Well, better late than never! I hope you all had a wonderful Easter, wherever you were at. As planned, I went to the historic Universalist National Memorial Service in Washington D.C. The whole experience was just fantastic. The greeter at the door was a kind man with whom I enjoyed speaking for a few minutes before the service. Soon there entered a very nice lady who seemed genuinely interested in talking to me and welcomed me heartily to the service as well. I had the chance to speak with a couple other nice folks before and after the service as well. The service itself was really pleasant and I felt completely at ease, something I can’t say for every church I visit! I never got the slightest feeling that I was being pressured or scrutinized. It was the pastor’s final sermon there and I felt privileged to be able to attend this church with the wonderful people there and hear her final message to this group of folks.
Then, as I was driving home, I noticed a leaflet tucked snugly into my wiper blade. At first I thought it was a ticket for parking in a questionable area. When I arrived home I plucked it out of my windshield wiper and was intrigued and slightly amused to read that the end of the world was going to happen very soon, apparently. The title said “Holy God will bring judgment day on May 21, 2011.” I read the back and saw that the leaflet was produced by Family Radio! Anyone scared yet? I began to read. In one short paragraph, I read the words “Holy God” three times.
Throughout the leaflet, God was consistently called “Holy God” over and over again. The Great Flood, “by careful study” happened, per the pamphlet, in 4990 B.C. Then, some numbers that people might be likely to ignore out of sheer boredom are manipulated to come up with a date for Judgment Day! This is really unconscionable. The leaflet struck me as actually bordering on being venomous; it reminded me just a little bit of Chick tracts (truly venomous!), minus the comic illustration of a huge angel tossing live human beings into a burning pit to suffer forever.
Anyway, the bottom line message was: “Holy God hates you!” I crumpled it up and threw it in the trash. Then I retrieved it just to serve as an example of how why our image of God matters so much. I can’t ever imagine myself loving “Holy God” as described in this leaflet. He’s waiting to torment his own creatures for all eternity! As Ellen White says somewhere about eternal torment: “O, dreadful blasphemy!” I’m no Seventh Day Adventist, but their stock went up considerably when I read that quote from their beloved founder and leader.
In any case, this pamphlet was playing upon people’s fears: upon our realization that none of us are perfect before our Creator, an all-knowing being that has never made a mistake, knows everything about us, and (implied by this pamphlet) is VERY ANGRY with all of us!! But let’s take a step back into the wonderful reality for a moment and see how Jesus, the perfect manifestation of God here on earth treated imperfect people like us when he was on earth…prostitutes, lepers, outcasts. I’m repeating here, but this is so important that we strive to follow his example as best we can. He ate with hated people, drank with them, healed the sick and paralyzed people and liberally forgave them – even when they did not ask for it! And, we read of a good many religious leaders who scowled and seethed with hatred at him.
Therefore, when we want to know what “Holy God” is really like, let us look to Jesus and read about how he treated people. Let us meditate on the parable of the lost sheep and those like it – how we are all God’s children (per Paul’s speech to the Greeks in Acts 17, and elsewhere) – and how the Shepherd will not rest until all his sheep come home. I believe the New Testament does clearly teach true justice. But the punishment must fit the crime! In Deuteronomy (25:1-3) even, the number of lashes a person could receive was limited to 40 and it was to be “according to his guilt!” This was a brutal period, and even here we see justice tempered with mercy.
Nowhere in the leaflet is there anything said about how God is Love or how Jesus treated people. In fact, there’s virtually nothing at all in there about Jesus’ example and teachings to love one another and God (because he first loved us!). Rather, the leaflet is designed to scare the living daylights out of people with a guilty conscience or the gullible, perhaps, who have yet to subscribe to some formula that Family Radio has cooked up that you and I need to believe in in order to escape this judgment.
We know that God will have all people to be saved (1 Tim 2:4 – efforts to water down this verse don’t change the tremendous strength of the Greek verb there – see Gerry Beauchemin’s book Hope Beyond Hell or ask me for it and I’ll send you a free copy that details this); God is in charge of who gets saved of course; and we are told over and again that he will have mercy on ALL (Romans 11:32). 1 Tim 4:10? Believe it! He really is the Savior of the whole world, not just the religious elite; and when he was on earth, he acted like it, by hanging around those who would be deemed by churches today to be “lost” or “damned forever”!
Clearly there may be some pain to come, more or less. Mark 9:49 tells us EVERYONE will get some fire. We are all imperfect. But as we know, God’s mercy endures forever, mercy triumphs over judgment and his wrath lasts but a moment!! (Psalm 136, James 2:13, Lamentations 3:31-33) What a change this makes in our lives in how we look and treat others when we realize this truth. And thank God, this is the kind of God we serve – a God of mercy and love. Yes, God is Love! (1 John 4:8; 1 John 4:16) And I’ll end it with 1 John 4:18 – “There is no fear in love; but perfect love casts out fear, because fear involves punishment, and the one who fears is not perfected in love.” Again, none of us are perfect, so there is bound to be some unhealthy fear and problems of all kinds in life associated with fears of all kinds. But we know that God is going to take care of us all, wipe away every tear and fear will be no more!!
God bless!
-David
I throw tracts in the garbage too. God did not give us a spirit of fear, but of power and love and of a sound mind. He doesn't put us into fear first then give us peace.. it's always peace, given through the Prince of Peace.
ReplyDeleteAmen Sisterlisa! Thanks for your comment! I think I threw away my Chick tracts, or they were washed away in our basement flood of 2007! That could be called an act of God! I still wish I had the Chick tracts though, for a number of reasons. But I'm definitely not going to order any more and support that kind of fear-based religion. Blessings to you! -David
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