Even as I write this I am hesitant to make this post. However, it has been on my mind for a few years now. Religion is such a volatile subject and I hope this won't stir up a hornets nest but rather this will be a calm, respectful discussion. My family was Presbyterian. I was brought up going to Sunday school from the start. When I was around 10 yr old I asked that instead of Sunday school, could I go with mom to "the big room" with her. Even then I was looking for answers. The deal in my family was you had to go to church through the 8th grade but after that it was your choice to continuing going or not. I was not satisfied with what I was hearing so I stopped. When I was in college I took several religion classes as electives; History of Religion, World Religions, etc. Though not entirely sure what I was looking for, I knew I still hadnt found any answers. I developed my own religion of sorts - prayed daily, tried to be a good person - even wore a cross around my neck - not particularly in reference of Jesus but more of a daily commitment to be a giving, kind, generous person. I even went a couple of years watching "church on TV" - that's how I viewed it. I became a big fan of Joyce Meyer - who I still think is awesome. I would say as far as religion goes I am maybe a tiny bit more knowledge than your average American. Then in 2008 my dad got sick - never really made a complete recovery and began his descent into a steady decline - his CHF which began pretty passively really started to get a hold on him. Dads last 1 1/2 years were pretty awful for him physically although his mind was still good up until his final few weeks. I adored my father. While my childhood was pretty awful largely due to my mother - and my parents dysfunction relationship with each other - once I hit my 20's I was able to get past it in regards to my dad. My father was my best friend for the last 30 years of his life. We talked on the phone daily and were as close as any father/daughter can be. My father was always there for me - as well as my disabled son (who is named after his grandpa) he was there for my mother and my brothers too - although neither brother could get past our childhood and was never close to daddy. As far as I'm concerned this was my brothers loss and they never saw my dad for the amazing man he was. This hurt my father - he had tried for so long to make it up to my brothers - for the crappy childhood - and my heart broke for my dad. In the last month I prayed for God to take my father - i couldn't stand to see him suffering and I knew that it was what my father wanted - to end his suffering, to end being the weak helpless person he had become / he hated it. When my dad passed he was in a strange place and alone - it's a long story but in short my mother had him taken to a hospice center behind my back - on the one day in over two months that I couldn't go over to spend the day with him - I will never forgive her for this. My father vehemently did not want to go anywhere like that - he wanted to be at home and I had hired help for 18 hours a day and was in the process of making it 24 hours a day when mom had him moved. Mom did none of the care taking of dad. Okay - so my crisis of faith: why does it have to be like it is for so many of our loved ones as they age? It's painful both mentally and physically. They are robbed of their dignity, their independence, their minds, on and on in the most degrading ways possible. Where is Gods loving mercy? What is it we are meant to learn that has to be taught in the most heinous way possible? While I didn't really expect daddy to contact me from the other side I guess I did expect to feel his presence in some way - as close as we were. There is a thread going now - it's quite beautiful really - of story after story of long passed friends and relatives appearing to gently and lovingly help our loved ones "go home". Some even think Jesus himself is showing up. I'm not meaning to discount thoses stories - but could it be people are telling themselves this is what happens as a way of comforting themselves and their passing loved ones? This whole bit of being reunited - doesn't it make it easier on everyone to believe it's true? But what if when your dead - your just dead, gone? I just feel my dad is gone - forever gone. I've heard it said that faith is believing in something when there is no proof. I feel like I have lost faith. The whole "God works in mysterious ways. God has a plan" just doesn't do it for me any longer. What plan could possibly mean a good man - a man who took care of everyone in his life had to suffer in the most painful and degrading ways imaginable? I guess some of the Sunday school fire and brimstone lessons have stuck - I practically find myself looking over my shoulder for a lightening bolt as I write this. But beyond that?
And speaking of heavenly attire, the Seventh Day Adventists (the church I grew up in) were an offshoot of the mid 1800s "Millerties". Miller was a doomsday preacher, had a large following in New England and had predicted the second coming to fall on such and so day. He made a fortune selling "Ascension" robes that insured the wearers path to heaven. His predictions were wrong a few times, the faithful splintered and a large group formed the SDA church. The leading SDA prophet was Ellen G. White who established the SDA base in Battle Creek MI. She had amazing visions and predictions, flood, famine, hardship etc. and I might add, had suffered a serious closed head injury as a young girl.
There may be an SDA reading this who would quibble about my history, I don't claim to be any SDA historian, but the above facts are well founded and documented. Nor do I bring this up to insult this church. SDAs are some of the most generous and kindest people on earth. True Christians. But lest you think this history sounds a little nutty, Google Mormons, Jehovahs Witnesses or a dozen other modern, popular and respected American religions that came to be in this same era. The Great Awakening, I think it's refered to. These religions are like Rodney Dangerfield, they don't get no respect. They don't have the seniority of Catholicism, Judaism or Islam. People don't see the big 3 as kooky cause they been around so long. Well, that may be changing about Islam..........just look what some of those guys are doing in the name of God...
I do have problems applying the count it all joy principal when I hear my mother say "Wha?" to everything I say and have to scrub the toilet again. But really, if I hadn't been going through this, I wouldn't understand that old age is anything more than AARP and Jitterbug.
Just had a thought. I want to be buried with my mobile device -- whatever that will be at the time. That way if I wake up I can call 911. I am thinking about the old "saved by the bell" custom to keep people from being buried alive.
silent tears.
We miss so much if we insist on reading everything as piously and literally as if these were not real people with real lives full of poetry, drama, and royal soap opera as anyone else in any other age. Good St. Paul once literally bored someone to death with a sermon or lecture he was giving, though he raised him up too, and I watch my cousin the pastor struggle with the same old church discipline issues he had as a pastor himself! Abraham would be turned in to Child Protective Services today for that near sacrifice episode...my theory is that back in the day the pagans did that sort of thing all the time and someone challenged his piety, but somehow he knew and did not know at the same time that God would intervene. Pharaoh - well, he might have relented - not for any reason of his own goodness, but maybe just out of sheer laziness of heart or sentimentality - and then just dug the hole deeper to keep Israel enslaved in Egypt.
And if you don't laugh a little about the story of Jesus staying in the Temple instead of heading out with his family, and scaring His poor mom to death, getting chewed out however gently (loose translation of His reply: But Mom! I thought y'all knew where I was! Really!!), and being obedient again ever after you just aren't trying to imagine the real event. And Emmaus... now that was a divine prank if there ever was one. Yep, I would say our Book is the real deal, and the more we read with open hearts and minds, the more we understand. Corrie Ten Boom was said to have commented about her reading some Scipture that she wondered that the ink was dry, and I totally get why!
My point is just that I didn't "lose faith" because of some crisis in my life, or some horrid catastrophe. I simply didn't believe what didn't make sense to me. I'm not intolerant of other people's beliefs, and I never proselytize for atheism. I've given it a lot of thought over a number of years, and I am content where I am at.
As an atheist non believer I've got my headstone all figured out. It will say:
ALL DRESSED UP WITH NO PLACE TO GO
Sure hope I'm wrong........