There is a movement among Christians to reject "religion" in favor of being "spiritual" instead. Adherents to this theology do not seem to like going to church, listening to preachers or taking the Bible literally as the Word of God. This troubles me. We've been warned against spiritualism in Scripture and from the pulpits of Christendom. Unlike my spiritual friends, I
am content to accept the Word as my guide and to wait till eternity
until God offers me explanations of how everything works,
before I cast aside religion altogether. Discovering the things we have not been shown yet, should keep me
thoroughly entertained for millions of years. God's penmen could only
tell us what they saw, what they experienced and
what they understood in their walk with Him on Earth, when they wrote all that
down. Sadly, we see through a glass darkly. I have found that it takes knowing God in His
completeness to find one's way to the truth.
I'd
be very careful about tossing out all the parts of Christian "religion", including the
organized bits, that may not suit our modern clothes. Some ideas could stand to go. For instance, a lot of people stubbornly cling to the idea that God punishes dead folk
by chicken frying them for eternity. The thing is Scripture doesn't
actually teach that. It was a handy way to keep people afraid and in the
pews with their purses opened. That Satan introduced such evil ideas
doesn't void all organized religion. Paul warned about that. He says we
should meet and work together even more so as we see the end
approaching. And if you aren't seeing the signs on the evening news,
you're not paying attention.
And
if you actually come to know God experientially, you'd know He's not a
Hitler or Stalin or Caligula to inflict unfathomable cruelty on
creatures He6 lov, and it very specifically teaches that the human soul is not by nature immortal (John 3:16). God truly IS love and knowing that, you'll soon come to
realize and recognize what some branches of the church and some
churchmen who claim they have spoken for and still speak for God, take his
name in vain (a severe violation of a commandment with some pretty harsh
consequences).
In
my study of psychology in grad school, I recognized many of the
therapeutic tools we were taught to use were, in fact, the same sorts of things Christ
and the apostles built into the church as a way of altering human bad
behavior - prayer, praise, study and sharing what we learned from the
other four. Turns out, Jesus knew how the human mind works and built
things into His church that would help us change our behavior (what we Adventists call
sanctification). We get close to emulating religious training with
the behavioral/reality therapy techniques psychologists and counselors use. Seems Jesus understood how the human mind works.
We're
just now catching up and seeing the edges of God's amazingly detailed
creation. The sciences, when freed of politics, have begun to see
evidence of God as Moses did. Not fully His face, but His "back parts" - the footprints of
deity. Physicists, biologists, astronomers and mathematicians have recently begun to discover
answers to questions they never thought to ask because they dismissed
the idea of a God altogether from the very beginning. Too many approached science by first
rejecting the idea of a pan-dimensional being with vast power because of
what He is; one described as the Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the
end all at once. That was a pretty scientifically advanced idea for a
former fisherman, traveling self-educated preacher, and prisoner of Rome
living out on an island in the sea to have come up with all on his own.
The remarkable thing is that the Bible we've got is flexible enough to
guide everyone from the poor, the uneducated and simple folk to some of
the most brilliant intellectuals of our time.
So, we probably should be very careful about rejection "religion" in its entirety and making it a dirty word. Much of the greatest good in history has come from the exercise of Christian religion, from ending the tossing of infants into the fires of Molech and Baal, the forced prostitution in Dagon's temples, the massive human sacrifices of the Aztecs, Mayans and Incans, and the scourge of slavery that persisted for far too long in Earth's history.
Tossing out the religious baby with the truly evil bath of some of the worst cultures in history, could set us back centuries. Already we've sacrificed more than 50 million unborn infants in the past half century or so. Humans have committed genocide on an unbelievable scale and seem to throw a new war every few years with result death and carnage. Does anyone believe it's going to get better if we end Christian organized religion in favor of searching for truth within our own screwed up heads.
So, we probably should be very careful about rejection "religion" in its entirety and making it a dirty word. Much of the greatest good in history has come from the exercise of Christian religion, from ending the tossing of infants into the fires of Molech and Baal, the forced prostitution in Dagon's temples, the massive human sacrifices of the Aztecs, Mayans and Incans, and the scourge of slavery that persisted for far too long in Earth's history.
Tossing out the religious baby with the truly evil bath of some of the worst cultures in history, could set us back centuries. Already we've sacrificed more than 50 million unborn infants in the past half century or so. Humans have committed genocide on an unbelievable scale and seem to throw a new war every few years with result death and carnage. Does anyone believe it's going to get better if we end Christian organized religion in favor of searching for truth within our own screwed up heads.
Me, I'm going to seek enlightenment from my creator. Looking around at humans, I don't think I'm going to find truth and goodness in the unconverted human heart. I think that comes from Someone outside ourselves and navel-gazing isn't going to find it.
(C) 2024 by Tom King
(C) 2024 by Tom King