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Male and Female: Women in the Old Testament, part 2

The discussion so far:
…….

So let’s take a quick look at what specific women actually did in the Old Testament.

Before we begin, I want to address a couple potential objections. First, the Old Testament was written for our learning (Romans 15:4). I believe it is entirely relevant to consider the bulk of Scriptures in our discussion of gender roles within the Kingdom of God. After all, whenever you read about “the Scriptures” in the New Testament, it only ever meant the Hebrew Bible, i.e. the Old Testament. Second, nowhere in the text does it say or even imply that these women were the exceptions. They may have been exceptional women, but the Bible does not attempt to portray these women as somehow working outside the norm. They aren’t so much exceptions to the rule as they are exceptions that prove the rule – the rule of equal standing before God.

What did women do? What precedent is there? I will list the women along with the Scriptural reference so you can read the full story if you want.

…….

HAGAR (Genesis 16)
Hagar, we are told, was an African slave woman. Sarah picked her up as her maidservant presumably while they were down in Egypt. You may know the story. God promised that Abraham would be the father of many nations, but he and Sarah were old and childless. Sarah came up with the plan to bear a child through her handmaid – a kind of forced surrogate situation. We don’t have time to get into the problematic behavior here, but there is a key point to note about Hagar.

After Hagar became pregnant, Sarah became bitterly jealous of her and started treating her poorly. Hagar fled into the wilderness. It’s there that God sought her out and reassured her that she was indeed blessed.

And Hagar – a runaway, pregnant, dark-skinned, African slave woman – became the first person in the Bible to give God a name – El Roi, the God who sees. Adam gave Eve her name, but now Hagar gives God a name. Let that sink in.

…….

SARAH
Now, I won’t lie. I’m not a huge fan of Sarah. If we met at a party, I don’t think we’d be friends. However, it’s worth noting that she is one of the women mentioned in the “Hall of Faith,” Hebrews 11 – “And by faith even Sarah, who was past childbearing age, was enabled to bear children because she considered him faithful who had made the promise.”

…….

HERBEW MIDWIVES and JOCHEBED (Exodus 1-2)
These women in the opening chapters of Exodus stood up to the corrupt, oppressive government. They lied to Pharaoh. They disobeyed direct orders. They acted with extreme courage in the face of incredible danger in order to save innocent lives – and ultimately worked toward the deliverance of their enslaved people.

…….

MIRIAM (Exodus 15 & Numbers 12)
Miriam was one of the triumvirate leaders of the Hebrews as they exited Egyptian bondage – alongside her two brothers Moses and Aaron. Moses was the political leader. Aaron was the priestly leader. And Miriam, with no asterisk or qualifier, was a prophetic leader. The great song of triumph in Exodus 15 is attributed to Miriam as she led the people in worship. Numbers 12 recounts the instance where Miriam and Aaron confront Moses about his choice of wife. She was wrong, and she was punished for it. But she was wrong because of her own pride and prejudice so to speak, not because she was a woman. We must note, though, that she had the confidence to confront Moses, a man who most people would have considered her “superior.”

…….

RAHAB (Joshua 2 & 6)
Rahab, a Canaanite prostitute and inn owner in Jericho, was blessed by God for saving the Hebrew spies. She hid, them, lied to the authorities on their behalf, and sent them on their way. She would later marry into the nation of Israel and become the great-great-grandmother to the greatest king Israel had ever known. AND she was in the lineage of Jesus (Matthew 1). AND she is another woman mentioned in Hebrews 11 – “By faith the prostitute Rahab, because she welcomed the spies, was not killed with those who were disobedient.”

…….

DEBORAH (Judges 4-5)
With no qualifier, asterisk, or explanation, we are introduced to Deborah in Judges 4. She is a prophet and Judge. Full stop. She was appointed by God, not because no other man could be found, but because she had the characteristics of a leader – strength, empathy, decisiveness, and courage. She was gifted as a leader and was called by God to use those gifts to deliver her people. She is also, like Miriam, the composer of an amazing song of victory. Side note, the Song of Deborah in Judges 5 is widely regarded by scholars to be among the earliest written pieces of the Hebrew Scriptures.

…….

RUTH and NAOMI (Ruth)
These women put everything on the line. They were desperate and impoverished. Yet because they remained faithful to God, Ruth – a Moabite woman – became the daughter-in-law to Rahab AND the great-grandmother of King David AND an ancestor in the lineage of Jesus.

…….

ABIGAIL (1 Samuel 25)
Abigail is one of my favorite people in the Old Testament. She’s a strong woman who knows how to keep her head when all the men around her go crazy. She knows her husband is an idiot and calls him out on it. She knows exactly how to deescalate the hostile situation between her husband and David. She was not afraid to stand up for what she knew was right. I love her story.

…….

HULDAH (2 Chronicles 34)
A little context for this one. Long after David and Solomon, the kingdom was divided and the religious world of the Judahites fell into disarray. The Temple went unused and was in major needs of repair and renovation. The whole priestly system needed revitalization. That’s where King Josiah came in. He discovered the lost scroll of the Law of Moses. No one really knew what to make of it or what to do with it. King Josiah and the priest Hilkiah sought out the guidance of a prophet. No, not Jeremiah or Hosea or Micah or a number of other male prophets. They went to Huldah, a female prophet, who relayed to them the word of the Lord and sparked a nation-wide religious reform.

…….

This list is not exhaustive. I’m sure I may have missed a few. And for every example of a woman doing amazing things in the service of God, there is at least one other story of women who led men astray and lived in conflict to what God had commanded (like Jezebel, Delilah, etc.). Women did both amazing things and terrible things – just like men. It’s almost as if God calls people on the basis of their character and faithfulness not on the basis of gender.

To sum up, we have examples of women giving names to God, prophesying, leading worship, composing songs, speaking truth to power, stepping out in faith, engaging in civil disobedience, speaking wisdom into the lives of angry men, acting as commander-in-chief of Israel’s armies, sparking religious revival, and much more. Their acts of faith and courage are recorded for us to learn from and be inspired by thousands of years later. All this took place in an overwhelmingly male-dominated culture. These women were the exceptions that prove the rule that God’s giftedness and calling does not discriminate on the basis of gender.

Can women teach men and exercise authority over men? Maybe we should ask Deborah and Huldah for their perspective on it.

Male and Female: Women in the Old Testament, part 1

The discussion so far:
…….

I think it has been pretty strongly established that the Bible was written by men in a patriarchal culture. Men ruled the scene. Men were the kings and priests and business owners. Men made the decisions. Men had full ownership rights. Men could be educated and literate. Men made the laws.

But was all of this God’s will?

I think from our discussion of Genesis 3, it’s clear that this hierarchy is a result of the fall. Broken trust leads to broken relationships. Broken relationships lead to inequality and a power imbalance. We see that if men can oppress women without repercussions, then men will oppress women.

This comes to its most vile expression in Genesis 6. There’s a really strange passage at the beginning of the Noah story. We read that the “sons of God” were taking the “daughters of men” to be their wives. Ok…what?

One way of interpreting that passage (the one I think makes most sense) is that the “sons of God” were not angels or divine spiritual beings. Rather, they were men in a place of power and privilege. It was not uncommon at all for kings and chieftains of city-states in the ancient world to consider themselves divine, or at least sons of the gods. So we have men in a position of power and authority taking advantage of the “common” women, making them their wives by force.

We don’t actually read about any other explicitly evil act – no violence or theft or murder. But there is oppression and mistreatment of women by men in power. I’m sure violence, aggression, and revenge were part of it – those things always seem to go hand in hand with the mistreatment of women. But whatever the case, we know that God saw his corrupted creation and wept.

The next time we even meet a woman in the story doesn’t occur until Genesis 12 when we are introduced to Abram and his (barren) wife Sarai. In that ancient culture, infertility was just about the worst thing that could happen to a woman. When her only real value was in bearing children, a woman whose womb wouldn’t produce was more of a liability than an asset. Infertile women were often the source of contempt and ridicule. The ancients didn’t know how fertility worked. They didn’t really know that a man could have slow or weak swimmers. Today we look with sympathy and compassion on couples who have fertility issues. Not so in the ancient world. If a couple couldn’t have kids, it was the woman’s fault. She was defective.

God has a heart for barren women.

Sarah. Rachel. Hannah. Samson’s mother. Elizabeth.

Each of these women received vindication, blessing, and honor from God. This seems to be just another blow to the idea that the Bible condones patriarchal structures. Each of these women had value. They were each still loved by their husbands. God heard their prayers. God knew their heartache and pain. And God blessed them.

Coming up, we will take a TL;DR look at all the significant women in the Old Testament –  their roles in society and religion, how God used them to lead, teach, protect, deliver, and inspire the people of Israel.

Male and Female: Partners in Sin

Part 1) Male and Female: In the Beginning
Part 2) Male and Female: A Suitable Helper

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You know what’s really interesting to do? Try reading Genesis 3 through the lens of developing civilizations. Think about the transition humans made from hunter-gatherer societies to agrarian societies and see how it lines up with the transition we see take place through Genesis 2, 3, and 4.

The man and woman are in the garden. God has given them one rule – don’t eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. I don’t want to dive into the whole question of why God placed that tree there or why it was so bad for them to do it. That’s a whole other discussion.

The point is that they disobeyed God, sin and death entered the world, and there were major repercussions. One key consequence of their action was a rift in the relationship between the man and the woman.

So let’s take some time to see how the story plays out and how it changes everything.

When the woman saw that the fruit of the tree was good for food and pleasing to the eye, and also desirable for gaining wisdom, she took some and ate it. She also gave some to her husband, who was with her, and he ate it. Then the eyes of both of them were opened, and they realized they were naked; so they sewed fig leaves together and made coverings for themselves.
(Genesis 3:6-7)

A few things to note from these verses:

The woman was deceived. I’m not arguing that point. But I wonder why she was deceived? When the serpent asked her, “Did God really say you must not eat from any tree in the garden?” the woman responded with a different take on the command than from what God has said in the previous chapter. That command, by the way, was only given to the man. Some have taken that to mean that only the men should be entrusted with the words and commands of God because women are too easily deceived. OK…but let’s try out another line of reasoning.

Shouldn’t women get access to the same information about God as the men? Shouldn’t a woman be able to study and learn for herself instead some man acting as the intermediary between her and God? The woman seemingly had to rely on the information given to her by the man. Yes, she succumbed to the temptation – but so did the man! Which leads us to the next point…

The man knew it was wrong. He was given the directive from God himself. And he still did it anyway. That wording indicates that the man was there with her, not that she had to go off and find him. The man was just as easily swayed as the woman. This is not a passage about the religious superiority of men over women. This is a passage about how men and women both have a propensity toward sin and wanting to find shortcuts around what God has planned for them. At some level, even though they both had everything they could ever want or need, they were convinced that God was holding out on them. They were partners in life, and now they were partners in sin.

And that’s where it all went wrong. They tried to cover it up and hide it all from God – a fantastically unsuccessful plan. When God came calling, they had no choice but to fess up and take full responsibility for their actions…

I’m just kidding.

They did what we all do – they played the blame game. The man blamed the woman “who you gave me!” The woman blamed the serpent. Everyone was pointing fingers, and nothing would ever be the same.

To the woman he said,
“I will make your pains in childbearing very severe;
with painful labor you will give birth to children.
Your desire will be for your husband,
and he will rule over you.”
To Adam he said, “Because you listened to your wife and ate fruit from the tree about which I commanded you, ‘You must not eat from it,’
“Cursed is the ground because of you;
through painful toil you will eat food from it
all the days of your life.
It will produce thorns and thistles for you,
and you will eat the plants of the field.
By the sweat of your brow
you will eat your food
until you return to the ground,
since from it you were taken;
for dust you are
and to dust you will return.”
(Genesis 3:16-19)

Suddenly there is a rift – between God and humanity, between humanity and creation, and between the man and the woman.

This is where it might be helpful to take an anthropological view of the story. From what we can tell, hunter-gatherer societies were much more egalitarian than agrarian civilizations. It makes sense if you think about it. In hunter-gatherer communities, both roles are important to sustaining the life of the community. Men hunt and bring home the prey maybe a few times a month. The women forage and gather berries, roots, nuts, fruits, vegetables, etc. that are needed for the daily functioning of the family and village. Both contribute, both play to their strengths.

But when people started planting and harvesting crops and domesticating animals, there was no longer a place for the women to make an equal contribution. Men did all the hard labor (see Genesis 3:17-19 above). Men worked the land. Men ran the farms and businesses. Men herded the cattle. Men built the infrastructure necessary to sustain it all. And in a society where men are the major producers, women become commoditized. Women were vital for rearing children and keeping them alive until the children could work to support the father’s business. Thus, women had a price on them. And the more wives the better, because more wives equalled more children and more children equalled more hands to work the farm.

In these societies men owned the land and the business. They owned their wives and their kids and their slaves. There was a hierarchy to it. The man was the head of the household, the pater familias, the king of his castle. Women were relegated to the home, and maybe the marketplace, sometimes the place of worship. Women had no legal rights or rights of ownership.

The question, then, is – Did God intend for it to be this way? Let me put it this way… Did God really say that men should be the sole leaders of the household and civil society and religion? Did God say that women should be bought and sold and treated as property? Did God ordain the patriarchy?

Or, perhaps, maybe… the patriarchy is a flawed system that was a result of the fall and sin entering the world. Maybe God foresaw the consequences of this power imbalance. Maybe what God told the woman (Your desire will be for your husband, and he will rule over you) was not so much his punishment as it was a warning about what would happen if this was the kind of life they chose for themselves. The wording is nearly the same as the warning God gave Cain in the next chapter (sin is crouching at your door; it desires to have you, but you must rule over it).

God knew that if everyone was only out for themselves – as we see happen with the whole sin narrative of Genesis 3 – then that would ultimately lead to a power struggle between the sexes. Women were going to be fighting an uphill battle to reclaim their place as equals alongside the men. The men, being biologically stronger and more aggressive, were going to see that desire for equality as a threat to their own position and exert their rule by force over the women.

All because of a stupid piece of fruit.

But there would come one – a promised descendent of the woman – who would deal the death blow to the deceiver and set things right again.
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I know you’re probably thinking, “Well what about what Paul says in 1 Timothy 2?” The fact that you want to rush there is part of the problem in having these conversations. We must work our way to it, so that we will be ready to really wrestle with the two most problematic passages in Paul’s letters. We can’t ignore or skip over 93% of the Bible. That’s something Paul never would have done.

Male and Female: A Suitable Helper

Read part one of this series here >> Male and Female: In the Beginning

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If you aren’t aware, the Bible contains not one but two creation accounts. (Maybe even three if you count the first two verses of Genesis as a separate account entirely like some scholars do.) Genesis 1:1 – 2:3 is the great creation song, the epic poem of God creating something out of nothing. Well, not out of nothing per se, but rather out of his self-loving community and divine omnipresence.

Genesis 2:4 begins another account, zooming in on the creation of one man, one woman, and one garden. I appreciate that the Jews never tried to form a “reconciled” or “harmonized” version of the accounts by forcing them into one another. They are distinct. They are separate. And they are both telling a very particular story.

The Creation Song ends with God declaring his creation is “very good” and then taking a Sabbath rest (the 7th day doesn’t “end,” by the way). The next creation narrative zooms into an (unknown) area of the world that sounds very much like what we would come to call “the cradle of civilization.” God plants a garden, called Eden. God then forms man (adam) out of the dust of the earth (adama), breathes the breath of life into him, and places him within the garden. It’s then that we hear the first thing declared to be “not good” – being alone.

So God brings all the wild creatures to the man, and he names them – a sign of authority and power over someone/something. But there was “no suitable helper” for him among the animals.

Here’s where things get interesting. I mentioned in the previous post that I am unaware of any other Ancient Near East creation story that includes the creation of women specifically as equals to men. So that raises the question – is Genesis 2 undoing what Genesis 1 established, that male and female were created as equals in the Image of God?

Let’s look more closely at the language in the narrative.

A SUITABLE HELPER

God said, “It is not good for the man to be alone. I will make a helper suitable for him.” Some have read back into this passage the patriarchal hierarchy that views women as subordinate to men. They see that word “helper” along the lines of servant, maid, assistant, etc. In our understanding, the “helper” is lower down the ladder from the one they are “helping.” But is that the case here?

I know this is somewhat tricky to do because of translations, but if you simply search the Bible (the Old Testament especially) for the word “helper,” what are the results?

“My father’s God was my helper; he saved me from the sword of Pharaoh.” (Exodus 18:4) 

Who is like you, a people saved by the Lord? He is your shield and helper and your glorious sword. (Deuteronomy 33:29) 

you are the helper of the fatherless. (Psalm 10:14) 

you have been my helper. Do not reject me or forsake me, God my Savior. (Psalm 27:9) 

The Lord is with me; he is my helper. I look in triumph on my enemies. (Psalm 118:7) 

You are destroyed, Israel, because you are against me, against your helper. (Hosea 13:9) 

So we say with confidence, “The Lord is my helper; I will not be afraid. What can mere mortals do to me?” (Hebrews 13:6)

That’s very interesting. I’m doing the search on Bible Gateway using the NIV to be consistent. But the only Old Testament occurrences of the word “helper” that don’t refer to God are here in Genesis 2 and once in Nehemiah 4. Every other instance of the word “helper” is in reference to God and his role among the people of Israel.

When the woman is created as a “helper” compatible or suitable for the man, that is not a place of subjugation but of power and ability. In many ways the man is incomplete without the woman, just as the people of Israel are incomplete without the Lord their God.

SIDE BY SIDE

Another thing to notice in the narrative of Genesis 2 is how much detail we get in God’s creation of the woman. The story uses the same language to describe the creation of man and the animals – formed out of the dust, given the breath of God. But the description of woman’s creation is like that of a master artist crafting his masterpiece.

So the Lord God caused the man to fall into a deep sleep; and while he was sleeping, he took one of the man’s ribs and then closed up the place with flesh. Then the Lord God made a woman from the rib he had taken out of the man, and he brought her to the man.
(Genesis 2:21-22)

It is significant that God created woman out of the man’s side. Even the rabbis of old noted the importance of this. Woman was not taken out of man’s foot that she should be underneath him. Nor was she taken out of man’s head that she should be above him. But she was formed out of man’s side, so that she may walk alongside him as equals, side-by-side partners in life.

So you can see, if we just slow down a bit, question our assumptions, and do a little more digging, Genesis 2 is not at all undoing what was already established in Genesis 1. Yes, man was created first, but are you forgetting how the rest of Genesis goes? It’s nearly always the youngest who gets the blessing from God: Isaac over Ishmael, Jacob over Esau, Joseph over his brothers, etc.

1 + 1 = 1

We’re not done yet. Finally, pay attention to what the man and the narrative have to say about the partnership of male and female:

The man said,
“This is now bone of my bones
and flesh of my flesh;
she shall be called ‘woman,’
for she was taken out of man.”
That is why a man leaves his father and mother and is united to his wife, and they become one flesh.
Adam and his wife were both naked, and they felt no shame.
(Genesis 2:23-25)

A few final thoughts on this chapter. You can almost feel the relief and excitement in the man’s words. I picture the look on his face is just like that of a groom seeing his bride walk in for the first time. Bone of my bone. Flesh of my flesh. She is like me – but unlike me in all the right ways. Yes, he “names” her, but that naming is based on his own title. He takes what is his and gives it to her as her own. What else did the man have to give?

Notice also that the text says a man will leave his father and mother to be united with his wife. That’s the exact opposite of the way things work in a patriarchal society. We see countless stories in the Bible of the woman leaving her family to be joined to her husbands family. The wife leaves her home to join the man in his home. But it was set up for the man to do the leaving.

Finally, they were both naked but they felt no shame. Think about the double standard of how society treats men’s and women’s bodies. Have you ever read The Scarlet Letter? Have you heard the numerous stories of women who were victims of revenge porn and forced to leave their jobs because of it? We treat women’s bodies as objects to be exploited. We have such a damaged view of sex, intimacy, and vulnerability that good Christian women can’t have sex with their own husband without an overwhelming sense of shame.

There can be no intimacy without vulnerability. There can be no vulnerability without trust. And there can be no trust where there is fear of shame.

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To sum up: Woman was hand-crafted by God out of the side of the man to be his “helper,” a title elsewhere reserved for God himself. The man recognized their equality. The man gave the woman the only thing he had to give – his name. The two became one (reflecting the loving oneness of God’s own nature). They lived in a relationship based on trust, vulnerability, and intimacy.

And all was good… for a while. More on this next time.

Male and Female: In the Beginning

In the beginning…

As often as possible I try to do two things when studying the Scriptures. 1) Look back at the beginning for how God intended to world to be, and 2) Look forward to the world as Jesus set it in motion to become. One of my favorite hymns is This Is My Father’s World. That song does exactly that – it looks around to the awesomeness of God’s creation, but it also looks forward to the day when “earth and heaven” become “one” again. And Jesus is at the center of it all.

That’s my hermeneutic. That’s my modus operandi for discovering what the Scriptures are all about. Obviously, there’s more to it than that, but this is as simple as I can make it.

Too often, discussions about the role of women in the church are too quick to jump to the passages in Paul (all two of them) that seem to issue an eternal ban on all female leadership in the church. And if we do that, then we run the risk of thinking Paul is saying something I don’t believe he ever intended us to apply universally.

Ok, so…in the beginning…

What is the very first thing the Bible is trying to tell us about the relationship between men, women, God, and creation?

Then God said, “Let us make mankind in our image, in our likeness, so that they may rule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky, over the livestock and all the wild animals, and over all the creatures that move along the ground.”
So God created mankind in his own image,
in the image of God he created them;
male and female he created them.
God blessed them and said to them, “Be fruitful and increase in number; fill the earth and subdue it. Rule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky and over every living creature that moves on the ground.”
Genesis 1:26-28

A few key things to notice:
1) Both male AND female are created in the image of God. This is more revolutionary than we realize. I am unaware of a single other ancient creation myth/legend/story that includes the creation of women on the same level as men. The ancient world was very patriarchal. The man was the head of the house, the head of the city-state, the head of the nation, the head of religion, and so on. Men were always featured in the creation narratives, but women almost never were. And if/when they were, they were treated as creations made for the express purpose of being used by the men. What Genesis 1 is trying to establish is the fact that from the very beginning women were on equal created status as men. They both bore the divine image (meaning God is neither male nor female, but includes both within Godself).

2) Both male AND female are given the divine vocation within creation to participate with God in the creative process – tending to and improving upon what has already been made. They are both given special status among living creatures as rulers over the animal kingdom. They are both commissioned to tend the earth, to subdue it, to co-rule with God as his “ambassadors.”

3) Both male AND female are blessed to be fruitful and multiply. It’s not just up to the man to govern the size or location of the family. Women are given a measure of say as equal partners in the relationship.

Male and female he created them. God blessed them and said to them

Again, it’s important to start at the very beginning. Most men are too quick to jump to Genesis 2 (we’ll get there next time) and point out – like Paul seems to do in 1 Timothy 2 – that man was created first and then the woman. They emphasize that woman was created as man’s “helper.” They seem to think that Genesis 2 undoes everything Genesis 1 establishes. But I really don’t think that’s the case.

If we start at the beginning as God intended creation to be, we see “male and female” created as equals in the Image of God. We see male and female as co-regents, joining God in the creative process and co-ruling creation with God.

Even though the Bible was written from within a society dominated by the patriarchy, much of Scripture seems to be written counter to that system, critiquing the ubiquity of male dominance and female oppression – like this insight from the creation poem.

How did we lose sight of that so quickly?

GOD IS LIGHT: John is more right than he knows

How do you think about God? What image comes to mind?

Maybe you think of God as some cosmic grandfather, an elderly white man with a long, flowing beard reminiscent of Santa Claus.

Maybe God is some kind of universal policeman always on the lookout for people to mess up so he can zap them with lightning.

Maybe nothing in particular comes to mind.

John makes an interesting illustration for God in 1 John 1:5

This is the message we have heard from him and declare to you: God is light; in him there is no darkness at all.

We’re probably all familiar with what John says later in the letter: God is love. But here at the beginning, John says that God is light.

One of John’s favorite binaries is light and darkness. It’s all throughout his gospel, his letters, and Revelation. The opening paragraph of John’s gospel concludes this way:

In him was life, and that life was the light of all mankind. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.

I think Light can be a powerful metaphor in understanding God’s nature and character. Remember, John is writing in the pre-scientific era. The properties of light that we know today weren’t even part of John’s thought process. But the more we understand about light, the more we can come to understand about God.

LIGHT IS BRIGHT
Ok, let’s start out with the simplest one. It’s bright. Light illuminates everything around it. And you don’t even need very much light to see in the darkness. We’ve probably all be on one of those cave tours where the guide turns off all the lights and you can’t see your hand in front of your face. You lose all sense of direction, your surroundings quickly become unknowable, and even time begins to feel different the longer you’re in that sort of darkness. But then a simple pen light or match is lit, and the whole cavern becomes visible once more.

Darkness cannot snuff out the light. It only works one way.

Taking it another step, though, think about what it’s like in the morning. Your room is dark. You’ve just started waking up. Then someone turns on the lights full blast. How do you react? It’s miserable. It hurts. You want to throw the blankets over your head and retreat to the comfort of the darkness again. We get used to the darkness. The darkness is comfortable. But then the lights come on.

This is a great analogy for God’s holiness. Whenever God appears in his glory to people throughout the Bible, they cannot look directly at him. “No one can see me and live,” God says. We cannot enter God’s presence because we are sinful. We’ve gotten used to the darkness. It’s painful to enter the light of God’s holiness. But just like with Isaiah and Moses and Jacob and Peter and Paul – God’s holiness cleanses our sin and purifies us so that we are actually able to stand in his presence. It may take time. It may hurt. But we can adjust to the light.

(Another related aspect of light is it’s cleansing abilities. You can disinfect items by placing them in direct UV light. You can also bleach stains out of cloth by laying it out in direct sunlight. Etc. Etc.)

LIGHT IS MADE OF DIFFERENT “COLORS”
We know these colors are actually different wave lengths. The human eye can only perceive a small portion of the entire light spectrum. What looks like white light to us is actually a combination of all the colors of the visible spectrum. That’s kind of how it is with the Triune God who is Three in One.

Our eyes cannot see most wavelengths of light. We cannot see radio wave, infrared radiation, or ultraviolet rays. But just because we can’t see them doesn’t mean they aren’t there. We can see the effects of those wavelengths – like if you’ve ever listened to the radio or gotten sunburned. So it is with God. Just because we can’t always see God doesn’t mean he’s not there, acting, moving, impacting the world around us.

LIGHT IS THE UNIVERSAL CONSTANT
The “C” in Einstein’s equation (e = MC^2) is the speed of light, which is constant (in a vacuum). In space light travels at ~186,000 miles per second (or ~300,000 meters per second). Einstein proved that the speed of light is constant no matter what. If you are moving directionally toward the light source, that light is coming at you at 186,000 miles/second. If you are moving away from the light source, the light is still coming at you at 186,000 miles/second. The laws of physics that govern the universe function the way they do because of the cosmic constant. Nothing that has mass can travel at the speed of light, and as far as we know nothing is able to travel faster than the speed of light.

So it is with God. Nothing is greater than God. Nothing can outrun God. God is constant in the universe. There is nowhere you can go where God is not.

LIGHT HELPS US SEE
We’ll end with a simple one, too. You can probably move around your room and your house pretty well in the dark. You know approximately where everything is so you don’t stub your toe on the way to the bathroom at night. But what happens when the furniture gets rearranged?

We live in a constantly changing world. Society is evolving at a breakneck pace. We are becoming more diverse and more globalized – which can definitely be a good thing. But it’s like the furniture keeps getting moved and we’re stumbling around in the dark simply trying to find our way without any point of reference or system of understanding the world.

I love this quote from CS Lewis, the famous Christian author who was an atheist-turned Christian apologist. He never tried to scientifically prove the existence of God or the accuracy of the Bible. To Lewis, this is what it all comes down to:

Faith in Christ is the light that allows us to navigate through the darkness of this world. God is the light in which we can walk without stumbling. When we walk in the light together we can see the things of this world for what they are. We can more easily avoid the pitfalls and obstacles while reaching our goal – bringing heaven here on earth, reflecting God’s light for all the world to see.

John the Apostle, Doctor Who, Han Solo, and Intergenerational Discipleship

I never knew my grandparents.

I am the youngest child of two youngest children (something I coincidentally share in common with my youngest son). All of my grandparents died before I could ever really get to know them. As I get older, that reality hits a little harder. I love that my sons get to grow up knowing their grandparents.

Why?

Because it connects them to the past. A relationship with their grandparents reminds them that the world was around before them and will be here after them.

Generations fascinate me. I think there is so much we could learn from each other if we would just take a second and listen. I wish I could have had the chance to ask my grandparents what it was like to grow up in the Great Depression. Or what it was like to live through World War II. Or what church was like in the South during the Civil Rights movements of the 50s and 60s. What was is like to hear the news that President Kennedy had been shot? How did people in church respond when Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated? Did the moon landing rock your faith at all?

One day I hope my grandkids can ask me where I was on September 11, 2001, and how much the events of that day changed everything. I hope they can ask me about my first cell phone and smart phone, or about how the church responded to the LGBTQ revolution.

What does this have to do with anything?

In the end, all we have is our stories and our memories. Or as The Doctor used to say,

“We’re all stories in the end, just make it a good one, eh?”

I’ve heard it said recently that there are not really generations within the church. Each church is one generation of believers. I love that idea. The world wants to divide us up into generations. I’ve said it before, and I firmly believe it, that AGEISM is the most commonly accepted form of discrimination. Modern society is increasingly divided along generational lines.

It shouldn’t be that way in church. Those who are younger have much to teach us about how to be Christians in the current culture. Those who are older have much to teach us about remaining faithful to the God who never changes. Have we let the world dampen out ability to listen to each other and learn from each other?

When I read the writings of John, I hear the voice of an elderly Christian who is tenderly sharing his thoughts, experiences, and stories with his grandkids. I have no problem assuming that it was John the Apostle who composed the Gospel and Letters that bear his name along with the book of Revelation. And if that’s the case, we know from historic tradition that John was the oldest living apostle and the only one to die of old age.

So we have a letter (1 John) written by an elderly John (maybe in his 70s or 80s) and it opens like this:

That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked at and our hands have touched—this we proclaim concerning the Word of life. The life appeared; we have seen it and testify to it, and we proclaim to you the eternal life, which was with the Father and has appeared to us. We proclaim to you what we have seen and heard, so that you also may have fellowship with us. And our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son, Jesus Christ. We write this to make our joy complete.
(1 John 1:1-4)

John is writing to the next generation of believers. These were not eye-witnesses of Jesus’ ministry like John was. They did not have first-hand experiences with Jesus like John did. It reminds me of the first encounter Rey and Finn have with Han Solo aboard the Millennium Falcon in The Force Awakens. Han tells them a little bit about what he knows and has experienced. They are in awe and disbelief. He reassures this younger generation of ragtag runaways and rebels that, “It’s true. All of it.”

That’s what John is doing. Most of the original apostles, disciples, and church planters have died off. It’s nearly 60 years later. Many stories have been lost. Much teaching has been muddled or misconstrued. John looks around and sees what is becoming of this church that Jesus founded and charged them with expanding “to the ends of the earth.” So much has happened over the last 60 years that people are beginning to doubt, details are being lost, truth is getting mixed up with legend.

John looks at this new generation of Christians and reassures them, “It’s true. All of it.” He wants them to remember that he was there. He hugged Jesus. He ate with Jesus. He fished and camped and traveled and goofed around with Jesus.

John knows what Jesus’ voice sounded like. John remembers how infectious Jesus’ laughter was. John remembers the heartbreak and sorrow as Jesus wept outside Lazarus’ tomb.

John can remember like it was yesterday the moment Jesus was hanging, bloody and beaten, from the cross. He was there with Jesus’ mother when Jesus looked at the two of them and created an inseparable bond. They were family now. Mary had long since gone to be reunited with her Son. I wonder what Mary’s funeral was like? John could tell us.

John can still feel the rush of adrenaline pump through his aging veins as he recalls outrunning Peter to the tomb that morning but being too hesitant to go in. John can tell you exactly what the scars and holes in Jesus’ resurrected body looked and felt like. It was both gross and awesome.

John was there when Jesus ascended into heaven, but don’t ask him to describe it to you. He doesn’t quite have the words to explain it – and this was the guy who wrote Revelation.

“I was there. It’s true. All of it.”

But the thing I appreciate most of all in John’s letter is that he doesn’t come across as the “Old Man Yells at Cloud” type. He never uses the phrase, “back in my day.” He doesn’t complain about the current state of affairs or bemoan the loss of “the good old days.”

He’s writing this letter not simply to set the record straight, but to preserve unity and fellowship and love and joy. John doesn’t strike me as one constantly looking to the past, but as one eagerly anticipating a future filled with more believers, more faithful followers, more loving brothers and sisters, more grandkids in the faith. He doesn’t look to the future with fear and anxiety but with hope and excitement. Each day brings us closer to Christ, closer to each other, closer to the Kingdom of Heaven.

I think John is someone worth listening to. Even though he has been gone from this earth for nearly 2,000 years, his legacy lives on, and he has much to say to us next-generation disciples.

To Meme or not to Meme?

Let’s talk about memes.

I’m definitely no memetic expert (believe it or not, that’s a real thing that exists now because internet). But I am one of those darn Millennials who’s killing off all the good things your parents and grandparents tried to hard to build – like Applebee’s. So I think I can speak on the issue a little bit.

I love a good meme. A GIF or a still image with a clever joke, pun, or subtitle that gives you a quick LOL before you scroll further down on Reddit. I have friends who I count on sharing some quick chuckle memes every time I hop on the Face Books.

They make for some good “Haha! Look at this!” moments, and they can really give others a glimpse into your specific brand of humor.

Harmless. No big deal. Moving on.

Right?

Until…

2015/16 happened. As a digital native, I was flabbergasted by the sudden infiltration of political memes into my otherwise mostly peaceful habitat. My entire online ecosystem was overrun with memes about Trump or Hilary or Bernie or Pepe. I quickly and undelightedly learned which of my friends held which extreme political views.

I think there is something altogether different about political memes. Joke memes can be outrageous or over the top to spark a quick laugh. They’re created to get a gut-level emotional response. Memes seem to trigger a response that is quicker than logical thought. So if a meme has more than, say, 10 words total, you’ve lost me. Now I’m thinking too hard. Logic and reason simply get in the way of enjoying a good meme. The best memes are emotionally relatable at some level. They elicit this “it’s funny because it’s true” kind of response. And so we share them with the comment, “This is so MRN.” (me right now) And we move on IRL. (in real life)

Political memes seem to do the same thing – and that’s why they are so dangerous. If most regular memes exist to get a quick chuckle, political memes exist to get a quick outrage response. They are specifically designed to elicit an emotional response, but instead of relatable self-deprecating humor, they spark a sense of anger at some injustice or corruption or “I can’t believe what THOSE people do/say/believe.”

Political memes are, by and large, poorly photoshopped pieces of “art” created with an obvious bias that are meant to be easily disseminated and viewed on large-scale platforms for the sole purpose of increasing the US vs. THEM divide.

Another way to put it, political memes are “information, especially of a biased or misleading nature, used to promote or publicize a particular political cause or point of view.”

Which is actually the definition of PROPAGANDA.

Political memes are propaganda. Full stop.

It’s SO easy to click that “Share” button underneath a political meme you see in your timeline. And it’s a purely emotional reaction to do so. If you would give it half a moment’s thought along with a 30 second or less search on Snopes, you would probably realize that big, white block letters don’t make a statement true.

Sharing a picture with white writing on it to promote your political believes is lazy at best and dangerous at worst. All those “Pizzagate” memes lead to an actual murder!

Political memes are nothing more than propaganda, and propaganda has only ever served to deepen the divide between people. I see people sharing loads of propaganda on FB and then post about how sad it is that we’re so divided as a country. Want to start healing that rift between people? Then stop sharing that political propaganda bull crap.

[Side note: I’m not including articles, headlines, or even infographics. Those can be helpful and insightful. Memes? Not so much.]

When I see you post a political meme, I have no choice but to assume you agree 100%, not only with the message of the meme but also with the creator of the meme or the group that meme came from. Which, newsflash – a large percentage of the political memes people share come from other countries that don’t have our best interest at heart.

I’d be MUCH more interested in reading what you actually believe in your own words. If you disagree with someone/something, feel free to speak out. I’d like to hear your own thoughts, your own words, your own nuance.

Every political issue is more complex than can be accurately represented by a meme, anyway.

Finally, those of us who follow Christ should have an added interest in seeking and sharing the truth. And the truth is that Christians don’t fit into our two party system. We should represent a third way. Whenever the leaders of his day tried to suck Jesus into a political debate and get him to choose a side, he nearly always chose a third way that they never saw coming. He didn’t come to play those games. (And he didn’t always show the utmost respect for the office of the leaders, either. Remember that time he refused an audience with Herod and called him a “fox” in response?)

If political memes are only there to cause disunity and to spread misinformation, then I, as a US citizen but more importantly as a follower of Christ, want nothing to do with them.
…………………

What do you think about political memes? Are they harmful propaganda? Or are they harmless fun? Let me know in the comments, because that’s always a safe place for political discussion…

What If PAW PATROL Was Actually Good?


Plot Synopsis:

In the very distant future along the coast of the former United States of America sits a city populated by the descendants of those who survived the great wars of the late 21st Century. The United States has dissolved. Local populations banded together to form city-states, which are mostly at peace with each other.

Leading up to, and during the great wars, corporations seized more and more power. Independent research firms, backed by government dollars, competed to become the first to create sentient human-animal hybrids. These hybrids usually retained the physique of the animal with the intelligence and communicative ability of humans. These sentient animals were given legally protected status and were trained in search-and-rescue and military operations.

Other corporations focused their research and development on multi-function vehicles (MFVs). These vehicles can transition from ground to water and air, playing a pivotal role in the great wars. Later, the remaining MFVs were de-weaponized and put to use for more civilian tasks – construction, emergency response, etc.

This city on the coast has chosen to raise a young boy with great potential to become the leader of their very own paramilitary group, specializing in search-and-rescue, emergency response, city defense, and anti-espionage. They would work in close conjunction with the mayor, the de facto commander-in-chief, of the city-state to ensure the health, safety, security, and prosperity of their citizens. She cares deeply about maintaining peace and order, but not at the cost of the citizens’ liberty.

While this city-state is working toward peace in an effort to preserve and rebuild civil society, not all power players feel the same. The mayor of a rival nearby city-state is power hungry and devious. He wants to consolidate power in the region and annex all surrounding cities under his supreme authority.

As political threats become increasingly hostile, our mayor calls upon the young man, now a preteen, to form his team and protect their city from any outside invaders or spies on the inside. She gives them full jurisdiction over all emergency and law enforcement efforts.


Together with the human-animal hybrids in this case, all dogs and the repurposed MFVs, this young man, Ryder, forms his paramilitary special ops team to protect and serve the citizens of Adventure Bay under the leadership of Mayor Goodway. Will they be able to stand against the political schemes of the rival Mayor Humdinger? Will they be able to rebuild a society to match that of centuries past?

These are the tales and adventures of Ryder and his Paw Patrol.


Dammed Faith

Faith is an interesting thing.

I find it fascinating that as we trace back human civilization – for as far back as we can see there has been some kind of faith, belief, or religious ritual. From cave paintings and burial rites to ancient temple complexes that were built while mammoths still roamed the earth, mankind has nearly always reached out for something greater.

A complete disbelief in God or the gods is a relatively new phenomenon. Religious belief has only come into question within the last few centuries – just a drop in the bucket compared to the full history of humanity. The burden today seems to be placed on those who believe to explain why rather than for those who don’t believe to explain why not.

For myself, I think of my faith in God as a river system. Belief in God is the large river cutting large swaths through the countryside. But that river had to form somewhere. Along the way, there are five smaller streams and tributaries — some larger than the others — that feed into the larger river of faith. As each of these smaller streams feeds into the others, the larger river begins to form and becomes an unstoppable force of nature.

So what are these streams, and why do they matter? I believe God reveals something of himself within each stream, and if we pay attention we will see the power and majesty of the mighty river begin to form.

CREATION
I think this is where it all starts. Who on earth can look up at the night sky illuminated by stars and galaxies and not feel simultaneously small and incredibly important? The mountains, the ocean, waterfalls, rainforests, desert sunsets, peaceful snowfall on the evergreens – for man and countless others, they all point to a larger reality. The glorious, awe-inspiring beauty and design must have an artist, an engineer, an architect behind it all.

In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was hovering over the waters.
Genesis 1:1-2

The heavens declare the glory of God;
the skies proclaim the work of his hands.
Day after day they pour forth speech;
night after night they reveal knowledge.
They have no speech, they use no words;
no sound is heard from them.
Yet their voice goes out into all the earth,
their words to the ends of the world.
Psalm 19:1-4

For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities—his eternal power and divine nature—have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that people are without excuse.
Romans 1:20

EXPERIENCE
This one is a bit more subjective, but I believe in God because I’ve felt him. I’ve felt his presence around me. I’ve heard the call of his Spirit to pursue a life of ministry. At one of my darkest moments I felt him whisper, “I’m not through with you yet.” I have known his presence in the midst of a worship experience, speaking to me through the lyrics of the hymn Great Is Thy Faithfulness. It’s like how you can tell when someone is looking at you from across the room, you can feel their stare… Or when you think you’re alone, but suddenly you feel the presence of another person enter the room before you even hear or see them… It’s hard to describe, but you know it when you feel it. Don’t discredit your own personal experience of God’s presence.

You have searched me, Lord,
and you know me.
You know when I sit and when I rise;
you perceive my thoughts from afar.
You discern my going out and my lying down;
you are familiar with all my ways.
Where can I go from your Spirit?
Where can I flee from your presence?
If I go up to the heavens, you are there;
if I make my bed in the depths, you are there.
If I rise on the wings of the dawn,
if I settle on the far side of the sea,
even there your hand will guide me,
your right hand will hold me fast.
Psalm 139:1-3, 7-10

In the same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness. We do not know what we ought to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us through wordless groans. And he who searches our hearts knows the mind of the Spirit, because the Spirit intercedes for God’s people in accordance with the will of God.
Romans 8:26-27

SCRIPTURE
Yes, I believe God is revealed in Scripture. Men and women throughout the centuries have had those experiences of God, encounters with the divine, and recorded them for us. God has chosen to reveal himself to us through the written word, preserved and passed down to us through the generations. We can know something of God through our personal experience and through our interactions with creation, but if we want to move from the general to the more specific — what is God actually like? — then we must seek him out within the Scriptures.

And he passed in front of Moses, proclaiming, “The Lord, the Lord, the compassionate and gracious God, slow to anger, abounding in love and faithfulness, maintaining love to thousands, and forgiving wickedness, rebellion and sin. Yet he does not leave the guilty unpunished; he punishes the children and their children for the sin of the parents to the third and fourth generation.”
Exodus 34:6-7

All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, so that the servant of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work.
2 Timothy 3:16-17

JESUS
I believe that Jesus is the ultimate revelation of God to humanity. This is by far the largest of the tributary system flowing into the larger river of faith in God. It’s been said that Jesus didn’t come to change God’s mind about humanity, but to change humanity’s mind about God. Do you want to know what God is like? Look at Jesus. Who does God love? Look to Jesus. How do we settle all the questions and debates about God in the Hebrew Scriptures (aka, the Old Testament)? Look to Jesus. Humanity had lost its way in fulfilling our call to be the Image of God in the world. Jesus comes and does it right.

In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was with God in the beginning. Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made. In him was life, and that life was the light of all mankind. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.
The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us. We have seen his glory, the glory of the one and only Son, who came from the Father, full of grace and truth.
John 1:1-5, 14

The Son is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation. For in him all things were created: things in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or powers or rulers or authorities; all things have been created through him and for him. He is before all things, and in him all things hold together. And he is the head of the body, the church; he is the beginning and the firstborn from among the dead, so that in everything he might have the supremacy. For God was pleased to have all his fullness dwell in him, and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether things on earth or things in heaven, by making peace through his blood, shed on the cross.
Colossians 1:15-20

In the past God spoke to our ancestors through the prophets at many times and in various ways, but in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son, whom he appointed heir of all things, and through whom also he made the universe. The Son is the radiance of God’s glory and the exact representation of his being, sustaining all things by his powerful word. After he had provided purification for sins, he sat down at the right hand of the Majesty in heaven.
Hebrews 1:1-3

COMMUNITY

Finally, there is the community of believers. The Bible was NEVER intended to be a document about how to save individual souls for heaven. The Bible is the story of God and his people. God always has a group of people, from the first family, to the promise the all nations would be blessed through Abraham’s offspring, to the establishment of Israel as a nation. Even when Jesus comes, he calls his group of disciples who then go on to establish the church. God is revealed in community. God himself is a community of love. Our community, our gatherings, our families, our assemblies, reflect that self-giving love.

“My prayer is not for them alone. I pray also for those who will believe in me through their message, that all of them may be one, Father, just as you are in me and I am in you. May they also be in us so that the world may believe that you have sent me. I have given them the glory that you gave me, that they may be one as we are one—I in them and you in me—so that they may be brought to complete unity. Then the world will know that you sent me and have loved them even as you have loved me.”
John 17:20-23

Don’t you know that you yourselves are God’s temple and that God’s Spirit dwells in your midst?
1 Corinthians 3:16

No one has ever seen God; but if we love one another, God lives in us and his love is made complete in us.
1 John 4:12

DAMMED FAITH 

One or two of these may be explained away, but under the weight of all five, it’s hard not to see evidence for God all around us. The danger comes when we begin to dam up the streams.
When we shut ourselves inside in front of our screens instead of getting out in nature;
when we fill our schedules so full that we never have time to experience the presence of God in the silence;
when we stop diving into Scripture because it no longer seems “relevant;”
when we stop following Jesus in favor of another lord or master;
when we cut ourselves off from the community of believers because who wants to wake up early on Sunday anyway?
…Then it’s easy to see how the rushing river of faith becomes nothing more than a mere trickling drainage ditch.

Are you damming up the streams of revelation that feed into the river of faith? Maybe it’s time to release the flood gates and reconnect with God.