Post
by Murfreesboro » Thu Jan 12, 2012 9:32 am
Well, that was kind of a long YouTube (14 minutes), but I watched it all because it interested me. I had never heard of that (college kid?) who has tried to separate Jesus from religion. I don't really buy his premise, either. Jesus says (Matthew 5:17) that He didn't come to abolish the Law & the Prophets, but to fulfill them. To me that says that He was very much within the framework of Judaism (the reason I have never understood anti-Semitism among Christians). He wasn't anti-religion, as I understand Him. He was anti- the perversion of religion. He was very, very severe against the Pharisees, who were quite self-righteous, and we have that mentality with us always.
I also can't go along with everything the "Amazing Atheist" says, either, obviously. Like so many people I have known throughout my life, he seems to equate religion, and even the idea of sin, with enforcing or breaking a bunch of rules laid down in the Bible. When people do that, I wonder if they have ever really read the Bible, or read it attentively. Rules and rule-breaking were what the Pharisees were all about. Sin is not about rule-breaking. It is about separation from God. My favorite comment about the Ten Commandments was made years ago by Billy Graham. He said that we do not break God's commandments. We break ourselves upon them. I am not a Baptist and do not regard Billy Graham as my ultimate authority in religious matters, but that was a very wise and insightful statement about human nature. The Bible is not just a collection of "old desert stories." It is a collection of intensely human stories, about the way we break ourselves, over and over again, and seek reconciliation with God because of it.
Clearly, too, the Amazing Atheist is bugged by the idea that a man who lived two thousand years ago could atone for my sins today. I think he is trapped in the notion that God is time-bound. But God is outside of time. That does not mean He lives "forever," if by forever you understand "endless time." That means He is outside of time. I think the concept of eternity is not really comprehensible to the human mind, because our minds are time-bound instruments. But again and again the Bible uses words that suggest this dichotomy. Even the name God gives Moses, "I Am," underscores His timelessness.
I don't know what that college kid says about the Old Testament versus the New Testament. The Amazing Atheist says he (the college kid) rejects the OT and holds up the NT. I know there are some denominations that tend to do that, but to me, the Bible is continuous. I love the Old Testament. It is filled with wonderful story after wonderful story. Many literary scholars have remarked that every genre of literature there is can be found in the Bible. How could anyone who has read it not love it? And the funny thing is, the more you read the entire Bible, the more you see Jesus everywhere in it, not just in the New Testament. He is all over Psalms, for example. (BTW, He actually quoted Psalm 22 on the Cross, which, if you read it, is a pretty graphic description of the Crucifixion).
Sorry, I know I am going on. I don't mean to be confrontational, not at all. But it makes me sad that so many people today seem ready to reject the Bible and Christianity without really even understanding either of them.