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Olivia F. Ard's avatar

Thank you for platforming this, David. This mirrors a lot of my deconstruction/reconstruction of faith. During the pandemic, deep in the middle of a depressive episode after breaking up with my church and my parents, I watched The Good Place and realized I didn't actually believe what I thought I did. My faith shattered, and because of that I was able to piece it back together without the additional bullshit. I was able to find a truly loving, safe and inclusive faith family and am experiencing peace and wholeness for the first time, without this obsession for punishment and retribution.

(Disclaimer: I completely understand that many end deconstruction with deconversion and that is 100% valid. I want everyone to seek out what gives them peace, and I realize that for so many that atheism, agnosticism, humanism, etc. and I support that 100%. Proselytizing is gross and not at all my goal.)

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Adam Reaves's avatar

As a believer, it is hard to watch others condemn so many people in the name of God for mistakes they have made. Society in the times of Jesus were hard, yet Jesus never did what a lot of mainstream churches do. He fed the hungry, healed the sick. He didn’t brag or boast about His abilities. He walked among the sinners in his group of 12. He lived a life that was surrounded by the outcast. And now Christianity has become this exclusive club where the pastors get rich off of their churches.

If we lived as Christ, we wouldn’t have jails like we do. We would help those who made mistakes. We would fight for health care for all, we would help the poor and reach out to those that need it. I work for a church now, and to see the beauty of what we do within our community is wonderful. We support the LGBTQ community, we work with groups to help get food and housing to those that need it. We support prisoners and those in need. That’s what a church should do. And we never talk about it outside of where the money is going and we show that to the congregation.

It’s hard to be of faith in these times. But today in our monthly meeting, the head pastor said something that resonated. We are a church that isn’t conforming to world, but one that follows the gospel. That Jesus served the community and that is our responsibility. We aren’t here to save souls, we are here to follow the example of Christ and help those in need.

Thank you for a beautiful article. I know I was rambling, but it hit home. I’m in recovery and I was shown grace. It’s sad that Christians wanted me to be cast aside, but someone showed me grace. I have friends that are felons, and they have made better of their lives because of people like minded like you who see the need for reform and not more punishment.

Shane, you would be interested in a book called “ Tattoos on the Heart “ by Greg Boyle. I’m currently reading it and it’s about his work in LA with Hispanic gangs and the love that he has learned through working with them. About how the system has failed them, but Gods love and grace gives them hope. He writes very bluntly about their living conditions and the way gang culture is. It’s not a book that tries to hide the realities but instead embraces it. Also, another good book is Howard Thurman’s “ Jesus and the Disinherited “.

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