Asking the Wrong Questions About Rights and Freedom

With the recent Supreme Court’s upholding the constitutionality of the Health Care Law known as Obamacare and the upcoming Independence Day holiday, I’ve been pondering how many pundits are asking and answering the wrong question.  Headlines are everywhere about the government upholding every American’s right to, in this case, health care.

That’s asking and answering the wrong question: “What rights does the government give us?”

Because the truth is the government didn’t come first.  The rights we have date back to our Creator. 

That’s what the Bible says and for those who don’t like the Bible, it’s also what the Declaration of Independence says.  

Significantly drafted by Thomas Jefferson, the same man who took a pair of scissors to his Bible to make a book scrubbed of any supernatural elements, the United States Declaration of Independence was adopted by the Second Continental Congress on July 4, 1776, the anniversary we celebrate as the Fourth of July, Independence Day. The text of the second section of the Declaration of Independence states,

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.”

If we take the Bible and the Declaration of Independence to be correct, the government doesn’t give us any rights.  Our Creator does.

So the right question becomes, “What is the purpose of the rights we have?” 

The rights we have are given so that we might freely choose how to live (i.e. whether we will follow God or choose a different way).  The government’s role is not to give any rights whatsoever.  The role of government is to guard and protect our freedom and to preserve those God-given rights that we already have.

  • Will we find life with God or without Him?
  • Will we enjoy full liberty in Him or apart from Him?
  • Will we pursue and find genuine happiness with God or on our own?

It’s part of what makes the United States of America a beautiful place to live.  It is why America is the envy of an oppressed world which yearns for the political freedom to pursue God-given rights.

Would you like to go deeper into the topic of Freedom and Rights? If so, please join me on the page.

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Asking the Wrong Questions about Patriarchy

This is a trustworthy saying. And I want you to stress these things, so that those who have trusted in God may be careful to devote themselves to doing what is good. These things are excellent and profitable for everyone.  But avoid foolish controversies and genealogies and arguments and quarrels about the law, because these are unprofitable and useless (Titus 3:8-9).

Asking all the wrong questions is an unprofitable and useless endeavor.   Yet, in every wrong question and its wrong answer, people find hills to die on.  Fight to the death is what too many do and we end up bleeding the Body of Christ with words that hurt, wounds that endure, and worthless controversy that the Bible says is harmful, unprofitable, useless, and completely futile.  Why do we do this?

In this first installment of Asking the Wrong Questions, we’ll be considering the wrong question, “Is patriarchy God’s design for women?” 

 The short answer is Yes and No.  Patriarchy is God’s design for all of us, yet not as we practice it in our culture. 

 If you’d like to go deeper, please join me on the next page.

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Top Ten Things I Wish Every Jew Knew

Top Ten Things I Wish Every Jew Knew About Christians (Summary Version)

Every year at this time, I confront the question “Did the Jews kill Jesus?” and I’m  reminded of the Jewish roots of Christianity.  I’m saddened at the ongoing misunderstanding between many Jewish people and Christians.

 If I could speak to the hearts of the Jewish people, here are the top 10 things I wish you knew about me:

  1. I don’t blame you for the crucifixion of Jesus.
  2. I didn’t cause the Holocaust—I’m as outraged as you are that it happened.
  3. I love the Jewish people.
  4. I won’t force my beliefs on you.
  5. I don’t refer to the Tanakh as the Old Testament because the New Testament supplanted it.
  6. I am not like every other Christian just as I respect that not all Jews are exactly alike.
  7. I don’t view myself as superior or you as inferior.
  8. I don’t view your faith as wrong–Jesus practiced it.
  9. Discrimination on the basis of our faith is wrong—whether Jew or Christian.
  10. I am Christian because I follow Jesus, who was Jewish.

Would you like to read the explanations of each of these?  Please join me on the next page as we go deeper in our understanding each other.

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Forgiveness

Forgiveness (Summary Version)

What is forgiveness?  Forgiveness is a transaction between two or more individuals.  Forgiveness assumes someone acted wrongly toward another and that the offended person has a right to something as payment to make peace with the offense and the offender.  It’s also a relational issue…and a complicated one at that.  If you’d like to explore deeper, join me on the next page.

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The Harrowing of Hell

The Harrowing of Hell (Summary Version):

Harrowing of Hell

Thank you, Simon, for asking the interesting question about  the “Harrowing of Hell.”   First, I’ll offer a short summary answer followed by two pages going progressively deeper into the topic.

The term “Harrowing of Hell” refers to the time after Christ’s victory over death through which He was able to secure freedom for righteous men and women imprisoned by sin since the Fall of Man.  The timing happened sometime after His death, but before His resurrection.  Some theologians do not want to taint Christ with Hell…even by a temporary visit…so they disregard this as not being in Scripture.

The bottom line is that the answer to the question “Where did Jesus go after He died?” is that His body lay in the ground for three days prior to His resurrection while His Spirit went elsewhere.

Jesus Christ secured freedom for all of God’s faithful people by His death on the Cross –even if it doesn’t specifically say how Christ went to release them from hell.

 But there’s more to this and if you’d like to go deeper, join me on the next page.

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