Friday, March 31, 2017
Jesus is Lord
The insight of my beloved brother Tim in Australia continues in mind: rather, it's a touchstone of all my thinking about the evils of this time.
"Politics is not really about politics."
Lately God's been guiding my thoughts towards economic, as well as political, issues. And it seems Tim's insight also applies there; that "economics is not really about economics."
I've been pondering that.
I certainly can't claim any expertise in these matters: I can only think about them in their simplest terms. But there's often some clarity in looking at the basics of things. And at their most basic, politics and economics are simply human behaviors.
To my understanding, that puts everything in context. Human behavior was exactly what Jesus talked about. Human behavior is exactly what we should mean when we say "Jesus is Lord."
Politics, economics, whatever human behavior (or their theories) we name...aren't really autonomous entities. Jesus is Lord.
Thursday, March 30, 2017
Communion thoughts by Robin Meyers
“…if the call of Jesus is to
worship a God of distributive justice, then there is no getting around the fact
that everyone in the world must have enough.
Calling this ‘socialism’ is a scare tactic…making sure that everyone in
the world has enough should be called ‘church.’
Justice means that everyone is welcome at the table…
Starvation in the world is not the result of lack of food, but of a failure to share. There is enough for everyone, with some left over, but not if the gifts of the earth are reduced to a commodity that is sold to the highest bidder. ‘Whatever the market will bear’ becomes unbearable if you are poor.
In the Underground Church, nothing is for sale, and no one can be purchased. We step out of the madness of the world of buying and selling…What has been freely given is freely offered…That…begins with food and remains only when everyone has enough.”
Justice means that everyone is welcome at the table…
Starvation in the world is not the result of lack of food, but of a failure to share. There is enough for everyone, with some left over, but not if the gifts of the earth are reduced to a commodity that is sold to the highest bidder. ‘Whatever the market will bear’ becomes unbearable if you are poor.
In the Underground Church, nothing is for sale, and no one can be purchased. We step out of the madness of the world of buying and selling…What has been freely given is freely offered…That…begins with food and remains only when everyone has enough.”
-- from The Underground Church (2012), pp. 177, 185, 190
Tuesday, March 28, 2017
A Simple Truth
Jesus told us to follow the Spirit of Truth (John 16:12), and He commanded us to love one another (John15:17)
Jesus said that anyone who loves Him will do what He says (John 14:15, 23).
But there seems nothing of Jesus' teaching in the politics most American Christians embrace. It's hard to see...as their politics more and more embody lies, and hatred for the "others" Jesus most commended to our mercy...how American Christians continue their self-deception that they love Jesus.
Sunday, March 26, 2017
Humility and Knowing Truth
"The most important component of . . . critical thinking that is lacking in our society today is humility. It is a simple yet profound notion: if we realize we don't know everything, we can learn. If we think we know everything, learning is impossible. Somehow, our educational system and our reliance on the Internet has led to a generation of kids who don't know what they don't know. If we can accept that truth, we can educate the American mind, restore civility, and disarm the plethora of weaponized lies threatening our world. It is the only way democracy can prosper." (my emphasis)
-- Weaponized Lies: How to Think Critically in the Post-Truth Era,
by Daniel J. Levitin (2016), pp. xviii-xix
Wednesday, March 08, 2017
Yemen
The continuing war in Yemen (mostly, but not entirely, between the Saudi-backed president-in-exile and Houthi rebels linked to al-Qaida) has resulted in "...a humanitarian crisis with an estimated 18 million of the country's 27 million people in need of some sort of assistance. The country faces chronic water shortages, and people in the worst affected areas can spend hours a day waiting in line for water. The economy, the health care system, the education system have all broken down." -- http://www.npr.org/sections/parallels/2017/03/03/518146483/u-s-ramps-up-its-fight-against-al-qaida-in-yemen
The U.N. recently named Yemen the world's worst humanitarian disaster: which is saying a lot, from what we all know is happening to the people of Syria and South Sudan.
The U.S. has responded to Yemen's crisis with increased bombing.
Donald Trump also met with a Saudi prince this week to announce he will resume weapons-shipments to Saudi Arabia. The Obama administration had suspended shipments, concerned at increased Yemeni civilian casualties from Saudis' use of American technology.
Congressman Hypocrisy
Roger Marshall is the U.S. Representative for Kansas' "Big First" District: basically, the 3/4 of the state west of Topeka. Last year he upset the incumbent Tea Party Congressman in that district, who was a hard-core obstructionist in Congress, hated even by his party's leadership. Marshall is a doctor: and recently proclaimed he is against any healthcare bill:
“Just like Jesus said, ‘The poor will always be with us.' There is a group of people that just don’t want health care and aren’t going to take care of themselves.”
"For you always have the poor with you, and whenever you wish you can do good to them; but you do not always have Me." (Mark 14:7, my emphasis)
Here's what Jesus was quoting:
"There will always be poor people in the land. Therefore I command you to be openhanded toward your fellow Israelites who are poor and needy in your land." (Deut. 15:11)
Even for the political faction that deceives voters (and possibly itself) with its claims to be "Christian," Representative Roger Marshall stands out for blatant hypocrisy.
Saturday, March 04, 2017
Repent
The one word God has put in my heart, that I'd like to proclaim to everyone who claims to be a Christian:
If your politics teaches you to follow lies and love unrighteousness, your politics are evil.
You need to repent of your politics.
Woebetudes
We love the Beatitudes of Matthew 5. They teach a reality that is upside-down, but positive. We can all put ourselves in the place of the poor in spirit and those who mourn, and be encouraged by Jesus' promise of blessing.
We seldom consider the parallel version of Jesus' words in Luke 6, which include what someone has called the "Woebetudes:"
"But woe to you who are rich, for you are receiving your comfort in full. Woe to you who are well-fed now, for you shall be hungry. Woe to you who laugh now, for you shall mourn and weep. Woe to you when all men speak well of you, for their fathers used to treat the false prophets in the same way." (Luke 6:24-6)
Maybe, if we examine ourselves honestly, we can also put ourselves in the place of the comfortable and the reputable, and be fearful of Jesus' words.
There's no escaping the fact that Jesus' gospel was bad news for some; for those who grow rich by impoverishing others, or profit from others' bondage. Bad news, perhaps, for people such as we may be.
Jesus wasn't killed for the good news He brought to men . . .
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