POC Blog

The random technotheolosophical blogging of Reid S. Monaghan

POC Bundle - 7.18.06

Islamic Watch

What are the little kiddos learning in school today?  Pluralism? Political Correct Speech codes? Diversity? Maybe a little math and a few spelling bee words?  Perhaps in America.   Or maybe that Jews are apes and Christians are swine?  Or maybe that the Muslim must wage jihad in order to spread the faith in battle against the infidel? Or that Jews and Christians are the "enemies" of Muslims?  Well that would be in Saudi Arabia.  There is an interesting article over at MSNBC about what the kiddos are learning in the land of princes and oil.

Technology

Mac's do have some cool stuff going on today...namely cool Logos Bible Software on the way (PC users like me have had this for years) and now a cool Bible Widget to go with.  Mac users, download today


 

The Church 

Mark Driscoll comments on Calvary Chapel's recent statement of concern regarding Emergent.   

Found this on some Tech Web Sites

 
Engadget put out a story about a Jews for Jesus' tract entiteld "What's Next for the iPod guy." It has made its way to being mentioned on Digg, Gizmodo and a few other tech sites...I'm positive if this is real, but it looks to be from what I am able to ascertain. 

Perhaps this is a great example of a bad attempt at contextualization... 

Here is why this sort of evangelistic tool is not a helpful strategy in my opinion:

  1. It clearly will be perceived as being aimed at an individual - in this case Steve Jobs
  2. It appears to be an invasion of tech space by outsiders...rather than a wise move to share Jesus with tech people from tech people
  3. It is cheesy looking and a bit silly (the ole byte of the apple line)
  4. By sharing the gospel story this way, being techie-cute, it trivializes the transcendent importance of the message.
  5. It is funny - yes, it is pretty stinking funny.  But would it dull people to actually talking about the Messiah in the future?
  6. It may be easily dismissed by those who actually know the Apple story and the tech world.  The apple story has a bit of mythological feel to those who are computer industry insiders. 
Anyway, thought it would be worth sharing as an example.  Those T-shirts in the "outreach section" of the Christian bookstore (Got Jesus? Jesus like Resee Cups, etc) ain't no better. 

POC Bundle - 7.15.06

For Fun - Check this out - ESV “To Do” Bible - purgatorio - and yes, if you are new to Purgatorio, this is a joke. Too funny...

The Church - The PCUSA trashes the Trinity

When one California pastor was asked how he felt about the new terminology for the Trinity, he told the Los Angeles Times newspaper, "You might as well put in Huey, Dewey, and Louie." That minister is not alone in his sentiments -- another conservative Presbyterian theologian and pastor is similarly expressing disgust at what he describes as the denomination's move to "alter a major doctrine of the Christian faith."

For Young Dudes - Great Article - Stop Test Driving Your Girlfriend by Michael Lawrence (HT - Theologica)

On Science and Philosophy - Interesting article on moving robotics with brain impulses...now what causes the brain to move? (HT - Pearcey Report)

POC Bundles - New Feature on POC Blog

From time to time I find little interesting tidbits around the net and in the past have made them separate entries...

To make this a bit cleaner and not bog down everyones RSS readers quite as much I am going to start bundling these together.  

POC Bundles will also be a new category so you can click through these historically as well.  

Bundling at one time in America was a stange cultural phenomena, but now it just will pull together fun little bytes on the POCBlog.

Above all Earthly Videos...

There are some excellent video interviews rolling out over time from several of the speakers from the upcoming Desiring God National Conference - Above All Earthly Powers - The Supremacy of Christ in a Postmodern World

I highly recommend these for thinking about reaching people today through theologically driven, culturally engaged, missional churches.  Very interesting video interviews...

The Way I See It

Ethicist Wesley J. Smith has a quote (#127 to be exact) in Starbuck's The Way I See It Campaign. It is certainly one I pray many people discuss over a cup of five dollar joe. Here is the quote:

The morality of the 21st century will depend on how we respond to this simple but profound question: Does every human life have equal moral value simply and merely because it is human? Answer yes, and we have a chance of achieving universal human rights. Answer no, and it means that we are merely another animal in the forest.

For the complete article, go over to the Center for Bioethics and Culture Network Web Site.

Buddhist Insight and Christian Truth

In this post I will compare some Buddhist views of suffering, desire, and the attending solution to the human dilemma with that of my own understanding of the Christian faith.  Before beginning with this task I am reminded of some advice I once heard.  A man once said “if you try to make a major world religion look bad in just a few moments, you really do not understand it.”  Such is a reminder everyone should heed. My intention with this essay is not to malign a major religious worldview, but rather to affirm the insight of the Buddhist tradition and the philosophy’s assessment of the human condition.  In this essay I will first lay out the Buddhist diagnosis of the human condition by looking at two of its four noble truths, that of Dukkha or suffering and Samudaya or desire.   I will then communicate my own understanding of the Christian faith on the same topics of suffering and desire.  Next I will look at the solutions offered to the human condition by both religious views.  Finally, I will give some thought to how one might share the gospel with a Buddhist through the concepts of suffering and desire and make some concluding remarks.

Buddhist Assesment of the Human Condition

The Buddha was quite adamant that his philosophy was that of practice and of practical importance to solving the problem human beings face in the passage of life.  He claimed to only have observed our condition, realized the truth about it, and offered the right medicine for people to apply.  Speculation and theorizing, he claimed, was not helpful and should be avoided about things we have little access to through our minds.  The illustration that was offered is that of a man dying with an arrow lodged in his flesh.  If one stops to ask too many questions he places himself in deeper peril.  If while bleeding he asks: What type of arrow is in me?  What is the tip like? What are your credentials for removing arrows? If he asks such questions, the man will continue to bleed and die before he is assisted.  The wise man will just remedy the problem; he will just remove the arrow.  In this essay I will argue that the Buddha did indeed have great insight into the human condition; we are in a desperate situation with arrows lodged deeply in us.  The question I will ask is this; did he know the proper path for removing the insidious darts?  Before we turn to that question, we must first look at his diagnosis.  To do so we will look at the first of the Buddha’s Four Noble Truths.

The first noble truth of the Buddha is that of Dukkha, which means that life is in essence suffering.  From a purely human perspective, life under the sun is to experience suffering, lack of satisfaction, as the writer of Ecclesiastes also teaches; life is vanity of vanities, a chasing after the wind.   I find this world to be very much like the Buddha describes.  In realizing that to live is to suffer, the Buddha then turns to his second noble truth to provide an explanation as to the source of our suffering.  While I find his identification of the source of our suffering to be perhaps incomplete, I find his insight to be helpful.  To the reason for our suffering we now turn.

The second truth tells us that we suffer due to desire or attachment, a self orientation which causes a preoccupation with fulfilling our earthy wants.   We try to quench the thirsts of our desires only to find that the attempt to find satisfaction leaves us even more unsatisfied, full of suffering.   An analogy may be helpful.  Think of a man who is set adrift at sea who has run out of fresh water to drink.  He sees water all around him and he deeply desires to drink.  Yet when he does he only finds that the water will kill him, multiplying his bodies thirst, rather than quenching it.  We desire, we are attached to this world, seeking to quench our thirst in a vast ocean of suffering.  If we drink, we only thirst more; if we continue to desire and stay attached, we will never be released from our suffering and pain.  In summary the Buddha teaches us that our problem in this life is suffering and this suffering is produced by our attached and self centered desires.  It is not hard to guess what his solution to this dilemma might be.   Yet before moving to that very important task, let me first explain my own view of the human condition from my perspective as a follower of Jesus.  Although the reason for our condition finds a very different explanation in my view, the condition we find ourselves is very near to that of these first two of the Buddha’s Four Noble Truths.

My Assesment of the Human Condition as a Christian

As a follower of Christ and the teachings of Scripture, my view of the world is not that far from that articulated by the Buddha.  Indeed, I see a world that is fallen, fractured and quite full of suffering.  This world, as a result of human being’s disobedience to God, is now under a curse; a curse which includes death, disease, and suffering in this present age.  It is a creation under the bondage to decay which is awaiting redemption and is in great need of liberation.   As GK Chesterton once aptly implied, this present age is one resembling a shipwreck, a golden vessel which went down at the foundation of the world and its goods are scattered amidst the wreckage of the world.

Additionally, if our desires and attachments are only for this world, I agree that this is a great source of suffering.  St. Augustine provided me with some great insight in a discourse I read where discussed the Sunnum Bonum, the greatest good for human beings.  His line of thought was that our hope, our greatest good, cannot be found in this world of suffering.  If we place our hope in our health, it can be lost.  If our greatest hope is in wealth, this too can be taken from us against our will.  If our hope is placed in the good of home and family, loved ones too can be lost and taken from us.  If our hope is placed in safety and security, our world is one where people are conquered and goods are plundered.  Our supreme good would have to be found in another place than in this current fallen age.   Indeed, desire and attachment placed in temporal “goods” is an attachment which will lead to despair and suffering.  Ephesians teaches me that deceitful desires are part of our sinful nature and 1 John is very clear that the desires of the flesh, the desires of the eyes and pride in possessions—is not from the Father but is from the world.

Yet my view as a Christian does not hold that all is lost in this fallen world of suffering.  For I am not a pessimist about our current condition and this is perhaps where the teaching of the Buddha and my view greatly diverge.  For the Buddha lives in a world of human problems, and does not allow a divine light into his noble Truths.  As we turn our attention to the solution of suffering and selfish desire, we will see that the gospel calls forth, evokes, directs new desires, where the Buddha only seeks to amputate desire from the human soul.   Though the diagnoses are similar; that we are in need of deliverance from suffering produced by sinful desires, the salve for our condition is very different as offered from Buddha and offered from Jesus Christ.  To this we now turn.

Solutions to the Problem of Misplaced Desires

In examining the Buddhist view of solving the diliemna of suffering caused by attachment/desire we move to the third of the Four Noble Truths.  If Suffering is caused by desire, the Buddhist makes a reasonable, though deeply flawed move.   If desire is the culprit, then he must be terminated.  The third truth, Nirodha, means that desire and attachment to the objects of desire must end.  The goal is to be free from desire so that one will not suffer.  In fact, one must be free of the illusion that he is an entity we would call a “self.”  You realize that you have no essential identity and as a result desire, attachment and suffering fade away as one is extinguished into nirvana.  Instead of removing the arrow from a man’s leg; it seems the solution of the Buddha is to cut off the leg completely.  Even more so, to deny there is an arrow, a “you”, any real reality to any of it at all.  But the questions which arise to me are the following: What if desires, loves, wants, and attachments are essential to human beings?   What if there is a “self” that is intrinsically valuable but does not have to be the center of all things?  Yes, desire can be wrongly aimed and projected to the wrong persons and things; yet this hardly assumes that there is not a proper person for the highest and most intense desires.  In this I find the person of Christ to offer a much more excellent way.

In looking at the human soul many have observed that there is something essential to our nature that longs for relationship and worship.  Human beings are always worshipping – in fact it would not at all be improper to call us homo adorans.  Yet in our fallen state we can aim our affections at many things both good and sinful.  The problem is that our desires are deceitful and our affections are for sin and self, not that I have desires.   My Christian faith and experience informs me that there can be pure affections and holy longings; desires for a person that is true, right, and good.  Our sins need forgiveness and our desires need to be placed firmly upon the living God.  In the gospel we see that our desires need not amputation but rebirth.  Our desires need not to be removed but captured by a greater master; the Lord God himself.

The Buddhist offers meditation as a way to clear and empty the mind and remove earthly desires.  In contrast as a Christian I seek to mediate with a full mind, inflamed and set upon God’s majestic beauty, benevolent character, holy justice, his word and works in this world.  Jesus told us not to kill desire but rather to love fully.  You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, mind and strength.  And you shall love your neighbor as yourself.   How can this happen to selfish people who are stuck in the miseries of sin?  God is his grace redeems us, forgives us, removes our guilt and gives us new loves, new affections, and yes, new desires.  He then fills our lives with his own Spirit to lead and guide us through this fallen world.  All of these things take place under the gigantic shadow of the wondrous promise of his coming redemption of all things.   This world of death, disease, despair, and suffering – even Dukkha, will one day be brought into the full liberation and renewal of the Kingdom of God.  In that day the tears will be dried, hopes eternally realized, and we shall run without amputation with the beauty of consummated and realized desire.

Dialogue With those who Embrace Buddhist Views

When I think about how to apply this understanding to sharing the gospel with others, the method represented in a book I read comes to mind.  In the book, Engaging Unbelief, a Captivating Strategy from Augustine and Aquinas (IVP, 1999), author Curtis Chang looks at to historical models of engaging other worldviews.  To summarize quickly he encourages us to enter the story of the other person by their own presuppositions and definitions.   Second, we retell the story from within that view exposing its flaws in explaining our human condition.  Third, the truthful insights of the worldview may be captured in the broad Christian narrative which better explains where the other view falls short.  In living this in conversation with someone with Buddhist views (something I did in travels to Eastern Europe - lots of Buddhist philosophy floating around today in that idealogical vacuum known as Europe ), there is a great entry to his story via the two Noble Truths regarding suffering and desire.  We can affirm the insight of the Buddha and his good understanding of the human condition.  We can then ask questions about the nature of the solution.  Is all desire bad?  What sort of desire could be good desire?  If there are good desires what are they for?  What if our desire for relationship was a great clue to where our desires ought to find culmination?  In looking at the Buddhist story we can share that only certain desires are corrupting and others might perhaps be a clue to something wonderful, relational, and true.  Additionally asking one other other question is helpful: what if our primary purpose was for love and worship?  We can then affirm the intuitive Buddhist drive for this reality by their practice of prayer (note: Mahayana Buddhists have more of an idea of god than Thervada Buddhists...so ask some questions and see what a person is into).  Prayer is the greatest validation of the I/Thou relationship which can only occur between the self and the “other.”  This urge towards prayer demonstrates something profound in of our nature.  Namely, that desire for someone else is perhaps very essential to being human.   Finally, the themes of suffering and desiring within the Christian story can acknowledge this world of suffering, yet offers a very different solution to our dilemma.  The solution of reconciliation with God, the only one in whom we may loose ourselves in deep desire, even worship, and thereby find our truest selves in the process.

Conclusion

In today’s world many who claim to be disciples of Christ have adopted a view of the world that suffering is somehow abnormal and strange for them.   Christians need to expect and know “to live is to suffer” – too many have been sold a happy, two hand clappy, version of the Christian life, seeking your best life now.  Our Christian forebears in the Bible and on the pages of Church history have told us that this world is indeed fallen, full of disease pain and suffering.  Our Buddhist friends have observed this well.  When all is done we are made not for extinguishing ourselves, but for worship.   The traveling soul on its earthly sojourn will not find ultimate and final rest in anything but worship and relationships.   Indeed Augustine wrote insightfully:

Thou hast formed us for Thyself, and our hearts [the center of our desires]are restless till they find rest in Thee   

 

This is Just Weird

This web site is spooky weird. Who welcomes you to the site? A fully animated white guy with flowing haired who is supposed to be Jesus.  Here is a picture of it - you have to go to site to see the video for yourself.

 
Is that Gaia behind Jesus? What the heck is that?

Worth a laugh, a tear, or just a puzzled look.  Here is the link: Welcome To Cross Rev Connect

On the bottom of the site is the following tag: This site was created and inspired by God through the Power Of The Holy Spirit. Maybe, but I'm not so sure that the Jesus video thing was inspired by God and of the Holy Ghost.

(HT - Tim Challies)

Funny Quote

I ran across this quote today in an e-mail interview done by Christianity Today with Mark Driscoll of Mar's Hill Church in Seatle (Men Are from Mars Hill - Christianity Today Magazine)

No offense to the Moms of the megachurches - but I found this to be pretty funny...

The major blind spot of megachurches is that they tend to be very effeminate with aesthetics, music, and preaching perfectly tailored for moms. Manly men are repelled by this, and many of the men who find it appealing are the types to sing prom songs to Jesus and learn about their feelings while sitting in a seafoam green chair drinking herbal tea—the spiritual equivalent of Richard Simmons. A friend of mine calls them "evangellyfish" with no spiritual vertebrae...

ESV Jounaling Bible - High Fives All Around

 
Some days my old school wrestler emerges in my life.  When I lack discipline to study, read, exercise, love my family well - I can get a bit hard on myself (all the psycho-anaylyzers, please hold the e-mail, God's grace is real to me). 
 
Many days I can boil down what needs to happen in my spiritual life to a simple phrase - Read your stinkin Bible!  I always thought having one of those big margin bible for all my scribbles would be nice - but usually you need a private fork lift and a good back to lug those chunks around.  Seeing my back is a bit jacked up from time to time and I own no large warehouse arranging vehicles, I have stuck with my ESV thinline for reading the Scriptures.  Well, the dream of a compact, big margin Bible made for writing your thoughts and comments along side the Bible has now become reality.
 
Crossway has just published the ESV Journaling edition, available in both hard back and calf-skin (for those who have bank and nice tastes). I received mine this past week and have been very thankful for this edition of the best translation available today (ESV).  Here are a few of the features I really enjoy:
  • Text Size: Small, 7.5 pt font.  I love small fonts, so at least for a few more years the text is fine on my eyes.  I like the clean look of the pages, but the text may be small for some.
  • Two inch margins: The margins on each side are ruled and very wide.  The ruled lines are a bit small, but I write small and find this an asset rather than a hindrance.  Some may want to use two lines.
  • Additional materials: The Bible has some great instroductory material to the Old and New Testaments, a topical listing entitled What the Bible Says About, book introductions to each biblical book (though these are at the back of the Bible, not at the head of each book), a yearly reading plan offering five chapters each day including OT, NT, Psalms, an article on the gospel entitled God's Plan to Save You.  Obviously, the publisher wanted to keep this edition compact, but while doing so they still managed to pack some nice features into the journaling Bible.
  • Coolness: The original hardback format is just cool. It looks like a fat moleskin with a sturdy elastic strap to keep it compact and a black ribbon for marking your place.  This little gem has a high cool factor.  Did I say this was a cool looking Bible?
Here is the sample of a page provided by Crossway:
 
 
 
So far, I have been scribbling running verse by verse commentary in my two inch ruled margins.  Others may want to journal prayers, thoughts about life, letters to God, etc. Most importantly, this may just help you Read your stinkin Bible.  In doing so the wild and fantastic God of the universe may just grab you and throw you out into his mission.  Then life just ceases to be normal.  Read the book.
 
One last thought.  I like this little edition so much that I think if Jonathan Edwards were alive, he might have just used a bunch of these little black books instead of the hand-sewn interleaved Bible which he used to write down thoughts in his tiny script. 
 
Highly recommended, you can order here:
The ESV Journaling Bible, (Wheaton: Crossway, 2006) 1074 pages.
 

Two Excellent Resource Pages

Mark Dever's Introductory Sermons on the Bible are Available for free download from Capital Hill Baptist Church's web site.  This is the audio version of the text that forms the books "Promises Made" and "Promises Kept" - I blogged and linked to the books here.

This is a good to have as a reference if you are involved in teaching the Bible. Here is how you might use the audio:

  1. You are ready to begin teaching or personal study of a certain biblical book - it is always good to get a flyover picture of the book.  Read it five times straight through - jotting notes in margin or in a moleskin - or, get the ESV journaling Bible and have both.
  2. Download one of these MP3s -listen to it, take notes (or buy the books)
  3. Look for launching ideas for your own brainstorming.  Ideas for illustrations, further study, digging deeper.

I love ministries and churches that see giving away free content - sermons, studies, articles, etc. as part of their calling. A great gift to the greater church in the world.

While Europe Slept

Tim Challies has a great review of the book While Europe Slept which documents the coming Islamization of the continent should current trends continue.

It has long been my contention that Europe has lost its cultural center, worldview, and no longer has anything to hold it together. Europeans are not breeding, they are aging, and do not seem to have the will to survive.

Decades ago, the Brittish Journalist Malcom Muggeridge summed up the downward spiral of Western Culture in the following fashion:

Thus did Western man decide to abolish himself, creating his own boredom out of his own affluence, his own vulnerability out of his own strength, his own impotence out of his own erotomania; himself blowing the trumpet that brought the walls of his own city tumbling down. And having convinced himself that he was too numerous, labored with pill and scalpel and syringe to make himself fewer, until at last, having educated himself into imbecility and polluted and drugged himself into stupefaction, he keeled over, a weary, battered old brontosaurus, and became extinct.

 

Here is the link again -Challies Dot Com: While Europe Slept

Mass Ape Immigration Anticipated

Just when everyone thought that the deepest jungles were the choice destination of classic ape living with the highest of style, another location emerges as the great ape living place of choice.

Instead of living in those terrible jungles, or even more disgusting, a prison human's call a "zoo", great apes may now immigrate to balmy mediteranean destination known as Spain!  Oh yes, in Spain the apes are afforded a legal status of equality with human beings, complete with labor laws, paid vacations, and maternity/paternity leave.  They can even join the union and only be required to work 26 hours a week!

As the European population ages and the Euros just refuse to reproduce, many see the new Ape population as a great asset to the economy.  Jose Noway, a prominent Spanish politician, recently commented:

I think it is great to have our Ape brothers in the work force.  We don't have any more people for jobs so someone will have to do it.   We think Apes may be our solution.  Up until now radical Islamists have taken over our jobs, but now we have a second source of labor.  Granted, Apes cannot use computers, do simple math, count money, understand simple abstractions such as banking, but they do have similar DNA to us.  Plus, we think if put in the right environment, such as Europe, the Apes will rapidly learn and evolve.  Additionally, we hope the apes can help our sorry football team in future world cups!  The apes have been victims of speciesism for too long.  Spain is leading the world in this new revolution! 

Peter Singer echoed great enthusiasm as the goals of his Great Ape Project are being realized!  The goals of the great ape declaration are finally coming to past in the enlightened lands of Spain.

We demand the extension of the community of equals to include all great apes: human beings, chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas and orang-utans.

The community of equals is the moral community within which we accept certain basic moral principles or rights as governing our relations with each other and enforceable at law...

Apes everywhere rejoiced at the movement in Spain.  Though the ape community's reaction was mostly positive, there have been some mixed responses.  Some, who desire to remain anonymous, shared their disappointment by the slow progress in America.  Many understand that the ape community really dislikes Europe as they see no future for the continent.  Most prefer the state of California as the true golden coast of ape rights.  They feel it is the first state which may grant them moral standing in the community of equals.  Though thankful for the movement in Spain, many want to see lobbying dollars and more social pressure put on California.  Ape Lincoln (R - Asia) did go on record about the so called Californian Initiative:

The great apes of our lands do appreciate all the efforts, hard work, and tireless service to achieve this great victory for ape-kind in Spain. Yet much more work is to be done.  We have many, many zealous friends in California that need our support in their struggle.  Once apes have rights in California, we will be truly free from the bonds of speciesism - plus, we can go live in Hollywood and continue to follow our dear brother Clyde in the movie business. 

 

 

 

This will be the great day of rejoicing for all ape-kind - when California drops her great deception of human superiority.  This will signal the end of ape oppression! 

Americans are mixed on the whole matter - some realizing that we are no better than apes want to go ahead and codify this evident truth in law.  Some simpletons (particularly Jews, Muslims and Christians) want to maintain that human beings are ontologically distinct from the apes.  But some superstitions are slow to pass in the minds of men. 

[For the Reuter's story on Spain to grant equal rights to Apes, see
Demanding rights for great apes]

 

Progressive Dispensationalism

For all those who are interested Darryl Bock has a concise and clear definition of Progressive Dispensationalism

Progressive Dispensationalism - June 29 | Bock's Blog

(HT - Justin Taylor)

The Anatomy of a Name

By the grace of God we will be having a baby boy next month.  We are so filled with awe that God would bestow upon us this grace of being parents once again.  This time to a little male munchkin - we know he is likely to be a short little dude as Dad is 5'7'' and Mom is 5'4''.  In thinking through a name we came down to two finalists.

First was the name Blake.  To be honest this was probably the family favorite, but seeing it was inspired by a guy on the Amazing Race, we felt that was a little weak in giving meaning to our Son's name.  I want all my kids to know that their names have significance and call each of them forward in life.  Though Blake and Page were cool folks racing around the world, I could not find enough to give my boy in that.  So, the name we finally lande on was Thomas Reid Monaghan.  

This name has multiple degrees of meaning for us - and our kids.  Much fertile ground here for calling a little man up in this life.  Here are the 5 degrees of meaning for the little dude's name. 

  • Thomas Michael Echstenkamper - Mike X is the guy who led me to Jesus when I was a knucklehead 19 year old wrestler at UNC. His investment in me, his compassion to share the gospel with a lost soul, encouragement for me to ask questions, grow, walk with me in those early years are deposits from a faithful man I do not want our family to forget.
  • Thomas Aquinas - Obviously this Thomas is one of the looming figures in the history of thought.  His philosophical realism is still influencing many thinkers today - the rise in Thomistic thought among theistic philosophers is an encouraging trend in some academic circles.  When I teach little Thomas the basic laws of logic and realism I want him to know the name Aquinas.  Something is what something is...something cannot be and not be at the same time and the same sense.  Yes, the Christian who synthesized the thought and rigor of the ancient world will be remembered.
  • Thomas Reid - His whole name will remind him not only of his Daddy (Reid), but also of the Scottish philosopher who influenced the great theological minds of Hodge and Warfield at Old - Princeton Seminary.  A unique synthesis of common sense realism merged with reformed theology.  I want my boy to know about this.
  • Thomas the Tank Engine - Well, an Anglican reverend created this little gem of a kids series for his own little boy in the 1940s.  My little girls liked that one - Thomas the Tank Engine is big in our home.  I pray little Thomas will love little trains with his pastor Daddy as well.
  • Thomas the Disciple - Many times known as "Doubting Thomas" by those who do not read the whole story.  I want my boy to know that people who once did not believe can be radically changed.  That someone can go from doubting soul to a radical knee bent worshipper of Jesus...Additionally, some reliable tradition holds that Thomas brought the gospel to India where he died as a witness to Jesus.  I want my boy to know the power of the gospel to change lives and send people on mission with Jesus.

Finally, Thomas is very nicknamable.  Some day if he is a tough little dude we can call him Tommy.  If he has potential to be a philosopher warrior we can call him Thomas R. Monaghan...if just a warrior, perhaps in the UFC, we can give him one of those southern hyphenated names - not a progressive feminist last name - but a three syllable first name.  Tommy-Reid.  If he is a theologian with an amazing mind, he can go by TR Monaghan. Anway, very nicknamable - smile.

Now young Thomas, not yet born, do know that a kind providence is bringing you into this world with a family that greatly anticipates your arrival.  You have brilliant little sisters, full of zest and joy, waiting to pull your ears, poke you in the tummy and almost drop you a hundred times.  You have a mother who is talented, compassionate, humble, and faithful who is going to sacrifice body and soul for you.  You mess with her heart - you answer to me.  And Son, you have a Father who is praying to be a strong and wise and godly man for you.  To teach you how to think, pray, love Jesus, fight for what is good, right and true - to teach you to wrestle, respect women, and most importantly the fear of the Lord.  We are ready - we pray you make it into the world without too much struggle.  We trust you even now, your soul and body, to the Sovereign King who has numbered your days.  

Through good and bad - he is God.  In all our roads ahead together, we have a great high King - you would do well to bow your knee and arise a Knight of his realm.

We love you Thomas Reid Monaghan - I pray you will be worshipper of YHWH and a servant of men.

Listen up young folks...

For all those young folks out there who have been through the crazy world of marriage, divorce and troubled lives...and who do not want to walk that path yourself. There are some good findings you need be aware of over at Rutger's University's National Marriage Project

Ten Important Research Findings on Marriage & Choosing A Marriage Partner

Specifically, all those who think "you gotta try before you buy" are just plain spinning nonsense to themselves. Cohabiting does not make for a better marriage - it is hazardous to future matrimonial success.

6. Living together before marriage has not proved useful as a "trial marriage." People who have multiple cohabiting relationships before marriage are more likely to experience marital conflict, marital unhappiness and eventual divorce than people who do not cohabit before marriage. Researchers attribute some but not all of these differences to the differing characteristics of people who cohabit, the so-called "selection effect," rather than to the experience of cohabiting itself. It has been hypothesized that the negative effects of cohabitation on future marital success may diminish as living together becomes a common experience among today's young adults. However, according to one recent study of couples who were married between 1981 and 1997, the negative effects persist among younger cohorts, supporting the view that the cohabitation experience itself contributes to problems in marriage. 

So kick out that nappy head boyfriend of yours and drop that week shackin up schmack! Men who take all the benefits with no commitment are little boys masquerading as men...get rid out that kind of chump. Men, get your game together, get a job, serve someone else through the church so that you will be worth marrying some day. I have hope for you guys.

It's a "Self" Help Therapuetic World...

Al Mohler has a great commentary being re-issued on a recent book by Steve Salerno about America's self-help addiction.  I heartily agreed with this commentary and fear much of this has infected all of us.

We need to work hard for God-helped, men, who refuse to see their lives through victimization, and then get to work. 

Here is the link: America Should Be Ashamed of SHAM

Relevance? Don’t Get Married...


There is so much blah, blah, blah, blah about Christians being relevant in today’s culture.  The desire to be cool, liked, etc. among some in the Christian universe sometimes gets very silly.  I want to make a few distinctions that may help those wanting to connect the gospel of Jesus with others…so we are not weird cultural aliens from the 1920s nor are we turn coat punks denying the faith in order to be “with it”

First, one needs to look at the word “relevant.”

Relevance

By relevance, usually what one means is being able to connect with the world around you in a way that as culturally and socially acceptable.  However, what sometimes happens is that people become trend followers, jumping from the new, to the hip, to the new hip-hip new.  

We need to be more like the world around us so people will want to “come in” – so they would be attracted to what is going on with the Christians.  Problem is it can all be pretty inauthentic – and to be honest it can get quite weird.   Many times if relevance becomes the only all encompassing goal, syncretism and worldliness usually are following the parade.  The spirit or soul of the world around us can capture the hearts of people so much that we really do not long for the realization of the Kingdom of God.  

Simon Weil rightly said “He who marries himself to the spirit of the age soon becomes a widower.”  The Scriptures also warn us from getting too much in bed with the world.  When we get married to the world – we quickly realize we have married a whore, a union which can turn out to be enmity, hatred towards God.

You adulterous people! Do you not know that friendship with the world is enmity with God? Therefore whoever wishes to be a friend of the world makes himself an enemy of God.

James 4:4 (ESV)
So what should we do?  First, we have to realize that culture matters.  The language of the people, the forms of a people, the art, entertainment, literature, technology, relationships, patterns of family, of a people really matter.  There are no people who do not live in culture.  Jesus himself became incarnate into a culture – that was Jewish, in a Hellenized world, under the rule of the Roman Empire…

So rather than a people trying to be “relevant to” a culture – we seek a more excellent way.  We desire to bring a gospel driven, kingdom culture to bear within and through the cultures of the world.  This leads us to a slightly different idea than sprinting on the tread mill running after the gods of relevance. A principle long discussed with those in cross cultural mission - that of contextualizaton…

Contextualization

Culture is simply the learned design or pattern of living for a particular group of folks.  It is learned, it is the air we breathe, and the water we swim in…it is the life we live.  We all live in culture…and we need to realize that most of culture is not antithetical to the theological truths and ethical implications of the gospel.  As much as we may not like it God is not absolutely opposed to NASCAR or Football (or Soccer her in America).  As much as we may not like it…biblically, it really doesn’t matter if you use chop sticks to eat rice, or a knife and fork to eat Spam.   Blue grass music or hip hop (yes, both can have eeeevil lyrics, but they also can sing to sweet Jesus as well), wear blue jeans or saris to church.

So the goal is not to create goofy Christian subculture, but to embrace aspects of culture and live modestly there.   In fact, Christians should not ask converts to leave nonsinful aspects of culture to “come out” into whatever sub culture they have created (like a culture where wine at communion will make people “stumble”).  Many times we create culture that is not at all biblical and call people to that rather than to Jesus.  Thou shalt not dance? Uh, I’m still looking for verses on that one.

I recently listened to a message by Ed Stetzer about viewing culture as a follower of Jesus.   Quoting Robert McQuilkin, three paths were highlighted which I will paraphrase the best I can:

  • Much of culture we can receive – there is a good thing to the old saying “when in Rome” – not the sinful stuff of Rome, but living in that world.  The apostle said he wanted to “become all things to all men so by all possible means we might save same…I do this for the sake of the gospel (1 Cor 9).  For the sake of the gospel missionaries in China eat with Chinese people in a chinese way…this is not controversial, but it makes some a bit nervous.  Thinking if you have an electric guitar in church, or don’t wear a Western European inspired suit and tie in church, it is somehow worldly.
  • Some of culture should be redeemed.  For example, our culture may be a perverted culture in relationship to sexuality.  But that does not mean sex is bad – sex in our culture needs redemption, not rejection.  It needs the context of covenant not “with whoever consents.”  The same might be said for good, dark, beer – it needs the redemption of moderation not the excess of drunkenness.
  • Finally, some things of culture must be absolutely rejected.  There are some aspects of culture that are sinful and evil and cannot be adapted or redeemed.  We repent of this and change.  This is true in cross cultural missions, where missionaries rightly opposed such cultural practices as sati, or child sacrifice.  It is true for the church in culture today.  We simply do not have “current hookers reaching hookers for Jesus” or “Misogynist Wife Beaters for Christ” or "Crack dealers dealing so they can witness to drug addicts" – it is on issues of sin where Christians have to hold the lines of biblical truth and not waver – even where there is extreme cultural pressure to punt.  “We’re queer, we’re here, get used to it” – no, we love you, but we can not applaud.  We weep with you and love you – but we cannot go the distance to be welcoming and "affirming".  We will welcome, but we cannot celebrate.  Certain elements in culture are challenged, rebuked, and must be changed in the light of the gospel.  We all need to repent of our cultural junk…including Christian cultural junk that is neither Christian, nor in the Scriptures.  
Our goal should be living in our culture, contextual and faithful.  Not punting sound doctrine or the truth of Scripture.  Nor do we marry the world and become an offense to God.  Mark Driscoll’s book Radical Reformission does a good job describing these two extremes with the following equations…


 
[Gospel + Church – Culture = Separatist Fundamentalism]

 
[Church + Culture – Gospel = Syncretistic Worldly Theological Liberalism]

The equation which is a difficult balance would be:
Gospel + Church + Culture = Reformission (missional and faithful, reaching out without selling out)

Another author, Os Guinness echoes a similar call in his book Prophetic Untimeliness – which is to seek relevance with faithfulness – sound easy?  It is not.  Not for sinful human beings at least.  There will always be a great need for wisdom and the leading of the Spirit and the Word.

In that book Guinness recommends a great course for our age.  We must be prophetic to be able to call people to a different life, a different Kingdom, and a different God.  If we become captured by the world we loose our voice to call people to repentance and faith – to follow Jesus rather than the gods of our making.   We need to be untimely in that though we live in culture now, we speak a message from the eternal God.  The Word of God speaks from outside human experience, into our lives in culture and confronts us, shakes us, challenges and redeems us by grace.  We then love differently, we care differently, and we suffer for others for the sake of Jesus.   

This sort of path keeps us on mission in culture, yet faithful to God and the Scriptures.  Sometimes we need a course correction either side.  We are too worldly and are loosing faithfulness or we are too inflexible in things which are cultural that we become dead people who hold right beliefs but are not on mission…


Some of us are joyfully "Not of the world" but need to "get into life with people" for the gospel.  Some of us are too "in the world" and need to be called out. 

It is my prayer that I can be utterly faithful and utterly faithful to reach out to people in a way that connects.  This ain’t easy – in fact we need wisdom to walk this path.

Can we be thankful that we eat at all?

There is an interesting review of the book The Omnivore's Dilemna by Michael Pollan over at Books and Culture.

Like any other people in the enlightened western crowd, Christians too are concerned with being green, organic, and having justice for creation (no comment).

This article is interesting in that it discusses the struggle to eat well as we take "steps back to wholeness." This is very common today as many Christians are seeing salvation as redemption of creation and human beings finding wholeness (not oneness, though some do seem to go that far) in this world. If the Kingdom is NOW and NOT yet, this crowd certainly believes in the NOW part. Salvation comes through creation care, reconciling ourselves with the natural world, all things to God.

Now, I do see clearly in Scripture that God is reconciling "all things to himself" in Christ. Yet, I see a bit of a pendulum swing away from the Christian's hope being in a new creation, and the age to come. I also see a huge place for Christian environmental concern. Not just because it is trendy to be green, but due to the nature of human calling as stewards and vice regents with our Creator in this world. But it seems like our concerns for everything granola and pure is a new form of godliness for some. Granted, I don't want my kids running around in air that remembles a long toke on an exhaust pipe, but I think some can be overly freakish and worried about so many things that they can forget that God is also concerned with souls, concerned with sinners and sin, concerned to redeem our lives to be people who are his possession, eager to do what is good.

Does this include environmental concern? Again, Absolutely! But can we get sidetracked and replace the gospel and the work of the Kingdom with creation care and worrying about whether Chicken nuggest are 13 part corn or 14 parts corn? Again, Absolutely

One thing that we spoiled western people can forget is that we not only get to eat whole foods, or organically grown crops, or a double cheeseburger, or an ice cold Mountain Dew (which chemically is nothing like dew from a mountain - but oh, it is a sweet yellow beverage). We forget the grace that we get to eat at all. In some parts of the world, folks would be overjoyed to eat some hormonally jacked up beef. Overjoyed to eat corn feed animals, and chicken nuggets that have a composition only known to freaky, nerdy, chemist types.

Have a conscience about what we consume in the world...YES. But forget not that it is grace that we have air and food and water at all.

All the environmental, vegan, orgo superstars out there - praise God for you. Just don't hate everyone who likes a bit of red meat from time to time. And all of us, don't forget to say a word of thanks for whatever you cram down your throat tonight. But don't eat too much - that is a sin...one we easily forget.

Book Review - Witnessing for Peace in Jerusalem and the World

 

Younan, Munib and Fred Strickert, Witnessing for Peace – In Jerusalem and the World. Minneapolis: Augsburg Fortress, 2003. 169 pp.

 

 
Introduction

Witnessing for Peace – In Jerusalem and the World is an interesting recent volume from the Lutheran Fortress press. The author is perhaps in a most unique position to speak to the issue of peace in the world as he lives in a state of constant war and tension. You see Munib Younan is a Palestinian Christian, serving as the bishop of the Lutheran Church in the Old City of Jerusalem. He is a minority among the world of Islam and a minority living under the state of Israel. He is a small voice within the city of the Temple Mount, of Haram al-Sharif, in the city of Jesus’ death, burial and resurrection. Younan is seeking to be a servant of the prince of peace in the Holy City – seeking to be a witness for peace in a land of war. I found the topic to be of great interest and hoped to gain deeper understanding into the history and reality of the city venerated by the great monotheistic religions of the world. In this review I will first summarize the book’s three main sections, offer some analysis of the work, and then close with some concluding remarks.

Summary of the Book

    The book is sectioned into three parts. Part I, Contexts, focuses on the history of the Christian faith among the Arabs of Palestine and Jerusalem as well as the personal story of Mr. Younan and his family. Part II, Martyria and Nonviolence, sets forth a philosophy of Martyria or Witness, the path of Christian ministry taken by the bishop in his efforts to promote justice through nonviolent means. The final section focuses on practical applications of living a witness for Jesus Christ in a land of high tensions both religious and political. In summarizing the book I will treat each section of the book in turn.

Part I – Contexts

    I found the first part of the book to be the most helpful. The first chapter is a great reminder of the long history of the gospel in the Jerusalem. Much of this information is quite unknown to Protestant Christians who unfortunately spend very little time studying pre-reformation church history. The Christian church indeed has a rich history in Palestine with many leading early thinkers belonging to the Caesarian school and many early church leaders were Christians of Arab descent. To read that one fourth of the bishops at the Council of Chalcedon in 451 were of Arab descent was a great reminder about the ethnic and cultural composition of early Christianity. With the Latin fathers, particularly Augustine, weighing so heavily in the Protestant mind, unfortunately it can easy to over look the Eastern, Egyptian, and Arab leaders of early Christianity. The time of Constantine and the building of the great churches in the Holy land were discussed as well as the peaceful and collegial relationship between Islamic leaders and Christians throughout the early middle ages. The “Crusader Period” was discussed with its many atrocities, even highlighting Crusader against Christian violence. The Rule under the Ottoman Empire and the corresponding millet system[1] was treated along with the formalization of Muslim-Christian relations in the Holy Land; many of these arrangements existing until this day. The chapter closes with a treatment of the events of the 21st century, a century described as “a century of European intervention and Palestinian devastation” (Younan, 15). The chapter details the events which took place surrounding the formation of the state of Israel – know simply as the catastrophe, to the Palestinians, both Christian and Muslim. The second chapter moves from a general history of Jerusalem to the specific and recent history of Younan’s own family, a family’s experience as refugees from the Israeli occupation. Additionally this chapter focuses on Younan’s call to the Christian ministry and his subsequent theological training in Finland. The first section of the book was extremely valuable as it colors Younan’s history and experience before hearing his own positions. This background helped me understand quite literally “where he was coming from” as the book unfolded.

Part II – Martyria and Nonviolence

The mid section of the book dealt with two main concepts. First, Younan’s understanding of what it means to be a witness (martyria in Greek) and secondly, the method of being such a witness in the midst of the violent and conflict ridden city of Jerusalem. Younan rightly describes a witness as one who in word and deed points others to the person of Jesus Christ. His emphasis is on word and deed, though it becomes quickly apparent that deeds will prove more important in his view. An emphasis on suffering, the way of the cross, on behalf of others is also elaborated on in this section. Nonviolent means of resisting injustice and oppression takes center stage in the section and continues throughout the book and it is clear to Younan that the Israelis are illegitimate occupiers of the land they posses. This unjust occupation must be opposed by nonviolent, prophetic calls for justice in the lands. Without justice there will be no peace; without an end to the occupation, without a right of return to the land for the refugees, there can be no just peace. This is Younan’s view—and it aligns with that of a Palestinian living under occupation.

Part III – Applications

    The final section of the book demonstrates several practical applications which Younan has applied in being a martyria peace. First his identification with both Israeli and American victims of terrorism is a witness to those affected acts of by violence. Second, a touching story of his love and commitment to a convicted Palestinian terrorist living abroad shows the depth of forgiveness and the possibility for life change. Third, his call and example of participation in Theological Trialogue between Christians, Muslims and Jews is offered as a way to solve problems through moderation and understanding. Finally the book closes with his witness to both Muslims and Jews described. The book ends much like the situation in Jerusalem, with the reality of conflict unresolved. Yet there is resolve to be seen; the resolve of the bishop, to go forward in the way of Christ as he sees it; to witness for peace, nonviolently, from Jerusalem to the ends of the earth.

Critical Analysis

    In looking at the message of the book critically, one pauses before commenting on the words of a man who lives amidst such strife and who has endured great suffering. In no way am I the man that Bishop Younan is; I have not faced the realities that are everyday life in his world. Yet I did find much to comment upon in his writing. I will first commend what I found helpful in the work and then conclude the analysis with some things I found to be of deep concern.

    There is much to be commended in the views expressed in this book. First, the bishop’s desire for justice is a wonderful voice which is often missing in evangelical circles. Second, he is very strong in saying that Christian witness should be in word and deed – proclamation and exemplary lives. More will be said on this in the critique, but his point of word and deed witness is stately strongly in the book. Third, he is rightly critical of certain fundamentalist strains of conservative Christian theology. Namely, the hyper dispensational premillinialism which causes some people to want to create carnage and chaos surrounding the temple mount to somehow compel a reluctant Jesus to return once “prophecy is fulfilled.” Such aggressive work to fulfill known prophecy seems absent in the Scripture; the Son comes back at the will of the Father, not due to the premeditated actions of men. Fourth, Younan’s focus on nonviolence and love as the path for Christian communities is a welcome voice in a world of war.[2] The focus on justice, witness in word an deed, critique of theological quackery, and a emphasis on personal nonviolence are what I found to be refreshing strengths of the book. However, Younan’s views had several tremendous shortcomings in representing the Christian gospel. To these we now turn.

    The critique I would offer comes in two basic categories. First is that of inconsistency in the application of some of the some aforementioned strengths. The second area of concern deals with his understanding of the gospel and an overemphasis of a perspectivalist hermeneutic which seems to elevate the historical situation above the proclamation of the gospel. I will cover each critique in turn.

    The first critique is that the author seems a bit inconsistent in three areas; his view of violence, his view of justice, and his view of Christian witness as coming in word and deed. One of the contentions of the book is that the principle of justice pursued through non-violent means should be pursued. Several times I felt he was a bit inconsistent with his stated principles. First, he gives a disclosure that “violence on either side is intolerable” (Younan, 79) yet this comes at the end of a paragraph where he seems to state that Palestinian violence is understandable. He states the following:

There is a popular Arabic saying: ‘When you push the cat into the corner, it scratches.’ This is what occupation does to Palestinian people. Yes, it is true, there is violence among the Palestinians. Some people turn to violence because they are desperate, and they see no way out. Some people turn to violence because this is what they have learned from the occupiers. (Younan, 79 emphasis added).

If we are not going to justify violence on either side, then we should not present such justification. Second, the concept of justice is left a bit vague in the book with one wondering if the only “just solution” is that offered by the Palestinian. The author seemed to be rather one sided in the Palestinian/Israeli conflict, I suppose this is to be expected with the author a Palestinian, but I did not expect such a one sided view in looking for a “just” solution. Finally, while the author rightly asserts that Christian witness should be word and deed, it seems most of the witness Younan offers is devoid of a verbal proclamation of the gospel. Jesus’ death for sinners, that people need to repent and believe; these are a bit absent. It seems to me that his witness is mainly deed and words of conversation. The words “repent and believe the gospel” are not found in his witness. As this is related to the second weakness I see in the book, we will turn to the issue of the gospel.

    The second critique has to do with the nature of the gospel itself. It seems that Younan is primarily concerned with reconciling horizontal human relationships and a liberation theology which focuses only on sociopolitical concerns. I think these issues are very important to the gospel, but what is missing is of essence. Namely that Christ died for us, according the Scriptures, and was raised on the third day. Lost sinners must repent and believe in order to be saved. This is just absent in the book.

    Additionally, Younan denies that God is in any way angry with sinners, that God will have vengeance (contrast with Rom 12:19-21). His hermeneutic leads him to reject wholesale the conquest narratives of the Old Testament, because “God would never” command Caleb and Joshua to conquer the lands and drive out the people (Younan, 94). He is a God only of “love” and would never be angry or command judgment upon a people. He even compares Joshua and Caleb to the Crusaders of the middle ages:

The Crusader movement was a perverted pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and they perverted the cross. They were colonialists who had no intention of bringing religion to this country. They are no different than Caleb and Joshua. God never told the Israelites to go and kill the women and children and chickens. They used religion to achieve political goals (Younan, 89)

I find this to be a strange understanding of the conquest narratives. It is understandable only if one is interpreting the conquest narratives as later additions by Israeli political leaders seeking to justify their actions by showing God’s judgment on others. We see this perspectival reinterpretation of the Old Testament seems to be devised to take away any divine claim to the land by the Israelis. God simply did not give the land to Israel or order the conquest under Joshua; those who took the land invented these stories to present God as having justified their political actions.

    Finally, he never mentions the problem of personal sin or the solution of the cross as being in any way necessary for people. In fact, he seems to present a view where “conversion” is unnecessary and counterproductive to witnessing for peace. Overall, I found the Christian faith and witness of Younan to be courageous and compassionate. He is a man in whose shoes I have not walked so I do not want to appear too harsh in my critique. But the faith he describes is one of universalism, where Jesus and the cross are only exemplary of suffering, but not necessary for salvation, and conversion and the need for repentance and faith are conspicuously absent. I suppose that he is a peace activist with his motivation being suffering for others for the sake of Jesus. I concur that this is a good thing – I would only desire the gospel to be shared so the hearts of people might be forgiven and changed. I like his word and deed philosophy of martyria, I only wish he would preach the Biblical gospel with his words.

Conclusion

    Shortcomings of the book aside, I would recommend this book to others for the value of seeing the historical view of a Palestinian Christian refugee. This alone is well worth the read. Additionally, seeing the situation in the Middle East through the eyes of a Palestinian is perhaps easier for those in the West when seen through the eyes of a bishop of a Christian church rather than a Muslim Imam. However, the injury which is done to the gospel and the disregard of the Scriptures, was a bit of a disappointment. Younan’s nonviolent witness is a good example for all Christians; I just wish he would share the gospel of Luther along with his passion for social justice. All that seems to be of concern for Younan is of this world; he ignores the Kingdom which is not of this age. I would like to see a witness truly in word and deed as Younan describes early in the book; a witness that not only suffers for others and speaks prophetically for justice, but a witness who also proclaims the good news of the Triune God. God the Father sent the Son who joyfully and obediently died to pay for the sins of the world. This then applied by the Holy Spirit to all who believe and who in turn witness to this saving work of God. Of course this would be unacceptable to both Muslim and Israeli in contemporary Jerusalem and would not lead to the sort of peace Younan seeks. But perhaps there is a different peace which is also to be sought, a peace with God through Christ. I shudder to even write these words, but it seems that we can forget that Jesus did not only come to bring an earthly peace (Matthew 10:34, Luke 12:51), but rather to call a people to be his own possession—eager to do what is good. This sometimes will divide, yet there is much more at stake for us all if Jesus indeed told us the truth.

[1] The millet system was a system of self government in civil and religious matters for the various sects and religious groups in the Holy Land.

[2] Whether the state has a just right to the use of force to maintain order and a just society is not the point here. Only that Christians ought to reject revenge and personal vigilantism and not force the issue of justice through personal violent reprisal.

In