Thursday, October 24, 2013

Spiritual? God-fearing?



Royal Priesthood, Holy Nation                                          Acts 2:5
Spiritual? God-fearing?
by Robert T. Cooper

When I was in seminary, many years ago, I did a mission trip to Salt Lake City. There I learned about a group of people known as “Jack Mormons.” To my understanding, these were people who when asked claimed to be Latter-day Saints, but never attended services and didn’t keep any of the Mormon rules such as the Word of Wisdom.

Such a phenomenon is not all that unusual. Amongst Christians, there are huge percentages of people who claim to be believers, even born again, but who never attend services and never do anything that smacks of Christianity, such as pray or read the Bible. We might call them backslidden and suspect they have never been converted.

There are Muslims who are cultural Muslims only and are not seriously submitted to Allah. Amongst Jews, we have what is termed secular Jews; that is, they claim Jewish ethnicity, but not Jewish religiosity. Even amongst religious Jews, strict Jews might question the commitment of many who identify with Reformed Judaism.

Then we have the modern phenomenon of people who say they are not religious, but consider themselves to be very spiritual. But for the life of me I cannot figure anything that marks many of them as being spiritual at all. I don’t have the foggiest notion what they mean. Perhaps they simply don’t want to be self-identified as being non-religious.

In biblical Judaism, there was a group of Gentiles identified as God-fearers. These were people who fully worshipped Jehovah, but had not converted to Judaism. For example, Cornelius was a God-fearer. But there was also a group of Jews identified as God-fearers. They were devout and godly in character; they observed the commandments. Of course, all such Jews would be in Jerusalem for Pentecost.

But what about us? Would we self-identify as being God-fearers? Would others identify us as being devout and godly in character?

How do you self-identify, and what do you mean by those descriptors?

No comments:

Post a Comment