Disclaimer:
The
writings that follows are my questions, concerns, and interpretations
during my first reading of the Bible. There is no reason to take
offense, because this isn't an attack on anything, just myself trying
to see where I stand after reading the Bible cover to cover.
My
Introduction:
To
begin with, it would be best to offer a little background about
myself. When I began this journal, I was 32 years old. I grew up as
a Christian, sort of. Between birth and 17 years of age I might have
attended a church service six times. I really don't remember. For
example, I do remember attending a catholic service once with a
friend as a teenager; and I know that I went to a service in 3rd
grade, because it was summer and my mom was trying to get me out of
the house for a while. The church was right across the street from
the house that we lived in that year.
Around
age 17, a friend of mine who played guitar and drums asked me if I
could help him run the sound board at his church. He was in the
church band and they were having trouble teaching/keeping a sound
guy. I thought I knew a little bit about running a sound board, but
I really didn't know anything about balancing the sound for a church
service. This church also recorded the sermon and service, so I
spent a lot of time listening to the sound quality and not very much
time listening to the message each week. I don't remember how long I
ran the board at that church but it wasn't every Sunday and I don't
think it was more than four months. I could be wrong.
Something
else that happened when I was 17 was that I joined the National
Guard. This is important because three days after I graduated high
school I was off to basic training. I attended a lot of church
during my basic and advanced training. Not because I needed God to
make it through though. My battle buddy and I were working the
system. Ya see, we were allowed to choose from any church service on
base on Sunday. If you didn't go to church then you would be in the
barracks... with a drill sergeant... who was working a weekend
shift...
So
I went to a lot of church services during my eight months of
training. In fact, not only did it get me out of the barracks, but
the service that we went to let out after the chow hall closed for
lunch. This meant that the drill sergeant had to let us go to the PX
and eat lunch in the food court. Yes, I used church to eat pizza and
burgers during my army training. I always seem to be working the
system. I also bought and still own my first bible at that time.
At
the age of 20, I stopped calling myself a Christian. I did it out of
respect for the faith. This might sound a little weird, but I didn't
know the Bible or what it meant to be Christian. I could have just
as easily said I was Buddhist or Muslim because I knew just as much
about those religions. I thought that saying I was agnostic was a
better description of who I was. The word agnostic means to be
without knowledge, and that is what I
was, without knowledge. Some people call themselves agnostic as if
it were a religious position. This is a misnomer, and I think these
people use it as an easy way out of a difficult answer. A better
answer would be to call themselves a deist.
That
was the extent of my religious underpinnings until I met my wife at
age 27. A few months after we got together, my wife wanted us to
find a church for our family. I didn't have much of an opinion on
the matter, and she noticed my indifference quickly, but we started
the search for a church that would fit us both anyway. This began
about two years of church shopping. We went everywhere, from small
start up church to a local mega church. We tried them all. In the
end we settled on a beautiful older church. It had a very
traditional service but was socially liberal. We wanted a church
that reflected our family values about homosexuality and other social
issues. I enjoyed the services, and the adult Sunday school must of
all, but being a libertarian some of the left wing social agenda got
to me.
Now
I haven't yet mentioned my profession. I am a truck driver by trade.
I drove over the road for a couple of years when I was younger, and
while I did take seven years off from truck driving, it has always
been the profession that I identified with. At the time of this
writing, I worked for a beverage company. I had just begun a new
position as a transport driver delivering product between warehouses.
I was working ten hours a day, driving eight hours a day, 4-5 days a
week. That is 1600 to 2000 miles a week. That is low compared to
driving over the road, but I was home every day and off on the
weekends. This profession is not for everyone, but it afforded me
the opportunity to finally read, or should I say listen to as audio
books, all the classics.
I
started with books like Dante's Inferno and Chaucer's Canterbury
Tales', but what I really enjoyed was the Modern Scholar series.
Listening to lectures by real professors on a wide range of topics.
One of the first that I listened to was about the historical Jesus
and Mohammad. It was about the evidence for the existence of Jesus
and Mohammad, and any historical accuracy to the claims of their
lives and traveling ministries. I have always been interested in
religions of all sorts, but only ever skimmed the surface when
studying them, including the one I claimed. It was after listening
to these lectures that I decide to listen to the whole bible, cover
to cover, sort of. I started with the New Testament, and then
listened to the Old Testament. Here is the reason why. It took me
three days to listen to the New Testament. It took me a little over
two weeks to listen to the Old Testament.
While
I listened to the Bible, I took notes on interesting things that I
learned. As well as things I didn't understand so that I could
research them more in-depth later. What follows is the results of
that discovery process.
Now,
like I said before I am a truck driver, but I have studied physics,
calculus, astrophysics, M-Theory, evolutionary biology, and many
other topics. I love history of every culture and I tend to remember
the most obscure facts when learning something new, just ask my wife.
I have no degree, I have a little bit of college credit, but I also
have trouble sitting in a classroom and caring about someone talking
to me and thirty other students. I would rather learn something on
my own and come to my own conclusions. I also try to read both sides
of an argument, something that doesn't seem very popular in
undergraduate courses today. If there is something controversial
about a topic, then you have to know both sides before you make up
your mind where you stand on it. It is important that we decide for
ourselves what we believe. What follows is my understanding of the
Bible and its history and teachings through my first examination.
I
want to explain a little about my intellectual process of reading the
Bible. First, I wanted to keep the text in context. Whenever I have
been to a sermon they pick and choose verses from all over the Bible.
I never knew the context of the verse and context is always
important. I don't want this writing to feel like a presidential
campaign ad (I hate all of those five second blurbs taken out of
context). Second, I tried to remember that this text was written
down for the first time anywhere from 1000 B.C.E. to 330 B.C.E.
depending on which book of the Old Testament you are talking about.
Also, I don't want to focus on things of pure faith. The burning
bush or the miracles of the New Testament are simply outside the
realm of discovery and must be taken on faith. Instead I wanted to
focus on knowing the Bible better.
I
know that there are highly educated authors writing about how the
Bible is or is not historically accurate. There are scholars that
know the details of early Jewish or Christian life far better than I.
There are incredibly intelligent and well read people arguing on
both sides of any debate of religion. This writing is simply my
understanding of the subject and the things that I have found
interesting, or troubling.
I
think too many people say that they are Christian without knowing
what that really is. I doubt many Christians today have read the
Bible cover to cover. Many people say that they believe the Bible
literally, or that they try to live according to the Bible or at
least the teachings of Jesus. Let us see what it is that these
people claim to believe.
"...the
Bible itself will turn you atheist faster than anything..."
Penn
Jillette
So
let us set aside our Id, to engage the Superego and find an axiom of
truth. Let the wild ride begin.
What a well thought out and written introduction. I am eagerly awaiting your thoughts. I agree and feel similarly to you on too many points to mention. I second letting the wild ride begin!!
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