Here are some things I believe:
I believe in the purposeful, intelligent creation of the universe, of all of the galaxies, of our own galaxy and solar system, and most importantly: the creation of every living thing on this planet. I think I am actually physically incapable of regarding nature and the way it interacts with itself – an enormous, worldwide system – and conceiving that it arrived at its current state by mistake. The human body is so purposefully precise and exactly what we need. We have minds. We have the ability to consider our own existence, while animals do not. How could we have descended from microscopic beings? We are pure potential. I’m not capable of believing that the earth is many billions of years old. We were created on purpose. Nelson Mandela says, “we were born to manifest the glory of God that is within us. It’s not just in some of us. It’s in everyone.” I agree.
Because I believe that we were created, I believe in God. I don’t believe in God in the lame, vague way that many people believe in God. I don’t think it’s appropriate to throw around testaments of faith when you’re only choosing aspects of God to believe in. Because I don’t think you should loosely believe that the most powerful, all-knowing and omnipresent presiding force exists. I think you should believe all of it.
I believe that most religions on earth are all worshipping the same God. God has many names, translated in many languages. Similarly, the Holy Spirit has many names as well. The entering of a powerful force into your heart is the act of the Holy Spirit. In Chinese, this experience is called chi. Just because they call it something else doesn’t make it a different being. However, there is one aspect that no religion besides Christianity will accept. It is the fact that the only way to truly get to God and to go to heaven when you die is through Jesus Christ. So many people are so afraid of being restricted that they reject this germane aspect of a relationship with God right away. I’ve never thought more that it is a genuine fear of being contained that makes human beings reject the idea of Jesus. Ironically, that is how we were created. We were created with huge potential to grow up and out and in every direction. We were created with free will to do as we please. People just don’t understand that accepting Jesus is literally accepting freedom. People don’t understand that we are free in Christ. I know it sounds really “religious” of me to say things like this, but I can’t help but believe it’s true.
I believe in God. I believe that the Bible is “God-breathed.” He inspired every word of it. If I believe these things, then I have to believe in the Jesus-is-the-only-path-to-God aspect. Jesus didn’t used to be the only way to God. It wasn’t until about two thousand years ago, when we crucified him, and he paid for our sins and made us perfect in the eyes of God that he became the only way. Heaven is perfect. There can be no imperfection there. We, as human beings, no matter how enlightened or transcendent we become, will never be perfect. Therefore, we must accept the gift of God: a way to make ourselves perfect and thus receive eternal life.
Being a good person and doing good things while you are on earth is important, I think. If you have the means and the desire to beneficial to a greater purpose than just living out your life as society expects and then dying equally predictably, then you should do it. God wants people to be happy. Since so many people don’t believe in Him, He can’t make them happy. That’s why He uses human beings to do good things. To help people. To help the environment that he created. To spread His love. Some people are spreading His love without even realizing it, or even considering that He exists. I find this beautiful. However, contrary to popular belief, I think that doing good things will not get you into heaven. You could live a fantastic life, but if you never accept God and his Way (Jesus), then how can you go live in His perfect place?
I think that we, as human beings, are genuinely good. We are born with the potential to do fantastic things. Because of the environment that we created with poor choices based on our free will, some very bad people are doing very bad things. But I have trouble believing that even as innocent infants, those people were bad. I think we’re all good to start out with, and the course of our lives based on our decisions and other people’s decisions determine the type of people we become.
I believe that there are some terribly ineffectual Christians in the world who feel that testimony is a crusade. I call these people “turn-or-burn”-Christians. Fire and brimstone, inflexible, closed little minds. These are the people that turn people off of believing in God, and sometimes I wish they would just shut the hell up. I mean, seriously. Shut up. You’re ruining it for everyone with your insanely religious mumbo-jumbo. Remember that other human beings have minds and feelings and free will, and you can’t control that.
I believe all of these things because I have to. I cannot even imagine living the life that I have lived feeling like there is no purpose in any of it. Feeling like I came to be out of a colossal crapshoot of life-formation. It’s the purposelessness of life without the belief in something bigger than myself that allows me to maintain faith, even in the darkest of times. And I have gone through some pretty dark times. It’s the wonder that stirs up inside of me every time I take a drive through the country and witness the perfect system of wilderness that exists in nature that brings me back to a little reverence for the being that created what was meant at first to be a utopian paradise. There are little pieces of paradise left that human beings haven’t trampled. I think we should look around once in a while and respect that.
Those things are not the only things I believe in. The list could go on. Here’s one last thing that Nelson Mandela said:
“As we are liberated from our own fears, our presence automatically liberates others.”
But I’m still working on that.
Wednesday, January 2, 2008
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