Filtering by Category: Life

Self-Denial in an age of Indulgence, Part 2

Added on by Jeremy Mulder.

Yesterday I wrote about this diet that my wife and I are on and the benefit of self-denial. The first practical benefit is that we find out if we can actually live without something, particularly if that thing is either a luxury item, or potentially harmful. I'm mostly thinking about food here, but it applies across the board. I've known people who have given up Facebook because, let's face it, you don't HAVE to use Facebook. They just wanted to know if they COULD give it up if they wanted to.

So here's the second tip/benefit of self-denial.

Self-denial allows us to get to the bottom of a (bad) habit

The second practical benefit of self-denial though is that it can allow us to get to the bottom of a bad habit. It's not so much about the habit, it's about the why behind the habit. Why do you reach for the chips or the cookies? Why do you drink forty-seven cups of coffee a day? Why do you "need" that glass of wine at night?

It happened to me this past week two nights in a row. The first was on Sunday as I was coming home from a long day. I realized, even before the day was over, that I usually ended my Sunday night with a beer or glass of wine. I knew that I better have a replacement something available to me that I could look forward to, otherwise my night was about to suck. I picked up a couple of nice steaks instead and made a delish meal for my wife and I. Problem solved.

The next day, Monday, I had a late meeting. Typically I'd come home and have a beer to wind down, but that was a no go. I opted instead for my stand in, a seltzer with just a splash of orange juice. This is my go-to drink of choice when I'm off the beer/wine train. (There are a few stations where I normally hop on that train. After a long day. After a meeting. After the kids go to bed. Basically the train comes to the station around 8:00 at night, most nights.) Once again, problem solved.

The diet that we are on, however, suggests that you don't just "replace" a habit, because it tricks your mind into thinking that the habit was okay. For example, if you normally put sugar in your coffee, it's not a good idea just to switch to Splenda. The "elimination" portion of the diet we are on is intended to get you off of sugar–which it may have done, if you switched to an artificial sweetener–but since your coffee still tastes the same (or slightly worse), as soon as you get through the 30-day elimination period, you will almost certainly switch back to sugar. Same goes with something like pancakes. If you trick yourself into thinking that pancakes are okay just because you make them with mashed oats and bananas, as soon as you can have a real pancake again, you are going to do it, and forget that you ever made that crapcake to begin with.

I was concerned that I had just switched one "bad habit" for another on both nights. The first night, it was rewarding myself with food. That can be a dangerous game! The second night, it was rewarding myself, or calming down after a meeting, with a beverage. If I let myself think that those were proper rewards, was I just going to jump back on the beer/wine train as soon as the elimination period was over?

I don't know the answer to that. I don't necessarily think that the habit itself was bad. It did, however, lead me to reflect on the reasonor reasons, that I often used beer/wine/food (insert your thing here) as a reward after a meeting or a long day. Not all of the reasons are negative. For one, I enjoy it. I like a good glass of wine or a delicious treat or a tasty beer. I have a selection of frozen mugs in my freezer that are always on call, waiting for the perfect pour. That first sip of beer, when the mug is still freezing cold and the beer is freshly poured...there's nothing like it. But I digress. The point is that there is nothing wrong with doing something that you enjoy as a reward, assuming that thing is not inherently dangerous to you. Another reason is that it typically leads to relaxation. Nothing wrong with that. That was the point.

The bigger question was, why beer/wine, specifically? One reason was that it was a quick solution to the problem of anxiety (at least in the moment). My wife asked me a few years ago, somewhat rhetorically, if I realized how much I used the phrase "hurry up" when talking to her or the kids. I started taking note of it and realized that even while we were on vacation my basic premise was "hurry up and relax". If you had offered me a whip to get my family out of the house faster as we were trying to get to the beach, I probably would have taken it and used it. I'd push the family out of the house, stressing everyone out, just so we could get to the beach and...sit there and relax. Well, beer/wine can help you "hurry up and relax". And while I don't have a problem with that in theory, it's a pretty short ride from consistently using beer/wine as a means to "hurry up and relax" to depending on beer/wine for relaxation. Again, you can apply that to any habit, not just drinking.

The second reason, though, was that beer/wine helps dull the mind or change your focus. Any type of sugar does the same thing. It's a mood-altering thing. Which begs the question–why do you have to change your mood? What's bothering you?

It's one thing to say, "well, I had a long day and I'd like to have a drink to take my mind off of it." Hey, I get it. Not only do I get it, I'll pour you another one. Some days life just knocks you over, and worse, it's usually things you love that are the catalyst. Your kids annoy the living bejeezus out of you and you just need a drink (insert cookie, or Facebook, or video games, or whatever) to "gladden your heart", as the Psalmist says. (Psalm 104:15). Your job is intense. Your friends are going through a tough time. Whatever it is.

But what if "normal overwhelming" isn't actually normal at all? What if your life, for whatever reason, is just plain overwhelming? What if you are overwhelmed because you are in the wrong spot, or you have a "flat tire" somewhere in your life that needs to be fixed, or there is a relationship that needs addressing, or there is something in your life that is trying to get your attention, but instead of listening to it, you are just dulling it's voice? How would you know?

Self-denial gives you the chance to discover the "why" behind the "what". Maybe your habit, or your go-to relaxation thing, isn't bad at all. Or maybe you discover that it's just masking something that should be addressed. But how would you know, unless you denied yourself for a season just to reflect on it?

Just something to think about while you are pouring yourself another seltzer and OJ. 

Self-Denial in an age of Indulgence, Part 1

Added on by Jeremy Mulder.

Last week I got tricked into doing a diet for lent. My wife suggested that we go on the diet together, and I was more than happy to comply. Thirty days of eliminating some bad stuff that we don't need. I'm all in. It wasn't until after we started that she gave me the spin:

Hey, since we started on the first day of Lent, we can just do this until Easter!

So instead of 30 days, now it's 40. Oh–and today I remembered that Lent is actually 46 days, plus Easter, because Sunday's aren't counted as part of the 40. And worst of all, if we fail, we're failing Jesus. Great. Just great.

The problem with this "elimination" diet, where you remove all of the stuff in your diet that the dietician you've chosen as your guru tells you is junk is not just that you realize all the garbage you've been eating, but you realize all the garbage that you could eat, if you really wanted to. And not because you'd fall off the wagon and go on a bender at the grocery store. You'd just need to open your pantry or your fridge. It's all right there. The garbage is around you all the time. You're surrounded by all this stuff, and unless you make a conscious decision to turn away from it, you're going to embrace it.

Participating in some form of Lenten self-denial, even if it was accidental, has made me realize how easy it is for me to indulge in basically anything that I want to indulge in, and not just that, but how often I actually do it. Food, stuff, entertainment. Whatever it is. When I want it, I can get it. That's the age we live in. And unless I'm making a conscious decision to turn away from all the things I could indulge in, I embrace it.

I'm not sure I have any sure-fire solutions to this problem, but over the next few days I'm going to offer some suggestions that we have been trying. I realize this is sort of like asking someone for some advice on dealing with suffering while they're in the midst of it, or asking someone the best way to parent when their kids are still toddlers. Everyone thinks they know the best solution when they're in the middle of it, but they don't really know until they're through it. It's usually better to ask them how they dealt with suffering once it's over and they're still mentally healthy, or to ask a parent how they did it when they're kids are functioning adults.

So maybe this is more for me than you. Either way, time will tell. So here's the first suggestion:

Give self-denial a try.

I hate this. Period. But the truth is that until you deny yourself something, you don't really know whether you could live without it, especially if it's a luxury item.

That glass (or three) of wine every day? You know you could give it up. You just don't want to. I get it. Me neither. But how do you actually know you could give it up? How do you know that you haven't become dependent on it, even if only emotionally? I'm all in on the daily glass of wine (or daily cookie or whatever your comfort food choice is) but if you never deny yourself, you'll never know if it's controlling you or you are controlling it.

I read a super-convicting statement before we went on this diet, that said something like this: no one forces you to cheat on your diet. A glass of wine doesn't magically appear. You don't accidentally have a piece of cake. No one forces you to eat unhealthy. It's your choice. Which means, you can take control, and stop being controlled by your circumstances.

Yes, we live in a world that encourages me to indulge in everything I want, when I want it. But I don't have to. That's my choice, and I want to own it.

But I hate it. Which, ironically, is exactly the reason I need to do it from time to time.

 

 

Living Christian(ly)

Added on by Jeremy Mulder.

The Christian life is about realignment. We are realigning our way of "being" from a focus on ourselves to a focus on God and others. This realignment can occur because we are already treated as if the realignment is complete; because of Jesus, we are seen as having achieved what will take us a lifetime (and more) to actually work itself out into our external reality. Often times, however, we trade the reason for our realignment with the results of our realignment, and end up in a mess.

The common approach towards realignment in the modern church is to focus on people's behavior and what they do. If we can get them to live the way that God calls us to live, then it is relatively unimportant what they actually think about it. The world will be a better place simply because we are all living according to God's ideals. In some cases this consists of teaching people to live according to the moral standards of God: don't use bad language, treat other people kindly, read your Bible, pray, serve in the church, and things like that. In other cases, it's teaching people to live according to the social standards of God: do not tolerate oppression, care for the poor, fight against injustice. Getting people to do is more important than getting them to understand. And this lack of understanding has led to, well, a lack of understanding of what it actually means to be a Christian.

When I was in grade school, we were taught how to do math by teaching us facts about math. Two + Two = Four. As long as you memorized these facts, you could get yourself to the correct answer. The math curriculum my children are going through thirty years later has introduced some significant changes in how math is taught. Rather than simply teaching the facts of math, they are trying to teach the theory behind it. Why does Two + Two = Four? In other words, the reason that Two + Two = Four is just as important as the end result. It's the modern equivalent of "showing your work". How you got to the answer is just as important as the fact that you got to the answer at all.

Modern Christianity has traded the reason for the result and so most people assume that as long as they are acting like Christians (living out something similar to the values listed above) they are Christians. Jesus teaching, however, stands in start contrast. He makes clear that it's entirely possible to be doing all the right things, but miss the main point. Our "realignment" is only possible because Jesus has made it possible. If we attempt realignment without Jesus, it doesn't actually work in the long run.

What we need to do is remember that the only reason that we can realign our deepest desires, our deepest affections, and our deepest loves, is because Jesus has already done it perfectly in his life, death, and resurrection. As a result, we can actually begin to live a life that is truly in alignment with the way that Jesus calls us to live: loving God, and loving others.

Recapturing our Joy

Added on by Jeremy Mulder.

The train of thought went like this:

I was somewhat sullen after a long summer, filled with more challenges and tragedy than I could have possibly expected.

I thought back to when I was feeling really fulfilled in my work and ministry, and remembered that it was earlier this year.

What was I doing then? I was writing more frequently–nearly every day, in fact. I was working up to something; writing was an outlet not just for my own joy but also for the burden I felt to share what God was doing in the world and how we should think about it.

I didn't feel like I could have that joy again.

And then I remembered the first post that I had written when I got back into writing. It was titled, "restarting and the Christian life." I read it again, and remembered. Sometimes you just need to get back on the horse.

The most shocking thing to me, perhaps, is that I got away from it to begin with. Why did that happen? What squeezed out the most joy-filled part of my day, the part I really looked forward to, the part that made me feel like every other part of the day was worth it? Of course I'm speaking about a work day here, not the day generally. There are plenty of things to make the day, each day, worth living, even if I were to place the general calling of the Christian that gave my life purpose to the side. A wife, children, the blessing of provision, and on it goes. Yet most of us go to work day in and day out and we can say that we love our work but what we mean is that we love spects of our work and we endure the other aspects of it because they allow us to do the things that we really love.

A friend of mine who is an exceptional communicator and pastors his church well through that gift said to me that he loved preaching so much on Sunday that he endured the meetings throughout the week just so that he would have a chance to do that. That sentiment resonates.

Somehow that thing that I really enjoyed, and felt like I was fulfilled in, got squeezed out. Life does that. We need to protect the things that give us joy, or they get bumped to the side. I think it's for the same reason that our most important relationships tend to get neglected; we assume they will always be there, so we don't invest much in them. Then we find that they have deteriorated. Or we find that we aren't doing the things that bring us joy anymore, because life took over.

That joy need to be recaptured.

There are things in your life that used to bring you joy. Maybe it was a particular activity, maybe it was a relationship. Maybe you used to find joy in reading, but you haven't read in a while. Maybe you used to find joy in your marriage, and you wonder where it went. Many times we are concerned we may never get that joy back. The answer, I think, is just to press in. Start reading. Begin the activity. Invest in the relationship. Just do it.

You may find that the joy can be recaptured after all.

 

Equality & Law Enforcement

Added on by Jeremy Mulder.

Back when the events in Ferguson, MO were going down, I had a conversation with someone where the person admitted that he couldn't figure out why things transpired as they did. On the one hand, he couldn't figure out why a man might get shot or even hassled by the cops. On the other hand, he couldn't figure out why the end result would be rioting. This kind of thing didn't happen in Saratoga Springs, NY.

Of course it doesn't, I told him, because the people in Saratoga Springs, where he was from, were wealthy.

Let me be clear: that is not intended to be a character statements about wealthy people. There is no shortage of sin and brokenness at every level of affluence. Wealthy people commit just as many, and quite possibly more, crimes than poor people. Wealthy people are often just as rude to the cops and sometimes, distrusting in different ways. The reason that things like Ferguson don't happen in Saratoga Springs is not because the people are better or more moral or more ethical. It is because in Saratoga, the people have the money to keep the police just.

If a police officer in Saratoga Springs hassles someone unjustly, it's likely that the person he is hassling has the financial means to right the wrong, should it be necessary. Even if the person he hassles doesn’t have the means, the general community does, and they aren’t going to tolerate even the possibility of being hassled or treated unjustly. The police officer understands that his authority and power are held in check by the very people that he is called to police. If he does not do his job, he might lose it; if he takes advantage of his job, he might also lose it. The people in a wealthy city like Saratoga Springs have at least as much power as the police officer, and as it turns out, that’s the only scenario in which law enforcement can truly operate effectively.

Again, law enforcement can only function effectively in a society where the citizens have just as much power as the law enforcers. There is actually a biblical principle for this that comes up over and over again throughout the Bible, because it’s based on the very character of God himself. The principle is this: True biblical submission can only take place in the context of equality. 

In the New Testament, there are authoritative/submissive commands for various relationships. Husband and wife, employer and employee, parents and children, and so on. Some people misunderstand those passages and attempt to do away with "authority/submission" language to soften the blow; in other words, they deemphasize the structure, in order to draw attention to the equality. Others misunderstand those passages by attempting to emphasize the authority/submission language, and often end up losing the value of inherent equality. To understand it properly requires that we view these commands through the Biblical lens which does not emphasize one over the other, but actually demonstrates that true authority/submission can only happen within true and real equality. 

The early missionary and writer of much of the New Testament, Paul, emphasized on more than one occasion the equality of all people in the sight of God, while also emphasizing that within that equality there is a mutual submission that consists of authoritative roles and submissive roles. As it turns out, this is the most clear reflection of the nature of God, where we find that God is both equal with himself–that is, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are all equal in their divinity and in their power and in their essence–and yet, are also submissive to one another, so that the Son is submissive to the Father's will and the Holy Spirit is submissive to the Father and the Son. Submission can only exist in the context of equality.

A healthy society, therefore, will emphasize the equality of law enforcement and the citizens. In a society where the law enforcement has all the power, you will end up with a domineering police state that hassles it's citizens without repercussion, and carries out it's "justice" inequitably amongst the people. Such is the case in many lower income areas, where the people do not have any power to keep the police in check. On the other hand, a state where law enforcement is deemphasized and disrespected also ends up with just as much injustice. Those with access will bend the law to their will, and the officers of that law to boot. The officers will end up serving some, and neglecting others. Instead of a balance of power, the people have the power (by which I mean, the wealthy people), the law enforcement become their pawns, and ultimately just as much injustice ensues.

No, there is only one way that law enforcement works in a healthy society, and that is when both the enforcer and the enforcee recognize their equality and thus their equal share of power. Both parties therefore enter into a mutually beneficial agreement; you will respect me, as a person, and my sovereignty, yet will nevertheless enforce the societal laws that we all agree on.

So why do "things like this not happen" in Saratoga? Because in Saratoga, there is a balance of power between those with the legal power and those with the financial power. They hold one another in check. In Ferguson, and in almost all places where we see this type of unrest, they do not hold one another in check. One side has all the power, and it's not the people. It's law enforcement.

That's why injustice happens, and that's why people respond in anger. They have no other choice. They have no other power. The only way to get something to happen is to get noticed, and hopefully, they will see justice.

If you can't understand why they would do that, my guess is, it's because you have other ways to fix the problem.

Can a Christian Smoke Marijuana? Maybe.

Added on by Jeremy Mulder.

Within my lifetime there has been a significant shift in the cultural perspective on marijuana usage. Just today, as I sat in Starbucks sipping my decaf coffee (I didn't want to abuse the drug caffeine), I was simultaneously reading a forum discussion between Pastor's on the subject of whether or not Christians should smoke weed and eavesdropping on a conversation between people next to me who were discussing their perspectives. Both parties at the table next to me discussed the rampant drug use in the high school that they were familiar with; one of them said, "Marijuana has replaced alcohol as the drug of choice. It's so much safer! It's all natural, too." The other (apparently after the other person had left, because I wasn't watching them and there was no response), gave the traditional perspective: "It's so dangerous...it's a gateway drug."

The shift in cultural perspective means that in some parts of the country, recreational marijuana use is legal, and in all likelihood the rest of the nation will follow this trend. Many Christians have refrained from using marijuana simply because it has been illegal; as that will no longer be the case, they are actually forced to have a perspective on it and think through why a Christian should abstain or not abstain. If you live in one of those areas where it is already legal, there's a good chance the discussion has already come up: should a Christian smoke marijuana?

Let me say up front that I am not talking about medical usage of marijuana. Marijuana is proven to relieve the symptoms of some ailments, and the research has increasingly demonstrated potential value in cases such as epilepsy. A friend-of-a-friend uses it for just this purpose, and claims that it's the only thing that works to keep him from the seizures that he's had since he was born. My assumption is that he's telling the truth, and that if it works, more power to him. But that's a post for a different day. In this case, I'm talking about recreational use specifically.

The first place the Christian looks to see if there is any instruction or guidance on the subject is the Bible. So long as marijuana was illegal, the discussion on whether or not a Christian should partake was really just a question of whether or not a Christian was obligated to follow the laws of the land. Since the Bible makes clear that they should, the Christian response to marijunana was similarly black and white. If it is legalized, then that argument becomes moot. And since marijuana usage is not specifically addressed in the Scripture, we have to turn to related issues to determine whether or not it's use is acceptable. Those two related issues are the Bible's teaching on alcohol usage, and the teaching on sobriety generally.

Alcohol & Sobriety 

Although there are differing perspectives within the Christian community on whether or not a Christian should ever drink alcohol, it is an issue that should fit solidly into the "conviction" category of beliefs. A conviction is a belief that a Christian has that is addressed by Scripture, but not in a way that makes the conclusion obvious. As a result, our convictions–although informed by Scripture–are often heavily influenced by our personal experience, and thus we can come to different conclusions and still remain friends without attempting to dismantling the other person's faith. 

The Bible does address alcohol usage, but does so in a way that leaves open the option for Christians to drink. Those in favor of having the occasional drink point out that Jesus first miracle was turning water into wine; those opposed to drinking alcohol point out that the main point of the miracle had to do with purification, not wine drinking, and in any case because Jesus allows something doesn't mean he condones it. In his letters, Paul would encourage the early Christians to "remain sober-minded"; this is the teaching that seems to be behind Paul's exhortation not to get "drunk like the pagans, which leads to debauchery". If there is a clearly-expressed biblical principle related to alcohol, this is it. The Christian should maintain his wits about him; he or she shouldn't voluntarily submit their mental focus to anything that would negatively impact their sobriety.

The reason for this, I think, has less to do with the results of being under the influence, and more to do with the opportunity cost of the loss of sobriety. The results are certainly important, as Paul points out: getting wasted often leads us to make very unwise choices, sometimes to the point that we don't remember we made them. Those effects are temporal, however. They are for this life only. The greater tragedy is the opportunity cost of the loss of sobriety; that is, when we are not sober-minded, we will be ill-equipped to share the Gospel if an opportunity arises. This gets to the heart of Peter's exhortation to the believers in his first letter: always be prepared to give an answer for the hope that you have. There is much that this could mean, but it certainly includes the understanding that the Christian person should be always ready to share the Gospel, and anything that would inhibit our ability to do that should be put aside. Thus, the desirable state of mind for the believer is the one in which he or she is sober and ready to make a defense of the Christian faith.

So then, we are left with these two principles: first, that the usage of alcohol itself is never condemned, and second, that what is condemned is anything that would cause us to lose our wits. If we take the first principle to mean that alcohol usage is allowed, then certainly the guiding principle should be the second: there are limits to God's good creation! The Psalmist remarks that wine gladdens our hearts (Psalm 104), but the wise teacher of the proverbs reminds us that it can also lead us astray; to follow it would be unwise. (Proverbs 20)

These are the two principles that I would apply to the recreational usage of marijuana. Will it cause you to lose your wits? Can you occasionally smoke marijuana and still be in a state of mind to share the Gospel? If so, then I cannot see a biblical reason that it would be disallowed. This is not to say that it would be wise to smoke marijuana. That is a different question and one that I have very little interest in answering at this juncture. Everyone makes unwise choices, and often with regularity. What I'm interested in is what God thinks about it. And as far as I can tell based on what he has chosen to reveal, the best we can do is develop a personal conviction on the issue. We can decide for ourselves based on the Scripture and encourage others to see things how we see them, but we're not allowed to chastise someone for choosing differently than us, if they at least understand what the Bible teaches. If God wanted to be clear, he certainly could have been. But he wasn't. And that means that as we apply what he has told us, we might not all agree. That's what makes it a conviction, rather than an essential.

And at the end of the day, we can still all get along.

Speculating on Jesus: Reliable Sources?

Added on by Jeremy Mulder.

The final challenge that might be presented in light of the recent survey previously referenced is the challenge of whether or not the source material of Jesus life is to be trusted. By way of reminder, the survey indicated that most Americans believe that Jesus was a historical person who existed, but the opinions about what he was actually like or who he actually was varied greatly. This means that for the modern American Christian, the chief concern is not proving that he was, but who he was. This means, first, that Jesus is someone that we should care about beyond the typical historical figure. Second, it means that we need to know where to look to find out more information about him. And then finally, we need to determine whether that source material can be trusted.

As I mentioned in the last post, this third question is only posed when we realize that the source material about Jesus (his biographies) unashamedly present a man who believed that he was God. His claims were not just universal in nature, but they were actually universal truth claims about himself. If he really was God, if he really did do the things that he said, then it has tremendous implications for our life today. So much so, that if we can't rightly ignore what he said according to his biographers, then the next best thing to do is question the source altogether. Perhaps the accounts have been embellished. Perhaps, over time, the accounts have been changed to present a figure that said more than Jesus ever actually did.

This argument is quite easy to dispel, of course. Simply, if you were trying to soften the blow of Jesus' claims, or you were trying to make him more acceptable to the skeptic, you would have dialed down his claims, not ratcheted them up. In this case, Jesus' biographers would have made his words more offensive, more outlandish, and ultimately more crazy–unless they were true and he actually said them. We must keep in mind that it is recorded, extra-biblical, and fully accepted history that this group of people called Christians were being mercilessly persecuted by Rome, and particularly by the emperor Nero. Even if we wanted to make the highly unlikely and somewhat illogical argument that all of these early Christians were delusional, persecution that led to death certainly would have cleared out the insane from the sane. Instead of shrinking this group of people, however, it actually grew.

It's helpful to remember that these were first and second generation Christians who were being killed. Some of them may have been alive during Jesus ministry; most almost certainly had parents who were alive during that time. They faced this persecution precisely because they believed that the message of Jesus was true. He really did say what he said he did. He really was who he said he was. 

The Gospel writers fall into this group of people who, again, were first or second generation Christians. Three out of four definitely saw the ministry of Jesus. One of them, Luke, may not have, and perhaps that is what prompted his thoroughly researched biography that he claims to present to a person named Theophilus. Nevertheless, it behooved all of them to account for Jesus life as it actually happened. There was no benefit to making the story more than it was. They were already going to lose their lives on account of Jesus and who he was. Better to die for the real Jesus than someone they made up. Furthermore, the early church consistently verified these accounts of Jesus life as being accurate and truthful accounts of Jesus life.

All things being equal, a group that believed a known lie–and make no mistake but that the central moment of Jesus life, the resurrection, would have been a known lie were it not actually true–may have continued to propagate that truth so long as it led to pleasurable results. That is, assuming that the first disciples made up the outlandish story of Jesus rising from the dead, so long as it had pleasurable results the group might have just gone on propagating that story. What did it matter, so long as the results were good? Yet this is not what happened. While it did, for a time, produce pleasurable results, the fact is that the more one believed the message, and the more that one shared the message and lived out the implications to this truth, the less desirable the results became. If you really believed it, and you shared it, and you were obvious about the message of Jesus resurrection, you were threatened, arrested, and beaten, almost from the jump. If the resurrection–again, the single act that motivated the early church to advance–were not true, the disciples would have known that it wasn't true. At some point, someone would have cracked. At some point, a second or third generation follower would hear the story, not having seen the resurrection for themselves, and said, "this is crazy", and eventually the movement would have died. Of course, the other possibility is that the resurrection is not a lie at all, but an actual historical event that took place. Quite frankly, this is the direction that all of the notable information points. The movement really did happen. Cowards became courageous. The government and the religious leaders–two major powers who wanted nothing more than for this Jesus character to go away–never presented the body, despite knowing exactly where they put it because they guarded it with soldiers.

In the end, we might find that the message of Jesus' biographies, and the claims that he made about himself, are either outlandish or they are old fashioned. We may find that they are offensive. But none of these are the central question that we ought to ask. The question is, are they true? Did Jesus actually say and do these things? Are the Gospel accounts trustworthy? Given the historical context (not to mention the harmony of the four accounts), it seems that it would be more reasonable to ask why we wouldn't trust them. No one had anything to gain by fabricating these stories. The government didn't want to advance the message. The religious leaders never wanted to think about Jesus again. The Christians knew they would be killed for writing the things that they wrote. The only reason you'd write them is if they were, at the end of the day, actually the things that Jesus said and did, and if, at the end of the day, you were willing to stake your life on their truth. And that's exactly what the writers did.