Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Ethical dilemma
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Guns are bad
Friday, February 19, 2010
How I met your mother
Monday, February 8, 2010
Innerancy of the Bible?
"There is one book of truth: the Bible, God’s written revelation to man, authoritative, reliable, inerrant and without need of any other document(s) to complete its message."
Needless to say, I decided not to apply. Yet, it got me thinking about different views of the Bible. If people truly believe that the Bible was plunked down on Earth by God in modern English just so that we could understand how sinful we are, they are seriously misguided.
The first and most obvious problem of the above statement is that the Bible is translated. We have ancient texts that are a collection of different versions of letters or books that people wrote thousands of years ago. They were written in languages that no one speaks today and even the best translators are just guessing as to what some of the words mean (just look at some of the footnotes in the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament), especially Psalms. Do you really think the books of the Bible were translated without any other books? Were the translations also divinely inspired? That is just the most obvious flaw with the belief that the Bible is perfectly clear and does not need to be read in a very intentional academic way to understand the full meaning for both us and the original intended audience. (This does not mean that I don't think the Bible should be read devotionally, I just don't think this is the only way it should be read.)
This idea was backed up by a recent article in the New York Times. The author said this: "I know that this will offend some Christians, but the notion that Scripture is perfectly clear is wishful thinking, as a recent white paper prepared by the All Saints’ clergy demonstrates. The writers of the four Gospels don’t agree on even so simple a thing as which people were present at Christ’s empty tomb." If the gospels thought that even that detail could be changed in order to make the point more clear means that we can and should see the Bible as a lens through which to understand Jesus. If we only look at the literal meaning we are missing most of the Gospel, if not all.
There is also an interesting article in the New York Times Magazine about the Texas School Board and their influence on the curriculum in most other states. The Texas School Board has recently elected a near majority of Christian Conservatives with the clear agenda of changing the curriculum requirements in Texas, which because of the way textbooks are distributed, would effectively change the curriculum of 46 or 47 other states. Clearly this is an effective way to change the curriculum around the country. The people planning this understand that the students in the classroom will be in government and every other sector of life in a generation. If you can shape the basic principles that they learn you can change the way the whole country is run. School board is an elected position, that has a very low voter turn out - so the actual process of change is much simpler than electing someone to more high profile position. Of course, these Fundamentalist Christians are the same type of Christians that are running that school that I did not apply to. Perhaps someday we'll be teaching the inerrancy of the Bible in public schools one day.
Written for Episcorific
I’ve been thinking about Lent 2010 for a long time. This is not a season that snuck up on me this year. The main reason is that I’m part of a team that is developing “Cries of Anguish, Stories of Hope: A Lenten study on the Worldwide Struggle to end Violence Against Women.” (You can check out the study http://women.overcomingviolence.org).
When I told some of my friends at Church here about this project, one quipped that “you’ve found a way to make Lent even more depressing.” Lent is depressing, but it’s depressing because our world is depressing. Lent is the time when we focus on the sins of this world. Lent is a time to understand our own complicity to these problems. Lent is a time where we look for Jesus’ love despite these problems. We look all the problems square in the eye and say “you cannot win.”
During my research and planning for this project I have learned about atrocities all over the world. Human trafficking is the most profitable black market industry in the world – with estimations going as high as $32 billion a year with over 27 million people currently enslaved. On average in
Yet, as much as these stories are appalling what I am struggling with is my own place in the picture. What am I doing to contribute to or bring an end to violence against women? Am I ever complicit? I know I have thought, or even said that perhaps a woman could have done something to avoid being raped. As if she brought it on herself. I have believed that only “weak” women stay with abusers. If women were stronger they would just leave him. I have looked the other way when I see a girl being harassed on the street. I have failed to speak out when a man talks to me inappropriately in a bar, hoping he’ll just go away. My work to eliminate violence against women is a drop in the bucket. What am I doing in this depressing situation? Where is God in this?
Lent is the time that the Church sets aside for us to remember and focus on these tragedies. We do this, not because God is absent in all of this, but because these tragedies are precisely where God is. God’s love for people extends beyond the worst that can possibly happen. Jesus came into the world to give people the ability to live in hope despite our tragic circumstances. Despite all the facts that I listed above, God is here with us. God is giving us hope to face the terrible situations and make something better out of them.
If we lived in a rosy, perfect world we wouldn’t need Lent. If the only problems in our lives are who will organize the Parish Pot luck next week or where we’ll go on vacation next summer we would not need Lent. Lent is a time for us to look around us and look around the world at the serious problems. A time for us to understand the problems. A time for us to immerse ourselves in the problems. We have Lent to be depressed about the world.
Luckily, for us and the world, Lent is not the end, but only the beginning. We have Easter to live out the rest of the year. When we truly understand and relate to the seriously depressing situations in the world we can rejoice even more loudly that Jesus conquers all. Jesus is Lord.
Friday, February 5, 2010
Churchianity?
Here is a quote from it:
It [Modern Church] promotes churchianity—the practice of making belief in Jesus largely focused on the habits and demands of the institutional church (doctrinal purity, religious behavior), rather than on God’s love.
So true! I see that all the time in churches I go to. It is more important to appear "religious" than to actually love people as God loves us. All I want to do is learn how to do that. I try, but I can't seem to go beyond what makes me comfortable. I signed up to volunteer here and perhaps that will help me. I'm going to be volunteering at a homeless services center. They do breakfast and clothing and financial advice. I'll see how that goes. I'm looking forward to it, and hopefully it will help me steer clear of the temptation of "churchianity."
Honestly, I think the fear of this sin is one of the reasons that I have not yet started seminary. I'm not 100% sure that I'd be going because I want to learn what God is calling me to - or because it would be the ultimate "right" thing to do in the Church. Go be ordained - there's nothing better than that, right? Perhaps I'll find out my own motivations as I get closer to deciding.
It would be so nice if going to Church and serving all the nice people at Church were what God intended for the Church. But instead I worry about social injustice and those that have so much less than the our abundance in the US. I see God's desire for justice. "Churchianity" is a tempting idol because it looks good. Especially in the US where "going to Church" is such a nice thing to do (I grew up in the Bible Belt - so it was the norm). Yet, if we were really following the Gospel and living like Christ we would not be "nice" at all. We would be prophetic and we would change our world. All you have to do is look at Jesus. Living out God's love got him killed by the Roman's.
Churchianity - it's a tempting sin. Pray that I, and all Christians, can avoid it.