Concerning Life as It Is Supposed to Be

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With Apologies to Honest Lawyers…

…both of you.

I meant to add this to the previous post, but forgot. The irony of these two things in juxtaposition will be obvious.

After the report on the health care debate on NPR this morning, the local affiliate added its own boilerplate support spot. I’ve heard this hundreds of times before, but this morning I heard something distinctly different (names have been changed because, well, they sue people):

“Morning Edition is brought to you by the liars of Smith, Roe, Jones, and Doe”

My brain tells me that the announcer must have said ‘lawyers’, but my ears reported ‘liars’ so distinctly that I did an aural double take and wished I could replay the moment.

Fill Him with Pins

I will have some substantive things to say about Paul Miller’s excellent and thoughtful book A Praying Life, but today let’s just settle with one simply ‘Amen’ that is not related to prayer at all.

In discussing how vestiges of greek thinking leaves us with an over-spiritualized idea of prayer, he says that these ideas ‘seeped into the church, equating spirituality with a suppression of desire and emotion.’

Then he points out what made me smile:

‘That’s why Jesus comes across in so many films as a bit strange and effeminate. He walks slowly, talks slowly, and moves slowly. You want to put a pin in him.’

That’s exactly what I want to do.

Sad

I wonder, really, how some men can sleep at night.

And it’s sad when I realize that all of Christianity is tainted by this aberration.

Overheard This Week

My five year old grandson referencing his eight year old uncle, aka Colin, my son:

“Grandpa, when Colin’s 800 years old, will I be 500 years old?”

Acceptable logic for a five year old.

This next item, not so much.

Colin and I were standing fifty feet in the air waiting in line to tube down a ride at a local water park. We were all watching the clouds roll in and were listening to the thunder get closer, and remembering that all rides would be shut down when lightning is within five miles of the park.
The teenage girl behind me says to her boyfriend:

“Thunder’s not a problem. It’s only if there’s lightning that they’ll shut it down.”

I faintly heard Vizzini at that point:

“Inconceivable!”

Risks and Laurels


Erwin Rommel was one of the greatest generals of World War II. Unfortunately, he played for the wrong team, being not concerned for the politics or morality of his situation until later in the war. In the main, he was a military man inspired deeply, ironically, by Confederate general Stonewall Jackson.

Rommel made his reputation in a series of daring campaigns carried out in the North African desert. (The rigors and difficulties of that aspect of the war was fictionally, and yet, I believe, accurately reflected in Steven Pressfield’s Killing Rommel, a book given to me by my son this past Christmas.)

In that rugged and desolate terrain, the supply chain was always of paramount importance. One biographer, David Fraser, says this about Rommel’s attitude and success in that campaign:

“Rommel may not have gained a reputation for painstaking personal absorption in the detail of supply within the North African theatre before campaign…. He certainly sometimes ran out of fuel – and, often by his own initiative, repaired the situation; and he more often ran the risk of running out of fuel.”

That much is the biographer’s report of the facts. What follows is the biographer’s editorial comment on the matter:

“It is likely, however, in the sort of fluid situations, the sort of mobile manoeuvres at which he was master, that the man who never risks running out of fuel is inclined to risk nothing; and he who risks nothing is seldom crowned with the laurels of victory.”

[David Fraser, Knights Cross: a Life of Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, page 239, 1993.]

“He who risks nothing is seldom crowned with the laurels of victory.”

Sometimes, those who risk, fail. But rarely if ever is there victory without the risk.

What is true in warfare is true, as well, in our marriages, our churches, and our lives of faith.

I need to be encouraged to take the risks as well as to not despair when in so doing, I run out of fuel.

Religion vs. Reason

Sam Harris thinks that Francis Collins is a bad choice for the head of the National Institutes of Health. Why? Because Francis Collins claims to be a Christian. You can read his article here and decide for yourself the merits of his argument.

I would only point out the epistemological quandary his argument creates. He contends that Collins cannot be trusted in a scientific position because he believes that there is a God in the universe, when there is not. The equal and opposite argument could be made. Harris cannot be trusted to speak intelligently on matters of science because he excludes from the universe a God that is really there.

There are all kinds of serious implications of Harris’ line of reasoning.

But what struck me in the article was his claim that modern science possesses esoteric knowledge that mere mortals – especially mere Christian mortals – cannot be expected to understand. He says:

“…very few scientific truths are self-evident, and many are counterintuitive. It is by no means obvious that empty space has structure or that we share a common ancestor with both the housefly and the banana. It can be difficult to think like a scientist. But few things make thinking like a scientist more difficult than religion.”

Sociologist Rodney Stark in a book published by that bastion of religious ideology (dripping irony intentional), Princeton University Press, notes that the vast majority of practitioners in the hard sciences, both living and dead, are religious. Extraordinary, isn’t it, how so many are able to overcome their natural biases and do good science and believe in God at the same time.

Harris’ contention hides an arrogance of ‘expertise’ which makes debate nearly impossible. How easily an argument is squashed when someone transcends ‘you don’t understand’ and plays the trump card ‘you CAN’T understand’.

He is not alone. In the thread I referenced here regarding the book Physics for Future Presidents, by Berkley professor Richard Muller, a colleague of the author makes this observation:

“Although I generally agree with Prof. Muller, and I have enjoyed the parts of his book that I have read, I would take him with a grain of salt. He is by no means the most authoritative research on climate change available, even on the Berkeley campus. Like Al Gore, he has now become a popularizer, and that task has inherent risks, as Muller himself is aware.”

The merits or demerits of the book aside, the implication is that any attempt to popularize, that is, to explain these difficult matters to the masses, will be deficient. Sort of the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle applied to public knowledge. The more we try to bring this knowledge close to people, the less clear it becomes. What we of the masses must do, I suppose, then, is to trust the experts, the experts who support and do not question whatever happens to be the current party line. “Trust me. I have a PhD. You need to reduce your carbon footprint. Just trust me.”

This all reminds me of a discussion I once had with an older woman about abortion. The argument was successfully ended when she said that I could not possibly understand because I am a man and, at the time, young. Different argument, same tactic. Argument over. Not settled; just over.

Sam Harris is rightfully troubled with some arguments for God’s existence, and some natural and observable phenomena which seems to cast doubt upon God’s reported goodness or power. These questions are troubling and need to be discussed.

A Christian explanation needs to be pondered. We might be tempted to suggest that he cannot understand the Christian explanation because he is an atheist.

He should take offense if we do so. Rather, we need to see that he will not understand. His is a moral, not an intellectual, problem.

Don’t Forget the Context

Always, always important to remember the context. Some quotes follow, perhaps (!) yanked out of context:

“Do not think.” – Jesus

“Hang the law and the prophets.” – Jesus

“Hitler is the man.” – me, in Sunday’s sermon

John Stott says that he knew of a man, frustrated with the OT, who actually preached using this middle quote as his text.

Hot Town, Summer in the City

Florida is a great place, but…

I take a shower, dress for work, climb in our non-air conditioned van for the mere 1/2 mile commute to the church when I find that the battery is dead.

Reposition cars, connect jumper cables, charge battery, start van, detach cables, reposition cars. All with 80 degrees and 80% humidity.

Bottom line: I need another shower.

Can’t complain about the consistency, however, as shown by this forecast from my Google weather widget:


Florida is a great place.

Marriage of Convenience

“Aravis also had many quarrels (and, I’m afraid, even fights) with Cor, but they always made it up again: so that years later when they were grown up, they were so used to quarreling and making up that they got married so as to go on doing it more conveniently.” – The Horse and His Boy, C. S. Lewis, page 224

Wanting to Believe

This is a fascinating story. It’s worth reading in its own right.

Everett Ruess is someone I’d never heard of, but upon whom many others had fixed their ideals. In the article, I’m struck by how resistant true believers are to what clearly seems to be the truth.

Christians have staked their lives upon a hero whose end of life realities are central to their hope. The difference is that the earliest propagators of the idea of the resurrection of Jesus insisted that its truth mattered.

And if Christ has not been raised, then our preaching is in vain and your faith is in vain. (1 Corinthians 15:14)

The revelation of Ruess’ probable demise has sent some of his believers into a frenzy of denial. Were it to be proven that Jesus did not rise from the dead, Paul’s counsel, it seems, would be that we shut up and go home.

Apparently, he who had seen Jesus raised (along with a myriad other eyewitnesses to that truth) was so confident of its truth, he could lay down a confident challenge. We can share his confidence.

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