theoldwolf: (Default)
theoldwolf ([personal profile] theoldwolf) wrote2009-03-21 03:42 pm
Entry tags:

Can you think of anything stupider to fight about?


Thanks to [livejournal.com profile] dhlawrence for the idea.


My recent experience interacting with a biblical apologist left me somewhat unsettled, and I haven't been able to think about much else for a couple of days. The thing that unsettled me the most was that despite my best intentions, I felt myself being dragged into the fray.

Additional research on the internet has led me to a plethora of websites of every possible permutation.

Atheists vs. Apologists
Evangelicals vs. non-orthodox Christians
Muslims vs. Jews
Muslims vs. Christians
Jews vs. Gentiles
Secular humanists vs. Believers
Mormons vs. Atheists
Evangelicals vs. Mormons
Bible-believing Christians vs. Jehovah's Witnesses
Scientologists vs. Everybody
7th-Day-Adventists vs. ...

You get the picture. Choose one from column A, and one from Column B, and you'll be able to find it out there.

Incredible amounts of time, effort, indignation, anger and outright hatred are being spent in attempts to prove, by logic, or reason, or scripture, or exegesis, or tradition, that which is virtually unprovable - hence the cartoon above, which I created more for my own benefit than anyone else's. And it all comes down to the most basic of human addictions, the addiction to being right.

Of course, none of this is new. It's only that the internet era gives us fingertip access to the full spectrum of human maladjustment and brings it into clearer focus. People have been killing each other for their differences, religious and otherwise, since the dawn of time - and since the same epoch, there have been those who have risen up against the madness.

I remember back in the late 60's and early 70's when Vietnam was in full swing, a popular bumper sticker read, "What if they gave a war and nobody came?", and that led me to an odd thought. My own faith holds out that before Christ comes again, the earth has to be made ready for his coming. Part of this involves preaching the Gospel to every nation, kindred, tongue and people, which is why almost everywhere you go, you see our young missionaries out spreading the word.

That's well and good, but what's the ultimate point of that Gospel? Imagine with me that the earth was divided into only two nations.

The first consisted of three billion people. 99% of those belonged to the "correct" religion, whatever that happened to look like. Other than that, things were pretty much the same way they are now.

The second also consisted of three billion people, of all different persuasions, religious and secular - and it was not uncommon to find a mosque and a synagogue built next to each other, right across the street from a Hindu temple and an Anglican chapel.
While not everyone was rich, there were no poor, because everyone believed in a society where everyone wins.
People didn't covet one another's goods.
People didn't lie, or steal, or rob, or murder, or slander or persecute one another.
People lived simply, so that everyone could simply live.
People respected their environment, and did all they could to be good stewards of the only planet they had to live on.
People were kind, and loving, and charitable.
Lawyers and judges were out of work, because nobody wanted to sue anyone else.

If you were God, which nation would you want to walk with? "Wait, wait, God loves everyone, he's not a respecter of persons!" Well, you're right but you get my point, which is:

"In the end analysis, God cares less about which Church you belong to, or don't, than how you're treating your fellow man."

This, then, is the Ecumenism that I support. It has nothing to do with the various faiths trying to become like one another. It has nothing to do with everyone joining the "First Church of Blah Unsalted Farina". It has to do with each one of us, regardless of our walk in life, reaching out to every member of humanity and doing our best to create an entire planet where everyone wins, and helping every other member of our species to make it across the finish line.

Utopia won't come cheap. Given human nature, there will always be poor folk, there will always be those who don't obey the rules, there will always be illness, natural disasters and everything else that makes our world a challenge to live in. But what if we were to make it halfway to that glorious goal? Wouldn't that be better than doing nothing at all?

The more time goes on, the more I become committed to bringing people to Christ (which is my particular walk) by raising the human condition, rather than worrying about what they wear, which scriptures they read or which direction they face to pray - or if they even pray at all. I may be the only book of holy writ that some people ever read.

Just saying that could get me heaved out of my own faith by certain people.

I'll take my chances.

[identity profile] ccdesan.livejournal.com 2009-03-22 10:36 pm (UTC)(link)
Haha! I love TPBF... the dude is totally insane. Or of course, Gulliver's "big-endians" and "little-endians" Image

Obviously many people are aware of the folly... the problem is, most of them are the secular humanists who roll their eyes with pity at the poor deluded believers. If we could only get the churches to understand that "angels fly because they take themselves lightly", we'd be making some good progress!