On the other hand, there is something about passionate abandon that resounds in the human heart. We long for transcendence, and living for something we know is worthy of giving our lives away for. Now, Christianity claims that it is universally worth living and dying for, and that it gives meaning to all people’s lives. This declaration alone is worth an investigation.
Consider the most inspiring and noble pursuits of the human race; the highest achievements that people sweat and bleed and die for. There are many pinnacles of man’s hard-earned achievements: we excel in the arts, in economical freedom that sets the masses free from poverty, in literature, in just law, in athletic ability, in academics, and religious devotion, to name a few. But take any one of these noble pursuits and you couldn’t honestly make the declaration: this is what your heart was made for, and if you give yourself with total abandon, it will really set you free and transform you into something the world will stand in awe of. Could you image the most talented composer, or chef, or humanitarian saying: this passion is worth the total devotion of every man, woman, and child on the planet, no matter what their age, culture, or race. It would be ridiculous; they couldn’t say that, no one would claim that.
But Christians do.
2 comments:
Hmmm, you might want to rethink the postulation this:
"f someone has found something they think is worth being martyred for, it probably is worth your time to look into. Something to think about."
There are lots of things that people are martyred for. In our lifetime, suicide bombers and Islamic Jihadists come immediately to mind - in fact, while there ARE Christians being martyred today, the culture at large is probably much more aware of the Islamic radicals who are martyring themselves for their faith. You can argue that it's different - they're committing suicide for their cause, vs. being killed *because* of their profession of faith. But whichever way you look at it, they're bravely walking into death because of what they believe.
However, this lends no credibility to WHAT they believe, simply the passion with which they believe it.
A most excellent observation Heidi, as always. Sentence has been deleted!
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