Thursday, November 23, 2017

Thanks be to God

To my delightful surprise, a little piece of Landers, California has been my abode since 2012.  Periodically, I get antsy staying in one place but these times pass and I rightfully remain grateful to all those who made my sandbox happen.  The weather is just a wee bit hot in summer and comfortably chilly in winter, no complaints.  The neighbors are few as my dogs and I hike our sandy roads.  One neighbor, Janet, stops by with her dogs every few days and we share a smoke on the front porch, mixing in a little intelligent conversation about world events, family and politics.  This is adequate socialization for this content senior life observer.
      
This past February I was told an emergency appendectomy was in my immediate future at our hospital on the hill in Joshua Tree.  Five or six hours later the surgeon arrived and I entered the never, never land of anesthesia heaven, trusting in the competency of hospital staff.  Upon awaking from my deep sleep, I slowly became aware of how close eternity had rubbed up against me.  In the recovery room, G. Goslaw began bleeding, an alert nurse recognized the situation and took aggressive action to get me back into surgery to stop the bleeding.  In her words, “I didn’t think you were going to make it”.  I am haunted by the realization that the end could very well have been in 2017, my last days on this earth.

Most of us live very busy lives but in times like these we should ask, when death does arrive, will we humans experience some sort of eternity?  If so, what will eternity look like?  The answer to the first question is a no brainer, there either is or there isn’t.  No eternity means that our lives are reduced to our circumstances and relationships through whom we hope for a future beyond death.  This believing in ourselves may be enough for some but it seems a bit superficial, life becoming all about me and mine.  This is the very definition of Godless secularism, get all you can while you can, every decision is only a pragmatic personal calculation but how that decision may affect others is less important.  Is it any wonder that our country has progressively become mired in selfish expectations and attitudes?  Should there be no eternity, a great many of us will be proved wrong, disappointed and unaware of the loss.

Let us, therefore, quickly dismiss that possibility.  The second question is more fun to consider, what will eternity be like?  What is the destiny of the human spirit?  Every few years someone rises from a near death experience to tell us what eternity is like on the other side, a light at the end of a long tunnel, an overwhelming sense of peace, the great judgement day.  Our religions deposit supposed truth upon the people, whether it be something called nirvana, the fires of hell or 99 blessed virgins.  As for me, eternity without my dogs won’t cut it, which only proves that our expectations have an eerie way of trapping us in earthly drumbeats.  Listen as we must, these opinions are all different and may only be the simple winding down of our computer brains, none of us really knows.
 
In the recovery room, there were no lights, possibly I wasn’t dead enough to bring back any messages or I wasn’t worthy enough to be that messenger.  Others have, Socrates of Greek antiquity and King Solomon of Hebrew history each brought back unusual understanding.  The boy David, the twelfth son of a shepherd family found great courage under the stars of biblical times.  My spiritual background is from an evangelical perspective that has only one picture of eternity, the heaven and hell scenario.  One might wonder if this thinking (dogma) is intended to scare the faithful and sinner into submission to a man-made institution.  Sure, the Spirit of God operates in the church as he does among all of us but is the thinking of God the same as the thinking of the Church?  I trust not.

I can trust Jesus who came out of the desert with a message for the forgotten people, not the religious and proud crowds.  He said, your circumstances have no real power over you because this world belongs to the God of the galaxies and he has your back.  Eternity is here and now as well as beyond death. This was new news to the forgotten people, no one had talked to them before about eternity, as Jesus put it, the kingdom of God.  The forgotten people clamored to listen to this strange talk from Jesus.  Is this kingdom talk a new thing?  Is the kingdom really for me?  Why has no one else spoken of this kingdom?  Does this kingdom have rules?  Will this kingdom improve our daily lives?

Jesus told a little story recorded for us in the gospel of Mathew, this parable or “The story of the wedding banquet”, is a picture of eternity (Mathew 22: 2 through 14).  The story begins, “The kingdom of heaven is like a king who prepared a wedding banquet for his son”.  Fourteen little words tell us the size and shape of eternity more profoundly than a multitude of volumes written from human understanding and for a profit.  Eternity has one boss (king), we human beings are family (sons), eternity is a party for the ages (banquet), eternity is about the unification of we humans to God (wedding).  Which one of we humans would want to miss this eternal party?   Not I, nor any other honest person, most of all some of us believe that none of we human beings will miss out!

Surprise, surprise, this is not the small ball touted by the religious crowd but sounds much like universalism, which says that, to God everyone is a son deserving of an eternal party.  The religious crowd will question, don’t our choices in this life determine our eternal future?  If the individual is a part of the wrong religion or worst of all, no religion at all, surely these folks will be excluded post death, will they not?  In response to these seemingly logical questions, one might ask, do those who teach an exclusionary eternity understand the heart of God.  Jesus excluded no one from the love of God, not his enemies or his critics or those who nailed him to the cross, “Father forgive them!”.  Such words sound inclusive not exclusive.  Another instance, the two thieves crucified with Jesus, one repented in this life and he was told that this day the kingdom of God was his to share prior to death but Jesus never condemned the other thief to some other reality.  The love of God never gives up on any of his sons, he just waits, saying, your time will come (the lost parables).

Either God loves the world (John 3:16) or he doesn’t.  Divine love reduced to the religious few is the religion of the Old Testament.  To the extent that the New Testament enforces this understanding of spirituality, the N.T. has missed the revolution that Jesus began.  The hell advocates are certainly missing the revolution, no surprise, you see, most of us miss it most of the time.  The parable of the banquet says that the exact same thing, the Kings invitations to the party is ignored by the people, each preferring to actively pursue other things, “But they paid no attention and went off – one to his field, another to his business.  The rest seized his servants, mistreated them and killed them (v.5).”  Have you ever wondered where violence originates, violence that always makes no sense and is self-destructive, could it be that to us, anything is better than accepting an invitation to spiritual accountability?

In response to our avoidance techniques, God (the king) directs his servants out into the streets to invite anyone and everyone they meet to the party.  “So the servants went out into the streets and gathered all the people they could find, the bad as well as the good, and the wedding hall was filled with guests (v. 10).” May I be blunt?  Does this story uttered by Jesus not teach that a heavenly destination is in the cards for all of us?  Moral standing may not be the primary qualification for eternity.  The shared human destiny is an eternity with God, who does not discriminate, by race, religion, wealth, sex, skinny or fat, ugly or buff or relative goodness.  And that there, in eternity, we all will discover what spiritual reality is truly all about, at the party.

About this time, I hope you are questioning my universalistic assumption about this passage.  When the invitations of the king are rejected by the people who kill his servants, the king takes revenge by sending his troops to murder and burn out those selfish subjects (v. 5)?  Is this divine intervention or a John Wick movie about revenge?  Can’t you hear that line, “they killed my dog”?  As if that injustice was to justify all the killing to follow in the movie.  Worse yet, this so-called God, who acts out with the sword, must be related to that other ancient religion that persists to this day.  Anyway, the biblical parable of the wedding banquet describes a very human deity who responds to injustice just as we do, with violence from a vengeful heart.  This venom can’t be the God of the galaxies, but the Bible, in this parable, claims this earthly behavior is a divine right, violence is a part of the character of God.  A simple question, how does this violent depiction of God square with the message of Jesus who said, love even your enemies? Jesus goes on to say, love your enemies so that “you may be the children of your Father in heaven (Matt. 5:45)”.  This is not the picture of a violent vengeful God.

The conclusion I have reached is that the red-letter edition of the Bible, the words purported to be from the lips of Jesus, are a mixture of his words and the succeeding generations of religion defenders and handwriting duplicators, who were not fans of the Jesus spiritual revolution.  The violent elements to the parable were added to water down the wide open message of Jesus.  In verses 13 and 14, the king, God, has an encounter with a man at the party without wedding clothes, the king feels insulted and passes judgement upon the man.  “Tie him hand and foot, and throw him outside, into the darkness, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.  For many are invited but few are chosen.”  The religious few relate to these words but really, the ultimate reality, God, is he so easily insulted and apt to take revenge?  Is this parable Greek mythology or spiritual truth?  Sadly, the answer is that it has become both.

Heaven is a place for spiritual growth freed from the burdens and distractions of this earth.  Let’s play God a moment, how would you design such a reality?  The parable of the wedding party may be helpful to reduce the fog of some of our misunderstandings about eternity.  While all our spirits may have the same final destination, the seating arrangement at the eternal party may or will be different.  Some of us will be up close to the action around God, while others of us will be seated in the darker places.  Just possibly, as we get it together in the hereafter, those closest to the light will pass on into another reality.

Should this be the future for the human spirit and justice combined with love is the character of God, how will God determine the pecking order in heaven?  Who gets to proceed first to the light?  My own opinion is that those of us who had no chance at finding God’s Love in this earthly life, will go to the head of the line.  They will experience the blessed light and the next reality sooner than we darker souls.  The worthiest of all contenders for this priority are the millions of we humans that were aborted in the womb, their bodies torn apart before they had a chance at the life we take for granted.  This would-be justice!  Enough with the suppositions, the Ultimate Reality is the boss.

G.Goslaw
Landers, CA.