Wednesday, July 25, 2012

May I Be Such a Man!

This morning, there was the story of two men in the Aurora theater shooting who literally laid down their lives to save their girlfriends, shielding them from the bullets with their own bodies.  Watch the video here.  You won't regret it.

The Bible says this of how a man is to treat his wife, down to his final breath:


"Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ loved the church and gave Himself up for her..." (Ephesians 5:25)
Now Christ perfectly loves His bride, the Church, at all times, but it is interesting that Paul chose this moment as the example of Christ's love--the moment when Christ died for his Bride.  That is the moment those two young men dramatized for us with their final breaths.

In a society where our marriages are predominantly crumbling temporary matters and many of our men are checking out and walking away from their lives, those two men shine like beacons.  They weren't even married, but they lived out the vows so many men take at marriage and break at their convenience--the only way those two men were going to leave their lover's side was in a box.  And that's exactly what they did.

If you're married, or have been, or plan to be, would you have done the same for your lover?  Would you press her down to the safety of the floor and whisper, "Shh, stay down.  It's okay.  Shh, just stay down," even as rounds ripped into your back and your lifeblood began to pool beneath you?  If not, let me say this: you are not a man.  You are a dishonor, though you may yet change that and be a man like these.  In those fatal seconds, they earned more glory than Alexander the Great in all his battles, more honor than King Solomon held in his court, and demonstrated an integrity more valuable than the net worth of Bill Gates.  In eternity, we may scarce remember the names of the world's great kings, conquerors, and wealthy men, but we will remember the names of these men.

My grandfathers were such men.  On my mother's side, there's Kenneth Houston.  He met his bride as a pen pal during World War II as he served in the merchant marines.  He came home and courted her briefly, then married her and stayed married to her through thick and thin until she died suddenly in her 80's.  One year later, cancer took him as well, setting on him suddenly as if--with her life now over--it was simply time for him to die as well.  Yet to his last breath, he demonstrated love.  When his children gathered to figure out who would take care of him for his final days, he chose his son Ray, whom earlier had been estranged to him.  If there was any bitterness or healing yet to be done between them, he was determined to do it.  In the end, he lost his voice and was bedridden and mute.  Yet the last thing anyone remembers him doing is taking the hands of two of his children in his own and joining them together--as if to order them to carry on, to love and care for each other in his immanent absence.  Then he fell asleep and never woke up again in this world. Now there was a man!  May the halls of Heaven beware his coming!

On my father's side was my paternal grandmother's final husband, Bill Alder.  She had been married to many different men in her life, some good and some bad.  Bill seemed to last longer than the others.  Then, one morning, my grandmother came into the kitchen and found him dead, toppled onto the floor from a heart attack with his coffee growing cold on the table.  What we didn't find out until then was that my grandmother had early-onset Alzheimer's and had it pretty bad.  When her husband died, it fell on us, her children and grandchildren to care for her--and from personal experience that was a full-time and frustrating job.  She couldn't remember to do the most basic things, like getting dressed in the morning, and her mind wore a weary track of questions she couldn't remember the answers to--and couldn't recall asking just five minutes ago.  The official literature on Alzheimer's discourages loved ones from trying to care for those who suffer from the disease alone or without help as the stress can literally kill you.  Bill knew all about her Alzheimer's, but he never talked about it.  He never asked for help.  He knew his wife felt very strongly about nursing homes and so he never even let it be suggested that she be taken to one.  He took care of her alone, himself, and covered for her slip-ups on the phone as best he could until the stress of it all caught him at that kitchen table, rising early for his wife, and killed him.  There was a man!  You may argue him a fool for trying to do it all himself, but a noble fool he was.

All of these men are dead now.  As their bodies await the resurrection, their memories among the living will fade.  Who will show the generations to come what a man is, so that there may be great men in our world in times to come?  Do we dare take up the banner of these who have fallen?  If we do not dare, will our lives be of any worth, as men?

As for me--as the LORD God, by Whom I live, and breathe, and have my being, lives--I will take up their banner.  I will live as Christ my Lord, King, and Lover has lived, and--as He makes me able by His grace--I will die as He died, as they died.  I am not strong, but He will give me strength.  I am not brave, but He will give me courage.  I small and inconsistent in my love, but He will broaden and establish my heart by His Spirit.  By Him, I will be such a man!  I will live and die as such a man!  This is my quest, and for it may every hour and every breath of my life, to my very last, be spent.

So be it.

Friday, July 13, 2012

Measures of Pride

I got pretty upset this week with a group of posters who decided to try to use one person's question about Bible translation preferences to attack modern translations as the work of the devil.  Allegedly, all of these modern versions were invented solely to attack the central doctrines of Christianity (which they nevertheless contained) and only the KJV was a real Bible.  Let me say, first off, that I have nothing against the KJV at all.  It is, in fact, my primary Bible translation.  However, it is not the only true Bible translation out there and any argument to that effect is garbage.  Some of them are very, very obviously false--such as alledging (as one man did) that the KJV is obviously the only pure version of the Bible because older versions were corrupted somehow and the KJV uses newer manuscripts as its source.  Of course, how these newer manuscripts wound up being uncorrupted (since they were copies of the older ones) and why even newer versions wouldn't be superior was something the author did not care to divulge.
Thinking about the whole mess, I could figure only two basic reasons why anyone would defend the KJV-only position.  First, they had been duped by it, convinced by the great many venomous attacks on every modern version that the KJV was the only Bible they could trust.  That's sad, because the attacks are baseless and can just as easily be made on the KJV itself.  I was once one of these.  Second, of course, was that they needed to feel superior in their choice of version.  They needed some measure to tell them that they were a real Christian, and others weren't.  The KJV provides a convenient distinction, even more so because after 400 years what was the easiest English translation to read has now become impenitribly dense to the average reader.  They could take pride in being able to even understand it through all the shalt's, thee's, and thou's, and congratulate themselves on being true Christians (some KJV-only proponents have said just that, citing 1 Corinthians 2:14 to argue that anyone who can't penetrate the 400-year-old vocabulary and syntax must not have the Holy Spirit).

"Being able to read outdated English does not make you a Christian," I muttered to myself.

Unexpectedly, this became the start of a list.  By the end of the list, I was humbled by the number of things I had thought, at one point or another--or still thought, at times--were the measure of a Christian and were, in fact, nothing but measures for pride.

The following things do not make you a Christian, or make you a better Christian than anyone else.  If you think they do, I would be happy to hear why, but I don't think you're right.  If you think about all the Christians there are out there today, here and in nations where the name "Christian" is a death-sentence, and all the Christians there have been throughout history, I think you will see that none of these things distinguish Christians from non-Christians, nor the great Christians from their fellows.
  • Being able to read the King James Version and understand it
  • Being able to read the original Hebrew, Greek, or Aramaic
  • Being able to speak eloquently of the original Hebrew, Greek, or Aramaic
  • Knowing that there is an original Hebrew, Greek, or Aramaic
  • Owning an ESV Study Bible
  • Leading a Bible study
  • Being a member of a Bible study
  • Being a member of a campus ministry
  • Being a member of a church
  • Attending church services every time the door is open
  • Attending church services Sunday morning and evening
  • Attending church services weekly
  • Attending church services at all
  • Evangelizing cold turkey
  • Voting Republican
  • Voting
  • Having the right to vote
  • Believing in Creationism
  • Being informed on the Creationism vs Evolution debate
  • Being a Calvinist
  • Adhering to any particular school of theological thought
  • Adhering to any particular set of convictions or personal preferences
  • Agreeing with you
  • Being religious
  • Taking half-days to be alone with God in prayer
  • Scheduling time to be alone with God in prayer
  • Praying and receiving any particular answer
  • Praying the way you do
  • Reading the Bible through in a year
  • Reading the Bible on a regular schedule
  • Memorizing an entire book of the Bible
  • Memorizing an entire passage of the Bible
  • Memorizing a verse of the Bible
  • Having a Bible
  • Being able to read
  • Giving money to missions
  • Giving money to the church
  • Giving money to the poor
  • Having money to give
  • Having any particular spiritual gift
  • Having any particular personality
  • Having any particular level of social skills
  • Having any particular hairstyle/clothing style
  • Having any particular musical preference
  • Not using cuss words
  • Not having piercings or tattoos
  • Looking and sounding like you or someone you'd like
  • Having all the sin in their life conquered
  • Recognizing all the sin in their life
  • Being at least as "good" as you
Having made this list, I must confess that, at one point or another in my life, I have used, or at least been very tempted to use, each of the above as a measure of pride.  I have used them to measure others, to say to myself, "Well, if this person is a Christian, they aren't a very good one because of thus-and-so."  I have become puffed up with pride and denigrated others wrongfully in my heart for this.  If I have used any of the above against you or those you know, then I beg your forgiveness.  I was wrong.  It was the sin of pride.

Further, I have used this list and taken it to Christians I admire.  I have said in my heart, "Ah, this person is a great Christian because they do thus-and-so!"  I have idolized such people in my heart.  I have said in my pride and foolishness that I would be like them, that I would do as they did and by so doing become a great Christian.  I was wrong.  If you have been idolized by me in any of the above ways, I ask your forgiveness.  You may or may not see it, but I was wrong.  You aren't perfect, and I was a fool to think you were and make you my idol to follow instead of God.

These things make you a Christian, and a great Christian you are if you have these:
  • To love God
  • To trust Him
  • To obey His "voice" in your life, however that voice may come to you
If you have these, then you know God and that is life eternal.  If you have these, nothing can add to them, or take away from them.
He has showed you, O man, what is good. And what does the LORD require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God. -Micah 6:8

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Body and Soul

There are some posts on this blog that make empirical arguments, some that set forth evidence and lay things out rationally, which can be proved and known.  There are some that can only convey inexplicable experience.  This is one of those.

Yesterday, in the morning, I wanted the day to be something special between God and me.  I realized there was nothing really that I could do to bring this about, so I prayed that God would, that He would do things that day that would break down all my walls and "leave my soul naked and vulnerable" before Him.  I knew that it was at times of such great vulnerability that I felt closest to God, though there is always a thrill of terror about the vulnerability and openness of such a position.

And so it went.  God demonstrated His love to me, whispered of it to me, in little ways, and those broke down my defenses.  By the time I went on lunch break at 2 o'clock, I already felt vulnerable.  I wanted nothing more than to curl up on my bed and bask in the nearness of my God.

But the day wasn't over yet.  When it was, the business of the day had caught up with me, exhausting me and, in part, raising my walls again.  Then, I remembered the prayer I had prayed that morning and prayed it again.

He heard me, and answered in a way I did not expect.  My eyes closed and I stopped tossing and turning.  I stopped moving at all.  Yet I was not asleep.  I was fully awake and aware.  I tried to move but I could not.  It was like the paralysis that comes before sleep, but sleep was far away.  I wondered what this could be.  Then He spoke to me.  He told me that my inability to move was His doing and that He would not harm me. He asked me to quit struggling.  I did, though not right away.  I asked what was going on and He told me He was answering my prayer, that this was me, a naked soul separated (partially--I could still control my eye movements) from my body.  He spoke wonderful things to me (of which I have no particular memory) and I was in ecstatic union with Him.

Then something really unexpected happened.  My awareness shifted and while I was still aware of my soul in ecstasy, it was a dim awareness, like my awareness of my body had been soon after the separation began.  What I was most aware of was my body, lying there, waiting: unable to move on my own and waiting for the commands that would enable me to do so.  I was waiting for other things too.  I was tired from a hard day's work, waiting to go to sleep.  I was dirty from sweat and dust and waiting to be clean.  But I was also waiting for a much deeper bigger thing.  I was aware of a deep, painful, treacherous stain of sin in me, and I was waiting to see, if at last, I could be made free of this.  As I waited, I heard Him say to me, "Don't worry.  I haven't forgotten you.  You will be made clean, whole, and perfect.  You are also deeply loved."

Then my awareness was returned whole, body and soul, welded together and united by love, deep in love with my Creator!  I have never felt such joy and love for Him before, and yet it was but a foretaste, a lesson, a moment I want to keep with me all my days.  I am loved body and soul.  I do not expect that any of those supposed wise men who deny that there is any such distinction will credit my experience, but who asked for their opinions?  I am loved body and soul.  I am not loved any more in or for one than the other.  I am loved not for the good deeds I do in the body--for my soul is loved also.  I am loved not only for what existential heights I may be able to reach, for my body is loved also.  My God will provide all my needs.  He will not merely take me to Heaven and leave me naked and destitute to fend for myself on earth--for He loves my body also.  He will not either remember to feed and clothe me and yet forget to satisfy the deep longings of my inner being--for my soul is loved also.  I am perfectly loved.

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Backstory

So, I've been reading the manga "Rosario+Vampire."  If you've heard of it, it's probably not what you think.  The anime of the series is, if my friends and online articles are any reliable source, terrible--ditching the entire plot in favor of fanservice.  The manga is quite different.  The manga starts out as a simple "harem" comedy, where a perfectly ordinary boy accidentally enrolls in a high school where monsters learn to live in human guise.  Like any comedy of the genre, the boy (Tsukune) discovers his one true love, a fetching kind-hearted young vampiress named Moka--who in turn discovers a taste for Tsukune's blood.  Despite this rather disturbing taste, and the even more disturbing nature of the monster academy, Tsukune decides to stick it out so he and Moka can be together.  Immediately thereafter (and this is where the term "harem" comes in), girls start throwing themselves at Tsukune one after another, trying in vain to wrest his affections from Moka.  When they're not trying to beat each other up or hug-tackle Tsukune, the girls help Tsukune and Moka defeat the monster-of-the-week.  Hilarity ensues. Aside from the fact that Tsukune is in constant peril and is the only one who can remove Moka's rosario (transforming her from soft-hearted damsel-in-distress into a haughty vampiress whose round-house kick is capable of one-shotting nearly any opponent they meet), the manga is, at first, light-hearted and its contents fluffy--or so it seems.  Soon, Moka's trick of rescuing Tsukune from the brink of death with an infusion of vampire blood turns out to have some unexpected consequences, in the form of him being transformed into a ghoul--a soulless killing machine with all the power of the vapire(ss) who created him (and, apparently, none of the vulnerabilities).  He gets better (about the soulless part), but the latest issues delve into the backstory and show that much more is at play than was initially thought.  Moka (sans-rosario) isn't just a very powerful vampire, she's pretty much the most powerful vampire.  Her mom was part of a legendary three-monster team that took down an eldritch abomination of ultimate power bent on destroying the world.  Her mom can regenerate in minutes from being cut in half and her own round-house kicks pack more raw power than a bunker-buster.  And guess what?  Little Moka is heir to mom's incredible powers (not sure about the regeneration, but she's definitely got the power: as a 10-year old she blew a hole 6-foot square through a castle wall with one punch--and she wasn't even aiming at it!).  Better yet, that power isn't from genetics, but from blood.  Moka is the only one of her sisters (two of which have sadly gone dark-side) to have this power because she received an infusion of her mother's blood shortly after birth to help her survive.  And since Tsukune's ghoulish powers come from Moka's blood...yup, there's a pretty good chance that he's the ultimate incarnation of vampiric power there is.  The only hitch is that it turns out Moka's mom beat down the eldritch abomination by syncing her power to its, so that it was forced to slumber as long as she kept her powers in check.  And since mom's power is Moka's power--yeah, opening the throttle on that awakens the eldritch abomination...and there's a good chance Tsukune's power does that too.  So all that time they thought they were just harmlessly curb-stomping the monster-of-the-week it turns out they were actually poking the eldritch-abomination-of-ultimate-horror with a stick.  Things look pretty dark, but there's a ray of hope.  Moka's mom foresaw this link as a problem and made the rosario to seal Moka's power away (sacrificing herself in the process, sadly)--but she did so deliberately in such a way that only her one true love could remove it.  More, she designed it so that her one true love (when she met him) would remove it, because then it would be "time."  Time for what?  No idea, but the next volume is due out this month!

So you see, what was at the beginning just a comedy of errors is now revealed to be a stroke of destiny, bringing Moka and Tsukune (and company) together on a stage of epic proportions where the fate of the world is at stake...a lot can change when you know the backstory!

I'm betting the same is true in my life.  Things seem haphazard and kind of meaningless more often than not around here.  Sometimes I feel like I'm in a comedy of errors, but the jokes aren't all that funny and this is definitely not a "harem comedy!"  So let me take a step back and lay out the background of my story.  Let me see where it all fits in, if I'm able...

In the beginning, and before it, God existed alone, eternally complete, a unified being within Himself: Father, Spirit, Son.  Omnipotent and omniscient, He planned the creation of the world and all things and plotted their course, then brought it to pass for His own pleasure.  He made all things good.  He made the heavens and the earth and all things and beings that within them dwell.  He made angels as His ministers, among them Lucifer, a bright cherub, the covering of His throne.  He made humans also.  He made them to be His image, to have dominion on the earth over all creatures and reflect His glory and nature through their own.  He made them a little lower than the angels.  He made them male and female, equals, companions, compatriots, lovers, husband and wife.  He crafted the first marriage Himself when he brought the two of them--formed with His own hands for each other--together in the garden, where they were both naked and not ashamed.

He made them good and glorious, but He made them free.  They were able to choose whether to remain as they were or to corrupt themselves by turning their back on Him and taking their destinies into their own hands.  Lucifer took this path.  He became a murderer from the beginning and forsook the truth.  He became known as Satan, the Accuser, the Father of Lies.  He fell from Heaven like lightning, cast out after a great battle among the angels.  He deceived Eve and Adam in the garden, convincing them that God was holding back something that would be good for them, the fruit of the forbidden tree.  They took their destinies in their own hands.  They rebelled.  They ate the fruit and they Fell.  The penalty was death, and more horrible than they could imagine.  Not only would their bodies grow old and return to dust, but their souls would be subject to the full wrath and power of God for all eternity in Hell--the place prepared as the final prison of Satan and his angels, their unending punishment under darkness and in fire.  Even as they lived, their lives were cursed by the God against Whom they'd rebelled.  The woman gave birth in sorrow and great pain.  The man labored in vain all his days.  Even together, they had no solace, for the woman longed to control the man and the man dominated her like a tyrant.  All seemed lost as their curse spilled out over all creation and their ungodly children multiplied.  Their eldest son became a murderer and was cursed to walk in exile all his days.  The earth was so filled with violence that God confessed that He regretted making mankind and resolved to wipe them out by destroying the world in torrents of water.

But God had foreseen all this from the beginning and determined already what He would do.  From the beginning, He had made some of His creatures, like ungodly Cain, to be hateful "vessels of dishonor."  These He hardened and these He consumed in order to show the greatness of His power and justice.  Yet He had also made certain "vessels of mercy"--indistinguishable from the others to all but Him, for He had chosen them.  These, He choose to save and restore, to show the greatness of His love and mercy, and His power.  For these, He sent His Son in the fullness of time, born of a woman, born under the law and under the curse. He assumed the guise of humanity with all its complaints, but He was God and He lived without sin.  Then, as He had foretold in scripture and in person, He died an agonizing painful death.  He drank down the cup of the Father's wrath to the dregs and thus offered the mercy and love of God to all that He had chosen, to all who were given to Him, to all who came.

So He did destroy mankind and the world with a flood that day, but He also saved alive 8 chosen men and women in an ark He had prepared for them.  In time, He chose a man out of Mesopotamia to be the father of His special people.  The man was childless, but he believed, and in time God gave Him a son.  From that son proceeded a nation of millions.  They were enslaved, but God allowed this and raised up their captors only to cast them down again with plagues and miraculous destruction, to show His glory.  He led His people out, but they rebelled against Him in the wilderness.  He cursed and killed the rebels, but kept alive their children, who lived to see the promises made to their forefather fulfilled.  Yet the people continually rebelled. Their hearts were never fully His, and so He sent invaders to punish them.  In the end, He destroyed them, but saved a remnant.  It was from this remnant He brought forth His Son.

When His Son died, those who put their faith in Him saw the windows of Heaven opened and the Spirit descended on them, giving them miraculous power, and--most importantly--changing them from the inside out, at the level of the heart.  Finally, God's plan from eternity was revealed.  He was not merely seeking a remnant.  He was not seeking His own special ethnic group or kingdom.  He was seeking a Bride.  These believers, and those He had chosen throughout time, were that Bride.  They were individuals united as one, diverse in gifts, unified in heart and purpose.  Saved from death and Hell by the blood of the Son, they became His Bride, destined to enjoy His favor, His love, His power, every pleasure He could provide, and unity with Him, beginning in this life and made perfect as they cast off their mortal coils.

I am a member of this Church.  I am one of many, but I am loved as if I were the only one.  The power and wisdom of God watches over me, to guide me, to protect me, to perfect me in love.  There will be trials.  Trials grow character.  There will be opposition, but Satan is no match for the power with which I am united--the power of the God Who created and damned him.  That power, that love, that God will never leave me and I will be with Him forever.

This is my backstory.  I may not see how, but around me the hand of this destiny is at work.  Everyday situations are trials and opportunities, blessings and gifts of love, or banes from an enemy who hates me but cannot defeat me.  All of this is one step closer to my ultimate end, which is to be the Bride, at the side of my God, united with the Beloved forever.

Not so haphazard and meaningless anymore...