Life begins with a very spring-like season. It is a
time
of rapid
growth, freshness, innocence, and freedom. The beauty and joy of
childhood can be taken away by all kinds of things--disease, death of
loved ones, poverty, and abuse just to name a few. These things
can
come upon all children, but they are almost inevitably caused by
humans, especially the most horrific ones. In my life as the
child of
an atheist, death was the ultimate tragedy. My wife, on the other
hand,
experienced the death of her father when she was five, but the faith of
the family minimized the impact of that death upon her happiness.
Her
childhood was still beautiful and she has nothing but fond memories of
all of those who were part of her church family. I never knew
about
death as a child, and one of the first conflicts between my wife-to-be
and my mother occurred when we were dating and my wife's mother took us
to a visitation for a classmate's father. To my wife's family,
death
has always been a natural thing that was not a time of darkness and
unhappiness but the beginning of something better for the deceased and
an opportunity to serve for the Church. To my parents death was
the
ultimate tragedy, and it was something one did not talk about--much
less expose a child or even a teenager to. My mother was incensed
that
someone would take her son to a visitation where he actually saw his
first dead person.
The summer of life is the time when childhood ends and
adult
responsibility takes over. This transition is difficult, and can
in
fact be overwhelming. Finding a career, making decisions about family,
politics, religion, and building security can be very difficult.
In my
case there were the complications of having chronic disease in my mate,
having a child born with multiple birth defects, and being opposed by
family because of the choices we made about faith and family. The
atheistic approach of my parents had always been that one must watch
his back and take care of what is best for himself. The guiding
principle was survival of the fittest in a dog-eat-dog world. The
notion of marrying someone who had a chronic disease (in our case,
diabetes) and of raising a child that they felt should be
institutionalized was contradictory to conventional wisdom. When
my
faith in God led me to a ministry that involved sacrifice and offered
no financial gain I was considered to be incredibly foolish.
"This is
not what people who want to succeed in life do," my father told
me. I
was sent to the family doctor who had been instructed to prove to me
that marrying a diabetic was
suicidal and would bring me
nothing but
misery and poverty. When we were faced with the decision of
whether to
institutionalize our child or not, the same doctor tried to force
institutionalization by going to the involved agency himself.
When I
decided to be a teacher instead of the medical doctor that my father
wanted me to become, I incurred the wrath of my parents. I was
told I
would be poor all my life, that I would not be respected or esteemed in
the community, and that my talents would be wasted. Much of that
has
turned out to be true, but as a believer in God what matters in life is
more than money and esteem. The joy of serving others is
something one
learns as a Christian. The satisfaction and joy in feeling one
has done
something worthwhile in life means more than those in the world can
understand.
The summer of life can be very hard. There are many
battles, many
disappointments, and some heartbreak. Hopefully the choices we
have
made make the later parts of the summer of life see some success.
My
most satisfying successes have not been in what I accomplished
financially or professionally because those have been minimal.
The
satisfying successes have been in seeing what God has done. This
is
something that is guaranteed to Christians and that no person outside
of Christ can comprehend. These successes do not depend upon
education,
money, IQ, or politics. They involve the response others make to
what
God brings to their lives through you. The older one gets the
more he
realizes that helping someone heal their marriage, or bring their child
out of destructive environments, or bring joy to someone who has
suffered physical or mental damage brings enormous satisfaction and
joy. God does the work, but you become the agent through which that
happens, and everything else that happens becomes secondary to the
feeling of worth and accomplishment.
I am now in the autumn of my life. As I enter my
seventh
decade of
existence I know that I have far more time behind me than I do in front
of me. Like the picture on our cover, I see beauty in everything
I look
at, from the face of a baby to the beauty of the night sky. My
perspective has changed. I now take time to look at what is
around me,
and I am much less disturbed by the things that used to upset me.
My
aggressiveness has subsided in everything from my driving to my
reaction to stupidity in the political world. My favorite line
now is,
"If it isn't of eternal significance, I don't want to hear about
it."
As a Christian, I have no regrets about financial decisions that may
have been bad or missed. The things that I wanted to do that never got
done are not a concern. The fact that death is approaching, when
I
shall leave this world does not fill me with dread. The anxiety
that I
see in my atheist friends are not a part of my makeup. I can
understand
the confidence that Paul expresses as he was late in his autumn of life
when he says, "I have fought the good fight, I have finished the
race,
I have kept the faith. Now there is in store for me the crown of
righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will award to me on
that day--and not only to me, but also to all who have longed for his
appearing" (2
Timothy 4:7-8, NIV).
As an atheist, one can say that this is just a great self-deception, and a fostering of a grand illusion, but one cannot deny that the peace and the effect it has on me as an individual is real and unique. The evidence for God's existence and His active role in our lives can be seen in many ways. The beauty of autumn is just one of them. Do not live your life according to the assumptions of naturalism, chance, and survival of the fittest. Seek ye first the Kingdom of God, and all these things [what you need in life] will be added to you.
Back to Contents Does God Exist?, SepOct08.