Oh, For Crying Out Loud!
by kreitsauce on Jan.09, 2010, under Bible, Doctrine, Philosophy, Politics, Science
I got the title of this post from my favorite line from Stargate: SG-1. Jack O’neill always says it when he gets frustrated by people who waste time on stupidity, wrong-headed thinking, or inane political mumbo-jumbo. Frankly, I’ve noticed a lot of Christians that deserve a good “Oh, for crying out loud,” from the Colonel himself, followed by my second favorite line. My reason for this is that it seems like so many Christians have their heads firmly planted in the sand.
I say this because I have met so many Christians who naively think that they are not responsible for what happens in the world around them. Their attitudes and words, they think, do not influence those around them. Their choice of entertainment, they suppose, is entirely a matter of personal preference, devoid of any deeper meaning and incapable of creating unintended consequences. Whether or not they vote or are involved in government and law (one hesitates to use the word “politics”) is of little consequence. Worldview, apologetics, and philosophy have no meaning to them, and they would just as soon have everyone avoid this area of reality altogether. And, oh, the excuses they use to justify these ideas. Some of them even use Bible verses to bolster their position.
- Involvement in something other than government, law, and other aspects of the public square is not contradictory to concern for evangelism and discipleship. I would also add here that the Great Commission is not the only aspect of Christian responsibility. Otherwise, ditch you family and your job and spend the rest of your (most likely short) life winning folks and getting them into church! Oh, you’d have to revoke your citizenship, too, since that’s a part of human government.
- Abraham, Joseph, Moses, Samuel, Nehemiah, Daniel, Esther, and a host of other men and women of God were directly involved in influencing the course of their nation.
- God gives everyone talents and responsibilities so that they may work. Work is by default a good thing because God intended for us to work. It’s a part of His creation. God’s idea of “work” is not limited to a job, but to that which creates, repairs, maintains, and produces. In a sense, everything except for recreation is work- even voluntary involvement in government.
- We live in a nation that gives us direct access to our leaders. We can vote on the federal and local levels. We can call, email, and write our leaders. Just like Daniel and Esther, you and I have an audience with our leaders. They may not always do what is right, but we are responsible to do our best.
- We live in a capitalist society, for the most part. For this reason, your dollar is your vote for the goods that ought to be produced. When you buy a CD or movie, you tell the producers you want more of that kind of product. “What you applaud you encourage, but beware what you celebrate, ” says Ravi Zacharias. What are you telling Hollywood?
- Jesus didn’t limit His command for us to be salt and light to strictly evangelism, even though that is how we often portray it. No, He says that we must season the earth and light the world so that people will glorify God in Heaven. This can be done in many ways; naming the name of Christ must be done in even the highest places in the nation.
In fact, the use of the word “world” in Matthew 5 is interesting. “You are the light of the world”, Jesus says. The word “world” is from the Greek word “kosmos”. The Kosmos is defined as “constitution, order, and government”, “the human family”, “the universe and all of reality” and “world affairs”, according to my Greek lexicon. Interesting. We are supposed to be a light to law and government. How can we do so without informing those that work in such areas concerning Truth?
Which brings me to my last point. Truth matters. Either it is sacred and therefore must be protected, proclaimed, and defended, or it is unimportant and may be trampled under foot. For this reason, worldviews matter, for they are how people unintentionally interpret reality and Truth. Philosophy matters, for it is how people intentionally interpret reality and Truth. Apologetics matters, because it treats all Truth as God’s truth. There is no direction you and I can go in reality, no sphere into which we delve, in which God has not spoken. His Truth is everywhere. We can use His Truth, His world, His revelation of Himself through the cosmos to speak truth into people’s lives. If your concern is for evangelism and discipleship, you have no choice but to explore the world of philosophy, worldview, and apologetics.
Too many Christians are picking their one area, retreating into their hand-crafted shells of existence. Whether the world ends with a bang or a whimper, they are only concerned with themselves in the end. They do not want to learn. They do not want to expend energy. They’d rather go to task on only their one thing. We need people like Nehemiah in the Bible. He commanded his people to both defend and build. They took up sword and trowel to accomplish the task God had for them. We need to do the same- or get out of the way so someone else can.
January 10th, 2010 on 11:29 pm
nice points. the way you say it makes it almost self-explanatory
January 10th, 2010 on 11:32 pm
Is it sad that a few weeks ago i read almost all your posts in just a few days? Call me addicted i guess : )
January 10th, 2010 on 11:56 pm
Lol, glad you enjoy it, young Padawan!
January 23rd, 2010 on 6:26 am
i love yore blog becauce, besides the wonderful content, the bckround is dark and it makes it easy to read late at night. the white backround almost is blinding but i can read this easily even at 12:30 at night.
February 10th, 2010 on 7:04 am
I think that there can be no doubt about it that being a Christian means more than just reading the Bible and going to religious services once a week.
A good Christian is also a good human being and a responsible citizen. He demonstrates this by doing good towards all his fellow human beings and playing a positive part in all the insitutions of the society he lives in.
In the Hebrew Scriptures we can read this in the law of Moses: the more than 700 rules and commandments that taught the Jews which things were pleasing in the eyes of the Lord and which were not. Most of these hunddreds of commandments have to do with the way a good Jew should behave towards his fellow Jews and the Jewish nation as a whole.
In the Greek Scriptures we can read the well-known words of Jesus: Christians ought to serve their Lord and God with all thir heart, their whole mind and all their intellectual powers….and treat their fellow men the way they would like to be treated themselves.
February 11th, 2010 on 11:04 pm
Ok…my name is Maioribus and I'd like to start by saying that I'm an Atheist, and before you think so I'm not a radicalist, I'm not here to bash but I would like to talk more about the theory and religion that you preach, you seem to be well-rounded in your arguments and I'd like to maybe enlighten you to my side of thinking, from what i see, youre not a huge fan of the theory of evolution nor the truth thought that there may not be a God, and i believe that you should open your mind a little more, i will continue to read your blog to gather your view, hope to talk to you soon….
February 11th, 2010 on 11:31 pm
Maioribus, I welcome thoughtful discussion from anybody, provided they're willing to be polite about it. Frankly, I'm a little low on time these days, but if you don't mind my replies being a little delayed, I would enjoy talking with you!