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The “Good News” The Gospel, a Greek term meaning the “Good News” has a noble and loving heritage as the “hope for the world,” proclaiming, “peace on earth, and good will toward men.” (Luke 2:14) Even if you don’t believe Jesus Christ is the Son of God, you must admit He is the single most influential person of all time. Because He changed the way everyone – even atheists – thinks. The carpenter is the first person in history to teach that we should love everyone we meet - regardless of race, creed, or gender. He said we are all “Sons of God” and that “there is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one.” Two thousand years ago this was a revolutionary thought. Unlike the Good Samaritan, the morality of the day would have left the victim on the side of the road. (The Hebrews taught us compassion, but they usually meant compassion for other Jews). Slavery was commonplace, and even talking to the “woman at the well” was beneath the dignity of a Jewish man. Yet the carpenter made of point of doing so, permanently engendering a philosophy of equality among the races and the sexes. And, of course, He told us to forgive. Now, nearly all Americans think this way - even atheists and people of other religions. Jesus practically invented tolerance. Here’s a list of revolutionary concepts that the carpenter introduced:
The Greeks were intellectual giants, bringing us the concepts of art, literature, theater, astronomy, biology and most importantly democracy. But most of you would be astonished that some 70% of people living in ancient Greece were slaves. In their democracy, the demos only included Greeks men born from that city. It did not include other men (or even Greeks) that they enslaved - and it didn’t include women. The rest of the world was pretty much the same – if they showed compassion at all, it was only to their own people or their own family. Indeed, look at the myths and you’ll see how cruel people were to siblings and parents in their own family.
Compare that mercy to the present-day culture of the Middle East. Adulteresses are executed by the sword - even today - now, in the 21st Century. It happens in public, in the middle of town, for everyone to see. I know – I’ve been there. You could complain that equality has taken too long, and that women – even in the West – are still not treated equally. I totally agree. Others might argue that followers of the carpenter (or people who claimed to be followers) have had sexist, even horrible views towards women. Unfortunately, religions are made up of human beings, and human beings are often quite horrible. I would contend that if, over the last two thousand years, everyone embodied the ideas of the carpenter – the first person in history to treat women as equals – we wouldn’t have had that problem.
The preciousness and sanctity of every human life is a uniquely Christian concept. It did not occur until Jesus.
Look at what the Greeks thought about romantic love – nearly every hero that fell in love was destroyed because of that love. Indeed, of the 30+ Greek plays we still have today, not one of them has love as its subject. Read Medea and you’ll see what it was like to be a Greek woman. Aristotle thought women incapable of friendship, and Plato wanted to abolish marriage altogether. Christianity alone treats men and women as equals. (Matthew 19:6)
Modern secularists have done a superb job making everyone believe that science and Christianity are enemies and always have been. Far from the truth, the concept that the universe was ordered but not magical catapulted scientific thought greater than any other culture. “faith in the possibility of science…is an unconscious derivative of medieval (Christian) theology.” Compare that thinking to ancient China, which was much more stable and wealthier than medieval Europe: “there was no confidence (in China) that the code of natural laws could ever be unveiled and read, because there was no assurance that a divine being, even more rational than ourselves, had ever formulated such a code capable of being read.” Medieval Catholics invented the university system and the first hospitals. Almost all important early scientists were Christian. The Persians gave us Algebra, and the Greeks a host of early sciences, but there are virtually no important contribution from early Islamic or Hindu scientists. “So vast, without question, is the divine handiwork of the Almighty Creator!” Nicolaus Copernicus Even to this day, patterns are sought by scientists to unravel our complex universe, looking for “beautiful” mathematical relationships rather than “ugly” ones. Why? Because even secular scientists see the inherent order of the cosmos, an order that is “bordering on the mysterious,” according to physicist Eugene Wigner, “and there is no rational explanation for it.” Western culture abolished slavery and gave women the right to vote. It is generous to the poor and accepting of other religions. It embraces diversity and promotes liberty. All of that progress comes directly from the teachings of Jesus. |
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