Recommending Jesus

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Woke up early this morning to someone who did not recommend attending Hawesville Baptist Church. After not recognizing the name, I read the post and wrote a response below:

“The Bible is a compendium of fire side tales and fables, recounted orally for generations by goat herders and primitive tribes from the stone age, until writing was invented, and then again, many different sources, transliterations, and versions were copied and written down. 

 'The Bible was created during a time where stories were orally passed down over thousands of years. Stories constantly morphed and changed over time, and the Bible is a collection of these. This is why it has the nearly identical flood story from Gilgamesh, and why Jesus has the same characteristics as Dionysus, Osiris, Horus, Mithra, and Krishna. 

The contradictions and immorality in the stories are not evidence that God is flawed or evil, 
but rather that humans invented him, just like the thousands of other gods that we used to but no longer believe in.''...and to answer the questions of the many fears and mysteries of our universe, like 'thunder' and earthquakes, since there was no science yet.

This is the old Testament.

The ‘new’ Testes is also hearsay since these letters, ‘gospels’ and stories were written by the loyal faithful, the camp followers, not by objective historians at that particular time, or by any contemporary writers, and these tales were written many years after the supposed events of this mythical Jesus. 

Thus, there is no verifiable evidence of a Jesus in real documented history. 

Then, many of these stories, but not all, as many were not chosen,  

[ There are more than just four Gospels but only these four were agreed on ], 
were compiled for one self-absorbed converted Roman Emperor in his Nicean Council,
for his expressed purpose of conquest and control of the people of Europe for his Holy Roman Empire. He recognised that this was the perfect religion/mythology for the future domination of the populaces. 

Half of the stories were ignored by the Nicean Bishops and none have been proven to be based on fact. This ‘Bable’ book is backed up by absolutely no facts and no evidence.

It is not proof for any god(s) ....(or of any jesus...) 

It is a historical novel.....

Only!

The Bible is proof of a book ONLY (certainly not evidence of any gods...)

Here’s my response:

Hey Brien,

Actually, there’s more proof for the reliability, accuracy, and veracity of the Bible than the works of Plato, Herodotus, and Aristotle combined. Fragments of the Dead Scrolls reveal an accuracy of translation passed down for thousands of years. Archeological evidence swings in the Scripture’s favor almost daily. Well before the Nicean Council, the Old and New Testament canons had been completed and passed down through papyrus, parchment, codex, and whatever other material believers of the times could acquire. 

Far from being an invented figure, the Jesus of history is documented by historians such as Josephus, Pliny the Elder, along with various Roman and Jewish artifacts, even by people who didn’t believe on his name. 

Take every other story of the Bible that you want to argue and only one of them has to be true: we believe this Jesus died on the cross for your sins, my sins, and also the sins of the whole world, and that God miraculously raised him from the dead three days later, having been seen alive by more than 500 witnesses. We believe that right now he is seated at the right hand of the throne of God, and he ever lives to make intercession for those who would follow him, including you.  

There’s more evidence for the presence of faith than its absence. There’s the ontological argument, then there’s the teleological argument, that the heavens declare the glory of God, and the earth reveals his handiwork. Deep within every human heart is a longing to know, to be restored by, and to be reunited with the God who created them for his very pleasure. As Augustine said years ago, restless is our heart until it rests in him.

Brien, I think if you had a chance to attend Hawesville Baptist Church, you would feel differently about your recommendation. You would be welcomed, loved, and befriended by folks who aren’t related primarily by genealogy, but by the precious blood of Jesus Christ. He loves you with an everlasting love, and if you’ll come to him, he will do the same for you as he’s done for me and everyone else who has called upon his name: give life, peace, pardon, and a purpose that goes beyond anything this temporal world can offer. 

The truth is we don’t read the Bible; the Bible reads us, better than any book ever could. The greatest, most grace-filled irony in all the world than the human desire to know God is his even greater desire to know us. He wants to know you more than you want to know yourself. I pray that the God of this universe would reveal himself to you, and that you would receive his peace.

If I can help you in any way, please don’t hesitate to contact me.

God bless you, 

Barry

Pastor, Hawesville Baptist Church

Barry E. Fields

All Things New is the preaching and teaching ministry of Barry E. Fields, pastor of Hawesville Baptist Church, a regional congregation on the Ohio River with two campuses in Kentucky (Hawesville) & Indiana (Crossroads Tell City) and membership in five counties.

Originally from Bowling Green, he grew up at Glendale Baptist Church under the ministry of Pastor Richard Oldham, competed for Western Kentucky University's nationally recognized speech and debate team before receiving a B.A. in History in 2007, completed an M.Div. from The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville in 2010, a Th.M. in 2012, and is currently pursuing a Ph.D. in Homiletics and Church History at Southern, serving as Garrett Fellow to Dr. Hershael York from July 2012-December 2014. He has also taught theology and church history as an adjunct instructor for Campbellsville University. Before coming to his present ministry, he was pastor of Mt. Tabor Baptist Church in Buffalo, Kentucky, for almost 5 years.

Active in denominational life, Barry currently serves on the Southern Baptist Convention's Young Leaders Advisory Council, a small group of pastors and ministry leaders seeking to engage the next generation in cooperative missions and ministry; recently completed a term on the SBC's Committee on Committees; currently represents the Blackford Breckinridge Baptist Association on the Kentucky Baptist Convention's Executive Mission Board; and has served on the KBC's Committee on Nominations, as well as several associational roles.

In his free time, he enjoys reading history and politics, listening to WKYU's Barren River Breakdown (Bluegrass and folk music) along with a variety of podcasts, as well as watching historical and political documentaries and the Andy Griffith show. Barry has a desire to help people fulfill the Great Commission through the Great Commandments: by showing the love of Christ, we can better share the love of Christ, and make disciples of all nations. And just so you know, he bleeds BLUE (UK Basketball)!