Zzyzx wrote:.
SS,
You have once again demonstrated why you have earned my respect (and that of many other members) by a reasoned, rational and grounded theistic view.
If ONLY your views were characteristic or representative of mainline Christianity as it is presented to the public. You make it almost appealing (or at least quite acceptable) even to Non-Theists.
I encourage readers to consider that what you present is Christianity as it should be (and as representative of the teachings of Jesus).
Thanks Z.
And I in turn encourage all readers (including you) to read the great texts and thinkers from the great religious traditions, and in this way: When you come upon magical thinking, tales, and propositional truth claims,
bracket them, set their factuality aside (but don't cut them out like Jefferson did). Then ask yourself: is this theological, mythopoetic interpretation at work here (hint: yes)? What were they getting at? Does this resonante with me? Does this seem important? Is there wisdom here? What about it is unique? Does it overlap with what others have said elsewhere and since? Importantly, is there a reason that this point is made in this literary form, and not in simple direct philosophical prose (hint: it might have to do with the symbolic nature of poetry and symbol). Taken together, does it appear to speak to an orientation that strikes you as admirable, appealing, enriching? (Remember, at this point you've bracketed the literalness/historicity of magical claims for later consideration...).
And to introduce one of the tools in my (our) books: how does this text/story/tale/idea purport or even succeed to help people satisfy what we call the six fundamental human desires: meaning, value, purpose, connection, resilience, and transcendence (defined broadly)? This makes for interesting reading, reflection, and conversation.
You can apply this to jewish, christian, hindu, native american, animist, mormon, neopagan, taoist, etc. etc. texts and tales. And see what, if anything, sticks.
Then, and
aside from all that, ask yourself, how much non-evidentiary, magical, ontological thinking can you tolerate or accept as a possibility? 0%? 2%? 5%? 50%? 100%? That will differ for each person, and be driven in large part by one's assessment of modernity, but IMO high numbers are not a prerequisite for meaningful religious engagement.
Personally I'm epistemologically humble enough to accept as much as 2-5% as "could be, maybe, wouldn't that be nice." In my book that's good enough. Sometimes (actually, rather often) I'll live as if it were real, not as a wager, but as a choice that helps me make meaning in a way that I value. Simply because 1. I'm epistemologically humble enough to suspend judgment at the fringes of awareness, understanding and experience, and 2. I've been spiritually inclined since childhood (god gene, elect, father issues, indoctrination, plain ol' crazy, a calling...not sure).
But it is worth noting that many people active in a religious tradition, especially skeptical and liberally educated people, will find that over time these small 1-5% allowances accrue, until they become quite comfortable with the language and presuppositions of their faith. I have no problem with that, because these folks usually remain rationalistic enough to say, "Well now, wait just one cotton pickin' a minute" when the real crazies show up. At least that's how we do it up here in Boston.
BTW, since my first post above, it occured to me that the enhanced narrative aspects of visions, miracles, etc. in biblical (and other) ancient texts functioned, in the ancient world, much like
special effects do in ours. The audience expected it and responded to it. And just like how a great film can work at several levels, based on audience sophistication and receptivity, these stories do too. At home, we have a theory: if God himself showed up and spoke truth from a podium, and he had an honest and clear but butt-boring delivery, nobody would listen. Sometimes you need some lights and incence, some ritual, some magic, etc. Concepts don't sell; visions, hope, stories and people do. Ancient writers knew that, consciously or not. It was just part of their grain, as well as that of the oral traditions they sourced.
Puttin' the real in realigion (go ahead and steal that),
SS