Mark Gilroy

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Search Results for: label/God

Mark Gilroy February 28, 2008

Walking With God in America …

Anyone who doesn’t believe God has blessed America just needs to take a long walk and witness her beauty posits Ken Duncan, a world renowned Australian photographer, who visited all 50 states with his camera and notepad.
In the intro to his book, Walking With God In America, Duncan writes:

It might seem funny that although I am Australian, God has given me a real burden for America. No nation in the world has been more naturally blessed than the United States, and I believe God has done that so people will understand how much He cares for the nation. America’s faith in God is what had made it one of the greatest countries on earth, and faith is a beacon of hope for other struggling nations around the world.

From “under God” in the Pledge of Allegiance (the phrase was upheld in 2004 by the Supreme Court 5-4 because Sandra Day O’Connor argued that the phrase is “meaningless” — “any religious freight the words may have been meant to carry has long since been lost”) to removing references to God in textbooks on American history, the place or name of God in America’s public square — literally — is an ongoing political and legal powder keg.

I’ll defer any attempts at an argument that maintaing liberty requires virtue — and virtue requires true religion, to John Adams:

We have no government armed with power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by morality and religion. Avarice, ambition, revenge, or gallantry, would break the strongest cords of our Constitution as a whale goes through a net. Our Constitution was made for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.

For now, I’ll leave debates on whether or Constitution intends for there to be freedom of religion or freedom from religion and follow Duncan’s simple advice to look for America’s spirit in her beauty!
Acknowledgments: Panographic photographs are (c) Ken Duncan and used by permission; all rights reserved. The quote from Sandra Day O’Connor and John Adams are from Rediscovering God In America by Newt Gingrich (Thomas Nelson).

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Filed Under: Uncategorized

Mark Gilroy July 23, 2008

Who Stole Jesus?

How do you define Jesus?

Who Stole Jesus?

We all know that the Grinch stole Christmas but who stole Jesus? According to an AP story last month we now at least know who found Him! In Detroit of all places.

Thu Jun 5, 2008, 12:57 PM ET

A Detroit woman has found Jesus … in an alley.

The pastor of a church in the city says its stolen 8-foot Jesus statue was recovered from bushes in an alley about two blocks away.

Patricia Bowers says she notified the church late Wednesday that she had seen the statue the previous day after she had gotten off a bus.

Bowers says she didn’t realize the green-hued, plaster statue had been stolen until seeing news reports Tuesday night.

The Rev. Barry Randolph says the only damage to the statue is a broken hand. The cross it was attached to suffered major damage.

A church member noticed the statue missing Monday. Randolph says thieves may have thought the statue contained copper, which often is stolen and sold as scrap metal.

Copyright © 2008 The Associated Press.

When I was a seminary student many of us were pretty certain that theological Liberals like Anglican Bishop John A.T. Robinson who had written Honest to God, a thin book that had ignited a firestorm of debate, had tried or were trying to steal Jesus of His divinity. In Robinson’s case it was through a mind-numbing and fuzzy critique of the Medieval Church’s belief in a three-storied universe, which seemed fairly threatening at the time but in retrospect was a straw man argument that didn’t really address the topic at hand; God. Today such concerns might be directed at the Jesus Project (a methodical, decidedly agnostic, approach to understanding the historicity of Jesus) or come in response to bestselling books that put God on trial, like Christopher Hitchens’ God Is Not Great, Sam Harris’s Letter to a Christian Nation, and Richard Dawkins’ The God Delusion.

Some would argue that Hollywood has stolen Jesus or, at minimum, the power of His name, by gratuitously inserting profane usage of Jesus Christ into almost any movie made that is not rated G. Can you imagine the outcry if names for God in other religions were treated in the same way?

After the Crucifixion, the religious authorities were concerned that His disciples would steal Jesus – while His followers, notably Mary and Martha, believed that it was the Jewish leaders who had done just that.

Parents, when sending their kids off to college, are concerned that skeptical professors will try to steal Jesus from their children. Only 8% of Americans consider themselves an atheist – so why do they all seem to be employed in higher education? I kid. (Sort of.)

Many Christians believe that Jesus has been stolen from the public square by a radical fringe that uses the courts to enforce a much more expansive view of the “separation of church and state” than Jefferson ever intended in his letter to the Danbury Baptist Association in 1802.

The Death of God Movement, inspired by Nietzsche’s infamous sentence in Thus Spake Zarathustra, “God is dead … and we have killed him,” didn’t actually believe God had died literally or physically. But they did believe that the “idea of God” was no longer adequate as a system or inspiration for morality or finding ultimate meaning in life.

Is it possible to steal Jesus? to kill God?

We know that if God is God, if Jesus is who He says He is, then such questions are ridiculous. So why do they keep coming up?

Is it possible Nietzsche was on to something – at least on a personal experiential level? Faith, the requisite for knowing God, almost by definition – a confident belief and acceptance in the truth, value, or trustworthiness of a person or idea – seems to imply that we, by choice, can steal from Jesus His divinity and power; at least for our own lives. That raises too many theological questions to even pretend I could address in a quick blog or a lifetime of sitting in front of a typewriter.

But the question of whether someone has stolen or can steal Jesus is worth noting on a personal level. For we truly do live in a profane and secular day when it’s easy to just go with the flow of soft belief. So if you show up at church one Sunday morning or find yourself pondering the meaning of life in the middle of the night while staring at the ceiling and can’t seem to find Jesus, don’t go looking for Him in an alley in Detroit and don’t point an accusing finger at others.

The place to begin is found in the face you see in the mirror.

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Filed Under: Faith, Inspiration

God’s Help for Your Every Need: 101 Life-Changing Prayers

God's Help for Your Every Need written by Mark Gilroy

101 Life-Changing Prayers

Let us therefore come boldly to the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need.

—Hebrews 4:16 NKJV

Prayer is much more than the words you say to God. Prayer goes back to the beginning of time, to the Garden of Eden, where God walked and talked with Adam and Eve daily, making it crystal clear for all of us to understand and see, He desires fellowship with us.

Prayer is God’s invitation for us to enter into his presence with confidence, not timidity. It is his invitation to us to speak our hurts and needs and worries. Prayer is God’s antidote to the toxins of fear, cynicism, skepticism, and self-centeredness. Prayer is the wonderful opportunity for us to grow in faith and attitude as we express our love, gratitude, and praise to God. Prayer is the place to find forgiveness and begin repentance as we confess our sins to God.

You have been given a tremendous gift, rooted in God’s desire to spend time with you. It is called prayer. Respond to this gracious invitation to experience more fully the peace, joy, purpose, wisdom, and power of knowing God.

PURCHASE

AMAZON: Hardcover | eBook

Barnes & Noble: Hardcover | eBook

CBD: Hardcover | eBook

 

INSIDE THE BOOK

God’s Help for Your Every Need is divided into six sections – they are listed below with samples of the prayer topics. Click on highlighted topics to read samples that have been shared on blogs.

Home and Family

  • There Is Conflict in My Home
  • Guard My Children from Bad Influences
  • Bless My Spouse
  • My Child Is Struggling and I Don’t Know How to Help
  • My Parent’s Health Is Deteriorating

Attitudes and Emotions

  • I Need Courage
  • A Friend Has Betrayed Me
  • I Lack Confidence
  • I Am Struggling with Anger
  • I Feel So Alone

Work and Finances

  • I Need a Job
  • My Company Is Struggling
  • I Am Being Sued
  • I Want a Job Promotion
  • I Am Being Asked to Compromise My Character
  • I Need to Live Within My Means

Spiritual Growth

  • I Am Struggling with Temptation
  • I Have Drifted Spiritually and Need to Come “Home”
  • I Need to Forgive
  • I Need to Simplify My Life
  • Renew My Strength
  • I Have Doubts

My World and Nation

  • Bless My Country
  • Give Wisdom to Our Leaders
  • Establish Racial Harmony
  • Protect Our Soldiers
  • Help Me Speak the Good News

Mission and Service

  • I Want to Be A Blessing
  • I Am Bored and Lack Purpose
  • I Want to Share My Faith
  • I Need Hope for the Future
  • Loving My World

 

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Mark is a publisher, author, consultant, blogger, positive thinker, believer, encourager, and family guy. A resident of Brentwood, Tennessee, he has six kids, with one in college and five out in the "real world." Read More…

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