Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Believe What We Want To?

The following Slice of Infinity came from RZIM on May 21. It struck such a cord with me I wanted to share it.  It brings to mind one of my favorite quotes, with my daughter's translation:

"Fere libenter homines id quod volunt credunt." - Julius Caesar
(Nearly always men willingly believe that which they want.)

You can believe whatever you want to, but that doesn't make it true. So many people, it seems, choose their "religion" or what to believe:
  • not based on what is true, but based on what is comfortable
  • not based on the evidence, but based on what they want to do 
  • not based on objective analysis of the source material, but however they must to reach the outcome that pleases them
  • not based on transcendent reality, but on what they "can live with"
God help us all...that includes me...not to be so shallow and short-sighted in our thinking about God and our eternal destiny that we would attempt to conform Him to our image, instead of conforming our thinking to His example provided through His Son


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If you want to investigate whether Sherlock Holmes was a real or fictional person, you can’t believe everything you read on the Internet. His “biography” is as easy to find as Winston Churchill’s (and there seems to be some fact/fiction confusion on both counts).(1) Between the years of 1887 and 1927, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle wrote prolifically of the famous detective known for his heightened skills of observation and eccentric personality. Holmes was both memorable and beloved—and entirely fictional. It is a strange irony indeed that there are a great number of people who would claim the clues suggest otherwise. As Holmes himself once said, “The temptation to form premature theories upon insufficient data is the bane of our profession.”

The process of gathering and interpreting information is never ending. From childhood we learn patterns of life around us and create theories on how it all works and how we must live. Not knowing whether it is insufficient data or fast truth, children readily form theories. For instance, pans on the stove burn fingers. This is one theory a child might conclude having learned the hard way. But as data becomes more sufficient, a child’s theories are readily adjusted—namely, certain parts of a pan on a hot stove burn fingers. Though memory of the sting may last, there seems an unconscious acknowledgment that their theories are the means to understanding and relating to the world. This is very different then theorizing the end they might want, need, or hope to be true.

Strangely, the temptation Sherlock Holmes speaks of—forming theories upon insufficient data—seems to grow with age. As the questions we seek answers for become more difficult, so the ante for interpreting accurately increases as we grow older. And yet, as adults we are often less willing to adjust our theories. The biases we bring into investigating often prevent us from recognizing data as insufficient or tampered with. We also more readily remember the sting of being burned and hold on to it in our interpretation, so that even to some of life’s deepest questions we are responding with predisposed theories. For instance, God cannot exist because if God did exist my mother wouldn’t have died so young, or tsunamis and hurricanes wouldn’t kill people, or I wouldn’t still be struggling with my finances. How would we respond to a child who insisted that if broccoli were good for her, it would taste like candy?

In one of his essays, F.W. Boreham writes of his grade school difficulties with geography class.  When the teacher spoke of life in a far-off land, he found himself drifting off to scenes in that land and remaining there long after they had switched to another destination. One day, catching him in the midst of a daydream, the teacher called on Boreham and asked, “What part of the world are we studying?” Recognizing a fellow student in distress, a friend scribbled the correct rejoinder on the paper beside them.  ”Java is the answer,” said Boreham. “Good,” the teacher noted, “Now tell me, what was the question?”

When the theories we hold as answers become the end and not the means to understanding, we eventually lose sight of the question. “If God exists,” we essentially ask, “why wouldn’t God be like the God I want to believe in?” or “why wouldn’t God be revealed in the way that I need God to be revealed?” We unreasonably hold the answers without realizing the questions we are even asking. “I maintained that God did not exist,” noted C.S. Lewis of his years as an atheist, “I was also very angry with God for not existing.” There are answers we cling to without admitting the question we have asked is faulty.

I believe the clues of a creative and personal God are all around us. I am convinced that Christ’s vicarious humanity is unique in its ability to change and transform lives. I also know the desperation of clinging to the answers that keep us from really seeing the evidence. But this is not seeing. “For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities—his eternal power and divine nature—have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that we are without excuse” (Romans 1:20). Will we investigate the evidence of God with a mind to see what is really there? Perhaps there is indeed something to the call of Jesus to receive the kingdom of God like a little child.

Jill Carattini is managing editor of A Slice of Infinity at Ravi Zacharias International Ministries in Atlanta, Georgia.


(1) “Fact & Fiction: Churchill Seen as Fake, Sherlock Holmes as Real-life Detective,” USA Today, February 4, 2008.

Sunday, May 11, 2014

"You have to behave the way we tell you to"

Maybe it’s weird that we sometimes think of people in terms of comparisons between groups. I have been lately.  I mean, consider terrorists and Democrats.

One group doesn’t offer any useful information on how to build a nation. They take exception to American exceptionalism, and are bound and determined to bring our nation down to the level of every other nation: mediocre, less productive, less successful, lower standards of living, bound up by superstition contrary to factual evidence. This group pays lip-service to concepts like job creation or the economy, but they don't actually provide jobs in any private sector, only in the "sector" that is controlling other people.

They want to be in control of your life and mine. This group tells us, "You have to behave the way we tell you to," and they will punish us if we don’t. People around the country are learning just how they have to behave in order to not be punished. Just ask photographer Elaine Huguenin, and florist Barronelle Stutzman, and the owners of Conestoga Wood and Hobby Lobby.

And the other group? They are terrorists.
 
The parallels came to mind as I considered recent remarks from our eloquent Secretary of State John “I served in 'nam” Kerry, as reported in the Patriot Post:
Secretary of State John Kerry offered some withering criticism for terrorists. "I have seen this scourge of terror across the planet, and so have you," he intoned. "They don't offer anything except violence. They don't offer a health care plan, they don't offer schools. They don't tell you how to build a nation, they don't talk about how they will provide jobs. They just tell people, 'You have to behave the way we tell you to,' and they will punish you if you don't." Bombings, shootings, running planes into buildings -- that's nothing. Terrorists don't offer a health care plan. Funny he should mention health care, though, since Democrats used the very tactics he described to force people to sign up for ObamaCare. But, Kerry said next, "Our responsibility and the world's responsibility is to stand up against that kind if nihilism." 

Now that’s telling ‘em John! Got those terrorists really worried I bet.

Why can’t he just admit it? If you don’t place extreme value on liberty—that is, the least necessary governing of individuals’ lives—for all, then what you think is OK simply depends on how you think people should behave.

Whether you’re a terrorist or a modern liberal.