The Keith O’Brien Tragedy

The most famous opponent of militant homosexuality in Scotland, Cardinal Keith O’Brien, resigned over alleged “inappropriate behaviour” towards other priests.  His views were not bigotry, as some famously claimed, but it seems he was a hypocrite.  It all reminds me of something I wrote last year — The Sins We Talk About.

(LATER NOTE:  the earliest report did not make it clear that O’Brien is still contesting the charges, despite his resignation.  This article was written before the BBC changed their article to clarify that point.  Thus, without knowing the facts, I would not charge him with hypocrisy — though there are multiple witnesses, and it appears they are not driven by anti-Catholic bias.  In any event, what follows is true whether or not Keith O’Brien is guilty of this particular sin, or other sins.)

Some worry about politics as the Scottish Parliament debates homosexual marriage — but anyone trusting the Catholic Church to stop bad laws hasn’t been paying much attention.  That’s not the real problem.  If God is going to spare this nation, He doesn’t need Keith O’Brien, and He isn’t likely to do it in a way that would let a man take the glory for it.

The real tragedy is that this poor, sinful man is surrounded by people who will perpetuate the lie he himself has always taught about God’s forgiveness.  They’ll tell him to do what he has always told others to do.

Instead of confessing the full evil of his sin, it will be called “failures,” and he and his friends will remind people of all the “good” he has done.  Instead of seeking the Heavenly Throne of Grace for mercy, he’ll go to an earthly confessional booth.  Instead of looking to God’s finished work on the Cross, he’ll look to his own incomplete works of penance.  Instead of believing God-inspired words of forgiveness, he’ll believe the human words of absolution spoken by some man just as fallen and sinful as he is.

All his life he has believed and taught something that never provided true forgiveness of sins, and no one around him will tell him it can’t help him now.  He’s helped to build a religious edifice that will entrap him and spiritually entomb him, doing all it can to shield him from the truth that could have given him life and set him free.

That is the real tragedy of Keith O’Brien.  Made in God’s image, he has yet listened to counterfeits of God’s voice, and suppressed His true Word.  Who now will tell him the truth, now when his facade is destroyed and his own “goodness” is an ash heap?

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“Ruling the Sense with Soul”

We sang a hymn (not a very well-known one) on Wednesday.  It’s one I’ve always liked, and it has this line, “Ruling the sense with soul.”  We tend to think of “sense” as a good thing, as in, “He has a lot of sense.”  That’s not the idea here, though.

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Wee Followers of Christ and the Wee Frees

I see the point.  “Wee Free” is perhaps not the most respectful thing to call a church, even if the appellation has had a long tradition and (in general) people mean no malice by it.  (Here’s the full article on the Free Church website.)

Still, I can’t help remembering that “Christian” was probably originally meant as an insult, meaning “follower of Christ” — or possibly even “wee Christ.”  Believers considered it a privilege to be insulted for the cause of Christ, and wore the name as a badge of honour.

A Scripture also came to mind:

I Samuel 15:17

And Samuel said, When thou wast little in thine own sight, wast thou not made the head of the tribes of Israel, and the LORD anointed thee king over Israel?

It makes me a little queasy when a leader of a Christian group tells the world how big and important they are.  That kind of thinking got Saul (and myriad others) in trouble.

May the Lord always keep us wee in our own eyes, whatever others may think.  That’s the only way we’ll ever begin to be worthy of being called Wee Followers of Christ.

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A Key to Happiness

One of the keys to happiness is doing what you know you will wish you had done.
– Unknown

My son, hear the instruction of thy father, and forsake not the law of thy mother:
– Solomon (Proverbs 1:8)

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The Picture Says it All

Great picture to illustrate this verse.  Who Cares?

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Ten Key Principles for Difficult Questions

Occasionally, we encounter one of those “difficult questions” where the Scripture hasn’t given us as clear a statement as we might like.  I’d like to give some general principles to keep in mind when we meet those difficult questions.

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Some Questions from Around the Web

Random, scattered thoughts:

1. (No link) If Oscar Pistorius shot to death his live-in girlfriend, even if accidentally, is this really the time to be writing about how devout he is?  So maybe he prayed before races and has a Scripture tattoo, but what about that “flee fornication” thing?

2. Related, when will people learn that overstating your case usually just ends up damaging your own credibility?  Anyone who repeatedly fired a gun through a closed door without being certain there is a threat behaved immorally (and illegally in just about any legal system).  But when you try to prosecute with manufactured evidence, you even damage the chances of getting a conviction for the things you can prove, because no one has confidence that you are acting with integrity.

3. If Benny Hinn gets messages from God, why didn’t God tell him to heal the man his son was assaulting?  They didn’t know he was deaf and dumb?  Doesn’t this show even the most gullible that God isn’t talking to Benny after all?  When will Christians stop supporting this fraud?

4. When Glenrothes has the worst child poverty in the country, why is the discussion ALWAYS about benefits?  Applying benefits to this problem is like giving paracetamol to someone with cancer — it may make people feel a little better for a while, but it solves nothing and gets very expensive because it is going to take a LOT of paracetamol (or benefits) to ease the pain over time.  What about tackling policies that discourage companies from hiring, payroll taxes and a benefits system that make benefits more attractive than employment, and policies that effectively encourage addiction, teenage pregnancy, and other poverty-inducing behaviours?  You aren’t going to make progress here until we have more people working and fewer people making life-damaging decisions.

5. If Christians can’t decide what “evangelical” means, why expect the media to do better?

6. (I’ll skip the link) Why is anyone anywhere in the world giving Piers Morgan a hearing?  America sends trashy movies here and Britain sends Piers Morgan back….

7. Are we more concerned about horse meat than we are about slavery?

8. Do you have a Big God and an Open Bible?  If not, your theology is going to be wrong.

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