Can This
Be Christian? (Chapter 5)
Can this approach be Christian?
That depends. What does it mean to be Christian?
Does being Christian mean believing
certain things about the Bible and God and Jesus?
Does it mean believing that the Bible is all literally true, and that God causes suffering? Does it mean believing in the Trinity and the Virgin birth? If so, then we can’t take my approach to being Christian.
But does being Christian mean
believing those things? Or does
it mean something else?
We must answer this question by
looking to what Jesus said, not by looking to tradition, or theologians, or the church, or even to St. Paul. Because the question is, what does it mean to follow Jesus Christ -- not anyone else.
What Did
Jesus Say?
Just look at these well-known passages:
* The Great Commandment: We are to love God and love our neighbor. (Mt. 22:35-40, Mk. 12:28-34, Lk. 10:25-28.)
* The Sermon on the Mount: He tells us how to treat each other, to be
reconciled, to love even our enemies. And those who will enter the kingdom of
heaven are those who do God’s will -- not those who call Jesus “Lord.” (Mt. 5-7; see also Lk. 6:17-49.)
* The Great Judgment: Those who are going to heaven are those who fed
the hungry, welcomed a stranger, and visited the sick and imprisoned. “Truly,
I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my brethren, you did it to me.”
(Mt. 25:35-40.)
Jesus taught us how to live, not
what to believe. To try to accept this message, to try to live it, was to accept
God’s messenger, and was to accept God.
The First Rule of
Christian Belief
(1)
A belief is appropriate for Christians if it is consistent with the Great Commandment taught by Jesus, and with
Jesus’ central role in our faith.
Our common sense approach can do
this -- I will show how later.
The Second Rule of Christian
Belief
Many people would add to this. They want to require that we believe certain things about Jesus. But before anyone can require that we believe something to be considered Christian, it has to pass our Second Rule of Christian belief:
(2)
A certain belief about Jesus can only be necessary for Christians, if it is necessary for following his teachings,
with Jesus as our guide or focus.
Conclusion