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Wandering the savage garden...

Study on Romans 1: verses 18 through 32

Posted on April 16, 2012 Written by savage Leave a Comment

My bible study group (or “life group,” or “small group,” whatever you’d like to call it) is doing a study on Romans, using the Journey Church’s online study.

It’s interesting, if a bit overguided – it’s like a lot of similar studies in that it more or less walks readers through the chapters.

What does verse 17 say about this topic? What’s the seventh word in verse 18?

That’s an exaggeration, for the most part, of course; the study expects readers to use different translations, so there’s no way to definitively answer a question like “what’s the nth word?”

But the point remains: the study’s interesting, the questions are mostly there for filler and to make sure the study leader doesn’t run out of steam.

This last week’s section was the beginning of where Romans’ tires meet the road, if you will. The first few verses introduce the writer (Paul), the next few verses back up his authority and testimony…

“The Decalogue” is a fancy term for the Ten Commandments.

Then verse 18 starts in describing Man’s relationship to God. It’s not a pretty picture: basically, as a very short summary, man sees evidence of God in the world around him, and rejects God despite this, replacing the Creator with the Creation. Paul walks through the entire Decalogue, basically recounting it in terms of the sin we bring to the table.

One of the men in the study had a really good point about how the list of sins is laid out: it’s a list of what we do, what we say, and what we think in sin. That doesn’t map quite to the Decalogue, but it’s a really neat way to think about it.

One of the questions I had was about the primary sin involved in the section. To the rest of the group, I think it was “idolatry,” and the text actually refers to idolatry, the replacement of the worship of God with the worship of an image.

To me, though, it was a little more banal; to me, it was lying. We lie about the nature of God, which allows us to lie further about who He is, which leads us to idolatry, murder, covetousness, and the others.

Meanwhile, if we were honest about what we see and feel around us, through the Creation, we would understand God’s nature and power, and worship and honor Him alone.

Thus: to me, it starts with a lie, and progresses from there.

It’s an interesting study, really, because of the people participating in it; we’re all fairly well versed in the Bible, so it’ll be fascinating to see the ripples our study creates in each others’ lives.

I’m really looking forward to chapter two. 🙂

Filed Under: Bible Study Tagged With: romans

Making Modern Music

Posted on April 16, 2012 Written by savage Leave a Comment

Yesterday, my son and I were looking for some appropriate Hanukkah music (as, of course, Hanukkah is upon us.) We listened to Adam Sandler’s Hanukkah song, as well as digging up the Maccabeats’ “Miracle” on Youtube, which was really pretty neat. (He liked Sandler’s song best, of course.)

However, the Maccabeats’ song makes a reference to Matisyahu. I don’t know where Matisyahu is in the Maccabeats’ video, but I’ve listened to a few songs of his, and decided to show my son some as well.

“One Day” came up first on Youtube’s search.

I think I nearly cried through it, which can happen with some songs (Rush’ “Closer to the Heart” is one, for example)… but not many.

It focused my attention on the other stuff my son listens to – Drake, Ke$ha, Li’l Wayne. I don’t mind his music (much) – I don’t appreciate it, but he’s got his own path to find.

But what stood out to me was what Matisyahu does with similar beats and approaches, against what the… for lack of a better word, typical popular artist does.

Reggae stands out, first.

The main thing, though, is the focus of the music. Matisyahu makes reference to himself, because he’s using his personal point of view, but he’s not talking about himself.

Compare this to some of the other music my son listens to. “I’m bad, I stole a car, I’m dangerous, check my grill, my car, my woman, my crib, my tats, my prison record.”

It’s about the artist, directly, and it’s focusing attention on attributes that glorify only the artist or his aims.

In the grand scheme of the universe, these are very small concerns.

I have a reasonably nice vehicle, but I can’t imagine singing about what it is to other people – regardless of how nice it might be. I can’t imagine glorifying myself, because I’m not that important.

What Matisyahu does is more respectable: he’s looking at issues that matter (peace, mutual benefit, glorification to God) and using himself only to personalize the topic and influence others positively.

Typical pop music is about the artist and his or her desires.

The music I like most is “real,” about something important, instead – not that the artist isn’t important, but the artist’s importance is primarily to the artist and not to me, and my acceptance and appreciation of that importance will always be artificial.

That’s why I say it’s “real.”

“I got a nice car, I got a nice grill, I got a woman and I know she will” isn’t real – it’s me projecting the things I have onto you, somehow. The best I can hope for is to impress or stun you. The effort poured into the creation of such art is destructive, because the creation consumes everything that goes into its making.

But “I want our children to some day be able to play in peace in their way,” well, maybe it’s not perfectly formed, but it’s more real than personal glorification.

The effort poured into this “real” music is constructive, because hopefully it inspires someone to think this way, to see the world as something beautiful to be preserved, to bring the light of God through the shell of evil that surrounds us and into the world for all to see.

Shalom.

Originally published on Dec 22, 2011.

Filed Under: Arts, Lifestyle Tagged With: matisyahu, music, rush

Welcome to Exploring the Well.

Posted on April 16, 2012 Written by savage Leave a Comment

This site is dedicated to my observations on my own Christian walk.

Because nobody exists in a vacuum, a lot of my observations are eddies caused by those around me.

I tend to be a bit of a runaway thinker. Observations outside the normal flow of thought will be included in an “aside box,” like this.

My observations are reactions to events. whether they’re things that happen in my own life in the process of being married, raising three boys, or working, or things mentioned by other people that make me react and search out my own thought processes on a matter. As a result, you’re reading “me” – which may or may not be a good thing.

I can’t claim to be authoritative, and wouldn’t make such a claim. Where I can, I’ll try to explain my reasoning and back it up with sources – and if I’m incorrect or unenlightened, I’m glad to be corrected.

This blog isn’t exactly new. For one thing, it was hosted on blogspot for a while, before moving to a new domain (and a new hosting application, WordPress.

Also, recently something happened to the database, and like an idiot I didn’t have recent backups (or, well, any backups.) So there’s some time in which posts have been lost, which is especially frustrating because some of them were among what I consider to be my best work here.

As I can, I’ll migrate the content originally hosted at the original domain, and if I can, I’ll recreate some of the content since lost.

Filed Under: General Tagged With: about

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