Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Image of the Invisible

We're more than carbon and chemicals
We are the image of the invisible
Free will is ours and we can't let go
We are the image of the invisible
We can't allow this, the quiet cull
We are the image of the invisible
So we sing out this, our canticle
We are the image of the invisible

We all were lost now we are found
No one can stop us or slow us down
We are the named and we are known
We know that we'll never walk alone

We're more than static and dial tone
We are the image of the invisible
We're emblematic of the unknown
We are the image of the invisible
So raise the banner, bend back your bows
We are the image of the invisible
Remove the cancer, take back your souls
We are the image of the invisible

We all were lost now we are found
No one can stop us or slow us down
We are the named and we are known
We know that we'll never walk alone

Though all the world may hate us, we are named
The shadow overtake us, we are known

Raise up the banner, bend back your bows
Remove the cancer, take back your souls

- Thrice
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He is the image of the invisible God
The firstborn over all creation
For by him all things were created
Things in heaven and on earth
Visible and invisible
Whether thrones or powers or rulers and authorities
All things were created by him and for him
He is before all things
And in him all things hold together

- Col 1:15-17
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So God created man in his own image
In the image of God he created him
Male and female he created them

- Gen 1:27

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Concerning Concerns about Christianity

I talked to a man today... more than an acquaintance, but not quite a friend.

He thought Christianity was bull crap.

Why?

1) Billy Graham's son once said in a sermon, addressing non-believers "your god is not my god"

He took this to mean that Graham's son thought there was more than one god. My friend didn't think this could be, so instead of believing in one god, he simply believes in a higher power that no one knows.

He also doesn't think this god causes harm or helps people out. He doesn't think god is the kind of person who harms people, but he also has experienced too much pain and seen his Christian mother suffer too much to think that god helps out believers.

2) He heard a paster once say the more money you give the more god will bless you. He has heard about how pastors, when they train, are trained in how to get their church to give.

Thus he thinks that the church is only a lucrative business, and being a pastor just another way to bring home the bacon.

3) His heard a pastor say that if you didn't read his Bible, then you aren't reading the Bible at all.

He thinks the pastor is referring to all the different translations, and thinks that each new one waters it down more and more. So how can a religion be worth following, according to him, if everyone is reading a different book, each watered down from the original.

Then he told me the only pastor he likes to listen to is Joel Osteen. He was frank with me, so i was frank with him: i told him most Christians i know reject Osteen as a real Christian (or at least one worth listening to). When we differed on opinion, he exclaimed the problem he had with Christians believing so many different things. It seems to him it is all a matter of opinion, and so how could any one person's opinion be right (meaning how can one know who is telling the truth who doesn't already have the truth).

4) He also brought up the pope, and all the problems catholic priests are having. I don't really need to say much further here... he definitely was right about that.

All this mixed with 55 years of life experience to back up his ideas and a pretty stern and stubborn attitude, it was a very difficult conversation for me to have.

We agreed to disagree... but i still went away from the conversation a little disappointed with the Church as a whole. Why can't there just be one church that is telling the world the same thing?

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

The Golden Rule and Categorical Imperative

The Golden Rule
"Love the Lord your God with all your heart
all your soul
all your strength
and all your mind... and love your neighbor as yourself" (Luke 10)

What does it mean to love your neighbor as yourself?

Immanuel Kant gives, in my opinion, a pretty close answer. He is not directly answering this question, but instead he is amidst answering the overarching question "What is the right thing for me to do?" He came up with the categorical imperative.

Act only on that maxim wherby thou
canst at the same time will that it should
become a universal law

Basically this means that when considering if an action is right or wrong, hypothesize that everyone in the world is faced with the same choice. If the action is something it is clear would be beneficial if everyone in the world did it, then it is the right thing to do. On the other hand, if the action is something that would be clearly detrimental if everyone in the world did it, then it would be the wrong thing to do. Or... doing what we would want everyone else to do... which is kind of like doing unto others what we would have them do to us... or loving our neighbor as ourselves.

So, should i post this blog? Well, i wouldn't mind if everyone in the world published a blog about drawing connections between the Bible and philosophical passages, all in an attempt to improve the way we think and live. So yea, i think i should.