Info

You are currently browsing the archives for the Naturalism category.

May 2012
S M T W T F S
« May    
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  
Links

Archive for the Naturalism Category

Doing Hate Right?

Dr. Henry Cloud says that great leaders learn to hate the right things well.

What is the role of ‘hate’ in your life?  When should we hate?  Care to comment?

Good Quote from Victor Davis Hanson

“Modern liberalism for our elites is really a psychological state, in which an individual crafts an all-encompassing world view in the abstract to offset a rather materialistic and self-centered desire in the concrete.” - Victor Davis Hanson

unChristian…A Book I’m Reading

Ron Smith posts on some interesting revelations from unChristian.

If only we could ban the ‘f word’! 

Simple Thought From a Simple Mind

Yesterday our pastor was preaching on the fact that the Christian life was never intended to be a call to exert enough will-power to live a righteous life.  (No, I wasn’t calling him a simple mind.  I was referring to my own…the thought is coming.)

As I thought about it, the idea of a believer struggling to “gut out” enough self-righteousness to please God makes just as much sense as a light bulb, disconnected from any source of electricity attempting to “will” itself to illuminate.  Just as the filament in a light bulb requires electricity to illuminate, so the believer requires the empowerment of the Holy Spirit to live the Christian life as it was meant to be lived.  (I’m sure I’m not the first to draw this analogy.)  Even our good deeds, accomplished outside of reliance on the Holy Spirit, are empty and misled.

Lord, teach me to rely on You and to stop trying to impress you with my own pitiful efforts at righteousness.  Once again, thank you for grace!

Help Wanted: Individuals Living Out Authentic Faith Needed

It’s late, so here’s a couple of quick thoughts.  I was recently challenged by a former church-goer as to the behavior of the vocal “Christians” and how even their fellow believers fear to do business with them because they are so untrustworthy and can actually be expected to operate in direct opposition to their stated beliefs.  I couldn’t argue…it certainly happens…often.  Is it in keeping with the person of Christ?  Absolutely not.  Is the validity of faith in him and a transforming relationship with him called into question?  Absolutely.  This is a tragedy in the church and one which, as believers, we should be challenging.  I pray for more churches that will call people to lives worthy of the high calling we’ve received in Jesus Christ.

Another sad application of the same issue can be seen in our failure to answer this dangerous school in Virginia.  Islamic students are being taught that it’s acceptable to kill ‘infidels’, yet the American church is so impotent that most Muslims in this land see nothing to attract them to Jesus and the God of the Bible.

If we fail to repent and remedy the current situation, then whether our downfall is ultimately brought about by secular humanism or Islam, the answer for our ineffectiveness in reaching our neighbor will be found in the same place: the mirror.

I Don’t Believe We’re Put Here To Be Comfortable

Richard Dawkins wrote a book entitled, “The God Delusion” in which he attacks belief in God as unscientific and false. This video is an interesting interview with him, during which he attempts to defend his position (which he does rather poorly).

Follow this link for the interview.

Alistair McGrath, by the way, wrote an answer entitled, “The Dawkins Delusion” which I’d recommend to anyone who gets confused by Dawkins’ materialistic dogma.

Dawkins and I share one thing in common. Both of us desire to live our lives in conformity with the truth, no matter the consequences. If he’s sincere in that claim, then I pray that God would break through the intellectual pride and materialist presuppositions and reveal himself to Dawkins (and those like him) in unmistakable ways. It’s interesting to note the final statement in the video, “I don’t believe we’re put here to be comfortable.” As determined as Dawkins is to operate as if there were no ultimate purpose in life (without a Creator, there can be none), he unwittingly lapses back into language that conveys that we have been “put” here (notice the passive voice). Dr. Dawkins should ask himself why, if there is no moral basis to the universe and there is no Creator (or Intelligent Designer), it should matter in the least whether a society lived according to truth or a lie…the universe is certainly impervious to the beliefs of humans? Or why it matters what “purpose” the collection of matter presently known as Richard Dawkins has “decided” it has? After all, if Dawkins is correct, his own thoughts are the predetermined product of chemical interactions in his brain which give the illusion of conscious choice, but have no ultimate purpose or meaning, nor could he have chosen otherwise.

Dr. Dawkins, please remind us why you wrote your book?

The Purposeless Driven Life

Rick Warren wrote what has become a well-known “Christian Living” book entitled,  “The Purpose Driven Life”.  I must admit that I haven’t read it, but I am well aware of the need to live for something and to orient our lives around that purpose.  When this purpose drives all of our attitudes, energy, and actions, we fulfill our purposes and enjoy the satisfaction of living a life that has an impact on the world.

I’ve recently been considering the “driven-ness” of the purposeless life and considering the pain brought by a lack of fulfillment.  The purposeless life can be just as driven as any other, but the effort expended is simply dissipated,  returning nothing but a shallow, short-term benefit, followed by the quick return of the hunger for fulfillment and the drive to satisfy that appetite.  Some return to the same well over and over, thinking the next attempt will prove more satisfying than the last…driven to addiction.  Others are smarter than that, so, for instance,  having tried illicit sex, they might move on to alcohol,  or drugs, or gambling, or…you get the picture.  Fundamentally, they believe that there has to be SOMETHING that will satisfy and they continue their desperate search to find it…driven to distraction.  Still others face the reality in front of them and, having lost hope, they dread another 60 to 100 years on this Earth through which they will “live”…driven to despair. As Dylan sang, “You gotta serve somebody.  It might be the Devil and it might be the Lord, but you gotta serve somebody.”

The fact is that there is no such thing as a purposeless life, but there are plenty of lives who have not discovered their purpose and there are plenty more who have, but they’re running from it!  Like it or not, we were all created to glorify God as we experience relationship with Him, through Jesus.  And it is only in giving ourselves to that relationship, that we discover who we were truly meant to be and can fulfill the specific purpose for which we were created.  Only God is big enough to capture our imaginations, to hold our wonder, and to meet every need in our lives.

Politically Correct = Waste of Tax Dollars

This is too funny…at least now Sweden won’t have to deal with all those women on street corners, afraid to cross the street because the sign only instructs the men on how to do so.

When being “politically correct” replaces the obligation to be moral, all kinds of nonsense emerge.  This is just one example.

How’s THIS for a Contrast? (Warning: Explicit)

I get the iTunes free Single of the Week each week, which happens to be a great value (most weeks, anyway). Occasionally, I don’t get the chance to listen to the song until it pops up randomly on my iPod and I realize I’m hearing it for the first time. Sugarcult’s, “Los Angeles” was one such song. I’ll warn you before you proceed, that the lyrics are harsh, but I’m posting them because they represent the stark reality of life as the center of one’s own universe. For contrast, I offer the 8th century hymn, “Be Thou My Vision” which hints at the enduring joy of a life of worshipping God through Christ.

Do you want to live a life of enduring hunger, never satisfied, simply consuming everything and everyone around you in your search for satisfaction? Or is a life of purpose, satisfaction, and joy which transcends circumstance a more reasonable goal? Read the lyrics and think about it…

Sugarcult – Los Angeles

I want a girl, girl that won’t talk back
And a job, job that gives me slack
And a car, car that won’t break down
In the heat of Los Angeles
Want to go, go without a map
Far away, away, I won’t get trapped
By the sound, a town, the sun beats down
In the heat of Los Angeles

One more holiday
I will not celebrate
I’m almost desperate
Cause I’m down, I’m down, I’m so beat down

This city’s killing me
I want, I want, I want everything
This city’s killing me
In the heat of Los Angeles

I want a love, love that won’t hit back
Want sex, sex without a catch
Want a face, to trust, to feel, to lust
In the heat of Los Angeles
Want to FUCK, FUCK, FUCK this up
Gonna feel, feel, feel you up
Had enough, enough, enough’s enough
In the heat of Los Angeles

This city’s killing me
I want, I want, I want everything
This city’s killing me
In the heat of Los Angeles
What has become of me?
I want, I want, I want everything
This city’s killing me
(I want everything)

Come on, come on
It’s alive and breathing
Come on, come on
Come alive today
Come on, come on
It’s a heartless beating
The sun is burning down Los Angeles
Los Angeles
Los Angeles

I want a girl, girl that won’t talk back
And a job, job that gives me slack
And a car, car that won’t break down
In the heat of Los Angeles

Come on, come on
It’s alive and breathing
Come on, come on
Come alive today
Come on, come on
It’s a heartless beating
The sun is burning down

(This city’s killing me)
Come on, come on
It’s alive and breathing
Come on, come on
Come alive today
(This city’s killing me)
Come on, come on
It’s a heartless beating
The sun is burning down Los Angeles (one more holiday)
The sun is burning down Los Angeles (I will not celebrate)
The sun is burning down Los Angeles (one more holiday)
The sun is burning down Los Angeles (I will not celebrate)


Be Thou My Vision

Be Thou my Vision, O Lord of my heart;_
Naught be all else to me, save that Thou art_
Thou my best Thought, by day or by night,_
Waking or sleeping, Thy presence my light.

Be Thou my Wisdom, and Thou my true Word;_
I ever with Thee and Thou with me, Lord;_
Thou my great Father, I Thy true son;_
Thou in me dwelling, and I with Thee one.

Be Thou my battle Shield, Sword for the fight;_
Be Thou my Dignity, Thou my Delight;_
Thou my soul’s Shelter, Thou my high Tower:_
Raise Thou me heavenward, O Power of my power.

Riches I heed not, nor man’s empty praise,_
Thou mine Inheritance, now and always:_
Thou and Thou only, first in my heart,_
High King of heaven, my Treasure Thou art.

High King of heaven, my victory won,_
May I reach heaven’s joys, O bright heaven’s Sun!_
Heart of my own heart, whatever befall,_
Still be my Vision, O Ruler of all.

Not Worth A Penny

George Bernard Shaw is widely considered a brilliant author, but if someone had offered him a penny for this thought, they would’ve overpaid.

“Lack of money is the root of all evil.”

Are we to believe that evil does not lurk within the hearts of the rich?  Why, then, do we find greed and corruption at all economic levels?  Perhaps poverty is not the cause of evil, but only one more symptom of man’s fallen condition.

Thoughts?