Several times, nudist have engaged in discussions of the Bible and
Nudity.
Nudity
and the Bible, At one regional nudist convention, there was a minister there to discuss the topic. We found a good article
on clothsfree.com that sheds a lot of light
on the subject. |
|
God asked Adam, "Who Told You That You Were
Naked?" It is strange that considering the first
thing that God got upset about was when Adam and
Eve put clothes on - why do some people who
claim to be his followers have exactly the
opposite view? Many nudists are Christians who
adhere to the Bible’s teachings. If you’re new
to this lifestyle and are also religiously
devout, you might be nervous about being deemed
a sinner. After all, the Bible very clearly
states that when Adam and Eve were in right with
God, they were naked. When people are in right
with God, they do not have to fear nudity. To
answer God's question to Adam, "Who Told You
That You Were Naked?", Satan was the only other
one there who told Eve she and Adam will not die
after eating the forbidden fruit and she was
obliviously told they were naked and that God's
greatest creation, the human body, was shameful
and needed to be hidden. The mere sight of the
body, the image of God, is not harmful or
obscene. If fact, it is an insult to God to hide
nudity for the sole purpose of shame.
If you believe that God created everything we
experience on this planet, then God created free
will and our ability to use that will. If God
had originally created man and woman and
intended them to live without clothing until
they were exposed to underhanded ideas, then we
should start at that point. If one chooses to
live according to the Bible, then one hopes to
live without sin. Therefore, a nudist can live
freely in spite of Adam and Eve’s original sin,
because free will separates him or her from the
willful sinning of the original couple.
Christian nudists choose to shun the shame and
lust heaped upon the body as a result of Satan’s
work. Perhaps the rest of society should do the
same.
Everything evolves, but churches are stuck in
an old-time mentality when it comes to nudity.
If you look closely at Genesis, you will find
that God did not intend for us to be ashamed of
our bodies. Rather, it was a byproduct of Adam
and Eve’s shame for committing the first sin.
Christians believe that Jesus died to help
rectify those sins so that all people who
believe can stand before God unashamed. The
church should emphasize this point of redemption
when dealing with the human body.
If our bodies are gifts from God and built in
His image, how can we be ashamed? Should we not
celebrate such an awesome creation? The human
body is beautiful and built perfectly. It is an
intricate machine and a work of art at the same
time. With such a great gift to behold, why is
there such offense?
Perhaps, you still have doubts and are used to
equating the naked human form with the sexual
human form, rather than seeing one as mutually
exclusive from the other. Matthew 5:27 says that
it is considered a sin to look at a woman
lustfully. Well, logic would have it that the
more we are brought up to see the human body
outside of sexual situations and as a beautiful
creation, we will have nothing to lust over.
The Bible does not place restrictions on being
nude. God commanded Isaiah to go out and preach
publicly in the nude for three straight years!
(Isaiah 20). The prophets were often
symbolically naked. When Saul stripped off his
clothes and provided a prophecy before the
masses, the onlookers simply assumed he was a
prophet and was acting at the behest of God (1
Samuel 19:24). King David danced nude in the
City of David over the news of the Ark of the
Covenant’s return. His wife criticized this
practice and was punished and left childless
until her death (2 Samuel 6:20-23). While God
condemned the use of make-up, He openly
celebrated the human form, as He did through
Ezekiel, “made you
grow like a plant of the field, naked and
bare. You grew up and became tall, and arrived
at full maiden-hood, the ORNAMENT OF ORNAMENTS;
your breasts were fully formed and your pubic
hair had grown” (Ezekiel 16:7). Since material
was expensive and the climate hot, workers in
Mesopotamia and Palestine, men and women, often
labored nude in the fields. Peter fished naked
(John 21:7). While lust for sexual contact is
prescribed against in the Bible, the evidence is
plentiful that God didn’t intend the human body
to be considered shameful in its own right.
Yet the churches lost this vision as time passed. Theodore of
Mopsuestia (c. 400) said, "Adam was naked at the beginning,
and unashamed. This is why your clothing must be taken off as
baptism restores right relation to God." As new concepts of
“modesty” developed around the sixth century,, and the body
was no longer revered as beautiful and as the temple of God,
but rather as something vile, filthy and naturally unclean.
When St. Francis experienced his conversion, he removed his
robes and walked nude in the piazza in Assisi. As the notion
of the body changed, he was considered to be immodest, rather
than provided the reverie given those in Biblical times.
Further down the line, several popes required that the
paintings of nude forms and statues by Michelangelo in the
Sistine Chapel be hidden and fabrics painted to look like
flowing linens were pasted over the “offensive” parts of the
masterpieces. The painting was returned to its nude
appearance in more recent times.
We doubt Jesus would be ashamed of his body or tell others to
cover up especially during baptism. God said our bodies were
good and intended humans to be unashamed. After Jesus died
for our sins, we no longer need to be ashamed.
Still need convincing? Perhaps this anecdote will sway you
completely. In the Gospel of Thomas,
considered to be "superfluous to scripture" by the same
council at Trent which determined what we today declare as
"The Holy Bible," in Thomas 37, the disciples asked
Jesus, “When will you appear to us, and when will we see
you?” Jesus responded, “When you become like little children,
and disrobe without being ashamed, and you take your clothes
and put them under your feet and trample them, you shall see
the Kingdom of God, and you will not be afraid.”
If you’re religious and a nudist, you should be not afraid.
The human body is not shameful and is not inherently lustful.
Romans 14:16 points out, “Do not allow what you consider good
to be spoken of as evil.”
(Feel free to copy this article in part or
in whole, for any use as long as credit is clearly given to
ClothesFree.com as
the source.)
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