Sunday, April 13, 2008

[christianity] as relevant today as it ever was


Two decades ago I was showing an old Czech animated film, on Super 8 reel to reel, about war.

The idea of freedom was represented by a red flower and they couldn't kill it off.

They tried burning, stomping, culling, weapons of mass destruction were brought out - until in a mad frenzy, the full force of the state and its misguided denizens was brought to bear, stamping out any little red flower the instant it showed signs of emerging from the earth.

The resources expended were insanely huge.

Of course it failed and first one, then two, then four, then eight little flower stems sprouted until, at last, the whole killing fields were smothered in these red flowers of freedom.

Christianity stays alive best in this climate as well. It has always been an endangered species and all the more hardy and valuable for it. From Nero's oppression to the new assault in this day and age, there has always been a motif of mockery, if not actual martyrdom and for me that is pretty cool.

Social ills are sheeted home to it, it represents, in many godless humanists' minds an archaic throwback to a less enlightened time and these people go apoplectic if one has the temerity to defend the idea. I've had many on this blog.

Real Christianity [and we'll get into that later] always operates in a climate of suspicion and outright hostility, a climate I'm more than comfortable with.

Like the Cromwellian English the moment they step onto Irish soil, all reason departs its foes and the most outrageous and flagrant breaches of ethics and law are visited on it when it comes to this turbulent notion and those who believe in it.

As Deogolwulf says:

She profaned a crucifix and called Jesus some horrible names. I’m only joking, of course: in Europe, such deeds might win you a prize, if they are done with sufficient effect.

Christianity's most dangerous enemy is the False Prophet and his offsider, the Strawman.

The Crusades, the Inquisition, the Knights Templar - all were secular hijackings of an originally good idea. Currently, the Nairobi Kid - Djwahl Kuhl - and various other manifestations, the Billy Graham and Swaggart ministries, the Mega-buck Churches, the controversial and seemingly Laodician Rowan Williams, the P2 under another name today - all are False Prophets or might well be.

Know them by their fruits is a great maxim and another good one is Frodo's Maxim, in Lord of the Rings, as he says:

I think one of his spies would - well, seem fairer and feel fouler if you understand.

To which Strider laughed:

I see ... I look foul and feel fair. Is that it? All that is gold does not glitter; not all those that wander are lost.

Tiberius Gracchus accuses me:

To arrogate such power to yourself ... [to see what is in people's hearts] is pharasaical James- it is arrant heresy and far from Christianity, it is not for you to know what people are in their innermost hearts.

Forgive me but anyone with antennae can see much of what is bad fruit but the practised deceiver is another matter and can fool "even the elect", so the noble Tiberius is right in this respect. The practised deceiver takes much longer to expose.

The second danger is a generation growing up without any imparted code and logically turning into a William S Burroughs dystopic Chav and ASBO Teenage of indiscriminate sex, drugs, self-centredness and internal alienation. Poor, poor kids [and even the girls of my acquaintance decry what they see about them] The kids might even chant:

"We don't need no edjukashun ..."

The third danger is the whipping boy syndrome. A religion spawns murderers so ALL "religions" are to blame, the opiate of the masses ... and into the breach steps ... well ... what steps into the breach? Shopaholicism? Temples of Glitz? The Marxist ideal of enforced mediocracy and Procrustean equality? Or is Clubbing, like Imhoter's chanting accolytes, the new religious sacrament?

The fourth danger is represented by the seeming anomalies. Why does G-d "allow" people to die? Do Buddhists and Muslims go to Heaven? How can Tacitus and Josephus be trusted as sources?

The fifth danger is represented by the devotees. From the Mormon offshoots to Christian Scientists - the public perception is dire. Earnest suited men, in pairs, knocking on your door and asking you to open your heart to Jesus is hardly likely to produce the desired result. The happy clapping and blind faith in a choreographed, televised service is also hardly likely to enamour the Christian to the wider populace.

The sixth danger is the way Christianity falls foul of new constructs such as sexual orientation, feminism and every other modern "ism". So one of my commenters says the faith must change to meet current realities, e.g. the need to have indiscriminate sex - awkward that, as the gospels are clearly against the notion. No matter - we'll invent the New Christianity which allows all those hedonistic delights.

The seventh danger is its seeming irrelevance, as perceived by the wider society. While Williams* would appear to do next to zero to promote an actively caring ministry, while the Russian Orthodox Church singularly failed to speak up in Soviet times, whilst the Vatican went along with Nazism, the Christian faith seemed particularly irrelevant, save for the Salvos on the street and the workers in the hospices who toiled day and night to care for those on the street the religious chiefs had airbrushed out of their vision.

[* Actually agree though with Williams' stance against the teaching of Intelligent Design, as it doesn't need to be taught - it's bleedin' obvious anyway. Better to teach the gospel.]

The eighth danger is the ridiculous descent into theological argument over such things as the Filioque Clause or Consubstantiation and Transubstantiation, to name a few. It's always blurred the real aim, the central goal, by immersing it in philosophical niceties of the sort the pipe puffing pagans like to lose themselves in at university tutorials. I was one of these once, forgive me.

Having said all this, the truth is that Christianity will stand or fall by its own central premise, i.e. that it stems from G-d - so it's hardly our concern.

And it's actually more relevant today than ever. The reason is threefold:

1. The theological and metaphysical aspect. Very simple premise. The theory is that if you believe, whichever way you'd care to, that Jesus of Nazareth is somehow part of the Godhead and able to redeem sin, presupposing that there is such a thing as sin [the Satanists say not], then in that very act of belief, of acceptance, the third force of the spirit flows into you and provides both comfort and support [the water of Frank Herbert's Dune, if you like].

The issue of protection is hotly debated. I incline to the idea that you're protected insofar as you are doing His will but I don't think the Christian is any more protected from the vicissitudes of life - he just handles them, meets them differently.

The promise is comfort in time of trouble and the backbone to stand firm when necessary and it certainly delivers that.

2. The societal aspect. The Sermon on the Mount, in terms of the way to run a society, just as MacOS system is a way to run a computer, is pretty well unsuperceded. It's a great system in its base form but costly and difficult to follow and understand all the implications of. If everyone were to adopt its precepts, all the societal ills would melt away.

3. The obligatory aspect. There's no such thing as a free lunch and there's no such thing as an unpossessed person. If you're not possessed by evil and not by good, then you're possessed by a creeping hedonism and materialism which gets you deeper and deeper into the mire. The humanistic notion of the man-centred universe where he is the highest good and has self-determination is a complete illusion.

Man left to his own devices stumbles and falls. Chekhov wrote of it:

“Man has been endowed with reason, with the power to create, so that he can add to what he's been given. But up to now he hasn't been a creator, only a destroyer. Forests keep disappearing, rivers dry up, wild life's become extinct, the climate's ruined and the land grows poorer and uglier every day.”’

Agent Smith spoke of it:

I'd like to share a revelation that I've had during my time here. It came to me when I tried to classify your species. I realized that you're not actually mammals. Every mammal on this planet instinctively develops a natural equilibrium with the surrounding environment, but you humans do not. You move to an area, and you multiply, and multiply, until every natural resource is consumed. The only way you can survive is to spread to another area.

There is another organism on this planet that follows the same pattern. A virus. Human beings are a disease, a cancer of this planet, you are a plague, and we are the cure.

He cannot exist on his own - he is not an island, as Donne perceived. The progressive enlightenment of man and ideas is actually a swindle - the humanist thinks he's heading for some sort of non-religious Nirvana but actually he's securing his place in Hell. To be more Illumined is to be further and further lost.


It's an insane pursuit, following the Eternal Loser and an insane loser at that, based on a panoply of lies.

When one becomes Christian, it is not self-freedom he achieves but thrall to another entity - his Maker. This carries obligations - for some the evangelistic course, for some the caring ministry, for others different ways. But who does not wish to find harmony with his mother and father, if such were possible? It's a noble notion.

What it does bring, committed Christianity, is inner peace. Just as a man trades away certain freedoms when he marries a woman but gains the joy of "completion" through wife and family, along with all his self-imposed obligations, so the Christian trades away freedoms and protections in favour of a higher inner harmony.

It doesn't seem so harmonious to outsiders when he's thrown to the lions or tortured but he trades his place in this world for a place in another and along the way he tries to bring joy to others. Through this comes his own joy.

We're coming into a time now when the message of Christianity is as real as it ever was, even more so. The false prophets abound - they infest the place and the only sure way is to adopt the "words spoken" as a personal guide. Does it mean that there'll be no more cakes and ale? Does it mean that women cease to be alluring or convivial company must cease?

Does it heck as like.

Why do non-Christians always assume that the stern moralist, like Maugham's Davidson, is the only model? What of the ordinary Christian who doesn't make a big deal of it - the Paul Linfords of the world?

Why do non-Christians always assume that you have to be a saint? I'm far from being a saint as certain ladies know - I'm just a sinner, reformed in certain respects.

Time to bring this to a close before Mutley comes over and calls it all "piffle from beginning to end".

:)

14 comments:

  1. Each to their own, so long as the mormons and witnesses aren't chapping on my door I don't care much what they get up to.

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  2. James as I'm sure you know there is much that though I am not a Christian I find attractive in the ethical message of Christianity- forgiveness, meekness, charity, humility I agree with you are the key values which really govern the world. The centre of Christianity as I perceive it- and you may be able to correct me here- is that message- judge not for by that judgement that ye judge, shall ye be judged, the meek shall inherit the earth, the idea that you should give up all your wealth to the poor and follow Christ, the idea that all the commandments might be abolished save those about loving God and your fellow man. But Christians too often confuse that message by getting obsessed by issues which are marginal as far as I can see it to the actual message of Christ- homosexuality which isn't mentioned in the Gospels for example- heterosexual adultery is dealt with by Christ but for him you sin not just if you commit adultery but if you look on a woman or a man and desire him or her. That is as bad according to the gospel as actually having sex with them.

    Christianity is a harder and easier doctrine than most Christians seem to expect. It is harder in that there is more that is classified as sin than most Christians beleive- being rich means that you have less chance of getting to heaven than a camel passing into the eye of a needle- but on earth we are enjoined to forgive and to remember that God's forgiveness is infinite. That to me is the attraction of Christianity- its ethical doctrine makes sense- you cannot breathe without sinning, you cannot eat without sinning, you cannot move without sinning- but you have to forgive and you have to realise that it is not for you to administer the heirarchy of sin, it is for you to punish yourself and be gentle to others.

    That's what I understand by Christianity- I may be wrong.

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  3. Can you supply coffee next time you write a huge post ?

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  4. Coffee's on the way, ladies first.

    Tiberius - those are well thought out thoughts of yours. Let me study them more at leisure.

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  5. It's worth bearing in mind that the original aberrations you mention all stem form the same source; the Roman Catholic Church; which has as much to do with the original concept as, say, Scientology has to do with Buddhism...

    Also, although Christianity, like all major religions, has a basis of morality and codes of behaviour, all societies, will develop these anyway as they are necessary for the survival of the group.

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  6. The answer to Agent Smith's point, I dealt with in a recent post; that life itself, if you seek a good definition, is a virus. I susopect future generations will be more comfortable with the categorisation. But yes, looked at at logically, Life itself, is a virus.

    Longrider, I'm sorry to disagree and be sectarian here, but it has alays been my view that there is only so far away from Catholicism you can move, before you've lost the giood aspects of Christianity. Indeed, i define myself as 'Catholic', because I refuse to be associated with the unscientific ideas sop prevalent amongst the christians of the born again type.

    We have to accept Christianity as a phiosophy, and accept that Jesus couldn't have known how life would be today. We have to that into account. Jesus made some strong statements on sex, but he also forgave Mary Magdalene. I believe, had he lived today, his opinions on several things would have been different.

    It's a system of thought designed to make life better, by changed our attitudes towards eachother. It's about the chip in your brother's eye, and the log in yours.

    It's about trying to understand human nature and improve it. But I can't accept that the last word on that, was writing in the first century AD. Otherwise, we would he bother leaving a church to carry on dealing with the problem? Surely even Christ accepted that he left behind a WAY of thinking, that some of the thoughts themselves, would need re-evaluating, in the light of fresh circumstances?

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  7. Totally OT James,

    I'm glad you've found Unenlightened Commentary. Would you like a list of other, like thinkers to compare & contrast v. your blogroll?

    I'll read this post later; judging by the comments you are having fun again.

    STB.

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  8. Thanks LR, Crushed.

    STB - I would indeed. Ross and I are long time blogfriends now.

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  9. And yes - it was time to throw a bit of Christianity in there.

    :)

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  10. "The centre of Christianity as I perceive it- and you may be able to correct me here- is that message- judge not for by that judgement that ye judge, shall ye be judged, the meek shall inherit the earth, the idea that you should give up all your wealth to the poor and follow Christ, the idea that all the commandments might be abolished save those about loving God and your fellow man."

    I'd say this is an important tenet, but the central fact of Christianity (to me) is the belief in Christ and the Way to the Father through Him.

    James: go back and read the penguin mafia thread comments, I added a new one to you.

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  11. An interesting and well -written post, James and I see where you are coming from. I think Gracchi has said everything much better than I could.

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  12. A good post James. Whether one is a Christian or not, this philosophy if I may call it that , or tenets of beliefs and actions have shaped the Western world such that even non believers think it is right to do unto others, etc. So one can profess to be agnostic or atheist but the whole society tries to act within the Christian "rules" which benefit everyone.
    I have not said this very well but.....

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  13. The Principal of the Christian College in New Zealand where those kids died in the gorge invoked the power of the Christian faith numerous times in his statement to the media. It was strangely reassuring, his faith in god and how the incident fitted in somewhere.

    Powerful statement for an organisation in crisis.

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