C
cho_pilo
Guest
Of course, God reigns supreme – for those who believe there is a God.
I do. And the God I believe in is the God my parents introduced me to, my school taught me about, and life convinced me to love and obey.
While the Old Testament did tell stories of a God to be feared, it did seem to be in a context of the times – the way people understood life and responded to the challenges of their circumstances. In the history of the areas where Abraham and Moses lived, it was less the holiness of the people of God that was highlighted but the environment of war and violence. And it surely does seem that this environment of conflict was sustained over generations, even centuries or millennia.
A greater backdrop would be the recorded human history of the continent of Europe, the powerful neighbor of the Middle East. That history indicates that there were more wars than years as one year could witness several wars going on in the same period. That same history points to about 3,000 years where war was a constant reality and peace a rare occurrence, more a respite from war or a preparation for the next one. It is easier to understand the context of war than the context of God. I conclude that even the face of God or who people imagined God to be was very much colored by the reality of war in people’s lives.
Read MoreWhen the backdrop of societies over thousands of years is violent conflict, a God to be relevant has to be intimate to the fears and hopes of people engaged with warfare as a primordial societal activity. In this context, the God of the Old Testament dealt consistently with war and death more than love and forgiveness. And definitely, that God insisted on obedience of the military kind – instant and unquestioning. It was the only kind of obedience that people could understand because a military-centric life was what dominated society.
I hope to hear comments from those who are presently living under obedience. Can obedience be blind? What is your concept of a blind obedience?