9/13/21 Jack see HERE
Are you “agnostic” when it comes to religion? What does that even mean?
As a Christian, I often tell people in my gospel outreach
conversations that if I had not had the kind of personal encounters and
experiences with God in living out my Christian faith that I’ve had, the wisest
position I could take would be to call myself “agnostic”. I’ve told them that the ability to admit one’s
ignorance on a subject – which is what the term “agnostic” means – is the most
honest and open-minded position one can take.
I need to be more careful, though, when I say this because I’m
realizing “agnostic” means different things to different people.
For me, when I think of being agnostic I tend to automatically
assume that one is actively pursuing spiritual interest, but is honest enough
to admit they have not yet found convincing truths. They are uncommitted but interested and open
to new ideas and possibilities. An
atheist, on the other hand, would be close-minded in that they have already
reached a conclusion that God does not exist, as if they have looked under
every rock in the universe.
But not all who say they are agnostic are actively doing
something to alleviate the ignorance they claim to have. Many, such as a young man named Jack whom I spoke
with recently, view being agnostic as more of an easy label to use to just
explain that they really don’t care to know, that they take no interest in
spiritual things. Maybe a better
descriptive label might be “indifferent”.
I find it hard to believe that others really don’t care
about who we are, where we’ve come from, where we are going, and what our
purpose is here in this life. I remember
a time when I feigned indifference to spiritual things, because that was the
safe way to avoid getting involved, to face up to my shortcomings and sins, and
to avoid committing myself to something greater than myself. I wouldn’t have been able to articulate this
at the time, but I think that was what was going on.
Jesus said that when the gospel seed is planted, it will be
received by many different types of “soil” and in 3 of the 4 that he mentioned it
will not grow to maturity. He said that
some seed fell among thorn bushes which grew up and choked the plants. He later explained that this meant that the
thorn bushes choke the message of God. It is heard, but people’s concern for
riches and their worries about life cause the plants to die.
Is that the case with many people I meet who, like Jack, I
would describe as “indifferent” toward the things of God? Maybe a better way to describe them would be “distracted”. If so, than maybe my conversations with Jack and
others are exactly what is called for: to break into their regular routines and
comfort zones that can be so distracting from spiritual things, and to ask some
uncomfortable and thought-provoking questions that might lead to more thought
in that direction.
John the Baptist had the same sort of role, as one who was “a
voice crying out in the wilderness”. We
live in a wilderness of competing ideas and distractions that lead many to an
indifferent and distracted sort of agnosticism.
I pray that many believers will step out of our comfortable Christianity
and be that voice crying out in the wilderness.
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