Your question about the New Testament resulted from my comment about “living for Christ” (which does indeed mean one lays up in store “treasures in heaven” by virtue of how they live their life, here and now, without thinking they have to be a martyr to “live for Christ”), and my other comment as follows:
My question was due to your misunderstanding of what Jesus really taught, as opposed to the LDS version that claims:
“repenting through the atonement of Christ” which means changing and becoming more loving disciples of Him every day of their lives, and on being strong on self-defense and on a unified group defense such as is shown by the group led by Captain Moroni in the Book of Mormon.
That’s a complete contradiction of everything Jesus taught in the Gospels. The second part of that statement (in bold) is especially troubling to me as a Catholic, and as an American. Jesus never taught anything like that, anywhere in the Gospels. The Catholic Church never focused any effort whatsoever on any “self-defense” mechanisms, either as individuals or as a Church. It’s a religion of peace, based on the example given to us by Jesus. It’s not a military enterprise, in any way. It’s focus is on worshiping God in spirit and truth. The only part that might be seen as a type of ‘military force’ is the Swiss Guard, but their only ‘mission’ is to protect the Pope. They’re more like royal body guards than an actual military.
If Jesus wanted His Church to be any kind of military force, would He have stopped Peter when he cut off the soldier’s ear, and told him to put away his sword? The Jews didn’t recognize Him as the Messiah, partly because they expected Him to be an earthly ruler that would vanquish all of their enemies. They were wrong. He didn’t come to help us fight our physical battles. He came to fight the spiritual forces of evil in this world (aka the devil), and conquer them. He reopened the Gates of Heaven to us. He didn’t care about the politics of this world at all.
If any church that claims to follow Jesus is focused on building a quasi-military defense force into their ‘faith’, then they’re not even a church in the true sense. It would seem that its goal might be more towards establishing some kind a political entity, modeled on its own interpretation of the ‘kingdom of God’. That’s what worries me about your statement. Christ’s True Church is the Kingdom of God on earth, but it is ‘not of this world’. It’s a Heavenly Kingdom, not a worldly one. Jesus never intended for His Church to rule over this world, until He actually returns. Our Kingdom is in Heaven. We don’t necessarily worry about what the governments of this world do. We abide by the laws of the land that we live in and participate in doing our duty as citizens, but that’s about it. We’re certainly not obsessed with politics or ruling the world.
When Jesus comes back to judge the world at the end of it, He will make a whole ‘new Heaven and a new earth’. Then, and only then, will He establish His Kingdom on the earth,
Himself, where He will reign as it’s King, forever. The entire earth will be completely renewed. All good souls, who have lived faithfully by the laws of God, will be reunited with their resurrected and glorified bodies. Those good people will live on the new earth, and the damned will burn in hell, forever. There will be no more evil in the world, and no need for any kind of ‘politics’.
So while it seems we probably agree about the importance of laying up “treasures in heaven”, it seems we don’t agree about being defensively prepared in view of the temporal world we live in where everyone isn’t loving and kind and some are in fact the opposite of that. The issue was whether a group or an individual becomes defensively prepared, or whether they just “let it happen” and perhaps become “a martyr” and thus, evidently, join Christ all the sooner. I don’t think the teachings of Christ lead one to believe they ought to just “let it happen” and become a martyr at the first opportunity an enemy has to inflict damage, particularly to one’s family.
Like I said, we’re not to be overly concerned about politics and all the junk that goes along with it. There will always be those that will kill people because they don’t hold the same beliefs as they do. Governments can worry about military defense, and the local police can worry about taking care of criminals that threaten private citizens. That’s their jobs. If someone breaks into our home, then we might have to worry about it when the time comes, but we certainly don’t need to stockpile an arsenal of weapons, ‘just in case’.
It also seems we don’t agree about having sufficient of this world’s goods to take care of one’s family, since if one takes every teaching of Christ literally, verbatim, they would sell all that they have, give to the poor, and thus have no goods at all and no home in which their family can live. I don’t think Christ was teaching that concept for our temporal world.
Your assumption on this point would also be somewhat wrong, not to mention, silly. Our family believes in being prepared for any emergencies by keeping enough food, etc., for those times when we might need them, like in the recent case of hurricane Irene. We, as Catholics, take all of the teachings of Jesus seriously, but we also depend on the Catholic Church to explain which teachings are to be taken literally, and which ones aren’t. They’re guided by the Holy Spirit to interpret all scripture for our benefit. We trust them to understand it better than we do, because Jesus gave them that authority when He established the Church. We don’t get caught up in trying to predict the Second Coming, or in trying to force it to happen the way
we want it to be. God would never approve of that.