Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Empty Idols


"What fault did your ancestors find in me that they withdrew from me, went after emptiness and became empty themselves?" Jeremiah 2:5

One of the most overlooked Commandments is the first: "You shalt not have other gods besides me." Exodus 20:3. And on the surface, this would seem to be alright. There is no glaring problem with polytheism in the world today. Zeus and Hermes are becoming rather thin for lack of sacrificial offerings these days. Chances are, if you are religious in today's world, you believe in a single god, whether you are Christian, Jewish, or Muslim.

But the real problem is that we take the words that Moses received on Mount Sinai too literally and fail to apply them to contemporary reality. "Gods" do not have to be of Olympian stock. False divinities can also take the forms of money, ambition, and even technology. When a man choses to pursue the accumulation of wealth to the point that it hinders his pursuit of God, he sins against the first commandment. Worshiping idols can take a plethora of forms.

I want to specifically address one of the most dangerous modern idols in today's world: technology. Technology is not inherently evil. When used correctly, it can improve standards of living, relieve the pains of the suffering, and cure diseases. But technology is very easily used for sin, and I'm not simply talking about specific acts of sin like pornography. Technology, specifically smartphones, are very dangerous idols. When you get the chance, look up from your phone and look around you. Chances are, about half of the people you will see, no matter where you are, will be actively engaged in some sort of activity that involves their phone.

Smartphones are the premier in false idols. Not only are they worshipped, but they can interact with their worshippers. Baal is very jealous. The development of technology has progressed to the point that smartphones have the illusion of life.

More than that, smartphones are dangerous because of their versatile and self-contained nature. They can connect you to friends through texting and social media, you can access the Internet, play games, and listen to music all in a device that fits in the palm of your hand. The smartphone can become it's own reality. Why would you have to leave the safety of your iPhone if it has an app for your every desire? Any possible whim you could have can be satisfied by one of millions of apps, many of which are free. This engenders the attitude that life is all about entertainment. Things become useful solely to the extent to which they can provide a few hours or even a few minutes of meaningless fun.

This is an attitude that is directly in conflict with the Truth of God. God does not want us to be trapped in our smartphones. He wants us to interact with the people whom He placed around us, and not just on Twitter. He wants us to work for the salvation of sinners, not a new high score.

Deus Volt!  

Monday, May 25, 2015

A Memorial Day Post: Service

Today is Memorial Day, the day upon which Americans honor the sacrifice and service that has been offered up by countless men and women of the armed forces, or at least, they are supposed to do so. Right now, I see a total lack of respect for the service of our soldiers. Instead of providing support to American heroes, cowards prefer to attack them. They fail to recognize the nature of their sacrifices. Celebrities and politicians sit back in comfort and condemn the acts of violence that soldiers perform, ignoring the difference between a soldier and a criminal. The difference is that soldiers do not fight for themselves. They fight to defend the people they left behind and safeguard the liberty of their nation. The job soldiers have to do might not be nice work, but it is work that has to be done.

The Bible is rife with examples of soldiers. The Old Testament is practically filled with them. Joshua, David, Judas Maccabeus, Gideon, the list goes on and on. These men exemplify the inherent virtue of the soldier. They take upon themselves the greatest sacrifice: killing and being killed, in order to free their people from bondage, to defend their nation from transgressors who defile the law of God. Judas Maccabeus is one of my favorite biblical figures. His story has clear parallels to today's situation. The Bible tells us that the successors of Alexander the Great decided to suppress the people of Israel by forcing them to violate the commandments of God. Many succumb, those few who do not are killed. But the priest Mattathias, along with his family, refuse to bow to sin. When a royal official comes to Mattathias and tries to convince him to partake in blasphemous sin, Mattathias replies:

 "Even if all the nations that live under the rule of the king obey him, and have chosen to obey his commandments, every one of them abandoning the religion of their ancestors, I and my sons and my brothers will continue to live by the covenant of our ancestors. Far be it from us to desert the law and the ordinances. We will not obey the king's words by turning aside from our religion to the right hand or to the left." (1 Maccabees 2:19-22)

Mattathias and his sons were soldiers of God. They offered up their lives to serve God and their people, even if the political environment did not favor such behavior, much as it does not today.

Dishonor is being done to our soldiers. They are being left behind by politicians who only want the votes of a majority. Go to any major city and walk the streets. Chances are, you will see a homeless veteran. These men and woman suffer from their sacrifices. Many face the crosses of PTSD or TBI. Suicide rates for returning soldiers continue to rise. If you watched the news in recent months, you will have seen news about the VA scandals: veterans with urgent medical needs were left to die.

We need to honor our soldiers. We need to support them just as they supported this country while putting their lives on the line. We need to respectfully bury the martyrs of freedom and honor their memory. We need to tend for the wounded and the hurting soldiers who return from the battlefield to the home. We need to show a little respect.

Deus Volt!  

Friday, May 15, 2015

A Brief History of the War for Souls


Since the creation of Adam and Eve, the Earth has been a battleground. Satan and the forces of evil have been fighting against God and the Heavenly Host of Angels and Saints ever since the Fall.

In terms of strategy, the Devil is trying to seduce and kill as many souls as he can. God wants every soul that He created to go to Heaven, but at the same time, He respects their free will and allows them to make their own choices.

The Devil is fighting a war of attrition. He is trying to steal away souls from God, as many as he can. At the same time, however, his best tactic is that of stealth. Satan is most deadly when no one believes in his existence. His blows are whispers of temptation and discord. Only rarely does Satan resort to direct action. He would prefer to sit in the shadows and nudge souls away from God.

The best way to describe how Satan kills souls is to draw a comparison to the process of addiction: already a demonic process. All Satan needs is the smallest of faults for an opening. He looks for a chink in our spiritual armor and that is where he strikes. But like the coward he is, Satan does not fight fair. He waits until we are at our lowest, physically and spiritually. He strikes when we are tired, hungry, angry, or depressed. Satan prefers to kick us when we are already on the ground. Small sins become larger and larger faults which we overlook. It is denial. The first and hardest step is to admit that we have a problem. Satan wants us to justify and defend our problems until they look insignificant or excusable.

God, on the other hand, relies on our weakness. He does not take advantage of our lowliness, rather, He embraces us for it. If the Devil is fighting a battle of attrition, God has already won the war through a preemptive strike. In a  word, God sent His special forces: Jesus, down to Earth to strike the Devil a finishing blow. The Redemption was the height of asymmetric warfare. The war for souls was won in an instant: when Jesus died for our sins. Christ dashed to pieces all the hopes of Satan. He stormed the stronghold of Hell, rending the gates of Acheron with his Godly might.

The war for souls has already been won. So where does that put us now? Obviously, the Second Resurrection has yet to occur. Spiritual warfare is still continuing. There is still sin. There is still death.

What we are engaged in now is a rear guard action of sorts. The Devil knows that he has lost the war, yet he continues in his arrogance to fight. While there are still souls that can be seduced, Satan will persist to seduce them.

Our objective, therefore, as the Militia Christi, is to finish off the forces of Satan and rout the culture of death. We can take confidence in the fact that the victory is already in our hands. Jesus is already the victor. But victory does not mean that we should balk in our vigilance. Just as the Devil will continue to steal souls, we must continue to save them. Until the Second Resurrection, we must continue to fight. We must make the Earth ready for God's return. We must annihilate the last remnants of Satan's evil and the culture of death.

Deus Volt!

Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Nietzsche and Relativism


A lot of the world's moral problems can be traced back to relativism. The Oxford English dictionary defines relativism as "The doctrine that knowledge, truth, and morality exist in relation to culture, society, or historical context, and are not absolute." Relativism is the new truth, the prevailing ideology across the public education systems and modern life in general.

Relativism allows justification for all manner of evils. It blurs the lines of morality and personality. If someone does not "feel" that what they are doing is wrong, than it must not be wrong.  Relativism is the ultimate expression of individualism. It gives the individual unlimited power: the power to decide its own good and evil.

But truth is not "feeling." Truth is not conventional. It is not convenient. Truth is.

The fact that one person believes a ball is orange and another believes it is red does not change the reality that it is in fact blue.

The simplest definition of truth is this: God is truth. God in His ineffable wisdom has decided what truth is. He alone determines good and evil. It is the height of folly to believe we have the power to make that determination ourselves.

God says that marriage is between a man and a woman: "male and female he created them" (Genesis 1:27). He says that life begins at conception: "before I formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born, I dedicated you," (Jeremiah 1:5). Disordered desire cannot change the truth of marriage. We cannot project our own imperfections upon an eternal institution founded by God. A litany of denial cannot erase the truth that life begins at conception. There is no justification for murder, and abortion is just that.

So where did the world go wrong? How is it that truth has been forgotten and stomped upon? Of course, all sin and disorder can be traced back to the Original Fall of man from Eden. But the misconceptions of relativism have only seemed to get stronger and stronger in recent decades. A large part of this movement can be traced back to the school of thought characterized by one man: Friedrich Nietzsche. Nietzsche was a philosopher at the turn of the twentieth century. He was an ardent and outspoken atheist and cynic. His work is best summed up in a single book: Thus Spoke Zarathustra.  This book mocks the rhetorical style of the Bible to further Nietzsche's views. He was a heavy proponent of relativism. He stressed the importance of the individual will and selfishness. He believed that the greatest good was oneself. For Nietzsche, there was no truth. "'This- is now my way- where is yours?' thus I answered those who asked me 'the way.' For the way- that does not exist!" (Thus Spoke Zarathustra, Book III, On the Spirit of Gravity )

The only way we can respond to these existential lies is to follow THE truth. We must counter falsehoods with the unity of God-given truth.

To learn the truth, we must study the Scriptures and the works of the Saints. We must gird ourselves with the righteousness of God's truth.

Deus Volt!