Faith, Poetry

A Bedtime Prayer

God, the time to sleep has come for me at last;
this day, though blest, has been a weary one.
Both pain and gain I had beneath the sun,
and now I close with thanks for what has passed:
You gave me breath to walk, and work, and sing.
On wicked words and deeds, please, mercy show.
You gave me light to see, and know, and go.
I wanted more; I could have had much less.
You gave me hope, enduring in distress;
above all things it kept me fighting sin.
You gave me love—of beauty, kith, and kin,
delights enkindling love of You, my King.
So many were your perfect gifts as through the day I pressed.
With gratitude I gently go most sweetly to my rest.

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Faith, Poetry

A Morning Prayer

God, your brilliance lit each photon that has shined.
You wove spacetime. You framed the human mind.
Your might assembled every quantum mote,
and heaped up stars like sand, and formed my throat.
And though you’ve bound the universe with death,
today again you’ve filled my lungs with breath.
So speaking now, I kneel as I rise.
I place my hope in you. You hold my fate.
The Bible says you’re holy, loving, wise;
Muhammad says you’re merciful and great.
But me, I’ve never seen you with my eyes;
I only know to cling to hope and wait.
So lowly, weak, uncertain, full of sin,
I’ll worship, serve, and sing as if you’ll come again.

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Faith

Islamic Evidence of the Bible’s Corruption

Note: While living for two years in Saudi Arabia I made Muslim friends and as a result have developed Islamic connections on social media. One group I am a part of is devoted to interfaith dialog between Muslims and Christians. The majority of the members appear to be from the Middle East and Africa. In April, I posed a question to the group: “Muslim apologists frequently claim that the Bible has been corrupted from its original form. What specific evidence do you have of corruption? As someone who has spent more than a little time studying the textual history of the Bible, the New Testament in particular, I find the claim of corruption difficult to substantiate. Compared to all other ancient texts, the Biblical text is extremely well attested in the manuscript record.” The question led to hundreds of comments and counter comments from many members. Those comments I consolidated into a single list of twenty evidences. I then shared that list of twenty with the group and asked for validation, which I received from the Muslim members of the group. I present that list here without additional comment. I hope in the future to return to it and share further thoughts. (DL, Sept. 13, 2021)


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Faith

Disillusioned Tears

Notes: Much of my inner life since about 2010 has been lived against a backdrop of constant, dull pain. It is the pain of disillusionment, of hope betrayed. In the last few years I have learned to have more peace, to accept what I cannot change. In particular, I have begun to learn how to live a life of faith again and to hope in God even in the midst of unresolved doubt. But there are days (today was one in fact) where the old pain is strong, and then I feel lethargic and sad. (DL, June 10, 2023).


"You have been trying to trap me in words, playing with me? Or are you now trying to snare me with a falsehood?"
"I would not snare even an orc with a falsehood," said Faramir.

I was raised in a Christian home by conservative parents.

I was taught that the Bible is 100% literally true because it’s God’s message to humanity.

As a boy, I was taught that biblical, heterosexual marriage and the family is a great good and a gift from God. I was taught that husbands and wives deserve loyalty, kindness, and love from one another, and that they have a duty to be loyal, kind, and loving.

I was taught that abortion is wrong and a heinous slaughter of innocents because every human—even an unborn one—is a valuable soul made in the image of God Himself.

I was taught that God hates lies, and that to speak truth and eschew falsehood is Good, is pleasing to God, and is a mark of honor in a man.

I was taught that stealing from another—or even coveting what belongs to another instead of rejoicing with them in their bounty—is an evil deed, and that persisting in evil deeds, and hiding them, stains and twists the character and the soul.

I was taught that a man is to treat a woman with respect at all times, and in matters of love, with gentleness and chivalry.

That’s what I was taught, and each of those lessons took deep root in the very core of my being. I believed them all. And I wanted to be—longed to be—a man characterized by those things. A man of Virtue.


Then I grew up an learned lots of other things.

First I learned that the president was a Bad Man because he wasn’t a Man of Virtue. He did shady dealings with cronies. He Whitewatered and Travelgated and cheated on his wife with an intern and lied about it.

How sad for America that Bad People had chosen a Bad Man to be president instead of a Man of Virtue like Ronald Reagan.

Then I learned more.

I learned that my Sunday-school-dad was a serial adulterer. I learned that my mom and dad had, ahem, known each other for a long time before they were married. I learned that the guy who worked for Ronald Regan who went on to write the Book of Virtues was a gambling addict. I learned that Rush Limbaugh was a drug addict. That Newt Gingrich left his wife when she had cancer. I learned that pastors—so many pastors—cheated on their wives. I learned that lots of things taught as for-sure Bible truth were in fact a bunch of nonsense. And that the Bible probably isn’t 100% literally true at all.

And I learned more.

I learned that it was more fun to play video games than to work hard. I learned that I liked porn and that it was very hard not to look at it. I learned that telling lies could really make your day go a lot more smoothly than telling the truth. I learned that I liked eating junk food and would keep doing it even though I knew it made me fat and that my being fat was unpleasant for me and for those closest to me—but I did it anyway.

So much I have learned.

About the loss of faith. About political expediency. And WMDs in Iraq. And water boarding. And To Catch a Predator. About the Jack Bauers and the Frank Underwoods. The Bill Clintons. Bill Gothards. Arnold Schwarzeneggers. The Donald Trumps.

And yes, even the David Lohneses.


I would be lying if I didn’t admit that I very often wish with a lump in my throat (maybe even now, but shhhhh) that I could be that boy again who believed in Good and looked up to Good Men, and the Good Old Flag, and the Good Book, and delighted in Hope at the triumph of Good.

But I can’t.

I’m a middle-aged, overweight white guy who struggles with depression at what he and the world is and is becoming, even though I have nothing to complain about because I’m a scion of white upper middle-class America and have had basically all the benefits with very few of the pains of the human experience.

I grew up thinking I lived in Lothlorien only to discover I was in Terry Gilliam’s Brazil. And the wound has never healed.


But I will be damned before I give up on Lothlorien.

And I’ll be damned before I vote for Saruman for loathing of Sauron. The light may fail, and darkness may cover the lands, and I may be an orc myself like every other orc that slithers across this globe.

But even if orcs and a world filled with orcish dens is all I ever know, in my heart the Idea of the Good Man still shines brightly—so brightly it hurts. And I may never be that, and I may never see it, but I’ll be damned before I walk away from it.

And I refuse to be a Wormtongue to Trump’s Saruman,

Even if so many of those I once respected and trusted have no problem being so.


EDIT: Based on several similar comments, it seems that this post has come across as more of a complaint against people than I meant it–as if there were some bitterness or disappointment I feel in people. That is not how I feel. One of my friends upon reading this post encouraged me not to forget forgiveness, and to save some for myself as well. I have pasted my response to him below.


Forgiveness.

If I have forgotten it, I suppose it would be for myself as you suggest. I love myself as much as any man does, yet often I do not like myself.

But I have no grudge with people. I don’t feel betrayed by the failings of others. How can I blame people for being people? Born into an inscrutable existence, beset with sorrows and challenges beyond their means, and finding their try half over just as they begin to understand the question.

I would have little knowledge of either myself or the human condition if I were to begrudge others their failures—no matter how low.

For many I feel mostly pity. Dennis Hastert is a good example. How must the enjoyment of his accolades and power been tainted by the knowledge of his secret sin—like Dimmesdale in the Scarlet Letter. Unless he felt no guilt or shame and was instead a nothing man not feeling the brokenness of his state, clinging to scraps of glory and power he could never keep, watching in vain as day by day his face grew older in the mirror. An evil man, but pitiable—like Gollum, grasping in vain after his Precious, and incapable of peace.

Probably if I had been a victim, my pity would be overcome by bitterness and hate, and forgiveness would be hard to find. And certainly I believe in Evil and that there are Evil Men worthy only of confrontation and destruction.

But mostly I see the human race as struggling blindly in darkness. We are something like sightless swine squealing after scraps, while singing stories about our royal pedigree and noble mien. We are also like blind children, left alone in the wild to grope our way home as best we can. Pitiable.

Some perhaps are born bent and broken, as are dogs which have been bred to cruelty and violence. But even then, a person can hardly choose his genes or upbringing.

No. I have no grudge with people. If I feel a grudge, it is with God.

It seems to me that if He is and rules as my Calvinist reading of the Bible says he does, He must be cruelly unjust—setting us to a test He knows we cannot pass, and torturing us forever when we fail it.

If He is and rules in some other way, then He seems to me distant and uncaring—giving no sure and loving sign to lead us on the road while we squeal and grope in the darkness, consuming ourselves.

If He is not . . .
. . . then Lorien indeed is dead and I am inconsolable.

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Politics

A Theologian Argues for Trump

Note: I was hardcore #NeverTrump from the very beginning. He represents the opposite of Conservative values and Christian values, being both a fascist and a deeply immoral, selfish man. This Facebook post from the 2016 election cycle is representative of my views both then and now. (DL, June 10, 2023).


townhall.com/columnists/waynegrudem/2016/07/28/why-voting-for-donald-trump-is-a-morally-good-choice-n2199564

Respected theologian Wayne Grudem is publicly teaching that voting for Trump is the moral thing to do.

The core of Grudem’s argument is this:

"There is nothing morally wrong with voting for a flawed candidate if you think he will do more good for the nation than his opponent. In fact, it is the morally right thing to do."

The core of my response is this:

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Faith

Irrefragable: Examining the Word-for-word Reliability of the Gospels

“The Scripture cannot be broken.”

Jesus

The following analysis was first written in May of 2015 for a group of dear friends with whom I was working through some questions related to the Christian faith of my childhood and early adult years. Beginning in my early-mid 30s, for the first time in my life I began to seriously question the veracity and authority of the Bible. This analysis was an output of that process of questioning. (DL, Sept. 6, 2021)

Bart Ehrman’s arguments about who Jesus actually was and how he came to be thought of as he is now among Christians all take as their starting place a conviction that the four gospels which describe Jesus were not supernaturally delivered and are not literally, word-for-word true and error-free.

In order to enter into Ehrman’s arguments, one must be able to entertain the possibility that the four gospels are not 100% true and reliable guides to history. This is the key leap for a person like Ehrman who moved from evangelical faith to agnosticism. At one point he believed that the gospels are 100% historically reliable; at a later point he did not.

The parts of Ehrman that I’ve read so far delve briefly into the question of the gospels’ reliability, but mostly take it as an assumption that they are not 100% reliable. But for those in our position, the question needs more detailed attention.

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Faith

A Prayer Written in the Face of Rationalist Doubt

Note: The first half of 2015 was a time of spiritual crisis for me. Doubts and questions that had been building for years came to a head in a moment of personal and family trauma. One of the outputs of that period was this prayer which I wrote carefully but have–in truth–only seldom prayed. (DL, Sept. 12, 2021)


Maker of Spacetime and Human Minds, you who are the Author of Good and Source of Light, please hear my prayer and grant my request:

I wander in uncertainty as to your truth and the path to your right hand. I want to know you as you would be known and rejoice in the joy that only can be found in the warmth of your fellowship. 

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Faith

Presuppositions that Frame my Examination of the Scriptures

The following points were first written in May of 2015 for a group of dear friends with whom I was working through some questions related to the Christian faith of my childhood and early adult years. Beginning in my early-mid 30s, for the first time in my life I began to seriously question the veracity and authority of the Bible. These points are an output of that process of questioning. (DL, Sept. 6, 2021)


What follows is an attempt to frame the starting point from whence I begin an examination of the Scriptures. These points should be taken as a provisional and ad hoc distillation of thoughts I’ve been a long-time forming. I am happy to see them challenged or accepted as suits the reader.

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Thoughts

Sehnsucht

Note: This is a lightly edited version of an e-mail I sent on May 10, 2015. The concept of Sehnsucht was originally introduced to me by a dear friend (Gloria Repp) some years prior. Since writing this I have experienced what I only know how to describe as a kind of emotional burnout. The glimpses described her stopped. Whether from aging, emotional trauma, or some other cause I do not know. Nevertheless, it feels a bit like a part of my brain–the emotionally imaginative and hopeful part–has burnt out. Hopefully not forever. (DL, Dec. 4, 2022)


Sehnsucht is a German word. It means “longing.”

But it represents something more than that English word conveys. It is a very difficult concept for me to explain, but it’s a very important one, for it a key to my secret heart, my secret longing. In Surprised by Joy, C. S. Lewis uses the word “Joy” in a special way. It’s a feeling he would get at certain unexpected moments while reading or walking in the countryside or listening to music. More than happiness, more than jollity, it’s like for a moment he would get a feeling or a glimpse of something deeper, more real, more perfect than this world. He would be taken beyond this world for a moment and filled with wonder; he would be surprised by joy. And those glimpses of joy begat a longing for joy, a longing for the perfect, a longing that led him to search for it in literature and music and philosophy till he found it in Christ. That longing for joy, for the perfect and complete, could be called sehnsucht,

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Thoughts

Morality Presupposes Transcendence

Note: This series of Facebook comments began as a response to someone I’ve forgotten on a friend’s post that I’ve also forgotten. Through all my decade plus of spiritual doubt, I never lost confidence in—and still have never lost—the observation expressed in this post that without a transcendent reality beyond the material universe, there can be no rational basis for the concepts of Good an Evil. I only have my part of the exchange. Summary comments have been added for clarity. (DL, June 13, 2023).


What the quote [OP’s Name Redacted] posted addresses is a fundamental flaw with philosophical materialism. If there is no reality beyond the matter of this universe, then talking about good and evil is meaningless.

States of matter cannot be good or evil. They are simply configurations of atoms. A supernova doesn’t have moral quality, neither does an avalanche. Both are simply matter in motion.

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