Dear D.
,
Way back when on this thread you responded to my "I know that you are being sarcastic post", and Saturday finally arriving I can now respond.
You said quite a bit in a few sentences that I would like to respond to, unfortunately I do not have the "gift" of a sharp wit like you do, so forgive my long and rambling answers.
We were talking about "drawing moral lines", or rules, and I took your response to be one that scoffed at such a notion as being unneccesary. Then, I believe you argued that the Bible, and my faith in it, were no different than blindly following GG; your contention, if I have it right, is that my faith in a personal God is a narrow type of "club membership" that views life through a "straw." Also, that Christianity is just a male created means to control others via assuming a God given moral superority over others lives.
This thread has had some who answered some of these challenges listed above very well. I thought that Joseph Resigner's post answered perfectly the last item about moral superiority.
I would like to respond to your challenge to a belief in "a personal God," as all the above questions are tied together on this point.
Prior to my new birth I believed in the Eastern religous view that God was a universal consciousness; that God was everything, and as such everthing was part of God. Indeed, evil was part of God, as was good, and that we all existed in a kind of eternal circle of existence.
Such belief can bring a feeling of great contentment for those plagued by their conscience. It can also bring great relief to a feeling of frustration in struggling against the concept that God has moral expectations for my life.
This last paragraph was the reason for my rejecting the Christian concept of God and accepting the "god is a force" type idea. The immediate relief I felt led me to a course of moral and psychological passivity, that travelled a path to a deep narcissism. I was a very nice guy, and never hurt a flea, but lived life in isolation w/o any positive impact on others. Had I been left alone I would have ended up never getting married, having children, having a productive career, and could have been a hermit to my days end.
I lived in a cave in the mountains, and began to be oppressed by spiritual forces that I did not understand. I now believe that these powers were demonic, but that is not the important point, rather it was a means to awaken me from the path of least resisitance that I took.
I then cried from the heart, "God, whoever, or whatever you are; I will do what you want!" The oppresive spiritual forces vanished and a joy that I never had came to my life!!
This was not done in a church meeting, and I had never heard of the Assembly at that time, rather it was a personal experience between me and God alone. If your experiences with the Gospel were all Assembly linked, this could be a problem with your ability to separate God from a kind of group think. There are those who leave the Assembly, and once the group controls are lifted, they realize they have no connection with God at all.
My cry was not answered because of it's theological correctness, it was the moral component, "I will do what you want," that accomplished the necessary breakthrough.
The essence of reality is not "God consciousness", but that God is holy: "God is light", the Bible states, and "this light lightens every person that comes into the world." This light is moral sensitivity to what is good and evil.
Though I tried to escape my conscience via a belief that morality was not an issue, it was being forced to admit that it was an issue that led to my discovery of true peace and joy.
My "facing of the moral issue" did not mean that I was able to change the fact of my own moral failings, but I realized instantly that the problem had been resolved. I learned later the reason for this, and that was that God Himself, in the person of the Son, gave His life to take my sins away.
God as a person makes so much more sense than God as a force. The fact of creation means that there is a designer and with that design comes a purpose to life. The fact that we do have moral awareness means that the designer gave us this attribute. W/o moral awareness and distinctions we sink into an abyss of moral relatavism that brought to birth such "great" movements as Nazism and Communism. This also brought the hippie generation of "free love" that brought the resurgence of almost defeated STD's and some new ones to boot!
This salvation understanding is entirely individual and comes from an one-on-one interaction with God. Group membership in an organization, with loyalty to a dogma, will never produce the personal enlightment that comes from regeneration via the Spirit of God.
"Many will come from the East and West", as Jesus said, and make this personal discovery, since God has given everyone moral awareness (a conscience); this "generation of the righteous" is not going to be a narrow select group of church going members, but spans all time and the Globe!
The foundation of my faith is not based on the moral superiority of my character, rather on a personal transformation of my heart. This change came from conviction of my conscience and the forgiveness of sins.
The Gospel's power to change lives is not through a gift of moral superiority to others, rather as a demonstration of God's great mercy and grace to broken and needy folks.
This spirit of love and forgiveness was largely absent from the Assembly system, and instead a harsh caricature of the face of God was displayed. Groups can lose their Gospel moorings and drift from "the grace of God in truth" and do great damage to people ( i.e., "destroyed faith, stumbled lives, offended little ones, etc.).
If one is unable to separate the loving God of the gospel from the twistings of Assembly, and other group think distortions, they may have never experienced the most wonderful discovery of personal salvation through reception of the Holy Spirit.
God Bless, Mark C.