Posted by
Bob Siegel on Tuesday, December 18, 2007 3:49:31 AM
Sarah St. John thinks she’s written an original book. It’s called, Is This The Best God Can Do?. She was
talking about this book on the radio yesterday with Michael Medvid. Growing
disillusioned with Christianity, Miss John has embraced a kind of combination
between Christianity and Hinduism.
This, of course, is an impossible thing for any thinking person to do but
generally when religion is the subject, people assume that all thought can go
out the window. They figure it’s only about blind faith anyway and they have
very emotional, non-rational reasons for making their choices. This does not
have to be the case. If God truly exists, He is a genuine being, an authentic
entity, and very involved with reality.
Miss John admits that her mother’s death threw her into a
faith crisis. She could not believe that her unsaved mother went to hell after
dying, so she decided to stop calling herself a Christian in the classical,
exclusive sense of the term. I am sympathetic to the woman’s predicament. No one wants to believe
that a loved one is in hell. Let me say for the record that neither Miss John
nor anyone else needs to assume that they know the eternal destiny of a family
member. Who can say what may have transpired between her mother and God in
those moments of crossing from time into eternity? God looks at the heart. There is even a verse
in Acts 17 that says God takes sincere ignorance into account. I personally think this means people are not
necessarily rejected simply for not having become a Christian. It may depend on
their reasons for the rejection. Jesus died for our sins whether we are aware
or not. Pushing Jesus away deliberately because we’d rather live a life of sin
certainly creates a problem on judgment day. But supposing one was sincerely
misinformed or led astray and turned off by church going hypocrites? Perhaps
God will take that into consideration.
It sad that Miss John did not consider this before discarding
Christianity.
At the same time, Miss John evidently had little if any problem with the
doctrine of hell until it became personal.
For this reason, her changed position becomes just a tad bit
disingenuous. We cannot cherry pick our doctrines. If in fact there is a hell,
then the place will continue to exist whether we like it or not. And if there
is a hell, everyone going there is either a father, mother, sister, brother,
son, daughter, husband, wife, or relative. The rules do not change simply
because we are related.
This leads to the crux of the problem: We should not be asking ourselves
which religion we like. We should be asking ourselves which religion
is true. That did not seem to be a concern for Sarah St. John. Neither did
the contradiction of mixed religions occur to her. She enthusiastically
admitted to accepting the Hindu belief that God is everything. He is all of
nature, trees, mountains, rain and He is also all people and all animals. He is the stars and rocks and
dust…everything. This idea cannot
possibly co-exist with the Biblical definition of God: A thinking, feeling,
sentient being who created the entire universe. According to Christianity, God made the tree. According to Hinduism, God is the tree. We cannot have it both ways.
Miss John also accepts the Hindu idea of reincarnation. She believes
people keep returning and keep evolving. She talked about the changes in
technology as evidence that we are evolving. Actually, the change in technology
proves no such thing. The people who invented the rocket ships were not smarter
than the ones who invented the wheel.
It’s just that the latter had thousands of years of accumulated
information to work off of. Besides, we certainly aren’t evolving morally. The
worst atrocities ever committed against man (such as the Holocaust) were
committed in the twentieth century. The
terrorist acts of the twenty first century are not far behind. So where is this
evolution? And again, this feature of
Hinduism also contradicts the Bible. Jesus taught that we would resurrect after
we die as the same person and that in heaven we will remain that person for all
of eternity.
Now then, saying two religions contradict simply means that at least one
of them is not true. They can very well
both be false. Providing evidence for Christianity goes beyond the scope of
today’s blong entry. But I have many
articles on the subject and have written a whole book about Christian evidence.
(See my website link at the bottom)
As for now, a good start toward critiquing Pantheism (the philosophy
behind the Hindu, “God is everything” idea) would be to ask how evil men like
Hitler or Stalin were a part of God.
Remember, the phrase, “God is everything” sounds great while talking
about cute fuzzy creatures frolicking in the forest. But “everything” is a very
big word.
In any event, I know Miss John is sincere and she sounds like a very nice
lady, but she really isn’t proposing anything new. The combination of religions
isn’t exactly an earth shattering idea. I’ve been hearing about this mixture of
religions for years. It comes up in
almost every conversation I engage in and there are whole religions based on
the idea of mixing several faiths together such as the Unitarians and the
Ba’hai faith. Actually, syncretistic religion took place as far back as
Biblical times. God condemned it. He
called it idol worship.
The Bob
Siegel Show can be heard every Sunday from 3:00 to 4:00 PM on KCBQ 1170 on the dial or KCBQ.com to listen live
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