So today marks 8 years that I’ve been doing this blog. That’s a pretty big milestone! I had two posts on November 14, 2006, and I thought it would be fun to repost them here (along with a little commentary).
Here’s the first:
Wish me luck… 🙂
So that was innocuous enough. Now here’s post number 2:
I think 1 Corinthians 1:18-25 best explains the way in which Christ’s gospel was/is a mystery. As vs 18 says:
18 For the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God.
We can see from this passage that God’s plan of salvation makes no sense to those who refuse to believe it, but to those of us who accept it, it’s brilliant! Verse 21 goes on to say:
21 For since, in the wisdom of God, the world through wisdom did not know God, it pleased God through the foolishness of the message preached to save those who believe.
See, because the world is so “wise,” it views the concept of God as foolishness. They have been blinded by their own pretensions. For the Jews and Greeks of the day, it wasn’t that they didn’t believe in the supernatural; it wasn’t that they didn’t believe in deities. Their problem was that they thought they already knew what God would do. The Jews already had a fixed idea of what the Messiah would be, so when Christ appeared and didn’t lead them to victory against the Romans, they refused to accept him. The Greeks didn’t accept Christ because they couldn’t conceive of a god allowing himself to be put to death by his own creation. And because they already had things “figured out,” they missed their chance.
Today, people do the same thing. They would rather put faith in scientific theories that have not been proven. They would rather believe that all of the order we see in our universe (the fragile food chain, vast differences throughout the animal and plant kingdoms, the very specific orbits of planets, etc) was created through a giant explosion (something that, in all practical applications, has only been shown to destroy, not create). Have they been blinded by their own “wisdom?”
Too often, even those who profess to be religious only listen to their own ideas about what God wants. Many times they view the Bible as a collection of stories or suggestions, and not the “wisdom of God that leads to salvation” that 1 Corinthians purports it to be. How is that different from what the Jews and Greeks were condemned for?
Throughout the Bible, passages talk about truth and understanding. I firmly believe that God gave us understanding and intellect for a reason. We are supposed to be able to understand God’s message for us. It’s not supposed to be “mysterious” any longer. It’s not supposed to be some “better felt than told” experience. No, God’s word is supposed to be powerful and undeniable. It’s supposed to move us and touch us in a way that nothing else can. But for it to do that, we have to read it, study it, know it.
It’s a little painful to read through that. I cringe when I read how badly I understood things about evolution and the Big Bang back then, or when I alluded to non-Christians as just being those who “refuse to believe it”. It’s kind of funny, but I was guilty of the same thing I was accusing others of. I thought I had the answers, but I had never taken time to really examine any other point of view.
The one decent thing from the post that serves as a bit of foreshadowing about where I would eventually wind up is the last paragraph. You can see that while I was firmly ensnared in Christianity, I believed that it was not supposed to be utterly mysterious. It was supposed to be consistent and “undeniable.” It took a while, but I finally realized that Christianity just didn’t deliver in that regard.
Anyway, I hope you’ve enjoyed this little jaunt down memory lane. Someone suggested to me recently that I should think about doing this kind of review with more of my old posts. I’ve been considering it… Thoughts?
“well, i miss kathy.</em" – Me too, but I'll take better aim next time —
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oh, hahahaha, I just laughed out loud like a hyena at that one.
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Raptured? No. I have a headache.
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Another one laughing like a hyena. . .. 🙂
Nate – how is it that you got all the comedians??? Or is that ‘Canadians’?
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Hey, look at that, the gang is all here (give or take). It’s a resurrection!
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ha, ha – yup, somebody rolled back the stone! 🙂
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Not me; I was raptured.
*fwoop*
(Oops..)
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“No. I have a headache.” – So…no rapture tonight —
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So…no rapture tonight –
LOL
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Btw, if you want to resurrect Kathy, start posting “liberal” studies. 😉
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Dontcha’ know? Kathy won’t be back cuz she was “caught up into the air.” (We can only hope.)
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R.I.P., ratamacue. The sudden landing must have hurt.
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Neeeeooooo. Not tonight.
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the rapture,
sooo anticlimactic.
anyway, Nan is right, Kathy was indeed “caught up in the air”, I have the picture to prove it.
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“the rapture,
sooo anticlimactic.”
Hey, you do rapture your way, I’ll do it mine. Oh, I forgot – you already do —
Anyway, there’s nothing anticlimatic about mine, maybe you’re not doing it right.
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BTW – LUV the pic!
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I must have missed being raptured. Isn’t that always the way? No worries. i catch it the next time around.
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Who needs helping verbs, anyway?
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Poke it with a fork – it’s dead!
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remember this I was working on?
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the Picassos got me motivated so I finished making the 6ft tall stencil and cutting the painting out of a piece of plywood, priming it white.
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and here I am standing to give you perspective of the size. soon I start airbrushing.
it’s gonna be “HOOOOOOTTTTTTTT”
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Very cool!
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Nate took the words right out of my mouth.
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Cool! Looks like you’ve had a very productive day!
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