The Good Life
I have heard of the good
life, but have never seen it. This life, for anyone who is observant, is
not good, and the lack of good correlates with the lack of fearing God or
having an absolute “goodness” by
which to judge all things.
In our world today we have Machiavellian leaders, who, on the
surface, make it look like they care about the people. There are religions
whose members are brutally dismembering young men who disagree with them and
desire freedom, and brutally raping, selling, and using women as they would
cattle. Our nation, who has often cared for the helpless of the world, seems to
be silent, indifferent or even incapable of helping now.
We seem confused and this confusion causes tremendous
instability. Boys and girls no longer know if they are boys or girls,
advertisements are trying to create perceptions and turn them into reality, and
men and women who got caught on the Ashley Madison site are committing suicide,
because they got caught.
If we were a good
nation, full of good people, we would
not be able to know such things were happening and do nothing about it.
Recently, in regions of our country, they were voting on
legalizing pot which, if passed, would add to an already dysfunctional system of
government money, alcohol, and unemployment.
We pay superstar athletes millions while paying the elementary
school teachers and coaches who gave them their foundations barely a livable
wage.
Alcoholic beverages have become normal in Christian celebrations,
yet they are the main cause of domestic destruction.
Donald Trump is a viable candidate for President because he is
brash and says what he is thinking, and that seems to be tipping the other
candidates who have perfected the art of saying things in a way that is
acceptable to all and yet, in essence, say nothing.
Some have said that we enjoy wealth, so it is the good life. Yet, the pursuit of wealth,
pleasure, comfort, and fame will leave us minimizing relationships, using
others to satisfy our desires, lazy, and consumed with perceptions.
When people are consumed with themselves, which we are, there is
no good life to be had.
I think that we would be having the good life if we were
enjoying God, and poor people seem to do that better than the rich.
It is time for true repentance. It is our only hope, our only way
out, and the way God has created for a nation to fix what is wrong.
It starts with the simple fact of acknowledging that God is God and I am not, and we go from
there, discovering who He is, why He made us, and how we fit into the grand
plan.