‘The Reason Why’ by Mark Mittelberg

The Reason Why‘ strikes a cord with a previous post. The Publisher’s Description: “Everyone wants to believe in something beyond or someone bigger than themselves, but nobody wants to be duped. In order to provide answers to people who are seeking the truth, Mark Mittelberg updates for today the classic book by Robert Laidlaw that sold millions, The Reason Why. This short book gives clear, concise reasons why belief in God makes sense.”

Here Lee Strobel interviews the author to reveal more about the book and its purpose.

It is available on Amazon UK

 

 

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Atheist, Christopher Hitchens, Extols The King James Bible

The BBC reminds us, or if we didn’t know, informs us that the “Bible was the daily reading of millions of people throughout the English speaking world, from Northamptonshire cobblers to US presidents – though not perhaps so far distant in the latter case.

“Readers absorbed its language both directly and through other reading. Tennyson considered Bible reading “an education in itself”, while Dickens called the New Testament “the very best book that ever was or ever will be known in the world.””

Christopher Hitchens isn’t endorsing Charles Dickens’ view of the Bible when it is said that, “Hitchens is the second atheist, after Richard Dawkins, to laud the KJV in honour of the 400th anniversary of the translation. The prominent atheist recognised and expressed appreciation for its contribution to English literature.

“”Though I am sometimes reluctant to admit it, there really is something ‘timeless’ in the Tyndale/King James synthesis,” said Hitchens in his commentary featured in Vanity Fair.”

We have to keep in mind that Hitchens “made the argument that “religion poisons everything” in his book, God Is Not Great, . . .” an interesting claim considering the passage of Scripture he chose to make a contrast with the KJV and a modern translation of the same quote – which he called, ‘pancake-flat’ was from the New Testament book of Philippians which he read at his father’s funeral:

“Finally, brethren, whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report; if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things.” (Philippians 4:8; King James Version).

I am trying to think what is poisonous about that advice!! Interesting!

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Shelly’s Dirge or Pippa’s Song?

We pick up the story in Luke 24:18-24. The two sad-faced friends were walking away from Jerusalem, commiserating with each other in their grief. On the way a stranger joined them. His identity remained anonymous. His inquiries suggested that He didn’t know what had been going on in Jerusalem that weekend!

Like anyone perplexed about life, these two disciples were quite ready to pour out their distress and their vexation to a ready and sympathetic listener. It says in verses 20 and 21:  “The chief priests and our rulers handed him over to be sentenced to death, and they crucified him; but we had hoped that he was the one who was going to redeem Israel. And what is more, it is the third day since all this took place.” What a tragic bereavement!  All was wrong! Dreams and ideals that had been previously treasured were shattered!  Jesus was dead!

This story brought to mind ‘A Dirge by Percy Shelly. It may well have described how these two disciples felt. Shelly was drowned at the age of thirty while sailing in Italy. But Shelly (1792-1822) held very radical views on society. His Dirge is said to be very descriptive of emotions bordering on severe manic depression.  It reads:

Rough wind that moanest loud Grief too sad for song. Wild wind, when sullen cloud knells all the night long; Sad storm whose tears are vain, Bare woods, whose branches strain, Deep caves and dreary main, wail for the world is wrong.”

Such was Shelly’s view of the world, and that it might have been in his time. And his ‘Dirge’ could well describe the feelings of these two desperately disappointed men walking away from Jerusalem. They were now left with empty lives and no real reason for living! In effect, these two disciples were reflecting in heart the funeral dirge for the nation of Israel. The prophet Amos had prophesied such a dirge about 800 BC. We read it in Amos 5:1-2: “Hear this Word, O house of Israel, this lament I take up concerning you; Fallen is Virgin Israel, never to rise again, deserted in her own land, with no-one to lift her up.”

And for these two disciples on the Emmaus Road, this was final! The One they had put their hope in as the promised Messiah and King – was dead!  And in John 19:15 we are told that the leaders of Israel had declared they wanted no king but Caesar.

Verse 23 of Luke’s story reported that an angel had passed a message to some women that “he was alive.” But further inquiry revealed no physical evidence, apart from an empty tomb.  And anyway, who could believe such a report? Hadn’t they themselves seen Jesus – struggling and fainting under the weight of His own cross? They had personally witnessed the gory detail of His crucifixion! They heard His cries of anguish, and His prayers for others.  And they would have seen his body pierced by a spear to make sure He was dead! Then they would have seen that mutilated and limp body removed from the cross and sealed in the tomb until after the Sabbath. True, – Jesus did great miracles; he even raised people from the dead!  But now, the miracle worker Himself was dead!  Who would raise Him? And while verse 23 tells us that someone said He was alive, the direction in which these two disciples were travelling tells us how much they believed that story!

And then, to their surprise, this Stranger joined them and began to reveal to them that he was far from uninformed about the happenings of that crucifixion weekend. Luke 24:25-27 tells us that He certainly knew the Scriptures. He even chided the disciples for not being more informed about the Messiah.

By the time they reached Emmaus the Stranger was so successful in His exposition of the Scriptures, that it says in verse 24 that they urged, or insisted, or constrained Him to stay with them. So He did. And Jesus found himself sharing an evening meal with them around a table. The dim shadows cast by a flickering oil light might have helped the Stranger to keep his identity hidden. But then, the disciples saw those nail-pierced hands on the table in front of the light. He was breaking and blessing the bread, and then handing out the bread to them. That was enough! Verse 31 tells us their eyes were opened, and the awesome and wonderful truth was revealed, – He was alive!

And although He disappeared from their midst, there was no doubting they had seen that familiar gesture, and those hands that had blessed food which miraculously fed multitudes.

But there was something else too, which made them even surer. Verse 32 says that they had felt the burning in their hearts as Jesus talked with them and opened up the Scriptures.

The disciples had a relationship with Jesus, but it seems they had not paid enough attention to what had been written about Jesus in the Scriptures, and so they had been completely confused by the events of that weekend. They had made their assumptions about what God’s Word said, but didn’t really know what it said.  And those assumptions were controlled by their expectations. What God said in His Word had to happen! Notice in verse 26 that Jesus told them that “Christ had to suffer these things and then enter his glory.”

We read in Matthew 16:21-23 that Jesus had tried to tell His disciples about His impending sacrifice. But they wouldn’t take it in. In John 12:23,27,32-34 we have Jesus talking about being lifted up on a cross, but they were not listening.

Acts 3:18 tell us that this is how the disciples eventually did understand the death of Christ. It was all part of God’s plan. In Acts 17:2-3 we read how the Apostle Paul understood that Christ had to suffer and rise from the dead. We can read about it in other Scriptures such as in 1 Peter 1:10-11, and in Revelation 13:8. It was all part of God’s plan; hence the O.T. Sanctuary system and the slaying of animals, as we have explained to us in Hebrews 9:22-28. But the disciples had ignored that part of their religious tradition.  The sacrificial ritual had lost its meaning for them. It was something they had to do because it was passed on to them. And so when things did not happen the way they expected – they were horrified and dumbfounded! They even thought Jesus could be an impostor!  Verse 21 says,  “We had hoped that he was the one who was going to redeem Israel”!

Their hopes were now dashed! He obviously wasn’t WHO they thought he was. And the direction they were travelling that day made that quite clear. How important it is for us to know God’s Word personally, and to avoid being confused by the many voices appealing to us today, – whether from outside the church, or even from inside the church. And there are many people who are basing their Christian faith on experience, or what others tell them, rather than on the personal study of God’s Word that leads to personally knowing Jesus Christ.

The Apostle Paul tells us about people who are left out of the kingdom because they “loved not the truth” (2 Thessalonians 2:10). Said Jesus in John 14:6, “I am the way, the truth and the life. No-one comes to the Father except through me.” In His prayer to His Father Jesus said, “Your Word is truth” (John 17:17).

Fortunately for these disciples they had opportunity to re-establish their faith in the Word of God in that tremendous Bible study that Jesus gave them on the Emmaus Road.  When Jesus opened the Word to them verse 32 tells us their hearts were on fire.

And what a contrast was that return journey to Jerusalem!  As contrasting as another song I could think of so different from that of Shelly’s ‘Dirge’; Robert Browning names it, “Pippas’ Song” from “Pippa Passes,”. Robert Browning was born a little later than Shelly, and lived a lot longer (1812-1889). ‘Pippa’s Song’ expresses a different view on the world than that of Percy Shelly. In “Pippa’ Passes,” young Pippa, an Italian silk worker, is on her only day’s holiday in a whole year. But on that one day Pippa goes through the streets singing songs that influence for the good, the unfriendly characters who hear her. And in the words of the song, Pippa sings:

“The years at the spring, and days at the morn, mornings at seven; the hillsides dew-pearled. The Larks on the wing; The snails on the thorn; God’s in His heaven– All’s right with the world.”

What a contrast to that of ‘A Dirge’ by Shelly! One can almost see the new morn “with hillsides dew-pearled and the Lark on the wing,” as it flutters high in the blue morning sky. And so it was for Cleopas and his friend. It was a new day for them, and a new day for the world too. What a difference from their earlier mood as the two disciples retraced their steps to Jerusalem. They were no longer “sad-faced,” bowed and heavy footed. Now there was a spring in the step – they were spirited with life and their faces glowed. The change really needed no further explanation than that, “He was alive“!

What was it that changed their Dirge into a Song? It was a personal encounter with the risen Lord Himself!  Others had passed the message on that ‘He is Alive’.  But the power of the message comes from a personal encounter with the risen Lord! And their experience was not a play on the emotions as a result of a visionary experience.  For Cleopas and his friend the revelation of God’s Word came before the revelation of experience. Jesus revealed himself in the Word before revealing himself personally.

The joy and delight that these disciples experienced was based on a corrected understanding of God’s Word. They had to see that Christ had to suffer! (Luke 24:26). Christ would suffer and die for all mankind! And it was after Jesus had revealed Himself in His word, that He revealed Himself personally. So, as verse 33 says, they could say, “The Lord has Risen.”

It is still the same today. God does not bypass His prophets to give us special revelations! God communicates to us through His Word (Psalm 119:105). And the quality of our lives and the surety of our future depend entirely on our proper use of His Word. We have many pressures and distractions on all sides that seek to persuade us to give the least attention to the Bible. It can mean our walking the Emmaus Road. It is revealed in our ambitions, our cares and worries that bear no relation to the message to be received and given that, “He has Risen“! The Christian message is not like Shelly’s Dirge, it is more like Pippa’s Song? This is the best of Christian belief; we have a risen Saviour. He is called the ‘Blessed Hope’ (Titus 2:13). Like Pippa, we have a song to sing; a song that must pervade our own lives if it is to persuade others to know that, “He has Risen”!

The resurrection is the basis of the Christian faith. The Apostle Paul affirms this for us in 1 Corinthians 15:20-23.  He says there that “Christ has indeed been raised from the dead, the first-fruits of those who have fallen asleep. . . . For as in Adam all die, so in Christ all will be made alive. But each in His own turn: Christ the first-fruits; then, when he comes, those who belong to him.”

This has been the hope of God’s people down through the ages (Hebrews 11:39-40). Abraham believed in the resurrection when he was commanded to slay his son, Isaac (Genesis 22:5; Hebrews 11:19). We read that wonderful hope of the resurrection in Job 19:25-27.  Looking for the time when he would find release from his pain-wracked body Job said: “I know that my redeemer lives and that in the end he will stand upon the earth.  And after my skin has been destroyed, yet in my flesh I will see God; I will see him with my own eyes – I, and not another.  How my heart yearns within me” said Job.

Is the longing for Jesus’ coming and the perfection he will bring to our bodies and to this world something we long for?  This is what God’s people have expressed down through history. As one Christian writer put it, we want to see “an end which makes sense of it all.” Certainly, Job did.

Isaiah shared the same longing.  We read in Isaiah 26:19 of Isaiah repeating this hope to his own people when he says: “But your dead will live, your bodies will rise.  You who dwell in the dust, wake up and shout for joy. Your dew is like the dew of the morning, the earth will give birth to her dead.” How many of us have not had loved ones taken from us by death, whether family, church family or friends?  The Bible says that those who have put their hope in Christ will rise again.  As the Apostle Paul has put it in 1 Corinthians 15:22, “For as in Adam all die, so in Christ shall all be made alive.”

That was the promise given to Daniel after a full life faithfully serving God. We read in Daniel 12:2 and 3 of Daniel being told, “Multitudes who sleep in the dust of the earth will awake; some to everlasting life, others to shame and everlasting contempt. Those who are wise will shine like the brightness of the heavens, and those who lead many to righteousness, like the stars for ever and ever.”

It sounds very poetic and descriptive. But how else should a writer write who has been given visions of the future glory of God’s people of all the past ages and the ages to come?

Hosea, the next prophet on from Daniel, reports God as saying to His people in Hosea 13:14: “I will ransom them from the power of the grave; I will redeem them from death. Where, O death, are your plagues? Where, O grave, is your destruction?”

That passage is echoed in 1 Corinthians 15:55 where the Apostle Paul exclaims with delight, “Where, O death, is your victory? Where, O death, is your sting?” The Christian message is not ‘Shelly’s Dirge’, it is ‘Pippa’ Song’!

Because Jesus is risen, we may have new life in Him now (1 John 5:12), and one day we will rise to be with Him – for eternity! We sing it in the chorus of that wonderful resurrection hymn: “Thine be the Glory, risen, conquering Son, Endless is the victory, Thou oe’r death has won.”

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‘The Mind Of Christ’ by Ben Witherington

Jesus once asked his disciples, “Who do people say the Son of Man is?” (Matthew 16:13-16). We still struggle with that question today with all its implications. For his disciples he was “the Christ the Son of the living God.” But we want to know what that means! Was he part divine as well as being totally human? Was he just human and not divine at all? Speaking to fellow Evangelicals Ben Witherington says,

“Sometimes we Evangelicals have distorted image of the two natures of Christ.  We kind of assume he was 90% divine, and 10% human.  No, he was 100% divine and 100% human and the only way that corporate merger of the divine and the human works is through divine self abnegation, divine self-limitation.  And that is precisely what we see in the Gospels.”

Philippians 2:7 speaks of Jesus ‘emptying himself’ – a suggestion of handing over the prerogatives of his divinity to the Father and becoming one with us – totally. John 1:14 tell us he did not pretend to be human but that “The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us.” Much of my library has gone in my downsizing after retirement but a sentence by John Owen on the nature of Christ has long remained in my mind – “It was not that he gave up what he was but that he became what he was not.” But what are the implications for us today of Jesus becoming one of us? Ben Witherington challenges his congregation (and readers) with a sermon on Philippians 2:4-11 on what it means to have, The Mind Of Christ.

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The Fukushima Fifty & The Cross Of Christ

Did you read about the bravery and courageof “The Fukushima Fifty” following the devastating tsunami that hit Japan on the 10th March? Although they were given the name ‘The Fukushima Fifty’ there is said to have been between 100-200 engineers working around four shifts trying to halt a national nuclear disaster at the Fukushima nuclear power plant following the tsunami on March 11.

These workers remained behind to make the plant safe and to try and restart the plant. They “were said to be stoically accepting their fate ‘like a death sentence.” It is thought that high radiation levels at the plant entrance are at a level that will either kill the workers or cause them appalling illnesses in the years to come. They risk their lives to make the plant safe for the safety of others.

This story reminded me of another about Louis Slotin, told by George Vandeman in his book, A Day To Remember. Vandeman begins, “but that day the screwdriver slipped!  It was early in 1946.  Preparations were being made for the atomic test to be conducted in the waters of the South Pacific atoll of Bikini.  A young and daring scientist by the name of Louis Slotin was carrying out an experiment.  He had successfully performed it many times before.  But this day, just before leaving Los Alamos for another assignment, he had offered to run through it one more time.

The purpose of the experiment was to determine the amount of U-235 necessary for a chain reaction – scientists call it the critical mass.  To accomplish this, he would push two hemisphere of uranium slowly toward each other.  Then, just as the mass became critical, he would push them apart with his screwdriver, instantly stopping the chain reaction.

But that day, just as the material became critical, the screwdriver slipped!  The hemispheres of uranium came too close together.  Instantly the room was filled with a dazzling bluish haze.  Young Louis Slotin might have ducked away. He might have saved himself.  But no.  He interrupted the deadly chain reaction by tearing the two hemispheres apart with his bare hands!

By this instant, self-forgetful daring he saved the lives of the seven other persons in the room.  He realised at once that he himself would be bound to succumb to the effects of this atomic accident.  But he did not lose control.  Shouting to his colleagues to stand exactly where they had been at the moment of the disaster, he drew on the black board an accurate sketch of their relative positions, so that doctors might discover the degree of radiation to which each had been exposed.

A little later, with Al Graves, the scientist who next to himself had been most severely exposed, he waited beside the road for a car to take them to the hospital.  Sensing fully the fate that awaited him, he said quietly to his companion, “You’ll come through all right.  But I haven’t the faintest chance myself!”

It was only too true.  Nine days later he died in terrible agony.”

“Nineteen centuries ago” says Vandeman, “the Son of the living God walked directly into sin’s most concentrated radiation, allowed Himself to be touched by its curse, and let it take His life. The accumulated guilt of the ages released its deadly contamination over Calvary.  And He who made the atom permitted Himself to be nailed to the tower at ground zero, allowed wicked men to trigger the cruel device we call Calvary.  But by that act He broke the chain reaction.  He broke the power of sin.

“Strangely true were the mocking words of the rulers who watched Him die: “He saved other; Himself He cannot save” ( Matthew 27:42).

“Never were truer words spoken.  For to interrupt the chain reaction of sin, to stop its deadly fallout, he must give His whole life. His own life.  He could not save Himself and save others too.  It is as if He spoke to every man, “You can come through all right.  But I haven’t the faintest chance Myself.”

We are coming up to Easter. It is a time when Christians remind themselves of the death, burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ – what was Jesus feeling and thinking, – and what was he then doing for humankind back at that place we refer to as Calvary?

Says Vandeman, “Calvary seems so far away, so disconnected from the restless age in which we live.  As Christians, we reverence it, to be sure.  But to most of us it is little more than a devotional exercise that we put on and take off like a cloak.  And even when we stop to think about it, do any of us really know what it means?  Or why it had to happen?”

“Calvary, to millions, is nothing more than a harmless emotional release from the tensions of the week – seldom thought of as a cure for a society like ours.  It seems too far removed from our speeding, launching, boosting, counting generation.”

I have been challenged by Calvary. “ The wages of sin is death but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord” (Romans 6:23). We have been separated from God through our deliberate rejection, our waywardness or even just our indifference to Him. Jesus said to the people of His day, “how often I have longed to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, but you were not willing” (Matthew 23:37).

We weren’t there at Calvary of course, and yet, I remember reading Peter Marshall’s sermon based on the Negro-spiritual, “Were you there when they crucified my Lord?Dr. Peter Marshall was the famous Scot who was twice-appointed chaplain to the US Senate. The sermon eventually became part of a book, The First Easter (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1959)

In “Were You There When They Crucified My Lord?” Dr. Marshall saw that we were ALL there that day when Jesus died. One can get a grasp of his passion as he painted colourful descriptions of Jesus’ last act – of allowing himself to be taken like a common criminal and made to suffer that cruel death on a cross. Here are a few words from the closing part of Marshall’s sermon:

“A thunderstorm was blowing up from the mountains. It was becoming strangely dark. People looked at the ominous sky and became frightened. Women took little children by the hand and hurried back to the city before the storm would break. It was an uncanny darkness – it had never been as dark at midday before.

“The tears of the women were drying now. The Centurion was silent – every so often he would gaze up at Jesus with a strange look in his eyes. The soldiers were silent too, their gambling was over. Suddenly Jesus opened His eyes and gave a loud cry. The gladness in his voice startled all who heard it for it sounded like a shout of victory. “It is finished. Father into your hands I commend My spirit.”

“And with that cry, He died.

“They were all there that day on the top of the hill” said Peter Marshall. “the friends of Jesus – and His enemies. The Godly people, they were there, as well as the people who could have cared less about God. The Priests were there and the scribes, the greedy Sadducees, the hypocrites, the proud authorities with their robes, their broad-bordered phylacteries on which the golden bells were sewn with golden thread. They were there, gathering their robes more tightly around them and standing with arms folded approvingly. The unbelievers were standing beside them. The harlots were there and their customers were there, they were all there. Simon of Cyrene was there and the soldiers too.

“Were YOU there when they crucified my Lord?”

Said Marshall, “When we are honest with ourselves, we know that we were there too and that we helped to put Christ there. Because every attitude present on that hilltop that day is present with us now. Every emotion that tugged at human hearts then, tugs at human hearts still. Every face that was there is here too, every voice that shouted then is shouting still. Every human being was represented at Calvary, every sin was in a nail or the spear or the needle-like thorns, and pardon for them all was in the blood that was shed…

“Were you there when they crucified my Lord?”

“I was!” said Peter Marshall.

I give way to Peter Marshall’s claim. I know I too was represented there among the crowds of that day. And I wasn’t one of his followers either! I can remember on one occasion in the work place being drawn into a negative discussion about Christianity. I should have known better but I joined in the criticism. My criticism and cynicism was a bit too bold for one colleague. His change of colour appeared to be a cue for me to remove myself from his immediate presence. His appearance and posture suggested that his anatomy could explode all over me at any moment. He was a bigger and heavier fellow than myself and I hadn’t seen him turn that colour before.

I lost a good work colleague that day – things were never the same again, any friendship was finished. I have often wondered why he turned angry all of sudden. There had been no evidence up to that time that he had any Christian convictions; by his language or by his behaviour. He might not have been a Christian himself, but had my critical remarks cut too deep and offended his respect for people or someone he knew who were genuine Christians; family members for whom he had good reason to respect and love?

If I wasn’t so hasty to excuse my own rejection of Christianity and God, I might have reminded myself of those Christians I once knew who were above the reproach and diatribe I was then delivering in the work place. So when I read, and reread Peter Marshall, I was represented there, and specifically among the mockers at that.

To come back to the analogy of those dealing with the deadly atomic elements to make others safe, whether at Fukushima, or with young Louis Slottin back at Los Alamos in 1946, the ‘Calvary’ symbol is about a much more critical moment. It affects every living person on planet earth. Jesus chose to come between the deadly consequences of sin and a just God. At Calvary, mercy was mingled with justice. Jesus had the option not to step in between sin and its consequence. “The wages of sin is death, but the Gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.”

When I think of my own indifference to God in earlier days, and even the verbal defamation, and now read such passages as in Romans 5:8, “But God demonstrates his own love for us, that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us,” I can’t help feeling ashamed.

His death wasn’t a murder. He wasn’t a martyr dying for a good cause. He could have walked away from the cross. When he prayed in the Garden of Gethsemene, “My Father, if it is possible, let this cup pass from me,” it was possible for him not to take upon himself the wages of sin, death, my death, our death, present and eternal! In intent his separation from God the Father was eternal. We see it in his cry of dereliction, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (Matthew 27:46).  And so his submission to the Father’s will had you and me at the heart of it, “nevertheless, not my will be your will be done” (Matthew 26:39; Hebrews: 12:3-4)).

So no, his death wasn’t murder; his death wasn’t martyrdom, his death was a sacrifice! (Isaiah 53:3-6). It was a voluntary death (John 10:17,18; 12:32). He was one with God (John 1:1), equal with God (Philippians 2:6), and yet he became one of us (John 1:14), a human being, even a servant; and in his humanity he became obedient even to death on a cross (Philippians 2:6-8). “The wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord” (Romans 6:23; 3:21-26).

And it’s all about the Law of God. Sin is the breaking of God’s Law (1 John 3:4-6).  And the wages of sin is death (Romans 6:23). Galatians 4:4,5 tells us that “when the time had fully come, God sent his Son, born of a woman, born under law, to redeem those under law. . . . “ The Apostle Paul uses the term “under the law” to mean under the law’s condemnation. Not that we ignore the law but there is no salvation by keeping the law – salvation comes as a gift from Jesus Christ. As Vandeman states, “If that law could have been set aside without peril to the universe, if its commandments could have been abolished without shattering the security of heaven and earth, then Calvary was unnecessary and only a meaningless drama!” Sin, the transgression of the law (1 John 3:4), becomes very real when we see what it did to the Son of God.

The whole of the human race finds itself making a choice. Jesus came to this world to reverse the effect of sin. The mission of Jesus to this world was not just to reveal what God was like (John 1:18). We can say from reading John 14:9 had it been God the Father who had come to this world he would not have thought or behaved any differently from God the Son. But the mission of Jesus was also to remove the effect of sin, “the wages of sin is death.” It then goes on to say, “but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord” (Romans 6:23).

As noble an act that it is, ‘The Fukushima Fifty’ could only try to save their fellow citizens from the toxic consequences of the damage done by the tsunami. And the same with Louis Slotin. He could save the lives of his colleagues by taking the consequences of his own mistake. But their lives are still only the allotted span for this life. Jesus had made no mistake. He has taken the consequences of our mistakes – and offers us eternal life – life everlasting (Isaiah 53:4-6; John 6:40).

As the most well known and most loved text in the Bible says, “God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have everlasting life” (John 3:16).  I don’t know why I was ever ungrateful to God. I now wonder why anyone can be ungrateful to God. What I know is, “While we were yet sinners Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8). That’s a powerful incentive to love him in return, isn’t it?


Posted in Christ's Sacrifice, Easter, Forgiveness, Gospel, Jesus, Law of God, Salvation, Saved By Grace, The Gospel, The Resurrection, Tragedy | Comments Off on The Fukushima Fifty & The Cross Of Christ

Children & The Images Of The Tsunami?

When I first saw the image on the news of the powerful and destructive force of the tsunami that struck Japan I was left speechless. And then come the trickling news of the tragic loss of life with the numbers increasing into the thousands. Says Barbara Curtis, “If every picture tells a story, the images from Japan are an encyclopedia of misery to come.  As the days and weeks progress, we will continue to see news reports of thousands in shock, grief and despair.

“When disaster strikes, a parent’s first thought may be to protect their children from the dreadful news, the staggering numbers, the overwhelming questions. To think of the loss in Japan hurts our grownup hearts.” But should parents protect their children from seeing those horrific images of devastation inflicted on the people of Japan as a result of the tsunami? Barbara Curtis is an AMI Montessori teacher, mother of 12 and grandmother of 12 (so far!).  She is author of 9 books and over 1500 published articles. She tells us what she thinks about children being exposed to the news of a natural disaster.

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My Story

It’s the 400th Anniversary of the printing of the King James Version of the Bible. It was the first Bible I bought – a cheap one. I was really embarrassed buying it. I don’t know why now. Says, the BBC, “It is used by the whole globe. The last Harry Potter book sold 44 million – the Bible has sold 2.5 billion some say, or six billion, others say.” If I had read The God Delusion before reading the Bible I might well have been persuaded by Richard Dawkins’ arguments against the Bible and Christianity. He says on page 5 of his book that by the time I had put his book down I would become a hard-nosed atheist like himself! In my younger days I might have. I wasn’t well read on things Christian as I am now. However, I should say in Dawkins favour that he does spend a few pages (340-344) in TGD telling his readers why he is so “taken aback at the biblical ignorance displayed by people educated in more recent decades” than he was (p.340).

But for myself, what Christian friends I had in earlier years I had left behind in my early twenties. I was raised in a Christian family but had not become a Christian. I hadn’t taken any rational position against Christianity. I hadn’t become an atheist or an agnostic by thinking out arguments. I just drifted from the church and Christianity; it became inconvenient. If I was to describe myself I suppose I would say I had become a hedonist. Life was to be enjoyed without any control over my freedoms.

So what brought about the change? And why was I so embarrassed buying a Bible? What made me want to buy one? I hadn’t been into any serious reading since I left school! This is my story of how I became a Christian.

It all began by an accident – a serious accident involving my 650 cc Golden Flash and a vintage Austin 14! The side-on collision resulted in a broken front axle on the Austin 14. It also tested the crumple-zone on my motorcycle! It tested my crumple zone too!

When I had recovered consciousness and was placed in the ambulance someone handed me my safety helmet. It had been previously removed when I was unconscious. My fingers felt the concave on the surface of what I used to call my ‘crash hat’. I realised how fortunate I was. If I had hit the cabin section of the car the outcome could have been much more serious. As it was I was flung over the car bonnet and landed on my head on the road. The safety helmet had saved me but in the ambulance, and later, I found myself nagged by that question, ‘what if’? Safety helmets were not legally required in those days.

A couple of years later another potentially critical incident involved a serious roof-fall at the #16 coal face at Nantgarw colliery. Approaching the area the fireman and myself were just seconds away when the roof caved in almost above us. The blast machine driving the conveyor chain was still chugging away and pulling the return part of the chain which in turn was pulling on the anchor (Sylvester) that secured the conveyor at the other end of the coal face and pulling away the gate road roof support ring so the roof was falling in below us – before the chain snapped with the strain.

You can get used to working in hazardous conditions – until you are confronted by that ‘near thing’! We did safely retreat to safety but following that incident there was that nagging ‘what if’ question again.

There is nothing like life-threatening or challenging situations to make one think more soberly about life. It’s like being at a funeral service, a time for sober reflections and questioning – death comes to us all at some stage – but it is not me and sober thought soon fade as life has to carry on.

Following that was a health concern where a second opinion at my local GP clinic suggested glaucoma was the cause of the severe head pain I had been having. This was all happening within a couple of years – I was still in my early twenties. I was single and dependent on relatives for temporary abode. I was beginning to feel more vulnerable than when I had left home to make my way in the world at aged 16.

I had asked myself after the two serious incidents the ‘what if’ question – and what then? I recovered from the one incident and came unscathed from the other. The hospital result on the glaucoma scare was negative – and by then the pain had ceased. Everything was back to normal and life was still to be lived.

But I did find myself thinking in my rare moments of questioning, if there really is ‘someone up there’ or ‘out there’ who is responsible for the creation of the universe. If so, what should my response be to that? Then I also thought of my Christian friends I used to associate with. If I was honest I enjoyed their company back then.

It was about three years after the first critical incident that on a Saturday morning I found myself pausing for a moment at this Bible-Book stall in Cardiff indoor-market. Previous thoughts about the ‘out there’ or ‘up there’ came to mind. I had a conviction about buying a Bible.

This was where I was embarrassed. Was anyone looking?  I took another full walk around the upstairs of the market making sure there were no friends or work colleagues who might see me. Seen buying a Bible wouldn’t have been good for my image – not at that time in my life. Feeling sure there was no one about who knew me I stopped briefly and purchased a small cheap Bible. I stuffed it into my baggy Motor Cycle jacket and moved from the stall with some haste.

I hadn’t realized how much the message of the Book had infiltrated my mind over the weeks and months of reading it until one day at work. There was this obnoxious work colleague who had got up my nose, as he often did with other colleagues. It was while I was letting loose some vulgar expletives that I felt my face glow with what must have been a very crimson blush. It didn’t represent in any way my anger. I blushed because I was embarrassed! It was a different embarrassment from when I was buying the Bible. For the first time in my life I felt I was in the presence of Someone unseen. And I can’t explain that.

The power that is in the book we call the Bible was beginning to transform my life (Hebrews 4:12). I am still making my spiritual journey but if I was to mark its beginning, that was it; my life was being turned around – by a Book! I could no longer look at people with hostility or even indifference, not even obnoxious work colleagues. I now needed to see others as God saw me, someone he loves despite who I am or have been. As it says in Romans 5:8, “While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.” The influence that Book had over me is just inexplicable.

Being honest and open to what the Bible has to say is risky. It does turn people’s lives around and upside down, but always for the better, even in adversity. It says things like ‘Blessed are the peacemakers for theirs is the kingdom of God.’ And, ‘Forgive us as we forgive them that trespass against us.’ And ‘Peace I leave with you, my peace I give you, . .John 14:27.

The ‘New Birth’ experience, which is what was happening to me (John 3:3-8), has happened to millions of people down through history and is still happening.

Even today in lands hostile to Christianity, people are becoming disciples of Jesus Christ in the face of persecution and even death. How do Christians face life under extreme persecution and the threat of death?

Facing decapitation in his prison cell in Rome, the Apostle Paul wrote in 2 Timothy 4:6-8 – v6, “For I am already being poured out like a drink offering, and the time has come for my departure. V.7, I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith. V. 8, Now there is in store for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge, will award to me on that day – and not only to me, but also to all who have longed for his appearing.”

There’s the certainty – it is a trust in the Lord Jesus Christ. And there’s the enormous difference in the God I found and the God Richard Dawkins found in reading the Bible. It is surprising how two people can read the same book and come to opposing conclusions. Like millions of others when I read the Bible I found a God who is a loving, forgiving and welcoming God. What makes the difference?

The difference is in the one who reads the Book. If we are honest and open to its message we will see a different God from the one who reads the Bible to be critical and hostile! Convince a man against his will he will be of the same opinion still! It’s like putting butter and clay under the midday sun. Butter will melt but clay will harden. The sun doesn’t alter in any way – it is the substance or material that alters.

How it works I don’t know. That is what Jesus said, in John 3:8, “The wind blows wherever it pleases. You hear its sound, but you cannot tell where it comes from or where it is going. So it is of everyone born of the Spirit.”

I will not abuse Dawkins with the abuse he gives to Christians. I can only say I have found a different God in the Bible than he has found. I have found a God who is willing to provide us with the abundance of His grace to live a better and kinder and more meaningful life in this world. And when we fail, as we often do, He is ready to forgive us and says to us ‘let’s just start again’.

I admit that initially I imagined God as being quite severe – especially when it came to the idea of judgment. Now that really did scare me – until I got to know about the judgment. It doesn’t scare me now (Hebrews 9:27,28).

In a loose way I connect my experience with God with the character in ‘Good Night, Mr Tom’. I suppose my initial image of God eventually developed from a kind of grumpy severe looking Mr Tom Oakly, into discovering someone who really had a heart of gold. Young William had been the victim of an abusive mother with a distorted view of God and threats of going to hell for his sinfulness. By the time the story finishes the character of Mr Tom had so bonded with William the young evacuee, you were won over by this very compassionate and caring Mr Tom. That is how I now see God.

We see God the Father in the story of the prodigal son in Luke 15:11-32. In verse 19 we see the Prodigal’s view of the Father where he says, “I am no longer worthy to be called your son. Make me like one of your hired servants.” In verse 32 you get God’s view of his prodigal son. Says the father to his elder son, who had objected to the banquet given for the wayward son come home, “It was right that we should make merry and be glad for your brother was dead and is alive again; and was lost and is found.”

When it comes to rescuing us from our wayward selves God is in the banqueting business! I no longer have that image of an austere severe God. Now I see myself as part of God’s great family. I belong! I am a child of God (Romans 8:14-17; 1 John 3:1-3). That’s what’s so good about Christian belief. I no longer want to be obedient to be loved by Him, I want to be obedient because I am loved by Him.  ‘It was not that we loved him but that he loved us . . .1 John 4:10.

We know God has shared in our common lot of life through Jesus when He lived on this earth. Despite what takes place Jesus gives us a hope in this life and in a future life to come. No one can take it away from us.

The resurrection of Jesus is the basis of the Christian faith. Whatever we share in the common lot of life, or whatever adversity we encounter, when it comes to the end of the road, because he is raised we will be raised too – that is what the Apostle Paul wrote in 1 Corinthians 15:20-24. For the Christian, Jesus will always have the last word, because of who He is; “He is Christ the Lord” (Luke 2:11)!

And so in his letter to his colleague, Timothy, the Apostle Paul invites all who will, to share in the certainty of the future he had. Said the apostle, “I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith. Now there is in store for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge, will award to me on that day – and not only to me, but also to all who have longed for his appearing” (2 Timothy 4:6-8). How can I explain why I share that same confidence and assurance in Jesus Christ?

I was just a small lad going home from school. It was winter and there was a gale blowing down the valley. I found myself being blown along on my little legs. I was running and running faster and faster without being able to control my direction. It was scary – enough for me to remember. I was veering off the pavement onto the road in front of an oncoming car. There seemed nothing I could do to stop myself. All of a sudden I found myself picked up off the ground and then placed down safely on the pavement – a strong hand held me – I was alongside my dad.

The weather was so bad my father decided he should take time out from work to see I got home safely. That’s how I now see God – my experience of becoming a Christian was that real! Like in the story of the ‘Prodigal Son’, our Father took time out to watch out for me – to pick me up out of the way of danger. No one can take that experience away from me.

As a Father who loves his children He wants to see us home, safely. I can only speak for myself, but the story of the ‘Prodigal Son’ is a picture of God watching out for anyone and everyone who is willing to let Him see them home, safely (John 3:16). That’s the best of Christian belief. Wherever we have been and shouldn’t have been in life’s experience, whatever we have done and shouldn’t have done, like Luke’s recording of the story of the lost brother, our Father is always ready to forgive us and welcome us home (Luke 15:22-24)! There’s more to it, but basically, that’s my story of becoming a Christian.

Posted in Bible, God, The New Birth | 3 Comments