Category: Christianity
Thanksgiving in a Land of Milk and Honey

Editor's Note: This commentary reproduced by permission from Chris Truelsen of TheMuseAndTheScribe.com. Truelson is also a frequent contributor to the news and information site, MyVoiceNews.com.

I know that those of you who live in other nations have different customs, but recently in the United States, many Americans celebrated Thanksgiving, which is a national holiday, or Holy Day.

In the Old Testament of the Scriptures, the descendants of Abraham were told that God would bring them to a land "flowing with milk and honey."

When you read Deuteronomy it says that God would bring these people to a land that was abundantly watered, having wheat and barley, vines, fruit trees, olive oil and honey, where the people would eat bread without scarcity, and where people would lack nothing. It was also a land where there was iron and copper. (See Deuteronomy 8:7-9).

In modern times, there are many nations that could boast of conditions like these. Technology has brought prosperity to a large number of these nations on the earth, and many of those living under dictatorships would know the same prosperity if their leaders would allow it. Of course, those of America who recognize that these blessings come from God and God alone, are giving thanks to God for these things, hence the holiday, Thanksgiving.

Not all things can nor should they be whitewashed though. A few thanksgivings ago when I went to perform a wedding in Wisconsin, I met a retired pastor there who was caring for a small congregation. He had spent many, many years in the mission field. I think we got to the subject when I asked him how he had ended up working as a missionary, and he told me his tale. Many years ago, near the beginning of the nuclear age, this pastor had been stationed, I believe, somewhere in the South Pacific, and was serving military duty on a ship.

Before it was fully realized by the public just what the effect of radiation was on human beings (and I believe this statement is a true one) a small number of natives, living on a particular island, were moved to a new home. That island was then used for nuclear testing; this of course, was after World War II. One morning the pastor and his shipmates were told to get up early; that day they would witness the might of the American military. He would never forget what he saw. Several miles away on the island, a nuclear bomb was released. The soldiers were far enough away that they would be okay, but when the force from the blast reached them, the power of the blast was tremendously jarring, knocking them back.

After that experience, this man decided to go into the ministry; he decided that he would work in the mission field, caring for people such as those who were displaced when the military decided to perform its tests.

The Cold War had many casualties everywhere throughout the world. We must still be vigilant against the ideologies of tyranny (which can show themselves even in lands that are free), but as for the end of the Cold War, the buildups that finally led to the collapse of the Soviet Union and changes in many other nations, I think, have had a net positive effect. However, the cost in many respects was high. Freedom has sometimes been expensive; there have been human costs too, but I'd much rather live in a free nation than not.

No nation has ever been perfect. We could apply what the Scriptures say about human nature to the deeds of nations too: we have all sinned and have fallen short of the glory of God (see Rom. 3:23). This past Thanksgiving we didn’t need to whitewash all the things about our country, but we should continue to count our blessings. We are abundantly blessed by God. Any of you who are fortunate enough to live in country where you are not in need, you are blessed too. Whether you live in America or elsewhere, for those of you who live with abundance, consider your neighbor who does not live in abundance. In what ways can you help your neighbor? For Christmas would you consider not exchanging some of those gifts (for those to whom it really wouldn't make much of a difference) and instead giving to a charity? Could you buy gifts for children of those in prison? Would you consider visiting a nursing home patient who has no family to visit? Would you consider giving to a Christian relief organization? I humbly suggest to you, why not share?

Chris Truelsen: http://themuseandthescribe.com

 
Harry Potter: Ultimate truth through myth and symbolism

Editor's note: The following piece was first published in November of 2005. A revised version later appeared in the "Op-Ed" section of The Corydon Democrat, a weekly newspaper in the Southern Indiana area. With the release of the latest movie in the Potter series, and the allegedly final installment of the series in book form, I decided to bring this commentary out of mothballs. ENJOY! 

By Chad Phillips
MTW contributing writer

Someone much older and wiser than me once said, “The River of truth runs between the banks of two extremes.” This seems a fitting analogy for a debate which continues ironically enough between evangelical Christians. That debate centers around the popular series of Harry Potter books by author J.K. Rowling. The latest movie adaptation from the series was released in November, and my instincts tell me it will renew the controversy.

The brief treatment which follows is an attempt to shed some light on the discussion. I also wanted to draw out some of the inconsistencies which arise from the often myopic explorations of well meaning Christians who are both the victims and the perpetrators of friendly fire in the war over Harry Potter.

This is essentially an in house debate. I fully understand the reluctance of some Christians to embrace the books as a matter of conscience and religious ideology. But I want to emphasize that this need not be something which divides us. Even in my own church there are people who disagree with me on this issue, and I do consider them friends as well as family in the body of Christ.

Before getting into it, I have something to say to my Christian brethren out there. If you haven’t read any of the books or seen the movies, don’t send me any hate mail until you do. Far too many of us have taken a position on this subject without so much as a glance at the material. Examine the books for yourself; then decide.

So why is it that in Christian circles people are up in arms at the mention of Harry Potter? The simple answer is the Biblical mandate against witchcraft. The logic goes something like this. Harry Potter is a wizard who attends Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. Witchcraft is explicitly forbidden in the Bible. Since Harry as the protagonist of the story uses “witchcraft”, it follows that these stories encourage its use, and perhaps would lure the impressionable mind of a child into the occult.

Furthermore, since the books seem to be aimed at children, the fact that they get darker with each installment is not very comforting to Christians intent on raising their children with a Biblical paradigm. Beyond that, I will point out that given what I know so far about these stories, I am much more concerned about the increasingly violent nature of subsequent volumes of HP than I am about anything else I see modeled therein.

So perhaps as Christians we are wise to be cautious of Harry Potter. If the premises of the critics are true, we could rest here with nothing more to say on the issue. However, a big part of me believes this view may be ever so slightly alarmist, for several reasons. 1. We underestimate the power of the word of God to equip the mind and spirit of a child. 2. We confuse style with substance, and 3. As a general rule we tend to make our decisions about such things based on opinions of others, as opposed to doing our own research.

My own opinion comes by way of taking a hard look at witchcraft from the Biblical perspective as well as that of secular history. I also examined the arguments of those on both sides of this debate. Finally, first hand exposure to the books and the movies that have followed have really rounded out my perspective. Though, having actually analyzed only two installments myself, I can hardly be considered an expert on the subject. All I can do is tell you what I've discovered thus far in my own journey. Certainly, as more information comes to light concerning these stories, it will be brought to bare on this writer's perspective. To my surprise, what I've found so far is that these stories are chock full of (believe it or not) medieval Christian symbolism and “real life” situations illustrating moral absolutes.

Some years ago, philosopher Author Holmes wrote a book in which he states, “…all truth is God’s truth wherever it be found.” And in Rowling’s books we don’t just encounter darkness, but the light of transcendent truth. These stories illustrate moral truth as an absolute embodied in the concepts of good and evil. Rowling also does an excellent job showing us the consequences of choosing one or the other. Therefore, it seems to me that to dismiss these stories without a closer look at their moral implications is to throw the baby out with the bathwater.

It was Dostoyevsky who declared that “If there is no God, then all things are permissible.” This is a significant insight because the fact that moral absolutes are taught in the series implies an ultimate foundation for truth and therefore an ultimate authorship for it. Without an ultimate foundation for moral truth there can be no right or wrong, no good or evil. Things just are.

To illustrate this, there’s a scene in the screen play, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, where Harry has to choose between helping the man who is the very personification of evil, (Lord Voldemort) or standing his ground to fight him. Harry’s dilemma is moral. He can choose evil by helping Voldemort or he can stand up to him and probably loose his life in the process. As Harry ponders his decision, Voldemort says the following words, “There is no good and evil. There is only power…and those too weak to seek it.” Harry’s response is to reject Voldemort and his postmodern world view by calling him a liar and standing his ground to fight the good fight. The point, which cannot be ignored, is that in selecting a paradigm embodying moral absolutes as Rowling has done implies an ultimate moral law, and therefore an ultimate law giver. Such constructs cannot exist without a supreme deity. People in general, and Christians in particular know that deity as God.

But what of the charge that Harry Potter promotes or teaches witchcraft in defiance of scripture? Christian author John Grainger will help us answer this question. He has written eloquently on the subject and points out a critical distinction between the “magic” used as a backdrop in the Harry Potter series, and the magic or “sorcery” prohibited in scripture. In the case of the former, the magic used by both the “good guys” and the “bad guys” in the series is incantational. This particular brand of magic has its roots in European literary works of fantasy. This is the stuff of pretend.

Contrariwise, invocational magic rendered “sorcery” or “witchcraft” in the scripture involves the conjuring of spirits or demons to manipulate people, objects, and circumstances. So there is a significant dichotomy between both incantational and invocational magic. Where the latter is factual, the former is fantasy.

An additional problem I see with some critics of the series is logical inconsistency. I’ve found that some of same people who think Harry Potter is evil have no problem with other literary works of the same genre. The Lord of the Rings, The Hobbit, The Chronicles of Narnia, and Shakespeare’s The Tempest all fall into this category.

Perhaps the coup de gras of the whole debate though, is that even the Bible describes a witch conducting a séance for King Saul (1Samuel 28). Should we bar reading that passage because somebody might take an unhealthy interest in the occult? Of course not. So then to be logically consistent, those who censure the Potter series must also censure other literary works incorporating the same subject matter.

What is fundamentally at issue for me as a Christian is the relationship between the actions of people, and the resulting consequences of those actions exemplified in these stories. Our preoccupation with that cause and effect relationship might even explain our fascination with literature incorporating these ideas. For we never seem to tire of mythic concepts like the battle between good and evil, and the Biblical principle of reaping what we sow.

These notions are not exclusive to the Potter series and necessitate a reexamination of self in the light of God’s transcendent truth. Therefore I believe that a moderated approach to these books as well as others from the same genre can provide teachable moments with our children. They remind us of the bitterness of poor choices and the sweetness of wise ones. And they help us to reconnect with something mysterious which we’ve lost in the age we live in—the power of archetypal myths and the all but lost language of symbolism hardwired into our very being.

 
Know Any Good Ministers?

By Ray Robinson
MTW contributing writer

My wife and I faced one major hurdle on our way to wedded bliss – who would perform the ceremony? I'm a Christian and she is not, and neither of us were interested in changing, nor were we asking each other to change. A church wedding was out, as was the Justice of the Peace, and this ceremony was too important to be handled by a stranger.

Fortunately, one of our friends was ordained online, and we asked him to officiate.

Before you dismiss online ordination as “fly-by-night” or “Vegas-like schlock," take a moment to consider some of the facts. The largest online ordination site is the Universal Life Church, boasting 20 million ministers ordained since 1959. Their beliefs are simple: ensure for each of their ministers the absolute right of freedom to practice their religion in the manner of their choosing, and to encourage their ministers to do that which is right and in accord with their government's laws.

Universal Life doesn't stop with granting licenses. They offer online training for those wishing to become the best minister they can be. They also offer basic sermons and ceremonies the minister can use as a template to build from. There is also a chat forum so ministers can assist each other with ideas and guidance. Finally, they offer products, such as clerical robes and literature, for the minister to utilize in his or her work.

Do they have some people sign up as a joke? Certainly! Universal Life asks only that their members “Do only that which is right” and leaves it up to the individual to determine that course.

When I approached Gary about officiating our ceremony, he told me up front that he takes his role as a minister seriously. He was not about to do anything he didn't feel was appropriate for such an important occasion. I responded “that's one of the reasons we want you to do this for us!” Over a couple of dinners, the three of us worked together to come up with a ceremony that included scripture, handfasting, and a unity candle. Even the staunchest Christians in our families were moved to tears, and many commented it was the best ceremony they had ever witnessed.

So if you're having trouble finding an appropriate minister, maybe a good friend would willing to step up and fill that void. It may be all you need to make the big day even more special! For more information on the Universal Life Church, go to <a href="http://themonastery.org">