Thursday 25 April 2024

Where your trasure is...

 

I often use the phrase Seekers after Truth when I’m leading worship because I think it’s an honest description of where most of us find ourselves on the Journey of Faith. 

There are some Christians, and they are usually very sincere, who would view themselves rather differently as Guardians of Truth. They believe in a prescribed orthodoxy which has various ‘tests’ and ‘benchmarks’ used to determine if you are in or out.

I sometimes think of faith in terms of a wonderful box of treasure.  Guardians of Truth want to keep it secure and under lock and key. Yet, to me at least, that feels as if we are putting God in a box.  Of course, we cannot do that because God is bigger than us!  Instead, I find it more helpful to think that Seekers after Truth delight in opening the box and exploring all that is good, helpful and inspiring within.  A treasure box that, however many times opened, always has something new.

Perhaps my picture is too simplistic, yet it does reflect some basic differences in the way we Christians face contemporary ethics.  Whist some enthusiastically quote proof texts (they never actually show absolute proof, by the way) I prefer to search for core principles from the Bible and then apply them to modern day contexts in a less literal approach.  For example, the Bible actually encourages slaves to obey their masters and for women to keep silent in church.  Yet no Christian today would approve of slavery and most value that God speaks just as much through women as men.  These passages of scripture cannot just be read literally, they need to be understood contextually.

All of that demands a fair bit of work.  It’s the sort of work we all need to do in seeking to address many ethical issues today, such as sexuality and marriage.

There is a wonderful line from an Iona hymn that asks for God’s help as we use the faith we’ve found, to reshape the world around.

Using faith demands much thought and prayer and lots and lots of seeking.

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