I mean why do we as in everyone give those cliche christian answers and call it "love" when that person is in the pit of despair or beat someone over the head with the Bible who is just taking baby steps in their walk with Christ because they aren't "doing it right"? Why do we look down on some sins but not others? Why do we have to meet certain social standards to be accepted? It's exhausting! Why can't we just be vulnerable and get down and dirty to love one another? Feel with one another? Like actually and literally cry for one another? Why do some people get blamed for being a bad Christian when all they're doing is trying their best with the circumstance they have?
That's what I mean...this isn't specifically directed at CC but it is directed at Christians as a whole.
This is just the lead-in, but when I finish getting it readable, I'll send you a copy.
After taking about 70 trips overseas to Latin America, Europe, Russia, Asia, Africa, the Orient, and the island nations of the world, I can say with all certainty that something has gone terribly wrong on planet Earth! Deception, despair, destitution, disease, and death continually decimate the human race day after day. This is not theory I’m talking about, or a subject to be debated in our institutions of higher learning. Why is all this heart-wrenching destruction happening? What or who is behind it all? Is there a way to deal with it?
We’ve heard all the hollow, pat answers that don’t ring true and leave us still wondering:
“You never know what God’s going to do.
”Who can understand the ways of God?”
“There’s always a reason behind everything God does.”
“We’ll understand it better in the sweet by and by.”
“The Lord’s ways are mysterious and past finding out.”
“God is testing you, and if it doesn’t kill you, you’ll come through it stronger.”
“God is punishing you. You need to learn a lesson from this.”
“This is God’s way of teaching you to deepen your spirituality.”
Instead of learning through tragedy, many people come away bitter and distraught. Disillusioned, they ask, “Is this the kind of God I’m supposed to love and trust?” We’ve all seen things happen in life that ended in wretched, miserable outcomes, adversely affecting all who were connected to the situation. We’ve been taught generation after generation that “God’s got it all under control, and this somehow works toward a higher good.” Are you ready to put this teaching under the microscope?