Wednesday, February 5, 2014

The Reality of our Universe


Repent for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.” 

In the previous post I stressed the importance of thinking about the serious questions of life and in this post I want to address why. Jesus answers that question with the words, “the kingdom of heaven is at hand” or in other words, life under God’s authority is now available to all, it’s here. Why now? Because who God is and what he wants has now been revealed to us in the person of Jesus Christ. Jesus tell us to think again about life because he is introducing a whole new way TO think about life, even a whole new way to live. A life that he declares is a better life, even the best possible life - a life that corresponds to the reality of our universe. And what exactly is the reality of our universe? 

I will submit that we can see and feel indications of this reality in life. There are certain things that we hold in the highest regard, things that we think are the very best. Among these things is a person who is willing to give everything up for others. Story after story creates “heroes” who deny themselves on behalf of others and we applaud these stories again and again. Take for example the character from the movie, Seven Pounds. The story follows a man who gives up everything, even his own heart and eyes to seven different people. Watching these events unfold brings most people to tears. We call it beautiful, heart wrenching, maybe even life-changing. We want that character to be real, we want him to be our dad, our brother, and maybe even hope to become like him ourselves. We have something in us telling us that that is how life ought to be lived, that is how people ought to behave, that must be the truest way TO live, that should be the reality of our world…. why? I will submit to you that we feel and think this way because that IS the reality of our universe. We live in a universe created and maintained by an all-powerful, omnipresent God who is exactly that kind of person, who dies as much as a God can die to bring life to the creatures that he has made. We see it as is the true life because it is the real life.

Either life is a terrible cruel joke, a meaningless existence which only dreams of something higher, a container of the worst kind of empty promises OR it is a gift from our Creator, the perfect Father, in whom we truly “live, and move, and have our being.” 

Jesus believed this, Jesus lived this, and he calls us to to join him in this invisible reality that pervades us. He calls us to put our trust in Him and he promises to be with us, to transform us, and to continue working in us until we are one with him. It is not a call to better yourself or to fix yourself - it’s a call to entrust your life to the only One who can.

4 comments:

Cliff said...

Either life is a terrible cruel joke, a meaningless existence which only dreams of something higher, a container of the worst kind of empty promises OR it is a gift from our Creator, the perfect Father, in whom we truly “live, and move, and have our being.”

-False dichotomy.

Thad said...

Cliff, if this is a false dichotomy, then there must be alternatives that Corey did not address. Are you aware of any that you would like him to consider and respond to? I assume you don't believe both options he presented are true.

Cliff said...

Sure, can he address every different branch of Christianity as well as every different branch of differing faiths (Islam, Buddhism, Wicca, Scientology, etc. etc. etc. etc.)? Possibly have a discussion with an Atheist so as to get an alternative viewpoint than "It's all worthless"?

Until then, it's a false dichotomy.

Corey Fronk said...

Hey Cliff, thanks for reading and responding! I was just going for the two different ways to interpret the indications that I brought out in the 2nd paragraph. One, if it is simply chemicals going off in my brain which are simply there because there were needed at one time in the evolutionary process then I come to the conclusion of "meaningless, empty promises," etc. From what I have read/heard atheists believe that life is ultimately meaningless but that each person adds meaning in their own way. The other explanation for it, that we are created by a certain kind of person excludes all those religions you mentioned because they do not have (from what I know) a god that becomes human to suffer and die to bring life to his creatures. Hopefully what I said makes sense. I would be interested in hearing how atheists find meaning though. I do not understand how life could have any meaning if everything you do will eventually come to nothing, there are no "value added activities" when it is all said and done, imo.