Points to Ponder as a Christian

by Mandi

I was surprised to find this posted over on Martian’s blog, but it’s definitely something Christians need to read.

I believe there are millions of Americans–faithful Christians, Jews and Muslims–who are tired, fed up and angry. They want this country to once again be the beacon of moral clarity it once was. They want this nation to lead when it sees fellow human beings dying of hunger and disease. They want this nation to lead when it sees melting glaciers and rising oceans due to global warming. They want this nation to reflect the best of their religious traditions when it comes to taking care of our brothers and sisters no matter where they live, of taking care of this planet that God created and entrusted to us to cherish and respect.

In my book, “Middle Church, Reclaiming the Moral Values of the Faithful Majority from the Religious Right,” I have a chapter entitled, “Changing our Beatitudes: Guideposts for Deep-Water Citizenship.” The Beatitudes refers to the section of the Gospel of Matthew (5:3-12) and Luke (6:20-23) where Jesus has a list outlining what are his priorities for his followers: “Blesses are the peacemakers…, Blessed are the meek…, Blessed are the poor in spirit…,” etc. It is my firm belief that if we are to reclaim our nation’s values that the rest of the world has looked up to for so many years we must shake ourselves from our complacency and connect the values of the faith we share with the faith of the nation we cherish. I know that we can do this.

The reference to “deep waters” refers to a saying of Jesus in Luke’s Gospel. I see it today as Deep-Water Citizenship which is a simple plan I humbly offer to change today’s world with seven beatitudes.

1. Blessed are the faithful risk-takers. Too many faith leaders are silent on matters Jesus cared about deeply. My evangelical friend, Tony Campolo, laments that he can’t quote Jesus in churches these days because folks don’t want to hear about loving your enemies or overcoming evil with good. Faith leaders should be grounding their message from the pulpit in the deep waters of Jesus.

2. Blessed is the courageous remnant. The Hebrew prophets were not very popular. But they remind us even majorities can be wrong. Jesus quoted those prophets all the time. They were vilified by those in power. Some were stoned. But they spoke the truth and found the courage to do so. We need to find that same courage and speak up for what is right. Sometimes the majority needs to be led.

3. Blessed are those who love the stranger. If there is one thing common to the religious traditions of Abraham–the Muslims, Christians and Jews–it’s the Golden rule. If we really, really kept that law there would fewer people killed in name of God in the world today.

4. Blessed are those who read the Whole Bible. I’ve often said you can use various verses of the Bible to justify almost anything…slavery, polygamy, subjugation of women and children, even child sacrifice. But Middle Church has to own up to the whole of the Bible. We have to take seriously the words of Jesus when he tells us to love God with all our heart, mind and strength, and to love our neighbor as we love our very selves. How important is what is called the Greatest Commandment? Jesus even answered that: “On these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets.” (Matthew 22:40)

5. Blessed are the Faithful Voters. What would our government do if Middle Church voters followed the Greatest Commandment? We would trigger a seismic and historic change in American politics. I don’t care which party is in power because I think the faithful voter should speak Gospel truth to power regardless of party loyalty. If we are to be faithful voters, politicians must be afraid to cut welfare as they are to raise taxes, as eager to make peace as they are to start wars.

6. Blessed are those who challenge us to work for Justice. A lot of mainline Protestant pastors tell me they’re afraid if they preach prophetically they’ll lose members in their already dwindling congregations. They’ll lose those members if they don’t preach prophetically. We need leaders with vision who can take the Gospel imperatives to help “the least of these”, our brothers and sisters, in cooperation with corporations and government. We need everyone’s shoulder to the wheel to rid our towns and cities of poverty, homelessness and hunger. We are the leaders we’ve been waiting for. Let’s get to work.

7. Blessed are those with a sense of humor and a sense of hope. At the heart of Christianity is hope. We are a people of hope. And we should be people who can laugh in the face of great adversity. We must not let the enormity of what we see in today’s world to overwhelm us into inaction. We must always draw on that hope with its companion joyful laughter to carry on this Gospel gladness. The question I ask my fellow Christians in Middle Church is, “Do we value our faith enough to reclaim it?”

I do. I believe in my hopeful heart of hearts there are millions like me who want to reclaim the values this country once held dear. We’ve been distracted recently. We need to get back to the Greatest Commandment, the Sermon on the Mount and the Jesus who reached beyond the boundaries of his society to include everyone.

That was written by Rev. Bob Edgar, Secretary of the National Council of Churches USA.


8 Responses to “Points to Ponder as a Christian”

  1. Christian Eye says:

    I totally agree! The only thing I didn’t like was his wording “rewriting the beatitudes”. It makes it sound like he is rewriting scripture. But what is seems he really is doing is just rephrasing it so that the political can see it from a political mindframe. As I said before – its time to take a stand for what we believe in! Awesome post! :)

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  2. ontheedgeofmyseat says:

    Wow, I’m convicted and heartened all at the same time. Thanks for sharing. i’m definately feeling a need lately to get more into the political side of the US (which I’ve never had a passion for) in order to change things.

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  3. Jim Jordan says:

    I believe Christians need to read the beatitudes more than they need former Democrat congressman and ultra-left winger Bob Edgar to rewrite them. The answer to the ultra-right is not the ultra-left. Sorry to rain on your parade:(

    “Jesus never said one word about homosexuality, never said one word about civil marriage or abortion,” [NCC-USA Sec. Bob]Edgar said.

    I don’t know which Jesus Mr. Edgar was talking about.

    He also said, in his “beatitudes”, “Blessed are those who read the Whole Bible”.

    Bob Edgar either hasn’t read the Whole Bible or he is a liar.

    I think I’ll stick to my Whole Bible and follow the real Jesus Christ.

    In His service.

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  4. Carmelwww.nocaramel4u.blogspot.com says:

    Mr. Jordan… thank you for informing us about Mr. Edgar.

    It does seem apparent that he has misinterpreted the Bible.

    However Amanda had a post on there that was relevant and did encourage other Christians. While it may not have come from the most Christ-like of people, it still serves as a good message.

    God uses different people to give the message that He wants whether the person knows it or not. God could have even used Bob Edgar to deliver this message to Christians who need to hear it.

    -Sometimes- it’s not the person delivering the message we should focus on, but the message itself.

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  5. Jim Jordan says:

    Carmel. That would be an ad hominem attack on Mr. Edgar. Fair enough. Then look at his beatitudes.

    1. Blessed are the faithful risk-takers.

    2. Blessed is the courageous remnant.

    3. Blessed are those who love the stranger.

    4. Blessed are those who read the Whole Bible.

    5. Blessed are the Faithful Voters.

    6. Blessed are those who challenge us to work for Justice.

    7. Blessed are those with a sense of humor and a sense of hope.

    Sounds like a Hallmark card. Deep.
    Now, here are the real beatitudes.

    3″Blessed are the poor in spirit,
    for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
    4Blessed are those who mourn,
    for they will be comforted.
    5Blessed are the meek,
    for they will inherit the earth.
    6Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness,
    for they will be filled.
    7Blessed are the merciful,
    for they will be shown mercy.
    8Blessed are the pure in heart,
    for they will see God.
    9Blessed are the peacemakers,
    for they will be called sons of God.
    10Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness,
    for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
    11″Blessed are you when people insult you, persecute you and falsely say all kinds of evil against you because of me. 12Rejoice and be glad, because great is your reward in heaven, for in the same way they persecuted the prophets who were before you.

    It would take you months of intense research and prayer to explore these blessings and write down enough of the applications they have for our lives to feel like you have a command of what they’re saying. Such is the Word of God. It opens our minds up because it’s written by the programmer Himself. All I’m saying is to be suspicious of copies.

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  6. Carmelwww.nocaramel4u.blogspot.com says:

    Oh I abolutely agree Mr. Jordan.

    I know that Bob Edgar’s “be attitudes” while encouraging to and for some Christians does not take the place of the Original.

    I’m just saying… if it lifts up Christians and encourages them in their walk with God and if it’s a message that doesn’t disagree with what God says, then don’t tear it down because of who gave the message.

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  7. Musicguy says:

    Actually, Jesus himself didn’t say a word about homosexuality. Why?? Because there wasn’t a word for it then. Historical context means a whole hell of a lot when reading the bible.

    (And save the time of posting the Matthew verse where Jesus says marriage is between one man and one woman. Again folks, historical context. Look to see what was going on outside Jerusalem in the first century.)

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