A post from Dar
WHERE THEOLOGY MEETS THE ROAD . . .
(I'm sorry, I don't know how to post a new thread. But this kinda relates to this thread.)
This is what happened in our "living in paradise" city (of Honolulu, HI) yesterday:
Headline: "Babysitter throws toddler off Honolulu overpass"
- full story at www.honoluluadvertiser.com
(on Friday, January 18 -- you may have to go to the archive section if viewing after today)
In one response to this, one blogger commentor wrote, "When these things happen all I'm able to do is curl up in a ball. I won't read anything else about these tragedies as soon as I see the headline. There's no way to extinguish the pain. It happens every day all over the world, over and over. I get my faith confirmed every day: THAT THERE IS NO GOD. Just us out here on a ball, a maddening species with all the free will in the universe. We never seem to tire of killing each other finding, new ways to do it and finding new ways to deny our responsibility. Voices? So what? insanity is no excuse for anything."
I'm interested to know (from all you current or future pastors/ministers/theology teachers), what is your theological response and what does that look like in "real-world" ministry (as in addressing something like this horrible event)?
1 Comments:
There are two options in life: hope and hopelessness. There is no outside standard, no objective place to sit by which one can judge whether this life is one bent toward hope or hopelessness. One may only choose one of these by taking a risk. Hopelessness is no less a risk than hope. For my own part, I'd rather risk hope any day and risk that kind of life than hopelessness. To put it extremely bluntly, I'd prefer to live a life of hope even if it is false than live a life of hopelessness that is true.
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