Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Revelation or Regulation

Why would anyone go visit a church?  What would bring someone to a place like that?

The youth are perhaps more likely to get it and be changed.
I sometimes think maybe people visit churches because they want to get things right.  They want to learn how to have a good heart, find a connection with God and walk with Him and his family instead of on their own, alone.

The church can help with that.  Encounters with God in worship and in real truth are stunning, heart and mind changing.  The church can hinder that, too, if it begins with rules and conformance and requirements.  That's just religion.

Revelatory or Regulatory?  What kind of help do folks need?

The job of the church is perhaps most importantly to encourage and facilitate a relationship with God our Father.  Unveiling the truths and goodness of God and introducing folks to Him, that's the good the church can do.

Muslim and Christian with their
respective symbols, united.
Christian protesters shield praying Muslims in Nigeria.
Muslims similarly stand guard around Christian Churches.


When a religious institution goes beyond facilitating that relationship and begins focusing primarily on rules, it is no longer a church, really, it's more like a private club.  And it's an exclusive 'us and them' sort of arrangement.  "All of us are going to heaven, but you guys are on the outside because you don't believe the right way or you don't worship the right way.  Or you sprinkled instead of dunking."

(Just last week, a sweet lady told us, she had visited a church in her new city.  During prayer with her eyes closed, she had lifted her hands ... and the ushers escorted her out.  She wept.)


Folks come needing revelation not regulation.  They come with wondering hearts, hungry to know Him truly.  They don't need to be told what to believe or how to behave.  They need to find and know the truth for themselves, to discover what they can believe genuinely and follow truly, not just parroting someone's formula.

Kampala, Uganda - The young people understand ...
The 'real thing' is much bigger than Sunday morning church attendance, by the way.  Perhaps culturally a bit volatile as well.

_________________________________________

Sometimes faith turns into religion. Devotion becomes obligation, and suddenly you feel like you’re just going through the motions. Know what I mean?

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Desensitization

He was a fighter pilot, a champion fencer, an
accomplished violinist... and a fanatical Nazi.
Reinhard Haydrich planned and conducted
mass executions in WWII.  
Historians regard him as the darkest figure
within the Nazi elite. Hitler described him as
"the man with the iron heart". He was the
founding head of the Sicherheitsdienst (SD),
an intelligence organisation charged with
seeking out and neutralizing resistance to
the Nazi Party via arrests, deportations, and

killings. He helped organize Kristallnacht,
a series of coordinated attacks against Jews
throughout Nazi Germany and parts of 
Austria on 9–10 November 1938.
The attacks, carried out by SA stormtroopers
and civilians, presaged the Holocaust. Upon
his arrival in Prague, Heydrich sought to
eliminate opposition to the Nazi occupation
by suppressing Czech culture and deporting
and executing members of the Czech 
resistance.  He was directly responsible for
the Einsatzgruppen, the special task forces
that traveled in the wake of the German
armies to round up and kill Jews and others
deemed undesirable by the regime.
Haydrich was assassinated by the Czech
resistance in 1942.
(NC-17 Subject and Content)
The voice of the people has an impact, and public resistance can interfere with national plans.  How leadership responds, though, can be problematic.

Portrayed as a mercy death for the suffering, the German euthanasia program killed 70,000 beginning in 1939. Targeting the disabled and incurable, children and adults were killed.  Hitler's attempt to purify the race raised troublesome public resistance; the Catholic church openly opposed the policy.  The program supposedly ended in 1941, but another 200,000 victims followed. (ref) (ref)
It was presented to the public as a merciful deliverance from suffering.  Little if any of the killing, however, was done to alleviate pain or suffering on the part of the victims. The bulk of the evidence, including faked death certificates, deception of the victims and of the victims families, and widespread use of cremation, indicates the killing was done solely according to the socio-political aims and beliefs of the perpetrators. [ref]
The Nazis portrayed Germany as a targeted victim of foreign aggressors, as a peace-loving nation forced to take up arms to protect its populace, to defend Europe against Communism. The war aims professed at each stage almost always disguised the actual Nazi intentions of expansion and racial warfare. This was propaganda of deception, designed to desensitize or misdirect the German civilians and the international community.

Illustration from a children's book.  The
headlines say "Jews are our misfortune"
and "How the Jew cheats." Germany, 1936.
Hitler's Aryan purification plans continued.  With deliberate portrayal of Jews in the media as 'racially inferior', simple animals with behavior akin to 'rats' in a marketplace. Public opinion in Hitler's Germany eventually bent toward favoring separation of some sort.  Hitler, having learned his lesson from the outcry caused by his euthanasia project, worked through the media and kept the truth hidden from the public.  

The later campaign to rid Germany of Jews was disguised as a re-settlement program with nice passenger trains for the folks departing.  It seemed good to the victims, moving away from the discriminatory environment where they'd lost their common rights as citizens.  The slaughter happened outside the country and behind the scenes. 

Jewish women and children before being shot
by the SD. A beach near Liepaja in Latvia, 
15 December 1941.
Initially, only a few knew what was happening. Thousands, thirty-three thousand in just two days at Kiev's Babi Yar, then millions died.  Children were executed by gun, lethal injection, and gassing along with adults.
Auschwitz, August 1944: a network of German concentration
and extermination camps built during World War II in Poland.
 It consisted of Auschwitz I, II–Birkenau, III–Monowitz, and 
45 satellite camps.  (RAF Aerial Reconnaissance)

As the war turned against Germany and the Russian army advanced through eastern Europe and towards the death camps, the evidence had to be destroyed before the public became aware of what had happened. The Nazis tried to erase all traces of the camps and planted trees, for instance, when they had destroyed the extermination facilities.
A government of the people, by and for the people must conform to standards of legal and ethical conduct as well as requirements for transparency and accountability. When leadership becomes secretive and propagandic, manipulating legal definitions of this or that, we get slaves or rats or disenfranchised inferiors that we can treat differently, and there's a cost behind the scenes.
  
That's why our children are referred to as fetuses before they're born.
So we can treat them differently.



It's a matter of socio-political preference and ideology, not mercy.  Had you noticed?



Saturday, April 21, 2012

If you had a heart problem, would you know?

... would we know? 
When we look, it's visible there in us and in our actions.  Disappointing.

Selfishness pervades our lives, almost as though it were embedded in our DNA.   (Mine, mine!)  An honest introspection discovers that a measure of it remains even after many years of intending otherwise.  

We all hope for such a heart that we ourselves might become part of a greater good, don't we?

Maybe it's within our reach; a gift for the taking.

                    Nobility and grace, courage and determination, selflessness and genuine love ... 

Science has no explanation for these, but we all know how they inspire us and change things for the better.  Perhaps only God understands.  We should ask.

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Losing religion



In our twenties, we heard someone talking about fundamentalism and thought it sounded helpful with plenty of rules and explanations. We decided that's what we'd be.  It didn't last, but it was helpful to see why.  

The presumption of knowing God so well that we could say who would or wouldn't be loved and brought in ..., well, it smelled pretty bad after awhile.  Being able to judge others wasn't helpful.  Being among the very few who would be saved while all the rest of these billions were condemned to hell, that was cancerous, almost.  None of that anger and condemnation is supportable from the bible, at least the way I read it.


Church?  Or fantasy land?  What is it?


So, what might we embrace in good conscience about God, his son, and his invitation? Ah, that's the question.

What to do with 'church' is part of the problem, but it isn't first. First is what you can in good conscience believe; not wish, not hope, not anything but actually believe. Anything else is a bit dishonest, at least I think so.

A big question that follows quickly is 'what is it all for?' What do I do with the belief I have.


So now we're frighteningly intrigued; tiptoeing gingerly around the corner where you can just see the very edge of the light that shines around the good God ... stunned, we wonder what's next?

Go to church? Sit in a pew for a few years? Go just on Sunday mornings, or on Wednesday nights too? Wait a minute; I'm not sure any of that is relevant yet. Is it?

Wait, wait, wait, wait! I just skirted the edge of something so huge, I wept and didn't know why. I think I want to go stay there for awhile; I think there's a part of me that lives there, or should. 





(OK, now you can go to a church, but not to sit. Go to find others who've been to the place you saw and can lead you back there and show you around.)

Membership, attendance, being part of a culture with a particular bent, none will satisfy that desire to enter the room and know for yourself. Such knowing and belief are honest, and surprisingly strong for being so.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

How important is aid to Africa?

In rich countries, when economic growth declines by three or four percentage points, some people lose their jobs and possibly their houses, but they recover when the economy rebounds.

In poor African countries, children get pulled out of school—and don't return.  They miss out on becoming productive adults. In some cases, children die before they even have a chance to go to school. If the current growth collapse is typical of the ones Africa has experienced in the past, an additional 700,000  African children may die before their first birthday.

In short, the effects of fluctuations in the global marketplace on Africa will be permanent. 

So the idea that aid may be threatened because of the recession in rich countries seems to have the logic backwards. Precisely because the effects in rich countries are temporary, resources should go to places where they may be permanent. Of course, there are political pressures to spend domestically. But do politicians in rich countries really think that a few more votes are worth more than the lives of the infants who will die as a result of the recession?

Furthermore, the relatively modest sum spent on aid to Africa in the past decade was at least partly responsible for the continent’s rapid growth.  From 1998-2008, aid to Africa was increasing and economic growth was accelerating (to over 6 percent in 2007); poverty was declining and human development, especially primary school completion rates and the spread of HIV/AIDS, was improving. African countries had strengthened their macroeconomic policies—inflation had dropped to half its level in the mid-1990s—so that aid was more productive.  Private capital was flowing in at a faster rate than in any other continent. All of these developments have come to a grinding halt because of the global economic crisis—a crisis that was not remotely the fault of Africans. By increasing aid to Africa, the international community has a chance to reverse this trend and prevent a temporary shock from having permanent consequences.

Why aid to Africa must increase