BTEKS

Batiste Technical Services LLC
www.bteks.com
batiste.f@bteks.com

910-353-5931

BTEKS Services:

Database Admin Support:

Oracle,
MySql,
MS Sql Server,
Sybase,
Sql Server

Website Design Support:

Static & Dynamic
Website Design

Software Support:

Software Technical Support
Software Development Support
Software Technical Writing
Software Formal Instructor Svc

Military Aviation Support

Military Aviation
Technical Support
Military Aviation
Maintenance Management
AMEGS
M-SHARP
READINESS

Logistics Support
                          
Email: batiste.f@bteks.com


BTEKS PRODUCTS

BB&N Cosmetology
Directory
910-353-5931
batiste.f@bteks.com

www.bbandn.com
BARBER SHOPS,
BEAUTY SALONS,
NAIL SALONS

Free Business Listings,
Free Professional Listings,
&
Free Cosmetology
Student Listings
5,000 Plus businesses currently listed

Additional Services
BB&N Cosmetology
Directory

Display Your Info with:

Full Website
for Businesses,
Mini Website for Pros,
&
A Web Page for Employees & Students

www.bbandn.com

FEATURED SERVICES

ON-LINE CALENDAR & RESERVATION
REQUEST SYSTEM


Email notification
& confirmation
Color Coded
Calendar Display

Test Now

 

Religion & Truth
The 17th century painting Judith Beheading Holofernes, by Artemisia Gentileschi, depicts a biblical scene.
By Steven James, Special to CNN

My Take: Stop sugarcoating the Bible

(CNN) – The Bible is a gritty book. Very raw. Very real. It deals with people just like us, just as needy and screwed up as we are, encountering a God who would rather die than spend eternity without them.

Yet despite that, it seems like Christians are uncomfortable with how earthy the Bible really is. They feel the need to tidy up God.

For example, look in any modern translation of Isaiah 64:6, and you’ll find that, to a holy God, even our most righteous acts are like “filthy rags.” The original language doesn’t say “filthy rags”; it says “menstrual rags.” But that sounds a little too crass, so let’s just call them filthy instead.

And let’s not talk so much about Jesus being naked on the cross, and let’s pretend Paul said that he considered his good deeds “a pile of garbage” in Philippians 3:8 rather than a pile of crap, as the Greek would more accurately be translated.

And let’s definitely not mention the six times in the Old Testament that the Jewish writers referred to Gentile men as those who “pisseth against the wall.” (At least the King James Version got that one right.)

CNN’s Belief Blog: The faith angles behind the biggest stories

The point?

God’s message was not meant to be run through some arbitrary, holier-than-thou politeness filter. He intended the Bible to speak to people where they’re at, caught up in the stark reality of life on a fractured planet.

Dozens of Psalms are complaints and heart-wrenching cries of despair to God, not holy-sounding, reverently worded soliloquies. Take Psalm 77:1-3: “I cry out to God; yes, I shout. Oh, that God would listen to me! When I was in deep trouble, I searched for the Lord. All night long I prayed, with hands lifted toward heaven, but my soul was not comforted. I think of God, and I moan, overwhelmed with longing for his help” (New Living Translation).

And rather than shy away from difficult and painful topics, the Old Testament includes vivid descriptions of murder, cannibalism, witchcraft, dismemberment, torture, rape, idolatry, erotic sex and animal sacrifice. According to St. Paul, those stories were written as examples and warnings for us (1 Corinthians 10:11). So obviously they were meant to be retold without editing out all the things we don’t consider nice or agreeable.

Follow the CNN Belief Blog on Twitter

I believe that Scripture includes such graphic material to show how far we, as a race, have fallen and how far God was willing to come to rescue us from ourselves.

God is much more interested in honesty than pietism.

And that’s what he gives us throughout Scripture, telling the stories of people who struggled with the same issues, questions and temptations we face today.

Peter struggled with doubt, and we hear all about it.

Elijah dealt with depression; Naomi raged with bitterness against God; Hannah struggled for years under the burden of her unanswered prayers.

David had an affair and then arranged to have his lover’s husband killed. Noah was a drunk, Abraham a liar, Moses a murderer. Job came to a place where he found it necessary to make a covenant with his eyes not to lust after young girls (Job 31:1).

It’s easy to make “Bible heroes” (as Protestants might say) or “saints” (as Catholics might refer to them) out to be bigger than life, immune from the temptations that everyone faces.

I find it encouraging that Jesus never came across as pietistic. In fact, he was never accused of being too religious; instead he partied so much that he was accused of being a drunkard and a glutton (Matthew 11:19).

Jesus never said, “The Kingdom of God is like a church service that goes on and on forever and never ends.” He said the kingdom was like a homecoming celebration, a wedding, a party, a feast to which all are invited.

This idea was too radical for the religious leaders of his day. They were more concerned about etiquette, manners, traditions and religious rituals than about partying with Jesus. And that’s why they missed out.

That’s why we miss out.

According to Jesus, the truly spiritual life is one marked by freedom rather than compulsion (John 8:36), love rather than ritual (Mark 12:30-33) and peace rather than guilt (John 14:27). Jesus saves us from the dry, dusty duties of religion and frees us to cut loose and celebrate.

I don’t believe we’ll ever recognize our need for the light until we’ve seen the depth of the darkness. So God wasn’t afraid to get down and dirty with us about life and temptation and forgiveness. And grace.

Only when the Bible seems relevant to us (which it is), only when the characters seem real to us (which they were), only then will the message of redemption become personal for us (which it was always meant to be).

We don’t need to edit God. We need to let him be the author of our new lives.

The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Steven James.


Send Comments
Your comments will be added to the article that you write about, so include the article title

Send Comments ASKFMB OPINION

Today is

The Truth Is A Lonely Existence

 

There was a time where we would hold public trials for people who were accused of committing crimes, in which, the public witnessed the acts and actions of those being charged, and the public witnessed the witnesses, speak the truth or lies, regarding what they seen or heard.

Public Trials were psychological determents, meaning, ones actions in the dark were brought into the light, for all to see, and the accused would attempt to cover their face, in shame of being exposed for telling a lie, stealing, murdering, manipulating others, cheating, or committing immoral acts in the dark/out of sight.

Today, we humans today, are the same as humans in the biblical days, in terms of our capabilities of killing, lying, cheating, and other inequities that human's are capable of committing.

The Truth is the entity of facts that have no consciousness, nor does the Truth have any considerations of who delivers it, or how it's delivered. The Truth..... simply "is".

It's the human being, who either delivers or receives the truth, and for those who are more apt to have flawed conscientious awareness, they are the ones that find the truth hurtful, in it's presentation by anyone.

The ones that have great conscientious awareness, are the ones who believe in the truth, and are more apt to receive the truth with great acceptance, irregardless of its presentation, or irregardless of the one that delivers the truth.

However, those with great conscientious awareness, tend to be avoided because they do not condone the mal behaved, or the weak of heat, they speak the truth even if it hurts others, as well as, if the truth hurt themselves.

The Bible, in the manner in which it is written, is written by a human, and the pleasantness in which it is presented is designed, purposely, to be more acceptable by those who avoid the truth, presented in its true conscientious state.

The ones who speak the soft truth, does so for his own selfish reason, in an effort to gain something, be it, maintaining a friendship, or ensuring that a loved one feelings aren't hurt, and it's these soft truths..., themselves, that are "iniquities" that condones mal behavior or mal acts.

Last week, I was speaking with a friend, describing "Whitney Houston" as a "Crack Head" who destroyed her life due to her own flaws and selfish ways. My friend got upset with me for calling Whitney a "Crack Head", but, it's the truth, and suregarcoating it is how she was able to maintain her mal behavior, to the extent that it eventually took her life, or at a minimum, her mal behavior stole many quality years from her life..., at a minimum.

The Truth, has been avoided by humans, as evident in all the flaws of our government, flaws in our education system, flaws in our politicians and our political system, flaws in our law enforcement and our justice system, flaws in businesses that exploit victims, flaws in our daily behavior and our mal values and immoral behavior, flaws in the parenting skills, and flaws in our family members who we choose not to tell the truth too.

We are not supposed to be perfect, just conscientious aware of our day to day acts and actions.

 

In My Opinion

ASMFMB
2/27/2012

Send Comments
Your comments will be added to the article that you write about, so include the article title