Wade-
Here's another word for you: indoctrination. You were born, I'm assuming, of Christian parents who taught you at a young age to believe and respect their religious views. Deny all you want but that is the basis of your religious beliefs and nothing more. Indoctrination. I was brought up Catholic and chose to want more than faith. That is my choice.
Originally Posted by: dingus
Yes, it is. Always. Your choice. I may pray that you change your choice, but you are absolutely correct. Each of us can, and must, choose, our own beliefs. Actually, you and I are both choosing our faiths.
You are mostly wrong in your "history of Wade's faith," though. Yes, I was born and raised by Christian parents (Missouri Synod Lutheran). I was baptized in that faith, and I was confirmed in that faith in 7th grade or thereabouts.
But that's where the accuracy of your narrative ends, I'm afraid. My journey toward faith, my conversion to a truer (for me) Christian belief, has been a much longer and complicated one. One taking most of my adult life: I am now 56. I didn't really start to "get serious" about things until sometime in my mid- to late-40s, after I had finished grad school. Whether my belief matches my father's I don't know -- he died long before God became much more than "the guy whose church I have to go to because I'm a kid and the parents say I have to go."
But it certainly doesn't match my mother's, except insofar as we each consider ourselves Christian and neither has ever questioned the trueness of our claimed faith. (Or rather, she did; given her current state of dementia, I'm not sure what she's thinking now.) She is/was conservative God-fearing Republican of the sort texaspackerbacker labels "normal American" and his critics label "bigots." I am a "none of the above" anarchist who rejects both conservatism and liberalism, and that nothing trumps the Great Commandment. She's very much in tune with the Old Testament, thou-shalt-not-or-thou-shalt-perish, vision, and I'm the New Testament, by faith alone sort. We're both "followers" of Luther's theology, but whereas its all about going to church and socializing for her (or was), whereas I still pretty much avoid church except for Good Friday and Christmas services and have a very fundie Bible approach (sola scriptura, Luther again).
Indeed while I have always responded "Lutheran" when asked, except for the shared "justification by faith" label, my current faith is worlds different from that I professed when a child. Indeed, if I answer those "religion?" questions at all anymore (unlikely), I probably would answer "none" today. For I do not consider my belief a "religion" at all anymore. I agree with Luther's Biblical exegesis (what I know of it), but I don't consider myself of a "Lutheran denomination". Mine is a personal stance of trust and faith, and that is all it is. It is not something designed to fit human categories and human standards. It is a relationship I have with the Divine, my continuing attempts to follow that Great Commandment of His, but I do not see it as membership in a shared "religion." Religions are artifacts of the cultures of flawed human beings, like constitutions and statutes and football teams.
I am a Christian, yes, but not in the sense of "tries to follow some human-proscribed set of rules and dogma" coming out of the Vatican or my local synod. I am a Christian in the sense that I strive to follow Christ's wishes. Not because he is at the top of my religious hierarchy. Because He is the Word that is with God and that is God.
And trust me, were my mother able to overcome that dementia that she is captive of, she would consider this distinction between "religion" and "faith", or between "church" and "faith" at least as bizarre as most people I try to explain it to.
Just as she thought it utterly bizarre when I decided to spend a week in contemplative retreat at a Benedictine monastery and then, a few years later, five weeks in total eremetic silence at a house of prayer deep in South Texas. No, that's not right. The second she considered bizarre. The first she feared for my salvation, in that I was somehow becoming "Catholic" and would start buying masses for the dead with my deepening interest in the contemplative ideas of Benedict, Thomas Merton, and others.
No, the notion that my belief in Christ is the result of parental or cultural indoctrination, I find utterly ridiculous.
Throughout history there have been more than 3,000 gods and goddesses worshipped all around the world. The arrogance and hubris that goes with thinking that the god your parents raised you to believe in is the one true god is laughable at best. What happens if you're born in India? Egypt? Israel? China? America before Europe found it? But the one you believe in is the true god?
Do I believe there is one true God? Yes, absolutely.
Do I believe that one true God created life, the universe, and everything? Yes. Do I believe that all those other 3,000 gods and goddesses were the creations of the imagination of human beings attempting to make sense of what the one true God created? Yes, that, too.
Is this hubris? Perhaps. But, if so, it is a weird sort of hubris, for my belief is that the nature and character of that One True God not only passes my own understanding, but my ability to understand (Philippians 4:7, to quote that silly little book again). I believe that God "created man in His own image", but I do not claim to know what that means? If I cannot comprehend the God who passes all understanding, how can I know what his image looks like I certainly do not believe that God looks like me, or thinks like me, or does anything like me.
I think it matters not at all where or when you are born. (I forget where I first heard/read this/had itexplained to me. But it is what I believe.) When you are born, you know God, because you see/hear/feel/taste/know God's world. You may not have named Him, but you know Him with your very actions and being of living in His world. If you die before learning of the Bible or even hearing Jesus' name, you die His. He doesn't condemn you for failing to formally acknowledge Him in a creed or words of faith. He loves you because you are part of your creation and you have acknowledged Him by being that. He doesn't require you to acknowledge his salvation of you on the cross any more than he requires you to keep the Law that Moses brought down a thousand years and five thousand miles away.
God requires the kind of stance of faith He requires of me (and, yes, I believe, you) because we know of his sacrifice. Because we have not just experienced His creation, but because we have heard of Him in his Himness. For me to not take the stance of faith that I take is different because my not taking that stance would be an act of refusal, a choice of denial. And it is denial that is the opposite of trust.
As to when unknowing non-acknowledgment becomes knowing denial, that line is God's and God's alone to draw. Unlike the "religious" who debate the value of infant baptism, I would not dream of claim to know His will on this.
And who knows, maybe the One True God does accept some kinds of faith in some of those 3,000 gods and goddesses because they were manifestations of Himself that He designed. I don't know or profess to know. (Philippians 4:7, again).
I only believe that salvation comes only by virtue of the sacrifice that He made, and that the only route to salvation for an individual knowing of His sacrifice lies through faith. I don't claim to know His will beyond that. I don't even claim to know what he requires as evidence of sufficient faith or whether I have shown it yet.
I merely believe.
Is that truly what hubris is?
And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.
Romans 12:2 (NKJV)