I wouldn't be happy to have to take such a class either. I have better things to think about.
But it won't hurt to "look through another man's eyes" -- like Susana says, it'll help you "learn to discern the difference between the wisdom of God and the wisdom of man."
That, BTW, is a useful "tool" for reading comments on this forum!
Nietzsche wasn't that "bad". Let me give you a picture of what Nietzsche might have been like: Picture in your mind's eye, a man sitting in the middle of a circle of people who are supposed to be "Christians". They are different from each other. One is an idiot, another is a thief, another argues incessently and pointlessly, another blindly follows folk-tales of his parents and others...
And in that particular group, not only Jesus is missing, there are no "Pauls", "Peters" or even "Timothys".
In Nietzsche's day, the only representatives of "Christianity" he knew were sadly deficient. He could read the Scriptures (and did) but without an enlivened spirit, he couldn't really grasp what he was reading.
With this strange picture in mind, understand that when Nietzsche rejected religion and declared that "God" was "dead", he really was making a comment about "religion" that he'd seen with his own eyes. What he "religion" saw in the lives of the people around him was, in fact, "dead".
In fact, Nietzsche was better off rejecting the "religion" he'd grown up with in his century. It would have been nice if he'd gone
onward to a personal knowledge of the Person, Jesus -- but that didn't happen.
Audioartist --
here's a positive step you can take that I seriously suggest:
Meditate LOTS on Psalm 1.
(It's easy to remember what passage I'm recommending -- open up the Psalms and it's
first!
Now -- verse 1 begins with, "Blessed is the person who does not follow the advice of wicked people..."
One paraphrase of this verse that helps me reads this way: "Blessed (means "happy") is the person who does not follow the advice
of those who do not know God."
In the Hebrew (accord to Strong's), "wicked" means someone who is "hostile to God".
Well -- Nietzsche certainly was "hostile to God" and certainly did NOT "know God".
That means, however much you might learn to appreciate his humor, his intellectual brilliance, or his mother's snitzel,
don't follow any of his counsel on how to view the world!
The rest of the Psalm says what you
are supposed to do, is be like a tree...
...like a tree planted by a stream, whose roots are bathed by water (even in time of drought), whose leaves will not wither...
You're the "tree", the stream is the Living Word of God (His "law" or, as Jesus put it, "every Word that proceeds out of the Father's mouth" is our "bread of life"...)
The point of Psalm 1 is that if you make a top priority to stay "drenched" in the Word of God (and in His Presence), then when you're having to listen to the counsel of people who don't even know God, you'll stay strong, spiritually healthy and what you set your hand to do will prosper. (All right there in the psalm!)
KingdomScribe
P.S. One last point -- while you
must sit under the teaching of "those who don't know God", audioartist --
make sure you stay in fellowship with those who DO know God... ks