Sep 15, 2012

Beyond Doubt

Written 8/15/12. I consider this "Part 2" of a journey that first became real in Haiti. You can read about that here.

Last night I spent some time with a friend at an impasse in life. We talked about his legalistic religious background, where everything is works-based and his family doesn't allow men to grow hair past their ears in fear of losing salvation. Yet life circumstances were forcing him to question a lot about his beliefs, convictions, and family. None of the answers were easy. Belief in a salvation of grace alone would necessitate a horrible fight and separation from his mother, his best friend and only real pillar in life. All in pursuit of a faith hardly understood and a God barely known. With his current foundation crumbling, the end question was: on what must he base his faith?

But now I stand asking the same question. I have lived in the church for twenty years and led Bible studies, boys' cabins, and men's halls towards Christ. And so much more. I’ve walked in God's presence, laughed at countless inside jokes only He and I understand, and embarrassingly wept in public over sin and grace. I’ve seen, I’ve felt, I’ve tasted, I’ve known.

So why is that not enough? During moments of spiritual intimacy, I feel this black doubt perching on the corner of my heart, driving questions into my head like "what if it's not real", "what if this is all just a waste of time", and "what if everyone else sees". To which I usually snap “shut up, I’m not supposed to be thinking that, go away”. I don't know what upsets me more - the presence of the doubt or my inability to prevent it from coming back.

On what have I based my faith?


Facts won't work. Every incontrovertible "fact" in my head - persona, experience, blessings - can be shoved and explained away by mental rushes, perception, or coincidence. Chemicals in my brain can warp perception of reality, and momentary feeling is no foundation for a world-shaking faith. 

And the past is no foundation either. Devoting yourself to something just because it makes your family happy, or because you've developed hard-to-break habits around it, is laughable. Countless people have defied family both in pursuit and hate of Christ. Habit is no indicator of truth, as neither are history or ritual.

What about creation and the universe itself? There are many claims about this planet and its origin; in deliberate avoidance of that debate I rest on two facts. First, everywhere I look I see infinitely complex systems begetting endlessly intertwined life. Second, that all of these systems seem remarkably intentional and I must assume an intentional creator. Perhaps that's the strongest yet - art denotes the existence of an artist. Yet again I trip over myself, as that sentiment is based on my own vulnerable and fickle perceptions. Observation of the natural world is a strong base, but not the final cornerstone on which to base faith.

Therefore the foundation of faith cannot be based on anything I see, feel, or know. It must be something other, something impregnably unaffected by mine or anyone else's perceptions. It must be the foundation of all foundations, something all-powerful and all-knowing. I guess we'd probably call that God. But to start to believe in any god, your brain requires reason and evidence, both of which are flawed by perception and feeling. The circle begins again.

There's an impasse here. As I know my perceptions are faulty, I cannot base my faith on anything I sense. Yet without some sensed proof there's no thought towards faith in the first place.

Credit: xkcd.com

A leap has to happen. A leap letting go of the expectation of knowing, of proof, of quantifiable certainty; if I could quantify it I couldn't trust it anyways. It has to be a Faith rooted in faith -a leap of pure, unwavering trust that the chasm has another side. It's a letting go of what I know and just trusting that something…else is there across the gap. It's believing in the unfeelable, unseeable, and unknowable, then and letting that belief fuel everything in life.

Instantly at the thought my deathgrip grows tighter on the mental handhold of what I know, and all the "what ifs" pound into my head again. What if it's all fake, what if it's not real, what if you fall and everyone sees? But those are exactly the same questions plaguing me at the beginning. They circle around like sharks biting tail of the other, neither finding any end but their own. Futile. Unmoving. Stagnant. And I hate stagnation.

You know what, this is stupid. I'm always that guy that jumps first, the one that unthinkingly hurls himself headfirst into things. Why do I fearfully cling to the wall only here? Screw the damn doubt questions. I thirst deepest for action, for purpose, for integrity, and this is the only recourse I have for all three. I don't care if I fall. I don't care if people see. I want to find the truth and truly live, so I'm jumping.

See you on the other side.


Aug 22, 2012

Redemption

Written 12/08/10.

I don't get the cross.

Or forgiveness, for that matter. Be honest with yourself - if someone you truly cared for consistently flaunted your love, what would you do? If everyone treated each other how we treat God, we'd hate each other. We get sidetracked by almost every shiny thing that pops up in our path; substitute almost anything for our time with our Lover. How can he keep forgiving us through that? How many times have I tearfully sworn love and loyalty, only to turn and slap God in the face the next day? How many turns will this take until it "sticks"? How many tears must flow to change my soul? How many mountaintops must I fall from until I learn to fly? The first lines from Chris Rice's "Clumsy" come to mind:
"I get so clumsy, I get so foolish, I get so stupid sometimes, then I feel so useless. But you're saying you love me, and you still wanna hold me, that you wanna be near me, that you're making me holy...still making me holy".
Yes we all know the Sunday School answer. God loves us just that much to forgive us every time we sin. Thank you so much. 

You know what? Forget our all-knowing mind for a second, and answer with your heart. How long must this go on? How long must I grieve the heart of God? Why does He redeem us? Relational pain is a horrible hell, but could you imagine going through it almost continually, every day, just because you love so many people that much? This is crazy. There are so many ways to explain "Oh, how He loves us"…but why. Why does God love us? Why does he forgive? Why did he die and go through hell for us? Why did he create humanity in the first place?  "For His glory". Well, crap. Right there we cross over into the deepest part of theology - the mind of God - and reach the end of human understanding. Sure, God is the only being in the universe that can justifiably glorify Himself, so what else would be more glorifying than an image of Himself?

Forget the mental gymnastics. I've heard them all my life. I'm not looking for rational answers, and I don't think you are either. Reason can impact the heart, but not change it.

From My Utmost for His Highest: 
"It does not matter who or what we are, there is absolute reinstatement into God by the death of Jesus Christ and by no other way, not because Jesus Christ pleads, but because He died. It is not earned, but accepted."
I don't get that. I live life by doing, by practicing and doing better and getting my work's due. And when I just mess up all the time, I ruin the one thing in my life that could save me. Continuing from Utmost:

"All the pleading which deliberately refuses to recognize the Cross is of no avail; it is battering at another door than the one which Jesus has opened."

But what does that mean? What does "recognizing the Cross" look like? What's the ten-step, ten-minute plan to overnight Cross recognition? I've heard the story of the cross so many times, but has my heart ever truly grasped the depth of the Atonement?

I think this just deserves incredulity. An passionate kind of disbelief that fuels our every action - a true realization of the power of the Cross. The insanity of the Atonement. And to let that grind our sense of self-ownership and any speck of pride into nothing. We are not our own, never were our own, never will be our own. It's never been and never will be  about us, and nothing we ever do can change the horrible blackness in our souls. I found something awesome on this.

"I think it means we serve a God who loves redemption more than we can possibly imagine. We may feel disqualified for his mercy. We may feel too dirty for his grace. We may feel only a series of white knuckle works will open back up his gates. But, that’s not what his love letter says. We are not shown a steady parade of heroes who became even more heroic in the hands of God. We are shown a parade of failures who found forgiveness. Losers who found love. Hopeless who found hope."
                                                                                - Jon Acuff

If nothing else, in realizing just what a hopeless loser I am apart from God, I've learned a bit of how prayer is such a fantastic answer to everything. So that's what I did. I prayed. God, I'm an idiot, I don't get this. Can you at least help pry open my mind to this? Sanctify my broken heart and heal my blind eyes to see your truth?

That very night I'd messed up again. The next morning walking to class, I felt myself sheepishly standing before God, yet again trying to crawl towards him; whimpering a pathetic "I'm…sorry" with all the above questions ransacking my mind. Not again, how can I go back again, what can I do this time? As the hopelessness began to creep over me, a sentence was distinctly heard:

"You've already been forgiven".

...and there was no question about it.