Tag Archives: My Past

Nominal Christian, Practical Atheist

AtheismHave you ever noticed that God frequently will bring something to your attention one day and then reinforce it from an entirely different direction the next? Or am I the only one? Didn’t think so.

This morning’s message at church was tied in to the ongoing Truth Project that we’re studing in our small groups. Today’s topic was Theology (Who Is God?). Pastor Del was speaking about our possible responses to God. Many people recognize that there are two extremes: you can be an atheist, denying the existence of God, or a believer.

But there is a middle ground that I hadn’t really considered before today, and that is what Pastor Del calls “practical atheism.” Essentially this is believing that God exists (at least potentially), but living your life as though He didn’t.

Ouch. How many “Christians” are in fact pratical atheists? How much of my life is lived this way? I suspect this is part of the problem I’ve been having with getting the habit of prayer and scripture into my life. If I truly believed in the existence of God and His desire for a relationship with me, wouldn’t I want to spend every possible moment with Him? Wouldn’t I want to hear from the creator of the universe about His plan for me? Wouldn’t I want to read about his system for organizing my life and growing my spirit?

The only conclusion I can draw is that on some level I’ve been a practical atheist all my life. Sixteen years ago I made a decision to follow Christ, but I don’t think my behavior or my attitude have quite caught up with that decision. How far could I have come in these sixteen years if I’d been more receptive and more willing to surrender and grow?

Even when I was behaving as though I didn’t believe in God, the miracle is that He believed—and believes—in me. He has been faithful when I had little faith. He has been true when my life was filled with lies. He will take me where I am, and I can start allowing Him to change me today.

Like I said yesterday, new habits can’t be layered on top of old ones. I have to first do away with the old, let go of the things that aren’t pleasing to God, trust Him, and truly, passionately believe in Him. Everything else has to grow out of that.

Photo Credits: Atheism via Wikipedia, 3/29/07

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No More Clover

You’d think it would be simple. Just get out the mower, run it over the lawn, no more clover. Right?

Not exactly.

On Saturday, I finally decided to overcome my inertia and go at the lawn. At first glance, of course, it now looks great. All the overgrown clover is gone, and all that’s left is some nice, green (well, a little yellow in spots) grass. Problem solved!

On closer inspection, though, I can see that I’m in for a very long haul with this lawn.

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In Clover

CloverMy front yard used to have some grass. When we first moved in, the builders had seeded with cheap grass just to keep the soil from washing away. The intention was that they would come back after the construction was done, rip out the temporary ground cover and start a new, healthy lawn.

They haven’t been back. And now, the lawn that used to have some grass is all clover. Huge swaths of it, overgrowing and choking everything else out.

They say that when you’re “in clover,” you’re living a casual, carefree life. No worries.

Ha.

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Protected: Building God’s House

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From Now On, A Christ-Follower

I’ve heard this before, more than once, and it always resonated with something deep inside me, but this post by a friend of mine really struck me the other day. From now on, I’m no longer a Christian, I’m a Christ-follower.

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