if we are for…

Tree of Light

It’s easy not to like something. It’s easy to show disgust or disdain towards a certain group of people or behaviours we don’t agree with. Most of our reactions stem from the after-effects of our environment and culture. It’s easy to be a critic and take ‘pot-shots’, it’s easy to point the and say ‘its their fault!’ What’s not easy is pointing the back on ourselves.

think the idea of ’ anything demonstrates the need to be against something. We have been taught that we are against something that we have purpose. Some might use the word ’cause’ to make it sound more justifiable. Being -something removes us from having any responsibility from the thing we might be against. It creates an unhealthy distance between us and the point we’re trying to make.

Being anti-anything isn’t really healing.

Pointing the finger doesn’t deal with issue, it just gives us someone to blame and gives us a false sense of peace that we have done something about it. But if ever talk to someone who lost someone dear to them and ended up in court-room staring down the defendant at fault for their loss, the killer going to jail doesn’t make the loss seem any easier to bare. The loss is still there. The distance between what is and what could be seems to be an ever-widening gaping hole leaving us crying out for some repair.

What if we are for things rather than against them? What would that look like? How would that change our conversations? How would that change how we see the world?

If we are for things than we have a responsibility to provide space for those things to grow. If we are for things than it means we have hope. If we are for things than there is potential. If we are for things than God has room to still create (and so do we). If we are for peace rather anti-war than it means we intentionally do something about rather than simply complain about it. If we are for love rather than anti-hate than it forces us to ask the necessary question of ‘what does it look like for me to love well?’; if we are for rather than anti-sin than it means we focus on who we are meant to be and living out of the divine spark in such a way that it extracts the very same thing out of others when we interact with them.
If we are for things, the world can be a better place. We can have a hand in healing people, places and things. IF..

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throw away the cookie cutters.

Bert Lahr by Melvin Sokolsky # 2

i remember getting into a lot of trouble when i was younger.

 my childhood is riddled with story after story of me doing so many awful things. i got so good at so bad, i learned how get others in trouble. mostly, by pointing the finger. it gave me power. it gave me this sort of immunity over . as long as i had a ‘fall guy’,it wasn’t full proof mind you, but it sure made my odds more realistic. it also gave me the cockiness to think i could get away with it. i have since learned that this approach to relationships isn’t a healing one. it doesn’t encourage reparation, if anything it makes sure healing doesn’t happen.

this knowledge i gained as a young child stole some of my innocence. i knew how to judge situations so well that i could manipulate people into doing what i wanted. this is not a good thing. it’s this knowledge i want to talk about. the knowledge of good and evil and how it and has already gotten us into a lot of trouble.

adam and eve is one of those stories that has a lot of meanings.

it isn’t a story just about two literal people, in fact, their is archaeological evidence that demonstrates the story originated on a scroll in ancient Mesopotamia. one of the many deeper layered meanings could be about judging others. adam and eve wanted what wasn’t theirs. they consumed. but what did they consume? they consume the knowledge to know between good and evil. the ability to judge. to separate the difference between right and wrong which in turn could lead to the same very thing i got into the habit of doing, judging and incriminating others for my wrongdoing, essentially this happens in the Garden account. Adam blames Eve, Eve blames the snake and so on. The blame game begins. Judgement is in the hands of man, and it already has dangerous implications.

What they didn’t come to realize is that part of the story is that it wasn’t their place to know the difference, or to judge others. In fact, at one point, Eve assumes the fruit she wasn’t meant to eat was also good for Adam. She judges not only for herself but for another person; that what is good for her is also good for someone else. Isn’t this at the heart of judgement?

why we judge? why we point the finger?

not only because is it about power, manipulation, or blame, but it could also be about the fear of being alone. that we need others to journey with us so we feel like what we believe or where we’re going is right and true. we need validation and so we judge others. we try and make them like us. we pull out our cookie-cutters and begin etching away on those around us. yet, i think we forget that we are created to be us, as had intended. you are you. i am me. we need to throw away the cookie-cutters.

the hebrew mind puts judgement not just above ourselves, but equates the act to divine judgement. one of the many hebrew words for judgement is the same exact one as elohim used in the beginning of the bible when it says that ‘in the beginning God (elohim) created…’ — judgement is a God-act only. reserved for the godhead. paul deals with this in the first few chapters of and almost condemns the church and basically says that if they think they have right to judge others than they also have a right to be god.

another hebrew word for judge is the word duwn, or diyn. it means to make straight. in one place, the writer modernises the meaning as ‘umpire’. someone who determines whether is right or wrong and makes the call. another place defines it as making a way straight. another place uses the similar word to ‘law’-suit, or sentence or tribunal. judgement in these contexts are public things. they are exposing kinds of things. they embarrass another. they cheapen the reputation of another. they create a relationship where one person is superior and the other is inferior. its a relationship of power and manipulation. not of healing. another definition for the word judge/judgement is justice. a setting things right. but justice is a holistic thing in the hebrew mind. it sets all things right.

so what if judgement is about healing?

what if judgement isn’t about the person standing next to us, but what if judgement is more about how we are making the a better place to be. maybe it could be about how we all work together to find the good in the and as some Jews believe/d help repair that good/divine in it. maybe judgement is about seeing the good rather than the bad. in fact, another word in the hebrew for judge means to cheer. not to cheer for the folly of another person, but to believe in the best of another person. to be a cheerleader of the other. to bring out the best in another person, to search out opportunities to cheer one another on to be the best them they were intended to be.

judging others in the traditional sense doesn’t allow much space for healing the world or broken relationships, in the traditiona sense it is the opposite of cheering and more like how adam and eve might have got it wrong. and so if judgement is about justice and setting things right, maybe we can shoulder-to-shoulder and believe in and dream out the kind of world god intended. i hope we can.

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Romans 6:23: More About Identity, and Less About Everyone In Sin

Day 303: My Identity

6:23 — For the wages of [is] ; but the gift of God [is] eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.

This tends to rendered as a verse that describes this idea that all people are hidden in ‘sin’, and since all people are ruled by sin then all people die. That all people are headed to a destructive place called hell.

(Rather than dealing with a better rendering for sin as well as the mythology and rhetoric behind the ancient idea of hell, I would like to spend some time picking apart and re-contextualzing the verse.)

If you notice in this verse context, Paul is consistently making a contrast. He goes from verse-to-verse demonstrating either the destructive nature of sin or the complete and full gift of salvation. (In this context, salvation also means healing or .) living as we are meant to be. living out of the best ‘us’. and so the less we spend our energy on not being ourselves the better we live out our salvation.

the word for wages is opsōnion — it is related to the wages of a soldier who deserved his pay. it was also used to describe a human to human transaction; for example, in the ancient times sometimes a debt was paid by one working for another to settle their debt. “The law was very strict in requiring daily payment of wages.” More on Wages here.

Thanatos is the word for death. It tends to be defined in the bible as physical death, but i think its also important to remember that Thanatos was also a minor part of Greek Mythology. It is death personified. death in a person.

Maybe in this context, it might be better rendered as ‘the ability for a person to bring destruction everywhere they go when they are not living out the best them. The word also is connected to the idea of pestilence. which brings death. basically, the idea here is that sin and our intentional alignment with it only bring daily destruction.

the word for eternal is better rendered as a ‘life of the ages’, or ‘life as you were intended to live out’.

So it seems Pauls is creating a contrast between two-types of people. people who align themselves with sin purposefully, will only experience and bring destruction wherever they go. those who choose to live out of the best them they were meant to be, bring healing and hope. so, then in this light it is less about how all of humanity has lost the plot and more about how all of us can choose to be people who either leave destruction or leave hope in the wake of our choices. which one are you striving to be?

So then the term connotes itself to the idea of a daily experience of sin. Sin defined as people not living out the best them.

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morality: on the inside.

Moral Compass

Reach for your goal. Reach for the stars. Chase your dreams. Since our childhood, most of us have been inundated with philosophy that everything we want to achieve is rather than in. That life is about finding ways to get what we want. It is consumerism dressed up in the fads achieving our personal potential. If you grew up in the Christian Church for example, you get taught that ‘’s mysterious will’ is nowhere near. That his will is somewhere out there. That our lives are about guessing at where his will is and what its supposed to look like. But even the confines of claustrophobic Christianity there is this life message that whatever we’re searching is completely and utterly separate from us. I think we have also come to do the same with morality.

We’ve gotten it in our heads that morality is a plumbline we grapple for or wrestle others over.  But what if morality is deeper than that’s out there? What if morality has been ingrained within us? Maybe somewhere deep down embedded in the acids of our DNA is the coding for morality. Somehow people know at a very young age that stealing is wrong. Most people can try to explain it away as parental nurture, but there is more to it than that. Or that we can go to any country in the world and somewhere somehow we all know that killing is destructive behaviour.

For some, morality is something that is either taught, learned or gained through familial contact or social interaction. Yet there are people who didn’t have good parents or no parents at all and grew up without much social interaction or exposure to accessible information and yet can interact with a culture and still know the basic ‘rules’ fo morality. For others, morality seems to be something we have to achieve to or earn. That the more we do the more moral we become. If that’s true, than morality has always been a commodity we can purchase. Then morality sits in our hotel vending machines waiting for us to choose it.

But, morality isn’t a rule. It isn’t a plumbline. It isn’t a tool to determine who is in and who is out. It is something that part of each person. We don’t earn morality. It earns us. The more in touch with our humanity we become the more moral we become. Morality is a gene. But not a gene that we can see or study. Its a gene that progressively evolves over time, but unlike any other gene it is effected and altered by the decisions we make and don’t make. It is transformed by compassion and deformed by the lack of it.

Morality isn’t a characteristic that was somehow born out of the ancient Christian scriptures. It wasn’t birthed out of the introduction of evolution. It isn’t a course you can take at a university. There’s no degree you can get in morality. Morality is in us. We are all moral. Its how we choose to use that knowledge that will determine how we nurture the growth of that morality within us. So, the origins of morality lie in each human but are grown through the intentional everyday process of making choices.

If morality is subjective than is there a plumbline is the first apparent question? If there is a plumbline it is found in a multi-systemic worldview. are encouraged by living in a moral society or community. They are also spurred on by what we choose to expose our minds to. Moral subjectivity is not the enemy to the progress of any society, the enemy is when homogenous morality is used as way to marginalize people into our neat little boxes. Moral subjectivity leads a society to embrace diversity by seeing that their worldview isn’t the only right one. Moral homogeneity says needs to see everything the same.

Now the problem comes when someone thinks that their moral worldview is much more valuable than the person standing next them. The moment that moral subjectivity becomes moral superiority is when things like the Holocaust or the Crusades leave open scars on our history. Events like this instill just enough fear in people that to even hear words like ‘moral subjectivity’ force them to cringe at the next global episode likely to occur because of such terminology.  Most tend to blame the development of such atrocious acts on the lack of parenting skills or chock it up to bad highschool experiences. For the most part people tend to blame events outside of the perpetrators life to help explain why they are the way are. But maybe its deeper than attempting to victimize those that have made historically destructive decisions.

Decisions belong to those who make them. The after-effects of someone’s decision are the life-long souvenirs they will carry with them. And those souvenirs are indicative of the origins of where they learned to make moral choices. If the origins of moral subjectivity lie in the heart of a person than no longer can people blame outside unseen forces. If moral subjectivity is true than one can only blame themselves. This is incredibly empowering discovery because than it means that everyone is responsible to developm morality in light of their journey. This doesn’t mean that there aren’t objective morals to follow, it means that our development can remain subjective all the searching for the objective. That we don’t have to push, pull and prod our way through the library to find the one book that teaches us how to be all things moral. This reality us with a responsibility not only to choose progress but to help one another on our journey, and by doing so we help usher in a new morality that is much needed in light of our current cultural shift.

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all haven’t sinned. being exclusivist is the ultimate stop sign.

Egypt faces, without words

Rom 3:23 For all have sinned; all fall short of ’s glorious standard (or fall short of the glory of God).

most people render this verse be a universal proclamation of the depravity and falleness of man. that we are all going ‘hell in a handbasket’. but is that what is being said?

i think its important to remember that the majority of the time when paul uses a ‘you’ in his letters he isn’t directing the ‘you’ to those outside his audience, he is directing it to the readers/hearers. or even what some might call universal proclamations tend to not include the universe within which most theology sets the stage for universal depravity. take for example the first few words — ‘for all’ — which the word in greek for this phrase is better rendered ‘for all of those who’. paul is dealing with a specific issue, he is also referring to older set of scriptures, more specifically to the verse in the OT where God supposedly tells the nation of Israel that not one among you is good (there’s that ‘you’ showing up again; remember God wasn’t talking to the , he was speaking thr0ugh a prophet to the Israelite followers). Paul is relating this terminology to make a point that this new grace that the Romans are receiving isn’t cheap grace. It comes with inherited experience. A inherited family that they are not a part of. Paul goes on to talk about the idea of sin. remember the word is singular, not epidemic. and two it is directly related to personal journey that is experienced and sought out throughout our life. so he is tell them that no one in their community is who they should be. (because there were some in the community who thought they were better than others because they thought following  jesus was all about the law — this is why Paul says before and after these verses that everyone has been made right. Paul is dealing with this destructive spirit of exclusivity here. some were saying only those who follow the list of the right things to do are good enough to call themselves followers. Paul nips that whole way of thinking in the bud by cutting out the legs from underneath those who have gotten too big of a head for the group they are a part of.

the next section is this idea of falling short. the word in the greek is hystereo. it means ‘lack’. deeply rooted in the origin of the word is this idea where the effect in the cause lags behind. so instead of having a cause and effect, one right after the other, the results don’t come immediately or directly after the cause. it would be like putting some money in a vending machine and making your selection and then coming back the next day to get your selection. or using paints to paint a picture, but the picture itself doesn’t show up until hours later. it is this idea that people haven’t caught up with they are . that we are learning what it means to follow christ. everyone. not just a few. and that no one can pull rank. in fact, the word also connotes a sort of partnership. so paul is actually chastising those who are trying to be exclusive by challenging them to see that by being exclusive they are partnering with their lack, they are partnering with the ‘who’ they are not . and by doing so, they don’t make god famous (which is the idea behind the word for glory). that we don’t draw people to jesus when we think we are better than others. and a good reminder is to see that we all need jesus. Paul goes into the atonement theology on the verses between these two. but the point is clear, exclusivism stops us from being who we are .

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an atheist speaks out: how christians and atheists can work together

Turtles All the Way Down

a really good friend of mine who is atheist shares his thoughts on bacon, god, and how  and atheists could work . here is his article.

                                                                                                                                                                                                          by James Millar.

 
USED be a vegetarian – but bacon frying in pan smells so good doesn’t it?  It was a life choice based on basic principle that I did not want consume a sentient being. A personal choice – a personal view. However, I was always surprised by confrontational response I would generally receive when I revealed this detail of my life. It was a constant irritation me, that others seemed feel compelled confront my belief system head-on. With a sigh, I would brace myself, yet again, a bombardment of hackneyed counter-arguments. Not that they ever managed shake my personal conviction that my choice was the right one for me.
My vegetarianism has now lapsed, but I still try and eat food which has been ethically sourced and have a great sympathy with the compelling arguments put forward for vegetarianism – maybe in the future I’ll be a veggie again, sausages taste so good though.
The reason I bring this up is like vegetarianism, atheism, seems to evoke a similar response. I have for many years held the belief that there was no god, no higher being guiding life, no holy spirit, that we are just animals, like any other inhabiting the world. A result of evolution – no less no more.
My name is James and I am an atheist.
There I’ve said it….I’m out the closet, because ever since I’ve held this viewpoint I have tended to keep it to myself. Perhaps it’s because I find the sight of atheist heavyweight Richard Dawkins, attempting to intellectually bludgeon the religious community slightly unsettling. I’m not driven by trying to impose my viewpoint on others, frankly I don’t care enough. But then I expect my beliefs to be respected and I don’t want to be hammered by religious dogma either.
I understand the hostility to my world view.

 Atheism calls into question one of the core beliefs of those with a religions conviction. The atheist doesn’t get ‘faith’ I’m afraid, he is needs convincing with scientific fact. Basically, if the argument is conceded that there is no intelligent design, no heaven and hell, no higher being guiding us through life then the house of cards collapses. If I had spent my life believing in God I might react in a similar fashion. 

Never the twain shall meet then?

I think not, there is common ground. There is a dialogue to be opened up here. I doubt there will ever be any concession on the diametrically opposing views of the existence or not of God. But I think Christians and Atheists have a lot in common. Both have spent time pondering the big questions in life – where we come from, why are we here, what happens when we die. More importantly though I think, both believe in promoting and nourishing the inherent goodness of the human race. Put simply; we believe that people should be good to each other.  I feel this, as a belief is far more important than a debate on the existence of a higher being. I would equally lack interest in a debate on whether fairies live at the bottom of the garden, I don’t mean to be offensive, that’s how I feel about it.
The only way in my view that the two can progress, is to leave that debate at the doorstep, and talk about humanist philosophy. I want to be decent, kind and honest to my fellow humans, not so I’m in God’s good graces, but because it feels good and I know on a fundamental level it is the right thing to do. But whatever the drive; those who care about helping others should come together, talk, take action and try and make this a world we are not ashamed to hand over to our children. Bacon’s burning, got to go!

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should we love everyone, really?

Plus haut 

i saw this short interesting thought on whole Glenn Beck thing. Check it out here or below: http://www.urbanonramps.com/?p=2204 (pay special attention the bottom lines, very good indeed)

On March 15, 2010 .

I haven’t seen the video of Glenn Beck’s call to “run away” from churches that teach social . Nor have I read much on the responses by the many – see the Sojo God’s Politics blog a round-up – who disagree with Beck. (So how do I know these things, might ask? I scan twitter feeds and email subject lines and pick up the plot.)

Nevertheless (famous last words), here’s what was on my mind when I woke up this morning:

Glenn Beck as you would yourself.

That’s a take-off from Matthew 22:36-40. you are a Christian, you are supposed to love people first. Not agree with them first. Or disagree with them first. Or truth to their power first. You are supposed to love them first. This is an equal opportunity, ahem, encouragement. On both the center-left and the center-right I hear ugly caricatures of the opposition-du-jour. So a question to the wise: “What does it mean to love Glenn Beck as you would love yourself?”

As for Beck himself, he seems to have really stepped in it this time (did he mean to? that’s always the question with show hosts), because it isn’t just so-called left wingers who affirm social justice efforts in churches. As an example, The Heritage Foundation created and just released a DVD series for use in churches entitled – wait for it – “Seek Social Justice.” (Disclosure: Yours truly appears in the video and study guide.)

By the way, here’s some bonus sermon illustration material. You substitute all sorts of people, and groups of people, for “Glenn Beck” or “your neighbor.” To wit:

Love illegal immigrants as you would love yourself.

Love oil industry executives as you would love yourself.

Love President Barack Obama as you would love yourself.

Love President George W. Bush as you would love yourself.

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u2 video remake: if i don’t go crazy tonight

U2 – I’ll Go Crazy If I Don’t Go Crazy Tonight from David OReilly on Vimeo.

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cruise hilight 1: the bible as a pseudo-reality.

Why does he leave Reality?

i just spent a week a cruise ship (our first cruise, woo hoo!) where some of time was spent with a pentecostal conference group. here are some of my hilights while there. on lookout for more.

a parent tell a child that they are no good or that they have no value give the world. subconsciously their worldview begins shift. their perceptions of themselves begin morph into what they previously thought about themselves. they begin believe these new words as the . and nothing but the . and most of them spend their lives trying live in defiance of these ‘truths’, others become the helpless victims of really bad parenting and become the prisoners these pseudo-realities. they believed what wasn’t true be true of themselves. sometimes we have deny the very truths we have been told that are true find the truth. and sometimes we have accept the very lies we have been told find the truth that was hidden behind them all along. words create worlds. realitities. truths and non-truths. god did it. we can it also.

this might be what has also gone on for centuries in the evolution of christianity. we have created pseudo-realities. false-worlds. for some the bible is a series of theological or doctrinal statements that all must -on to. and if not, then those who do not are either enemies to the movement or need to be converted to their pseudo-reality. their pseudo-world. this is not an attack, but rather than analysis of how we come to where we end up. if we are all honest with ourselves, we tend to want to define things either out of fear or the need to control*. this isn’t always the case, sometimes it is out of sheer curiosity and awe that we wish to discover things. this is what i want to spark in readers, that curiosity, the art of the question, doubt, narrative, romance, candlelight dinners, these are all good things.

take for example what many have done with the words of the author paul in scripture. there are a few place where paul uses words like battle, flesh, spiritual, or armour. he uses very engaging language. for most this is another reality, realm, existence or dimension that it seems at times we have to earn to be a part of. but if you read deeper and research you will find that paul was dealing with people on a human level, dealing with their everyday lives, sometimes dealing with communities who didn’t seem to have it together. his words were supposed to be encouraging not mandating a 5-point theological framework. and yet people have taken the words of paul and have created even more oppressive militaristic language of a cosmic battle going on somewhere out there for the souls of all mankind. we have taken his dealings with people and have created an alternate reality or what i call a pseudo-reality. something that wasn’t meant to be. paul was also a hebrew minded influenced writer who would also use the experiences and items around him for metaphor as well. paul would deal with some of their views on cosmology and creatively intertwine his views on how they effect our lives. he hardly said anything outside of what they wouldn’t have already known. but, he would say it differently than to what might have been acceptable. for example, the hebrews believed everything was already spiritual. in fact, one source even says that they thought eating dinner was the same as giving a sacrifice. the hellenized audience would have been aware of these subtle nuances we sometimes miss. but paul was having conversations with people, not creating pseudo-realities that we could use to scare each other with. if we are in any sort of battle, it is the battle to find god in the midst of all of our pseudo-realities we all have helped create.

another example would be the church in acts. in the book of acts, people experienced god directly. and they gave all of their belonging to one another. they met in each others houses. they met secretly and discreetly. they also got it wrong. a lot. they healed people randomly. they protected and cared for one another. and so many other things. but there is this over-eager desire to be like them so much that people are taking on their distinct practices, or even focusing only on certain aspects of their experiences (e.g., finding ways to re-experience ‘pentecost’ or doing ‘house-churches’). they are creating their own pseudo-realities of their experiences ‘then’. what about now? what do we do with now? it’s not that their experiences don’t have influence or don’t spark creativity, its that they aren’t relevant to our times. yes, they are relevant, but not for our time. god is in a different phase** (it seems) than he was then. but most people use the church in acts as the ultimate plumbline for how successful they are or could be. they use their models as their own. they use their models to judge others. they ask questions like ‘how come ‘they’ experience god so good and we don’t?’ and so then church life becomes something we keep doing more and more of (encouraging an over-spiritualized approach to consumerism) to get god to pay attention to us. we try and earn his magicshow. we have created a pseudo-reality that was never meant to be. the pentecostal churches seem to solely look for the ecstatics experience in god. in fact their denominational title is inspired by the early church event. and it seems they too have fallen into the trap of creating/forcing pseudo-ecstatic experiences in the place of other church practices and calling it god. i don’t want to seem to be undermining some of the experiences people are having or even begin to separate which ones are real or not. but i think we need to come to a place where we are comfortable with tearing down our own pseudo-realities and allow reality to be what it is. we must come to a place where we don’t need to feel in control of what we believe, but let belief be in control of our journey. we should be able to come to a place where these false-realities melt away leaving us with nothing more than god. but if we choose to defend, argue, prove, experience and too easily accept our pseudo-realities as the reality than we too will live life as subconcious victims to our unaware machinations of trying to control our worlds and the worlds of others. and there is more out there, it starts with us letting go of our pseudo-reality.

*am I saying that all of our inherited faith within christianity has been created by controlling or fearful people? i definitely would think if people like Augustine, Origen, Athanasius were to bear all, they too would agree that some of what we might deem as truth is just a colonization of our/their pseudo-realities.

** be on the look out for my new blog on the ‘evolutionary development of god’

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jesus and other religions: what did he have to say?

interfaith

jesus interacted with many people from many different backgrounds. when jesus quotes golden rule, he isn’t first one to utter these words, confucius did — almost 500 years before jesus was conceived. there is speculation that jesus traveled quite a bit during his 18 silent years that we have no record . some historians/theologians surmise jesus might have traveled to what is now known as britain and europe. others guess that he might have went to india, china and the rest of the to meet, study and learn at the feet of other spiritual leaders; such as buddha.

in fact, right near where jesus lived and grew up was a port where there were major intersections and import and export of goods around the world at that time. it is no doubt that jesus would be heard of such religions as buddhism, zoroastrianism and others. in fact, he would have been aware of the two-kingdom split of the israelites in the Tanakh (Old Testament). jesus would have interacted with other religions. in fact, even in some of the stories jesus shows his compassion toward other religions. he meets up a few different greek people, who would have been cult-practicing  ‘goa’ (anyone non-jewish). when jesus spends time with them, he doesn’t reprimand them for their practices. anything, most of our theology of condemning other religions tends to come from Paul not jesus (compare the number of verses between the two). when jesus changes the story of the two jews walking on a dangerous road, to a jew and a samaritan (who helps the jew), he is also playing with interfaith advocacy and religious pluralism. now, for some, they might argue that jesus was advocating the philosophy that ‘all truth is god’s truth’, which would wholeheartedly agree, . But, what there is more to it? what the reason why jesus didn’t comment on their religious state was because to him it didn’t matter.  it was their heart and personal transformation he desired. (now, this is conjecture, i understand, but any other retort this will be just the same — keep this in mind). yet, we spend so much of our time fighting over ‘religions’ when we agree jesus and i might add a person like buddha (who has written down that he wished people would not turn his insight into a religious movement) wanted something more than a set of rules or doctrines.

to assume jesus was here to create a ‘one-way’ religion (as is traditionally asserted) is to support the belief that god is truly small. it also doesn’t allow for the reality that god could easily break out all of our boxes, even the ones in this blog. we get so caught up in who believe in what that we forget jesus just loved people. he was a hippie. we be hippies. but because our incessant for labels and words have kidnapped mystery, we to continue making sense of it all rather than loving people. the gospel isn’t about how bad people are and who a small one-religion god. the gospel is hope (that’s what it means in aramaic), and that hope looks different for a christian than it does a or an hindu or an atheist. we have to see the gospel without our own interpretations. see it as the word is — hope. with no additives or preservatives, just extreme hope. jesus took the time to listen, learn and love. a lot of christianity is still learning how to listen let alone learn from other people. yet, learn we must. love we must. or we will be nothing more than a company who thinks our product is the best and else’s (as the british would say) is rubbish. which is at the heart quite counter to jesus’s message of love toward anyone and .

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