I grew up listening to "Contemporary Christian" music as a kid, back when some of it was actually good music, and not just repetitive praise-and-mind-control music. Off-topic kind-of rant: I enjoy MAKING music. I'll happily play keyboards or drums in a "praise" band, but I'm fairly confident that the push for "better worship" is really a push for "mood control." When I listen to the lyrics of most "praise"music, it all sounds like this to me. My family has been in and out of churches; leaving whenever the push for "better worship" overpowers the intended focus of what this post is supposed to be about. I enjoy a band named "King's X." They wrote a song called " Mission " The lyrics include: Who are these people behind the stained glass windows Have they forgotten just what they came here for Was it salvation or "scared of hell" Or an assembly of a social get-together What's the mis...
Short answer. He wouldn't. There's that answer He gives regarding taxes that sums it up fairly clearly; "Render unto Caesar that which is Caesar 's." Longer answer? He would vote for Love. He taught Love. He showed Love. He shared Love. He defined Love. He is Love. So - who would He vote for (if He really *HAD* to make a choice)? He would support candidates who are models of Love. He would know their heart. I know that seems unfair. But we can also know the hearts of mankind. He would not base His decision on candidate's words, but their deeds, life experiences, and reactions to the world around them. He would vote for the candidate who typifies a loving response in nearly every situation. He would support Love. If you vote, vote for the candidate who: acknowledges the suffering of others. appreciates the hardships and struggles of every human. models a heart of compassion. models a heart of empathy. cries out for the downtrodden. embraces the human conditio...
On my journey, I tend to look at Bible passages and think, "Wait. Is what I was taught actually what was meant?" Is Matthew 7:1-3 just about not judging others? Or is it just as much about not judging yourself? Or about not starting the domino-effect of everyone judging each other? Or is it equally about the first few words, "Do not judge so that you will not be judged. (NASB)?" My contention continues to be that God never intended us to see bad/good or label actions as "sin." My thought is that Jesus may have been suggesting that the only reason "judging" exists on the planet is because humans started it.
Comments
Post a Comment