Faith and relevance in the 21st century

Author: soulthoughts (Page 50 of 53)

Christian cliche – 'travelling mercies'

When we pray for someone who is about to go somewhere, how often do we pray for travelling mercies for them? Basically what we’re asking is for God to physically protect the person from harm and that they will safely get to where they are going. However I saw a great excerpt from a book recently, putting a new (and I believe more biblical) light on this cliche that so many of us Christians use.

‘Travelling mercies’ does not mean protection. God never promised to protect us from hurt or to keep us physically safe. The travelling mercies that we can hope for are the hope for a better future, the hope that one day there will be no more tears and no more pain. This is the hope that we have, not for physical protection, but for a better day when we don’t even need to think of praying for protection because death and hurt will have been defeated once and for all.

Many years ago I was about to go white-water rafting with a group of friends. One of the leaders of our group prayed before we set off, and he said that after so many trips, he no longer prays for protection. Instead he prays for wisdom. I used to wonder about that but now I’m more sure that this is a prayer that God is more likely to answer.

The insidious nature of a consumerist culture

This article in Eureka Street highlights once again the insidious nature of the consumer culture that we live in. It also highlights to me the addictive nature of what we fall for. We don’t control it; it controls us. Our lives are no longer our own (they’re never really our own anyway. Our lives belong to to God of the universe, but you know what I mean).

Daniel Donahoo and Tania Andrusiak make a brilliant point in this article as they observe the intrigue of their child –

“Our children are not our children. They, like all of us, live in a world saturated in brands, commercialism and all manner of hyped-up toys”

Mark Sayers has alot to say about this in his book, The Trouble with Paris. The good news is that the gospel is also good news to the rich. And that is us.

The devastation that pornography use brings

This article by Mal Fletcher is brilliant. After the Mike Guglielmucci scandal broke a few weeks ago, I remember thinking that, of all the feedback and commentary on this tragedy, I didn’t see anything that spoke about the absolute betrayal and devastation that porn addiction brings. Fletcher’s article highlights the issue with sensitivity and reality.

A major rethink is going on

This year has seen a major rethink in terms of the way I view my faith, the way I see Jesus, and, as a result, what I see the whole gospel as being all about. More and more I see that the Christianity I have been brought up with is, in many ways, a fairly long way from what I read in the Gospels. The more I read people like N.T. Wright and Rowland Croucher, among others, and the more I study the Scriptures and ask God to show me what he is on about, the more I see that what I was taught growing up is not what it’s really all about.

I don’t think Jesus had a whole lot to say about what happens after we die. I think what he is referring to mostly is what the kingdom of God is like. Jesus never defined the kingdom of God but he always said what it was like. It’s about Kingdom come – on earth as it is in heaven. As Tom Wright says, heaven is not our final destination. And as Rikk Watts says, heaven is coming here. The new heaven and the new earth is a coming together of heaven and earth where we will have physical, resurrected bodies. God is putting the world to rights. And that is our mission as believers. We are participants in the putting of the world to rights. That’s why we are to fight for justice, to care for the environment, and to protect the orphan and the widow. Salvation is the restoration of the image of God, indeed the restoration of creation. It is both personal and social, not one, not the other. And not where one is an optional add-on to the other. Jesus never separated the personal and the social. That is a western concept and a result of the Enlightenment.

I’m excited by the rethink that is going on in my head. May it makes its way further into my heart as I see to grow closer to God and ask for nothing more than his will to be done in my life.

The wisdom of the older generation

Someone was telling me yesterday how, in our culture, we don’t seem to seek out the older generation to mentor us. Rowland Croucher is one such elder statesman who has been a mentor to many a burnt out pastor over the years. Our society needs more people like him to turn to for their wisdom – the wisdom that only comes with the experience of life. It is a wisdom that comes too out of a maturity arising out of long days and nights spent in meditation, prayer and contemplation on the vagaries of this life. Here are a few examples of such wisdom:

“Enemies and close friends are the only two groups who will tell you the truth about yourself.”

“Walter Brueggeman said in answer to the question, ‘What’s the Old Testament about?: ‘It’s about a God of grace who often breaks the rules God has set for God’s creatures.'”

“Success will feed your ego but never your soul.”

When the rubber hits the road…oil wins again

If we ever doubted that the world is headed for environmental disaster, the news about using the melting Arctic for oil exploration seems to confirm it. At a time when the world is crying out for the urgent utilisation of renewable energies because of the CO2 that our use of oil puts into the atmosphere, we instead choose to make the problem even worse by drilling for even more oil. It is said that the definition of insanity is trying the same thing over and over and expecting a different result. The short-sightedness of this move is simply astonishing, not to mention frightening.

Faith and football

It was the great Liverpool manager of the 1960s and 70s, Bill Shankly, who, when asked in an interview about football being a matter of life and death, replied “I am very disappointed with that attitude. I can assure you it is much, much more important than that”.

If you live in Melbourne, you would have to have been asleep for the last couple of weeks to not be aware of finals fever. September is in the air. It is that time of year when the smell of the grass fills your nostrils, when spring has started and the weather is a little warmer, and Monday’s experts – to use a phrase from a popular song some years ago – are out in force. If your team is involved, you can feel the excitement as you make your way with the droves of other worshippers to pay homage at the temple, otherwise known as the MCG.

I describe it this way because this is indeed how it can be for me, a passionate Christian and a passionate footy follower. This time of year, especially when my team has been playing, is a struggle for me. It is a struggle against the idolatry that I can let into my heart when the fortunes of my beloved Hawks take the place of my relationship with God. It’s like I want to put God on hold during September and then I can live out my faith again. I have been aware of this over the last couple of weeks as I have felt the excitement in me again and as I have checked the papers each day for the latest news on Buddy Franklin or Luke Hodge’s injury concerns. Last Saturday morning, as I was having my normal morning quiet time, I was aware of this attitude in me and I had to pray that the focus of my day would be God and not the football. For by doing that, I would actually enjoy the football a lot more. And thankfully I did, and not just because my team won, but because it was a wonderful day all round, with good company, beautiful sunshine and great entertainment.

What is it that evokes such passion and emotion in sports fans at this time of year? Of course it’s not just in Melbourne, but the world over. Currently we have the Rugby World Cup in France, a sporting event incomparably bigger than the AFL Finals. Then there is the passion of soccer fans the world over who go week-in, week-out to watch their heroes, and whose very sense of well-being depends on how their team fares over those 90 minutes. In some South American countries it really is a religion. Thankfully in Australia we have not seen the sort of misguided, crazed passion that saw a Colombian player shot dead after the 1994 World Cup after letting in an own goal which saw his country knocked out of the tournament.

Why don’t I get as excited by following Jesus as I did in the first week of the finals when Buddy put through that last goal to win the match for the Hawks with 7 seconds to go? The feeling of ecstasy that shot my being when the siren went is something that I have relived a number of times during the last week. It is this that can be so addictive, that can so easily become what we live for. It was the anticipation of experiencing that again in the second week when my team fronted up again that was what I had been living off for those days in between. We live in an age where excitement is our goal in life. ‘Here we are now, entertain us’ is what Kurt Cobain sang before he tragically died of a drug overdose in the 1990s. But while there is nothing inherently wrong with enjoying the excitement of your team winning a close one in the dying seconds, the problem comes when this is what we live for, when it becomes our reason for being. The experience, though almost unmatched in its intensity by anything else, only lasts a few minutes and has to be fed to experience it again. And if we think of it like we do an addiction, it also has a diminishing return – you always need to feed it again to recapture the same buzz.

Much more beneficial for our emotional health is the quiet sense of God’s presence and the excitement that that can bring as we allow His Spirit to mould our wills slowly in line with His. The growing sense of quiet peace that wells up within us when we do this is something that does not need to be fed all the time. It is actually a by-product of our relationship with God. We don’t need to look for a feeling; our joy comes from looking for God and for what is right. You know when you are doing the right thing in a particular situation, that you have a peace about you that nothing can take away.

As I have been going with good friends to watch my team play in September, I have tried to take the advice of another friend of mine who encouraged me to see it as a time of fellowship with other males, about getting to them a little better, and to see the game as a side element of that. It really doesn’t matter whether my team wins or loses. My circumstances don’t have to dictate my sense of well-being. The joy of the Lord can be my strength. And it is then that I am able to enjoy the game more, win lose or draw.

As I go through this month and follow the fortunes of my team and their opponents, I invite the Holy Spirit to rule my life and to place all things in their proper place. I also paraphrase the words of Jesus – you cannot serve both God and football. One has to give. I choose to let the football give. And for the Hawks, there’s always next year!

Thoughts on life…The Bible and social justice

The Bible clearly shows that God has a preferential option for the poor. Care for the poor is part of the gospel. Jesus said it and demonstrated it. All people are made in the image of God and are therefore to be treated as such, with dignity, regardless of who they are. God loves and cares about the whole person, not just the soul and where it ends up.

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2024 Soul Thoughts

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑