A good friend of mine recently said to me, 'see your blindness'.
Paradoxical words because how can the blind see? It's like a Zen koan, an insoluble puzzle that forces discursive reason to be silent and stop its incessant chatter. Only the Holy Spirit of Truth can cause us to 'see our blindness' and then heal us.
The third chapter of Jonah revealed a blindness to me: when the people of Nineveh heard that judgement was coming upon their city, they began to amend their lives! They were sorry, yes, but it was a sorrow, borne out of a change in attitude, in heart, which issued in action.
The Reformers, Luther and Calvin, believed that the Christian life began in repentance and was to continue in repentance, a continual renewing of the mind or understanding; not merely an intellectual approval of interesting proposals but a divinely, initiated spiritual work involving the deep heart.
'Be not conformed to this world': I was educated early in Pentecostalism and Brethrenism - a strange mixture - but both emphasised the dangers of conformity to the world. Of course, my early education was about girls not wearing lipstick, young people going to dances and the cinema, drinking alcohol, coarse language and playing cards.
A Pentecostal preacher once shattered my easy complacency about standards by sharing that Pentecostals throughout the world had wildly divergent ideas about 'worldliness'. He joked that in one place in the deep south of the U.S. when he asked for a cup of coffee, he was told, "Coffee, coffee, down here we don't even drink whiskey!" What the preacher explained was that we always have to be aware of worldliness but we also have to be aware that the 'world' changes and that 'worldliness' in one generation or in one country may not be 'worldliness' in another. Some preaching about 'worldliness' is close to stupidity.
The Church at many levels has now become openly conformable to the present age. This situation is not because church members wear lipstick, dance, go to the pictures or say 'bloody'.
We must ask God to show us our blindness, our willingness to compromise with the spirit of the age so that our lives are little different from those outside the church. Our virtual atheism as defined by John Wesley, where we can consider anything as outside the superintendence of almighty God, is our biggest compromise with the world. Too many swallow camels but choke on gnats!
Sharing aspects of Anglican Prayer Book worship along with other items of Christian reflection.
Saturday, February 16, 2008
Friday, February 15, 2008
Christian Atheism!
"The great lesson that our blessed Lord inculcates here...is that God is in all things, and that we are to see the Creator in the glass [mirror] of every creature; that we should use and look upon nothing as separate from God, which indeed is a kind of practical atheism; but with a true magnificence of thought survey heaven and earth and all that is therein as contained by God in the hollow of his hand, who by his intimate presence holds them all in being, who pervades and activates the whole created frame, and is in a true sense the soul of the universe."
These pungent words were given to me by an overseas correspondent and come from a sermon by John Wesley (1748) on the 'Sermon on the Mount'. Part of the context for his words apparently were that Wesley originally baulked at the idea of preaching in the open air until he realised that the Lord Jesus had preached outside! But, more especially for our edification is that Wesley fixed on the truth that nothing is separate from God and that to so regard any thing as if it is separate, is to practise 'a kind of practical atheism'. What a challenging word!
Herman Dooyeweerd, a Reformed Dutch philosopher of genius, could be said to have built his life and philosophical endeavour around the revelation that creation is meaning and only God has being. And, he made the further point that because of the solidarity of all in the apostasy of primal mankind, all experience to some extent, 'the emptiness of an experience of the temporal world which seems to be shut up in itself.' Because of the inroads of 'Humanistic existentialism' he said, we all experience creation at times, as if it were disconnected from God and without meaning. However, the Christian also is made aware that such an experience is untrue.
Ronald Rolheiser (The Shattered Lantern) raised the issue of 'unbelief among believers' and argues that 'our own [Christian] consciousness borders on agnosticism'!! Christians give God a certain area within our church buildings but a confined space or even no space everywhere else. 'Business is business' it will be said, with the idea that the 'religious stuff' is just for Sunday worship. And, now even there, we have the market analysts reigning. This situation arises said Rolheiser because 'God is always partially obscure and we are always partially blind.' He argued that we need to wake out of our deadly sleep for God is present to us but we are invariably not present to him because our hearts are cluttered by trivial pursuits.
These pungent words were given to me by an overseas correspondent and come from a sermon by John Wesley (1748) on the 'Sermon on the Mount'. Part of the context for his words apparently were that Wesley originally baulked at the idea of preaching in the open air until he realised that the Lord Jesus had preached outside! But, more especially for our edification is that Wesley fixed on the truth that nothing is separate from God and that to so regard any thing as if it is separate, is to practise 'a kind of practical atheism'. What a challenging word!
Herman Dooyeweerd, a Reformed Dutch philosopher of genius, could be said to have built his life and philosophical endeavour around the revelation that creation is meaning and only God has being. And, he made the further point that because of the solidarity of all in the apostasy of primal mankind, all experience to some extent, 'the emptiness of an experience of the temporal world which seems to be shut up in itself.' Because of the inroads of 'Humanistic existentialism' he said, we all experience creation at times, as if it were disconnected from God and without meaning. However, the Christian also is made aware that such an experience is untrue.
Ronald Rolheiser (The Shattered Lantern) raised the issue of 'unbelief among believers' and argues that 'our own [Christian] consciousness borders on agnosticism'!! Christians give God a certain area within our church buildings but a confined space or even no space everywhere else. 'Business is business' it will be said, with the idea that the 'religious stuff' is just for Sunday worship. And, now even there, we have the market analysts reigning. This situation arises said Rolheiser because 'God is always partially obscure and we are always partially blind.' He argued that we need to wake out of our deadly sleep for God is present to us but we are invariably not present to him because our hearts are cluttered by trivial pursuits.
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