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Saturday, November 16, 2019

Spiritual vs. Religious

My purpose is not to criticize scientists, but to point out the inherent limitations of science. And my purpose in pointing out such limitations is not to criticize science, but to remind us that all humans are finite creatures in need of truth and wisdom only our Creator can supply.
Here’s why this theme is on my mind today.
It was my privilege to deliver the T. B. Maston Lectures at Baptist University of the Américas (BUA) in San Antonio this week. I believe strongly in BUA’s crucial mission and the leadership of its outstanding president, Dr. Abe Jaquez.
His faculty asked me to discuss the popularity of the “spiritual but not religious” movement, an urgent and timely topic. A Pew Research Center study reports that only 48 percent of Americans now consider themselves to be both “religious and spiritual,” while 18 percent say they are “neither religious nor spiritual.” But 27 percent say they are “spiritual but not religious.” Their number has grown nearly 50 percent in recent years.
This means there are more “spiritual but not religious” Americans than Americans who attended church last Sunday. 
A major reason why so many Americans choose to be spiritual but not religious is that they think they no longer need religion to be spiritual. It is conventional wisdom in our postmodern culture that truth is personal and subjective. There is no such thing as “truth,” only “your truth” and “my truth.”
We are therefore all equally able to discern spiritual truth for ourselves without need of divine revelation from a divine Creator. Or so we’re told.
How’s this working for us?
The theme of the book of Judges is the theme of our culture: “In those days there was no king in Israel. Everyone did what was right in his own eyes” (Judges 21:25). In a true kingdom, the king is the final authority on all subjects. His declaration is truth, his word inviolate.
Throughout Scripture, we are told that our God is such a king. Jesus called us to “repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand” (Matthew 4:17). He taught us to “seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness” (Matthew 6:33). We are to pray, “Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven” (Matthew 6:10). We are creatures in desperate need of truth only our Creator can provide.
It has been well said: To get along with God, stay off his throne.
 
ME: did you hear this past summer about the Georgia state legislator who cut through a Publix 8 or less line with well over the amount. When a fellow customer called her on it, she later returned to the store and falsely claimed she’d been racially abused. The guy, of Hispanic descent, also a Democrat. saw her on TV and came back to tell the true story. Of course by then her false claims had spread across the nation.
 
Not much with me. Working a half day today. Hope to move some beds and get out my winter clothes.
 
Worked until six last night. Had leftover Mellow Mushroom pizza for supper. Ceil had gone down to Buckhead Church for a baptism service, of the kids of a friend. I watched a movie Late Night. C came home and we watched Chicago Med and New Amsterdam.   
  
 
TED WILLIAMS  [SABR Bio] was the first player of Latino descent to be inducted into the Hall of Fame. Williams’ mother May Venzor Williams was born in El Paso of Mexican parents. Author Ben Bradlee, Jr. revealed Williams’ previously concealed ethnic heritage in his 2013 bookThe Kid: The Immortal Life of Ted Williams. Williams’ 1966 Cooperstown enshrinement predated Roberto Clemente’s by 7 years.
 
Although his career-best hitting streak is 23 games, he does hold the all-time record for most consecutive games reaching base. Williams reached base in a record 84 straight games, from 01-Jul through 27-Sep-1949. No other rookie has ever had more runs batted in - 145 RBI in his rookie season 1939.

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