The Hatred of God?

There are six things that the Lord hates,
seven that are an abomination to him:
haughty eyes, a lying tongue,
and hands that shed innocent blood,
a heart that devises wicked plans,
feet that hurry to run to evil,
a lying witness who testifies falsely,
and one who sows discord in a family.
- Proverbs 6:16-19

Perhaps sometimes our hatred is justified. I read this verse in a Sojourner’s email the other day and the quote that came with it spoke volumes to me about our call to live like Christ. Joan Chittister said “Anger is not bad. Anger can be a very positive thing, the thing that moves us beyond the acceptance of evil.” Wha?! Then I thought about it… There are a lot of sins we have been desensitized to.. I am going to have to disagree with my husband on his protest of the concept “Love the sinner hate the sin.” The problem with that phrase is that people don’t want to think about it and they want to throw out condemnations about the sins that shun the person. It doesn’t have to be interpreted that way. But in reality many of us as Christians have continuously been exposed to these “abominations” as Solomon writes.

That new show TV show on Fox, Lie to Me, while not a stellar concept, purports that a human lies every ten minutes. And how many innocent lives are shed because of injustice in war? How many of us have ever sown discord in our family? Oh, my, no not me! How many of us burn with a hatred, or even displeased heart, with all of these things? Unfortunately I know that I don’t always feel this way. Perhaps some of them have even played into my “Christ following life.”

Learning to live like Jesus not only says that ”if we love him, we will obey him,” but it also gives a certain justification to some negative emotions that we should have towards sin. This is no senseless battle, this is a real war that has been waged on our morality and our “differentness” that will show that grace and love of God. We aren’t salt of the earth if we’re lying every ten minutes and singing his praises in the eleventh hour. Being salt of the earth doesn’t just mean we believe, it means we spice it up, we are able to make a noticeable difference. I watch a lot of cooking shows and one of the main complaints of judges or chefs is too bland, not enough salt. What are we doing to ourselves??

Okay, I am just working this out…. more later… share your thoughts if you would like. :)

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Why ask why?

As Christians is it healthy for us to question? There are so many different interpretations and messages out there. Should that mean we should question then decide (or remain on the fence), or should we simply ignore all risky or edgy interpretations to find and seek truth only for ourselves.

It interested me yesterday that Anne Jackson asked a WHY question about being gay. What interested me more were the amount of people listing reasons why it was a sin, and in those reasons listing ways that we probably each sin daily, if not minutely or secondly. I know that shouldn’t take away from the original why question, but to me it did. It made me ask why are we asking why? Isn’t this God’s choice. Isn’t this a personal relationship in which we can have our own beliefs and follow a journey without asking why of other’s sins. It is a fine line. I fully believe in and respect the idea of accountability inside the Christian fellowship. And it trememndously helped me when I was in my own personal struggles. But if someone sees no issue and you have confronted them in love and a spirit of simple accountability, not judgment or condemnation, then isn’t that for them to handle on their own. I do believe that God has different plans for each of us, and maybe in that slower or faster journeys of self discovery. So…if we already know Jesus, I am just wondering, why do we ask why? Maybe it’s not as important as why he loves us, and why we in turn seek to love him.

Maybe it’s how, how do we do that?

How do I do that Jesus? How do I love you to my fullest? How do I go where you want me to go without wanting to run? How do I become others focused in a way that does not point out their flaws but grows me spiritually so that I can be more like you. Thank you for loving me. And thank you for giving me a heart with your desires and passions. Help me to not let my own gritty desires or selfishness get in the way of those. Keep my heart soft to those who need you, and hard to the sins I have most struggled with that are in my past. Continually take the me out and put You in, for without You I am lost and imperfect. Teach me how Father.

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Conviction, guilt, and the dreaded s word

Last night as I was laying in bed trying to go to sleep, I started to wonder, why do I feel bad about some sins and not others? There are some things that shock me into guilt, conviction, immediate “I didn’t mean to do that (or sometimes I did) but now I really need my Father’s forgiveness!” Then there are other things that I think about later. It’s more of an “Oh yeah I did that,” followed by a pang of guilt but taken over by calmness that whatever I did was necessary, pertinent to the flow of everyday life. I probably do some things that I never even think about. There are also convictions I have so strong that when I see other people moving against those things I feel guilt for them (in a vague attempt to bypass judgmentalism).

Then there are other things that I do that I wonder are even sins and if I should be asking forgiveness… I guess that’s a sign. But maybe not, I recently heard a pastor say, and have heard other pastors as well, talk about the guilt that is instilled in us as children. I am an “I’m sorry” person. Even when I am not necessarily sorry, or feel I shouldn’t be. I was the oldest in my family by a longshot, my younger sisters are seven and a half and almost ten years younger than me. So of course I had jealousy as a child. Having parents that never experienced this, I no doubt know they did not know how to handle it, other than putting me in line and making me realize my place. Of course, some of the time it was in reaction to my jealousy, trying to get attention when I realized that I would have to sit alone in the kitchen or upset because I was so much older that I wished to be treated like an adult. But most of the time I was left to feel that I was in the wrong. In fact, most little things I did were greeted with “You’re wrong,” not this is what Jesus says or even a guiding hand. I know that my father will admit this now, but at the time even when I protested, “Thou dost protest too much,” never an admittance of wrong or overreaction. Finding out people were human and did make mistakes changed me in a way I never thought possible. I really did believe that humans, all the adults in my parents circles, had their lives together because they went to church and praised God. Notice I did not mention I thought it was because of the love of Jesus. It was because they were doing something. Active in the church or what not. I never saw too much action for other things. (Secretly I am jealous of people who had hippies for parents). No one is perfect, and my parents are merely products of the way they were raised and the values (many of them good) that were instilled in them. So, is my “guilt” now a product of that? I don’t know.

But that brings me back to the issue of sin, and should I have guilt, or rather, recognition of when sin is occuring in my life. I know I should, but I truly believe  cannot force it. I pray about my lack of “goodness” in certain areas, asking God for strength to make right choices, and my love for Him does not cease, but I am obviously overcome by humanity as a pattern in my life. But then I go to the Word, which says sin is merely separation from God, the Latin “sin” means simply without, so perhaps I should look at sin as merely being things that I do without God’s stamp on it. Which means that I probably need to start probing myself a lot closer and spending more time with my Father.

I have a feeling this post is becoming to sound like a flag for legalism, but that is really NOT what’s in my heart. It is more of an outpouring of wanting to take what’s in my heart and (the good) things I have learned in the past and merging them together to make me a more whole person, more aware of God and able to listen and wait. Also, as to the issue of what sins are sins, I guess the only one to ask would be God, but a little personal reflection never hurt no one…did it? Hmmm….better ask my therapist, lol. Just kidding. When God is inside of us, I think there are some things even the best of human mind experts cannot comprehend.

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