God wants you to be healthy, wealthy and happy
I don't pretend this is a full account, simply a small counterweight to overly triumphalist baptisms of our present comfort.
of doom, gloom and empty tombs
By
byron smith
at
11:19 am
5
comments
Topics: cross, death, false hope, fasting, groaning, joy, kingdom of God, Life, mourning, peace, persecution, poverty, prayer, wealth
By
byron smith
at
9:08 am
1 comments
Topics: consumerism, contentment, desire, discipleship, ethics, fasting, freedom, gospel, healing, humanity, justice, learning, Lent, love, Rowan Williams, self-control, simplicity, wealth
"Beware of practising your piety before others in order to be seen by them; for then you have no reward from your Father in heaven. [...] And whenever you fast, do not look dismal, like the hypocrites, for they disfigure their faces so as to show others that they are fasting. Truly I tell you, they have received their reward. But when you fast, put oil on your head and wash your face, so that your fasting may be seen not by others but by your Father who is in secret; and your Father who sees in secret will reward you."
- Matthew 6.1, 16-18 (NRSV).
Does fasting earn spiritual brownie points? Does every meal skipped now give us an extra helping at the messianic feast of the age to come? I don't think that this is Jesus' point here. He is warning against those whose acts of piety (he mentions charitable giving, prayer and fasting) are done in order to be seen by others. Jesus has no problem with good deeds that are visible to others. Indeed, just a few verses earlier, he taught his listeners to "let your light shine before others, so that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father in heaven" (Matthew 5.16, NRSV). The issue here is not the visibility of the works, but their purpose. Ostentatious display somehow undermines the point of such deeds, which suggests that their point has to do with our hearts, with our motives and desires (a conclusion also suggested a few verses later in 6.19-21, where Jesus speaks of what it is that our hearts treasure). We give, pray and fast in order to allow our hearts to be shaped by such disciplines. These activities are done for the healing of our desires not the enhancement of our reputation. At least part of the reward of fasting, then, is to discover that our treasure is indeed heavenly and so free from the vicissitudes of material possessions or social reputation.
By
byron smith
at
12:49 am
10
comments
Topics: 1 Peter, desire, eschatology, fasting, healing, heart, heaven, Jesus, kingdom of God, Lent, love, Matthew, motivation, prayer, reputation, selfishness, treasure
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So what might it mean to remember that we are dust? Well, at a minimum, I suspect it means that we cannot simply assume "the environment" is something "out there", an appendix to our existence that can be treated purely instrumentally as a source of "resources". Instead, we recognise that we belong here, that we share a common origin and destiny with other created things. And we share a common task as well: the praise of the creator. So we are reliant upon the non-human in order to truly be human, since we are created to join our voices with creation's praise (in what might be called doxological interdependence). Note that this also means (contra some forms of deep green thought) that the rest of creation needs us to truly be itself too. This puts the lie to the idea that we ultimately face a choice between caring for humans and caring for "the environment".
By
byron smith
at
12:01 am
0
comments
Topics: Ash Wednesday, church calendar, creation, deep green, environment, fasting, home, human nature, Kyle, Lent, praise, Tearfund
By
byron smith
at
5:45 pm
1 comments
Topics: Advent, Christmas, consumerism, fasting, kingdom of God, money, peace, prayer, waiting
By
byron smith
at
12:02 am
35
comments
Topics: animals, bright green, celebration, common good, consumerism, contentment, desperation, ecology, economic growth, fasting, fear, feasting, guilt, idolatry, joy, long term, relationships, spirituality, stuff
All photos and text by Byron Smith, unless noted otherwise.
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