Where Does God Being Love Leave Us? (And Get Back Here, Atheists!)

by John Shore on September 16, 2008 in Christian Issues · 95 comments

“God is Love.”

Great! It’s the richest philosophical/religious proposition possible.

What it means to us Christians, though, is that (what with our being made in God’s image, and all) we, too, are supposed to be All Love All the Time.

Not so great. Instant fail.

Because who can be about love all the time? Life is hard—and when it’s hard, it’s either frightening or angering, either of which tends to cancel out love like a famished shark cancels out Charlie the Thermometer Tuna. People behave like animals. They doink you just because it’s the easiest thing for them to do. Your boss wouldn’t know a good idea from a python around his neck. Your coworkers seem to think “cooperate” means “shirk and blame.” Driving home from work at night is like being stuck playing “Let’s Make a Squeal!” Lying morons trash the economy. Nonsense wars are started by men and women who wouldn’t know a battlefield from a tennis court.

Point being: bad stuff happens all the time. And when it happens to us, the immediacy of that emotional impact is less likely to leave us filled with love than it is filled with thoughts that make Satan giggle and snort.

Not so good. Common, but not so good.

And things critical to the human experience that aren’t good need to be made better. That’s the Rule of Life.

So we need to figure out the nature of all that stands between us and our conscious, daily experiencing of God’s direct, unqualified love. If we can grasp What’s Hindering Us, then we can squeeze the life out of it.

Cool. We can do that. Understanding something just means thinking about it until you do. We can think. God didn’t give us brains just so our heads wouldn’t sag in. We’re supposed to use our Giant Brains to enhance our understanding of Him. (Atheists! You can do this, too! It doesn’t have to be the Christian God you’re trying to more richly and consistently experience. It can be … The Goodness of the Universe! You can try to buff up your Cosmic Integration! Graduate to the next level of Karmic Fulfillment! Become more harmonious! Whatever you call it, or however you conceive of it, you, just like we Christians, have no choice—you’re actually morally obliged—to try and become the best person you can vis-a-vis that particular version of The Big Picture to which you subscribe.)

God (or The Force, or whatever you might happen to call it) is always fully present in our heart and mind. But too often something or other interferes with our fully apprehending that most glorious truth of all.

I think it’s time we got busy thinking about what some of that Enemy of Us stuff is—of what exactly that troublesome “something or other” is made: how it works, where it comes from, how it can be made to go back to where it came from.

And chalking up all Bad Things to Satan doesn’t get it, by the way. Blaming Satan for what you can fix is like blaming Ronald McDonald for your high cholesterol. Ronald McDonald doesn’t control what you eat. He’s just a front man, a shrill shill of a pill filled with ill will. (Sorry. Bad timing on the rhyming.) Satan can point you toward what works against you—but he can’t make you partake of it. That’s where you have to kick in.

Anyway, I’d like to start writing on the relationship between Us and that which stands between Us and God.

I’d like to actually write a book on that. And I’d like to do it right here, everyday, one post at a time.

Then, when it’s done, I could make the whole thing available on Amazon as an e-book for about seven bucks.

I like it! Using your blog to serially write a book!

Shades of Mr. Dickens!

Except it wouldn’t work, since it would so quickly leave behind those who haven’t beeen reading the posts all along.

Shoot.

Well. We’ll see.

 

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{ 95 comments… read them below or add one }

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Candace September 28, 2008 at 9:19 am

Um, Ross? Ever heard of forensic archeology? Look up "mitochondrial eve". Humanity being traceable back to one female ancestor is not only "scientifically possible", it's mathematically probable. AND it's already been done.

Of course there is considerable debate as to just what that really means. Seems that the more answers we (think we) have, the more questions we find are generated. Ain't it grand?

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odgie September 26, 2008 at 9:07 am

“I say that if there is a god, why would it be so hard to believe that it created the big bang? It created evolution? It created the beautiful process by which DNA and the building blocks of life get transfered from parents to children.”

It’s not so hard. Do you know any Christians, Ross?

“Christianity has been correcting itself and apologizing for its mistakes regarding science for a long time, just add the above to the list.

Understanding the principles behind science isnt hard. It just takes an open mind. Question everything, including religion.”

You might want to question where your getting your information about Christianity.

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Candace September 26, 2008 at 8:08 am

I’m a medical biochemist. A darned good one too :-)

Wanna see my transcripts and references? All the letters I’m entitled to string behind my name? The Quantitative Analysis final I got a perfect score on?

(That’s sarcasm, in case you don’t recognize it. I have no need to prove anything to you. I do wish you well in your quest for an open mind, though.)

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Ross the rational th September 26, 2008 at 3:09 am

i do sincerely apologize if i have been stereotyping all christians to be fundamentalists.

I know many christians and most still feel the world is only 6,000 yrs old. they also believe adam and eve are their ancestors (scientifically impossible).

Dont we all have a bit of arrogance when discussing issues we are sure we are right about?

Candace, you dont have to prove anything to me, we are merely having a heated debate. This topic is a very serious one that surely wont get resolved in ours or our childrens lifetimes.

Im just tryin to say that science is what i put my faith in. Science is the search for how the world works. I refuse to put my faith in a book because someone tells me its fact. Facts must be proven. Faith is not proof.

And yes, i am young and still learning all about the world. I will continue to keep up with scientific advancements and also try to understand why there are so many religions in the world, all claiming to know the will of god.

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John Shore September 26, 2008 at 1:14 am

Dude, he's right. I personally don't know any Christians at all—and I know a LOT of Christians, of all denominations and persuasions—who have any trouble at all reconciling science with God. Only a small minority of Christians hold the sort of fundamentalists views you so mistakenly keep associating with all Christians. You're angry and arrogant, but you sure the freak are also woefully uninformed. My hope is that you're just young.

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