Friday, October 23, 2020

Share the Fear

        Ah, the season of scares! It’s upon us. Whether you love Halloween or pretend it doesn’t exist, much of the world is preparing for something frightening at this time of year. If you look up the history of Halloween you’ll find that what began as an ancient religious festival to ward off evil spirits has become a secular celebration, where people actually dress up as and invite the very spirits the festival was originally supposed to get rid of! The earliest settlers of the American colonies largely rejected the holiday due to their strong Protestant beliefs, but since the early 20th century it has become a multibillion dollar festivity in the United States alone. Horror movies bring in almost one billion dollars each year, and those are on the rise. Even though I don’t like scary movies now, I’m pretty sure I saw every one ever made before the year 2000, so I get the draw. But, why do we love being scared so much that we’re willing to spend money on it?

I’m not a psychiatrist and I’m sure people have different reasons, but there is one explanation that I think applies to everyone. That is the fact that we were created to fear. Psalm 33:8 says, “Let all the earth fear the Lord.” Proverbs calls the fear of the Lord wisdom and knowledge. Luke tell us that God is to be feared because He can cast our soul into hell. That last point is exactly why I became a Christian and was baptized twenty-five years ago. You may think that’s not a valid reason to turn to Christ, but I would beg to differ. If we were created to fear God, it stands to reason that acknowledging His awesome power to destroy us is certainly a legitimate reason to give ourselves over to His will. In doing so we become His children and are no longer considered the enemies we were before our conversions. Interestingly, when I learned to fear God, I stopped wanting to be scared by Hollywood. 

Obviously, after years of being a Christian, I’ve come to understand other attributes of God that make me less fearful and more grateful. His love is what motivates me now. Much like a good relationship between a human parent and child, when we’re very young we should have a healthy fear of our parents’ authority. It keeps us safe and sets us on the right track. As we grow older and have children of our own, we learn to appreciate our parents on a different level, and our relationships become more about love and respect. We start to understand why they did what they did and how it helped to shape us into the people we are today. Unfortunately, many people didn’t have a healthy experience growing up, and we’re seeing the aftereffects of a nation where children were never brought up to fear anything. 

Maybe that unfulfilled God-given need to fear is what drives people to seek it out through entertainment. So, when I see the lengths that people will go to just for a scare, I try not to be too judgmental about how they’re going about it. I don’t want gory Halloween decorations on my lawn, and I don’t have any desire to watch the latest horror flick on the big screen, but it’s only because I have something more awesome to fear—God’s power. Instead of looking down on those who do want those things for the season, instead of a self-righteous proclamation that I’m a Christian and don’t celebrate Halloween, maybe it’s better if I recognize the boom of the Halloween industry as a healthy appetite for the very fear that God put into each of our hearts at creation. Maybe I could find an opportunity to share the Gospel by sharing the fear of the Lord. There’s truly nothing scarier than that!

Saturday, October 10, 2020

Alive and Unchanging

       

        English has been spoken for over 1,400 years, and in that time it has changed so much that it can be difficult to read literature written just hundreds of years ago. If you read Dickens or Shakespeare you may feel like you’re reading a foreign language. In a way, you are! Many words now have completely different meanings than they did originally. How does that happen? Well, people use words and phrases in the vernacular that don’t follow the rules, and they eventually end up in the dictionary and grammar books. For example, chillax, whatevs, and awesomesauce are now recognized words, recorded in the dictionary. I know, I know. It doesn’t seem right, but to truly love a language is to also embrace its evolution. Besides, we’re not alone. There are currently over 7,000 spoken languages and it happens to them all, so chillax.

Unlike English, Latin is considered a dead language because nobody speaks it as a first language any more, and it’s not used for communication. As a result it has stopped changing, which makes it quite useful as an international standard for specialized studies like science, music, and law. The rules of Latin are forever seared into the pages of books, so purists don’t have to worry about the language adopting crazy new words like English does. They also won’t enjoy the charm of clever wordplay that is part of a thriving culture, but whatevs.

So, living languages change while dead languages do not. However, there is just one language that is both alive and completely unchanging. It’s the language of heaven, and it’s alive in that it speaks to people from two thousand years ago as much as it does to modern man. It’s also unchanging because it spans from eternity to eternity and encompasses every idea that has ever been or ever will be. There’s simply no need for change. It’s already the complete and perfect Word of God. We refer to Hebrew and Greek as the original languages of the Bible, but perhaps it’s more accurate to consider those the first translations by which God has given us a window into the communication of the spiritual realm. The language of heaven is something humans cannot yet fully understand, so God has given us the Bible and His Spirit to introduce us to the culture of heaven. It’s a kind of orientation packet from God to us. If we understand that He’s given us the Bible because He loves us, it might cause us to study it more, embracing the fact that our Father is helping us prepare for eternity with Him. Ignoring God’s words will only perpetually frustrate us and continue to decay our worldly cultures. Conversely, when we accept the Bible as truth and absorb its concepts, it’s the only language that actually changes us. For those of us who believe that and have put our faith in Jesus, that’s awesomesauce!