WARNING: Politically incorrect musings ahead. Just trying to examine a tough topic honestly.
I’ve been visiting with some Remarkably Intelligent People recently
(I didn’t know IQ scores went that high! Scary!) I’ve observed that a number of
them have real difficulty being Christians and relating to the God of the
Bible. (Not all, just a large fraction.)
It occurs to me that one reason may be because of God’s followers. Aw, heck: several reasons may be because of God’s followers. Let me explain.
It occurs to me that one reason may be because of God’s followers. Aw, heck: several reasons may be because of God’s followers. Let me explain.
Because of the merciful nature of God, and of his people
(when we do it right), Christianity does understandably draw a lot of broken
people who find mercy or acceptance (hopefully both) that they may have had
difficulty finding elsewhere. The reality is that broken people make broken
choices, sometimes justify those broken choices, and sometimes their
understanding of God is characterized by those bad choices. For example, if I
were to condemn you for not living up to my own moral standard, and then
declaim that this is the way God is, a Remarkably Intelligent Person is
probably intelligent enough not to be drawn to a god characterized by
moralistic bigotry.
But in addition, in many of the Hallowed Halls of the Faith,
thinking is not only not encouraged, it is occasionally actively discouraged, even (foolishly) presented as a conflict to faith. “Evolution can’t be true, because the Bible
says God created everything” not only misses the point of the conversation, it
demonstrates that people who think are not welcome to that conversation.
And then there’s the issue that Christians very often speak
gibberish. In our more lucid moments, we sometimes call it “Christianese,” but it's gibberish. We
make noises that nobody else uses, and expect other people to know what our strange vocalizations mean. Very often, we’ll abbreviate a whole conversation into just a conclusion,
bypassing the fact that it took someone (hopefully ourselves) months to arrive
there. For people with very healthy minds, the process is the point of the
conversation: they’re not interested in taking our word for something we
figured out months ago.
For example, I’ve been known to say, “God said it; I believe
it; that settles it,” as a reminder of the precious conclusion I arrived at
from a very long, very personal evaluation of what I understood about the
scriptures. That declaration is meaningful to me, but not to the Remarkably Intelligent
Person who hasn’t been through my year-long analysis. But if I just quote it,
merely because someone I respect said it and I think it gives credibility to my
argument: please just don’t go there. That’s insulting to intelligence in
general.
Finally, all of the Remarkably Intelligent People I know –
whether they are Christians or not – know what the Bible says. Generally they know
the Book better than I, even the unbelieving Remarkably Intelligent People, and I’ve been studying it for 40 years! One of
the characteristics of remarkable intelligence is the ability to see the
remarkable difference between what the Bible declares Christians should be like
(Jesus set up this booby-trap in John 17:23), or the incongruity between the
vengeful God preached from the OT and the God of Love as he reveals himself in
the NT. The fact that most of God’s people can’t reconcile either mismatch is
also not overlooked.
I am NOT trying to say that Christianity isn’t a good fit
for intelligent people. Nor am I trying to say that we need to live up to their
standard of intellectual analysis.
What I AM suggesting is nothing new: let’s not be stupid. Let’s see if we can speak English (or another actual language) instead of religious gibberish. Let’s take the time to figure out what we actually believe, and more importantly for our own growth: why we believe it.
What I AM suggesting is nothing new: let’s not be stupid. Let’s see if we can speak English (or another actual language) instead of religious gibberish. Let’s take the time to figure out what we actually believe, and more importantly for our own growth: why we believe it.
In other words, let’s learn to be genuine people, relating
genuinely to God and to each other. And let’s learn to feed ourselves.
COMMENT: These are politically incorrect musings. I've just been trying to examine a tough topic honestly. If you're offended: please get over it; this isn't about you.
1 comment:
Absolutely agree. Speaking plain personal English is communicating. Speaking christianese isn't even easy for long time Christians to decipher much less those not indoctrinated into all the buzz words.
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