Sunday, March 31, 2013

Easter Blasphemy

I'm sipping a cup of La Golondria from Counter Culture Coffee in the comfort of my home and bathrobe.  This coffee has a mellow front with a citrus twist and a clean finish.  God, I love coffee.

Speaking of God, it's Easter.  The "pagan" holiday that we Christians decided to adopt and make our most sacred celebration: the day Christ "conquered death."  Ready for today's dose of blasphemy?  Of course you are.

Throughout the course of recorded time, there have been reports of men and women coming back to life.  Sure, Christians like to pretend that Christ's triumphant return was the only really important one, but check out a couple of these situations:

The Egyptian god Osiris is said to have died and come back to life.  As well as Baal, Melqart, Adonis, Eshmun, and Dumuzi.

The ancient Greeks had the god Asciepius who was killed by mighty Zeus and then came back to life as a major deity.  Add to that Achilles, Agamemnon, and also a mortal, a 7th century sage named Aristeas of Proconnesus.

And let's not forget that within the Judaistic framework, there are resurrected folks.  Elijah raises a kid from death in 1 Kings.  EliSHa resurrects the son of a Shunammite woman (wonder what happened to these kids later in life...).  Later some dude's dead body is thrown onto the bones of Elisha and he is resurrected.  And lets not forget Lazarus- whom Jesus brought back to life just by telling him to.  The "Lazaras Syndrome" is a modern-day medical term for patients who have been reported as dead and have miraculously come back to life with no scientific explanation.  There have been at least 25 medical reports of this happening since 1982.

The point that I'm trying to make here is that the mysterious act of death and rebirth is not original in Christianity- nor does it really matter on this day.  The Bible was not written with Jesus' resurrection as the climax of the story.  GASP!

Christ did not "conquer death."  If he did, than all men and women after his resurrection would be immortal.  Death is still alive and kicking (couldn't resist).  Christ did, however, come back to life (like others before and after him) to show that death is negotiable, at times, and that the soul is real and will carry on after our bodies have quit.  Life is a cycle of death and rebirth as all naturalists will tell us.

Okay, Tim, so what the hell?  Are you saying Easter is meaningless?  Christ's resurrection is just ho-hum-okay?  Are you a total heathen?

No, but kind of.  Easter/spring season should for the Christian be a comforting reminder that the struggles and sorrows of winter are never permanent- that the pain of seeing Christ die as a blameless, upright human being will be erased by Him who knew no sin.  The poor tree that lost all of its leaves and beauty will fire back with flowering and fresh leaves like never before.  This is true of life in all major religions because it is how we relate to the earth that we live upon.

Christ tried to communicate this truth to his disciples before he was crucified (see Matthew 20, Mark 10, and Luke 18).  Jesus knew that his followers would struggle with this concept because we like to make things definitive-- black or white.  But the Creator has not made the life/death cycle so easy for us to make these snap judgments.

What is true, on Easter, as it is true in every culture in every solar system that can produce and sustain life is this, captured in Jeff Goldblum's brilliant line from Jurassic Park:

Life will find a way.



Even if that means that death must happen- life will return- GOOD will return- and a new dawn is the most holiest of representations of how our God will love us (the collective us) so much that he will allow and arrange deaths to occur so that we may experience a new life like we have never experienced before.

Those who would reject this "not religious enough" sentiment will do as Peter did before the resurrection- they will deny Christ and they will try to force the way of the Divine to function under their own set of foolish principles to which Christ will say warmly, "Get behind me, Satan" (Mark 8:31-33).

I see men and women try to work themselves up into a frenzy over Christ's death by creating such dramatic representations of it in cinema and theater.  Perhaps our time, money, and efforts would be better spent in observing and preserving the growth and circle of life and love on this planet- physically expressing our thanks to our Creator for the gift of death and rebirth for all of us.

Think about it.
-Tim

Thursday, March 28, 2013

First lesson...

So I'm wrestling with something.  If your family is anything like my family, there are issues that you do not see eye to eye on.  In fact, there probably isn't a single member of your family that you have more than 25% in common with-- and yet you're of the same flesh and blood so you want so bad to have things in common-- but you don't.  You could be going through the most amazing transformation in your character and soul and there's bound to be someone in your family that thinks you are just wasting your life.

So maybe like me you try to explain yourself to those whom you love.  You think, "Oh, if only I could tell them about this journey I've been on and the people I've met, they would understand why I have broken away from my upbringing!"  So you start off talking calmly and confidently and then suddenly you're exchanging shouts and snide comments and then- then you realize that they don't see what you see- they'll never see what you see- and they are just as passionate about believing in the opposite of what you believe in.  At that point, well, you just shut your mouth and learn to not talk about the things that matter so much to you.

Try to

focus

on

that

25%.

And, who knows, maybe it's a lot bigger than 25%.  Who keeps track of these things, anyway?

All I know is, one of the FIRST lessons my child will learn (pending we have kids at some point) is how to treat people who have a different opinion than you.  How to respect and enjoy others- despite the fact that they might think you are ridiculous or "denying your upbringing" or "becoming a pagan" or what have you.  Alright, maybe the first lesson will be "pee in the toilet" or "don't throw rocks at the car"-- but you get me.

The part I'm wrestling with is: If I'm just avoiding subjects that I know my family doesn't agree with all the time- am I truly loving them or letting them have the chance to love me?  Or, am I just trying to keep the charade going?

What do you think?  Stay true to myself, or keep the peace?