Day 12½: All Roads Do NOT Lead to Rome
Point to Ponder: I am as close to God as I choose to be.
Verse to Remember: John 3:17
Question to Consider: How do you know who to listen to and what to believe?
I found myself doing a bit of online research this morning on account of two books I’m reading. I’m reading a couple of books simultaneously as well as a few of the religious blogs here and a lot of buttons have been pushed on account of a lot of bold claims being made and a lot of fingers being pointed. If my faith wasn’t as strong as it is, at least one of the buttons could have the potential to have me doubt everything I’ve ever believed.
My journey to faith in Jesus started at the end of a rope. My pastor back at that time said that God hangs out at the end of ropes… because most people have to reach the end of theirs before they will look up to him to be saved. Two questions have always been on my mind regarding how I came to faith in Jesus. When I hit bottom I turned to the church because I’d had a church upbringing. I was scripture in action: “Train up a child in the way that he should go and when he is old he will not depart from it.” I returned to Christianity, not because I’d ever been one before (I hadn’t)… but because my roots were in Christianity because I’d gone to church as a child.
But what if I’d bumped into a Jehovah’s Witness or Mormon or a Buddhist or a secular humanist when I was at the end of that rope??? I use those religions in my list not because I’m trying to knock them, but because they canvas our island. They openly approach people with tracts or offers of spiritual renewal. Ok… not the secular humanist. I don’t even know what that is. I needed something to round out the list. My point? I was emotionally needy and mentally ill. I would have been susceptible to just about anything if it held out a hand to comfort me. I turned to a Christian church because that was what I knew. It never crossed my mind to seek help at a Catholic church, not because I was anti- Catholic because I didn’t even really know what a Catholic was… it just wasn’t what I knew. Whatever training I’d received as a child wasn’t enough to stop me from doing my own thing all through college and into my early 20’s. That training wasn’t enough for me to see and accept Jesus, but it was enough to point me in the direction of true North when I was well and truly aware of the fact that I was lost.
So going on 13 years of walking with Jesus and I will admit that I have had all kinds of doubts along the way. Hell, I still read stuff in Scripture and struggle. My faith has faltered, stumbled, and almost completely petered out. I’ve gone through periods where I could think of nowhere else I’d rather be than in church hearing the word… and I’ve also had periods where I could think of 50 billion places I’d rather be than in church. I’ve wanted to literally inhale every word I could in my own bible studies over the years… and then there have been times where I have opened the bible and felt like I was starving… because the Word just went over my head and I couldn’t understand.
Every religion believes that it is the RIGHT one… that it is the religion that has all the answers. Narrowing it down from “all” religions, I think about my own. I can’t speak knowledgably about other religions, so I won’t even try. I sometimes question how knowledgably I can speak about my own, but I do know that within the Christian faith you have a bunch of different denominations and everybody thinks that the way their denomination believes and worships is the right/best way. There are so many competing thoughts out there and it’s hard to know what to believe.
My online research started with Loren Cunningham, founder of YWAM. I’m reading one of his books now too. Is that Really You God? It’s about hearing the voice of God and seeking guidance from him. My experience with YWAM was not the best… but I don’t trash the organization. What I found online wasn’t news to me though. I’ve read information in the past, generally put out by former YWAMers with an ax to grind, that paint the organization to be just short of a cult. The information I found today online was bashing the book I’m reading. I’m only reading the book because my pastor assigned it as reading for the study we’re doing. I’m tempted to send the online link to my pastor and get his insight…but for now I have to think my own thoughts.
I decided to Google Rick Warren to see what people had to say about him and was REALLY surprised. I was surprised to find many websites slamming him and his book. Given the fact that I read it the first time as part of a Church study that was promoted by my pastor back in California… it was hard to read what I was reading. One site was by a pastor who has even written a book about why PDL is not something Christians should read. Another site even went so far as to call people who read the book Purpose Driven PUPPETS! The more I read, the more I bristled. One of the major objections that I’ve uncovered is his use of different translations and paraphrases. He uses The Message. A LOT. I have a copy of The Message. It’s a modern day rendering of the bible in contemporary language. I was introduced to it when I was on the ship. I used to read it a lot. I don’t read it much anymore and I definitely don’t rely on it for serious bible study. I actually did object to Warren’s use of it so much in the book. But according to the detractors The Message and even the Living Bible translation are bad.
This made me think about all the controversy I’ve been reading about the NIV. I didn’t even know there WAS a controversy with the NIV until I read some blogs here. That’s the version of the bible I read. It’s what has been used in every church that I’ve ever attended. It’s what I understand. I do not understand the KJV of the bible but I don’t knock people who use it. As I researched this controversy what I found pushed a HUGE button. Evidently, according to some, I don’t know God because I haven’t been reading the one true translation. And then there is the question about worship. That comes up in PDL and Warren made a point that I wholeheartedly agree with: no style of worship is more holy than another. It’s mostly about personal preference.
With all this other stuff bouncing around in my head the question of worship came up at work during devotions. One of the older staffers did her devotion on how hymns are making a come back and that they are more “spiritual” than contemporary praise and worship music. Can you sense me bristling? Bipolar Girl doesn’t do hymns. And as I did my research this morning I started to feel like the only way to “truly” worship God is to be in some stuffy room somewhere reading only the KJV or NASB while standing completely still singing hymns… without any real thought to your purpose or if God is REALLY speaking to you or not.
If the translation I’m reading is wrong and the songs I’m singing is wrong… what the hell am I supposed to read and sing? All the division within the church and the backbiting and the denominational biases are getting on my A-100% last nerve. I happened to channel surf past this program called “The Heartland.” Never seen it ever… and the guy was talking about how most Christians cannot defend the faith and don’t know their bible. I know my bible better than the average bear… but I do not have the temperament for religious debates. I don’t know church history and couldn’t name any prominent Christian leaders. And if ever asked to give a explanation of why I believe… it won’t be because I can argue stuff in the Greek. I didn’t come to know Jesus that way. NIV, KJV, NASB, LMNOP… I don’t care. Hymns? Sing if you want to.
I came to Jesus broken needing to be loved. He loved me in the John 3:17 spirit of the word. I don’t worship Rick Warren and I see his book as a tool. Could there be errors in it? Until Jesus comes back EVERYTHING MAN MADE has errors in it. With all the button pushing going on I was tempted to just stop reading both books and then decided against it. I finished the Loren Cunningham book and I’m praying about all the stuff that it raked up for me. I thought about the allegations against PDL… and I’m still thinking. This is my 4th time reading the book and I still haven’t found my purpose… so Warren’s claims aren’t valid in my case… but the book is a good tool. It makes me think and seek out things in scripture. It makes me pray and want to know God on deeper levels. Which brings me back to my original questions: I have to listen to God and I have to trust that He can reveal himself to me because I am honestly seeking him.