This story comes from the old NPR program "This I Believe". I've always loved either listening to these on the radio (on Morning Edition), or reading them from various source. There are many of these stories printed in a few volumes, also called "This I Believe".
Although no longer produced, this series was a sort of follow-on series based on the original Edward R. Murrow series from back in the fifties (I think).
Although this NPR version is lamentably no longer running, i still can give us something to think about!
Here's one from Bill Nunan... who at the time was a satellite Systems communications engineer.
I believe that God does not know the future. I arrived at this belief after a long and difficult journey through — and eventually away from — the faith in which I was raised.
When I was young, many people told me, "God knows everything." For years I tried to force my beliefs to conform to this view. But finally I took my personal leap of faith: I believe that God loves honesty more than conformity. And so I decided to go where the spirit moved me, even if that was away from the spiritual home of my ancestors.
I believe that the fate of our world is not locked in by Scripture, but that the future is shaped by the laws of nature and by what we humans voluntarily do during our time on this planet.
Many people believe every sunrise and sunset, every birth and death, every earthquake, flood and plague is a voluntary act of God. Like most scientists, I believe that involuntary laws of nature explain the behavior of planets, tectonic plates, weather systems and viruses. The earth continually spins and dispassionately quakes. Catastrophes happen infrequently. They are manifestations of the same laws of nature that always govern the universe.
I believe God never tweaks the laws of nature to achieve some desired outcome. Having accepted this, I do not agonize over why God allows evil to occur.
I don't expect God to intervene to help my team win a basketball game, either. As a kid, I thought God knew who would win before the game began. But today I'm convinced nobody knows for sure, not even God.
When I studied science and engineering in college, I met lots of people who had stopped believing in God. They asked, "If science explains the behavior of everything, from electrons to galaxies, then who needs God?"
I decided I still did. I agreed that science eliminates the need for a Creator, but the Creator is only one of the masks of God. The dispassionate mathematical laws of physics seem austere and impersonal, like a star or the moon. But the universe contains more than that. It also includes creatures like us who create purpose and meaning. Gravity does not care, but I do.
Physics does not explain the difference between sound waves and a song, or the difference between sex and love. Physics explains my body, but not my soul.
I believe my soul inspires me to make decisions to diminish pain and increase love in the lives I touch. Lots of times I try, but fail. On a good day I actually get it right! And God is pleasantly surprised.
By Bill Nunan
Independently produced for Morning Edition by Jay Allison and Dan Gediman with Viki Merrick.
And a poem to help along the journey -
If thou of fortune be bereft,
and in thy store there be but left
two loaves, sell one, and with the
dole, buy hyacinths to feed thy soul
By: John Greenleaf Whittier
Indeed!
And a poem to help along the journey -
If thou of fortune be bereft,
and in thy store there be but left
two loaves, sell one, and with the
dole, buy hyacinths to feed thy soul
By: John Greenleaf Whittier
Indeed!
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