While I was floating in Lake
Michigan with my mother’s cousin, she relayed to us the ordeal of helping her
80 year old parents send an e-mail. They kept asking, “Did it send?” and “How
do you know it sent?” she finally had to tell them, “It just did.” Faith that
an e-mail sent, while it may be simple for younger generations to have is
difficult for the older generations to grasp.
The
other day I was looking to see if any text compared Jesus to Socrates, since
Jesus often used the Socratic Method to help his disciples uncover truth. I
stumbled on a blog entry titled Socrates verse Jesus on the blog “Rationally
Speaking”, the direct link is http://rationallyspeaking.blogspot.com/2005/08/socrates-vs-jesus.html.
It was obvious the author Prof Massimo Pigliucci was not a religious man for he
described Jesus’ existence in a very naive and skeptical manner. But we forgive
him because he knows not what he does.
In the blog post, one statement,
unrelated to Jesus, seemed quite illogical, that Socrates, “encouraged people
to use reason, not faith to
understand what life is about.” How can that be when faith is not separate from
reason? We have to believe reason, have faith in it to accept it.
Think of a little child, they ask
questions like, “Why do I have to eat?, ”Why is the sky blue?” “Why?” “Why?”
“Why?” and after each explanation, “because your stomach will hurt,” “because
the sun hits air and reflects blue?” the child asks, “Why?” In the end parents or
others have to say, “because” or “I don’t know”, or my favorite, “ask God”. By
answering these questions parents and others are teaching children faith, that
if they don’t eat their stomach will hurt and the sky will always be blue. But
that faith is supported by their experiences of their stomach hurting when they
don’t eat and the sky remaining blue.
God himself does not ask us to
separate reason from faith. That is why he gave us the Bible so we could use it
as a resource to find reason to have faith in him. (Look below for “Reason to
have faith in God” sketched out.)
For the older generations, having
faith in e-mail may come difficult but faith in God comes easier to them than
young ones who trusted in e-mail the moment they used it. Yet how do you get
the younger ones to believe in something they find boring to hear about but we
have many reasons to know is
essential to having a truly fulfilling life?
That’s as difficult as getting those in their
80s to use e-mail.
The Old Testament
in brief; Reason to have Faith in God,
(also posted separately);
1.
God says to an Old Testament Character, “Because
I created the world, I know it. I will give you the secret on how to navigate
through it; if you do BLANK, things will go well for you but if you don’t
things will not go well for you.”
2.
Old Testament Character whines, “But I don’t
want to do that because of BLANK and BLANK.” After a miserable time the Old
Testament Character returns to God, “God why are things not going well for me
(us)? Why have you forsaken me (us)?”
3.
God says, “Okay, I hear you. You didn’t do what
I asked so like I told you things aren’t going well but I’ll give you another
chance. Do BLANK and things will go well for you but if you don’t do it things
will not go well for you.
4.
Old Testament Character bows grateful, “Okay,
I’ll do whatever you say.”
5.
The Old Testament Character returns once the
task is done, “It was hard but I did it and things are going well, thank you
God.”
6.
God say to the Old Testament Character, “I am
very pleased with you. Now do BLANK and things will go well for you but if you
don’t do it things will not go well for you.”
7.
Old Testament Character whines, “But I don’t
want to do that because of BLANK and BLANK.” After a miserable time the Old
Testament Character returns to God, “God why are things not going well for me
(us)? Why have you forsaken me (us)?”
8.
GO BACK TO 3 AND REPEAT (TILL THE END OF TIME)
So do we have reason to have faith in God, to trust in him?
Yep! He’s such a patient parent, don’t you think?
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