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Saturday, November 3, 2018

Hope and Faith


Hope and Faith
 
We are presently going through C.S. Lewis’s famous book, “Mere Christianity” and touching on some of the highlights.  This book is all about describing Christian beliefs.  And today we will touch on the Christian beliefs concerning hope and faith.
 
Today the definition of “hope” means “wishing or wanting something to happen”.  One might say that he or she hopes their football team wins.  This is not what the word “hope” means in Scripture.   For Christians, hope is one of the Theological virtues.  The word “hope” in the Bible means “a continual looking forward to the eternal world”. 
 
Scripture says: “Dear friends, now we are children of God, and what we will be has not yet been made known.  But we know that when He (Jesus) shall appear, we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is.  Everyone who has this hope in him, purifies himself, just as he is pure.”  (1 John 3:2-3) These verses seem to imply that when we look forward to or when we “hope” for our eternal home, that our hope has a purifying effect on our souls!  Our hope in God changes us?  
 
In the Old Testament, hope is expressed by words meaning “safety”, “security”, “trust”, and “refuge” and “waited for”.  Scripture says that the coming of the Lord is called “the blessed hope”, that is, the act of expecting our future victory in Christ in heaven gives joy to the Christian.  (Titus 2:13) 
Most of us find it difficult to want ‘Heaven” because we have not been trained – our whole education tends to fix our minds on this world and not the next.  Heaven is present in us, but we often do not recognize it.  If most people would look into their hearts, they might find out that they do want something more that cannot be found in this world! 
 
Perhaps there is something we humans grasp at when we are young and idealistic that later never turns out quite as good as we had dreamed!  Never becomes as fulfilling as we had hoped!  Some put the blame on the thing itself.  If he had only married another woman, or gone on a more expensive trip, or made more money – then he would have caught that mysterious something we all seem to want.  Some spend their lives running from woman to woman (or man to man) or from job to job, always hoping that the latest is the “real thing”. And always becoming disappointed.  And others solve the problem of their disillusionment with life by telling themselves not to expect too much.  That some things are too good to be true.  
 
But what if it’s true and there is perfect love and joy and goodness in heaven?  And just suppose infinite happiness really is there for us? The Bible teaches, and Christians believe that we will live forever!  Forever in glory and our future in Christ will be more glorious and victorious than we can ever imagine. (1 Corinthians 2:9, Isaiah 64:4)   That hope is surely enough to make our earthly life joyful.
 
If we find ourselves desiring something which no experience in this world can satisfy, could it be that we were made for another world?  We must keep alive in ourselves the desire for our true country, which we shall not find until after our death.  And we must help others do the same.
 
We now turn to the subject of faith.  Faith simply means belief – accepting or regarding as true the doctrines of Christianity. Scripture tells us that Jesus is the author and the finisher of our faith.  (Hebrews 12:2)   And Scripture also tells us that if we believe in Christ as Savior we will be saved. (Acts 16:31, John 3:16)   And without faith it is impossible to please God.  (Hebrews 11:6)
 
Because our faith in Christ is so precious and so important – (without it we would not have salvation) we need to take care of it.  Nourish and feed it by prayer and praise, following Christ, Bible reading, helping others, giving to the needy and fellowshipping with other believers. If you look at people who say they have lost their faith in Christianity, it seems that some of them didn’t hold on to their precious faith tightly enough and when troubles came along their faith simply drifted away.
 
 Faith is the art of holding on!  Holding on in spite of your changing moods.  And holding on when there is bad news, or when you are very sick.  Or when false teachers or heresies try to tempt you away from Christ as Lord and Savior.  Holding on when your church throws you out or fellow Christians turn against you. And holding on when you are living among a lot of people who do not believe.  Holding on when all at once your emotions rise up and carry out a sort of blitz on your beliefs.  And holding on when you want to sin and find it would be more convenient sinning if Christianity wasn’t true.  Yes, the troubles and temptations will come, and the storms of life will blow on your little house of faith.  But faith is the art of holding on.  “He who endures to the end will be saved.”  (Matthew 24:13)
 
 
 

Saturday, October 27, 2018

Forgiveness and Love


Forgiveness and Love
 
We are presently going through C.S. Lewis’s famous book, “Mere Christianity” and touching on some of the high-lights.  This book is all about describing Christian beliefs.  Today we will touch on the Christian beliefs concerning forgiveness and love.
 
C.S. Lewis insists that he didn’t invent Christianity when he discusses the fact that Christians are commanded to forgive.  Right there in the middle of the Lord’s Prayer, Jesus says: “Forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us.”  (Matthew 6:12) Jesus made it perfectly clear here, and also in other portions of Scripture, that if we do not forgive we shall not be forgiven.  There are no two ways about it.  But sometimes forgiving another person is very difficult.  Impossible in our own strength!  So, what are we to do?
 
God wouldn’t ask us to do anything that would be impossible for us to do.  But sometimes forgiving a really bad enemy would be impossible for us to do - in our own strength.  But then that’s where God comes in.  God promises to be there with us and help us with the impossible things in our lives.  And that means He will give us the strength and power to forgive our really bad enemies - if we ask Him to.  (Philippians 4:13; Isaiah 41:10; Matthew 7;7-8, Luke 11:9) Help is there for us if we want it.  We just need to ask and then stand on God’s promises!    
 
Lewis insists that the Christian teaching of forgiveness does not call us to reduce the hatred we feel for cruelty or treachery or for any other sin or crime.  Forgiving doesn’t mean saying that the sin isn’t so bad!  We ought to hate sin.  And forgiving a person who has sinned does not mean that that person is not to be punished by the law if a crime has been committed.
 
We are to hate the sin but love the sinner!  When you are trying to obey God’s command to forgive, try picturing the person you are forgiving the way God created him or her to be. God created all persons to be good. Pray that the one you are forgiving, the one who sinned, will become the good person he or she was meant to be.  Give this person to God and pray that he or she will be changed. 
 
Sometimes we can feel resentment towards this bad person or group we are trying to forgive.  We would like to hurt their reputation or their feelings or put them down.  Each time these feelings pop up in our minds we must put them down. God is not only calling us to “do” the right thing, but also to “think” the right thing!  Thought patrol?!  That’s what the Good Book says!  We are instructed in Scripture to “take captive every thought and make it obedient to Christ.” (2 Corinthians 10:5)  
 
Instead of hating the bad person or group, we are commanded to bless our enemies and pray for them.  (Luke 6:28, Matthew 5:44) It is hard work, but not impossible. God can love them through us. God has commanded us to forgive and forgiveness is hard work.  
 
We are to give this person we are trying to forgive over to God and let Him deal with the sin that they committed. We should not try to get revenge ourselves. Scripture says that God will take care of the person who hurt us or who stole from us.  Vengeance belongs to God and to Him alone.  Paying the sinner back for his sin is God’s job, not ours.   (Romans 12:19), Deuteronomy 32:35)
 
We move on to the topic of Christian love.  We Christians are commanded to love God with all our hearts, minds and soul and to love our neighbors as ourselves.  (Matthew 22:37: Deuteronomy 6:5) C.S. Lewis suggests that we not waste time worrying whether we ‘love’ our neighbor.  He advises that we act as if we love our neighbor that soon we will find one of the great secrets in life.  That secret is that when we behave as if we love someone, we will presently come to love him or her. 
 
When we obey God’s command to forgive and love, we become more loving with each decision we make to obey and love.  We learn to love a little more each time we choose to love and soon loving ways become a habit.  And good habits become our good character.  That is why little decisions we make every day have such infinite importance.  Good choices or evil choices can increase at compound interest in our lives.
 
Christian love, either towards God or towards other people is an affair of the will.  Though our loving feelings may come and go, God’s love for us does not. He always loves us.  God’s love is not wearied by our sins, or our indifferences.  And His love is quite relentless in its determination that we shall be cured of all our sins, at whatever cost to us, and at whatever cost to Him. 
 


Many of the teachings in this blog were taken from C.S. Lewis’s book, “Mere Christianity.”
 
 




 










Saturday, October 20, 2018

Thoughts Concerning Christian Marriage


Thoughts Concerning Christian Marriage
 
We are presently going through C.S. Lewis’s famous book, “Mere Christianity” and touching on some of the high-lights. This book is all about describing Christian beliefs.  Today we will touch on some of the Christian beliefs concerning sex and marriage.
 
The Christian idea of marriage is based on Christ’s words that a married couple is to be considered as a single organism – or “one flesh”.  (Mark 10:8) And one of the Ten Commandments in the Bible commands God’s people against sex outside of marriage.  It says: “Thou shalt not commit adultery.” (Exodus 20:14) God has given us this wonderful gift of marriage, but with His gift He has also given us some rules and instructions.  
 
Most likely God commanded His people to be faithful in their marriages because sex outside of marriage isolates one kind of union (the sexual) from all the other kinds of unions which were intended to go along with it and make up the total union called marriage.  Sex without love or commitment is really fake.  And God wants the real thing for us – and we should want that too. 
 
 Also, sex outside of marriage is called “fornication” and is called a “sin” in Scripture. This sin is sometimes made to look like “fun” in the media, but it can bring on so much sorrow and grief.  Unborn babies produced by couples who have sex and are not committed to each other are the cause of millions of abortions.   And parents who are not responsible or faithful to one another can be the cause of why little children are abandoned or are raised by one struggling parent.
 
There are people who want to keep free sex alive in order to make money out of us.  Today porn is everywhere, and sex is cheapened and considered a recreation. Surrendering to all our desires can lead to impotence, disease, jealousies, lies, concealment and abortions.
 
Sadly, babies and children are the ones who suffer most!  These little ones are sacrificed on the altar to the goddess of sex. How many more will have to die?  They pay the bloody price so that we can have free sex. God wants our best and our children’s best.  For any happiness in this world, quite a lot of restraint is going to be necessary. 
 
God loves and cares about the un-born and the abandoned babies and the children who are left behind like garbage after a feast.  Scripture says: “If anyone does not provide for his family, he has denied the Christian faith and is worse than an unbeliever.” (1 Timothy 5:8) God calls Christians to be responsible in their sex lives and to “flee – or run away from - fornication”.  To be committed to the one we have a sexual relation with and to be responsible for the children that our sexual relationship brings.  God loves us too much to have it any other way. 
   
Thousands of years ago, men – usually men with enough money – sometimes married more than one wife, if he could pay for her upkeep and also the children they had together. God called on them to take care of their families. Both Moses and Jacob, who were great men of God, were married to more than one wife, as was the custom in the patriarchal societies of antiquity. Today most modern women believe in equality in marriage and would not agree to share their every-day lives and their money as well as their husbands with others. 
 
Almost everyone who has been married in a church has made a public, solemn promise before God to stick to his or her partner in sickness and in health, whether for richer or poorer until death.  Marriage for a Christian is considered sacred – with God’s blessings on it.  But of course, we all know that some marriages don’t last until death like we promise in our marriage vows. And Scripture allows divorce in certain cases. Here are two of the several reasons. (Matthew 19:9, 1 Corinthians 7:15, Matthew 5:32) But still, the Biblical Christian beliefs concerning marriage and divorce are much stricter than our modern society would prefer. 
 
So how do we reconcile the reality of the high divorce rate among Christians with the high Christian standards of love and faithfulness?  It seems that many Christians have adopted the secular standards for marriage and given up our Christian standards. The modern secular standard for marriage does not always call the couple to stick together till death!  In fact, it seems that often secular advice goes like this – that one should stay in a marriage as long as the marriage is in their best interests.  And when two people “outgrow” one another or have different needs then they should split.  As you can see, there is a difference between the Christian definition of marriage and the secular one. 
 
 I would think that a Christian, trying to obey God, should take their marriage vows seriously and do their best to stay in a difficult marriage.  Go through counseling and pray for God’s help.  Scripture allows divorce in cases of adultery or abandonment.  And I believe that God doesn’t want us to stay in an abusive marriage when the abuser refuses to change.
 
 If one of the partners refuses to stay in the marriage, often leaving for another person, there is little the other partner can do but to go along with the divorce. But God forgives the sin of divorce just as He forgives all other sins. So, if you are the one who left your marriage and caused the divorce, you can be forgiven if you are sorry and repentant.  Christianity is all about repentance and second chances. 
 
God commands marriage partners to love one another.  And He commands husbands to “Love your wives as Christ loves the Church.”  (Ephesians 5:25) C.S. Lewis points out that those who are in love have a natural inclination to bind themselves by promises.  Romantic love songs all over the world are full of vows of eternal constancy.  But is this modern generation giving up on romance and true love?  Where are any romantic love songs today? 
 
Love is the great conqueror of lust.  And true love moves married partners to keep their promise of fidelity through thick and thin.  It is on this God given love that the engine of marriage is run. I believe a great marriage is there for us if we ask God for it.  And if we are willing to be unselfish and responsible. God promises to be with us in our marriages and to help us love one another – if we are willing.
 
Being married and in love is a glorious state!  It helps to make us romantic, unselfish, generous and courageous.  It opens our eyes not only to the beauty of the beloved, but to all beauty. We give up so much if we pass married love by for some cheap sexual thrills. Yes, true married love is a many splendored thing!
 
Many of these ideas were taken from C.S. Lewis’s book, “Mere Christianity”.
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 





 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 
 
 
 
 









Saturday, October 13, 2018

How Should a Christian Behave


How Should a Christian Behave?
 
Writers down through the ages have spoken about the “Cardinal Virtues”.  By ‘cardinal virtues’ we mean ‘basic good behaviors.  Good behaviors that all civilized people recognize and expect from one another.  Good societies cannot function well without good people.  And by calling a society “good” that doesn’t mean it has to be wealthy or advanced technologically.  But it needs to have cardinal virtues!
 
The four “virtues” or “basic good behaviors” are (1) Prudence, (2) Temperance, (3) Justice and (4) Fortitude.     Prudence means “practical common sense”.  Or taking the trouble to think out what you are doing and what is likely to come of it.  Scripture tells us to be “as wise as serpents but as harmless as doves.”  (Matthew 10:16) Much is said in the Bible about the ‘fool’ or the person who lacks ‘prudence’ or common sense.  God promises to give us wisdom and common sense if we ask Him for it.  (James 1:5) And being a Christian is an education in itself.
 
(2) Temperance, our second virtue, doesn’t only refer to over indulging in drinking or drugging.  But we are to be “temperate” in all things.  In other words, we are to go the right length and no further.  Moderation is the key. God wants first place in our lives.  And everything else will be given to you. (Matthew 6:33) (Exodus 20:3) (3) Justice, our third virtue, means fairness – honesty, give and take, truthfulness, keeping promises, doing what is right and good.  
 
And (4) Fortitude, our fourth virtue, means ‘guts’ or courage.  It means the kind of courage that faces danger and the kind of courage that sticks with it through trouble and pain.  You cannot practice any of the other virtues very long without having courage or guts.  A person who keeps trying to do just actions in the end gets a certain quality of character.  There is a right and a wrong in this earth and the Christian is called to try to follow the right.
 
Christianity does not profess to have a detailed political program.  That is not how Christianity works.  The Christian faith is meant for all people at all times and under various political systems.  And Christianity was never meant to supersede ordinary human politics or arts and sciences, but it is rather a director which will set them all to the right jobs and will give them all new life. 
 
The New Testament does give us a pretty clear idea of what a Christian society should be like.  Scripture tells us what is right and wrong, and how we are to behave ourselves.  And it promises us help from God in doing the right thing.
 
In Scripture the “Christian” society is a place where everyone who is able does work so that he or she can produce something good for others in the society.  If a person refuses to work, then he is not to be given a free ride.  Also. the Christian society is a cheerful society, full of singing and rejoicing and praising God because we are invited to walk by faith in God who will be with us and guide our steps and answer our prayers and eventually in Christ give us the victory!   
 
Courtesy is important in a Christian society and being a ‘busybody’ is a sin. Also, a Christian is to treat others as he or she would like to be treated.  And to love and have respect for one another.  Forgive one another always. All we Christians have departed from that total plan in different ways. But Christ, the good Shepherd, searches for us and brings us back to the fold.
 
Charity – giving to the poor – is an essential part of Christian morality.  One of the reasons the New Testament gives as a reason we should work is that the worker may have something to give to those in need. (Ephesians 4:28) Christ will one day separate the sheep from the goats.  And the sheep who go to heaven are those who gave to the needy and the goats are the ones who didn’t help the needy and they go down below!  (Matthew 25:35-45) Yes, charity – giving to the needy – is a big part of Christian morality indeed! 
 
A Christian is commanded in Scripture not to judge others. We humans don’t see the whole picture. We only see the results of a person’s choices – the outward appearances. But God, sees the whole picture.  He sees our talents and strengths, our social capital – our genes or what we inherited from our family and how we were nurtured and our happy or neurotic personality.  
 
And also, He sees the challenges we must overcome. And our troubles, our traumas and any mental illnesses, fears, health issues and phobias, our brokenness. He sees each person’s heart.  Let’s take two people who are guilty of the same crime and get a imperfect and vague idea of how God is able to know and see and judge the interior motives and struggles of these two people.  And how He can understand the whole picture and can judge with true mercy and justice.     
 
Our first person – a young woman - has committed a crime.  This young woman was raised and surrounded by a loving God-fearing family who consistently taught her to do good.  She always had enough to eat and a warm home and secure family.  She graduated from a good college and was engaged to marry the pastor of her church.  She was healthy and had good genes.  And she inherited her parent’s good dispositions and mild manners.
 
 Our second person – a young man -who is guilty of the same crime as the young woman.  But this young man was abandoned by his drug addicted mother at birth and for the first few years of his early childhood he was raised by angry foster parents who lived in poverty.  He was sexually molested by his foster father and he never finished sixth grade. By the time he was twelve years old he ran away and roamed the streets, alone and scared.  As a young teen the gangs became this boy’s family where he learned how to rob others and became addicted to drugs.  He was becoming a violent and dangerous person.  
 
Our two people both committed the same crime.  But the courts, only observing the outward appearances, will probably be more lenient with the young woman than they will with the young man. We do not know how our loving and merciful God would judge these two, but I think that God would judge the young man differently, and maybe with more leniency than the young woman!  God knows that the young man never had the chances that the young woman did.  God sees the young man’s brokenness and knows his poverty of spirit. 
 
Scripture tells us that we are not to judge.  Only God has the power and ability to do this job of judging people.  He created people and only He can see what made up the person life and the challenges and traumas that he or she had to face. Only God can be fair and loving, merciful and forgiving, just and pure. Judging is His job and His alone. (1 Timothy 4:1) Let’s remember that next time we start to judge someone. 
 


Most of the ideas in this blog were taken from C.S. Lewis’s book, “Mere Christianity”.   
  




Saturday, October 6, 2018

What is the Christian Faith?


What is the Christian Faith?
 
The book, “Mere Christianity” written by C.S. Lewis has been one of the most popular books ever written about what the Christian faith is all about.  Because so many have been blessed by reading “Mere Christianity”, we will continue skimming through this book in these next few blogs, checking out some of the high points.  And hoping that you will also be blessed.   
 
When a person believes in Christ as Savior and Lord, Christians believe that a supernatural event happens!  Believing in Christ means something much more than just trying to follow His teachings.  The Christian view is that when we believe in Christ, we are “born again”, as Jesus said we would be.  (John 3:3) That the “Holy Spirit comes to live in our hearts.  (2 Corinthians 1:22) Or in other words, a new kind of life which began in Christ is now to be put into us!   
 
C.S. Lewis writes: “There are three things that spread the Christ-life to us: belief, baptism, and …Holy Communion, or the Mass, or the Lord’s Supper.”  He continues that a Christian can squelch the Christ-life which has been put into him, and he needs to make efforts to keep it active and growing.  That “the best Christian that ever lived is not acting on her own steam – she is only nourishing or protecting a life she could never have acquired by her own efforts.”  That “the Christ-life is inside her, repairing her all the time …” 
 
Christians believe that Christ is actually operating through us.  Jesus tells us that if we believe in Him, rivers of living water will flow out of us.  (John 7:38) The Christian does not think God will love us because we are good, but that God will make us good because He loves us. 
 
We wonder if this new life is just confined to people who have heard of Christ and have been able to believe in Him?  What about all of the others?  God has not told us what His arrangements about other people who haven’t believed in Christ are.  Believers are “baptized into Christ’s body”.  Are others who are not the “body of Christ” in some other category?  We do know that according to Scripture, no person can be saved except through Christ.  (John 14:6) But, we do not know that only those who know Christ can be saved through Him.
 
We move on to the rules and commands in Scripture that are given to Christians as to how they are expected to live. Christ tells His followers that: “If you love Me, you will keep My commandments.”  (John 14:15).  If we Christians owned our own lives then we could do with them as we pleased.  But Scripture tells us that we do not belong to ourselves, but we are bought with a price and we belong to Christ.  (Romans 8:9 and 1 Corinthians 6:20) Someone else made you for His own purposes, and you have duties which you would not have if you simply belonged to yourself.
 
God has reasons for His commandments.  It seems that these commandments cover three departments.  First (1) Relations between one person to another person, and one group to another group.  Second, (2) Healing bad feelings and passions inside persons.  And Third, (3) Relations between a person and the Creator that made him or her. 
 
These commands from God are given to prevent a breakdown between persons or groups.  So that we don’t do damage to one another by cheating or bullying or violence.  And so that we can live peaceably with one another in Christian love. Christians are commanded to love and forgive one another.  Scripture emphasizes the necessity of forgiveness. The last six of the Ten Commandments are rules as to how we are to live with one another. These Commandments forbid us to bear false witness against another person, steal, commit adultery, covet what isn’t ours, or kill another person.  And we are commanded to honor our parents.  (Exodus 20:12-17)  
 
And then secondly, morality inside each individual is also important.  What good is it to draw up rules for social behavior if our greed, cowardice, ill temper, and self-conceit are going to prevent us from keeping those rules?  We cannot force another person to be good or unselfish, but when Christ’s Spirit comes inside that person, he or she can change.  Without good people we cannot have a good society.  The first four commandments of the Ten Commandments speak to healing what is inside of us. These commands teach us to take time to open ourselves up to God’s healing and life- giving Spirit in worship, prayer, and in studying His Word. In these first four commands we are commanded to put God first in our lives.  Not have any other idols. Or worship anything else.  Not swear or mis- use God’s holy Name.  And we are to remember the Sabbath day to rest, refuel and worship God on that day. (Exodus 20:3-11)
 
And thirdly, different beliefs about God and the universe lead to different behaviors and different answers to life’s questions.  What is the general purpose of human life as a whole?  What were we made for?  Why are we here?  It is in dealing with this third reason – Relations between a person and His Creator  - that the main differences between Christian and non-Christian morality come out.  For the next couple of blogs we will look at these differences and see how Christian beliefs differ so radically from all other religions.   

Friday, September 28, 2018

More about What Christians Believe


More about What Christians Believe
 
In learning about what Christians believe we need to start with the Old Testament in our Bible.  The Old Testament (39 of the 66 books in our Bible) is a long history of how God, through the prophets and teachers, spent several thousands of years teaching the Jewish people His laws and teaching them about Himself.  Christianity is really Jewish.  Jesus said that He came to fulfill the Jewish Law and the prophets.  (Matthew 5:17-20) 
 
How does Jesus fulfill the Law (written down in the first five books of the Old Testament) and the promises that God gave His people through the prophets?  Over the many centuries the Jewish people tried to follow the many laws that God had given them.  But even the best of them failed.  It became apparent that no human could ever fulfill God’s righteous laws.  Not one person has ever been found who could stop sinning in his or her own strength and avoid God’s judgment!  (Romans 3:23-24) According to the Bible, without some outside help no person in all the world is or ever has been good enough for our holy God!  It seems we humans are in a bad fix!
 
But Christians believe that this problem has caused our loving and merciful heavenly Father to step in and gives us poor humans that outside help! More than two thousand years ago, a man among the Jewish people goes about talking as if He is God.  Jesus claims to forgive sins, (Matthew 9:1-8) The Jewish religious leaders knew that only God could forgive sins.  And Jesus calls himself a name that all Jews knew was God’s name “I Am” and Jesus also says that He has always existed. (John 8:58) He heals hundreds of people, raises the dead and says He is coming back to judge the world at the end of time.  His claims were shocking, and He was crucified because of who He said He was. 
 
Some people today say that they accept Jesus as a great moral teacher but not as the Son of God or Savior. But a man who was merely just a man going around saying that he could forgive sins and was God; that man would be a mad man and not a great moral teacher!  Jesus was either insane, or He was who He said He was, - the Son of God.  You must make that choice.  Either Jesus was, and is, the Son of God, or else a madman making up crazy stories.  But let’s give up any patronizing nonsense about Him just being a great human teacher!  He has not left that open for us.  
 
Christians believe that the death of Jesus Christ is just that point in history at which something absolutely unimaginable from outside shows through into our own world.  God sent His Son, Jesus Christ to die on the cross and somehow put us right with God and give us a fresh start.  In other words, Christ disabled death, eternal death itself. Christ’s death and resurrection is the heart of the Christian message.  The very heart and soul.  We Christians may not agree on how this all works, but what we are all agreed on is that it does work!
 
Now Christians believe that humans are all sinful and we try to behave as if we belong to ourselves.  Christians believe that humans are not just sinful creatures, but we are rebels who must lay down our arms.  Laying down our arms, surrendering, saying that we are sorry, - this process of giving our lives over to God is what Christians call “repentance.”  Scripture says that we must “repent” in order to accept salvation from Christ. 
 
So, what does it mean to “repent”?  It means to unlearn all the self-conceit and self-will that we have been training ourselves into being.  It means killing part of our self, undergoing a kind of death.  But none of us can do all of this on our own even if we want to!  That is the problem! 
 
Scripture tells us that when we “repent” and give – or try to give- ourselves to Christ, we allow or invite Him to come into our heart and life and help us change into what we were meant to be.  Scripture says that when we believe we receive the Holy Spirit. God is putting into us a bit of Himself, so to speak.  He lends us a little of His reasoning powers and that is how we start to think.  He puts a little of His love into us and that is how we love one another.  We love and reason because God loves and reasons through us and helps and strengthens us to do good.
 
You and I can go through this process of “repenting” only if God does it in us.  Our attempts at “dying” to ourselves will only succeed if we share in Christ’s dying.  Scripture says: “I am crucified with Christ, nevertheless I live, but not I but Christ lives in me, and the life I live in the flesh, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loves me and gave Himself for me.” (Galatians 2:20)
 
The perfect surrender was done by Christ: perfect because He was God and surrender because He was man.  Christians believe that when we share in Christ’s sufferings we also share in His new life.  This means much more than just trying to follow His teachings.  But we are to try to follow His teachings of course.  In Christ, this new kind of life which began in Him is put into us by Him. All we have to do is to be willing to be willing. 


Most of the ideas in this blog were taken from CS. Lewis’ book, “Mere Christianity”.
 
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Saturday, September 22, 2018

What Christians Believe


What Christians Believe
 
When we study religious beliefs around the world, the first big division in beliefs is that some people believe in God or gods and others don’t. Most people on this planet believe there is a God or gods, something more than what we see, behind our universe.  But a minority of folks don’t believe there is a God, or any gods and they are called “atheists”.  Or “agnostics” if they don’t know.
 
Then the people who all believe in God or gods can be divided again into two groups according to the sort of god they believe in.  Some of the world’s people who believe in a god, believe that he is beyond good and evil.  They believe that everything is good in one way and bad in another. This view is called “Pantheism” and the Hindu religion is Pantheistic. Those who believe in Pantheism usually believe that the god they worship animates the universe like we animate our bodies. Pantheists believe that the universe is god and anything you find in the universe is part of God.  The tree is god and the river is god.  And the poisonous snake is god. 
 
The other and opposite idea concerning God is that God is quite definitely good and righteous.  He is holy and knows no evil. A God who cares and loves good and hates evil and wants us to love Him and live our lives doing good things.  This other view of a righteous and good God is held by Jews and Moslems and Christians.   
 
 Jews and Moslems and Christians believe that God created the universe, but that God is not the universe, just like the artist who paints a picture is not the picture.  Christians believe that God is separate from the world He created.  And Christians believe that a great many things have gone wrong with the world that God made.  And that God insists, and insists very loudly, on putting them right again. 
 
There are some views that try to pass for Christianity that go something like this: (There is a good god or force in Heaven and so everything is all right. All you need is love and all those other teachings in the Bible are outdated. So, they leave out those old-fashioned troublesome doctrines about sin and hell and our need for salvation.  People who argue this way insist that Christianity must be what they want it to be.  A Pollyanna religion - all goodie good. They quote verses about love in the Bible and throw away all those passages about justice and judgment.  Or our need for redemption!  Always insisting they must have a simple religion! 
 
But real things are not simple!  If you want to go on and ask what is really happening – then you must ask for something more than simplicity!  You must be prepared for something more complex.  Besides being complicated, reality is usually odd.  Not neat or obvious or what you might expect.  We might be making Christianity up if it offered us just the kind of universe we always expected.  But Christianity has that odd twist about it that real things have.  The problem is not simple, and the answer is not simple either!
 
What is the problem?  The problem is that our world contains much that is selfish and bad. There are two main views that try to explain this problem.  One is the Christian view that this is God’s good world gone wrong.  And the other view is called “Dualism”.  Dualism is the view that there are two equal and independent powers at the back of everything.  Neither power created the other. One power is good, the other bad.  And this earth is the battlefield in which they fight it out.  One power likes hatred and cruelty and the other likes love and mercy. 
 
The Christian also believes that this earth is a battlefield between good and evil and the evil power is spoiled goodness. There must be something good first before it can be spoiled.  Scripture tells us that Satan or Lucifer was created by God as a good and perfect angel – a very beautiful and powerful angel. He was good until he became so proud of his beauty and power that he rebelled against God and caused other angels to rebel too.  And He and the other rebellious angels were finally thrown out of heaven. (Revelations 12:7-9)   
 
In order to be evil, Satan had to have life and intelligence and free will.  All gifts God gave him. Free will is what has made evil possible.  For Satan and even for us.  God gave us free-will too.  Free-will to choose good or evil. To love God or to rebel against God.  
 
Of course, God knew what would happen if we used our freedom the wrong way.  He must have thought it worth the risk.  If God had not given us free-will we would be puppets that move only when God pulls the strings. A world of automated robots – of creatures that work like machines - a world hardly worth creating.   
 
Scripture says that the sin of Satan was pride – he wanted to do things on his own without God.  He wanted to be the center, in fact he wanted to be God.  We humans can fall for this also.  We want to run our lives on our own terms and not let God’s good laws get in the way.  And then we wonder why things don’t go as we wish and blame God.  But Scripture tells us that God cannot give us joy and peace apart from Himself, because it is not there.  There is no such thing.  All good things come from God.  
 
God selected one particular people - the Jewish people- and through the Jewish prophets, God spent several thousands of years teaching the Jewish people His laws and teaching them about Himself.  It’s all recorded in the Old Testament of our Bibles.  Christianity is really Jewish.  Jesus said that He came to fulfill the Jewish Law and the prophets. (Matthew 5:17-20)
 
How does Jesus fulfill the laws and the promises or covenants that God through the prophets gave the Jewish people (and us)?   Over the many centuries the Jewish people had tried to follow the many laws that God had given them.  But even the best of them failed.  It became apparent that no human could fulfill God’s laws.  No one could stop sinning in their own strength and avoid God’s judgment.  (Romans 3:23-24) Without some outside help we are all lost!
 
But that’s when the Christian’s loving and merciful God steps in and gives us that outside help!  We believe that the death of Jesus Christ is just that point in history at which something absolutely unimaginable from outside shows through into our own world.  God sent His Son, Jesus Christ to die on the cross and somehow put us right with God and give us a fresh start!  In other words, Christ disabled death (eternal death) itself.  Scripture says that His blood takes away our sins.  This truth is so amazing that we can’t understand it all!  But Christ’s death on the cross is the heart of the Christian message.  The very heart and soul! 
 
You may ask what good it will be to us if we do not understand it.  But if we could fully understand our salvation, that fact would show it was not what it professes to be – the inconceivable, the uncreated, the gift from beyond nature, striking down into nature like lightning!  Christians accept what Christ has done without knowing how it works.  That’s where faith comes in.  God calls us humans to use the faith He has given us to accept His gift of salvation!  And after we reach out in faith and accept the unbelievable Gift offered to us, then we begin to see!
 
Much of this blog is taken from C.S. Lewis’s book “Mere Christianity”