Deuteronomy 6:6
Topic : DeuteronomyErnest Hemingway
Ernest Hemingway, the literary genius, said of his life: I live in a vacuum that is as lonely as a radio tube when the batteries are dead, and there is no current to plug into.
This is a startling statement, given the fact that Hemingways life would be the envy of anyone who had bought the values of our modern society. Hemingway was known for his tough-guy image and globe-trotting pilgrimages to exotic places. He was a big-game hunter, a bullfighter, a man who could drink the best of them under the table. He was married four times and lived his life seemingly without moral restraint or conscience. But on a sunny Sunday morning in Idaho, he pulverized his head with a shotgun blast.
There was another side to Hemingways life, one that few people know about. He grew up in an evangelical Christian home. His grandparents were missionaries, and his father was a devoted churchman and friend of evangelist D. L. Moody. Hemingways family conformed to the strictest codes of Christianity, and as a boy and young man he was active in his church.
Then came Word War I. As a war correspondent, Hemingway saw death and despair firsthand. His youthful enthusiasm for Christianity soured, and Hemingway eventually rejected the faith he had once claimed.
While we dont know all that transpired in Hemingways heart, it seems he never developed a truly personal relationship with Jesus Christ. Genuine Christianity means more than living in a Christian environment, going through catechism, conforming to the codes, and affirming the truths of Scripture. True Christians are non-negotiated followers of Christ, those who are progressively moving toward Him and who understand all of life in the context of His teaching.
The point is not Hemingways life. Its my life and your life. If we arent cultivating a living, vital relationship with Jesus Christ, then we, too, may respond as Hemingway did when lifes questions are agonizingly unanswerable or when our inner impulses are too seductive for us to resist. An allegiance based on systems, rituals, and rules is never enough to keep us loyal.