He who does not love does not know God, for God is love.—1 John 4:8
When I was a kid, I would go to church with my family every Sunday. I loved singing hymns, but once it got to the sermon I was, quite frankly, bored. We rarely had dynamic preachers, and they never kept my attention . When church was over, I couldn’t have told you what it was about. I was just a kid, though I know now that I absorbed a lot of the information. I tried to perfect looking interested , but not much held my attention back then. It wasn't that I didn't care about God or the Bible and honestly it wasn't even that the preachers were bad at speaking, they just didn't open up the stories in a way that made any sense to me. They didn’t make it practical. Everything felt distant and cold, when it wasn’t the usual fire and brimstone warnings about Hell.
That changed in my early teens, but not because I suddenly became interested in the message, but because of a new young preacher we got from Faulkner University, the nearby Church of Christ college. He was there because we were between preachers. He was a very handsome young man in his senior year of college. (I looked him up while I was writing this, and he’s still a nice looking man, though he must be in his early 50s by now. All of the women and me had a crush on him, though of course, I never let on, nor did I probably the at it was a crush.I just new I was mesmerized. Not only was he good looking, he was also a good preacher, but sadly, he did not stay long and we eventually got another preacher.
Eventually, we got a new preacher who was more of a teacher than a preacher. He would teach us about being a better person by emulating Christ. I began to pay closer attention to the meaning of the sermons, and it laid the basis for my current faith. As I came to terms with my sexuality, I turned to the Bible to better understand myself. As I read the Bible and commentaries by more progressive Christian’s, I came to realize that being gay was not the sin I was taught it was. The real sinners were those judging others and playing God by claiming that their piety made them better than others. For many of those pious individuals, there are two major problems with them claiming to be Christians. First, their “faith” is fueled not by the love Christ preached about, but the hatred of those they deem immoral because they base their belief in a Christianity that is not backed by the Bible. Second, they come to their way of thinking by claiming they are following the Bible, when in fact if they do quote scripture, they take it out of context no they ignore passages that condemn their hateful and judgmental and hateful behavior .
If you really want to follow Jesus, then there are some questions you need to ask yourself. How do we love one another well, even when we disagree? What does it mean to follow your calling? How can God be called good when there is so much suffering in the world? (This is one I have particularly struggled with for many years.) What does it look like to fight back against oppression? How is God all powerful and yet people still die? These are the ultimate questions. hen I started to read the Bible in this way, I began to more fully understand Christ teachings of faith, hope, love, and charity. I’m a researcher by training, and I have spent years trying to understand my faith.
I saw that in Luke 4, Jesus set out a radical vision for his ministry of healing sick folks, cancelling debts, and setting prisoners free. That's a political mission as much as it as a theological one. One sabbath day the synagogue in Nazareth, Jesus read from the book of Isaiah. Isaiah
“The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me,
Because He has anointed Me
To preach the gospel to the poor;
He has sent Me to heal the brokenhearted,
To proclaim liberty to the captives
And recovery of sight to the blind,
To set at liberty those who are oppressed;
19 To proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord.”—Luke 4:18-19
Romans 13:10 says, “Love does no harm to a neighbor; therefore love is the fulfillment of the law.” If our actions, even in the name of God, cause harm then we're doing something wrong.
We must endeavor, not just to do no harm, but to stop harm from happening, not cause it as so many modern day Christians do.
I must be a retarded child because I am always bored during sermons...
ReplyDeleteOne of your best Sunday's post.
ReplyDeleteI'm a Catholic but not practicing for decades because going to church or all other religious things are no more than blah blah blah or kind of man's magical stuff.
What I do though is to make sure I put that main teaching of Jesus in my life as: LOVE, HOPE and CHARITY. To me these are the most important rules to put in our all day's lives.
IF these principals were really in ALL lives in the world, there would be no war, no hatred, no racism or sexism and no gun shootings of innocent people.
To me the rest of all those Bible scriptures are just fantasy stories and from a way far ancient times. Not to mention that we don't really know who were the authors of all those writings.
Hi,
ReplyDeleteMy blog "another country" (the name was later changed to "Esta Noche") is listed on your blogroll. Please be informed that I shut it down last week.
Visitors are now redirected to my new blog "The Narrow Corner. (https://mynarrowcorner.blogspot.com).
I added you to my new blogroll. Could you be kind enough to reciprocate?
Best,
Franck
There are as many Bibles as edited as there are Christian beliefs, Catholics and the infinity of sects that claim to possess the word of God...
ReplyDeleteIf someone is able to compile all these bibles and see if they really speak of the same thing then it would be a serious study that should be taken into account. The problem is that each religious belief seeks a very little heavenly end and very much worldly and then all those bibles out there are exactly the same as the Yellow Pages of the telephone service.
Sorry, I don't believe anything they say in those bibles and I would rather see actions than hear words. That's my opinion, that's all.
Angel
If you compare Bibles, there is very little difference between them.
ReplyDeleteThese differences are mainly due to the fact that they are translations from "original" manuscripts (Hebrew or Greek for the Old Testament) which may have slight differences between them.
Thank you!
ReplyDeleteFranck
The Narrow Corner