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> What Are You Asking? -December 2006
 


Tom Ehrich
Tom Ehrich

 
   

What are You asking?

Pastor, Author and Speaker Tom Ehrich responds to
your questions about God, faith and
living spiritually

Send us your questions


 

DECEMBER 2006


Why did God create us?

Good question, and one that probably isn't in our power to answer with any certainty. Scripture has two creation stories. In the oldest, the Adam-and-Eve story in Genesis 2-3, God “formed man from the dust of the ground” as the first act of creation. Later, after determining that “it is not good that the man should be alone,” God made woman to be his “partner.”

As to the why of this, the suggestion in Genesis 2-3 is that God wanted companionship; thus, when man and woman sinned and hid from God in shame, God was in distress because of losing a companion. But that isn't stated definitively.

In the second creation story, found in Genesis 1, God created humankind in his image on the sixth day of creation, the final act of creation. “Male and female he created them.” Their purpose was to “have dominion” over the created order. Genesis doesn't explain why God wanted that purpose carried out.

In both stories, the suggestion—again, only a suggestion—is that God created humanity in order to complete something, either to complete the created order by being God's special being in its midst or charge, or perhaps even to complete God.

These stories raise more questions than they answer.

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Please explain advent.

The word “advent” means “coming.” As the first season of the church year, Advent marks the coming of Jesus, both his first coming in the Incarnation and his second coming at the fulfillment of God's purpose. The Gospel readings for Advent focus on John the Baptist, the herald of Jesus' coming, and on his mother Mary, the bearer of his coming.

Advent is a penitential season, meaning it is a time for confessing one's sins and sitting with God. In the early years, Advent was a 40-day season of preparation for baptism, much like Lent. Baptisms were performed on the Feast of the Epiphany (January 6). When Christmas Day (December 25) became the more prominent holiday, Advent became a four-week prelude to Christmas. During Advent, churches that use altar hangings and clergy vestments will use the color purple (as is the case during Lent), or, if available, a dark blue.

Many churches and families use an “Advent wreath” to mark the four Sundays of Advent. These sets typically have purple candles for the first, second and fourth Sundays, and a pink or rose candle for the third Sunday, known as “Gaudete Sunday” (from the Latin word “Rejoice”), when tradition allowed an easing of the Advent fast.

Popular Advent hymns emphasize the theme of coming. “O Come, O Come, Emmanuel” and “Come Thou, Long-Expected Jesus” are two examples.

The arrival of Advent Sunday in late November or early December means the start of a new cycle in the lectionary of assigned readings. Most liturgical churches use a three-year cycle (Years A, B and C), each focused on a different Gospel. Year C, which began December 3, 2006, focuses on the Gospel of Luke.

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Since in the beginning man was created "perfect, without sin,” why did Eve eat of the fruit of the knowledge of good and evil?

First, Genesis 2 says that the first human was created a “living being,” not perfect. Second, both Eve and Adam ate the fruit, experienced shame, hid from God, and were punished. Third, as Genesis 2-3 tells the story, the serpent—a “crafty” wild animal—told Eve that God wouldn't really punish them for eating the forbidden fruit.

What caused the serpent to say this? Genesis doesn't actually identify the serpent as a power of evil. In the story, the serpent is just a crafty animal. According to traditional Church teaching, behind the serpent's words lay an evil power. But that isn't what Genesis says.

The mystery is why Eve accepted the serpent's words as true and why Adam concurred. I think we can put aside the ancient notion of “evil woman” ruining “innocent man.” That isn't true to the story. The more likely meaning is that a “living being” has the capacity for sin and that sin is likely to occur. Why? Genesis doesn't explain. My interpretation is that Eve and Adam did what we all so often do—closed their hearts to God’s way in favor of their own.

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Please explain the doctrine of the trinity. Is it based on Christian experience? The Bible? How do you experience Father/Son/Holy Spirit?

After the “Jesus movement” began to take shape and to spread, the question arose, Who was Jesus? His impact was undeniable, but who had he been? There were many explanations, from totally human to totally spiritual, from having truly suffered to having only appeared to suffer. One reason the gospels go to such lengths to describe the physical agony of Jesus’ passion was to counter the appearance-only school.

Questions about the nature of Jesus circulated for quite some time and evoked a diverse body of Christian literature – far more diverse than what has been handed down to us. Eventually, in order to bring some orthodoxy out of this, the bishops of the church declared the Trinitarian formula: God as Father (Creator), God as Son (Savior) and God as Holy Spirit (Comforter), three aspects of the one divine being, or three “persons” of one being.

From this formula came the Nicene Creed, adopted late in the 4th Century, and the canon of the New Testament, adopted several years later. The books of the Bible, especially the four Gospels, were chosen partly because they supported this Trinitarian formula. Other books, which gave a more spiritualized cast to Jesus' existence, were set aside.

With the Trinitarian formula, other questions arose concerning the timeline of this divine being: did God the Father come first (for example, before time and during the Old Testament era), then Jesus came later, at a specific point in time, and then the Holy Spirit came after Jesus departed, as his empowering gift. The Eastern and Western Churches split over their different beliefs as to whether the Spirit proceeded from the Father or from Father and Son together. The Gospel of John makes a point of placing Jesus as God's Word in the beginning of all things, whereas the Gospel of Mark (the earliest gospel) suggests that God chose Jesus somewhere in his adulthood, and that he gradually figured out what it meant to be Messiah.

All of these assertions are based on faith, not historical or empirical fact, and the underlying reality is beyond our comprehension.

People experience God in many ways. Some people see God the Father as harsh and legalistic, others as merciful and creative. Jesus said God is love, so I am inclined to agree with the merciful image of God. Jesus, in turn, is perceived as lamb, king, redeemer, future judge, companion, friend—in other words, in many ways. The Spirit is perceived as sustainer, power-giver, source of hope and comfort, one who nudges us toward goodness.

My hunch is that people don't get too hung up on the Trinity nowadays, because the theological questions that the doctrine answers probably aren't modernity's questions.

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Mark 10:11 says, “He saith unto them, ‘Whosoever shall put away his wife, and marry another, committeth adultery against her.’” Doesn’t that mean that remarriage after divorce is adultery?

Some faithful Christians see it that way and teach that we are wrong when we divorce and remarry. Others see it differently. No one applauds divorce; it is invariably an occasion of pain. But many believe that the divorced have every right, in the eyes of God and of the state, to try again. Many churches require counseling in this situation, to make sure that the new marriage isn't impeded or compromised by the former; some won't perform a marriage after a second or third divorce.

But the general belief seems to be that we are frail beings, that we often fail in our best intentions, including our marital vows, and that God is merciful when we fail.

I personally don't see remarriage after a divorce as an act of adultery. But others disagree. I think you need to understand the teachings of your Christian tradition and make your own peace with this matter.

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Is Jesus God, or does he have a spirit of God? I've been reared with Christian beliefs and was taught that Jesus is God, but I could never accept him being God. I AM. Alpha and Omega.

This is a matter of faith, of course, so one person's answer might differ from another’s. The traditional teaching of the Church is that the God of Creation touched humankind in three ways: as “Father” (or Creator), as “Son” (or Savior) and as “Holy Spirit” (or Comforter.) The exact nature of this “Trinity” is beyond our comprehension or ability to define. But the general idea is that God did take human form (“incarnate,” or “in the flesh”) in Jesus of Nazareth, and that through his sacrifice and rising again, God “redeemed” humanity by showing us the way to God and by making it possible for us to draw near.

This works in different ways for different believers. Some believe that seeing Jesus is the way to see the Father; that is, seeing the one whose hands touched and voice reached is our way—some believe our only way—to comprehend the God who exists beyond our reach. Some believe that the Spirit also touches us and helps us to remember what Jesus said and did. Paul believed that God has planted in us a “spirit of sonship” that causes us to cry out to God as “Abba, Father,” and that this gift is mediated to us by faith in Jesus.

Much of the work of the early Church was devoted to answering the very question that you ask. Christians have tended to make an idol of the church's answers, rather than enabling each believer to ask the probing question, to seek answers, to know and also not to know. I encourage you, then, to keep on asking—indeed, as the hymn says, to “bring it to God in prayer.”

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My husband firmly believes that the Baptist church was the first church because of the references to John the Baptist. He has read that because John the Baptist baptized Jesus that we must be Baptists. I am so confused! We are seeking to find the right answers and are afraid of following the wrong church and beliefs. Can you help?

You are asking a good question. What Jesus formed were circles of friends, not an institution grounded in hierarchies of power and rules of inclusion/exclusion. Thus, the first “church” (the Greek word ekklesia means “those called out”) would have been the circle of disciples that traveled around with him. These men and women considered him their “rabbi,” or “teacher.” Later, he sent out apostles two by two, another form of Christian community. At the feeding of the 5,000, he had them sit in groups of 50.

Interestingly, at the same time, disciples of John the Baptist were forming their own community, centered in John, whom they considered the Messiah. Later, John would send his followers to Jesus and make a point of saying that Jesus was the true light.

After Jesus died and rose again, the disciples were in disarray for a time, then began to proclaim the Gospel of Jesus Christ. As he commanded, they started in Jerusalem—where the Jesus movement was a strand within Judaism—and then, with Paul and Peter leading the way, went to other lands, eventually breaking free of Judaism and focusing their proclamation on the Gentiles. In each community, Christians formed a “church.” Thus, there was a church in Ephesus, one in Antioch, one in Jerusalem, one in Thessalonika, one in Corinth, and so on. Each had somewhat different practices, different beliefs about Jesus and different holy books. In the 4th Century, leading bishops tried to fashion a more uniform set of beliefs and Scriptures.

In time, the bishop of Rome emerged as supreme, although not every region recognized his authority, and the Eastern and Western churches split entirely from each other. For many centuries, there was the Church of Rome, the Eastern or Orthodox Church, and various other regional churches. There was also much bloodshed, as prelates fought for supremacy.

In the Protestant Reformation, starting in the 15th Century, the emerging nationalism began to shape churches serving nations, often in conflict with Rome. Thus, Germany had Lutheranism (as did Norway, Sweden and others), England had the Church of England, Switzerland had Calvinism, and so on throughout Europe.

Each national church tried to establish itself as the primary non-Roman expression within its nation. However, competing expressions arose, such as Methodism in England, the Anabaptist tradition, pietism, and others.
The American colonies inherited all of this diversity. Nonconformists settled New England, Anglicans settled Virginia and the Carolinas, Roman Catholics settled Maryland, Dutch Reformed settled New York, and Quakers Pennsylvania. Roger Williams led a break from Massachusetts Puritanism and founded a Baptist colony in Rhode Island.

When the framers of the Constitution dealt with this, they were mindful of centuries of religious warfare and stipulated that Church not be allowed to intrude on the State, and vice versa.

The US now has more than 300 separate Christian denominations, each of which thinks itself a true expression of Christian faith. The challenge for you, as for any believer, is to explore many denominations, as well as non-denominational churches, to see which makes you welcome, which seems to be serving as Jesus wanted, which proclaims a coherent message, and which strikes you as a promising spiritual home.

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It is written that to be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord. Does your spirit and soul go to be with the Lord? It is written that when the Lord returns, the dead in Christ shall rise first. Does that mean our spirit and soul reunite with our dead body?

The short answer is, we don't know. Various beliefs have emerged, some of them expressed in Scripture, some in church teachings. To some people, knowing the exact sequence of death and life after death is important. Others trust God to do what God knows best.

My own belief is that, at death, our bodies die, but our essential nature (call it “soul” or “spirit”) returns to God. Thus, the God who fashioned us and loved us unceasingly throughout our lives receives us for eternity. I have no idea what that looks like. Probably not clouds and harps. Nor do I feel a need to know. When loved ones have died, I have taken comfort in believing that they are now “with God,” whatever form God causes that to take.

If God is love, you see, then that love never ends.

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Whom did Cain and Abel marry? Where did other people for them to marry come from?

In the story of Cain and Abel in Genesis 4, I see no reference to Abel's every marrying, nor do I see a name given to Cain's wife. The same situation unfolded for Adam's third son, Seth, whose wife isn't named. There is no explanation of where they came from.

It is important to remember that the creation story in Genesis 2-3, the familiar Garden of Eden story, doesn't purport to be an actual history. It was a way for Israel to express its sense of origins. The point of Cain and Abel wasn't their historicity, but the conflict between a “keeper of sheep” (Abel) and a “tiller of the ground” (Cain) and the reality of fratricide. Moreover, the lineage of Adam was seen as proceeding through Seth, not Cain, another key point in Israel's self-understanding.

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To learn more about Tom Ehrich’s writings, visit www.onajourney.org.
 


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