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A Pentatonix Christmas

By Jeremy Myers
1 Comment

A Pentatonix Christmas

I love Pentatonix, and I love Christmas, so what better way to get into the Christmas spirit by listening to some Christmas songs from Pentatonix?

Enjoy … and have a Merry Christmas!

I know the following is not really Christmas, but it’s still amazing (and funny).

God is Redeeming Life Bible & Theology Topics: Christmas, music

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Oops! I said “Christmas”!

By Jeremy Myers
12 Comments

Oops! I said “Christmas”!

Christmas bad word

And if you don’t hate country music, check out this song:

The song comes from Brad Paisley’s Christmas album.

God is Redeeming Life Bible & Theology Topics: Christmas, humor, laugh a little

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4 Subversive Truths from the Birth of Jesus

By Jeremy Myers
18 Comments

4 Subversive Truths from the Birth of Jesus

If you attend church, sing Christmas carols, send and receive Christmas cards, set foot into any store that is somewhat decorated for Christmas, or watch “Charlie Brown’s Christmas,” you will likely see or hear some reference to the birth of Jesus.

I think, however, that while many people are familiar with the birth story of Jesus, few of us recognize how religiously and politically subversive His birth narrative truly is. The birth accounts of Jesus undermine several core ideas in most religious and political worldviews.

In fact, as you prepare for Christmas, note when, where, and how you see these references to the birth of Jesus, and what these references are connected to. More often than not, these references to the birth of Jesus will be connected to things the birth of Jesus actually undermines.

Modern references to the birth of Jesus often support things that Jesus actually opposed.

birth of JesusBut when we begin to understand the birth of Jesus (and His entire life), we begin to see how politically and religiously subversive Jesus really was. To see some of this, read my studies on Luke 2, and other Christmas posts.

We consider four of these subversive truths below.

1. The Kingdom of Heaven does not support the Kingdoms of this World

One of the most pervasive ideas in nearly all religious and political hierarchies is that God is on their side. Religious and political leaders claim that God has blessed them, their plans, and their goals. Religious and political institutions claim that everything they do is advancing the rule and reign of God on earth.

But usually, the goals and methods of the political and religious kingdoms of this world have little overlap with the goals and methods of the Kingdom of God. Those religious and political leaders which recognize this threat to their power often use the name of God in the attempt to destroy the Kingdom of God.

This is exactly what we see in Matthew 2 when King Herod feels threatened by the birth of a baby boy in Bethlehem, and then uses the claim that he wants to worship the new-born Messiah as an excuse for trying to kill Jesus.

When we truly begin to understand the values of the Kingdom of God, we see that His kingdom has come to overthrow the powers of this world. The Kingdom of God upsets rulers and dominions and powers and authority. It rights what is wrongs, restores justice, and reintroduces righteousness, which are all things the religious and political kingdoms of this world claim to do why they are in fact doing the exact opposite. For more on this, seeย Wright, “Emperors and Angels.”

2. The Messiah did not come for the rich and powerful

This idea is similar to the one above, but focuses primarily on the leaders themselves. For some reason, we tend to think that the people in positions of power, the people with titles, and the people who get their voice heard are the ones that God has blessed in this world. Most of the leaders believe this too.

But if the birth of Jesus is any indication, one of the greatest lies of the religious and political world is that God is with the rich and powerful leaders. The birth narratives reveal that there were no rich and powerful people with Jesus at His birth.

The Messiah has come for the dishonorable, the outcasts, the uneducated, the poor. This is the kind of family He was born into. These were the settings He was born in, and these are the type of people who first learned of His birth.

3 wisemen outcastsThe shepherds were considered by most to be dirty, outcast thieves, and while the wise men from the East are often called “Kings” (though they were likely not kings at all), most people in Israel would have considered them to be religiously unclean, astrology-practicing, sinful foreigners. Modern parallels might be street hustlers and fortune tellers.

So before you go envying the people at the top, who seem to be receiving blessing after blessing from God, you might want to take a closer look at the people who live in the gutter, for it there where you are more likely to find God.

3. Jesus often shows up in the most unlikely places

If you were to listen to most of the religious and political rhetoric at Christmas, you might get the impression that Jesus came to support the powerful in their goals for domination, the rich in their quest for year-end bonuses, and the elite in their self-glorifying causes.

But when God began to perform His greatest work in human history, He launched it in an animal feeding trough in the backwoods town of a tiny, poor, insignificant country.

I imagine that if Jesus were to show up again today, it would not be in Washington D.C. or Rome. It would probably be in some poor village of central Africa. If Jesus was born in the United States (or any of the ruling nations in the world … Jesus was born in part of the Roman Empire, after all), it would be to a poor prostitute who is living under a cardboard box in a back alley.

dirty town in Africa

This leads me to believe that if you want to see God today, don’t look on your television, the internet, or in buildings made with marble and brass.

Instead, look where you would least expect him. Look where life is hard and people are dirty. Look among the homeless, the prisoners, the prostitutes, and the drug-addicts.

4. The birth of Jesus turns political and religious values upside-down

Power, greed, and manipulation are three central values of religion and politics. Wayne Jacobsen refers to them as cash, credit, and control. But such things do not describe the birth of Jesus in any way, shape, or form.

The values of Jesus at His birth (and during His entire ministry) did not include getting more wealthy, but in generously giving it away. Jesus did not seek to gain power or credit for Himself, but consistently gave glory to God and spread power among His followers. And Jesus never tried to manipulate or control anyone into doing what He wanted, but taught people that they were free to follow God and live as they pleased within His family.

In times when politicians promise change to the world, followers of Jesus can offer true and lasting change, based not on the principles of power or greed, but on service and generosity.

This Christmas

I am not sure what you have planned for this Christmas, or for the year that follows, but if you want to see Jesus, don’t look for Him among the rich and powerful, or among those who are famous and well-known (whether in political or religious arenas). Instead, look for Him among the poor, the outcast, the overlooked, the sick, and the weak.

And don’t run after fame and glory for yourself, thinking that such things are the way God keeps score. They aren’t. God doesn’t keep score at all. Such things are not God’s gifts to you. Instead, be generous, loving, gracious, and kind, for it is in these things that God reveals Himself to you, and reveals Himself to others through you.

God is Redeeming Life Bible & Theology Topics: birth of Jesus, Christmas, Luke 2, Matthew 2, politics, religion, Theology of the Church

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Heโ€™s better off dead if heโ€™s gay

By Jeremy Myers
66 Comments

Heโ€™s better off dead if heโ€™s gay

Below is the fourth letter in the series, โ€œLetters To Dad.โ€ They are written by Sam Riviera, and are based on the true stories of people he actually knows in real life.

Dad,

You probably thought youโ€™d never hear from me again. Well, itโ€™s me. Iโ€™m alive.

But now Iโ€™m somewhere where you can never find me or hurt me.

LGBT Homeless TEenThereโ€™s a public library near here where I can get on the internet. I check Facebook. Sometimes I see your posts. I read that you found out Iโ€™m gay. Did you really say โ€œHeโ€™s better off dead if heโ€™s gayโ€? What is that supposed to mean? Is that some kind of threat? To your own flesh and blood? You want me dead? Seriously?

I didnโ€™t have a choice to be born. I didnโ€™t get to choose who my dad is. I also didnโ€™t get to choose that Iโ€™m gay. Regardless of what you think, I didnโ€™t choose any of those things.

I wasnโ€™t kidnapped. I had been planning my escape for a long time. I had to get away from you. Why? You scare me. Actually, you terrify me. I figured sooner or later you were going to find out Iโ€™m gay. I had to get as far away from you as possible before that happened.

Now that I see what you wrote on Facebook, Iโ€™m glad I ran.

I didnโ€™t want you trying to beat demons out of me. Thatโ€™s what you said. โ€œIf I ever find out any kid of mine is gay, Iโ€™ll beat those demons out of them if it kills them.โ€ You said that.

Seriously? You think I have demons in me? Why are you such an angry person? You need help.

homeless gay teenWhere did you learn this stuff, anyway? From those homophobic guys you work with? You know that some of them are gay, donโ€™t you? Seriously, dad. Some of them are gay. Donโ€™t you know that? You have gay neighbors and gay relatives and gay coworkers. Which of them are you going to beat the demons out of? That could get you some serious jail time.

You said the Bible says gay people are abominations and should be stoned. Nice. Is that supposed to be Christian love? Where did you learn that? That is sick. And frightening.

Anyway, not that you care, but Iโ€™m surviving. For now. Iโ€™ve hooked up with some other kids in similar situations. About half my group is gay. Some got thrown out by their parents when they came out. The rest of us took off before our parents found out so we wouldnโ€™t get the crap beat out of us.

We live outdoors most of the time. We steal to survive. We panhandle. Some of us sell drugs. Some of us sell sex. Donโ€™t be surprised. Stealing, begging, addiction, dealing drugs, selling sex, and being homeless is our lifestyle … chosen for us by our parents … by dads like you.

Oh, and add dead to that list. Our lifestyle makes for a short lifespan. Suicide, overdosing, disease, getting stabbed, shot or beaten to death, or dying from exposure on cold nights is our lifestyle.

Iโ€™m not really mad at you. Iโ€™m seriously afraid of you. Thinking about you hurts. You are my dad for Godโ€™s sake. How can you be like that? How could you sentence me to a life like this? Youโ€™re the one who made that choice. You chose. I didnโ€™t. You cut me off. You threatened my life. Youโ€™re responsible for me being on this earth. You brought me here. Now you want me dead?

One of my group read online that kids like us have a lifespan of four or five years at most. Maybe Iโ€™ll beat those odds. Maybe not.

Seriously, Shaun

Homeless LGBT Stats

God is Redeeming Life Bible & Theology Topics: gay, homosexual, Letters to Dad, lgbt, Sam Riviera

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Happy (Funny) Thanksgiving!

By Jeremy Myers
3 Comments

Happy (Funny) Thanksgiving!

No serious theology posts today! Just some funny thanksgiving pictures. Enjoy!

Thanksgiving humor

Thanksgiving humor

Thanksgiving humor

Thanksgiving humor

Thanksgiving humor

Thanksgiving humor

Thanksgiving humor

Thanksgiving humor

God is Redeeming Life Bible & Theology Topics: humor, laugh a little, thanksgiving

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