One of my favourite bloggers recently posted about his foundational reason to believe in God. To me, that is a very important question to reflect upon.
Blind faith can be very dangerous; it can lead to fundamentalism, extremism,
and the refusal to question one’s own attitudes and actions.
Why do I believe?
I have always believed in the existence of God. It may have
been the result of a vaguely Christian upbringing; in any case, believing in God
came as naturally to me as the belief that my mother loved me. Like so many
people, I look at the breath-taking awesomeness of the universe and I can only
believe Someone is somehow at the source of it all.
When I started looking into Christianity more closely, at
the age of 18, rational arguments, literary parables and personal experience all
played a part in my conversion. The course I attended argued that the New Testament can be considered historically reliable; maybe more so than most ancient texts.
At the same time, I read C.S. Lewis’ Chronicles of Narnia, and Aslan’s offering
his own life for Edmund’s vividly illustrated Christ’s death on the cross to
me. And, as explained in my post, the turning point was praying and
experiencing an inner conviction that the gospel was true.
Over the years, I have seen and experienced suffering, and I
have wrestled with many texts in the Bible that I find difficult to stomach. I
constantly try to understand it all better, and constantly question the way I
have been interpreting things. Yet there is one event that has sustained my
trust in God all these years.
In my early twenties, I visited a Christian community in
Germany and a preacher addressed the issue of God’s love. Can there really be a
God of love, in a world so full of suffering, or is He some cosmic tyrant
enjoying our pain? His proposed answer was simple, yet compelling to me: “You
can die for your children, not for your toys.”
I am convinced that Jesus really was God incarnate, because it
permeates through every page of the gospels. That incarnate God willingly let
humans kill Him in the most gruesome way, and claimed to do it out of love for
us. There may be many things I don’t understand, struggle with, and feel
confused about. I may wrestle with issues and cry out to God, “Why?” I may not
have it all figured out. But because Jesus lived and died, I am convinced of
this: there is a God, and He cares.
Amen!
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