Categories
book review

_The Biggest Lie …_ by Matthew Kelly Book Review

I received a book titled The Biggest Lie in the History of Christianity
by Matthew Kelly. It came in the mail. I didn’t ask
for it or pay anything for it. I read it anyway. Matthew Kelly
is an accomplished author. He likes to be known for
developing “the-best-version-of-yourself” concept. The book does have
much good within. As a result it is not necessarily a bad or
misleading book. My concern is that Matthew doesn’t validate visions
of the-best-version-of-yourself for some Christians whose callings are
similar to those Old Testament prophets who pointed out the civil sins
of Israel.

I won’t spoil the fun of what this biggest lie is, where Matthew
spells it out on page 32. I like how Matthew uses questions to help
the reader think through their own worldview. In one place he asks
these great questions: “Does this contradict Jesus’ teachings?” and
“Lord, what is it that you want most for me and from me in this
moment?”.

He concludes his effort to encourage Christians to preserve “religious
liberty” as set up by our founding fathers by writing

 "... it is essential that we resist the temptation to seek
 worldly solutions to spiritual problems.  We should involve
 ourselves rigorously in the political process, but our main
 focus needs to remain on spiritual transformation."

Matthew places political process outside of spiritual problems. I
believe this does contradict Jesus’ teachings. The Pharisees and
Sadducees held quite a bit of political power. Jesus answered
questions about adultery, paying taxes to Caesar, as well as taught
about many of the Old Testament civil laws given to Israel. The
apostle Paul caught on. In Romans chapter 13 Paul wrote the civil
servant is God’s servant to execute, not his own but God’s version of,
justice. The definition of good vs evil (in a civil sense) was to be
God’s definition. This “God” is the one Christian Triune God. It is
not a pluralistic idea. Matthew, as most Christians today, believe
religious liberty can be applied outside Christianity to
pantheistic, Islamic, etc., even atheistic religions (or philosophy if
that sect refuses to identify their moral beliefs as religious).

Perhaps this error explains why he jumps over early American
Christianity embedded in a majority of the 13 colonies’ civil legal
systems when he says “So, where do we start? We begin by exploring
the strategy that made the first Christians phenomenally successful.”

Getting back to the good stuff, Matthew, thank you for the
encouragement. Yes, I do want to get on to be “a better version of
myself”. I want to create following after God and His Son Jesus
Christ.

Categories
book review

Review of _The Post-American World_ by Fareed Zakaria, Norton, 2009.

 Fareed is an Indian who decided to stay in America after getting his post-secondary education here. His current job is with Newsweek magazine. He captures much about America’s position within the world with regard to economics, foreign policy, politics, etc. His story paints a picture of progressive thinking, i.e., strong central governments which have firm control of the nation in those subjects mentioned above. He has an optimistic view of humanistic planning and downplays religion.When religious differences among nations surface he views that as being either minor or unnecessarily ugly.

His topic is huge. As a result, in one book of just under 300 pages he can include only the details which corroborate his views. Fareed does this well. Obviously, he overlooks many details which don’t fit his own world-view.

Why did I take time to read a book written by a non-Christian? The short answer is because my son asked me to. However, after reading, and being inside the context of Fareed’s worldview, I decided it was worth it.

What did I learn? Although Fareed never defines his own worldview, it appears to be secular humanism. Based on his writing he appears to be agnostic in his own belief about God. From Fareed I learned that it’s hopeless to attempt to talk about morality as being a derivative of one’s religion to someone of this worldview. In his thinking man interprets something (what that is remains subjective and undefined often involving compromise) as a definition of good an devil. In civil matters collective man (humanist) must come to some moral decision but it is a democratic process and thus subjective. What is good (or evil) today may not be tomorrow. What’s good (or evil) in the Chinese culture may coexist with a different good (or evil) definition in America. A Christian may claim to have their morality based on the Bible but to someone like Fareed this is nonsense. Reading between the lines, perhaps Fareed believes the only role of religion would be that some religious (church) creed is the dictator of one’s moral beliefs, i.e., an ecclesiastic humanist morality. Thus, in his belief someone who considers a religious moral belief to equal civil morality is delusional or certainly misguided.

Do Christians really expect civil morality to come from the Bible? Is there such a thing as a moral standard which God expects man to put in place within those (self as well as various civil) governments over him? These are not new questions. In fact, the strong ‘yes’ to the former question but the differing answers to the latter are what distinguished the 13 original colonies from one another in early America. But something happened over the years. Today most Christians in America don’t take seriously Hebrews 5:14, which commands the mature believer to distinguish good from evil. Most Christians view civil morality as being secular “humanist” to some degree.There is no counting how many Christians I have heard repeat that phrase “separation of church and state” to justify having a secular civil government. Some may claim to want a biblical moral civil law, but (probably) not really. The immature Christian’s action doesn’t square with their stated belief. So, how should a mature Christian confront a humanist thinker such as Fareed, or even an immature Christian? An acceptance of Christ as (civil) King cannot begin with Matthew 28:18 or Romans chapter 13. Instead, the approach the Apostle Paul took (Acts chapter 17) to explain Christianity to the thinkers in his day is the right one. His discussion started with creation (vs 24) then went to the fall (vs 30), where good and evil fits in, then to redemption (vs 31).

I also understand a bit more of the squishy religion called Hinduism. Perhaps the best way to explain it is that Hinduism allows any and all religious views so long as they are not fanatical. In other words it allows, even encourages,inoculation(s) but don’t ever get a particular full blown”disease”. This explains why my conversations with Hindus often lead to how much my Savior, Jesus Christ, means to me but with a response of “yes, I believe that too” in reply.

Fareed reminded me of the ideal government, mentioning a benevolent King or dictator as the best form of civil government.

What did I learn from what Fareed *didn’t* say? As a self-confessing non-Christian he denies the possibility of anyone having a personal relationship with the Divine. He doesn’t come right out and say a belief in God is bad or dangerous but his discourse always suggests the avoidance of the Divine is the better choice. He suggests that neither Japan nor China is “immoral” but rather that only certain human rights maybe different from the West’s. I suppose China’s one-child policy or willingness to trade with governments known to murder their own people, e.g. Zimbabwe, which Fareed mentioned, is “moral”. He mentions that Enlightenment philosophers had adopted Confucianism as a good thing but never discusses the bloodbath of the French Revolution that resulted from this line of thinking. Fareed quotes the Rig Veda, the Hindu Creation Hymn. In spite of God “creating” the human with a mind to understand “Creation”, the Hindu tosses this ability and desire aside in an agnostic way. In contrasting this view with the Book of Genesis he claims “Hindus are deeply practical” when doing trade or commerce internationally. Thus, by extension, are those who take the Book of Genesis seriously then impractical in international trade?

Not giving a reason why, he does mention that in 1890, America had become #1 in the world economically. But, in all other categories he considered America a “weak” state as if this was a bad thing saying “the American state–Washington–grew, centralized, and gained unquestioned precedence over the states… and presidents … began defining America as a world power.” I tend to think the “weak” central state was a good thing where most civil power resided in the states or counties. But it was the self-discipline or self government which most Americans displayed which pointed to their true King over our nation. The role of our Heavenly Benevolent King as given in America the Beautiful:
America! America!
God mend thine ev’ry flaw,
Confirm thy soul in self-control,
Thy liberty in law.
is nowhere to be seen within this book’s pages.

What caused Britain’s decline as a world power? He asks and attempts to give possible answers but neglects the obvious: as said by Ben Franklin, “The longer I live, the more convincing proofs I see of this truth, that God governs in the affairs of men. And if a sparrow cannot fall to the ground without His notice, is it probable that an empire can rise without His aid?” If there is one theme of the Old Testament which cannot be overlooked, it’s that God corporately blesses nations which obey Him and punishes those nations which disobey. Again absent within this book.

Western Civilization started with the Christianizing of the Old Roman Empire. Christians rose to power because they could be”trusted”. They were known to be “honest” and “fair”. General Sada who served under Sadaam Hussain knows where these virtues come from. Fareed has yet to learn.

Categories
book review

Review of Nancy Pearcey’s _Total Truth_

A while back I read Nancy Pearcey’s book Total Truth. My
main concern is to address what she has to say about two
things. One, the idea of no (religious/spiritual) neutrality
and two, what are her views on the religious/spiritual nature
of civil government.

In general I would say she does a very good job with the first
point. As a Francis Shaffer disciple she shows that religious
thought, attitudes, presuppositions, i.e., belief, form our
every actions. She spends many words exposing the myth that
Christianity affects only one of the two spheres of life. She
uses many word couples to define what she means by these two
spheres: mind vs heart, private vs public, personal preference
vs scientific knowledge, values vs facts, sacred vs secular,
revelation vs reason, etc. She acknowledges many belief
systems and identifies what is their tightest held (core)
presupposition and even says “In this sense, we could say that
every alternative to Christianity is a religion.” She ties
this into the first point of the; creation, fall, redemption
model; given to us as Christians. In other words, who (or
what) is held as “creator”? What is one’s belief in the
“fall”? Who or what is wrong and needs fixing? She reminds
the Christian of our cultural mandate given both to Adam and
again to Noah and finally realized in the Great Commission
(simply because this cultural mandate was never revoked). In
other words, how can I apply “redemption” or attempt to make
culture better?

Taking up a good chunk of the book is a treatment of
Intelligent Design vs (macro) evolution. If you are
interested in this subject at all Nancy’s comments alone in
this area are worth your reading of this book. One of the
ramifications of our culture’s acceptance of evolution instead
of Divine creation is found in civil law. Nancy says “Holmes
took the idea that the source of law is nothing but evolving
custom. Whereas traditional Western legal philosophy had
based law on an unchanging source (on natural law, derived
ultimately from divine law).” This pragmatic view of law and
customs “inevitably leads to a pluralism of beliefs, all of
them transient and none of them eternally or universally
true.” In a sense, this is the Southern Baptist view of
politics. Dr. Richard Land preaches political pluralism as a
good thing for our culture. But that’s another book review.
Nancy quotes Denzel in a way that even she approves of a
political pluralistic society. “It became clear to Denzel
that in a pluralistic society, Christians need to master
apologetics …”

In conclusion of point one let me quote Nancy. “… it is
possible for even a Christian to be controlled by Satan and do
his work. There is no neutral ground in the spiritual battle
between the forces of God and the forces of the devil. If
some area of our lives is not fully submitted in obedience to
God, then in practice we are under the control of Satan in
that area — giving him the allegiance that belongs to God
alone.”

Concerning the second point, what does Christianity or the
Bible have to say about civil government I started out
hopeful. Early in her book on page 34 she writes “I can say
from experience that few hold an explicitly Christian
political philosophy.” She went on to quote a political
staffer who also was a committed Christian “I’m politically
conservative, not because I see how they’re rooted in the
Bible.” She concludes this early paragraph in her book “[The
staffer] knew he should formulate a biblically based
philosophy of government, but he simply didn’t know how to
proceed.” But where does she go from there?

Nancy says “I suggest that the assumption of autonomous
individualism is a central factor in the breakdown of American
society today.” Does she apply this to certain religious or
civil thinking? She says “the priesthood of all believers was
taken to mean religion of the people, by the people, and for
the people.” She mentions John LeLand as one of the backers
of individual liberty in both ecclesiastical as well as
political thought. Toward the end of her book Nancy mentions
the common error. Popular evangelicals were sounding the same
note as the early social contract theorists … who regarded
social structures … formed by the consent of autonomous
individuals living in a ‘state of nature’.”

Nancy concludes with “the dilemma is that humans irresistibly
and unavoidably make moral judgments — and yet nonbibilical
worldviews give no basis for them.” So then what about moral
judgments involving civil law and punishment that have no
biblical basis? She danced about this question but never
really attempted to take it on.

In the study guide section of the book she mentions that “back
in the age of state churches, it was Christian dissenters who
framed the case for pluralism and religious liberty. Today,
in the age of state schools, Christians ought to be framing
the case for pluralism and freedom in education as well.”

This seemed to contradict what she had written earlier about
individual autonomy being a major plank of the evil two-story
culture theory. This bothered me so much that I asked her
“[you wrote that] ‘Christian dissenters who framed the case
for pluralism and religious liberty’ Was this ‘case’ made
using Scriptural exegesis?” She actually replied — but in a
two-story cultural manner! Is it any wonder that our
Christian politicians who desire to be biblical are continuing
in languish simply not knowing how to proceed?