Resurrecting Religion by Greg Paul
Author:Greg Paul [Paul, Greg]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: RELIGION / Christian Life / Spiritual Growth, RELIGION / Christian Life / Personal Growth
Publisher: The Navigators
Published: 2018-02-02T00:00:00+00:00
To Keep Oneself from Being Polluted by the World
Itâs an evocative image, isnât it? We all know what pollution looks like: the brownish fog that hangs over most large cities in hot weather; dead fish among the cigarette packs and soft-drink bottles bobbing against harbor walls; smashed beer bottles left by some troglodyte at a wilderness campsite; a dying duck smothered in oil. Thereâs so much of it that itâs changing our climate, slowly throttling the planet.
In spiritual terms, pollution has historically been of great concern to just about every religion. In the church culture I grew up in, watching TV was frowned upon, and movies and dancing were out of the question. In Old Testament times, the Israelites werenât supposed to have any truck with foreign gods or foreign women. Touching a dead animal in the fieldâa sometimes necessary act if you were the herdsmanâmade you unclean and necessitated offering a sacrifice. So did something as unavoidable as a womanâs menstruation.
It was concern for this kind of ceremonial cleanness that kept the hypocrites who were railroading Jesus to his crucifixion from entering Pilateâs headquarters: to do so would have defiled them and disqualified them from celebrating Passover.[11] Kill a man but donât get your hands dirty: precisely the approach that has given religion such an awful stink in our world. Donât say, âThatâs not really religion.â It is. Those men were living out what they really believed: dotting the iâs and crossing the tâs of the religious rules was more important to them than actually doing the right thing. Itâs religion, all rightâbad, toxic, evil religion.
Although the Levitical stipulations that led to such travesty donât affect us much today, some churches do reflect, perhaps unintentionally, this need for âceremonialâ purity by the practice of liturgical confessions before the Eucharist. Communal and individual confession are certainly good practice, but the impression I suspect many congregants are left with is âNow we are cleaning up ourselves enough to qualify for participation.â A kind of spiritual quick scrub of the neck and behind the ears.
Examples abound of people, even and especially clergy, who scrupulously observe all the public religious forms while engaging in the most despicable behavior in their private lives, just like those murderous scribes and Pharisees.
But James is not referring to either moral or ceremonial pollution here. Removing the artificial chapter division, which only appeared for the first time in the Wycliffe Bible of 1382, makes Jamesâs intent immediately apparent. Here is how he describes being polluted by the world:
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Fangirl by Rainbow Rowell(9228)
How to Bang a Billionaire by Alexis Hall(8145)
Wonder by R. J. Palacio(8097)
The Thirst by Nesbo Jo(6932)
The Space Between by Michelle L. Teichman(6927)
Assassin’s Fate by Robin Hobb(6199)
Wiseguy by Nicholas Pileggi(5769)
The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern(5216)
Paper Towns by Green John(5177)
The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini(5168)
Bittersweet (True North #1) by Sarina Bowen(4843)
Gerald's Game by Stephen King(4641)
Too Much and Not the Mood by Durga Chew-Bose(4337)
Pillow Thoughts by Courtney Peppernell(4271)
Goodbye Paradise(3798)
Twelve Days of Christmas by Debbie Macomber(3559)
Good by S. Walden(3548)
The Rosie Effect by Graeme Simsion(3459)
The Cellar by Natasha Preston(3334)