Month: May 2013

  • I Like This New Pope

    I’m not Catholic. I also have nothing against the Catholic Church, with an exception of a few minor theological issues. However, I do find Pope Francis to be very endearing.

    I’ll keep my opinion out of this. After all, my opinions matter little. I do find this man to be fascinating though.
    Thoughts?

  • The Law, The Sermon on the Mount, and True Christianity

    I read someone’s blog where he critiqued the idea of “True Christians”. This person pointed out that Jesus stated that we are to follow the law of the old testament, and teach others to do the same. Conversely, he pointed out that Jesus also said not to follow the “eye for an eye” law. This person stated that Jesus, in just a matter of a few verses contradicted himself. He ended his conjecture with, Jesus wasn’t a ‘true Christian’.

    That, I have to give him. Jesus wasn’t a true Christian… Jesus was a devout Jew who started a revolution within Judaism that eventually became Christianity. Jesus didn’t intend to start a religion, but instead, came to reveal true religion. If we read what Jesus’ brother James says about true religion, we find that true religion is taking care of the widows and orphans, and if we continue reading, we see that true religion leads us to look after the poor as well, and showing mercy to others as we’ve been shown mercy. James continued to say that it is good to follow the “royal law”. The royal law is “Love your neighbor as yourself” and is known as the royal law because this is the heart of the Kingdom of God. It is clear that James was more interested in the heart of the Law of Moses than the ritualistic aspect of it, which is why the entire book of James is void of using words such as “circumcision”, “cleansing”, or hinting at dietary restrictions. James’ point for writing is to show that love and faith are at the very center of the new covenant, and to be loving and faithful, to be truly religious, requires us to not simply offer lip service, but to be doers and hearers of the Word.

    This shows that “true Christianity” does, in fact, exist, and with a proper understanding of scripture, we can see what “true Christianity” really is. Never mind the countless number of denominations and factions within Christianity. That’s a minor, but necessary inconvenience. We know what true Christianity is because it’s written in Scripture, clear as day.

    Of course, we don’t have go to James to see what true Christianity is. Jesus says it himself. The entire flow of the Sermon on the Mount, found in Matthew, chapters 5-7 shows true Christianity. But to understand the entirety of the Sermon on the Mount, you have to read it in context. First, we have the Beatitudes, which blesses the people we wouldn’t typically expect to bless. I believe that the sermon was designed in such a way to put us in our rightful place before God. When we read that the meek will be the ones to inherit the earth, the merciful will receive mercy, and the peacemakers will be called “Children of God”, it’s quite humbling. From there, Jesus continues by giving the analogies of salt and light, which shows that what we do matters because the world will look to the followers of Christ for flavor and a way, or in other words, for direction, and a path. What was his answer for a direction and a path? The Law! But what is the Law? Jesus did say that not one tittle of the Law will be abolished… but he also said that he came to fulfill it. What does this mean? What could it possibly mean to fulfill the law, but not abolish it? Christians don’t follow the law today, do they?

    Well… yeah… we do… Throughout the rest of the Sermon on the Mount, we read Jesus revealing the meaning hidden within the Law. He tore apart much of the Law saying, “You have heard that it was said… but I tell you…” Jesus, God incarnate, revealed the Kingdom of God within the Law, but what we see Jesus doing is setting up a new understanding, because many who followed the law had missed the point. They had missed the Kingdom of God. It wasn’t about the ritual, and it wasn’t about the punishment. The Law was originally set up to create a nation. That nation would give birth to a Messiah. That Messiah would set up a greater nation. That greater nation would set up the Kingdom of God. God will come to fulfill the Kingdom, and God will reign forever and ever.
    But you see, the entire Sermon on the Mount tears apart the misunderstandings of Judaism in that time. It humbled the prideful, and it showed the prideful to have hope in God and not in their own works. Because it is God who is the giver of all good things at the end of the day. It is God who causes the sun to shine and the rain to fall on both the righteous and the unrighteous. No man can boast, but they can boast in the Lord God.

    Finally, near the end of the Sermon, Christ said “In everything, do to others what you would have them do to you. For this is the Law and the Prophets.” This is the climax of the Sermon on the Mount. Later, in Chapter 22, Jesus even says again, in case there is any confusion, that the entirety of the Law and the Prophets hangs on these two commandments: Love your neighbor as yourself, and Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind. Jesus finished his sermon by summing up a few more points- First, “True Christians” will be known by their fruits. Second, there will be many people who claim to know the savior; many who claim to know his teachings, but in reality, they are prideful, hateful, hypocritical, spiteful people who never knew Jesus… who never understood his teachings… who misrepresented the the Kingdom of God and God’s righteousness. Lastly, in the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus told us to build our foundations on his teachings, because his teachings set up the Kingdom of God. True religion. True Christianity.

  • I’m Not As Bold As I Used To Be

    About 4 years ago, I was blogging in my prime. I was known for two ideas that made me and a few others stick out among other Christian bloggers.
    1. We were pacifists.
    2. We remained neutral to government.

    I still hold on to these values with a tight grip, but the other few people who held on to these convictions, though they were much more well-spoken and much more thoughtful than me, left Xanga for other blogging sites. Since those days, it seems I’ve lost my nerve. I don’t blog much about peace-keeping anymore, nor do I blog about the distinctions between the kingdom of the world and the Heavenly Kingdom. Maybe I just feel like no one has my back anymore. Or maybe I’ve just become content. Either way, I feel like I’ve grown and come to a place where I realize that not everyone has to think like me. That’s what makes our world worth living in after all; all the different opinions we can explore… all the options of thought available to us… Why in the world would I want another me?

    I would like to be bold again. I’d like to stick out again. I’d like to blog like the old me again. And maybe I will… But I’d like to be a less argumentative version of the old me. Maybe that’s what I’m afraid of– arguments… meaningless, pitiful, time consuming arguments… I can’t help myself but feed the trolls sometimes.

  • 10 Years Ago Today

    I know what I was doing around 8pm 10 years ago today. It was a Sunday. I was 16 years old. I was sitting with my dad, my brothers, and my sister, watching the movie Mr. Deeds. We got a knock at the door, and I answered it. My best friend and crush, a 15 year old @myareoplane was standing there, dressed in a McDonalds uniform and smelling like french fires. She asked if I could step outside for a minute and I said, “Yeah!” It was cold, windy and rainy, and there, on my front porch, like a scene out of a cheesy romantic comedy, she confessed that she liked me and that she felt “so stupid” for just realizing that she wanted to date me.
    Tesia: “What do you think?”
    Me: “Ok…”
    Tesia: “That’s it? Just ok?”
    Me: “I mean, of course! I’d really like that!”

    It’s been an adventure ever since, and I am happy to call my very first girlfriend my wife. 10 years since we started dating, we only understand each other better. I can’t wait to see what our story will look like in 10 more years! I love her very much.

    What were you up to 10 years ago?