Monday, December 28, 2020

737 - Trust Me on This

Spirituality Column #737

December 29, 2020

Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

Trust Me on This

By Bob Walters

“He who trusts in himself is a fool.” – Proverbs 28:26

“…the one who trusts in Him will never be put to shame.” – Romans 9:33 (footnote to Isaiah 8:14, 28:16)

Rarely does a sermon, Bible lesson, or a daily devotional not mention some iteration, backstory, or combination of the notion of trusting in Jesus completely while not trusting in ourselves at all.

This is pervasive, standard issue, Christian advice.  With Christ living in our own individual Christian hearts, we hope Jesus will help us to shine His light of love, caring, and compassion out into the external world.  I can’t help but notice, though, that His bright light also shines into all my own internal darkness. And further, that while His holy light shining into my soul illuminates my sin and error, it doesn’t automatically fix them.

I doubt I’m alone in that observation.

Non-believers in Christ, quasi-believers in Christ, errant believers in Christ, and atheists against any notion of God have the same problem but don’t realize it.  Our human default mode – also a sure sign of our fallenness – is that we are ordained to trust ourselves first: “I believe in me.” Then, once we are rich, smart, good looking, and healthy, we feel competent to demand of God why He allows adversity and injustice: “You, God, can fix everything.  That’s what the Bible says.  So … fix it.”

In my experience, the folks who least understand the Bible and Jesus are often the quickest to blame God for their troubles, trusting Him as nothing more than a temporal Mr. Fix-It.  This isn’t a case of a broken light switch; it is a case of blindness to God’s love, truth, goodness, and ultimate mission of Jesus Christ on earth: God’s glory.

Developing the faith to outsource trust onto something we know but can’t see is a sign of a mature Christian.  Thinking that the grasp and surety of my faith are a function of my ability to put my trust “in” myself and my intellect presents a contradiction of a fairly high and eternally damaging magnitude: We think we are the light.  No. 

Christians spend all this time talking about how much they trust Jesus as their savior, and spend almost as much time worrying about whether they are really saved.  I believe this is the manifestation of the tension we feel between the light of Christ shining outwardly vs. inwardly: of His true worthiness vs. our true unworthiness. 

It’s also a telling gauge of trust: What’s harder to trust than that Jesus would save even a sinner like me?  Being Jesus’s light out into the world while dealing with, addressing, and feeling the shame of what that light makes us see within ourselves seems, at the very least, a bit of a stretch.  Yet, it is the most profound dynamic of hope:

Peace, trust, and deep faith come upon us when we realize it’s all the same light.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) figures our fallenness is all the same; it’s just easier to judge the world’s than our own.  Good tip: read the surrounding context in the Bible verses listed up top.  “Fool” and “shame” describe permanent, not temporary afflictions.  May we endeavor to be neither in the New Year.

Monday, December 21, 2020

736 - Part 2: What's Left Unsaid Is ...

Spirituality Column #736

December 22, 2020

Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

Part 2: What’s Left Unsaid Is …

By Bob Walters

“The shepherds returned [to their flocks], glorifying and praising God for all they had heard and seen.” – Luke 2:20

These gleeful shepherds who had just seen the baby Jesus would have been horrified shepherds if the popular Christmas birth-of-Jesus narrative were true.

Not horrified or fearful of the angel who spoke to them, nor of seeing, well, God in a feeding trough. No, if they knew Mary and Joseph had been refused hospitality and then left alone in a stable or cave to fend for themselves in childbirth? Impossible.  Even these poor shepherds would not have let that happen, or let them stay alone in a stable.

That would not have happened anywhere at that time in that culture: not in Bethlehem, not among the rich or the poor, and certainly not to a family of “the house and lineage of David” in “the town of David.” (Luke 2:4).  In that town Joseph, basically, was a royal and would have been welcomed into any home in Bethlehem.  Likely, he had a plan to stay with family or friends … the Bible doesn’t tell us if he did or didn’t.

Let’s take a brief, issue-by-issue look at the words of Luke 2 and the birth of Jesus through the lens of Middle Eastern cultural expert Ken Bailey’s book, Jesus Through Middle Eastern Eyes.  Cultural context answers (and poses) many questions.

- The Trip (v4): “Nazareth up to Bethlehem…”  That’s a 91-mile trip south though farmland but “up” into the Judean hill country, not far from Hebron where pregnant Mary had traveled 90 miles to visit Elizabeth for three months, then returned home. (Luke 1:39, 56). I notice nowhere does the Bible say Joseph and Mary traveled to Bethlehem alone, so perhaps others from Nazareth went, too.  I’d have organized it for Mary to stay with Elizabeth and meet Joseph in Bethlehem 1. to hide her pregnancy from Nazareth and 2. to save Mary, basically, two 90-mile trips in late pregnancy.  Nobody asked me.

- Birth time? (v5): “While they were there the days were accomplished …” We mentioned this last week.  Very plainly, Jesus was not born the night they arrived.

- The “Inn” (v6): “no room for them in the inn…”  “Inn” here means an extra room in someone’s home (Greek word katalymati is a spare room, not a hotel), adjacent to or above a home’s main living area.  The “stable” would be a lower, open area on one end of the house where animals at night were kept inside for protection from thieves and the warmth for the family. A manger would have been in there; warm and well-attended. The home’s “spare room” evidently was already occupied.

- Manger (v7): – That’s an animal eating trough, either a stand or possibly a bowl dug into the floor of the main room adjacent to where the animals were kept at night.

- Birth attendants: As was custom nearly everywhere in the world, local women would have taken care of the pregnant Mary.  Men would have been cleared out of the main room of the house where the birth took place while various women attended to Mary and the newborn. Then, as was every baby of that time, Jesus would have been swaddled – v7 says “[by] Mary” and, in that circumstance, laid in the warm hay of the nearby manger because “there was no room in the inn [guest area]” of the house.

- Born at night? (v8): The Bible says the angel visited the shepherds at night, not that Jesus was born at night.  However, in v11, the angel says Jesus was “…born this day …” which could very well imply nighttime, since Jewish “days” started at sundown.

- The Shepherds 1 (v8-15): The lowliest of peasants, the shepherds were the first to be visited by the angel.  Note that it was not the Jewish leaders who were notified.

- The Shepherds 2: The shepherds (v9) were “terrified,” then the angel says “fear not.”  Why is that important? Because, as St. Jerome in the fourth century pointed out, when you are terrified you do not understand what somebody is trying to say to you.  The angel wanted the shepherds to calm down, listen to his message, and understand.  That “glory of the Lord” display (v9), I’m sure, would likely take anyone’s breath away.

- The Shepherds 3: They were first to learn, and it’s critically significant, that “a savior has been born unto you … he is Christ that Lord” (v11). “Unto you” is personal.

- The Shepherds 4: Their sign (v12) that the shepherds would find their savior in a manger wrapped in swaddling clothes, was also critical. Why?  Because this told the shepherds that the savior / Christ / Lord – anticipated by the whole Jewish nation – was humbly one of them. The fact they could go visit the Messiah in a common home in a common manger among common people would bring the shepherds great joy; it meant they were not separated from God by their lowly station in life.

- The Shepherds 5: That the shepherds visited Jesus and then (v17-18) “spread the word about Jesus’s birth, the angel’s visit to them, and all they had “heard and seen” is rich with meaning.  They had understood what the angel told them.  On the authority of that angel, the shepherds told “others” what Mary and Joseph likely would have been reluctant to tell them: that the baby Jesus was the Messiah.  It was only the shepherds who the Bible identifies as the initial spreaders of this news.  Even Mary “pondered [these things] in her heart” (v19).  And the fact that the shepherds had “others” to tell suggests strongly that Jesus, Mary, and Joseph were not alone.

- The Shepherds 6: The shepherds returned to their flocks in the fields, “glorifying and praising God for all they had heard and seen” (v20). These shepherds had just been trusted with telling the truth of Jesus’s mission to fulfil God’s salvation of mankind, and whether they understood the full impact of that is hard to say.  But what we can say is that not only were they rejoicing to God; they were satisfied that the village had provided adequate and maybe even laudable care and hospitality amid this birth.  Culturally, that’s something the shepherds would have insisted on and understood,

What’s left for us to understand is to rejoice and praise God, too. What’s left unsaid is that we aren’t meant to be Jesus; we are meant to be shepherds

Say what you will, I’m pretty sure that is the true meaning of Christmas.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) notes a few other things: 1. Some Bibles say they went to Bethlehem to be taxed (KJV), for a census (NIV), or to be registered (ESV).  It’s all the same Greek root word “apographe.” 2. Jerusalem was also known as the City of David. 3. Nobody knows the exact date of Jesus’s birth; but everyone agrees it was not December 25, and not the year “0000.”  4. The Wise Men showed up months later (Matthew 2:1-12).  5. Everybody tries to explain the Star in terms of astronomy (like the Saturn-Jupiter confluence this week); maybe God just put it there … like the Bible says. 
Monday, December 14, 2020

735 - Part 1: What's Left Unsaid Is ...

Spirituality Column #735

December 15, 2020

Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

Part 1: What’s Left Unsaid Is …

By Bob Walters

“The shepherds returned [to their flocks], glorifying and praising God for all they had heard and seen.” – Luke 2:20

I love the warm-fuzzies of the Christmas season, and especially the King James Bible’s beautiful story of the birth of Jesus in Luke 2.  Like the company of angels in Luke 2:14, we should all be “praising God in the highest” and praying for peace over all the earth.  The decorations, music, traditions, my own memories … I love it all.

I also get a real kick out of filling in all the blanks that exist within not just the Bible story of “Christmas” – a word which does not appear in the Bible – but also sorting through truth and legend of what happened in Bethlehem 2,000 years ago.  God sent to us the most powerful message possible: He sent Himself.  And the message truly did reside in the medium – a humble, helpless baby whose love and obedience would change all humanity in grace and faith … forever. 

There are very few biblical specifics about the birth.  It gets half a verse in Matthew 2:1, and then half a chapter in Luke 2:4-20. Yet there is so much we think we know that isn’t so, because we don’t know that culture. We know it happened.  That’s it.

Around 200 A.D. an anonymous non-Palestinian wrote a story, in Greek, titled The Protevangelium of James about the birth of Jesus.  It is from that story, not the Bible, that we get most of what we think we know about the birth of Jesus in (or near) Bethlehem, and most of it is wrong. 

There’s the story about Mary going into labor on the journey, Joseph putting her in a cave, and Mary, a scared teenager, giving birth by herself.  That notion took hold in the traditions of the Eastern Church, and that is the story in the Protevangelim.

Or, Joseph and Mary make it to Bethlehem in the nick of time and because there was “no room in the inn” (Luke 2:7) – which when translated properly means “extra room,” not “hotel room” – Jesus was in a handy “barn.”  Um, they didn’t have “barns.”

We are also led to believe this was a hurried trip with little planning and no provisions for lodging, that Joseph and Mary showed up unannounced as strangers, and they were either purposely shunned or coldly left unattended by everyone in the town of Bethlehem as Mary went into labor upon (or shortly before) arrival.  No.

Let’s address just one very obvious biblical detail.  Luke 2:6 – again in the beautiful language of the King James, states – “And so it was, that, while they were there, the days were accomplished that she [Mary] should be delivered…”  Jesus was born days after they got to Bethlehem, not as an emergency delivery upon arrival. 

Next week we’ll look briefly at other specifics of Joseph, Mary, the trip, their accommodations, the “inn”, the shepherds, the angels, the animals, and the culture itself.  It’s been a couple of years since I’ve mentioned Kenneth Bailey’s wonderful book, Jesus Through Middle Eastern Eyes, which provides realistic cultural context to the Bible’s very brief announcement of this world-altering event.

The Bible is true and accurate, and often says more than we may realize.  Plus, what’s left unsaid is sometimes historically knowable and downright fascinating.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) and his wife Pam decorate extensively for Christmas.

Monday, December 7, 2020

734 - Keeping It Together

Spirituality Column #734

December 8, 2020

Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

Keeping It Together

By Bob Walters

“As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways, and my thoughts than your thoughts,” – Isaiah 55:9

This verse is as plain as anything in the Bible: God is not something we will completely understand because we are not built to.

That said, we can know Him through Jesus Christ and the illumination of the Holy Spirit.  It takes faith, obedience … and some knowledge certainly helps.  But folks work harder at Christianity than they really need to because they constantly try to split, divide, and specifically define things that – I’m pretty sure – God intended to be understood as “whole cloth,” not random remnants.  He’s the whole ball game; not innings or quarters.

In a religion of unity, Christianity is often a religion that divides.  For example …

God - The complete undivided God is the Father-Son-Spirit Trinity.  God exists as this all-in-all relationship of love. No need to pursue three goals.  God’s math doesn’t just add, it multiplies: 1 x 1 x 1 is still 1.  Pray to one, you’ve covered them all.

Love – C.S. Lewis famously wrote of the “Four Loves” – eros (passion), philia, (brotherhood), storge (parents for children), and agape (God’s love).  As humans we feel the need to decide which love is holy and which love is not.  I’m here to disagree.  In the New Testament’s great passages on love – 1 Corinthians 13, 1 John, and all four Gospels where we are to “love God and love others” – there is not a word about sex or appetites, just warnings about worldly pursuits.  God’s love is best understood as whole.  Humans see love in complex human terms; real love is the simple way God sees it.

Truth – Culture insists we split up truth into as many individual parts as possible.  Then Satan takes the toxic bits and infects all society with confusion and division.  “My truth” and “your truth” are sucker gambits.  “I am the way, and the truth and the life” says Jesus (John 14:6).  Get your facts straight, sure; but God’s truth is the only one.

The Law – Paul was a Pharisee who Jesus told to spread the Truth to gentiles; Jesus never told Paul to teach the Law to gentiles.  Why?  Because the Old Testament Mosaic Law applied to the Jews. Jesus, not the Law, fulfilled Israel’s destiny of saving the entire world.  Christians cling to OT laws, I think, to have rules to follow. The Westminster Confession (England, 1647) famously split the Law into Moral, Judicial, and Ceremonial segments; but neither Jesus nor Paul preached that. Jesus’s “law” tells us to love God and love others, period.  We don’t need the old Law to love Jesus.

Forgiveness – It is OK for words to mean many different human things in many different contexts, but the forgiveness of Christ – our sins covered by the blood of Jesus restoring our divine relationship with the eternal God – is totally a God thing.  We cannot forgive another’s sins against God; but we are called to forgive worldly offenses against ourselves.  That’s not for the sake of the oppressor; it is to maintain our peace in Jesus.

Freedom – Jesus frees us from the Law because He completed God’s promise to Israel that they were the chosen nation God would use for the salvation of “the whole world.”  Israel didn’t realize this made them servants (like Jesus), not masters.  In the Bible “freedom” doesn’t mean freedom from responsibility; it means the freedom to have faith and to love God and others in obedience to Jesus’s command to do exactly that.

Division is the most confusing and destructive thing humanity faces, while the wholeness of God is meant to be the most comforting, creative, and coherent.

We may be flawed and fallen pieces, but God’s love, in Jesus, keeps us together.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) thinks puzzles with fewer pieces are easier to finish.

Archives

Labels

Enter your email address to get updated about new content:

Popular Posts