Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Religious Rhetoric

This was a reaction to an article I wrote for class! Just thought it was interesting ...


Christianity claims absolute truth. This is offensive to people, but
this is how I look at it: If there really is absolute truth (aka Jesus
really is God and He really is the only way to Heaven) then it doesn’t
matter if it’s offensive, it’s true, and the people who have found it
should proclaim it.

Lessl does seem to have a problem with the “politics” surrounding
Christianity. So do I. What he maybe needs to see is the reasoning
behind it. The story of Christianity is that there is a perfect, loving
God who came to save his sinful creation that was deceived by Satan and
their own pride. There are probably a thousand questions that come to
everyone’s mind as you read that sentence; I’ve asked them all before.
So now it’s God’s sinful creation (although redeemed and forgiven) that
has become the church. Sinful is the key word. Messed up. Imperfect.
Therefore, the church reflects that. That doesn’t make OK when the
church does wrong, but that is why it is happening. People should look
at Jesus more and the church less, because we (the church) unfortunately do not
always reflect who He is and what He stands for.

I, like Philip, am upset at the fact people separate Christianity and
science. If Christians are right (or anyone who believes in a God), and
God created the universe, it should not contradict science. It would
not. It cannot..... I understand the Big Bang Theory and reject it. To
me, it’s just as crazy that “something came from nothing” as it is that
a supreme being God created the universe. There are a lot of scientists
who believe in intelligent design (note the Ben Stein documentary:
http://www.expelledthemovie.com). There are brilliant men and women who
believe in creation AND evolution, so now we must decide which we
believe. We should test both. They cannot both be right.

Again I want to point out something that Philip said - Republican does
not equal Christian. Jesus was not a Republican. Jesus was certainly
conservative in his teaching, but really for Him it was a heart issue. I
know just as many awful Republicans as I do Democrats. Jesus was not for
a political party; He made that pretty clear when he came to earth and
didn’t overthrow the Romans like everyone expected. In my opinion,
according to our Constitution, gay marriage should be allowed and the
Ten Commandments hold no more bearing than any other religion’s
commandments. I have my own thoughts on those two issues, but according
to the Constitution, that’s the way it is. The fact is Jesus doesn’t
care about us following the rules – He wants us to follow Him;
everything else falls into place after that.

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