Posted on 12/04/2006 7:52:47 PM PST by Pyro7480
'The Nativity Story' Movie Problematic for Catholics, "Unsuitable" for Young Children
By John-Henry Westen
NEW YORK, December 4, 2006 (LifeSiteNews.com) - A review of New Line Cinema's The Nativity story by Fr. Angelo Mary Geiger of the Franciscans of the Immaculate in the United States, points out that the film, which opened December 1, misinterprets scripture from a Catholic perspective.
While Fr. Geiger admits that he found the film is "in general, to be a pious and reverential presentation of the Christmas mystery." He adds however, that "not only does the movie get the Virgin Birth wrong, it thoroughly Protestantizes its portrayal of Our Lady."
In Isaiah 7:14 the Bible predicts the coming of the Messiah saying: "Therefore the Lord himself shall give you a sign. Behold a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and his name shall be called Emmanuel." Fr. Geiger, in an video blog post, explains that the Catholic Church has taught for over 2000 years that the referenced Scripture showed that Mary would not only conceive the child miraculously, but would give birth to the child miraculously - keeping her physical virginity intact during the birth.
The film, he suggests, in portraying a natural, painful birth of Christ, thus denies the truth of the virginal and miraculous birth of Christ, which, he notes, the Fathers of the Church compared to light passing through glass without breaking it. Fr. Geiger quoted the fourth century St. Augustine on the matter saying. "That same power which brought the body of the young man through closed doors, brought the body of the infant forth from the inviolate womb of the mother."
Fr. Geiger contrasts The Nativity Story with The Passion of the Christ, noting that with the latter, Catholics and Protestants could agree to support it. He suggests, however, that the latter is "a virtual coup against Catholic Mariology".
The characterization of Mary further debases her as Fr. Geiger relates in his review. "Mary in The Nativity lacks depth and stature, and becomes the subject of a treatment on teenage psychology."
Beyond the non-miraculous birth, the biggest let-down for Catholics comes from Director Catherine Hardwicke's own words. Hardwicke explains her rationale in an interview: "We wanted her [Mary] to feel accessible to a young teenager, so she wouldn't seem so far away from their life that it had no meaning for them. I wanted them to see Mary as a girl, as a teenager at first, not perfectly pious from the very first moment. So you see Mary going through stuff with her parents where they say, 'You're going to marry this guy, and these are the rules you have to follow.' Her father is telling her that she's not to have sex with Joseph for a year-and Joseph is standing right there."
Comments Fr. Geiger, "it is rather disconcerting to see Our Blessed Mother portrayed with 'attitude;' asserting herself in a rather anachronistic rebellion against an arranged marriage, choosing her words carefully with her parents, and posing meaningful silences toward those who do not understand her."
Fr. Geiger adds that the film also contains "an overly graphic scene of St. Elizabeth giving birth," which is "just not suitable, in my opinion, for young children to view."
Despite its flaws Fr. Geiger, after viewing the film, also has some good things to say about it. "Today, one must commend any sincere attempt to put Christ back into Christmas, and this film is certainly one of them," he says. "The Nativity Story in no way compares to the masterpiece which is The Passion of the Christ, but it is at least sincere, untainted by cynicism, and a worthy effort by Hollywood to end the prejudice against Christianity in the public square."
And, in addition to a good portrait of St. Joseph, the film offers "at least one cinematic and spiritual triumph" in portraying the Visitation of Mary to St. Elizabeth. "Although the Magnificat is relegated to a kind of epilogue at the movie's end, the meeting between Mary and Elizabeth is otherwise faithful to the scriptures and quite poignant. In a separate scene, the two women experience the concurrent movement of their children in utero and share deeply in each other's joy. I can't think of another piece of celluloid that illustrates the dignity of the unborn child better than this."
See Fr. Geiger's full review here:
http://airmaria.com/
Kawaii, I believe that my Protestant Scripture contains the only books God preserved as Canonical. The others were added to the CANON at Trent and were disputed by the early church - included in but not limited to Jerome's Vulgate.
The books are of inferior quality and pedigree from the accepted Hebrew Scriptures.
JESUS named the canon of his day as the Law, Prophets, and Psalms. Peter included the epistles and the gospels are mentioned as well in the testimony of Scripture.
As Sola Scripturaists, we try to stick with that which is Scriptural. Purgatory certainly isn't scriptural; but it really and honestly has little if nothing to do with my personal rejection of the Apocrypha.
And on that interpretation hinges whether Christ commanded Gentiles to witness to others. Let's look at it from your POV. What does the consensus patrum say about someone witnessing to you, or you witnessing to other Gentiles? Full support, right? So, must this not be the will of Christ? How could it not be?
The reason I am saying this the fact that Jesus was a Jew and as a Jew He could not associate closely with the Gentiles. Activities such as eating together and fraternizing in a general way was strictly forbidden, never mind praying together!
As a Jew, could Jesus do work on the Sabbath? We know what happened there, so I would think that Jesus had no problem in associating with the Gentile riffraff. One of the big parts of Jesus' New Covenant was to officially bring in the Gentiles. I can't believe Jesus didn't lay any groundwork. (I already think He did in some of the verses you earlier rejected as to interpretation.)
Christ never advocated anything but Judaism. And Judaism He could preach only to the lost tribes of Israel (Jews do not proselytize).
I'm still not sure what you mean by this. Did Christ NOT advocate Christianity as we know it? If He didn't then we all have a problem.
He merely restated what the Jews believed, namely that through the messiah (meshiyah), who will establish peace and rule as a king on earth, the world will get to know (know about) the God of Abraham, not necessarily that the world will believe.
If He only came to restate, then He could not have fulfilled. In fact, if all He did was restate, then there would have been no movement to kill Him.
The Gospels were written when Christianity had only a one way ticket out of Israel. +Matthew wrote his between 70 and 100 AD. By then +Paul was already dead, and so was +James, along with the Church in Jerusalem (which was shut down in 69 AD). In view of that, +Matthew's Gospel's ending makes sense, a lot of sense!
Was it God's inspired word or not? Was all of this exactly according to God's original plan or not? Sure, the ending of Matthew makes a lot of sense, but not because of unforeseen circumstances, but because it was exactly as God designed.
FK: "... if you really believe that Christ did not want them to preach to Gentiles, then the only way you are saved is because Paul DISOBEYED Christ."
I don't think he disobeyed Christ. I don't think he ever saw Christ. I think +Paul was a very zealous convert. He saw Christians dying with joy and without fear. Many were impressed by that. He could have learned a great deal about Christianity in his line of work.
Do you believe what the Bible says happened on the road to Damascus? This is critical to any opinion of Paul. If that was just a story to buck up his street cred. then Paul was a fraud. He made very bold claims about that experience, which the other Apostles seemed to fully accept. I don't see much room for a middle of the road view here.
you mean the ones that jews who deny christ consider canonical.
I have no leg to stand on when it comes to concensus patrum, FK. But I don't see any evidence that the whole thing was intended for the gentiles from the get-go.
I would think that Jesus had no problem in associating with the Gentile riffraff
Do we have references to that, other than an occasional Canaan woman?
I'm still not sure what you mean by this. Did Christ NOT advocate Christianity as we know it?
What He taught was Judaism. He was a Jew. A Jew cannot believe in another religion and be a Jew.
He never advocated anything but obedience to the Law. He never advocated dispensing with dietary laws, or circumcision; He never advocated 'grafting' gentiles to Israel.
In fact, if all He did was restate, then there would have been no movement to kill Him
He was not killed because He came to restate but because He was rumored to have claimed that was the Son of God. That was a capital offense in Israel.
Do you believe what the Bible says happened on the road to Damascus?
I don't know what happened. In 1 Cor 9:1 +Paul says "Have I not seen Jesus Christ our Lord?" but in Acts 9:8 it says "And Saul arose from the earth; and when his eyes were opened, he saw no man: but they led him by the hand, and brought him into Damascus.
The Law, the Prophets and the Psalms.
Amen. And we know that ain't happening.
That's absurd. Anyone can repent for any reason whatsoever, even an atheist. Repentance merely means change of mind (metanoia in Greek). Anyone can regret something and resolve never to do it again. No faith needed there.
Given the flow of the conversation, I took it for granted that "repentance" referred to "repentance to God for sins against God". In that sense, it requires faith.
Of course, in the case of king David faith was the factor for his metanoia, but I am willing to bet there are people of faith who don't repent of everything, even though they have faith.
That must be the case the vast majority of the time. I would imagine that if one's last act is NOT one of repentance that there are some skeletons that have not been dealt with, in all Christian faiths. However, I am not familiar with what level of confessional particularity your priests would require to constitute "coverage". :)
You had to get in a shot, didn't you. :) I'm not positive, but I think it's correct that you can't look to any Reformed posters you know on this thread about this issue. I can only "unofficially" speak for SBC, and to date I'm unaware of any women senior pastors anywhere.
I agree with you that none of our churches passes every test of "the rules" perfectly. That's why I don't think it's right to make a federal case out of Reformed churches not mandating that women be covered artificially (i.e. with a veil), the way Kawaii has been. That verse isn't even crystal clear as to interpretation anyway, as 1000 S has demonstrated.
What? Putting the "life" part aside for a moment, you don't think faith is a free gift? Faith is just something we "have"? If faith isn't a gift from God then we must have ginned it up independently of God. Is this how you see it? Besides the obvious Eph. 2:8-9, see also:
Rom 12:3 : 3 For by the grace given me I say to every one of you: Do not think of yourself more highly than you ought, but rather think of yourself with sober judgment, in accordance with the measure of faith God has given you.
1 Tim 1:13-14 : 13 Even though I was once a blasphemer and a persecutor and a violent man, I was shown mercy because I acted in ignorance and unbelief. 14 The grace of our Lord was poured out on me abundantly, along with the faith and love that are in Christ Jesus.
No, we owe all of any faith we have to God. We don't simply "have" it.
[Grace is] not a state like freedom (which we don't call 'free gift' but an 'inalienable right').
Well, it's clear you can't be talking about spiritual freedom because the Bible is clear that it is a gift, unless one believes that salvation is earned. But even with physical freedom, calling it a right as opposed to a gift belies the Founders intentions, assuming that's what you were referring to. :
[Declaration of Independence:] ... We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
The Founders were absolutely correct. Any "rights" that we have which are unalienable are God-gifted rights. We did nothing to earn these rights, they were given by God in His sovereignty. It is the same with grace, and it is the same with faith (and it is the same with life itself).
A gift of a diamond ring would be a gift only if it were given to someone for no reason whatsoever. An engagement ring is a 'promissory item' usually but not always without a legal contract. It is given because someone wants something in return for it. It is therefore not a gift.
You wanna sell that to your wife? :) I would be injured if I tried. To avoid injury I would tell my wife that I loved her so much that all I wanted in the world was to marry her. Even in my youthful poverty, it was by God's grace that I scraped enough cash together to buy her the most beautiful ring I could as a small token of the love I had for her. Even if I didn't have the means for a ring, I still would have asked her to marry me. That makes it a gift, and nobody gets hurt. :)
Amen. I sure hope America wakes up and realizes what she did in putting these unpatriotic, anti-American leftists in power. I can't believe these liberals voting unanimously to confirm General Petraeus, and their next act is to vote against everything he told them he intended to do. I can't wait to see what happens when the actual funding bill comes up. I just DARE them to back Murtha or cut it outright. Suicide.
Ah well, we architects are both artists AND engineers, natural chess players; but we play with BIGGER THINGS than chess men on an 8x8 board. What's your profession?
I'm a lawyer. Most of my career has been in corporate legal departments handling contracts and miscellaneous business law issues. Drafting contracts is sort of like chess. You have to arrange all the words to work together to achieve your goal. Sacrifices must be made during negotiations, etc., etc. I just know that the same thing that attracted me to chess also attracted me to the law.
And what the Catholic Church teaches doesn't count as baggage??? :) "Baggage" doesn't have to be a bad thing. It just means a bias that is carried. I carry conservative Christian baggage to my political analysis. No big deal. All I'm saying is that we are all the same in this department, just from different sources. For example, when I look at one scripture, I carry with me the baggage of other scripture on the same subject. :)
FK: "[Does] the RCC support the Gideons?"
I don't know for a fact either way. I would not be surprised if we do, as it is sometime a useful thing, but I also would not be surprised if we don't because it is a truncated Bible.
Well, would you really say that a lost person given a Bible without the Dueterocanonicals would be worse off than with no Bible at all? What are the critical scriptural tenants of Christianity found only in the Dueterocanicals?
No offense, FK, but that sounds very naïve to me.
I don't see how it could refer to only demons. The analogy would fall apart because it is so clear that sheep refers to people
Well, then the Bible is not telling us the truth; then the eternal lake of fire was not created for the devil and his angels, but for some 'goats' in addition to that. It is clear from another part of the NT that Christ considered some who are among us not to have been created by the Father, but by the devil. (cf John 8:44)
To the extent we are both Christians, we ARE on the same page of music
I must disagree, FK. A couple of years ago I would have been more inclined to agree, but after having learned more about what encompasses "Christian" since then, that notion evaporated.
The Apostolics and the Protestants, as well as the LDS, and all sorts of other groups, all call on Christ, but our theologies, soteriologies, Christologies, etc. are like night and day. Even our "core concepts" that we share (in name at least), such as the Holy Trinity are not the same. When Kolo said that we worship a different God, he pretty much spoke my mind.
The Jews believed in Messiah
The messiah of Judaism is not a savior of man's souls. He is a mortal human being, a real king, who will bring peace and rule the world (this is where many anti-semitic groups get their conspiracy theories), this world. The Hebrew expression 'the world to come' does not refer to the heavenly world we think of. These terms are of course found in the OT but they had a different meaning before the Christians re-defined them.
The Apostles clearly expected such a man when they asked Christ if he was ready to establish the kingdom of Israel in the Book of Acts.
I really do not believe that the Apostles thought of Him as God (all Gospel verse notwithstanding) before the Resurrection, and that even after that +Thomas still had to put his fingers in His wounds in order to believe.
Of course that's not how it works, and I'm surprised that you still think Protestants "figure" that way at all.
Okay, then tell me if the Protestants do not believe that Christ paid for all our sins, past, present and future. Are we not just a pile of dung covered with a white sheet (Luther's words)? There is no cleansing required; just put on some clean clothes on our dirty bodies! Shove that dirt under the rug.
Do Protestants no believe that those who are saved are saved because God 'saved' them before they were even created? That nothing can change that? That everything they do is what God wills? Our works are not salvific; but then they are not damning either, correct? No matter what we do, we cannot be 'snatched,' correct?
Do the Protestants not believe that all your future sins are already 'covered?' So, why worry; be happy, right? Cozy, easy. Just sing 'hallelujah' and let god 'splash away' those 'perfect storms.' Easy, cozy, 'feel good,' that requires absolutely nothing of an individual's own doing. Nothing.
Was this God adjusting on the fly? :) God made a New Covenant because it was time for the Incarnation, planned from the beginning, and Christ was to bring it
Actually, yes! Just the way He 'repented' in the Old Testament for having made man and decided to drown everything alive "on the fly." Otherwise we have to assume He created man wicked in order to drown Him.
Your theory doesn't match the scripture, FK. In Hebrews, the scribe specifically states that the Old Covenant was made 'imperfect' by the unbelieving Jews (cf Heb 8:9), and that God decided to start from scratch, erasing the iniquities of the Jews and staring with a clean slate, once again (cf Heb 8:12).
FK, the Church and the Protestants cannot teach +Paul the same way and be ad different as night and day as they are. The divide comes in the perspectives and selectivity. The Church concentrates on those parts of +Paul which agree with the Church; the Protestants do the same except they look for agreement with them. Both sides claim that +Paul taught what Christ taught.
Christ did not teach to abandon circumcision or drop dietary laws or to create a new religion. That much is certain. So, +Paul did teach things Christ never taught unless, of course, we are to make a leap and say that Christ was really speaking through +Paul. But, then, everything else is up for grabs!
It's the interpretation that causes the problems, not the reliance on scripture
But we rely on the interpretation, FK, not on the scripture itself! The scriputre is not clear and definitive enough to tell us straight and narrow what the meaning is. To the contrary!
The scirputre is full of anecdotes, stories, parables, cultural specificities known only to the locals, time gap, you name it.
That's why my love for Tolstoy's Three Little Hermits and Christ's Two Commandments from the OT are my guiding formula to faith: glorify God and leave the rest to Him.
All the rest is human interpretation, i.e. legalisms, rules, judging, prejudices, and cultural bias.
Different interpretations by different men will lead to different answers
That hardly qualifies as the truth. Trouble is, people make decisions, sometimes decisions of life and death, based on those interpretations. Again, we use religion as a weapon and not as a means to simply acknowledge God's glory and be at peace. No, we must 'interpret' and be 'right.'
The key is not interpretation, FK, but worship. The less we concentrate on interpreting the scriputre 'just right,' and more on worship, the less sinful our lives will be.
Yes, we have hope in God's mercy, but we can be sure of this hope.
That's nonsense, FK.
The preist doesn't require anything. Your confession starts with "I confess to God, before you (priest, your witness)..." The only one you are cheating is the priest if you don't tell him everything. He will bless you and ask God to forgive you assuming you told God everything God already knows, and have resolved noever to repeat the same.
As you say, that's hardly the case, so we all tried to cheat God. But in many instances, we really don't see our sin because of arrogance and pride and have "nothing to confess."
Seniority is not part of the formula, FK. It's something a lawyer would throw in to obfuscate the issue faced with a lack of any real argument. :)
I agree with you that none of our churches passes every test of "the rules" perfectly. That's why I don't think it's right to make a federal case out of Reformed churches not mandating that women be covered artificially (i.e. with a veil), the way Kawaii has been
By all means, I couldn't agree more! But it's important to understand where the 'tide comes from' so to say. certainly, the non-compliance in Apostolic churches did not come from within those churches, but from western influence, based on Protestant individualism, pride, hatred for authority, etc. all the things we cherrish in secular life and mistakenly bring into our spiritual life.
It is even more hypocritical that it should come from the Protestant side since the Protestants 'live by the Bible.'
Artificial or not, +Paul is very clear when it comes to 'being covered.' There is nothing ambiguous about his commandments, FK. Let's face it, women find it 'offensive' to be excluded. They feel that they are somehow 'demeaned' when they are covered. Those ideas don't come from the Bible. They don't come from the Church, either.
It's a blessing, a gift if you will; you were given eyes and ears and a brain; do you call them 'free' as well? The absurdity of the construct 'free gift' couldn't be more obvious. Every true gift is free.
No, we owe all of any faith we have to God. We don't simply "have" it
So, now then you admit that our faith is not 'free?' It is attached to a condition that we owe to God? Then it's not a gift!
What God gave us freely is what we have; it is ours. When you give a gift, it is still yours?
Not unless it is freely given back to you! (here is where our free will comes in and why God gave us free will; if we can't give God back freely what He gave us freely, there is no true love)
The old saying says: if you let your bird free and he comes back to you, then he is yours. If he doesn't, he never was.
Faith is no different than our ears and our eyes. God gave them to us; they are ours to have and to use as we please. The same is with the faith: He inscribes it in our hearts; some use it; others don't.
Well, it's clear you can't be talking about spiritual freedom because the Bible is clear that it is a gift, unless one believes that salvation is earned
Grace is God's decision. It's different from the faith you carry in your heart and either come to God or reject Him. It's different from your eyes and ears which you have. Grace is a state: either you are graced or you are not. Either you are blessed or you are not. Either you are talented or you are not. Either you are alive or you are dead.
The "state" is your existence: you exist as a free soul, or you are a captive soul; you are awake or you are asleep. Your faith and your body parts are not a 'state.' They have a lot to do with you and your will. They are yours. They were given to you to keep and use. Your grace is independent of your will. It is not a gift. Your birth, your life, is independent of your will.
You wanna sell that to your wife? :) I would be injured if I tried. Even in my youthful poverty, it was by God's grace that I scraped enough cash together to buy her the most beautiful ring I could as a small token of the love I had for her
And, what did she buy you as a 'token' of her love? Did she also scrape enough of her youthful cash to buy you the most beautiful token of love she could? If she did, that's unusual. The 'token buying' (which is a major purchase and hardly a 'token,' yet another oxymoron we use so freely) is a one-way street, FK.
In many many societies in the world, it's the father of the bride who brings gifts to the groom (dowry). Somewhere along the line, the roles got reversed. :)
And what the Catholic Church teaches doesn't count as baggage???
LOL. INDEED! Though, to be candid, ALL groups . . . just as ALL individuals . . . carry baggage that is antethetical to God's Highest Truth, Will, Plan.
Today, here, now, on this issue, the group may level out the individual askew biases and bring a more Biblical, more Spirit led whole to bear. Tomorrow, there, then, on that issue, the SAME group may multiply the individual satan influenced biases toward an increase in the collective rebellion against God's Highest Truth, Will, Plan. Happens in ALL groups more or less all the time to greater or lesser degree.
When it's sufficiently horrid long enough, we have an Inquisition, papal orgies, "religious wars" for personal power mongering conquest. Most of the time, the horror is an outrageous "merely" multiplication of the preening 'before men' PLAYING CHURCH--habits, customs, traditions, values, priorities.
The notion that the magesterical; the built-up traditions; the spurious 'Apastolic' succession has somehow protected one group of mortals toward a more perfect union of Christian saintliness is beyond utter balderdash.
That sickening silliness UTTERLY IGNORES:
. . .
1) HUMAN NATURE
2) COLLECTIVE HUMAN NATURE
3) BIBLICAL HISTORY OF SUCH with God's CHOSEN people IN THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENTS
4) THE HEART OF MAN--WHO CAN KNOW ITS DECEITFUL WICKEDNESS
5) PSYCHODYNAMICS
6) SOCIOLOGICAL FORCES AND DYNAMICS
7) SATAN'S SKILL AT PLAYING COMPLICIT HUMANS LIKE A VERY OFF KEY PIANO
There is NO automatic magIC-sterical to the magisterical any more than Holy Spirit FORCES every Pentecostal to be a super saint.
CHURCHIOLOTRY is and has been alive and far too well in every era and every group. The older the group, the worse it has gotten, in at least several respects
The Gospels read like Christ--not the reformer--Christ the turner-of-the-institutions inside out; upside down and everywhich way but loose. And, His prime candidate to carry the biggest baton--Paul--went through about every hardship, suffering and indignancy known to man of the era. He did not fit the mold of A BUILDER OF EDIFICES.
He fit the mold of . . . well . . . of Jesus. TRUTH AND LOVE--RUTHLESS TRUTH--NO HOLDS BARRED LOVE--AND NOT A SHRED OF LENIENCY TOWARD INDIVIDUAL, GROUP OR ORGANIZATIONAL IDIOCY.
HIS MISSION WAS CHRIST AND HIM CRUCIFIED. The churches he left were led of Holy Spirit wherein NO INDIVIDUAL was to usurp power over anyone else. Leadership was to be by utter servanthood and by example of Christ perfected in the individual's life. There was Not a hint of any sort of positional lineage. Get the humble wise old codgers to decide tricky questions and go on with The Gospel--was the pattern. Local groups were expected to be charitable toward poor distant groups NOT because they were part of some magicsterically sanctioned organizational structure, edifice but because they loved Jesus.
Well, would you really say that a lost person given a Bible without the Dueterocanonicals would be worse off than with no Bible at all? What are the critical scriptural tenants of Christianity found only in the Dueterocanicals?
LOL. NOW YA GONE TO SPEAKING THE RAW TRUTH! Just keep in mind for your own sanity, Forest, that it's NOT RATIONAL. It's NOT historically accurate. It's NOT Biblical.
It's CHURCHOLOTRY and !!!!TRADITION!!!!
so called sanctified
so called holi-fied
fossilized
calcified
petrified
cold
hard
!!!!TRADITION!!!!
For too many . . . at some level . . . Christ came into the world that they might have an edifice, a structure, a cradle-to-grave many handed organization and script to lead them instead of the Word and Holy Spirit leading them.
It's very addictive . . . the EDIFICE provides 100's if not thousands of cues that one is doing the right thing; that one is kosher; that one is good; that one will MAKE IT. There's lots of
. . .
1) RITUAL
2) !!!!TRADITION!!!!
3) CUSTOMS
4) DEEDS TO PERFORM JUST SO
5) CONFIRMING ORGANIZATIONAL/STRUCTURAL PATS ON THE BACK
6) HOOPS TO JUMP THROUGH WITH SUITABLE APPLAUSE
7) COMFORTING BENCHMARKS THAT ONE IS 'DOING IT RIGHT.'
8) CRADLE TO GRAVE WARMLY SOOTHING SMOTHERING IN THE MOTHER CHURCH'S UHHHH NURTURING BREAST.
Alternately we are to work out our own Salvation with fear and trembling--the individual, The Word, Holy Spirit. That's awesome. Scary. So many chances to blow it. Where's the security? Where's the constant affirmation that one's walking in the boundaries? Where's the cradle to grave leading by the hand of the edifice?
Trust HOLY SPIRIT??? I can't see HIM! Be sensitive to HIS MOMENT BY MOMENT LEADING? But His still small voice is too soft. My cravings and biases are so much louder. Naw, the structure's pats on the back and 100's of cues that I'm jumping through all the hoops correctly is much more comforting. Holy Spirit can well . . . cool His jets. The edifice does it soooooo much better.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!NOT!!!!!!!!!!!!
It's the old tent of meeting terror all over again. Layers of edifice, custom, !!!!TRADITION!!!! must comfort and insulate from GOD ALMIGHTY wishing to have a face to face at the tent of meeting with every individual--moment by moment through every day.
Yeah, Pastor, you're probably right . . . He probably wishes He had of redeemed monkies instead.
That's why my love for Tolstoy's Three Little Hermits and Christ's Two Commandments from the OT are my guiding formula to faith: glorify God and leave the rest to Him.
All the rest is human interpretation, i.e. legalisms, rules, judging, prejudices, and cultural bias.
Different interpretations by different men will lead to different answers
That hardly qualifies as the truth. Trouble is, people make decisions, sometimes decisions of life and death, based on those interpretations. Again, we use religion as a weapon and not as a means to simply acknowledge God's glory and be at peace. No, we must 'interpret' and be 'right.'
The key is not interpretation, FK, but worship. The less we concentrate on interpreting the scriputre 'just right,' and more on worship, the less sinful our lives will be.
= = = =
FWIW, I liked the above.
Quix,
Worship and right understanding are inseperable to a point. The Jehovah's Witnesses could claim worship but do not have a right understanding of who Christ is. As such, their worship is of a false God. On the essentials, we have to get it right. Otherwise, our 'worship' is no better than pagan worship.
B.
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