Thursday, April 27, 2006

What God Wants?

I have been meaning to write this since Sunday, but have been both busy and simultaneously slacking, so here it is Thursday before my thoughts become words.

This is another one of those rare instances where I want to chat religion. Fair warning that I am my traditionally brutally honest self in this post.

I recently attended and helped put on a Gospel Brunch in Kansas City for the HRC. The goal was to bring civil rights organizations of all types and religious organizations. As an outreach project, I thought it was great, the event was a hit, and fun to boot.

During the brunch we had several groups perform, including the Heartland Men's Chorus, the primary gay men's choir in KC. My friend Randy had a solo that he was both excited and nervous about. He had also just come from a very moving church service that coincidentally was very similar to what the brunch was all about. Anyway, Randy was going on about how he hoped that God would give him the strength to sing, etc. and lots of other people there were expressing similar thoughts about their own lives. At that point, it really struck me why I clash so violently with the average Christian religions.

I used to think that my more open view of the world is what separated me from organized religion. How can you believe in things like horoscopes, magic, spirits, etc and still believe in God? That never seemed to fit, because I more believe in everything than I believe in nothing, but I still never could align myself with one religion. Now I think I know why: They pray for the wrong things, and the wrong reasons.

I recently read a story that I loved sometime in the Middle Ages, a farmer was looking at his crop, and he got down upon his knees and thanked God for a good harvest. A religious man of some sort (I am still trying to get at what religion he was) said "Do not thank God for your harvest. Instead thank yourself for your heard work. If you want to thank God, thank him for making you in such a way that you have the ability to grow food for yourself."

Bingo. That's it. To me, God created me. He gave me all the innate abilities of who I am, and the potential of who I can be. He then set me free to make my own life on my own. It is not He that makes me laugh or cry, but He who gave me the ability to do both, and the chance to chose what things were in my life. Randy has a great voice. A God given talent if you will, but when he goes out there, it is not God that is with him, only himself. It is his hours practicing that made him ready. His desire to do well that pushed him.

I see so many religions hold people back because they think that nothing can be done without God, and that anything that happens is directly attributed to Him. No wonder no one feels they can stand on their own two feet. I would imagine that God hates the way many religions view his work. Everything is by God's hand, but we are made in His image, giving us the ability to be our best. Hiding behind divine intervention is a waste of a life, and to me that is the biggest travesty against God.

Just the same is doing things that are atrocities in the name of God. I mentioned this last time, but I think I have found the reasoning behind it now. When people think that God is guiding each man's life, he can justify anything without holding himself accountable. "God wants me to do this," or "I wasn't able to do that because God wasn't with me. He didn't want that to happen."

I think that what our job is, is to be the best we can be with what we are given. God may have made the rules, but WE play the game. We have the power to make the difference in our lives, not by prayer, but by action. By faith in ourselves as God's creations perhaps, but not his instruments. By taking credit for the good and the bad in our lives, and not hiding behind divine intervention.

Friday, April 14, 2006

Beliefs

Recently I have been giving a lot of thoughts to people's beliefs. On one hand, I am very opposed to what beliefs can create. I mean historically, you can see the Crusades, the Inquisition, the Holocaust all terrible things caused by people with a belief system.Now of course, beliefs are what seem to be the cause of a huge push against my rights. At first it was easy to say that just some beliefs were bad, like when they cause harm to others, now I am not sure that's the case.

I have come to realize that people who don't share my beliefs EXASPERATE me. I am not just talking religious beliefs either. I mean top to bottom, if I have a strong belief in something, when someone has a different view, it is hard to deal with. I am also not trying to say that a difference of opinion is negative either. Opinions and ideas are one thing, beliefs... well that's entirely different.

Maybe beliefs have very little to do with anything. Maybe we simply create or chose our beliefs to match what we want to think or do. I mean often religious persecution was more about political power than actual faith. That would also explain why it is so hard to relate to people with VERY different beliefs. If we are creating them in an image of our thoughts and desires, it would almost be like the other person standing in the way of who you are.

I have been having a conversation with a good friend, and he mentioned that virtue was higher than value (very Aristotelian) because value, unlike virtue, was open to interpretation. I could see that at first, but I began to think that this might not even be able to be true. Why? Because even virtue is based upon belief. Is humility a virtue or a vice? Depends on your beliefs. I wonder how many people that believe humility is a virtue live in humility or have been victim of the negative side of pride. Many? I would put my money on it. And vice versa of course too, this is just an example. I think that most of us try and say that our beliefs make us who we are, but I think maybe that it is more who we are that makes our beliefs.

I apologize that there is no succinct point to this entry. I am just struggling, as I recently had a moment where I was surprised by my own vehemence towards a divergent belief. I am very open minded, so this shocking moment has made me think a lot. I think that this realm of thought is so ethereal that it will be hard to compress into a clear line, but perhaps this will be a start.

Monday, April 3, 2006

Personality Tests

A friend took a bunch of tests, so I was interested to see how they turned out. In addition, I will finally post that "What other people think about you" grid.

The Ultimate Personality Test from www.tickle.com

Rick, you're a Skydiver!

Your personality is actually determined by two personality sub-types - your primary, or dominant sub-type, and your secondary sub-type. You are a Skydiver which means you are a Seeker / Golden Your primary sub-type is defined by "Seeker" characteristics and your secondary sub-type is defined by "Golden" characteristics.

That means you're open minded, extroverted, free-spirited, and independent. Chances are you're pretty liberal. You're like a magnet for love and affection. People adore you. And, thanks to that healthy dose of self-confidence, you're super-flexible.

How do we know all this? How do we know you're a great leader at work? Or that you're a self-starter and will always volunteer to take on a job? How could we have divined that you're an excellent communicator and tend to spread your enthusiasm to others?

Because while you were taking the test, you answered four different types of questions questions that measured confidence, apprehension, willingness to take risks, and your focus on experience versus appearance the primary traits that determine your personality. Based on your responses, we determined your personality type, Skydiver.

The 5-Factor IPIP Personality Test
What Makes You Unique? from www.tickle.com

Rick, your most unique quality is that you're unusually Personable

You come to life when you're around others and are a real people person. You're also a natural leader and are able to maneuver difficult personal situations with ease and tact. You're on the ball, assertive, and have energy to carry out your best ideas. Not to mention the fact that people just enjoy being around you. Compared to others who are outgoing, you are unusually active and on the go with lots of things to do. Only 1.8% of all test takers have this unique combination of personality strengths.


Personality from www.blogthings.com

You Have A Type A Personality
A
You are hyper, energetic, and always on the moodYou tend to succeed at everything you attemptAnd if you don't succeed at first, you quickly climb your way to the top!You could be called a workaholic, but you also make time for funAs long as it's high energy and competitive, you're interestedYou have the perfect personality for business and atheltic success


And the Johari:

Arena

(known to self and others)

energetic, idealistic, powerful, searching

Blind Spot

(known only to others)

able, accepting, adaptable, bold, caring, cheerful, clever, confident, dependable, dignified, extroverted, friendly, giving, happy, helpful, independent, intelligent, kind, knowledgeable, logical, loving, mature, modest, observant, patient, proud, reflective, relaxed, self-assertive, self-conscious, sensible, sentimental, spontaneous, sympathetic, tense, trustworthy, wise, witty

Faade

(known only to self)

complex

Unknown

(known to nobody)

brave, calm, ingenious, introverted, nervous, organised, quiet, religious, responsive, shy, silly, warm

All Percentages

able (23%) accepting (3%) adaptable (10%) bold (20%) brave (0%) calm (0%) caring (16%) cheerful (10%) clever (3%) complex (0%) confident (50%) dependable (16%) dignified (6%) energetic (40%) extroverted (23%) friendly (6%) giving (13%) happy (10%) helpful (3%) idealistic (33%) independent (36%) ingenious (0%) intelligent (36%) introverted (0%) kind (3%) knowledgeable (23%) logical (13%) loving (16%) mature (6%) modest (6%) nervous (0%) observant (10%) organised (0%) patient (6%) powerful (3%) proud (6%) quiet (0%) reflective (13%) relaxed (6%) religious (0%) responsive (0%) searching (16%) self-assertive (23%) self-conscious (3%) sensible (6%) sentimental (10%) shy (0%) silly (0%) spontaneous (10%) sympathetic (3%) tense (3%) trustworthy (16%) warm (0%) wise (3%) witty (3%)

Created by the Interactive Johari Window on 3.4.2006, using data from 30 respondents.
You can make your own Johari Window, or view RickRaven's full data.