Questions and Thought for May 1st, 2016

Hello May! (Questions below are from class last week)
1. Questions – Are you a religious person? Who in this classroom hasn’t seen the movie Rocky? What do you believe? How did Philadelphia get its name? What kind of people were the Quakers?
2. Thought –Turning the Tables on the Atheist
— by Frank Turek
Before I attended Seminary, I took a class in Constitutional law at The George Washington University. The class was taught by a very liberal law professor who made it known she was an atheist. When we got to the so-called “separation of church and state” issue, the professor realized I was a Christian and began to grill me.

“Frank, are you a fundamentalist?” she barked, the contempt clear in her tone.
“Are you so religious that you believe the Bible is actually true?”

I tentatively answered yes, but I was stammering in my response. I hardly knew how to support my beliefs with any facts. Like most other Christian college students, I didn’t know much about the evidence in support of the Bible and Christianity, and I didn’t know how to turn the tables on her to reveal that she too was a religious fundamentalist who had a lot of faith.

What? She was an atheist—how could she be a religious fundamentalist with faith? It may sound counterintuitive, but I think it’s true. Just like everyone else, she was religious, had her own fundamentals, and needed faith to believe them. In fact, I’d like to offer a three-point news bulletin for the mocking critics of Christianity:

1. Everyone is religious.
Did you ever notice that people often give their opinions about religion but then caveat it by saying, “But I’m not a theologian”? Well, the truth is everyone’s a theologian. Some are more informed theologians than others, but everyone has some set of religious beliefs. If we define religion as someone’s explanation of ultimate reality—the origin, operation, meaning, and destiny of all things—then everyone is religious, including atheists. While some people devoutly believe that God is the cause of all this, others are just as devout in support of an atheistic explanation or that of some other religious worldview. Even those who are devoutly agnostic or indifferent have taken a religious position. It’s not that they’ve never thought about an explanation for ultimate reality, it’s that they believe the question is unknowable, undecided, or irrelevant. That’s still a religious position.

2. Everyone is a fundamentalist.
While Christians are often mocked for being fundamentalists, everyone has fundamental beliefs about why things are the way they are and how we should live in light of that. Atheists, for example, believe that there is no God; that life arose from non-life without any intelligent intervention; that there is no afterlife; and that science is the supreme if not exclusive source of all truth. Those fundamental beliefs usually result in moral fundamentals such as tolerance for everything (except for those who don’t tolerate everything). So the question is not who is or isn’t a fundamentalist—everyone is. The question is “whose fundamentals are true?”

3. Everyone has faith.
If we define faith as believing something that lacks complete evidence, then everyone has faith. Since no human is all-knowing, all of us—even atheists—require some degree of faith to believe our religious fundamentals. Those that have more evidence for their fundamentals, require less faith– those with less evidence need more faith.

I say all that to show that the playing field is truly level. Everyone is some kind of religious fundamentalist, and everyone has a certain amount of faith. That means that the seventy-five percent of churched students who reject the Christian faith after high school are implicitly adopting another faith, one with its own set of fundamentals and religious beliefs. Of course, few realize that. They think that they are becoming beacons of rationality by rejecting Christianity. Ironically, I think the evidence shows that the exact opposite is true. Those who reject Christianity are becoming more irrational. They require more faith to believe their new worldview than the Christian one they abandoned. The “I Don’t Have Enough Faith to be an Atheist” seminar begins to show them why. (To go deeper into the details, get the book I Don’t Have Enough Faith to be an Atheist.)

I have read this book by Mr. Turek and I view his website (Crossexamined.org) Very good stuff. Oh, 90% of the class had NOT seen Rocky. I now am convinced I am a dinosaur.

rem – I had no knowledge that I had no knowledge.
Question & Thought & ANDs.

Question & Thought for April 26th, 2016!!!

Good Tuesday Morning! Continued!!! Gratitude = Simplicity = Order = Harmony = Beauty = JOY! (I’m going to deviate, imagine that, from the Simple Abundance book and go to my favorite author on the topic of JOY!)
1. Question – And now, what does it all matter?
2. Thought – It matters more than anything else in the world. The whole dance, or drama, or pattern of this three-Personal life is to be played out in each one of us: or (putting it the other way around) each one of us has got to enter that pattern, take his place in that dance. There is no other way to the happiness for which we were made. Good things as well as bad, you know, are caught by a kind of infection. If you want to get warm you must stand near the fire: if you want to be wet you must get into the water. If you want joy, power, peace, eternal life, you must get close to, or even into, the thing that has them. They are not a sort of prize which God could, if He chose, just hand out to anyone. They are a great fountain of energy and beauty spurting up at the very center of reality. If you are close to it, the spray will wet you: if you are not, you will remain dry. Once a man is united to God, how could he not live forever? Once a man is separated from God, what can he do but wither and die?
But how is he to be united to God? How is it possible for us to be taken into this three-Personal life?
You remember what I said in Chapter I about begetting and making. We are not begotten by God, we are only made by Him: in our natural state we are not sons of God, only (so to speak) statues. We have not got Zoe or spiritual life: only Bios or biological life which is presently going to run down and die. Now the whole offer which Christianity makes is this: that we can, if we let God have His way, come to share in the life of Christ. If we do, we shall then be sharing a life which was begotten, not made, which always existed and always will exist. Christ is the Son of God. If we share in this kind of life we also shall be sons of God. We shall love the Father as He does and the Holy Ghost will arise in us. He came to this world and became a man in order to spread to other men the kind of life He has – by what I call ‘good infection.’ Every Christian is to become a little Christ. The whole purpose of becoming a Christian is simply nothing else. (Mere Christianity by C. S. Lewis)
“The whole man is to drink joy from the fountain of joy.” (C.S. Lewis) I’ve enjoyed this!
rem – I had no knowledge that I had no knowledge.
Question & Thought & ANDs.

Question & Thought for April 24th, 2016!

Good Sunday Morning! Gratitude = Simplicity = Order = Harmony = Beauty = Joy!
Harmony
1. Question – Can you just pause enough to see the harmony which order brings?
2. Thought – Usually, when the distraction of daily life depletes our energy, the first thing we eliminate is the thing we need the most: quiet, reflective time. Time to dream, time to think, time to contemplate what’s working and what’s not, so that we can make changes for the better.
On the Simple Abundance path we begin to learn how to pause. As we bring the principles of gratitude, simplicity, and order into our lives, harmony emerges. We learn to balance demands with pleasure, moments of solitude with a need for companionship, work with play, activity with rest, the inner self with the outer package.
Today, just try slowing down. Approach the day as if it were an adagio – a melody played in an easy, graceful manner. Listen to music that soothes and uplifts your soul. And while you listen, pause to consider how all the individual notes come together harmoniously to give expression to the entire score.
So it shall be with your world. With harmony as your guide, trust that your everyday moments will soon begin to resonate to the rhapsody of fulfillment. (Simple Abundance by Sara Ban Breathnach) 
​”The notes I handle no better than many pianists. But the pauses between the notes – ah, that is where art resides.” (Arthur Schnabel)
Have a learning week! Tomorrow – Beauty followed by JOY. (On of Lewis’ favorites!)
rem – I had no knowledge that I had no knowledge.
Question & Thought & ANDs.

Question & Thought for April 20th, 2016!

Good Wednesday Morning!
1. Question – If life seems to be a scramble from here to there, with little rest, little comfort, little contentment, and little joy – then why wouldn’t you sit down and apply these 6 principles and find that Joy you’ve been missing?
2. Thought – But before this book could be written, I had to take stock of what was working in my life and what wasn’t. Perhaps for the first time, I had to be ruthlessly honest both inwardly and outwardly. During this time of profound introspection, six practical, creative, and spiritual principles – gratitude, simplicity, order, harmony, beauty and joy – became the catalysts that helped me define a life of my own. One morning I awoke to the realization that, almost imperceptibly, I’d become a happy women, experiencing more moments of contentment than distress. (Simple Abundance by Sarah Ban Breathnach)
“There you have it:
Gratitude brings simplicity and with simplicity we get order and when we have order – we live in harmony and harmony breeds beauty and allows us to get glimpses of Joy.” (C.S. Lewis explored Joy and his writing on Joy is simply wonderful.) The remainder of the week, questions and thoughts will be on these six principles.” (Mark)
rem – I had no knowledge that I had no knowledge.
Question & Thought & ANDs.