Showing posts with label God. Show all posts
Showing posts with label God. Show all posts
Saturday, February 28, 2015
Sharing Statement March 1, 2015
Today our scripture came from the Gospel of Mark. Mark emphasizes Jesus' call to sacrifice by those who would follow him, and dwells on the Passion, Jesus' ultimate sacrifice. What does that mean for us? I believe it means giving sacrificially with our time, talent and treasure to see that God's will is accomplished on earth. This church is a good place to give your time, talent and treasure as we embark on a new vision for an old institution. Right now, we ask you to share your treasure.
Friday, May 3, 2013
Christian Inaction and the Second Coming
I am a scientist and a Christian. I received my doctorate in chemistry at the age of 25. I became a Christian at age of 29. The above article is very good on the views of scientists, but very poor on its analysis of the Christian belief in the second coming of Jesus. I have a literal view of Jesus but still believe in all the tenets of modern science including evolution and that climate change is man-made.
The only conflict that exists lies between fundamentalist Christians (a small but media savvy group) and atheists who enjoy portraying all Christians as fundamentalists. There is no conflict in belief about the reality of man-made climate change and their faith in the minds of mainstream Christians. Mainstream Christians believe just as scientists do that we must take action now. My own view is that we are too late. We have sown the wind, we will reap the whirlwind.
The author of the article failed to realize that it is not the belief in the Second Coming of Christ that determines how a Christian acts, but whether the belief is that the Second Coming is predictable and imminent. The immediacy of the Second Coming is a staple of fundamentalists who believe that the trumpet shall sound and Christ return within their lifetimes. Most believers in the immediacy of the Second Coming will tell you that they expect it to occur at any moment. Essentially, they are always looking over their shoulder for God.
I believe in the Second Coming but do not believe we will ever know how close or how far it is from us. Jesus himself said in the Gospel of Mark that only God knows the schedule, that he did not. If the Word of God did not know, how can we?
Ministers, tel-evangelists, and end times writers teach an all too gullible Christian fringe that the end is upon us, so get your spiritual affairs in order. This teaching that we know Christ will return in the present day yields at least two results.
First, the imminent Second Coming scares believers. This fear triggers a blind obedience to the purveyors of this fear. Out of fear that they are not right with God, believers give money to or buy things from those who claim that they know how believers can be safe. The focus is on saving yourself and lost souls by converting them to the only correct faith. (For my views on the many paths to God, read this. )
Second, the idea of an imminent Second Coming encourages believers to ignore the injustices around them. They reason that if Jesus is due any day now there is no need for them to take action because Jesus will fix everything. Better to spend their time focused on getting right with God than follow Jesus' command to help the least.
The time has come for mainstream Christians to make the media acknowledge a more complex faith than fundamentalists' sound bite theology, and to destroy the miasma of fear that too many create to line their own pockets. We must stand up for the intellectual truths of Christianity, for knowledge and understanding. We must embrace science and show there is no reason to fear it. We must demonstrate a faith inspired by a holy book, not bound by it. Above all, we must make known the diversity and intellectual honesty of modern Christianity.
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Monday, April 29, 2013
Sequester and the Moral Failure of Congress
Last week Congress voted to end flight delays by voting more money for the FAA. This was a self-serving and a genuflect to the wealthy. I am appalled that while so many suffer Congress chose to act on that measure.
"Repealing the small part of sequestration that affected Congress itself and the donor class, while letting cancer patients go without chemotherapy, seniors go without meals on wheels, pregnant mothers go without nutritional assistance, and children get kicked out of Head Start programs, is a new low in our debased public morality." Fear of Flying: Cancer v. flight delays from the Washington Post.
I am a Christian. I have never believed we were meant to be a Christian Nation nor have we ever been one. The sequester confirms we are not one. I believe we are being judged by how we treat the least among us and we are abject failures.
Will we raise our voices for those sick with cancer, seniors without food, mothers without food for their babies, little children denied education because they are poor?
Will we raise our voices for the immigrant(the stranger), for the unjustly imprisoned, for the poor, and all who suffer needlessly in this nation of wealth?
Will Congress stand up for the least or grovel before their rich donors' Golden Calf?
Will we worship Mammon instead of God?
"Repealing the small part of sequestration that affected Congress itself and the donor class, while letting cancer patients go without chemotherapy, seniors go without meals on wheels, pregnant mothers go without nutritional assistance, and children get kicked out of Head Start programs, is a new low in our debased public morality." Fear of Flying: Cancer v. flight delays from the Washington Post.
I am a Christian. I have never believed we were meant to be a Christian Nation nor have we ever been one. The sequester confirms we are not one. I believe we are being judged by how we treat the least among us and we are abject failures.
Matthew 25: 31-46
The Judgement of the Nations
‘When the Son of Man comes in his glory, and all the angels with him, then he will sit on the throne of his glory. All the nations will be gathered before him, and he will separate people one from another as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats, and he will put the sheep at his right hand and the goats at the left. Then the king will say to those at his right hand, “Come, you that are blessed by my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world; for I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, I was naked and you gave me clothing, I was sick and you took care of me, I was in prison and you visited me.” Then the righteous will answer him, “Lord, when was it that we saw you hungry and gave you food, or thirsty and gave you something to drink? And when was it that we saw you a stranger and welcomed you, or naked and gave you clothing? And when was it that we saw you sick or in prison and visited you?” And the king will answer them, “Truly I tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of these who are members of my family, you did it to me.” Then he will say to those at his left hand, “You that are accursed, depart from me into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels; for I was hungry and you gave me no food, I was thirsty and you gave me nothing to drink, I was a stranger and you did not welcome me, naked and you did not give me clothing, sick and in prison and you did not visit me.” Then they also will answer, “Lord, when was it that we saw you hungry or thirsty or a stranger or naked or sick or in prison, and did not take care of you?” Then he will answer them, “Truly I tell you, just as you did not do it to one of the least of these, you did not do it to me.” And these will go away into eternal punishment, but the righteous into eternal life.
Will we raise our voices for those sick with cancer, seniors without food, mothers without food for their babies, little children denied education because they are poor?
Will we raise our voices for the immigrant(the stranger), for the unjustly imprisoned, for the poor, and all who suffer needlessly in this nation of wealth?
Will Congress stand up for the least or grovel before their rich donors' Golden Calf?
Will we worship Mammon instead of God?
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Saturday, March 23, 2013
The Decline in Church Attendance - A Benefit
There continues to be articles that either lament the decreased attendance in mainline churches in the United States or rejoice in the decline of the institutionalized church. Both see as an increased absence of religion in younger Americans. One side recoils in horror for souls they assume are lost forever while others cheer the downfall of established churches assuming that their own movements can profit from mainline Protestant decline. I believe that the smaller numbers in attendance do not reflect a change in faith but instead a change in American mores. Ultimately, mainline churches will benefit from congregations of the committed.
When I was a kid in the fifties, church attendance was mandatory in order to function in society. People who did not attend some religious institution were seen as outside the bounds of society. Their businesses were to be shunned and their children proselytized. I lived in a city that was predominately Southern Baptist, so the majority of church goers were Baptist even if they were only "Sunday Baptists" engaging in less than Christian practices during the week.
By the sixties, community standards were beginning to relax, As a teenager, I could stop attending church with only mild approbrium from family and friends. (The church my mother and I attended did not approve of members asking questions. I was told my questions were a sign of unbelief.) Adults still faced social stigma for not attending church at least once a month.
By the time I received my doctorate in chemistry in the early seventies, I caught only minor flack for being a confirmed deist and never attending church. God was not present in my life. I never attended church and neither did most of my friends. My supervising professor did. He was a committed member of his Presbyterian church and had tried to persuade me ever so gently not to work in the lab on Sundays. He never succeeded.
When the eighties rolled around, all that remained of obligatory church attendance for younger Americans had devolved into attendance on two occasions: Christmas Eve and Easter. Still, older Americans were entrenched in the weekly ritual of morning worship and indoctrinated in its social benefits. But, there was another form of worship on the rise - the megachurch. Many of these churches had existed since the fifties, but their growth took off in the eighties. These churches vacuumed up members as people fled the cities for the suburbs.
I had a front row seat on the growth of one megachurch. In 1979, I helped start a church in Austin, Texas. (In 1975 I became a Christian and joined a liberal Baptist church) Very few of the sixteen that originally saw the need for a new church thought about becoming a megachurch although it was our pastor's dream from the beginning. We started with 60 in attendance on the first Sunday and grew to over 6000 attendees spread over three services every Sunday morning.
By the nineties, mainline churches had started to see a precipitous drop in attendance. I think two things happened. First, the megachurch provided religious entertainment with few strings attached. One hour Sunday morning was all that was demanded. Second, people who had grown up in the days of mandatory church attendance and for whom it still was a way of life began to die off. Together, these factors caused the decline in mainline Protestant churches.
Who remains in the mainline churches? Some survivors of the days of mandatory attendance have proved to be long lived and continue to occupy the pews. Most of the remaining congregants are believers and true converts. The rest are the flotsam and jetsam of modern society, people who feel lost in a megachurch or are somehow outside societal norms. In the mainline Protestant church they find a welcome if for no other reason than they fill the pews. Perhaps that is too cynical. In the small church I now belong to, such people are loved, accepted and nurtured. I hope that is true in most churches.
So, the megachurch has siphoned off those that want church as entertainment, a way to compartmentalize religion by reserving it to their occasional Sunday attendance, or a way to meet people in a supposedly safe environment. Megachurches do have their committed, but they are few. The mainline church has shrunk but still cares for the least including, but not limited to, the damaged humans that find their way through their doors. The decline is an illusion of numbers only. The relative number of true followers of Christ remains unchanged. Those that came because society demanded it are gone as well as those that found their answer in the megachurch. Today membership in the mainline church is a matter of belief first, attendance second. I think that is the way it should be.
Saturday, March 9, 2013
The Many Paths to God
Thomas said to him, "Lord, we don't know where you are going, so how can we know the way?"
By -=Bruce Berrien=-
Jesus answered, "I am the way, the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me." John 14:5-6.

I believe that Jesus is the highest revelation of God in human history and the best path to God. That is why I am a Christian. I also believe that all faiths have God's truth. I do not believe God condemns anyone because of their place of birth or faith or lack of faith, nor do I believe that Christians have an exclusive claim on God.
Conservative Christians are repelled by the possibility that their God and the God of Islam could be the same while they embrace the God of Judaism. Muslims trace their ancestry through Ishmael, the son of Abraham by the slave girl, Hagar. Theirs is the God of Abraham whether conservative Christians like it or not. Just as the God of Judaism is the God of Abraham. Even without the link through Abraham, I think that inherently all monotheists share the same God.
Atheists do not believe in any Supreme Being, but are closer to God than the nominally religious. To reject God you must first think about her. Such thought puts an atheist closer to God than all those who are indifferent or oblivious, lost in their own daily lives. Atheists will be judged just as we all will be, on how we treat the least.
My personal belief is that everyone at some point will be confronted by God and know that God is real. At that point whether before or after death, one can choose to be with God or not.
The immortal soul is a Greek concept, not Hebrew. I believe that without God, there is no existence. If a person rejects God, knowing God exists, then that person after death ceases to exist. No hell, no eternal punishment, just ending.
The God of love that Jesus modeled desires to wrap us in her love forever, but the choice is always ours.
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Friday, January 25, 2013
Lectionary Musings for January 27, 2013
14Then Jesus, filled with the power of the Spirit, returned to Galilee, and a report about him spread through all the surrounding country. 15He began to teach in their synagogues and was praised by everyone. 16When he came to Nazareth, where he had been brought up, he went to the synagogue on the sabbath day, as was his custom. He stood up to read, 17and the scroll of the prophet Isaiah was given to him. He unrolled the scroll and found the place where it was written: 18“The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to bring good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the oppressed go free, 19to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.” 20And he rolled up the scroll, gave it back to the attendant, and sat down. The eyes of all in the synagogue were fixed on him. 21Then he began to say to them, “Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.”
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Ruins of Sepphoris |
This week's lectionary reading in Luke's gospel finds us in Chapter 4. Jesus returns to the synagogue of his youth and reads from the writings of the prophet Isaiah. The passage he chooses may well have been written about Isaiah himself. Now, Jesus applies them to himself and they take on new meaning.
His focus will not be on the religious whom he sits among. His focus will be on the poor, those that are not full participants in their faith. Jesus will make them valued members of his faith and recipients of his all encompassing love.
He will seek those who cannot seek him: the captives, the blind, the oppressed. To them, he will proclaim the love of God.
He claims ownership of this passage and proclaims himself God's anointed. He does not claim to be the Messiah yet. This is the opening of his ministry. He is setting the stage for the revelation of divinity that is to come.
Why would he choose to make this proclamation in Nazareth? Nazareth, where he grew up, was a small village of Jews. However, Nazareth was adjacent to a new city, Sepphoris. Sepphoris had been rebuilt by Herod Antipas after it was destroyed by the Romans in 4 BCE. By the time of Jesus it was a bustling city whose population was much influenced by Rome. Perhaps Jesus intended for his words to go beyond the boundaries of Nazareth to Sepphoris.
Those that frequented the synagogue in Nazareth may well have frequented the ten synagogues in Sepphoris. Having grown up in the area and worked in Sepphoris, Jesus would know that what was said in Nazareth would spread to Sepphoris. In a subtle way, Jesus is announcing himself not just to Jews but also to Romans.
Jesus tells those that hear him that the world is changing, that a new force has entered into both the world of Jews and the world of the Romans. There is no fanfare, but God's good news is seeping into the world. Drop by drop hearts will be changed.
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Monday, July 25, 2011
Proving We Are Not A Christian Nation
Conservative Christians, who believe the United States was chosen by the one, true God to be his nation founded on God's principles, ignore Christ's summation of the law and the prophets in order to become Republicans. These Republicans daily demonstrate to the world we are not a Christian nation as they focus on money not people. If they win the debt ceiling crisis by destroying Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, they will have definitively proved that our government is free of any divine direction.
Christ said that there were two commands that summed up all of God's teachings. Love God and love your neighbor as yourself. When asked who is your neighbor, Jesus told the parable of the Good Samaritan. In it, a Samaritan (Jews despised Samaritans at the time) helps a man that has been mugged and robbed. The man is a total stranger. The Samaritan cares for the man, then pays for his future care. He tells those caring for the injured man that he will check to see they have carried out his wishes.
What can be clearer? Christians are to take care of the strangers in our midst who have been attacked by forces outside their control. Christians are not to just take care of them personally if they can, but to see that strangers are cared for. Christians are to check on the stranger's continued welfare. In a modern society of millions, how can Christians do this? Christians can enable a surrogate to act for them. The government becomes our Good Samaritan.
Republicans do not believe in the Good Samaritan. I have been repeatedly told that they have no obligation to help anyone outside their immediate family. That they have no obligation to help those who cannot help themselves. To the contrary, the Republicans consider those that cannot help themselves defective and a drag on society: they should be abandoned.
Those Republicans who call themselves Christians hold those same views. One such person in my own church told me that a member of our church who had taken in his grandchildren should not have done so. That church member should have saved the money he spent taking care of grandchildren so when his health failed he could take care of himself and not ask the church for help. ( He had asked for help. The church did not help. I no longer attend that church.)
Time and again, so-called Christians have written that they will not help people who do not work. These Christians assume that those not working don't because they are lazy. Interestingly, when Jesus talks about judgment, he does not say we should check on why a person was hungry, why they are sick, or why they are in prison. Jesus says feed them, take care of them and visit them if you want God to claim you as his own. Republicans have become the goats described in Matthew 25:31-47, turned away by God on judgment day.
With the Republicans dominating the political debate and Democrats cravenly acquiescing to their outrageous demands, this nation is in retreat from any notion of caring for the least among us. Republicans that call themselves Christian have made being poor a sin. They believe Christians have no obligation to help sinners. Republicans of all types have abandoned Christ's command to love your neighbor. How can our government abandon Christ's command and our country remain a Christian nation?
We are not a Christian nation. We should not be. Our founders saw this nation as encompassing all who were citizens regardless of faith. That is why we have the Bill of Rights: to keep the majority from abusing the minority: to keep Christians from abusing non-Christians.
Those that scream the loudest that we are a Christian nation refuse to follow Christ's command to love your neighbor. Today, they would shred the social safety net by cutting Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. Those that profess to be today's only true Christians only love themselves.
Republicans tell us we are to concentrate on money not the well-being of our citizens. Most Republicans have looked around and said, "I have no neighbors except the wealthy." Even Democrats are falling for that line. Soon, our government will be of money, by money and for money. Christ said that "You cannot serve both God and Money." If Christians who are Republicans choose money over people, then they do not serve God. By conservative Christians own choosing, we will not be a Christian nation.
Christ said that there were two commands that summed up all of God's teachings. Love God and love your neighbor as yourself. When asked who is your neighbor, Jesus told the parable of the Good Samaritan. In it, a Samaritan (Jews despised Samaritans at the time) helps a man that has been mugged and robbed. The man is a total stranger. The Samaritan cares for the man, then pays for his future care. He tells those caring for the injured man that he will check to see they have carried out his wishes.
What can be clearer? Christians are to take care of the strangers in our midst who have been attacked by forces outside their control. Christians are not to just take care of them personally if they can, but to see that strangers are cared for. Christians are to check on the stranger's continued welfare. In a modern society of millions, how can Christians do this? Christians can enable a surrogate to act for them. The government becomes our Good Samaritan.
Republicans do not believe in the Good Samaritan. I have been repeatedly told that they have no obligation to help anyone outside their immediate family. That they have no obligation to help those who cannot help themselves. To the contrary, the Republicans consider those that cannot help themselves defective and a drag on society: they should be abandoned.
Those Republicans who call themselves Christians hold those same views. One such person in my own church told me that a member of our church who had taken in his grandchildren should not have done so. That church member should have saved the money he spent taking care of grandchildren so when his health failed he could take care of himself and not ask the church for help. ( He had asked for help. The church did not help. I no longer attend that church.)
Time and again, so-called Christians have written that they will not help people who do not work. These Christians assume that those not working don't because they are lazy. Interestingly, when Jesus talks about judgment, he does not say we should check on why a person was hungry, why they are sick, or why they are in prison. Jesus says feed them, take care of them and visit them if you want God to claim you as his own. Republicans have become the goats described in Matthew 25:31-47, turned away by God on judgment day.
With the Republicans dominating the political debate and Democrats cravenly acquiescing to their outrageous demands, this nation is in retreat from any notion of caring for the least among us. Republicans that call themselves Christian have made being poor a sin. They believe Christians have no obligation to help sinners. Republicans of all types have abandoned Christ's command to love your neighbor. How can our government abandon Christ's command and our country remain a Christian nation?
We are not a Christian nation. We should not be. Our founders saw this nation as encompassing all who were citizens regardless of faith. That is why we have the Bill of Rights: to keep the majority from abusing the minority: to keep Christians from abusing non-Christians.
Those that scream the loudest that we are a Christian nation refuse to follow Christ's command to love your neighbor. Today, they would shred the social safety net by cutting Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. Those that profess to be today's only true Christians only love themselves.
Republicans tell us we are to concentrate on money not the well-being of our citizens. Most Republicans have looked around and said, "I have no neighbors except the wealthy." Even Democrats are falling for that line. Soon, our government will be of money, by money and for money. Christ said that "You cannot serve both God and Money." If Christians who are Republicans choose money over people, then they do not serve God. By conservative Christians own choosing, we will not be a Christian nation.
Sunday, August 29, 2010
Barack Obama: Closeted Non-Believer?

The title of this entry comes from a Huffington Post blog by Ali R. Rizvi. To read it click on the title. I do not agree with the author. I believe President Obama is a man of faith and I do believe that matters. I take President Barack Obama at his word; he is a Christian.
His 2004 interview about his faith is being used by fundamentalists and evangelicals to discredit his beliefs. President Obama did not use code words such as "born-again" and "the Bible is the Word of God." His failure to use the code and familiar references means that fundamentalists and evangelicals do not believe he is one of them, a Christian.
The problem, of course, is that President Obama is neither a fundamentalist nor an evangelical Christian. Just as I am not one, even though I was baptized in a Southern Baptist Church and am an ordained deacon in a church affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention. Neither of us approaches faith from the believe it or leave it approach. Neither are we non-believers.
In President Obama's 2004 interview, I recognize an intellectual approach to Christianity that is scorned by fundamentalist Christians. I grew up in a traditional Southern Baptist Church and was baptized at the age of 11. I believe that I committed as much as I could at that time to Jesus Christ. At 13, I left, pushed out by the refusal of adults to answer questions and my mother's insanity. When Mom had her first psychotic break, the church blamed her and did not reach out to help. Former church friends disappeared. The minister did not visit. The church made her insanity my mother's fault. I would come to learn that Mom was schizophrenic, not exactly something she could prevent. I returned to the church at the age of 28. In those years between, I studied many faiths and through the writings of C.S. Lewis, Dorothy Sayers, and others found the intellectual basis for my faith and in the church the community of Christians I needed.
I found that Christianity is as much an intellectual challenge as one of faith. Fundamentalists make all the issues depend on the Bible. Yet, fundamentalists tell you that your personal relationship with Christ is all important. That personal relationship is key for me. Because I am over-educated, I approached my search for faith from an intellectual viewpoint. I wanted questions answered, not brushed off. I found that my questions were often answered with another question, but they were never brushed off. Great minds have struggled with the meaning of Christianity for two thousand years. That does not mean I believe that an intellectual approach is the only way to true faith. I believe there are many approaches to faith, all valid.
Baptist believe in the priesthood of the believer which means we can each have a direct relationship with God. We do not need a minister or priest to intercede with or to bring us to God. I fully embrace that philosophy. I may not have all the answers, just as President Obama does not supply pat answers about his faith, but I know that God is real. That his truest representation is in Jesus Christ. That I can have a personal relationship with God. I know the God I worship is Love in its purest sense. Love that does not care what you call her.
Sunday, February 28, 2010
Proposition 4 on the March 2, 2010 Ballot
The Texas Republican party has placed five propositions on their March 2, 2010, primary ballot. These propositions are non-binding. The propositions are not amendments to the Texas Constitution.
Ballot Proposition #4: Public Acknowledgement (sic)of God
The use of the word “God”, prayers, and the Ten Commandments should be allowed at public gatherings and public educational institutions, as well as be permitted on government buildings and property.
YES or NO
Here we go again, planning to change national law with a proposition in the Republican primary, except this time the Texas Republican Party wants to amend the Constitution. Remember the First Amendment? Freedom of religion? Two hundred years of Supreme Court decisions? The audacity of this Proposition is breath-taking. Texans should decide the freedom of religion issue for this whole nation.
Texas Republicans want to use the word "God" at public gatherings. I have listened to speeches in Congress and in the Texas legislature. There is no absence of references to a Supreme Being. Problems begin when we look at schools, government policy dictates, and other situations where the power of the state is used to demand adherence to one religious viewpoint. None of us want our children indoctrinated in another faith. Why do we want to do it to others?
What happens if Muslims are the majority in a school district and want to use the word "Allah'? Or Buddhists? Want your child to pray to Brahman? I doubt a Hindu wants their child to pray to God, either. This is not a well-thought out proposition.
Any private person, student, or employee of government can pray at any time or any place. Only when the prayer is made as an official act of government is it disallowed. In Matthew 6:6, Christ said it was better to pray in private. I think we should follow Christ's command.
Texans say let the majority have its way. We are a democracy. Wrong. We are a democratic republic with a constitution designed to protect minorities. The majority is not always correct. Look at the history of civil rights. I would not negate our freedom of religion in order to make a public spectacle of prayer.
VOTE NO ON PROPOSITION 4!
Ballot Proposition #4: Public Acknowledgement (sic)of God
The use of the word “God”, prayers, and the Ten Commandments should be allowed at public gatherings and public educational institutions, as well as be permitted on government buildings and property.
YES or NO
Here we go again, planning to change national law with a proposition in the Republican primary, except this time the Texas Republican Party wants to amend the Constitution. Remember the First Amendment? Freedom of religion? Two hundred years of Supreme Court decisions? The audacity of this Proposition is breath-taking. Texans should decide the freedom of religion issue for this whole nation.
Texas Republicans want to use the word "God" at public gatherings. I have listened to speeches in Congress and in the Texas legislature. There is no absence of references to a Supreme Being. Problems begin when we look at schools, government policy dictates, and other situations where the power of the state is used to demand adherence to one religious viewpoint. None of us want our children indoctrinated in another faith. Why do we want to do it to others?
What happens if Muslims are the majority in a school district and want to use the word "Allah'? Or Buddhists? Want your child to pray to Brahman? I doubt a Hindu wants their child to pray to God, either. This is not a well-thought out proposition.
Any private person, student, or employee of government can pray at any time or any place. Only when the prayer is made as an official act of government is it disallowed. In Matthew 6:6, Christ said it was better to pray in private. I think we should follow Christ's command.
Texans say let the majority have its way. We are a democracy. Wrong. We are a democratic republic with a constitution designed to protect minorities. The majority is not always correct. Look at the history of civil rights. I would not negate our freedom of religion in order to make a public spectacle of prayer.
VOTE NO ON PROPOSITION 4!
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Saturday, December 26, 2009
Christmas Eve at a Baptist Church

I took my aunt and cousin to the Christmas Eve service at their Baptist church. The service was lovely and included lighting of the candles of Advent. More and more Baptist churches are returning to some of the rituals that were tossed out in the radical reformation.
My family has observed Advent for years. I usually pick up a daily devotional for Advent at my local Catholic bookstore. Those daily readings help us focus on the meaning of Christmas amidst all the bustle.
The Christmas Eve service included a short sermon. The minister focused on the Second Coming. I believe that is a very cogent topic at Christmas. Many Christians never think about the Second Coming, even though many writers in the New Testament are consumed by the thought of Christ's return. Paul believed Christ would return at any moment and wanted all Christ's followers to be prepared. Only with the death of the apostles did that emphasis lessen, but it never went away.
The sermon was short but to the point until the end. There the minister stumbled into the end time theology currently in vogue. The pastor spoke of a man waking to find that the Rapture had begun and believers were being swept up into heaven ( at another time I will tell you why I do not believe in the Rapture). Christ looks at this man as he pleaded to go to heaven, too. The minister said sadly it was too late, Christ left without this sinner. I believe that is a horrible way to portray Christ.
Jesus is God in action. Through this manifestation of God we all enter his presence. He would not abandon any one that sought help. No one will ever be left behind who desires to be with God. Only those who knowingly reject God will be excluded. This means you know that God exists, know his will, but choose to go your own way. These people are not condemned to hell but to death; they cease to exist,
God, the Trinity, wants all of us to join him. He never gives up. Creator, Comforter and Son: "I am love in action."
Photo by rutlo (not the church attended)
Monday, September 28, 2009
Spider Crawls on Pope Benedict XVI's Face During Prague Address

Arachnids know no awe. To read the full story and see a video, click on the title above.
In Texas, we have taratulas, not really dangerous, and black widow spiders and brown recluse spiders; both are very poisonous. I can remember waking at night and watching the brown recluse spiders or fiddlebacks scuttle for their hiding places. There is nothing like finding one squashed on your pillow.
Even if not poisonous, spider bites can be painful. I have been nailed more than once by a non-venomous spider. The Pope was very lucky.
Luck is just a nickname for God.
Photo by aviplot
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Wednesday, September 23, 2009
The Call
TheCall
Shared via AddThis
The message speaks of Convergence and subtly attacks President Obama. The statement that he was silent on the National Day of Prayer is false. President Obama issued a national proclamation for the Day of Prayer. The Justice Department has defended the National Day of Prayer in a lawsuit brought by an atheist in Ohio. What President Obama did not do was hold a prayer breakfast and make the day a political spectacle like his predecessor, George Bush. Somehow, this makes him less a Christian.
The essay then goes on to emphasize President Obama's statements in reference to Islam. The message neglects to mention that President Bush made the same kind of statements. Both Presidents were attempting to distinguish radical Islam from moderate Islam and to acknowledge the presence of Muslims as citizens of the United States. President Obama statements were not made because he is a secret Muslim; what I take the implication to be. The other implication is that that Islam is somehow aligned with evil (dark powers). I believe I worship the same God as Muslims although they call him Allah. A Christian should never engage in such rhetoric which could incite some deluded souls to violence against Muslims.
Christians have our own history of violent excesses that I believe as a whole we have moved beyond. Now violence only exists on the fringes in such areas as the antiabortion movement. Lou Engle, who is the author of some of this, is part of the antiabortion movement. I believe that he sees threats of violence and evil in Islam because he has seen the same in the radicals of the antiabortion movement. He knows what extreme views and rhetoric can produce.
This message plays into the fears of Christians and calls attention to the Muslim Day of Prayer in Washington, D.C. Somehow this gathering is seen as a threat because the Muslims would pray that the White House become a Muslim house. I see no difference in that and the call to prayer at the end of this message asking that Christianity be supreme. People of faith want their religion to be victorious and all to see the light that they believe is their own.
I am no different. I am a Christian and believe that Christ is the truest revelation of God. But, I believe that God reveals himself in all religions and that there are many paths to the truth. When Jesus says that all come to God through Him, I believe that is true. Jesus is God in action, the God we can meet. However, that does not mean we have to believe as a Christian. Jesus simply imparts a truth: He is the part of God that ushers us into eternity whether we are Christian, Jew, Muslim, Buddhist, Hindu or other.
The section titled "Here is The Call" reveals the true nature of this message: the desire to convert all Muslims to Christianity and the belief that the spiritual powers behind Islam must be restrained by God. This call to prayer is a call for Christian supremacy. The implication that Muslims are not to be respected because their faith is guided by dark powers. There is only a short step to believing that Muslims are evil. To me, the underlying message is akin to antisemitism and just as bad.
We should pray. Christians have a model prayer that Christ gave us. There is nothing in that prayer that puts us above others. Instead, we ask deliverance from evil and forgiveness for our failings. I will pray on September 25th for God to forgive me for failing to love as God wants us to. I will pray for the well-being of my Muslim brethren.
This same discussion with some added features can be found in another blog post.
Shared via AddThis
The message speaks of Convergence and subtly attacks President Obama. The statement that he was silent on the National Day of Prayer is false. President Obama issued a national proclamation for the Day of Prayer. The Justice Department has defended the National Day of Prayer in a lawsuit brought by an atheist in Ohio. What President Obama did not do was hold a prayer breakfast and make the day a political spectacle like his predecessor, George Bush. Somehow, this makes him less a Christian.
The essay then goes on to emphasize President Obama's statements in reference to Islam. The message neglects to mention that President Bush made the same kind of statements. Both Presidents were attempting to distinguish radical Islam from moderate Islam and to acknowledge the presence of Muslims as citizens of the United States. President Obama statements were not made because he is a secret Muslim; what I take the implication to be. The other implication is that that Islam is somehow aligned with evil (dark powers). I believe I worship the same God as Muslims although they call him Allah. A Christian should never engage in such rhetoric which could incite some deluded souls to violence against Muslims.
Christians have our own history of violent excesses that I believe as a whole we have moved beyond. Now violence only exists on the fringes in such areas as the antiabortion movement. Lou Engle, who is the author of some of this, is part of the antiabortion movement. I believe that he sees threats of violence and evil in Islam because he has seen the same in the radicals of the antiabortion movement. He knows what extreme views and rhetoric can produce.
This message plays into the fears of Christians and calls attention to the Muslim Day of Prayer in Washington, D.C. Somehow this gathering is seen as a threat because the Muslims would pray that the White House become a Muslim house. I see no difference in that and the call to prayer at the end of this message asking that Christianity be supreme. People of faith want their religion to be victorious and all to see the light that they believe is their own.
I am no different. I am a Christian and believe that Christ is the truest revelation of God. But, I believe that God reveals himself in all religions and that there are many paths to the truth. When Jesus says that all come to God through Him, I believe that is true. Jesus is God in action, the God we can meet. However, that does not mean we have to believe as a Christian. Jesus simply imparts a truth: He is the part of God that ushers us into eternity whether we are Christian, Jew, Muslim, Buddhist, Hindu or other.
The section titled "Here is The Call" reveals the true nature of this message: the desire to convert all Muslims to Christianity and the belief that the spiritual powers behind Islam must be restrained by God. This call to prayer is a call for Christian supremacy. The implication that Muslims are not to be respected because their faith is guided by dark powers. There is only a short step to believing that Muslims are evil. To me, the underlying message is akin to antisemitism and just as bad.
We should pray. Christians have a model prayer that Christ gave us. There is nothing in that prayer that puts us above others. Instead, we ask deliverance from evil and forgiveness for our failings. I will pray on September 25th for God to forgive me for failing to love as God wants us to. I will pray for the well-being of my Muslim brethren.
This same discussion with some added features can be found in another blog post.
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
A Call for Concern

The email message below was sent to every member of my Sunday School class by another member. Such messages as this are reasons I am no longer attending regularly. The Islamic Day of Prayer (Muslims to Pray for 'Soul of America' at U.S. Capitol Event - washingtonpost.com Shared via AddThis)has become a target for right wing Christians and a way to attack the President.
The message first speaks of Convergence and subtly attacks President Obama. The statement that he was silent on the National Day of Prayer is false. President Obama issued a national proclamation for the Day of Prayer. The Justice Department has defended the National Day of Prayer in a lawsuit brought by an atheist in Ohio. What President Obama did not do was hold a prayer breakfast and make the day a political spectacle like his predecessor, George Bush. Somehow, this makes him less a Christian.
The email then goes on to emphasize President Obama's statements in reference to Islam. The message neglects to mention that President Bush made the same kind of statements. Both Presidents were attempting to distinguish radical Islam from moderate Islam and to acknowledge the presence of Muslims as citizens of the United States. President Obama statements were not made because he is a secret Muslim; what I take the implication to be. The other implication is that that Islam is somehow aligned with evil (dark powers). I believe I worship the same God as Muslims although they call him Allah. A Christian should never engage in such rhetoric which could incite some deluded souls to violence against Muslims.
Christians have our own history of violent excesses that I believe as a whole we have moved beyond. Now violence only exists on the fringes in such areas as the antiabortion movement. Lou Engle, who is the author of some of this email, is part of the antiabortion movement. I believe that he sees threats of violence and evil in Islam because he has seen the same in the radicals of the antiabortion movement. He knows what extreme views and rhetoric can produce.
This message plays into the fears of Christians and calls attention to the Muslim Day of Prayer in Washington, D.C. Somehow this gathering is seen as a threat because the Muslims would pray that the White House become a Muslim house. I see no difference in that and the call to prayer at the end of this message asking that Christianity be supreme. People of faith want their religion to be victorious and all to see the light that they believe is their own.
I am no different. I am a Christian and believe that Christ is the truest revelation of God. But, I believe that God reveals himself in all religions and that there are many paths to the truth. When Jesus says that all come to God through Him, I believe that is true. Jesus is God in action, the God we can meet. However, that does not mean we have to believe as a Christian. Jesus simply imparts a truth: He is the part of God that ushers us into eternity whether we are Christian, Jew, Muslim, Buddhist, Hindu or other.
The email uses the controversy over a 17 year old runaway to slam Islam again. The story of Rifqa Bary is not as stated in this message. She may well be a young woman incited to run away from home by Christian zealots who hate and fear Islam. Up to now, there is no evidence that her allegations are true or that she is in any danger. Yet, this email says she is a sign that Muslims in America will be converted to Christianity.
The section titled "Here is The Call" reveals the true nature of this email message: the desire to convert all Muslims to Christianity and the belief that the spiritual powers behind Islam must be restrained by God. This call to prayer is a call for Christian supremacy. The implication that Muslims are not to be respected because their faith is guided by dark powers. There is only a short step to believing that Muslims are evil. To me, the underlying message is akin to antisemitism and just as bad.
We should pray. Christians have a model prayer that Christ gave us. There is nothing in that prayer that puts us above others. Instead, we ask deliverance from evil and forgiveness for our failings. I will pray on September 25th for God to forgive me for failing to love as God does.
The last off this pernicious email is a calendar of events supplied by Lisa Crump with the National Day of Prayer, a private organization. Among other things, it betrays a pro-Israel bias. President Obama is referred to as Mr. O, surely an attempt to belittle him. Finally, the calendar states that the Chinese flag will fly over the White House. This is simply not true. The Chinese are planning to fly their flag nearby, but not at the White House. This is another attack aimed at President Obama.
God does not bend to our will. God has his own agenda. Our duty as Christians is to seek his will, not our own. My only fear is that gullible Christians will be swept up in this fear driven and hate filled movement against Muslims and President Obama. Even then, though, I trust God. He is not bound by time or our petty disputes. His will be done on earth as it is in heaven.
Photo by dbking
The message first speaks of Convergence and subtly attacks President Obama. The statement that he was silent on the National Day of Prayer is false. President Obama issued a national proclamation for the Day of Prayer. The Justice Department has defended the National Day of Prayer in a lawsuit brought by an atheist in Ohio. What President Obama did not do was hold a prayer breakfast and make the day a political spectacle like his predecessor, George Bush. Somehow, this makes him less a Christian.
The email then goes on to emphasize President Obama's statements in reference to Islam. The message neglects to mention that President Bush made the same kind of statements. Both Presidents were attempting to distinguish radical Islam from moderate Islam and to acknowledge the presence of Muslims as citizens of the United States. President Obama statements were not made because he is a secret Muslim; what I take the implication to be. The other implication is that that Islam is somehow aligned with evil (dark powers). I believe I worship the same God as Muslims although they call him Allah. A Christian should never engage in such rhetoric which could incite some deluded souls to violence against Muslims.
Christians have our own history of violent excesses that I believe as a whole we have moved beyond. Now violence only exists on the fringes in such areas as the antiabortion movement. Lou Engle, who is the author of some of this email, is part of the antiabortion movement. I believe that he sees threats of violence and evil in Islam because he has seen the same in the radicals of the antiabortion movement. He knows what extreme views and rhetoric can produce.
This message plays into the fears of Christians and calls attention to the Muslim Day of Prayer in Washington, D.C. Somehow this gathering is seen as a threat because the Muslims would pray that the White House become a Muslim house. I see no difference in that and the call to prayer at the end of this message asking that Christianity be supreme. People of faith want their religion to be victorious and all to see the light that they believe is their own.
I am no different. I am a Christian and believe that Christ is the truest revelation of God. But, I believe that God reveals himself in all religions and that there are many paths to the truth. When Jesus says that all come to God through Him, I believe that is true. Jesus is God in action, the God we can meet. However, that does not mean we have to believe as a Christian. Jesus simply imparts a truth: He is the part of God that ushers us into eternity whether we are Christian, Jew, Muslim, Buddhist, Hindu or other.
The email uses the controversy over a 17 year old runaway to slam Islam again. The story of Rifqa Bary is not as stated in this message. She may well be a young woman incited to run away from home by Christian zealots who hate and fear Islam. Up to now, there is no evidence that her allegations are true or that she is in any danger. Yet, this email says she is a sign that Muslims in America will be converted to Christianity.
The section titled "Here is The Call" reveals the true nature of this email message: the desire to convert all Muslims to Christianity and the belief that the spiritual powers behind Islam must be restrained by God. This call to prayer is a call for Christian supremacy. The implication that Muslims are not to be respected because their faith is guided by dark powers. There is only a short step to believing that Muslims are evil. To me, the underlying message is akin to antisemitism and just as bad.
We should pray. Christians have a model prayer that Christ gave us. There is nothing in that prayer that puts us above others. Instead, we ask deliverance from evil and forgiveness for our failings. I will pray on September 25th for God to forgive me for failing to love as God does.
The last off this pernicious email is a calendar of events supplied by Lisa Crump with the National Day of Prayer, a private organization. Among other things, it betrays a pro-Israel bias. President Obama is referred to as Mr. O, surely an attempt to belittle him. Finally, the calendar states that the Chinese flag will fly over the White House. This is simply not true. The Chinese are planning to fly their flag nearby, but not at the White House. This is another attack aimed at President Obama.
God does not bend to our will. God has his own agenda. Our duty as Christians is to seek his will, not our own. My only fear is that gullible Christians will be swept up in this fear driven and hate filled movement against Muslims and President Obama. Even then, though, I trust God. He is not bound by time or our petty disputes. His will be done on earth as it is in heaven.
Photo by dbking
Subject: A Call for Concern.Plan to join this urgently called National Prayer Conference Call on Thursday 9/24 regarding the subjects below7:30-9 pm EASTERN6:30-8 pm CENTRAL5:30 -7 pm MOUNTAIN4:30-6 pm PACIFIC712-432-0233 Pass Code 637# (NDP)Please forward as you are led and able. If you are called to fast with this urgent time of intercession, ask the Lord about these 3 days: Sept 24th, 25th and 26th.Urgent Call to Prayer: Signs of the Times
Convergence
It is critical that the church in America understands the times and what needs to be done now. The natural things speak of the invisible. Natural happenings on the earth are revealing something that is going on in the spiritual realm. There is a great spiritual conflict with a rising tide of Islamic boldness being manifested. Several happenings are converging this week. First of all, our President has recently proclaimed, honored, encouraged the Muslim holy days of prayer and fasting called Ramadan. He was very silent on the National Day of Prayer but very vocal on the support of Ramadan. Interestingly at the same time a major Christian leader of the Emergent Church called for forty days of fasting and prayer in the same Ramadan period with the goal that the church will better understand our Muslim friends. We are all for understanding but we must have spiritual discernment as to the spiritual dark powers that are being invoked into our nation.
Cause for Concern
At the same time, on the 25th of September, Muslims are calling for a Muslim Day of Prayer in Washington DC (http://www.islamoncapitolhill.com/). They are calling for 50,000 Muslims to gather and pray on the DC Mall. This is the exact word of one of the Sheikhs who is leading this historic gathering, “Muslims should march on the White House. We are going to the White House so that Islam will be victorious, Allah willing, and the White House will become into a Muslim house.” These are not empty words. They speak of a dark spiritual intent and a coming day of great trouble to America.
A Divine Moment
Now one of these events is enough to awaken us to this significant throbbing moment, but when they all converge it becomes a massive spiritual alarm that must be responded to by the praying Church. However, I believe in this moment of divine providence God has raised up on the stage of history a little “Esther” that if we pray and fast for her she could be a major voice to expose the dark under-belly of Islam and radiate a bright hope for a day of salvation for Muslims in America.
Headlines
On Monday, Rifqa Bary, a young 17-year-old woman, will be in the headlines of US news. Four years ago, while living in a very devout and radical Muslim home, Rifqa met Jesus in a powerful way as her savior. She hid her conversion, began praying secretly, and began hiding her bible from her parents. Then, on Facebook, her love for Jesus was exposed to the radical Muslim community in Ohio. Rifqa’s father demanded that she renounce Jesus or he would kill her as is commanded by the Koran. As a radiant believer in Jesus she refused to renounce her Lord and fled to Orlando where she was taken in and cared for by a Christian Church and family. Now, the father is appealing to the courts to bring her back under his custody. Major television networks have already covered her story. How must the Church of America respond in this moment for our sister who is a part of the Body of Christ?
A Major Sign
This convergence, I believe, is urgently summoning us in the midst of the rising tide of Islamic influence in America to recognize that our God is above every god and that if we return to Him with all of our hearts and call upon Him with fasting and prayer then God could use what the enemy meant for evil to bring about a great day of salvation for Muslims in America, of which Rifqa is but a major sign.
Here is The Call
First of all, we cannot be passive as a Church to let these kinds of developments go on without being challenged in the spirit. Our fight is not against Muslims, it is against principal intities, powers, and forces of darkness. We are calling the Church of America at the end of Ramadan, from September 21st through 25th, to five days of concerted prayer. On Monday, we must pray that God would grant supernatural wisdom to the courts so that the testimony of Jesus would be proclaimed and that the best situation for Rifqa and her family would take place. We must pray for Rifqa to be bold in proclaiming Jesus that even thousands of Muslims would hear and be awakened to the love of Christ. She has already said that this is not about her but about many Muslims coming to Jesus. We must pray for her lawyers who are being bullied, threatened, and challenged on every side. On Friday, September 25th, the Muslim Day of Prayer, we are calling the Church of America to fast and pray that Muslims would be moved by the Holy Spirit, convicted by the testimony of Christ, and even be visited by Jesus in dreams. We must pray that God would restrain the spiritual powers behind Islam and grant us the great awakening that we desperately need for America. (Just look at the Dome on the Rock in Jerusalem - once was "ours", now "theirs".)
Let us hear the call to prayer and not miss this moment,
Lou Engle
The CallCRITICAL EVENTS
- 9-1-09 - The US began its turn in holding the rotating presidency of the 15-member UN Security Council. The role of president involves setting the agenda, presiding at its meetings and overseeing any crisis.
- 9-14-09 - The new assembly of the United Nations opened with the new president of the General Assembly - the ambassador from Libya.
- At an unknown-to-me-at-this-time date - Obama will address the UN General Assembly followed by the Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi. He will also host a luncheon for visiting sub-Saharan African heads of state, another one for the dozen top UN peacekeeper-contributing nations, as well as host the traditional US evening reception for world leaders.
- 9-18-09 - The Jewish New Year begins (5770)
- 9-23-09 - See You At The Pole prayer rally on high school campuses.
- 9-22 or 23-09 - Obama has called a meeting of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in New York. This meeting will require Netanyahu, defense minister Ehud Barak and foreign minister Lieberman to be absent from Israel over the New Year Festival - an obvious snub of this major Jewish celebration. It is expected that yet more pressure will be placed on Israel to give up land in that tiny country for "peace" to people who have vowed not to accept peace until Israel is obliterated.
- 9-23-09 - Obama will meet with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.
- 9-24-09 - Obama is scheduled to chair a Security Council session on global nuclear disarmament, the first such event by the 15-nation body.
- 9-24/25-09 - The G-20, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank will meet in the Convention Center in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania. Mr. O will host this meeting. The primary purpose of this meeting will be to address the world monetary crisis.
- 9-25-09 - 50,000 Moslems will gather opposite the ellipse in front of the White House for prayer with the intent of praying to Allah for victory and that the White House become a Muslim House.
- 9-30-09 - The 30 days of Ramadan end.
- 10-1-09 - The Communist Chinese flag will be allowed to fly at the White House.
- On-going - Security agencies are on high alert for terrorist activities as the FBI plans and conducts more raids in New York City.
Sent to advance the Kingdom of God and His divine purposes in this hour.AGAPE! Lisa Crump, NDP Task Force, Director of Prayer Mobilization
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