EXPLORE
                YOUR FAITH 
                        Why
                        not believe that the Bible is the literal word of God? 
            I
                was in a conversation with someone the other day who was brought
                up to believe scripture literally. She was a person who had suffered
                deeply and experienced much loss. She felt an anger toward God
                and questioned why so many bad things had happened to her. “I
                thought if you followed God, bad things weren't supposed to happen
                to you so much,” she said. “If bad things are going
                to happen anyway, what help is it to believe in and follow God?” 
            She
                was stuck in circular thinking that comes, in part, from reading
                passages literally—passages like Deuteronomy 11:13-19 …"If
                you will only heed his every commandment... then he will give
                the rain..." And if you disobey, "...then the anger
                of the Lord will be kindled against you and he will shut up the
                heavens, so that there will be no rain... then you will perish
                quickly..." 
            If...
                    ...then. Religion reduced to a transaction. Essentially
                    it is a self-interested transaction. If I do right by God,
                    then God will take care of me and prevent drought and other
                    bad things. But when bad things happen, then it must be somebody's
                    fault. The nearest place to look for blame is probably the
                    one who is suffering. Therefore victimize the victim. 
            "What
                good is believing in God?" she asked me, wanting to put
                down the anger that is a byproduct of her suffering. We talked.  
            I
                believe that life with God does go better, truly, than life without
                God. But not in the sense that we get a pass on suffering, tragedy
                and misfortune. Christians say that when we look at Christ, we
                see the face of God. The picture we see declares that God is
                with us in suffering, tragedy and misfortune. And it says that
                such things will not be the last word. God brings resurrection.
                But Jesus did not experience resurrection until he had died.
                It is that way for us sometimes as well. 
            When
                we choose to accept the relationship that God offers us, it can
                change our experience of life, including its suffering. And here
                is the offer -- God loves us and God is with us. God loves us
                unconditionally even before we have responded to God. God is
                with us so we can live with a new energy of presence and confidence,
                even in the times of suffering. The worst that can happen can
                be united with the cross and given meaning and hope, even though
                it may not disappear. 
            So
                in some sense, things do go better when we believe in and follow
                God. But "going better" doesn't mean that we won't
                experience drought and bad things. And when bad things happen,
                it doesn't mean someone has to be blamed, especially not the
                one who is suffering. If
                the cross can happen to Jesus, then tragedy and injustice can
                happen to us as well. Experiencing our lives
                through a relationship with Jesus can change its meaning. 
            That's
                what Paul continually talked about—if you are living "in
                Christ" you are "a new creation." That involves
                dying to an old way of living. The old way includes believing
                that we make a project out of our lives—the righteous earning
                righteousness, deserving blessing; the sinner earning condemnation
                and misfortune. Paul has died to that way of thinking.  
            Now
                he experiences everything "in Christ." God loves us
                and God is with us. Therefore, whatever happens is new. When
                good things happen, rejoice that God has given us more than we
                can deserve. When bad things happen, rejoice that God has let
                you share in Christ's sufferings. It is Christ's sufferings which
                are healing the world. That is reconciliation, says Paul. 
            --The
                  Rev. Lowell Grisham  
             A word about taking the bible literally,
                it is impossible for two reasons. First, the
                English translations preachers claim
              to be the literal word of God, are not always true to the original
              language of the Bible, Hebrew. All translations are really interpretations,
              and there are over 400 biblical words known as hapax legomena,
              whose English translation we don't know. The English you read is
              a best guess. The second reason why biblical literalism is impossible
              is because no one takes the entire bible literally. Serpent handling
              Pentecostal Christians in Appalachia come closest to following
              the words of Jesus literally in Mark 16. Perhaps you are aware
              of people who advocate self-mutilation in obedience to Jesus’ words
              in Mark 9. I'm not. And if we were to execute children who insult
              their parents as is written in Deuteronomy 21, we’d all be
            dead. 
            --Rabbi Micah Greenstein 
  from the sermon "Religion Without
  Humor Is Blasphemy" 
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