Thursday, April 29, 2010

Brief thoughts on the IRFA

This recent article on CNN.com highlights a general problem that a majority of the world's population faces: lack of religious freedom. The article in and of itself isn't all that groundbreaking. It merely reports on a common problem. The interesting part is that the organization behind the study, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (or USCIRF), was created by the government after it passed the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998.

Reading about the IRF Act, I understand the concept of the United States promoting religious tolerance and freedom- it is, after all, in line with the Constitution of the United States and it is something that we have enjoyed in America since the Puritans left England. Ideally, this plan of action would lead to more freedom of expression and ideas could be shared and people could be respected.

The practice of said legislation, however, ends up being pure lip service. While the Act allows for sanctions to be made against countries who refuse to "level the playing field" so to speak- and even creates lists of countries that are top offenders- sanctions on the truly egregious offenders are rarely taken. Why?

Money.

China and Saudi Arabia, both notorious religious persecutors are simply ignored. After all, when you import 958,000 barrels of oil into the U.S. everyday (like Saudi Arabia), or when you're the second largest trading partner the U.S. has (i.e. China) - ideals seem to fade in the blinding glow of the dollar.

I'm not one to think that the "American Way" means the best way (or that it means 'God's Way', but that's another blog post), however if this was something that the people of this nation considered important enough to pass into law then two things need to happen:
1) Admit that the report by the USCIRF is correct .
2) Be willing to take a harder stance on those who persecute peaceful religious expression, even if it adversely affects the United States and her allies.
3) Remind countries that receive such sanctions that they are in clear violation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and subsequently bar them from the United Nations.

If these things can't be done, why not repeal the bill and simply leave the ideal in the hearts and minds of people instead of committing it to legally binding paper (even though its already there in kernel form in the First Amendment) ? Doing so would eliminate a redundant program and save taxpayers money.

Friday, April 2, 2010

"The true way to Christianity is, first, to acknowledge that we are sinners according to the law and that it is impossible for us to do anything good. Therefore, you cannot earn grace by what you do; if you try, you double your offense, since you are a bad tree, you can only produce bad fruit - that is, sins (see Matthew 7:17; Romans 14:23). Anyone who wants to merit grace by works before having faith is trying to please God with sins, which is nothing but heaping sin upon sin and mocking God and provoking his wrath. When a person is taught this by the law, he is terrified and humbled and sees the magnitude of his sin and cannot find in himself one spark of the love of God. Therefore, he confesses that he is guilty of death and eternal damnation. The first part of Christianity, then, is the preaching of repentance and self-knowledge.

The second part is this: if you want to be saved, you must not seek salvation through works. God has sent his one and only Son into the world, that we might live through him. He was crucified and died for you and bore your sins in his own body. God has revealed to us by his Word that he will be a merciful Father to us, and without our deserving it (since we can deserve nothing good) he will freely give us remission of sins, righteousness, and everlasting life for the sake of Christ his Son. God gives his gifts freely to everybody, and that is the praise and glory of his divinity. Those who will not receive grace and everlasting life from him freely but want to earn them by their own actions would in this way utterly remove the glory of his divinity. Therefore, so that he may maintain and defend this glory, he is obliged to send his law, like lightning and thunder from heaven, to bruise and break those hard rocks.

This briefly is our doctrine concerning Christian righteousness. Faith justifies because it takes hold of the treasure of Christ's presence. But this presence cannot be comprehended by us because we are in darkness. Therefore, where there is an assured trust of the heart, Christ is present, even in the cloud and obscurity of faith. And this is true formal righteousness, by which a person is justified. Rather than love adorning faith, it is Christ who adorns faith - or rather, he is the true form and perfection of faith. Therefore, Christ, seized by faith and living in the heart, is the true Christian righteousness, for which God counts us righteous and gives us eternal life. This is no work of the law but a quite different sort of righteousness and a certain new world beyond and above the law, for Christ or faith is not the law, nor the work of the law.

True Christianity is, first, being taught by the law to know ourselves and thus learning to say with Paul that "all have sinned and fall short of the Glory of God" (Romans 3:23; see also Psalms 14:3; 51:4; 53:3). When we are humbled by the law and brought to self knowledge, true repentance follows (for true repentance begins with the fear and judgment of God), and we see ourselves to be such great sinners that we find no way to be delivered from sins by our own strength, works, or merits. Then we see what Paul means when he says that man is "sold as a slave to sin" (Romans 7:14) and that "God has bound all men over to disobedience" (Romans 11:32) and that the whole world is guilty before God (Romans 3:19).

Then we begin to sigh and ask who can help us. When we are terrified by the law like this, we utterly despair of our own strength; we look around for the help of a mediator and savior. This is the time for the healing word of the Gospel: "Take heart, son; your sins are forgiven" (Matthew 9:2). Believe in Christ Jesus crucified for you sins. If you feel your sins and the burden of them, do not look upon them in yourself, but remember that they have been transferred and laid on Christ, whose wounds have healed you (Isaiah 53:5).

This is the beginning of heath and salvation. By this means we are delivered from sin, justified, and made inheritors of everlasting life, not because of what we have done to deserve it, but through faith, by which we lay hold of Christ. Therefore, we also acknowledge a quality and a formal righteousness of the heart - not love, but faith, yet such that the heart must see and hold nothing but Christ the Savior.

Christ, truly defined, is no lawgiver but a forgiver of sins and a Savior. He might have paid for all the sins of the world with just one drop of his blood; but now he has shed it plentifully and has satisfied our need abundantly (see Hebrews 9:12; Romans 3-4). It is therefore important to lay hold of Christ by faith, since he bore the sins of the world. Only such faith is counted as righteousness. "

- Martin Luther, Commentary on the Book of Galatians