Cue a poem by Martin Bell:
Instruction for my Godson
(To William Redgrove)
God help me, I’m supposed to see you’re told
All about God the Father. So my beard mutters:
There are always two Fathers, one Good and one Bad.
You can always tell the Bad One, he’s always around.
Particularly first thing in the morning,
Scruffy and screaming for a razor-blade,
Wondering who to eat up for his breakfast —
He won’t eat you however much he shouts.
I’m not trying to sell you bad old Nobadaddy,
Learn to shrug off his sessions on his throne
Farting thunderbolts and belching clouds.
The Good One has a different way with Clouds; he watches.
He knows fifty-seven ways at least of looking at them,
He addresses them politely, and his looking
Can hold them still in the sky.Martin Bell
6 comments:
Good poem. Thanks.
Alan,
I think I'm being a bit dense but I don't quite get what position you're denying here. Can you elaborate?
There's a good ebook that's free to help pastors and their wives with discouragement and burnout. You can find it at
http://www.stoppastorburnout.com. It's quite helpful.
The God I don't believe in is the one who wants people to be paid for preaching the Gospel.
Thanks for comments and links. David, I think everything here is pretty self-explanatory, really. However I am sure you've found, as I have, that the "god" atheistic friends don't believe in is usually not the one you, or anyone, does. Then you have to ask, "where did that absurd idea of God as a crazy, venegful and not very competent fixer come from?" Painfully often, the answer is "something they think they heard us say."
thanks your Bishness.
yes, I get what you're doing now. Sorry, I think I'm just generally slow at the moment.
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