Have you ever noticed how often people use the word God in
everyday speech? We say things such as “Oh my God!” (also known as OMG in text
message shorthand). We say, “God bless you,” “God forbid,” “By the grace of
God,” “For the love of God,” “For God’s sake,” “It was an act of God,” “The wrath
of God,” “Honest to God,” and, “Thank God it’s Friday!” (the famous
TGIF).
Granted, most of the time when people use these expressions they
are not consciously thinking about the almighty divine Creator. They instead are
using culturally common figures of speech.
Even many agnostics and atheists use these phrases, and certainly
they are not renouncing their secular worldview and suddenly proclaiming faith
in God. They’re just using traditional phrases to express everyday surprise,
anger, fear, joy, frustration, etc.
Frankly, I’m not really sure if these expressions are violations
of the Commandment about taking the Lord’s name in vain. I hope they are not,
for the sake of the zillions of us who instinctively use these phrases on a
regular basis. I truly believe that God cuts us some slack when we commit sins
out of ignorance. So, if these common expressions are in fact taking His name
in vain, I think He understands that we’re not consciously trying to be
blasphemous. At least I hope that’s the case. I guess we should bring it up for
discussion the next time we’re in the confessional.
Anyway, since we regularly use these expressions that contain the
word God, and no one thinks we’re making religious pronouncements, we should
try an experiment. Instead of saying the word God, let’s substitute the name
Jesus. Like this: “Oh my Jesus,” “For the love of Jesus,” “Honest to Jesus,”
“Jesus willin’ and the creek don’t rise,” “Jesus forbid,” “Jesus works in
mysterious ways,” and, “Thank Jesus it’s Friday!”
Here is the most common one of all. Whenever anyone sneezes, say
as nicely as you can, “Jesus bless you.”
Unlike the common expressions using the
word God, which no one thinks twice about, if we substitute Jesus, I suspect a
lot of people will pause and say, “Huh?” And that’s exactly what we want them to
do: pause and ponder the name of Jesus.
If a relative, friend, or coworker
pauses and says, “Huh? What’d you just say?” we can reply, “I just said ‘Jesus
bless you’ instead of ‘God bless you.’ It means the same thing to me, since
Jesus is God.”
I’m not saying that when Dave from
Accounting sneezes on a Tuesday afternoon, the goal is to initiate a long and
deep conversation about the doctrine of the Holy Trinity, and the fact that in
Christian theology, as the Nicene Creed says, Jesus Christ is “true God from true
God, begotten, not made, consubstantial with the Father.”
That might be a little much, especially
since Dave from Accounting is probably more concerned at that moment with
finding a clean tissue.
It’s likely that most Christians rarely
ponder those words from the Nicene Creed (and I suspect most Catholics have never
pondered them, even though we recite those words at every Sunday Mass). But the
fact is, those words express a basic Christian belief: Jesus is the Second
Person of the Trinity, one-in-being with God the Father and the Holy Spirit.
Maybe it’s time we took that belief more
to heart and expressed it in a somewhat subtle way to our friends and family.
Let’s substitute the name Jesus in all those traditional figures of speech. Try
typing OMJ in your text messages, and say, “Jesus bless you,” when coworkers
sneeze. I don’t think Dave from Accounting will mind, and it might even get him
thinking about faith—right after he finds a clean tissue.
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