Here and there and everywhere dribbling: Subjectivity, Africa, & Love
Good and bad are subjective. Completely subjective. Right and wrong, moral objection. All subjective. How so?
President Bush thinks good is intervening in Middle Eastern affairs (bad)-kill Iraqis. He has his reasons:
Homeland security
Economics-which benefit the
Protection of
Christian/American values, adhering to them whatever the cost, whatever the sacrifice
The “terrorists” (aka Bin Laden and gang) think good is intervening in
Homeland security
Economics-which benefit his nation and their peoples
Protection of Islam (religiously speaking, God’s people)
Muslim values, adhering to them whatever the cost, whatever the sacrifice
Seem strikingly similar? Let’s continue:
Hitler thought good was purifying the world of inferior races (bad)-kill Jews. He has his reasons:
National pride
Apparent superiority of Aryan accomplishment to others’
Belief that the Nazi way was the most effective
Racial cleansing is the path to a more perfect, productive world
Billy Graham thinks good is purifying the world of sin (bad), one grand lecture at a time-convert all to Christianity. He has his reasons:
His religious beliefs he’s learned and held all his life
His personal experience that Christianity changes people
Considering ‘sin’(bad behavior) the ultimate enemy
Career- verbal crusades gather attention to a cause
Bono and many non-celebrities think good is helping Africans where they’re at-kill disease, apathy, and poverty. He has his reasons:
Disease, Apathy, and Poverty hurt people
Africa is a neglected continent torn by wars begun by their own kind and others who make
The cure for hurt is Love (affection, attention, and acceptance along with those 1 Cor. 13 traits)
I was thinking the other day how I’ve been saying Jesus came to show the JEWS a way out of their religion-a religion that bound them to law and ritual instead of “walking with God.” It’s true. Jesus was a Jew who didn’t follow the Jewish belief system, but fulfilled it (aka completed, peace-out Judasim) by his demonstration of perfect love-letting the Christ in him out. However, I’ve heard several times now the question of Jesus’ intended audience. Was he just for the Jews? What about the Gentiles? Didn’t he come to SAVE THE WORLD?! :-O
My response to this is: slow down. Separate that Christian doctrine from Judaism-quit mixing the two…religion is supposed to separate. That’s just what it does. It’s expected to. But most of all, remember that Jesus belongs with Judaism, not Christianity. He might be the champion of the latter, but it was not around when he lived, nor did he create it. Humanity did as humanity does—makes tools to help it see what it can’t seem to understand themselves. And more often than not, it’s better off without those tools because humanity doesn’t recognize tools’ limits. Religion is such a tool.
So Jesus (the biological person, from
Just a thought:
Sometimes I even wonder why we don’t just let