Apr 25, 2016

How satisfied are you with your relationship with God and your neighbor?

Typically we judge things relative to others we know or to another reference group. And sometimes we compare ourselves with our own personal best - how well we do in reference to our capabilities. Occasionally we measure performance by an absolute or external yardstick in terms of quantitative figures or demonstrable results that are visible. In the case of your relationship to God and his children, it is possible to be ignorant of one's own capabilities; and it may be true that we know little of our peer group to reference things to. Looking at absolute measurements (how much money/time/talent donated may be difficult to accurately access, too. So it is very likely that most people who are reading these words will jumble all these viewpoints together to produce a simple thumbs up or down response.

     There is also the cognitive dissonance that comes from the gap between what we speak versus what our actions suggest. So while a person may self-report all sorts of things about their relationship past and present with God and with his own neighbors, a close look at actions and the things that preoccupy the person's waking mind will perhaps be the truest indicator of what takes up the most space in one's mind.

entitled to abundance versus enfranchised to partake of abundance

There are several pairs of words that illustrate an important distinction when getting to know God. The simplest is the old one about a glass half-empty versus half-full. The state of the volume of liquid is not in question, but its significance is diametrically opposite in the one interpretation versus the other. In a similar way the abundant life that God grants to all his children could be interpreted by some people to mean that there is some entitlement to good life, based on meritorious deeds or service or right-minded habits of thinking and exercises in spiritual discipline. But by accepting that God's grace means that nothing you do or fail to do will give you any more or any less of that goodness, then the interpretation can change from entitlement to enfranchisement; that is, rather than laboring under the feeling of deserving better (or worse) in one's life and the lives of those around oneself, the emphasis now is on being empowered and authorized to partake of all God's abundance, no longer as a reward for one's external (or the things in one's heart of hearts) life, but now to participate in the abundant life for internal delight and joy; as an expression of one's overflowing love.
     The same distinction of interpretations can be seen in the idea of "following Christ." Rather than to reduce the behaviors, habits, words and so on to conformity with others in the flock as a way to show to others one's congruence and uniformity, far better instead to follow as eager seeker; someone who joins the way forward not to imitate the others on the road, but because one is eager to find out what comes next when living the Christian Way. From the outside all those on this road may look like a flock moving down the road, but in the hearts of those walking the walk there are important differences between moving along as eager seeker versus moving along anxious not to stand out from the norm.
     The same distinction of interpretation can also be seen in the idea of God's love; a love not of ownership or control, but of growth and changes. Interpersonal love can easily become either eros [Greek for the physical, literal love] or philos [Greek for friendly love]. But God's love more accurately is agape love, the 'charity' in the triad of faith - hope - love/charity. Whereas the first two, mortal types, of love tend to close, make exclusive, define boundaries of control and expectation and care, the agape kind of love tends of open possibilities and release boundaries and controls. It is about growth and change, rather than containment and unchangingness.
     Still another pair of terms illustrates the contrasting interpretation: to know something [facts; the Spanish verb 'saber'] versus to know someone [character; the Spanish verb 'conocer']. While there are some overlapping senses of knowledge between the kind that controls and contains a subject on the one hand, and the kind that leads to new relationships and connections to one's own self. By extension from 'knowledge' to understanding, there is an important difference in interpretation for 'comprehend' versus 'understand'. A person can grasp something intellectually, but still not make sense of it. And the reverse could be true, too: implicitly seeing the sense of the matter but not necessarily comprehending how it is structured, how it all works (function; process), or it's meaning. To comprehend something carries the meaning of wrapping one's arms around a subject; containing, defining, dissecting, and generally mastering a thing at least in terms of structure and function. But to truly understand something there should be more depth and appreciation of the relationship of part to whole; and the intersections of one instance with another. To truly understand is to add the dimension of depth to the flat, 2-dimensional grasp of 'comprehending' a subject.
     In all these examples the common thread is that one perspective seeks to reduce, contain, close-off, and simplify (half-empty quantity of water in the proverbial glass, entitlement instead of enfranchisement, following the external features of Christianity not the internal character, love emanating from mortal foundations rather than limitless Godly sources, knowing the surfaces of things rather that the core). The other perspective does the opposite: widen the connections and meanings, supporting growth and mutual gain, stressing emerging possibilities, saying yes by default rather than no, being proactive instead of reactive.

But why does this subtle change in emphasis or attitude to a set of circumstances of the passage of life matter? Going back to the image of a glass half-empty versus half-full, one can imagine the different horizon that appears from the one set of assumptions versus the other. For the one fretting about the amount that remains, the road ahead is one of scarcity; resources should be guarded, potential involvements will be defended against, the default response to things arising on the way is 'no'. By contrast to the person seeing the glass half-full, there is little thought to what may come tomorrow, so long as there remains something for today. Life is full of possibilities to share, and to get involved with others. In place of a default 'no' response to opportunities and initiatives that life offers up the "half-full" person takes 'yes' as the default reply to these developments.

In conclusion, to fully embrace the life of abundance (of the heart, not necessarily of the body or other material indicators) given by God to all creatures, the subtle shift in interpretation illustrated here can lead to big differences in the life one lives. What one may give up is control, but what one my gain is grateful appreciation of the things that comes to one's world. Perhaps the grateful heart intersects with one of grace, gratis, gratitude; that is, maybe these word roots come from the same place.

Apr 19, 2016

the interplay of faith, hope, love

click for full size view



Translations vary from the Greek of the New (or 2nd) Testament verse, 1 Corinthians 13:13

νυνὶ δὲ μένει πίστις, ἐλπίς, ἀγάπη· τὰ τρία ταῦτα, μείζων δὲ τούτων ἡ ἀγάπη.
SBL Greek New Testament

faith =pistis, hope =elpis, love/charity =agapi
And now these three remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love.
[New International Version] from biblegateway.com


But for right now, until that completeness, we have three things to do to lead us toward that consummation: Trust steadily in God, hope unswervingly, love extravagantly. And the best of the three is love.
[The Message] from biblegateway.com

So now, get three tings dat stay: we can trus God, an we can know everyting goin come out okay bumbye, an we get love an aloha. From da three tings, da love an aloha kine, dass da main ting, an da bestes way.
[Hawai‘i Pidgin] from biblegateway.com

But on the west wall of the First United Methodist Church (ZIP code 48879) the stained glass behind the altar gives the words Hope, Faith, and Charity, when reading from left to right. Looking at the visual representations we see anchor (hope), cross (faith), and Word of God (charity). By comparison, across the town square at the Congregational Church the south window shows an anchor with the text "hope" and on the opposite wall there is a cross with the text "faith," while at the altar there is a bare burnished cross with no words  printed. Perhaps the invisible "greatest of these" (love or charity) fills the space between the two wall; the place where the pews are lined up to face the altar.

Apr 12, 2016

Bible engagement with pencil and markers - marginalia and filtering the main themes/functions

Long ago Thomas Jefferson gave the world the result of his careful slicing of pages to reveal only direct quotation or speaking parts of Jesus; the Jefferson Bible. Since then others have sifted for particular words, responses to given circumstances and so on. And with digital versions and a fast computer it is possible to pore over the lines of a particular translation in search of specific points, phrases or passages.
click for full-size view of J.B. well traveled Bible, newly retired from the pulpit
The Men's Bible Study talked about Acts more recently in 2005. Now that our lives have moved along and the world has continued on its way, it seems time to pick up Luke's guide to Christ followers then and now.
The coloring on these particular pages refer to themes that come up again and again in the pages of the Bible such as promises, God's acts, warnings/consequences, precepts/prohibitions, etc. Some are doctrinal some are more about Christian living. A book well used will show lots of signs of engagement on the page like this!