Scripture: Romans 3:25
God presented Christ as a sacrifice of atonement, through the shedding of his blood—to be received by faith.
Thought for the Day: I had a dream about Paul last night. We were sitting on Mt. Olive, overlooking the still intact Temple, sharing some olives (obviously), cheese and wine, on a stunningly beautiful day. Paul knows he’s been dead a couple thousand years, and that we’re meeting in some weird, liminal space. I understand him in English, but I’m not sure what language he’s speaking. He’s absolutely devastated at what Christianity has become. I mean, the poor man is weeping. I feel badly for him, but I also explain that it’s largely his fault, because he got the Jesus movement all wrong. Sometimes I’m not the most sensitive person. “I’m sure you had the best intentions, Paul,” I say, “but the end result of your poor Christology and Theology has actually kept people from moving closer to God. Your insistence that Jesus’ blood had to be spilled to seal some sort of Divine covenant turned Jesus into an idol and God into a suicidal maniac. It’s created a huge divide in Christianity, especially today, between people who think of God as an outside entity sitting on a throne on a cloud, and people who think of God as an inner spirit, always with us, closer than our own breath—you know, like Jesus taught and showed.”
In the gently waving summer breeze, Paul picks up an olive and says, “Michael, here’s the thing: In my day, people understood the idea of blood oaths. For us, a pact made in blood could never be broken. Were you ever blood brothers with someone? This is what I meant when I spoke of Jesus’ blood sealing God’s new covenant. Was it necessary for Jesus’ blood to be spilled? Of course not! After all, God stops Abraham from sacrificing Isaac. Why then would God need to spill the blood of Jesus, who so closely embodied God that we called him God’s own son? When did you people start taking everything so literally? And I have another question. Why are you still reading my personal letters to churches that no longer exist, 2000 years after I wrote them? Haven’t you found anyone else to talk about God with?”
I explain to Paul that I’ve often asked the same question, and always wondered what he would think if he knew we were still reading his letters—or the works of the other ancient authors, so long after they were written. I told him that we still read the works of many ancient people—Isaac Newton, Josephus, Augustine, because their ideas in one fashion or another lay the groundwork for our new ideas. “Sometimes though,” I told Paul, “we do get stuck in the past. Especially where religion is concerned, it can be difficult for people to let go of long-held beliefs, even if they’re destructive.”
“You don’t have to tell me that,” Paul said. “Look what they did to Jesus! He had some fresh new ideas and they strung him up for thinking differently.”
“Unfortunately, that habit hasn’t changed much, Paul,” I explained.
And then I woke up weeping.
Prayer: Keep me open to new ideas, new theologies, new visions of Christ’s continuing work in the world, God who I understand as the being of all being, the elemental of all elements, the lover of all creation, in-dwelling and always with me. Amen.
Friday, October 24, 2014
Thursday, October 23, 2014
Scripture: Romans 5:1-2a
Therefore, since we have been justified through faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have gained access by faith into this grace in which we now stand.
Thought for the Day: Paul is the founder of Christianity. Jesus started a progressive movement within Judaism, but Paul started an entirely new religion. And while I believe Paul was trying to be faithful to God, his interpretation of the life, death and resurrection of Jesus completely missed the point and derailed what discipleship to Jesus could and should have been.
For Paul, it is the spilling of Christ’s blood through which God reconciles the sinners of the world (which is all of us) to God’s good graces. Now, if you were a 1st Century Jew or Gentile, this would make sense to you. All the gods were demanding, and most of them demanded blood sacrifices. But Paul knew as well as any other good Jew of the time that the Jewish sacrificial system was different from the Roman system. Where the Romans (for the most part) thought the sacrifice itself appeased the gods, for the Jews, the sacrifice was always symbolic. The sacrifice itself was simply a way for people to show their willingness to give things up in order to have a closer relationship with God. It was a way for Jews to acknowledge that everything they had belonged to God, and that they were just temporary stewards. They knew God didn’t demand fatted calves or hoards of Gold—what use does God have for material things?
So for Paul then to insist that God demanded the blood of Jesus be spilled to seal the covenant was disingenuous. It’s possible he attached so strongly to this after he started evangelizing to Gentiles, who would have had a greater connection to a material sacrifice. The Roman gods, much like the Romans themselves (and don’t our gods always reflect our own natures?) often demanded blood.
However, it’s now 2000 years later, and most Christians still insist that the blood of Jesus had to be spilled in order for God’s wrath to be appeased, and the work of reconciliation to begin. I disagree (as do most modern theologians). Some traditions hold us back. This is one of them.
While we remember and respect the work of Paul in his time, in our own era, we need to recognize and accept that many of his ideas no longer have bearing on our spiritual development. The entire idea of reconciliation and forgiveness for sin might be wrong, in fact. What if we’re not fallen creatures, but are evolving spiritually? God is not disappointed in us, and certainly didn’t mate with a human to create a demigod to be sacrificed like Hercules to Zeus. No, we are all the offspring of God in an entangled metaphysical/physical way we are only now beginning to understand. Jesus’ death wasn’t about atonement, it was about at-one-ment, a way for God to show us what and whose we are, always, no matter the evils we commit right now. God is at work, as God has always been at work, delivering us from our evils. That’s the way evolution works. It’s a process—a slow process, but our faith will see us through.
Prayer: God who conducts all the processes of the universe, give me patience, wisdom, and strength to encounter and understand You in entirely new, often frightening, always untraditional ways. Free my heart from the unhealthy belief systems of the past, and fill it with more enlightened ways to understand my spiritual relationship to You. Amen.
Therefore, since we have been justified through faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have gained access by faith into this grace in which we now stand.
Thought for the Day: Paul is the founder of Christianity. Jesus started a progressive movement within Judaism, but Paul started an entirely new religion. And while I believe Paul was trying to be faithful to God, his interpretation of the life, death and resurrection of Jesus completely missed the point and derailed what discipleship to Jesus could and should have been.
For Paul, it is the spilling of Christ’s blood through which God reconciles the sinners of the world (which is all of us) to God’s good graces. Now, if you were a 1st Century Jew or Gentile, this would make sense to you. All the gods were demanding, and most of them demanded blood sacrifices. But Paul knew as well as any other good Jew of the time that the Jewish sacrificial system was different from the Roman system. Where the Romans (for the most part) thought the sacrifice itself appeased the gods, for the Jews, the sacrifice was always symbolic. The sacrifice itself was simply a way for people to show their willingness to give things up in order to have a closer relationship with God. It was a way for Jews to acknowledge that everything they had belonged to God, and that they were just temporary stewards. They knew God didn’t demand fatted calves or hoards of Gold—what use does God have for material things?
So for Paul then to insist that God demanded the blood of Jesus be spilled to seal the covenant was disingenuous. It’s possible he attached so strongly to this after he started evangelizing to Gentiles, who would have had a greater connection to a material sacrifice. The Roman gods, much like the Romans themselves (and don’t our gods always reflect our own natures?) often demanded blood.
However, it’s now 2000 years later, and most Christians still insist that the blood of Jesus had to be spilled in order for God’s wrath to be appeased, and the work of reconciliation to begin. I disagree (as do most modern theologians). Some traditions hold us back. This is one of them.
While we remember and respect the work of Paul in his time, in our own era, we need to recognize and accept that many of his ideas no longer have bearing on our spiritual development. The entire idea of reconciliation and forgiveness for sin might be wrong, in fact. What if we’re not fallen creatures, but are evolving spiritually? God is not disappointed in us, and certainly didn’t mate with a human to create a demigod to be sacrificed like Hercules to Zeus. No, we are all the offspring of God in an entangled metaphysical/physical way we are only now beginning to understand. Jesus’ death wasn’t about atonement, it was about at-one-ment, a way for God to show us what and whose we are, always, no matter the evils we commit right now. God is at work, as God has always been at work, delivering us from our evils. That’s the way evolution works. It’s a process—a slow process, but our faith will see us through.
Prayer: God who conducts all the processes of the universe, give me patience, wisdom, and strength to encounter and understand You in entirely new, often frightening, always untraditional ways. Free my heart from the unhealthy belief systems of the past, and fill it with more enlightened ways to understand my spiritual relationship to You. Amen.
Wednesday, October 22, 2014
Scripture: Acts 14:21
They preached the gospel in that city and won a large number of disciples.
Thought for the Day: Those of us who have felt the tug of God in our souls are thankful for spiritual teachers. It’s likely we’ve had many instructors on our spiritual journey. People, books, art and music all inform our spiritual development.
For many Christians, the Bible is their ultimate spiritual authority. But the Bible is really more a record of people like us, struggling to find relationship with each other and God, and the development of their religious traditions. It’s not the greatest spiritual text. There’s a lot of information about forming a church or a synagogue and how to behave in one of those institutions. There are ideas about how to behave in community with one another, many as pertinent today as they were thousands of years ago (and many more that are completely repulsive). But the little spiritual instruction that’s found in the Bible is steeped in ancient Jewish mysticism and sacrificial symbolism that is lost on today’s population of spiritual seekers.
If we are really interested in conforming more to the image of Christ, then it’s more than okay—in fact I would say it’s a necessity, to look outside the Bible for spiritual guidance. Richard Rohr, Joel Goldsmith, Ram Dass, Marcus Borg, the New Interpreter’s Bible and commentaries—these are all excellent sources for spiritual lessons. The NIB commentaries in particular free us from the mythology and sacrificial imagery of the Bible most of us no longer understand.
Tradition is fine. It’s good to honor our spiritual ancestors. But just as Jesus taught new ways to think about being Jewish, we must also always strive to think about the new ways God is showing us what it means to be in relationship in the 21st Century.
Prayer: God who reveals all things, open my mind to Your new communication, so that I may be spiritually transformed, and not just blindly follow traditions I don’t understand. Amen.
They preached the gospel in that city and won a large number of disciples.
Thought for the Day: Those of us who have felt the tug of God in our souls are thankful for spiritual teachers. It’s likely we’ve had many instructors on our spiritual journey. People, books, art and music all inform our spiritual development.
For many Christians, the Bible is their ultimate spiritual authority. But the Bible is really more a record of people like us, struggling to find relationship with each other and God, and the development of their religious traditions. It’s not the greatest spiritual text. There’s a lot of information about forming a church or a synagogue and how to behave in one of those institutions. There are ideas about how to behave in community with one another, many as pertinent today as they were thousands of years ago (and many more that are completely repulsive). But the little spiritual instruction that’s found in the Bible is steeped in ancient Jewish mysticism and sacrificial symbolism that is lost on today’s population of spiritual seekers.
If we are really interested in conforming more to the image of Christ, then it’s more than okay—in fact I would say it’s a necessity, to look outside the Bible for spiritual guidance. Richard Rohr, Joel Goldsmith, Ram Dass, Marcus Borg, the New Interpreter’s Bible and commentaries—these are all excellent sources for spiritual lessons. The NIB commentaries in particular free us from the mythology and sacrificial imagery of the Bible most of us no longer understand.
Tradition is fine. It’s good to honor our spiritual ancestors. But just as Jesus taught new ways to think about being Jewish, we must also always strive to think about the new ways God is showing us what it means to be in relationship in the 21st Century.
Prayer: God who reveals all things, open my mind to Your new communication, so that I may be spiritually transformed, and not just blindly follow traditions I don’t understand. Amen.
Tuesday, October 21, 2014
Scripture: 1 Peter 2:21
To this you were called, because Christ suffered for you, leaving you an example, that you should follow in his steps.
Thought for the Day: One of the problems with starting a revolutionary movement is that very often, over time, people forget what the movement was about. This happened to Che Guevara’s movement in Cuba, to the Marxist revolution in Russia, and to the Jesus movement in ancient Palestine.
Jesus started a spiritual and political revolution. Remarkably, he did it peacefully. He was surrounded by other Jewish revolutionary factions (watch Monty Python’s The Life of Brian for a hilarious, yet accurate, send-up of the fragmentation of Jewish rebels in Jesus’ time), many of them likely urging him to join their movement, all of them armed and violent. Yet Jesus established something new: a protest against the unfair, oppressive ways of the world by focusing on the love of God rather than the weapons of humankind. Jesus called others to follow in his footsteps by urging them to focus on their faithfulness to God. He knew and taught that faithfulness to God is life- and world changing. He knew and taught that faithfulness to God is unifying, that love never judges nor condemns.
Unfortunately, a couple thousand years later, Christianity has become one of the most condemning religions on the planet. I actually heard someone talk about people as “saved” and “unsaved” over the weekend, completely missing the point of anything Paul ever wrote and Jesus ever said. I think the speaker saw the “Left Behind” movie and bought into its completely wrong ideas.
I urge Christians to remember the idea of discipleship—we are students and followers of Jesus, who teaches us that faithfulness to God is our only goal. God changes everything, all the time. through each and every one of us. God loves everything and everyone, and couldn’t give a hoot about our religion. We are somehow designed to connect with God on an atomic level. That’s what Jesus taught, knowing that once we make that metaphysical connection, we are changed forever, and we forever change the world.
Prayer: God of love, course through my veins, cleansing me of hatred, fear, uncertainty and doubt. Make me Your faithful servant, in the manner and likeness of Jesus the Christ, who teaches me and guides me every day. Amen.
To this you were called, because Christ suffered for you, leaving you an example, that you should follow in his steps.
Thought for the Day: One of the problems with starting a revolutionary movement is that very often, over time, people forget what the movement was about. This happened to Che Guevara’s movement in Cuba, to the Marxist revolution in Russia, and to the Jesus movement in ancient Palestine.
Jesus started a spiritual and political revolution. Remarkably, he did it peacefully. He was surrounded by other Jewish revolutionary factions (watch Monty Python’s The Life of Brian for a hilarious, yet accurate, send-up of the fragmentation of Jewish rebels in Jesus’ time), many of them likely urging him to join their movement, all of them armed and violent. Yet Jesus established something new: a protest against the unfair, oppressive ways of the world by focusing on the love of God rather than the weapons of humankind. Jesus called others to follow in his footsteps by urging them to focus on their faithfulness to God. He knew and taught that faithfulness to God is life- and world changing. He knew and taught that faithfulness to God is unifying, that love never judges nor condemns.
Unfortunately, a couple thousand years later, Christianity has become one of the most condemning religions on the planet. I actually heard someone talk about people as “saved” and “unsaved” over the weekend, completely missing the point of anything Paul ever wrote and Jesus ever said. I think the speaker saw the “Left Behind” movie and bought into its completely wrong ideas.
I urge Christians to remember the idea of discipleship—we are students and followers of Jesus, who teaches us that faithfulness to God is our only goal. God changes everything, all the time. through each and every one of us. God loves everything and everyone, and couldn’t give a hoot about our religion. We are somehow designed to connect with God on an atomic level. That’s what Jesus taught, knowing that once we make that metaphysical connection, we are changed forever, and we forever change the world.
Prayer: God of love, course through my veins, cleansing me of hatred, fear, uncertainty and doubt. Make me Your faithful servant, in the manner and likeness of Jesus the Christ, who teaches me and guides me every day. Amen.
Monday, October 20, 2014
Monday Meditation
Empowering
God,
move
among us and awaken us
to
your loving presence.
When
we lose our way
and
put our confidence in our possessions,
call
us back to you.
Remind
us that our very identity
is
dependent on your abiding presence.
Show
us how to walk with steadfast faithfulness,
following
the path of justice and goodness
in
our daily lives.
Fill
our days with joy and hope
so
we might fill the days of others
in
the same manner,
fulfilling
the call
that
comes from following Jesus Christ,
in
whose name we pray.
Amen.
Wednesday, October 15, 2014
Scripture: Exodus 3:10
[God said to Moses] “So now, go. I am sending you to Pharaoh to bring my people the Israelites out of Egypt.”
Thought for the Day: Here’s a perfect example of the way faith and work go hand in hand. Moses’ faith in God is deep enough to hear God speak, and what does God say? “Moses, go do this work for me.” Real faith is not about doctrines and creeds and confessions that Jesus is God’s only son (which completely misrepresents that 1st Century political statement). We don’t need to turn God into Zeus and Jesus into a demigod. Jesus was a person of deep faith who, like Moses, heard the voice of God and took action. This is the call of all people who claim faith in God: to listen deeply for the intimate voice of God that resides, slumbering within us all, just waiting to become active, so we too will become active voices, hands, and feet of change in a world crying out for help.
Faith turns us into a peaceful people, willing to sacrifice for the good of the world. Faithful people embrace universal healthcare and peace, free education for all God’s children, marriage equality for all God’s children, and love for all God’s children, whether called Christian, Muslim, Jew, Buddhist, Taoist, Hindu, or atheist. We forget that religion is a human-made construct, not a revelation from God, and we fight over our human ideas about God in the most ridiculous and unfaithful fashion.
If we are faithful, then we can only be active forces for love. Anything else is simply a lie.
Prayer: Lift my voice above the din of the “faithful” who abuse Your name to hate, kill, and exclude. Use my hands to create a new world where everyone is treated equally, and has equal access to healthcare, education, marriage, and love. Amen.
[God said to Moses] “So now, go. I am sending you to Pharaoh to bring my people the Israelites out of Egypt.”
Thought for the Day: Here’s a perfect example of the way faith and work go hand in hand. Moses’ faith in God is deep enough to hear God speak, and what does God say? “Moses, go do this work for me.” Real faith is not about doctrines and creeds and confessions that Jesus is God’s only son (which completely misrepresents that 1st Century political statement). We don’t need to turn God into Zeus and Jesus into a demigod. Jesus was a person of deep faith who, like Moses, heard the voice of God and took action. This is the call of all people who claim faith in God: to listen deeply for the intimate voice of God that resides, slumbering within us all, just waiting to become active, so we too will become active voices, hands, and feet of change in a world crying out for help.
Faith turns us into a peaceful people, willing to sacrifice for the good of the world. Faithful people embrace universal healthcare and peace, free education for all God’s children, marriage equality for all God’s children, and love for all God’s children, whether called Christian, Muslim, Jew, Buddhist, Taoist, Hindu, or atheist. We forget that religion is a human-made construct, not a revelation from God, and we fight over our human ideas about God in the most ridiculous and unfaithful fashion.
If we are faithful, then we can only be active forces for love. Anything else is simply a lie.
Prayer: Lift my voice above the din of the “faithful” who abuse Your name to hate, kill, and exclude. Use my hands to create a new world where everyone is treated equally, and has equal access to healthcare, education, marriage, and love. Amen.
Tuesday, October 14, 2014
Scripture: Galatians 5:5-6
But
by faith we eagerly await through the Spirit the righteousness for which we
hope. For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision nor uncircumcision has any
value. The only thing that counts is faith expressing itself through love.
Thought
for the Day:
I’m not exactly sure how it happened, but at some point Christianity became
about mansions and streets paved with gold in heaven. People have been taught
that if they lead a “good” life (whatever that means) they will be rewarded in
heaven. One of the many problems with this ideology is that the reward is
material—in heaven one receives mansions and gold streets, and puppies and
unicorns…
The
point of the spiritual masters was not to promise us material riches in the
afterlife. Jesus came to show us how a life of faith changes us here and now. More
importantly, Jesus shows us how faith changes the world here and now. If we are
honestly faithful to God, we are transformed—right now! into loving beings who
cannot help but help one another. Even Paul talks about a transformation of
love so complete that we see the world in a totally new way: We see each other
as parts of the wholeness of God, rather than separate beings who need to fight
over land and supplies. Our faith in God gives us the love we need to free
rather than enslave each other.
Faith
should always be active. It should motivate us to change the world, even if it
seems impossible. We have faith because we have felt the presence of the
supernatural in our lives. God lives within us, and moves us to work in the
interest of love. We become teachers of love, workers united in the cause of
love. Faith creates an army of lovers that always opposes the warriors of
oppression and hatred.
And
love always, always wins.
Prayer: Loving God, make my faith great
enough to stand against the oppressive forces of terror attempting to separate
us from Your presence. Make my love bright
enough to light the way for others on their way to Your embrace, and hot enough
to melt the hearts of fear that cause men and women to kill each other for
land, food, and misguided ideology. Amen.
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