Saturday, January 25, 2020

A Christian Ending to Our Life

A Christian Ending to Our Life

In the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit! Glory to Jesus Christ! Glory forever!

the good SamaritanThis photo is from a recent blog by the above title, depicting The Good Samaritan showing mercy to the beaten-up traveller while a Priest and a Levite are walking away. The author, Fr. Stephen Freeman wrote -

"The practice of medicine was largely a private matter for many centuries, with some 'clinics' of a sort being associated with particular temples, such as those of Asclepius. However, hospitals had to await the coming of Christianity. A name associated with one of the first such foundations was St. Basil the Great of Caesarea. He gave away his family inheritance for the needs of the poor, building a poorhouse, a hospice and a hospital just outside Caesarea. It was dubbed the 'Basiliad.' St. Gregory the Theologian compared it to the 'wonders of the world.'

"St. Sampson the Hospitable was a doctor. He found favor with the Emperor Justinian and asked for help to build a hospital in Constantinople. It served that city for centuries. His title, the 'Hospitable,' as well as our continuing use of the word 'hospital' are worth considering. In Greek, his title is 'philoxenos,' a word meaning the love of strangers – or kindness to strangers. Our word, 'hospitality,' still has this connotation. Its origin is from the Latin, hospes, which also has the meaning of the care for the stranger or guest.

"In the days following Christmas, I took part in the funeral of a 14 year-old boy who had died from sepsis ('blood poisoning'). It’s the sort of thing that strikes deep grief in the heart of parents and the wider community. Sepsis is more common than people realize, killing more people than cancer. A frequent remark I heard surrounding this particular funeral was how 'unnatural' it was – 'untimely' would have been a better word. The power of our technology has erected something of a dike against the always present flood of mortality. We forget that we are all going to die. Acknowledging death was a key in hospice care, both for the patients and the medical team. I have long marveled at the fact that most people in modern culture have never been present for the death of another human being, nor for an actual birth."

Read the whole article! BTW, I came very close to sepsis from a serious infection last July, so I know what he's talking about. He tells how we've become insulated against the real world of birth, sickness, and death. Much of religion does the same, singing about "The Sweet Bye and Bye" and preaching about pie in the sky. But real Christianity teaches against such fairy-tale notions: the "Seven Woes" in Mat. 23:13-36 tells how Jesus excoriated the Pharisees for their phony religiosity.

In another of his blogs, Fr. Stephen writes about "the great heresy of secularism." He says - "Secularism is not the rejection of God, but the assertion that the world exists apart from God and that our task is to do the best we can in this world. Fr. Alexander [Schmemann] suggests that the Church in the modern world has largely surrendered to secularism. 'The Church's surrender,' he says, 'consists not in giving up creeds, traditions, symbols and customs... but in accepting the very function of religion in terms of promoting the secular value of help, be it help in character building, peace of mind, or assurance of eternal salvation.'"

The "help" of a secularized religion is man-centered: "self-actualization," "realizing your human potential," and sometimes mixed with a dose of eastern mysticism or even occultism. It can also be using the church to lend a veneer of moralism over the self-serving goals of secular but pseudo-religious politicians, both in the West and in the East that allow the Gospel to be hijacked by Marxist "Liberation Theology." Sadly, many people fall for this ruse.

But the real, ultimate goal and purpose of our Christian faith is not to improve our lives on this earth or provide a fire escape from hell's flames; rather, it is to "be transformed by the renewing of your minds" into the likeness of Christ (Romans 12:2), to "put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh, to fulfill its lusts" (Romans 13:14) to become "partakers of the divine nature" (2 Peter 1:4). It's not fixing and patching up the old life, it's receiving an entirely new nature.

What exactly is secularism? In the article "Learning from Integralism" we read that the U.S. founding documents - The Declaration of Independence, The Constitution, and The Bill of Rights - are based on the principle that all people are "endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights" of which the right to life is first, and that "Congress shall make no laws regarding an establishment of religion, nor prohibiting the free exercise thereof." Note the use of "an establishment" which refers to any one of the various established religions - Presbyterian, Congregational, Methodist, Baptist, or Roman Catholic - that existed in the original 13 states: it does not state "the establishment of religion" meaning that the government must not make any laws that would establish a state church. Indeed, as this article states, "The constitutional settlement that endured for almost two centuries until it was abandoned by elites (including the Supreme Court) and uprooted in the 1960s was basically this: public authority could and should promote religion and partner with religious institutions for projects that are conducive to the common good, without coercion and without partiality toward any particular faith or sect."


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But what happened in the 1960s? First of all, God was put in a box and stuck up in the attic, in the "second story" of a universe where the first story was purely materialistic and secular. "Freedom of religion" was reinterpreted from freedom of expressing one's religious faith in public to mean "freedom to worship" once a week in a separate "box" called a church building, and leave it there - don't let it leak out into the public square, into your daily life and work. Secondly, now that religion was stowed away, the Sixties' Sexual Revolution let loose all those pent-up inhibitions, paving the way for The Pill and the U.S. Supreme Court's infamous Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion, the killing of innocent babies who were the result of uninhibited sexual behavior. Secularism became not the freedom to express and live out one's religious faith, but rather the license to scorn, throw out, and ultimately ban any religious expression of morality.

Why did things go wrong? As the last-mentioned article above states, the U.S. founding documents' "affirmations did not include sectarian tenets, theological speculation, or putatively revealed truth. They did include divine realities affirmed in the Declaration of Independence — a unitary God who created all there is, who providentially guided human events, and whose effects included naturally known moral truths — truths that could be known and were known by reason alone. These truths are elements of a 'natural theology' or 'natural religion,' really a branch of philosophy." But by defining religion too loosely, setting the boundaries too wide, by excluding revealed truth and including only what can be known from nature by reason alone, it started the process of secularization and the state's affirming only a rationalist, materialist worldview.

By now, Christians who believe in revealed truth and objective morality of right and wrong are in the minority. We need to gather together and regroup around a set of revealed truths that Protestants, Catholics, and Orthodox can and do all agree on: the Nicene Creed. It is the only Christian creed accepted by all three streams of Christianity. We must publicly affirm and confess this Nicene Creed as the set of truths to live by, putting aside any public disputes about secondary or "sectarian tenets."

Secondly, we must form Christian communities where we can encourage one another and raise our families in an atmosphere that is not constantly being bombarded with godless materialism, secularism, and even the demonic in movies, television, and social media. We need to clean up our collective acts, take out the garbage and filth, and let the Lord sanctify our lives!

"Ascribe to the Lord, you tribes of the nations, Ascribe to the Lord glory and strength; Ascribe to the Lord the glory due to His name: Bring an offering, and come before Him: Worship the Lord in holy array. Tremble before Him, all the earth: The world also is established that it cannot be moved. Let the heavens be glad, and let the earth rejoice; Let them say among the nations, the Lord reigns" (1 Chronicles 16:28-31).

In the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit! Christ is among us! He is and ever shall be!

 


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Saturday, January 11, 2020

Every Man Did That Which Was Right In His Own Eyes

Every Man Did That Which Was Right In His Own Eyes

In the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit! Glory to Jesus Christ! Glory forever!

Situation EthicsThis phrase, "Every Man Did That Which Was Right In His Own Eyes," appears five times in the Old Testament's Book of Judges: starting in 1:6; then 17:6; 18:1; 19:1; and ending in the last chapter - 21:25. Usually, it is prefaced by - "In those days there was no king in Israel" meaning there were no strong leaders who also carried moral authority because they lived according to the Law of Moses. When leaders are either wishy-washy weaklings or openly immoral, the people quickly learn that they can do whatever they think they can get away with. Story after story in the Book of Judges tell how the Israelites, who had received God's revelation of the Law through Moses, chose instead the path of "Situation Ethics" and moral relativism.

Just a few years before the era of Judges, as Joshua was reaching the end of his life, he challenged the Israelites - "If it seem evil to you to serve the Lord, choose you this day whom you will serve; whether the gods which your fathers served that were beyond the River, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land you dwell: but as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord" (Joshua 24:15). The people replied - "we also will serve the Lord; for he is our God" (v. 18b). But it didn't take long after Joshua died for them to turn away from serving the true and living God, the Lord, and begin serving idols.

The birth of Jesus Christ ushered in a new era for mankind: the Incarnation signaled God's in-person revelation to us humans, setting us free from the bondage to sin. Later, however, with the Age of Reason, the notion arose that human reason can understand everything that exists, the earth, sun, moon, and stars, and this led to the notion that if an idea couldn't be grasped rationally or by our five senses, it wasn't real - it didn't exist: materialism. This period of time was accompanied by the notion of religious and political toleration: we should "live and let live," accepting other people whose beliefs differ from ours if they will also tolerate our beliefs.

But if beliefs can't be broken down into rational, logical steps, then rationalism and materialism would conclude that they aren't real, they're just imaginary. So toleration easily morphs into relativism: it doesn't really matter what you believe or even if you believe, it's merely a matter of personal preference and choice. If this is correct, then there are no moral absolutes, no right or wrong, no good or evil, simply what works for you - "whatever turns you on."


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In the last 75 to 100 years, the U.S. has changed from a nation where nearly everyone believed in Christianity and attended church regularly to being a place where the majority has no morals and no absolutes: "Every Man Does That Which Is Right In His Own Eyes." In the 1950s, when "In God We Trust" was stamped on our coins, President Eisenhower infamously said something to the effect - "Everyone should believe in the God of his choice, and it doesn't matter which one." But if truth and error, right and wrong really exist, then it does matter very much which God we choose to serve.

The past century has also witnessed the struggle between Western Judeo-Christian beliefs and atheistic socialism/communism. Thirty years ago when the Iron Curtain came down and the Soviet Union collapsed, it seemed that the West had won. But had Judeo-Christian beliefs really won? Or had harsh socialism merely morphed into a honey-coated secularism?

While the state provides you with food, housing, education, transportation, medical care, etc., you're lulled into thinking - "This is all fine with me, so why fight the system? Why not just go along to get along?" There's a saying - "You can catch more flies with honey than with vinegar." But we're not flies, are we... or are we still rational creatures with free will that can resist the enticements of "free stuff" in order to hold fast to our beliefs in God, in truth and righteous, holy living.

As we're beginning to see, those who modern society deems deplorable or too troublesome or undeserving to take up space in nursing homes or too expensive to keep alive, the elite can pass laws that let them make a decision to eliminate by means of euthanasia: simply administer an injection or give them a pill, and it's over and done with.

As Christians, we must stand firm in the faith, be watchful and vigilant. Jesus said - "The thief only comes to steal, kill, and destroy. I came that they may have life, and may have it abundantly" (John 10:10). A robber steals by assaulting you with brute force, but a thief uses stealthy means to steal from you without your being aware of it. The devil is such a thief: he often uses honey instead of vinegar to entrap us with excesses in food, sex, drugs, love of money, leisure, etc. Then we're trapped, we're hooked in compulsive-addictive behaviors. We've lost our faith and our freedom to resist.

St. Peter wrote - "Be sober and self-controlled. Be watchful. Your adversary, the devil, walks around like a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour" (1 Peter 5:8). Satan's power over mankind was broken by the Incarnation and the Resurrection, but we're still fighting little skirmishes, wiping-up operations with his demons. Stay strong and keep fighting!

In the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit! Christ is among us! He is and ever shall be!

 


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