monkeybone wrote:please let me unload even if it doesn't make sense.
I'm pretty sure I only make sense like 70% of the time so no worries here.
monkeybone wrote:the phrase that has come to mind too often lately is 'a crisis of faith'. i don't know exactly where that comes from and i suppose i doesn't matter. i am in trouble.
How in trouble depends on who Jesus is to you.
monkeybone wrote:i sit in church with my ladies (work) every blessed saturday. st augustine's 5p mass. we go because they like church, they like the songs, it's a nice bonding time for all of us. we hold hands, we sing. the other motivation was my own lack of church experience. i wanted to get back to it.
You wanted to get back to it because you feel that going to church is the right thing or because you wanted to fellowship with other believers and worship God?
monkeybone wrote:i grew up lutheran. i know the litergy, the creeds, i knew them by heart. maybe i understood the meaning, sometmes just recited without thinking. i 'graduated' meaning i went through the catechism classes and was 'confirmed' in 8th grade. i was praised for my understanding of the Word, of Calvinism, of Luther.
All well and good, but knowledge is different than a relationship.
monkeybone wrote:i left my faith in college and did my own stupid things.
hehehe I found my faith in college! Of course it was Bible College and it was in my late 20s... hehehe Everyone goes thru a rebellion, it's Satan's way.
monkeybone wrote:Now, i profess my Christianity, I tell people I believe Jesus walked this earth, rose from the dead.
Satan knows and believes the same things...
monkeybone wrote:And yet sitting in this church every week i wonder how fantastic in a crazy way this story is. how Jesus' father lived and acted on DREAMS, and Mary the same. He walked on water. He performed miracles of providing sight to the blind, redemption to the whore, on and on and on. And his disciples were granted the power to provide miracles as well.
I like it better that the story *is* so crazy. Plus it had to be crazy to fulfill the prophecy. No matter what proof Christ provided, the pharises wouldn't believe and kept asking him to give proof. The man turned water into wine and healed the sick and they wanted more proof.
monkeybone wrote:How can this really be true? Why can't I see things like that now? Why were these miracles and speeches done then and not now?
Nothing in the Bible has ever been disproved. As a matter of fact the more archeologists find, the more it is
proved. God calls people in dreams and visions even today. There are true stories of people traveling to different countries to find a Christian church to find out more about this "Jesus" guy they've been dreaming about. Miracles are too often overlooked or disbelieved or miscredited. The "religious" idiots and kooks that wouldn't know a Bible if it hit them in the head are the ones that get the media attention so anyone that has anything intelligent to say about God or Jesus or Christianity is ignored or just lumped into the same group of idiots.
monkeybone wrote:I think that I have seen the work of the Holy Spirit.... but how much of that is just dumb luck?
Zero. Oh yeah, you can chalk up exactly zero instances of anything up to coincidence or dumb luck. Everything good that happens is of God. My entire life is a string of craziness that only makes sense when you look at it from the stand point of God working on me and working with the things that I've done and working with the things that people have done to me to be for His good.
monkeybone wrote:I am now taking a history class - civilization up to 1600. this is not helping my faith cause. so many stories of the great flood, of sending jeopardized male children down the river in woven baskets, the delivery of rules for life on basalt tablets and through burning objects similar to the burning bush have been recorded in other cultures over and over.
I would be more surprised if there *weren't* instances of the same types of stories in other cultures and mythologies. Considering these things
actually happened, it only makes sense that people who weren't Jewish would try to wrap their own heads around the events and make their own stories to make sense of what had happened. Also, the stories of the old testament were passed along verbally before and after they were ever written down. I'm sure there were eaves droppers that got their own version of events and started telling their own stories with enough twists in them to credit their own gods.
monkeybone wrote:the Hebrew idea of monotheism is new. does that make it true?
Nope, what makes it true is that it is. Technically, it's the oldest form of religion since it was the first. Adam and Eve knew there was only one God.
monkeybone wrote:the idea that a god can come back from the dead, at this point, is already well established. the idea of an afterlife is also established in a happy continuation of life (egyptians) and the concept of hell is not developed.
Again, not surprising due to it being actual history. As far as the egyptian concept of no hell, better for Satan if people don't believe there is a hell cuz then there is no reason to be saved from it.
monkeybone wrote:i don't want to lose my faith - and i don't want to be stupid.
You can't lose your faith if you truly have it. As far as being stupid...I live my life knowing that a good majority of people think I'm quite insane or idiotic for believing the things that I do. Even people whom I hold dear hurt me deeply with things they say about 'idiotic' or 'stupid' beliefs and ways of thinking. "Do not deceive yourselves. If any one of you thinks he is wise by the standards of this age, he should become a "fool" so that he may become wise." 1 Corinthians 3:18
monkeybone wrote:i realize that people of faith have nothing to lose. so what is my problem?
Questioning is good. In one of the books of the new testament, Paul (I think it's Paul anyway) commends people for searching the scripture to verify what he was saying instead of just eating it up blindly. God gave you reason so that you could use it.
The only thing I can think to answer this question with is: Have you truely accepted Jesus Christ into your life and heart as your Lord and Savior, or did you just learn everything in church because you were supposed to?
monkeybone wrote:shit.
No thanx. hehehe
Well, that only took me my entire work day.
I hope I made some sense. I may even go thru everyone's replies to see what I have to say about them. However, not right now. I want to go home.