Exodus 2:11-25 - Not for now

This week I heard that I was unsuccessful in an interview for a job I had.  It made sense in some ways that I hadn't got it but it was something I felt called to and so it was a big disappointment.  Serving full-time in the strategic leadership of a local church is something God has put on my heart to pursue but there's a slight snag - right now no-one wants me to do it!

In this section of the story we see Moses has justice on his heart and a desire to defend the Israelite slaves but the time just isn't right for him to do the big thing yet and he has a long wait in store before any of that stuff happens...

Exodus 2:11-25

When Moses killed the Egyptian slavedriver, he was doing the wrong thing for the right reason.  His motive was good - he wanted justice for God's people, but sin was right there too and he went about it totally the wrong way.  He needed patience to seek God's will for how to channel the passion he had.

"Who made you ruler and judge over us?"  It's an interesting question because the answer in a lot of ways is, "God actually." It's just not the right time and Moses only has a slight hint of what God really wants him to do.  No clue really.

So Moses ends up having to run away from home because his dad wants to kill him (so not the best home!) and he decides to live in Midian.  How would Moses have felt as he set up a new life there?  He must have been fuming about the injustice God's people were facing and the limitations on him to do anything about it.  But he is able to defend a group of girls against some shepherds.  Moses hasn't lost his strong sense of justice.  And this event leads to him getting married, having kids and settling down in Midian.

The passage tells us it was a "long period".  Moses no doubt still had a desire for God's people to be free but he knew he was powerless to do anything about it.  So instead he settles down in Midian and learns to faithfully obey God as a husband, dad and shepherd.  God has so much more for Moses to do but it's not yet.

What do you long to do for God in the future?  What does it mean for you to be faithful in the things God has you doing now? 


Exodus 2:1-10 - Names and beginnings

The way children are treated in their early childhood can have a powerful impact on them for good or bad, sometimes for the rest of their lives. Names are important too, especially if there is a clear meaning attached. A strong name can inform and influence a person's identity as they grow up. It can hold them back or it can be a reminder to them of who they are and what they're called to.  Moses' messed up childhood and the name he was given are an insight for us into how God was preparing him for all that was to come...

Exodus 2:1-10

Many Christians would agree that Moses wrote the first 5 books of the Bible, mostly because of verses like Exodus 24:4, Deuteronomy 31:24, Joshua 23:6 and John 5:46, and many others which refer to the written work of Moses.

If that's the case, we should imagine Moses as a grown man writing these words about the beginning of his life. They would have been supernaturally revealed to him by the Holy Spirit (2 Peter 1:21), probably through his mum and sister's stories of it to him in his first few years or perhaps as brand new information.  Either way, the knowledge of how he began life would have been a powerful reminder to Moses of who he was and what he was called to do by God: lead the Israelite slaves out of Egypt.

Moses name, given to him by his Egyptian mother, sounds like the Hebrew for "Drawn out".  It was a reminder of how he was 'drawn out' of the Nile as a baby but also a sign of all that God was going to do through him to 'draw his people out' of slavery in Egypt.  Moses' name is rich with meaning and significance and he must have had a growing awareness of this as he grew older and realised more of what God was calling him to do.  It's certainly easy for us to see it with the benefit of hindsight and I fully expect that Moses reflected on it with gratitude as he wrote this section.

What does your name mean or what does it mean to you?  What do you think God might want to say about your name and who he has made you to be for him?

In what ways can you see that God is beautifully redeeming the mess in your own life as you reflect back?  What can you praise him for?  What can you trust him for?

Exodus blog - Rescue and Redemption

1. Exodus 1 - Unstoppable
2. Exodus 2:1-10 - Names and beginnings
3. Exodus 2:11-25 - Not for now
4. Exodus 3:1-15 - The Great I AM
5. Exodus 3:16-22 - The God of promise
6. Exodus 4:1-17 - Moses is not the hero
7. Exodus 4:18-31 - Moses returns to Egypt 

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Exodus 1 - Unstoppable

Some things are just bound to happen.  Like the athlete who is way more talented and prepared than anyone else at the Olympics and wins gold, breaking all the records, some things are an inevitability.  Exodus is the true story of God's miraculous rescue of his people from slavery in Egypt through Moses and in the first chapter we see God's unstoppable plans and promises...

Exodus 1

Before we dive into the story of Exodus, we should zoom out a bit and remember the big picture of the Bible's story so far.  At the very least, we should whizz back to Genesis 15 where God was repeating his promises to Abraham - the father of the nation of Israel.  God promised that Abraham would have children and that his descendants would be 'as numerous as the stars in the sky' (v5).  He promised that they would have their own land to live in (v7,18-21).  And God spoke to Abraham in a dream that day and filled in some pretty significant blanks in the story (v13-16):

1. Before they had their own land, God's people would be mistreated slaves in a foreign country for 400 years.

2. The nation that held God's people in slavery would be punished by God.

3. God's people would leave that country with great wealth.

4. In the 4th generation, Abraham's descendants would finally get their promised land.

All this is back in genesis 15 and in Exodus 1 and the ensuing chapters, we see Abraham's dream, which is more like a nightmare in some ways, coming true.

So as we start reading the story of Exodus, we already have some pretty big spoilers!  Of course, far from spoiling anything, it makes it all the more exciting that God's plans always succeed and that he keeps all of his promises.  He is unstoppable.

God is unstoppable.  His plans and purposes are unstoppable.  His promises and his power to keep them are unstoppable.  And his plans, purposes, promises and power are for his people, which means his people are unstoppable too!

Just take a look in the chapter we've read at the number of references to how God's people were growing in number:

- In v5 we're told that the descendants of Jacob (Abraham's grandson) 'numbered 70 in all'.

- Then in v7 we're told that 'the Israelites were exceedingly fruitful, they multiplied greatly, increased in numbers and became so numerous that the land was filled with them.'

- In v9 again we have a reference to Israel's unstoppable numerical growth when the king of Egypt says, 'the Israelites have become too numerous for us' and he has a plan to try and stop them from becoming 'even more numerous' by making them slaves.

- But in v12 we're told that 'the more they were oppressed, the more they multiplied and spread'.

- And despite Pharoah's best efforts to have Israelite baby boys killed at birth, we're told again in v20 that 'the people increased and became even more numerous'.  Not only that but v21 says that God gave the Hebrew midwives 'families of their own'!

Nothing can stop the promises of God coming true.  That's definitely one thing to notice at the start of this book.  God promised Abraham that he would become a great nation and that his kids would number as many as the stars in the sky or as the grains of sand in the desert... and nothing can stop it coming true - not slavery, not Pharoah, not anyone or anything.  God's promises are unstoppable and his people are unstoppable.

And it's not just true for Moses and God's people then.  These truths go way further than that.  They reach right down to us today through Jesus:

Luke 24:44
[Jesus said] '...everything must be fulfilled that is written about me in the Law of Moses, the Prophets and the Psalms.'

The story of Moses is really the story of Jesus, which means we can be part of it too.  Through trusting and following Jesus, we get to be part of the unstoppable promises of God.  We get to call ourselves God's children and be unstoppable too!


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A Radical Submission to Authority


I'm working on some new punk songs under the same name as my old band In My Name.  The album will be called A Radical Submission to Authority.  Adding links here as they get done.  Hope to make it available on iTunes when the whole thing's ready.  For the first time, the songs are mine from start to finish and all the vocals and drums are me, so I've only got myself to blame.  Having said that, I do owe massive thanks to brilliant help from Dan Desmond (guitars and bass) and Gareth Hamer (from The Rec House in Bath for mixing and mastering).  It's kind of their fault too. ;)

If anyone would like to do some artwork for the project, I'd be forever grateful.  All I've got at the moment is a red square!

My Bike
Wake Up
Abortion Song
Adoption Song
That's What I'm Here For

OTW Big Questions and Answers (November 2015)

 
OTW Big Questions and Answers
November 2015

We want to forgive others but what if the person keeps hurting you and what if they don’t want forgiveness?

DAVE: Jesus said that there should be no limits to the number of times we forgive a person (Matthew 18:21-22) but it certainly helps if they’re sorry!  Even then, it doesn’t mean it’s essential to continue a friendship if it’s doing more harm than good.  Sometimes the most loving thing to do for another person is to get some distance from them, especially if they’re not sorry for their sin or not learning from the ways they’ve hurt you in the past (Proverbs 12:26, 18:24, 22:24).

CLIVE: It’s not about what the other person wants – it is about God’s expectation of me because he has forgiven me (Matthew 18:21-23).

AMANDA: Forgive them anyway, it may be a hard thing to do. You may have to forgive them everyday as often as they hurt you, but this is what Jesus instructs us. It may be worth putting some distance between you and them if possible. Holding onto anger only hurts you. Matthew 6:5, 18:21.

JOHN: You still forgive. In that way you “heap coals of fire” on their head (Proverbs 25:22, Romans 12:20). We don't forgive others so that we will feel better about things – that would be selfish – but we grow massively in personal strength when we practice forgiving people who still don't respond.

What difference does being a Christian make to YOUR daily life?

DAVE: I keep experiencing greater levels of gratitude towards God for everything that’s mine through Jesus (Ephesians 1:3-14) and for so many more good gifts every day that I simply don’t deserve (James 1:17).  I have peace about everything, starting with forgiveness for the ways I sin and affecting all our big decisions about how we serve and share Jesus as a family. God’s given us faith to make decisions many people would be afraid of (like adopting children or moving to a new city with no job confirmed).  I’m slowly learning to make the most of every opportunity in every conversation every day to help others know and love Jesus more (Colossians 4:5-6).

CLIVE: Seeking the good of others first, contentment and not striving (Philippians 4:13,19).

AMANDA: For me it means that I have someone who understands and sees what I go through everyday. Someone who cares and loves me just the way I am. I have a purpose and God will use me in any situation. I have hope and peace for the future. Romans 8:18, 8:28, Philippians 1:21.

JOHN: Three things: faith – trusting somebody I can't see instead of making decisions on my own; hope – looking forward to something much bigger than any ambition I might have in this life; and love – being part of a community of unconditional commitment and revolutionary love for its enemies. See 1 John 5:18-20.

How many laws did Newton discover and can you name them all?

DAVE: I don’t know and no.  I’d be Googling it or asking John Allan!  However, there’s a great podcast I listen to that has lots of fascinating true stories and science in it called Radiolab.  You should check it out!

CLIVE: Many!  If you mean laws of motion, there’s three:
1.     Law of inertia
2.     Law of acceleration (directly and directionally related to force applied)
3.     Action and reaction (opposite and equal force)
Bible verse… Psalm 19?

AMADA: You have his 3 main laws…
-       1st Law: An object at rest stays at rest and an object in motion stays in motion with the same speed and in the same direction unless acted upon by an unbalanced force.
-       2nd Law: The acceleration of an object as produced by a net force is directly proportional to the magnitude of the net force, in the same direction as the net force, and inversely proportional to the mass of the object.
-       3rd Law: For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.

The rest of his work was built on these laws. He himself read his Bible daily and found studying the laws of our planet showed that there must be a God. He said this: “Atheism is so senseless. When I look at the solar system. I see the earth at the right distance from the sun to receive the proper amounts of heat and light. This did not happen by chance.”

Proverbs 18.  Intelligent people are always ready to learn. Their ears are open for knowledge.

Job 11:8.  Such knowledge is higher than the heavens – and who are you? It is deeper than the underworld – what do you know?

JOHN: Four laws of motion. The first says that an object will remain at rest, or keep moving in a straight line, unless affected by an active force. The second says that the net force on the object is equal to its mass multiplied by its acceleration. The third says that all forces in the universe occur in equal, but oppositely directed, pairs. The fourth says that Force will be a whole wheat breakfast cereal discontinued in 2014. Newton believed this was predicted in the Book of Revelation. See Ecclesiastes 10:3 for a further comment on this question.

What about eternity?

DAVE: What about it?  God is eternal (John 1:1-3, Deuteronomy 33:27).  This means he has no beginning and no end (Revelation 22:13).  Everything and everyone else has had or will have a beginning and yet God has placed the awareness of and longing for eternity in the hearts of people (Ecclesiastes 3:11).  Only Christians (by trusting and following Jesus) will live with God forever (John 3:16, Revelation 21:1-4).

CLIVE: It lasts a long time!  We know very little about it except it’ll be a new, perfect, physical reality (Revelation 21).

AMANDA: There will be no more suffering, no more pain or crying. This excites me. However, I want my friends and family to understand, as I don’t want them to be left behind. Revelation 21:1-4, Isaiah 51:6.

JOHN: Is this a question? Eternity is what happens when time doesn't. We've known since the rise of relativity and quantum physics that time and space are not fundamental properties of reality, and that space-time had a beginning. Which is exactly what the Bible had been saying all along. There are some good questions in Job 38:4-7.

If Christians didn’t exist, how would people know God?

DAVE: Obviously hypothetical!  But Christians aren’t the only way God has revealed himself to people.  There’s creation (Psalm 19:1-4, Romans 1:19-21), conscience (Romans 2:15) and his care or providence (Acts 14:17, Matthew 5:45) to start with.  Ultimately and more specifically, there’s Jesus (Hebrews 1:1-2) and the Bible (2 Timothy 3:16). 

CLIVE: Creation and conscience (Romans 1-2).

AMANDA: God has sent his Holy Spirit to be with us, so they would be aware of his presence. They could also see his work all around them. God wouldn’t leave us alone without answers, he sent many prophets to show people the truth. He then sent Jesus. Psalm 104:24, Deuteronomy 18:18.

JOHN: Romans tells us that God has given every human two guides towards himself: their sense of right and wrong, and their inbuilt awe at God's creation. That's enough to give people a basic awareness of his existence; but it's only what theologians call “general revelation”. To understand God properly you need “special revelation”: the specific facts about Jesus which bring our vague sense of God into focus – and so that's why Christians aren't in heaven yet: we have a message to deliver to planet Earth. 2 Corinthians 5:20.

Is it wrong to say God-related jokes?

DAVE: Not necessarily, but before we speak, we should ask ourselves: Is it true?  Is it necessary?  Is it helpful?  And if it’s a God-related joke: Is God laughing or being laughed at?  Ephesians 4:29 raises the bar!

CLIVE: It’s “wrong” to belittle God and ignore his discipline (Hebrews 12:14-29).  Also, Exodus 20 ‘do not use the Lord’s name in vain’.

JOHN: You can be funny about any subject, but some subjects are more difficult than others because of the emotions and associations we connect with them in our minds (so jokes about the Holocaust, or the murder of babies, are unlikely to be successful). And some subjects are tricky because the way you tell the joke could reinforce in people the wrong idea about reality (e.g. lots of sexual jokes communicate the idea to boys that girls are always ready for sex; lots of jokes about St Peter and the Pearly Gates give people the idea that we get to heaven on the basis of our good works). So if you can make a joke about God without infringing the love, worship and respect he deserves – or without giving people the wrong idea about him – go for it; but not otherwise. Ephesians 5:4.

What helps YOU read your Bible every day?

DAVE: Knowing that it’s the only thing that’s always God-breathed and useful (2 Timothy 3:16-17), wanting to hear from God and know and love him more.  Good Bible teaching podcasts whilst I’m riding my bike help me a lot at the moment and have done for a while.  Having a wife and kids that look to me for guidance and help in trusting and following Jesus is also a big motivator!

CLIVE: Reality (Hebrews 4). Discipline (1 Corinthians 9:24-27).

AMANDA: I have an app on my phone, which notifies me of the daily Bible verse. I use the Word for Today notes, which are easy and quick to read. I also find leading Bible studies e.g. house group helps me to read it more. (2 Timothy 3:16).

JOHN: Having an idea of what each part of it is for. Knowing that God will speak to me through it even if I'm not conscious of him doing so at the time. Having it with me wherever I go. Psalm 119:34-36.

Is it wrong to get drunk?

DAVE: Yes.  The Bible says, “Do not get drunk” (Ephesians 5:18).  It’s not necessarily wrong to drink alcohol, depending on your age, the law and the situation.  But why would you allow a chemical, which doesn’t love you and has no sense of right and wrong, to start influencing your thoughts, words and behavior?

CLIVE: It’s good to be responsible and bring our appetites under the control of God (Ephesians 5).

AMANDA: I think it is wrong. We are told in Galatians 5:22-23 that one of the fruits of the Spirit is self-control. When we get drunk we lose our self-awareness and control and we will no longer act as if we have the fruits of the Spirit. We need to be aware of our limits and stick to them, this is often a good witness. Proverbs 25:28, Titus 2:2.

JOHN: Yes. Drunkenness is immoderate behaviour and Christians are supposed to be under control; drunkenness is one sign that we aren't (Eph 5:18, Romans 13:13, 1 Cor 6:10, 1 Pet 4:3). Paul says that people “given to drunkenness” weren't fit to be deacons, and drunkenness prevents us from seeing what's really important in life (Luke 21:34).

Is it wrong to divorce?

DAVE: Usually, yes (Matthew 5:31-32, 19:3-9).  We’re meant to keep our promises (Matthew 5:37, James 5:12, 1 Corinthians 7:10-13), even if they’re made rashly (Judges 11:29-35).  But where there is unrepentant sin (like in the case of ongoing unfaithfulness where the husband or wife refuses to be sorry or learn to change) or dangerous sin (like in an abusive situation), divorce becomes necessary and perhaps urgent too.

CLIVE: It’s sad when divorce happens, it’s often the result of weakness, pride and that’s the bit that is wrong.  See Galatians 5 about freedom and licence.  Sometimes divorce happens because of violence.  That’s more complicated.  And we need to think about the difference between separation and divorce.

AMANDA: Yes, generally. In our marriage vows we promise to love each other until death do us part, in sickness and in health. It is wrong to break those promises. In Matthew 19, it does say divorce is wrong, unless there has been sexual immorality. This is because the person who has committed adultery has already broken their vows. Matthew 19:8.

JOHN: Yes and no. Divorce will happen, sadly, because humans are imperfect and get things inextricably twisted up; sometimes there's no further hope for a marriage and that has to be admitted, since it would be cruel to force two people to continue through a lifetime of hurting and resenting one another. But divorce is always failure, and God isn't keen on it (Malachi 2:16).

Is it right to kill someone in a war?

DAVE: Yes if you’re following orders you’ve willingly signed up to obey (Hebrews 13:17, 1 Peter 2:13-14), if you’re defending the weak against the strong (Isaiah 1:17) and if you’re not making it personal in your own mind (Matthew 5:21-22).  The 6th commandment says “Do not murder” – not “Do not kill” (Exodus 20:13) and the Bible says there is a time to kill (Ecclesiastes 3:1-3).

CLIVE: Yes and No.

AMANDA: No.  We are called to be peacemakers. Any human life is precious to God. However, if we had not had people who were willing to fight in the World Wars, we would not have the life we have today. Matthew 5:9, James 3:18, 1 Corinthians 6:19-20.

JOHN: Christians have always differed about this and the Bible makes no clear unambiguous statement. The early Christians wouldn't join the Roman army (although perhaps this was also because of the sacramentum, an oath to the gods which a new soldier had to swear); but when Christianity became Rome's state religion, and Roman soldiers fought with the cross painted on their shields, things changed. Four centuries after Jesus, St Augustine wrote an important book called City of God which argued that there could be a “just war” which it was OK to fight. And yet God's ultimate vision for the earth must never be forgotten (Micah 4:3-4).

What is your personal conviction that God exists?

DAVE: Creation, conscience, providence, the image of God in people, logic, longing, reason, the Bible, change in my own life and in the lives of others, but mainly Jesus!  The evidence that Jesus is God and came back from the dead is overwhelmingly strong and convinces me beyond all other proofs (Luke 1:1-4, 1 Corinthians 15:14).

CLIVE: Creation and conscience (Romans 1-2).  See also evidence for resurrection (gospels) and also 1 Corinthians 15.

AMANDA: When I was a child I just believed, it made a lot of sense to me. As I’ve grown older I’ve seen God working in my life. I’ve had complete peace in the midst of terrible things. He’s healed me from depression. The world is too complex not to have been created. Deuteronomy 3:24, Philippians 4:7, Luke 9:11.

JOHN: I believe he does. Next question?

(I'd say I have three main reasons: the experience of the friendship of Jesus, the sense of his purpose shaping my life with answered prayers and “coincidences” making my way clear, and the fact that so many other people have shared the same experiences that I have. In other words: what happens inside me, what happens outside me, and what happens in other people.) Hebrews 11:6 is important.

Do you have any doubts about the existence of God, e.g. it was all just luck (the creation of the Universe)? 

DAVE: No.  Sometimes I feel like God’s not close or not helping but these days I never doubt that he exists.  Luck (or anything else other than an eternal, powerful God) doesn’t explain how you get something from absolutely nothing in the beginning (Genesis 1:1, John 1:1-3, Romans 1:18-23).  Out of nothing, nothing comes.  Not even Science!

CLIVE: Oh yes, he’s so incredibly “other”, how is that possible?!  See Job 38–40.  But he’s made himself known in Jesus so I can recognise him (Hebrews 1:1-3).

AMANDA: Occasionally. It’s normal to doubt something that we can’t see. I do often hear compelling arguments from scientists, however it is just too much of a coincidence. I have seen God working in my life too often to doubt him. It is easy to lose trust in him when going through difficult times. 2 Corinthians 4:18, Matthew 26:41.

JOHN: In any relationship there's a degree of faith and trust – and so there can always be doubts from time to time (does my girlfriend really love me? Does my lecturer know what he's talking about or is he bluffing? Is my wife faithful or does our latest baby look a bit like the milkman?). Sometimes faith and doubt can coexist (Mark 9:24). So it's healthy and natural for us occasionally to review the evidence in our minds, and work out whether we're really sure; but there's no need permanently to have nagging doubts poisoning our minds, because the evidence for God is strong enough to make faith more than reasonable. Incidentally, the creation of the universe is one of the strongest arguments for God: the discoveries of cosmologists in the last 40 years have shown just how incredible it would be if the whole thing happened purely by chance.

Why does God intervene in certain events but not others (he didn’t stop Hitler)?

DAVE: I actually believe that God is involved in ALL events that aren’t sin (Isaiah 45:7, Hebrews 1:3, Matthew 6:26).  I don’t know why God stops or limits certain situations of sin and evil but not others but I trust him to ultimately do what is right because of who he is (Genesis 18:25, Exodus 34:6-7) and no-one can complain that God owes them better (Psalm 96:13, Isaiah 53:6, Romans 3:23-24, 9:20, Job 40:1-9, James 4:12, Psalm 130:3).

CLIVE: Does he select or does he actually intervene in them all, or does he not intervene at all?  The Calvinist thinks he ordains all events.  The Open Theist thinks he is able to control but chooses to respond, playing to an end game via a variety of routes.  God’s love for us and our created dignity allows us the choice of how to live (John 8:11).

AMANDA: We don’t know why he intervenes with some things and not others. We do know that God said we would suffer, because of events in the Garden of Eden. Humans had a choice to trust in God or trust in themselves and gain knowledge for themselves (by eating the fruit). This means that we now live in a broken world, which isn’t what God wanted for us. He doesn’t promise to protect Christians either. However, he does promise that he will be with us, knowing we’re not suffering alone is a huge help. He also promises that one day our suffering will be finished for eternity. This gives us hope. When we look back it will be seem very short in comparison with eternity. Genesis 2:17, Revelation 21:1-4, 2 Corinthians 4:18.

JOHN: Not being God, I don't know. We know two things: one, that his ultimate purpose is to bring peace, reconciliation and happiness to his universe; two, that we won't always understand why he makes the choices he does. I can think of several reasons why God might not have stopped Hitler, but I can't say whether any of those reasons were part of his thinking or not; his plans are much bigger than I can conceive (Isaiah 55:8).

What created God? (Do not just say that he was there for eternity.)

DAVE: I have to disappoint you because the true answer to this question is that no-one created God and that he was actually there for eternity (Psalm 90:2).  If you don’t like it, try figuring out where the Universe came from without something uncreated and eternal to bring it out of absolutely nothing!  And what sense does it make for an atheist to insist on the essential existence of a creator anyway?

CLIVE: But that is the answer.  God was not created.  ‘Created’ implies time (beginning) and God does not exist in time (Hebrews 13:8).

AMANDA: We have no idea, there are some things we don’t know and for whatever reason God doesn’t share with us yet. Genesis 1:1.

JOHN: But he was. If God had to be made by something, then that something had to be made by something made by something made by something made by something made by something made by something made by something made by something made by something made by something made by something made by something. And then what made that something? Think, man, think.

There has to be somebody, or something, which is ultimate, outside time, at the end of the line. If it wasn't God, then what? A self-creating spark? Pull the other one.

Alternatively, read John 1:1-3.

Why aren’t more things obvious?

DAVE: Unless God revealed himself to us, he would remain unknown and unknowable.  As it is, he has revealed LOTS about himself to us through some of the things I’ve mentioned in previous questions (Hebrews 1:1-2) and yet there is much that remains a complete mystery to us (Daniel 2:47, Romans 16:25-27, 1 Corinthians 2:7, Ephesians 1:8-9, 3:8-11, Colossians 1:27, 2:2).  I think it’s because God is by definition beyond our comprehension and for those who trust and follow Jesus, we’ll have eternity to know and love him more (1 Corinthians 2:9-10, 13:12)!

CLIVE: That’d be great!  In some ways they are.  When we look it makes sense  (see Romans 1 again!).

AMANDA: I think things are fairly obvious, just looking around at the world around us. God doesn’t want to make it easy and obvious, if everyone had certainty that he existed and we could go to heaven, then everyone would believe in him. This would take away our free will that he has given us, he doesn’t want to force us to worship him, he wants us to choose. If we’re looking for proof of his existence then we see his work all around us. Psalm 104:24, Deuteronomy 18:18.

JOHN: Because reality is difficult. Because we live in a complicated and broken world. Because we've lost contact with our Creator and don't grasp things as we were meant to understand them (Romans 1:21). And so simple answers are almost always wrong.

How do we know which sect of Christianity is right (Catholic, Protestant, CofE, Baptist, etc?)

DAVE:  There’s no denominations in the Bible – only Jesus (Acts 4:12, 1 Corinthians 1:11-17).  He is the one who makes us family (John 1:12-13).  So whenever Christians disagree over anything else, they’re still family and besides, I don’t think it’s possible that any single group or denomination of Christians is right about absolutely everything.  Christian denominations need each other (1 Corinthians 12:21).

CLIVE: None of them are ‘right’.  They each have different emphases in practices but all agree on the core creeds (1 Corinthians 15:1-3) and the need for unity (Ephesians 4:3).

AMANDA: They all are, there isn’t a superior type of Christianity. There are some traditions or beliefs that some people hold to that aren’t necessary biblical or correct. However, most denominations are just down to personal taste, some have more liturgy, some have more symbolic traditions and practices. Some Christians feel that liturgy and traditions take their focus off God, but I can see the value in both. We are all still part of the same body.  1 Corinthians 12:27.

JOHN: Nobody's “right” all the time; every church is made of sinful people whose prejudices, pride and vanity, and lack of understanding, lead them to conclusions about Christianity, which are sometimes distorted and inadequate. But first, about the basics of the Christian message there is no disagreement between Bible-believing Christians, whatever their church; and second, God can use those disagreements over secondary things to teach us grace, humility and respect for one another (Philippians 2:3).