I have worked during the Advent season to avoid writing constantly about politics. Instead, I have tried to devote some of my time to focus on Christianity, given the whole season exists due to the birth of Jesus. On my radio show, I occasionally branch off from the daily news and politics into discussions of faith and culture. Having done so for so long, I have gotten asked multiple times to fill in for preachers on Sunday mornings. Â
After declining so many invitations to preach, I finally went to seminary, enrolling at the Reformed Theological Seminary to start work on an M.Div. degree. Once all the small churches came back and found out I was at a reformed seminary, the invitations dried up. That makes me chuckle all the time. The education along the way has been deeply rewarding and I have been able to engage more confidently in the subject of religion and faith.
A subject that occasionally crops up has come up again in an email I received from a lady in Lincoln, Neb. after a column I wrote. Debra wants to know if I really believe that a belief in Jesus is necessary to get into Heaven. Yes, I really believe that.
I am pretty sure I would not want a religion in which all comers get a pass. The whole idea of universalism, i.e. everyone gets into heaven, is anathema to the idea of justice. There are awful people who do awful things and I believe in a just God. Sharing eternity with unrepentant monsters would not be just.
But what about all the good people? This is a debate that surrounds us in politics as much as theology. In the present age, we have too good a view of humanity. Individual people can be good people, but collectively we have several thousand years of history showing the collective mob tends towards ill. As for the individual good people, show me a saint and I’ll show you someone who sinned. We all sin. As scripture tells us, we all fall short. None of us deserve eternity. It is only by God’s grace and our trust in him that we obtain it.
Why Jesus then? There are other religions. Why is Christianity the only, exclusive path to salvation? This is a matter of faith. As much as a Muslim believes theirs is the only way to eternity, I believe in Christianity. It is not a blind faith. Unlike other religions where the founders witnessed private events and private miracles and became designated prophets who could change things up until their death, Christianity is a religion built on a public ministry and public miracles of a man not claiming to be a prophet, but God himself.
We have the eyewitness testimony of Matthew, John, Paul, James, Jude, Peter, Mark, Luke, the eyewitnesses Luke interviewed, the students of John, Paul, Peter, and others. We have an eyewitness written record that goes back to only a few decades after Christ’s resurrection. We have the written works of students of the Apostle John recounting the things John taught them. We have over 5,000 copies of manuscripts written within a few hundred years of the resurrection. No other religion has the copious, written documentation compiled within such a short period of time, save for the Judaism on which Christianity is premised. No other religion except Judaism has a sustained history of persecution against its followers and yet thrived. And no other religion, even including Judaism, is sent into mission fields.
Buddhism, Islam, Judaism, etc. all have geographic anchors. Christianity is a global religion of enormous consequence free from the shackles of a geographic capital. Even most secular histories put Jesus’s crucifixion on the top ten list of most important moments in human history.
Ultimately, however, I do believe by faith. I believe because I see the interactions of a living God in my life. My faith sustained me when my wife was given six months to live (a misdiagnosis), sustained me as I lay in a hospital bed on the verge of death, and sustains me as my wife now battles her cancer. Yes, I really do believe these things and am not ashamed of them.
Jesus is the living God — Yahweh incarnate. We celebrate his birth in this season and I’m glad to be blessed with a platform where I can share his good news. Perhaps cancel culture or a secular elite that tires of Jesus talk can keep me from growing my radio show nationally or shut me down even here, but cancel culture cannot cancel the cross.
I agree with you 100 percent! We may disagree politically, but the beliefs you talk about I share. Is not it wonderful to be able to disagree with someone, have a reasonable discussion, and not call for each other's head? Of particular repugnance to me, is church people who when they disagree, simply because they have a different opinion, want to sentence each other to hell. Well it is not our mission to do that. OUR mission is to spread the good news of Jesus Christ.
About justice. No one can fool God. I have had discussions with others who dismiss the idea of hell, and say "If it is true, I will just ask for forgiveness on my deathbed, and God will accept me. " No one knows their time of death so imagine the arrogance of someone who tries to fool the Creator of the Universe with a false repentance! And about justice. Do people think they will have free will in hell? Free will is a God thing, not a satan thing.
Merry Christmas to all and pray for peace on earth!
"...cancel culture cannot cancel the cross."
BAM!! That's what I'm talkin' bout! Go Erick!