Archive for March, 2009

Full Plate of Life

Very interesting day today.  There are some family issues that need attention tomorrow on multiple fronts.  In the meantime I’ve got multiple plates full of work that I’ve got to get done for my job.  These sorts of times make me long to go back to school where my time was much more flexible. 

The past year and a half of work have been fairly stressful as I’ve had two back-to-back projects that have had some pretty tight deadlines with many moving parts.  What I’m beginning to realize is that perhaps God actually wants me to have a lot on my plate.  I’d rather not, but maybe this is a way that God is testing me, to see whose strength I will lean on.  As I prepare to go to bed, I don’t know how I will get the things done that I need to get done.  But I still have a job.  And thus far God has enabled me to get the key things done.  Yet it’s still difficult for me to trust that he will do it again.  Because this time it really is too much for me to handle.  And maybe that’s the point.  It is too much for me to handle.  That’s why I need to lean on God.  And so, I will aim to go to bed at a normal time, wake up early, and maximize the time I have tomorrow morning to finish what I need to finish for work, as the bulk of the afternoon will need to be used to address some family issues.

More Americans say they have no religion

This just in from MSNBC: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29585222/

Apparently the number of professing Christians in the U.S. continues to decline.  The percentage of Americans who claim no religion at all has now risen to 15%.  It’s probably safe to assume that this number is even greater in larger urban populations outside the bible belt, like the greater Seattle area that I live in. 

Quite frankly, this news does not surprise me.  In general it seems that God is not really relevant to that many people in everyday life.  As a Christian involved in leadership at my church and as a person out in the corporate workforce there is a stark contrast between those two contexts.  The topic of God just doesn’t come up much at work.  You might say that this is expected because people are focusing on work.  But I don’t think that’s the case.  Plenty of other non-work related topics come up during the day and are discussed at varying lengths, but on the whole, religion is not touched upon that often.  This, I think is largely the result of a cultural norm that’s developed that declares religion as a taboo topic.  Religion is not meant to be publicly discussed, but to be minimized and kept to oneself.  Which is interesting, because even if I grant that religion is a personal thing, it does not then follow that we should discourage it’s public discourse.  Public discourse if full of discussion of “personal” items.  One need only look to the tabloids and entertainment shows on television.  People enjoy discussing things that are personal to ourselves or personal about other people.  We are persons after all!

But religion is put into another catogory.  Personal, and undiscussable.  Why?  I believe it’s because religions, at least some, make absolute truth claims that can impinge upon each others freedom.  Religion, and in particular, Christianity makes certain claims that just don’t sit well with today’s American.  By and large Americans today want to live life in the best way we see fit.  And the best way that we see fit is often at odds with what Christianity teaches.  And thus, there is a push back against religion and perhaps against Christianity in particular, because it cramps our style.  It restricts our freedom.  And so we have rationalized God out of any relevant discussions in our lives, for to let him in is too dangerous to the authority of our own self-rule.

So then how are believers in Christ to respond in these times?  Do we adhere to the cultural norms and shy away from bringing issues of faith into the public discourse?  Or is there a way that we can lovingly push back against the prevailing culture and seek to demonstrate the relevancy of faith in public discourse.  Ultimately if people aren’t thinking through these things, then God is dead to us.  If Christians are content to keep their faith “personal”, then what we’ll have is a dying church, a fading light and an increasing irrelevancy of God.    Scripture calls Christians the light of this world.  But I’m afraid many of us would rather remain underground for fear of what others might think of us.

Jesus Bore our Sins

Jesus bore our sins.  What an amazing truth.  Scripture says that Jesus bore our sins in his body so that we might die to sin and live to righteousness.

The weight of the world’s sin was placed on the shoulders of Christ Jesus.  All the rape, all the murder, all the hate, all the greed, all the lust, all the fear, all the oppression, all the pride, all the selfishness, all of it’s weight was placed upon the back of Christ on the cross.  The shame, the guilt, and righteous judgment were all placed on Jesus.  But there was no deceit ever found in him.  Jesus didn’t have to bear my sin.  He chose to.  He chose to suffer unlike any other man to ever live in order that we might have life!  Jesus clearly is the hero of the story of humanity.  There are no other heroes in comparison to Christ.  What we are incapable of bearing, God has chosen to bear it for us, out of his great love for us.

Thank you Jesus,

-Caleb