fair, the whining chorus shouts, to reaffirm America’s existing
First Amendment right to religious freedom.
So,
companies that happily do global business with nations routinely killing, maiming,
enslaving and silencing public sinners and religious dissenters declare open
disdain for unfriendly Indiana, where we Hoosiers are a bunch of bigots and
homophobes, and I guess worst of all, Christians.
“But
hey – why don’t you visit our new store in Riyadh? Or Beijing?”
At an honest loss for loving,
effective rebuttal, I have found myself praying to receive the spiritual gift
of parables Jesus so elegantly exhibited when confronted with the Pharisees of
His day. Jesus, un-flummoxed, repeatedly
saved his life by telling brilliant parables in response to the accusations of cultural
leaders. I am certain that Jesus’s
priority was in revealing God’s glory, power and truth, not just saving His
life.
People today, often and mistakenly,
think those parables – such as the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:25-37), the Prodigal
Son (Luke 15:11-32), and many others (read the middle chapters of Luke) – are
there to instruct us in appropriate Christian living. Not even close. Those parables, usually in response to Pharisaical
accusations, were Jesus’s clever way of “blowing up” the status quo of Jewish
piety.
Jesus was a rebel, no doubt. More importantly He was – He is – a moral, perfect and
unimaginably shrewd Savior who sought out sinners not to aid and abet their sin
but to love them and teach them about the glory of God.
My parable prayer is not yet
answered, but I’ve got this off my chest.
Walters
(rlwcom@aol.com), possibly only in his own mind, believes
“sarcastic” is a falsehood that mocks a truth, and “sardonic” is a truth that
mocks a falsehood.
Spirituality Column #438
April 7, 2015
Current in Carmel-Westfield-Noblesville-Fishers-Zionsville
Pleasing to God
By Bob Walters
The
possibilities are endless for what God has given human beings the freedom to
create or destroy, to nurture or suffocate, to worship or revile.
Mustering
the discernment to figure out what is pleasing to God on a consistent basis is
a tricky business. It also involves
accepting that our most important personal and societal organizing principle
should in fact be what is pleasing to
God.
Do we
really understand that God created us in His image in freedom and love? Reading the Bible end to end, I don’t know
how anyone could come to any other conclusion.
Plenty of folks reject the Bible, shun church, don’t like Christians,
spurn religion in general and pursue their own self-focused agendas. Jesus isn’t for them, God is a lie, and the
Holy Spirit a myth.
“I gotta’
be me,” say the doubters, and that’s all the “truth” they need.
That’s just not a good plan.
It’s not a good plan because it
lacks precisely the two things Jesus tells us to do: love God and love
others. Love doesn’t mean “I get my own
way.” Love means doing the right thing
by God, and that usually cancels out our own worldly, comfort-led and
fear-averse priorities in favor of serving others, recognizing Jesus as the
Christ, and thereby glorifying God. That’s
a good plan. But how?
First, realize that God basically
does only two things: He creates, and He redeems. He makes things live, and he fixes things
that are broken. Yet so often the things
we think are broken are actually signs of humans going against what God created
in order that we could live. Look at the
segment of our culture that is just so angry about laws ensuring religious
freedom, when the larger shame is that humanity needs any such laws in the
first place.
Second, consider what you could,
should and would do. “What could I do?”
is about freedom, a creative gift of God.
“What should I do?” is about morals, our marching orders from God. “What would I do?” is about character, and
the choices we make before God.
Third, learn to tell what’s of God
and what’s of Satan. An easy “tell” that
the Holy Spirit is with you is when you feel peace in your heart; two warning
signs of Satan are anger and fear. Yes, I
can be at peace in my ignorance and angry at unholy things, but mercy and love
must guide my actions. Prayer is a great
revealer of holy truth.
What pleases God? I’m not always sure, but I do know it is
important to ask.
Walters
(rlwcom@aol.com) advises praising God and blaming Satan.
Lots of people get that backwards.