Daniel’s Endeavors

June 15, 2007

The trouble with Christianity in the US

Filed under: Christian thinking — Daniel @ 2:53 am
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I think the problem with the church in the US today is that it’s afraid to teach the whole message of God.

The Bible contains a message of love as well as a warning of discipline. Churches today are afraid to teach about the discipline of God for fear of driving away the masses. Yes, in many aspects, a church is like a business and it must meet it’s financial obligations, but that doesn’t give it license to ignore part of the message that God has for the world. The whole point of a church is to bring people into a relationship with God. If the message its giving is incomplete, it’s inaccurate and thus the church is inaccurately representing God to the people. Without periodic reminders that God is willing to discipline those He loves, people will push the envelope further and further until we end up with a society that’s, well, what we have today; a people feeling self-sufficient due to living a life already cushy from the blessings God has previously bestowed. We can see this cycle in the history of the Jewish people and now we are going through it ourselves.

Will we learn from what God let happen to His chosen people?
Will we wake up in time to save ourselves? I fear not, which will spell the doom of our once great nation.

Daniel

June 14, 2007

Are Ethics Needed Today?

Filed under: Christian thinking — Daniel @ 8:43 pm
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Ethics. Are they needed in today’s enlightened society? The answer to that question would depend on what ethics are.

In this day of political correctness, people don’t want to be told something is good or bad, right or wrong, black or white. Today everything is simply different, a shade of gray, if you will. People have come to accept their own personal definitions for right and wrong. “What’s right for one person isn’t necessarily right for another,” they say. But, if we are to survive as a society, we must have a common definition of right and wrong. If we leave the definitions up to the individual, we can’t even condemn the actions of someone like Hitler (who, in his own mind, thought he was doing the world a great service by advancing the Arian race). By his definition, his actions were right, although most of us would disagree.

In today’s society, ethics has become a bad word and people are looked down on for saying something is right or wrong. They’re called intolerant, prejudice, narrow-minded, or worse, for saying everything isn’t gray. But everything isn’t gray.

As much as tolerance and acceptance are touted in today’s society, it simply isn’t the way the world works. If a man steals money from a company, he’s a thief. To say ‘he used company funds inappropriately’ doesn’t make him any less a thief. Couching his action in political correctness simply makes it harder to determine exactly what he did wrong (did he spend money without authorization or did he steal the money). Blurring the definition removes the social pressure of the wrong doing, making it easier for him to do it again next time. If the man is to be punished for his actions, we must somehow get back to what’s right and what’s wrong.

Ethics is the term we use to describe the process of peeling off the layers of political correctness to get back to what’s right and wrong.

Most societies base their definition of right and wrong on a religious teaching. In the U.S., it’s Christianity. In India, it’s Hinduism. Its source is less important than society’s general acceptance of its definition. Once accepted, laws can be made based on the definitions and the society can then be governed.

If a society is to exist in any state other than chaos, a definition of right and wrong must be generally accepted and becomes the framework on which that society is built. In order for punishment to be applied for breaking a societal law, there must be mechanism that allows us to get back to that framework of right and wrong, no matter how many layers of indirection we place upon it. The mechanism is called ethics.

Life is tough and often a struggle. In that struggle, it’s imperative that we maintain our ethics. If we don’t, if we disregard that framework of right and wrong, our society will degrade into chaos.

Image a world where every aspect of life was devoid of ethics. Your banker would regretfully inform that your investment went bust, while his account grew the amount of your investment. Your doctor would tell you he could enable you to live longer if you would only write him into your will. A police officer would stop you in the street for the sole purpose of extracting a bribe. The list goes on and on. Would these professional’s be wrong to act that way (black), or would each simply have a different approach to life (gray)? Without ethics, who’s to say?

In summary, ethics are nothing more than a mechanism allowing us to get back to the framework our society was built on, the accepted definitions of right and wrong. That ability enables us to punish those that do wrong. And it’s the threat of punishment that controls how people interact with each other and thus keeps our society civil.

Are ethics needed? Yes. Without them, life is just one big con game.

What is a Christian?

Filed under: Christian thinking — Daniel @ 8:40 pm
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A Christian is one who follows Christ. Notice I didn’t say one who believes in Christ. Even Satan believes that Jesus is the son of God. Following Christ is quite different from believing in Him.

We follow Christ by incorporating His teachings into our everyday life. Jesus said, “But why do you call Me ‘Lord, Lord,’ and do not do the things which I say?” (Luke 6:46) If I claim Jesus as my Lord, then I need to do the things He taught us to do.

Webster’s defines Lord as, “1: one having power and authority over others.” That makes me ask, “Have I allowed Jesus to have authority over me?” If I answer yes, then I should be doing my best to make sure His teachings govern my conduct in life. If I answer no, then He’s not truly my Lord.

Being a Christian is more than just going to church, it’s doing the things our Lord taught us to do, i.e. it’s the way we live our lives. “Therefore by their fruits you will know them.” (Matthew 7:20)

I’m free to choose whether I’ll govern live my life according to Jesus’ teachings or not, and I make that choice every time I choose whether or not to gossip about someone, every time I decide whether to honk my horn at that guy that just cut me off in traffic or not, and every time I help a person in need, or not. Each choice I make in life tells the world around me whether I’ve chosen Christ to be my Lord or not. And believe me, those around you do notice.

In short, we are what our choices in life make us. Are you a Christian?

Satan’s best lie

Filed under: Christian thinking — Daniel @ 8:40 pm
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You’ve heard people say “Truth is subjective. What’s true for you may not be true for me.” I think this is one of Satan’s best lies. If he can get us to reject the truth, he can get us to accept anything.

We get bombarded with tons of information daily, and much of it, from the ads on TV to the gossip at work, isn’t truthful. To survive this onslaught of information, we have to decide for ourselves which bits of information are true and which aren’t. This makes it sound like truth really is subjective, i.e. we decide what is true and what isn’t. But rather than saying it’s subjective I think it’d be more accurate to say truth is concluded. The things we accept as true combine over time to create our definition of truth.

Webster’s defines truth as: 1. Being consistent with reality or fact. Note the lack of subjectivity in that definition. Something is either consistent with reality or it isn’t. To say that truth is subjective goes against the definition of truth. In fact, it’s a self-fulfilling prophesy. The statement is only true if you accept it to be true, because the statement itself is not consistent with reality.

If we accept a falsehood as true, our definition of truth becomes polluted and it becomes more difficult for us to recognize real truth when we see it. Jesus said, “I am the way, the truth, and the life…” If we can’t recognize truth, we can’t recognize Jesus and Satan’s plan is fulfilled.

Satan is always trying to entrap us, but Jesus taught, “And you shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.” Beware you don’t become entrapped in Satan’s lie. Guard the truth jealously. If we lose sight of it, we lose sight of our Savior.

Christian Misconceptions – Freewill was a mistake

Filed under: Christian thinking — Daniel @ 8:38 pm
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Adam and Eve had the entire garden to do with as they pleased, except for one tree. Why would God give them the whole world and exclude one tree? He did it to give Adam and Eve free will. If God removed that tree from the garden, they wouldn’t have any means of disobeying Him. Only by having the option to choose do we have free will.

Why is free will so important? It’s at the very heart of who and what God is: love.

Without free will, there is no love. A backhoe doesn’t dig a ditch because it loves its driver, it simply does what the driver tells it to because it has no choice, it has no free will. If God removed free will, if He didn’t restrict Adam and Eve from that one tree, we’d be nothing more than biological machines, doing whatever God told us to, just like the backhoe. While it’s true that hate and greed wouldn’t exist in a world without free will, neither would love. And that’s the precise reason we were created in the first place, so God could share His love with us.

Was giving us free will a mistake? Not at all. Without it, we could not love, and the purpose of God’s creation would be defeated. How we use our free will is up to each one of us, but whenever we choose to use it to love God, the purpose for His creation is fulfilled and God smiles. Personally, I like it when God smiles on me. J

Light Up!

Filed under: Christian thinking — Daniel @ 8:36 pm
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We’re often told that we’re to “be the light of the world,” but what exactly does that mean?

To start with, we need to realize that we’re not the source of the light, God is. Therefore, we need to be in constant contact with God, the supplier of light, if we are to be a light ourselves. We do this through prayer. One of the reasons we’re taught to pray without ceasing is to insure that we have a steady supply of light from God.

Once we establish our light source, we’re to reflect that light to those around us. This means we’re to take the love God has shown us and show it to others. We’re to accept the forgiveness our Lord offers and offer it to those who harm us. We’re to reflect the compassion Jesus has for us onto those around us. This is how we become a light in the world, by giving to others what God as so freely given to us.

“From everyone to whom much has been given, much will be required…” (Luke 12:48A) God blesses us so that we may be a blessing to others. A simple word of encouragement. A soft pat on the back. An ear to listen. These are ways we can bless those around us, simply by being there when others turn away. We don’t have to solve the world’s problems. All we have to do is love those around us as Christ has loved us. Succeed at this, and you’ll be a light in the world.

Remember, if the world’s getting darker, it’s not a problem with the darkness; it means there’s a lack of light.

God’s Love

Filed under: Christian thinking — Daniel @ 8:30 pm
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The greatest part of being a Christian is feeling the love of God. This love is the greatest thing I’ve ever known. It gives me a feeling of comfort in times of trouble, inspiration in times of action, compassion in times of tragedy, and peace each and every day. It shows me, rather than teaches me, how to relate to others and prepares me to do so. It fills me from within so I have no need to be filled from without. It removes the fear of death so I can live each day to its fullest. God’s love is all these things, but so much more.

The English language lacks the words to describe the deep felt joy God’s love gives me. To say I feel it in my bones isn’t deep enough. The marrow inside my bones doesn’t compare. The DNA in my cells can’t even come close to describing how deep God’s love goes. The very essence of my soul drinks it in and dances within me because of it.

God, who always was and who always will be, loves me, and nothing I can do will ever change that. Wow! The Creator of the stars, the maker of every blade of grass, the One who feeds each bird in the sky, knows me and loves me.

Of the billions and billions of planets in existence, God casts His gaze upon Earth. And of the billions of people on Earth, God found me to love and bless. I’m not a king. I’m not a president. I’m not even captain of the softball team. And yet Almighty God chooses to love me just as I am, with a love so big it can’t be measured in time or space.

God’s loves surpasses all. From this infinite being comes an infinite love and He shares it freely with me. How can I possibly accept such a wondrous and magnificent gift from one so great and mighty? Me, an unworthy worm, God has chosen to love. How can I comprehend the magnitude of such a gift?

Our great God doesn’t reserve His love for the rich or the powerful, He shares it freely with all, even me. How can I accept my wife, my health, or my salvation and not give back to God what little he asks. I would gladly give my life for Him should He but ask. How could I do less for all He has already done for me. Praise be to the Almighty God in Heaven!

Christians Awake!

Filed under: Christian thinking — Daniel @ 8:28 pm
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Our American culture contains a sleeping giant. As this giant sleeps, ropes are being tossed and stakes are being driven. If the giant doesn’t wake up soon, it won’t matter whether it ever wakes up at all.

Christians are, by definition, followers of Christ and the Bible is God’s instructions to His creation. If we’re followers of Christ (God) then we should act according to what the Bible tells us is right or wrong. That’s what the instruction book is there for, to show us how to live our lives in the most beneficial manner for both us and our society. But those instructions are only valuable if we use them. You could know precisely when and where to invest your money, but it won’t do you any good unless you actually make the investment. Having the knowledge is useless without taking the action. The same is true with the Bible. Knowing God’s rules won’t benefit your life, you must act on that knowledge to reap the rewards.

It is estimated that 1-3% of our populace is homosexual and that 77% of our populace is Christian. So how is it that 3% of our populace is making laws that 77% of our populace disagrees with? It’s because the giant is still sleeping.

Christians all across this country know the Bible teaches against homosexuality as a lifestyle and yet we do nothing to stop the gay activists from getting their agenda taught in our schools, from convincing the populace that homosexuality is a biological state, and even from making laws allowing homosexuals into the church to marry. While the giant sleeps, the villagers run amuck.

How long? How long will we, the vast majority, allow this 3% of our populace to control our lives, dictate our thoughts, and decide what is right and what is wrong?

We Christians belong to God. Is our God so small that He can’t stand up against this 3%? Of course not. But we are His fingers. If the fingers won’t curl, the use of the hand is limited. We must act if we want God to do something. We are the instrument through which God shows Himself. We are His church, His representatives in this world. If we do nothing, then God, who acts through us, does nothing. He is willing to leave us in our own mess or help us out of it. But help implies something already in progress, something that can be aided. If we do nothing, God has nothing to assist.

There comes a time in every life when one must stand up and be heard. For Christians, that time is now. We are still One Nation Under God but we must now fight to keep it that way. God is not a god of the past, He’s a god of the future. He knows we can’t go back in time and correct the things we’ve done, but He also knows we can make right the things we do in the future. If you want to side with God on this topic, then tell your clergy, tell your mayor, tell your governor, congressman, and senator that you expect them to leave marriage as God designed it, between one man and one woman. Tell them it’s God’s way. Tell them your next vote depends on it. Tell them you’ll be watching. Be God’s representative and stand up for what He has defined as right and wrong.

Edmund Burke said: “All that is necessary for evil to succeed is that good men do nothing.” So far, that’s what the church has done, nothing, and look at what’s happening around us. If 3% of our populace can have this big of an impact on our culture, imagine the impact 77% could make!

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