20 August 2008
Triple Post: In Love with Ella, Jesus and the Religions, and Heavenly Embarrassment
It's been so long since I've blogged and Ella's sleeping peacefully, so I thought I would do two blogs posts in one. The first one's short. The third one's probably confusing. The second one, I'm sure, is just right. ;-)
In Love with Ella
For me, having a daughter is like falling in love for the first time again. I look at her and think "How can someone so beautiful want to be with me?" I look around at other girls and ask, "Is she really the most valuable girl in the world?" and I decide, "Yes, she is, but I don't deserve her." Ella certainly doesn't take Nicole's place in my life. I am still madly in love with Nicole, no less now than before, but even more. But, I find myself longing to come home from work or wherever to see her and look in her eyes and express my love for her.
Jesus, the Heart?
I heard a statement a few weeks ago that is still bothering me. I was in the gym working out and conversing with two new friends. One is a Muslim originally from Chicago, but his parents are from the Middle East. The other guy is a Christian and Latino from Dallas. There was a slightly awkward point in our conversation when they found out that I am preparing to be a Christian missionary, but we naturally began discussing various theological questions. We talked about common misconceptions about Muslims and stereotypes. Then, we talked about anti-evolution and creation and human inability to fathom what God has done. Through everything, we either agreed or at least learned something from going back and forth on what each of us believed. Then, I was stunned a bit. The Christian said, "Well, I believe Christ is at the heart, right? And other religions are different veins, but each one flows to the heart, right? So, everybody's okay, right?" Well, I couldn't say I agreed, so I just said, "That's interesting." The Muslim went on to say that he believed in Jesus and that he figured he was closer to being a Christian than, say, a Jew, or someone who did not believe in Jesus. I thought, "That's great that you believe in Jesus. But what does that mean?" But, it was the first question, by the Christian, that has been bothering me almost constantly. Yes, of course, I believe Christ is the heart of life. I believe other religions point to Christ as much as anything else in creation. But, that it means everybody's okay just doesn't seem congruent with the way Christ and his earliest followers acted. They seemed to believe that Christ should be Lord. He was the One, whether they understood what it meant for Jesus to be the Messiah or not. They surrendered to Christ as the ultimate authority above all rulers and powers visible or invisible. Any religious or political figure must give up all power to Christ. Perhaps a better image for Christ is the head. The brain sends signals to all religions and cultures and politics in order for them to submit and be healed. As individuals and groups perhaps we drop to our knees realizing the he is Lord, Master, Boss, CEO of the Universe. We give him permission to heal us. Like someone with a broken leg that heals, due not to the surgeon's scalpel or the pharmacist's drug, but due to proper relationship between the brain and the leg . . . people of various religions that submit to Christ will certainly receive help and salvation. Those who consider Christ as an equal or lesser option will go the way of destruction.
Going to Heaven
That being said, . . . "What does one have to do to go to Heaven?" is a question that bothers me to no end. Along with that is the equating of "salvation" with "heaven". It bothers me in two points that I'd like to mention here on my blog so I can look back on them and see what was bothering me. 1) I do not find this interest as one of the hotter topics in the Bible. No one came to Jesus saying, "Rabbi, am I going to heaven?" Paul never said, "Your works don't get you into Heaven." Jesus never said, "Blessed are the meek for they get to go to heaven." I could go on and on and on of examples where God's early servants could have used the phrase "going to heaven", but didn't. 2) People teach and act like the only thing that matters is going to heaven. If you ask a Christian, "What's the most important thing?" I imagine they would say, "Going to heaven." If I then said, "What in the Bible gives you this idea?" I can't imagine what they would say, but I would certainly be curious. 3) The Christian's understanding of heaven (and hell) doesn't seem any different at all to what pre-Christian Greek philosophers or what popular Americans believe. Or another way to put it, The Christian's understanding of Heaven (and hell) seems void of Scriptural images and narratives and words. Doesn't that startle anyone else?
My irritation is not arrogance. I am not proud. I simply feel alone. I am embarrassed to ask the questions, "Isn't Jesus the only way?" and "Where do you get 'Going to Heaven' information?" I've been reading the Christian Bible my whole life. I meditate on the words almost constantly. I'm not proud of that; it's just that Scripture tastes like honey to me. I'm not necessarily good at understanding Scripture, though. Perhaps I read things into it or miss "weightier" distinctions. There's also a possibility that my obsessive irritation with these questions grows out of my own avoidance of taking the claim of Scripture seriously for my own life. My weakness, perhaps, is that I don't look inwardly to see what needs to change in my life if I do indeed believe Scripture is authoritative and "heavenly".
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7 comments:
I'm with you on the Christian's view of Heaven thing. I can heartily recommend 2 books for you: "The Divine Conspiracy" by Dallas Willard [He does a great job of describing what salvation here and now is. (warning: his idea of 'heaven' is bizarre and not really scriptural, i think, but his sermon on the mount stuff is mind-blowing)]
And for other thoughts on life (or death) after life, I'm 1/2 way through "After Life" by F. Lagard Smith. Awesome book. Buy it now.
I hope those help you out. I've struggled with the same questions myself, and these books really helped me understand what the Bible is really talking about, and the fact that salvation starts NOW! :)
Jason,
I think your conversation in the gym and your questions about this culture's fascination with "going to heaven" point to a larger problem with Christianity in at least the North American context. Jesus is Savior but not necessarily Lord. To accept Jesus as Lord initiates us into a journey where our entire life - our values, our allegiances, our world-view, and so on is abandoned for the values, allegiance, and world-view of Jesus - is transformed to the image and likeness of the incarnate Word. And this certainly does not mean that everyone is ok - not just because of what they believe but because those who do not surrender to Jesus still live a life in rejection of and rebellion to God.
But the culture we live in seems too willing to ignore the idea of Lorship within scripture and the tradition of the Christian faith. I believe this lends itself to the preoccupation with simply going to heaven. We want a savior (not necessarily The Savior) to save us from death which gives us some measure of peace from the fear of death BUT we do not want a Lord, especially when his name is Jesus and he calls not just to an eternal life after death but to a new way of life in this life (a way that transcends death).
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I am glad you are enjoying Ella. You are a great father and Nicole is a great mother. Praise God for Ella!
Rex
Thanks for posting your comments, guys.
Steve, I was in a class based on the F. Lagard book and wasn't too impressed, but maybe I should take a closer look. It wasn't that it offended me or anything; it just didn't scratch my itch. I've been wanting to read the Divine Conspiracy for a long time. I read Renovation of the Heart by Willard a few years ago. It was excellent except for a few bones I spit out. :-)
Rex, I think you're speaking to what is really my issue. It seems like "Lordship" too often falls on deaf ears, mine included. You also touched on the fear of death. It seems to me that a lot of people see Heaven as an escape from life. It's as though God created an evil world that He can't redeem/save. All God could do was extend a ladder down--no, not a ladder, an elevator. We should have to break a sweat following Christ, right?
Anyway, my thoughts are still a bit murky on this subject, but I appreciate you guys stimulating some creative thoughts for me.
As far as eternal life and Christian hope goes, my recomendation is N.T. Wright "Surprise by Hope." The book deal so well with the subject of Christian hope (eschatology) and how our hope is not just for the future but is also something that transforms our present way of life.
Thanks, Rex. That book is most definitely on my Amazon wishlist.
I think it can be dangerous to be too concerned with what is required to get to heaven-- because when one starts to doubt whether they have done enough to get into heaven, the devil is able to squeeze in-between that person and their relationship with God...to nurture that doubt. We shouldn't follow God because it gets us the prize, instead we should follow and serve him because HE deserves it. Period.
On the other hand, isn't a missionary's mission to save souls? (As in...get them to heaven?)
Thanks for sharing your comments, Whatbox. ;-)
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