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Eschatology review online
By Ron McRay
April 4, 2002
[This week, I want to share a letter to me from a good friend of mine,
and then an article that she sent to me. While she does mention some
names, it is not a derogatory statement. Make whatever applications you
have to make. I don’t agree totally with some of the wording, but the
basics are worthy of serious consideration. It is lengthy, but if it were
not good, I would not spend my valuable time typing it all in so all of
you might enjoy it. Maybe you want to contact Mr. Clayton yourself. If
any of you do, let me know and I shall see if I can run down his address.
Read and enjoy ~ editor ~]
[The letter]
Dear Ron,
Enclosed is an article that was written by my dear friend, John Clayton.
He has a program called, "Does God Exist." He was a freshman in
college at 16 years old. A brilliant man. He was raised an atheist and
found himself fact to face with his failed belief system when he set out
to prove the Bible was a book of myths. He is a scientist, a geologist of
some renown, and the man who found the oil at Prudea Bay, Alaska. He is
the reason that I am a Christian today. John has been devoured by the
fanatic C of C (Church of Christ-Ron) preacher in California by the name
of Jackson. He has made his life’s work, trying to destroy all the good
work that John has done with young people. And why you ask? Well, John
believe the bible and real science are not at odds with one another. He
believes that if you find a conflict between the two, then you are wrong.
Mr. Jackson believes that the earth is only 7,000 years old and that John
is teaching in error when he says the earth is around 4.5 billion years
old.
Anyway, you will enjoy this. You can replace the words Christian and
Atheist with Baptist and C of C or Catholic and Jew or any entrenched
belief system. This is the same philosophy that I expressed in my email
to you.
I think it is so tragic that we, as professed Christians, cannot set down
at the table, look at God’s word with appreciation of the time, the
culture, and the very essence of who, what, where, when, and how, God
revealed his plan of redemption for all mankind. If we would just come
with an open heart, leave our prejudices and preconceived ideas at the
door and allow God to open his word to us, He would guide us to His
truth. It is there for everyone of us, but our blinders of power and
ego and having to be "right no matter what" attitudes leave us devoid of
the very truth we come in search of.
Well, thank you so much for getting those books out. _____ called me
yesterday to tell me she couldn’t put our book down and she can’t wait
for her husband to get home and read it. [Behold, I am making all
things new -$8.00, postage free.]
Well, you have a good week and get your next book ready to go. You never
know what help lies just around the corner. Love in Christ. Joan Johnson.
PERSPECTIVES AND TRUTH
BY John Clayton
THE BLIND MAN AND THE ELEPHANT
By John Godfrey Saxe
It was six men of Indostan
To learning much inclined,
Who went to see the Elephant
(Thought all of them were blind).
That each by observation
Might satisfy his mind.
The first approached the elephant,
And happening to fall
Against his broad and sturdy side,
At once began to bawl:
"God bless me! But the elephant
Is very like a wall!"
The second, feeling of the tusk,
Cried, "Ho! What have we here
So very round and smooth and sharp?
To me ‘tis mighty clear
This wonder of an elephant
Is very like a spear!"
The third approached the animal,
And happening to take
The squirming trunk within his hands,
Thus boldly up and spake:
"I see," quoth he, "the elephant
Is very like a snake!"
The fourth reached out an eager hand,
And felt about the knee
"what most this wondrous beast is like
Is mighty plain," quoth he;
" ‘Tis clear enough the elephant
is very like a tree!"
The fifth who chanced to touch the ear,
Said: "E’en the blindest man
Can tell what this resembles most;
Deny the fact who can,
This marvel of an elephant
Is very like a fan"
The sixth no sooner had begun
About the beast to grope,
Than, seizing on the swinging tail
That fell within his scope,
"I see, " quote he, "the elephant
Is very like a rope!"
And so these men of Indostan
Disputed loud and long,
Each in his own opinion
Exceeding stiff and strong,
Though each was partly in the right,
And all were in the wrong!
THE MORAL:
So oft in theologic wars,
The disputants, I ween,
Rail on in utter ignorance
Of what each other mean,
And prate about an elephant
Not one of them has seen!
[From an Anthology of the New England Poets, edited by Louis
Untermeyer, Random House, 1948, pages 410-412.]
Probably many of you have read the above poem and perhaps enjoyed it as
much as I do. The problem with the poem, however, is how well it
describes each of us. Whether you are an atheist or a Christian reading
this article, there is a good reason to consider how its message might
apply to you. There is a tendency for each of us to think that we are the
only rational open-minded thinker and that everyone who holds a different
view or interpretation than we do is less that objective in coming to
their conclusions. I would suggest to you that in all matters that you
and I might discuss, there are three points of view – yours, mine, and
the right one. Please notice that I am not saying that mine and the right
one are the same. In all cases, if we could draw a line from me to you,
the truth would be somewhere on that line. It might be closer to you than
it is to me, but it is still between us.
The difference between the atheist and the Christian on this subject is
over whether you and I can ever be congruent with truth. If one holds to
the position that there is a source of total and absolute truth, the
answer to the question is "yes." The Christian believes the Bible to be
such a source. The atheist must believe that man strives for truth
through his intellect and thus truth changes as man’s intellect and
situation changes. Thus, whether something is morally right or morally
wrong is dependent upon the situation, and the term "situation ethics" is
used to describe the method. The question that becomes obvious in this
discussion is over whether the Bible really is absolute in its teachings
or not and does it cover all situations or is man left on his own in many
areas of determining truth.
I believe that both atheists and Christians are, to a great extent, like
the blind men in our poem as they examine the elephant. If the blind men
in the poem had been asked what an elephant was good for, I doubt any of
them would have given a right answer. The one with the tail might have
said an elephant was good for tying of boxes. The one with the trunk
might have said to take in water and blow it out somewhere else. The one
with the foot might have said to build a house with, and so forth.
Both atheists and Christians seem to do the same thing. Instead of
"seeing the whole elephant," people tend to see only the part with which
they have had experience. An enormous number of people in this world see
the Bible as a legislator of morality. Like the blind men, they have felt
the sting of the "thou shalt nots" and know nothing of the rest of the
Bible’s properties. This problem becomes especially obvious when issues
that are not specifically spelled out in the Bible are under discussion.
The Bible does not say, "Thou shalt not drink alcohol," for example. It
does not say, "Thou shalt not clone a human being." There is no passage
that says, "He who wears a toupee is a sinner." In fact, if the Bible
were to provide a specific statement for every moral judgment a man or a
woman might make, it would be so large a book that no one could lift it.
It has been my experience that when people attempt to use the Bible to
answer questions about the creation process and events related to it, the
same error raises its ugly head. People want to find dinosaurs explained
in the Scriptur5es. Many are determined to find the age of the earth and
the processes that God used to prepare the earth for man in the Bible.
Grabbing hold of a particular piece of Scripture, many are like the blind
man holding the tail of the elephant. No comprehensive or overall view is
entertained and the result is a distorted understanding.
When we get down to making moral decisions and when we teach our children
how to make moral decisions, we must comprehend all of God’s teachings.
The bible identifies very few things in completely objective terms. There
are some notable exceptions, such as murder and adultery, which even many
atheists would agree to, but most of the guidelines the Bible gives are
principles of how to decide and not overt "thou shall nots." Some
examples of these principles are:
How does what I am going to do affect others (physically and
spiritually)? See 1 Corinthians 8, 1 Corinthians 10:23-33, Matthew
5:14, 1 Timothy 4:12.
How will my action affect my health? 1 Corinthians 3:16-17, 1
Corinthians 6:19.
How will my choice affect the church? 1 Timothy 3:7, 2 Corinthians
6:14, Ephesians 5:11.
Notice that questions such as drinking, drugs, dress, type of work, and
so forth, can be answered from these perspectives even though a
specific "thou shalt not" is not involved. The Bible deals with the root
of the problem rather than trying to anticipate every moral choice in
which man might place himself. Jesus dealt with this concept beautifully
in the Sermon on the mount. He said that to avoid murder we should fill
our minds with things other than hate. Sexual problems also were dealt
with by going after control of the mind. In Galatians 5:16-26 we are
shown the way to comprehend the whole concept of moral truth by being
given two things from which we can choose. Notice the contrast:
| BAD MORAL INFLUENCES | GOOD MORAL INFLUENCES |
Adultery
Fornication
Uncleanness
Lasciviousness
Idolatry
Witchcraft
Hatred
Murders
Revelings
|
Love
Joy
Gentleness
Faith
Temperance
Peace
Long-Suffering
Goodness
Meekness
|
Atheists and skeptics can never comprehend total truth in more issues
because they have only one part of the "elephant" in hand and that is
self-gratification. An attitude control that helps us deal positively
with others is impossible when the only motivation you logically have is
to serve yourself. Many who claim to be Christians have similar problems
with moral choices because they have not understood the whole basis of
making moral choices. They, too, tend to look only at their own pleasure.
The immediate visible consequences, and what the wisdom of their
associates gives them. Then Christianity is shallow and ineffective
because they have not gotten the whole foundation. No wonder the "light
of the world" is covered so that few in the world can see it.
The evolution question is another good example of seeing only part of the
"elephant." Many scientists have only examined the area. They saturate
their minds with the writing of authors antagonistic to Christianity and
to even those fields of science that deal with man’s uniqueness. By
reading and considering only one aspect of man’s make-up, they miss
important aspects of man’s nature. Not only that, but they cause conflict
with the biblical view that is unwarranted and create problems for
science, schools, and the academic world in general.
Some religious people have also contributed to the evolution controversy
by seeing only a very small part of the issues involved. They have seen
the negative implications of some parts of the theory of evolution. They
realize that a full acceptance of evolutionary theory relegates man to
being just an animal. This conclusion eliminates man’s spiritual make-up
and makes the concept of Jesus’ dying to save our souls meaningless. They
also have seen that to accept such an explanation of man’s origin means
to make the Genesis account allegorical.
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