Dor
Bible Thumper
Namaste cyberpi, I'm not understanding what you are trying to say, please elaborate.
Hell I didnt understand a word he wrote.
Namaste cyberpi, I'm not understanding what you are trying to say, please elaborate.
I've only read one book by JS Spong: A New Christianity for a New World. He rejects supernaturalism in all its forms although as I understand it it is not his point at all that scripture should be measured by secular or scientific criteria. He does, however, suggest that the Bible be stripped of its 'theistic' view. He suggests that the first experience of Christ was not as theistic God but that this was a concept added onto the Christ experience as people reflected on it.Hi Lunamoth -
I'm not a reader of Spong, but it does appear as if he insists that the truth and validity of scripture can only be measured according to secular scientific criteria - and if science can't explain it, then it's a superstition that needs be done away with.
Maybe, but I'm not sure that he has. Frankly I'm a little perplexed by his view although I found this book very interesting. He seems to be claiming the death of a God I did not 'believe' in to begin with--well, except perhaps while I was a Baha'i. He rejects what he calls the tribalism of traditional views and the anthropomorphic God we tend to create in our image. Yet he proclaims God is very real; God for Spong is life, is love, is being. I also think that Spong mostly describes tradition in its most negative sense, a sense I've already rejected, and ignores the meanings of tradition that actually support what I consider the true and important parts of Christianity.Thomas said:In which case he has surrendered to the Philosophy of Relativism.
No, this is not something Spong says as far as I've read him. He is not concerned at all with proofs or disproofs of God and in this I completely agree with him. His point is not about the 'reality' of God: God is real to him. His point is about a God Who can not be supported in a reasonable mind, a God who needs to be explained when He fails to intercede for us and a God who allows evil to persist in the world. Belief in a 'theistic God' is unsupportable, he concludes, and he goes on to say that we know this and the signs of the resulting disconnect are evident in the various and increasing individual and societal maladies we observe today.Thomas said:(In which case 'love' can't be explained nor 'proven' to the satisfaction of laboratory conditions, so let's wipe that off the board to start with.)
Spong seems to assert that God can be proven or disproven by science.
Spong said:Theism is thus a definition of God which has journeyed with self-conscious human beings from primitive animism to complex modern monotheism. Yet in every one of its evolving forms, theism has functioned as it was originally created to do. Theism was born as a human coping device, created by traumatized self-conscious creatures to enable them to deal with the anziety of self-awareness. It was designed to discover or postulate the existence of a powerful divine ally in the quest for human survival and in the process to assert both a purpose to existence and a meaning to human life. Assuming, then, that theism developed as a human response to Tillich's shock of nonbeing and Freud's trauma of self-consoiusness, we shuold expect to see shock, trauma, and hysteria return in countless numbers of ways when theis dies as I contend it is doing today.
Namaste Wil... I like the word Namaste. What I know of the word came from yourself and here: Namaste - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaNamaste cyberpi, I'm not understanding what you are trying to say, please elaborate.
In regards to Spong, as I understand it, from a fundamental perspective we've read his writings, deem them hogwash and him a heretic. My question, does that also apply to Thomas Jefferson? Surely this swath is cast equally, the man rewrote the gospels. Are we ready to toss out all of his writings as well?
If Spong denies the Incarnation, then there is nothing of Christ left - 'Christ' becomes some universal abstract... surely?
And what is 'love' if God cannot engage with the world? I know I have only read superficially, but 'love' is not something on its own account - love requires object and subject ... and you can't ask man to love an abstract ... only a very few can manage that ...
... I know I haven't read him, but if you strip away the Incarnation, Revelation, God (as He who communicates something of Himself to man) ... if Scripture and its content is invalid as anything more than a myth of a race history ... then what's left, what defines Christianity?
Thomas