Wednesday, March 23, 2005

What would Jesus watch?

It's been a while since I've posted, but I finished my final for the VLI Winter Quarter, so for at least a week or two, I should have some breathing space.

First item to mention is that news.Google.com now lets you customize what you see. I'm experimenting with different search filters to try and capture some interesting faith-based news...caught this from David Crum at the FreePress..

FAITH IN THE 21ST CENTURY: What would Jesus watch? . Crum reviews some new DVD's from a Grand Rapids based group NOOMA. They're from the emergent chruch, Mars Hill. Here's Crum's description of one of their films....

"Well, in 'Bullhorn' (also known as NOOMA 009 of the 10 films available), a nerdy evangelist in a white shirt shows up on screen photocopying hellfire-and-brimstone tracts and packing up a bullhorn as he prepares to shout at people on street corners.

But wait. There's a second preacher in this movie, a very different kind of clergyman who shows up in the next scene, sitting on a wooden bench on a city street in a T-shirt and sandals. His name is Rev. Rob Bell. At 34, he looks like that cool guy in Verizon ads with glasses and spiky hair. In real life, he's pastor of Mars Hill Bible Church in Grandville, near Grand Rapids, a hot new church for twentysomethings. He talks straight and fast about a loving kind of God who accepts everyone 'just the way they are.'

Back to the movie. Bell talks into the camera, as if addressing the hellfire preacher in the first scene, and says: 'Bullhorn guy, I don't think it's working. ... I think it's making things worse. I don't think this is what Jesus had in mind.'

Churches shouldn't look for new members 'like they're notches on somebody's spiritual belt, because they're not,' Bell says. It's those ideas that give millions of young people the 'perception that being a Christian is lame.'

No, Bell says, the whole point of Christianity is to experience God's love, to love one another and never to scare or threaten people.

The movie ends there.

There's nothing in it about right and wrong. And there's nothing in any of the 10 NOOMA movies about women's rights or gay rights or abortion rights or any of the hot-button issues in the evangelical world.

Each movie is all about a specific, plain-and-simple spiritual topic. "Bullhorn" is about the need for acceptance. Other films are about Christian approaches to promoting forgiveness, overcoming rejection or soothing stress.


Interesting. Learn more at Nooma's website

Tuesday, March 08, 2005

And God Said...

...Let there be light.

Is this poetry? Metaphor? or Science?

Put aside the question of how you get sound without air for the moment, and check this out...It turns out that when pulsing sound waves compress bubbles in a liquid the result is observed as flashes of light, something they call "sonoluminescence"...now some scientists claim to have measured the temperature inside the bubbles...their answer? 15,000ÂșC or 4 x hotter than the Sun and hot enough to fuel a fusion reaction...here's the article...
WorldChanging: Another World Is Here: Son of Sonofusion

Thursday, March 03, 2005

How Do We Know About Jesus: Two Visions

I took a few minutes the other day to check out Nicola's books and was glad I did. It turns out that they have the best religious book section in Ann Arbor (IMHO)...better than Borders, better than Barnes and Noble, even better than Christian Crossroads (which is quite sad when you think about it). Instead of having the latest and greatest froth, they seemed to have a nice selection from across the spectrum of beliefs. I even found a copy of The Meaning of Jesus: Two Visions by Marcus Borg and NT Wright. Since Donnell was complaining about his lack of a discussion partner for this, and since Borg is coming to Ann Arbor in a couple of weeks, I bought it. I should be finishing Jeremiah tonight for VLI, but couldn't resist the call of a new book (I hope you're happy Donnell).

The first couplet of chapters is about how we know about Jesus (the format of the book is that two authors each write a chapter on the same topic, alternating who goes first). Borg started this one, and as Donnell pointed out
"Dr. Borg's vision of Jesus is very intriguing...[Borg] defines an argument called 'History Metaphorized' as 'the use of metaphorical language and metaphorical narratives to express the meaning of the story of Jesus.' ...[and] casts doubt on the 'historical' events and activities attributed to Jesus, and at the same time he affirms the importance of 'nonhistorical material.' "
Both authors, Borg and Wright, speak of growing up with similar worldviews in which faith was accepted uncritically while still holding an essentially modern view of the universe as a closed system, what Francis Schaeffer refers to as a “two-story” perspective where “faith” is held separate from “reason.” Borg faced a crisis when confronted with the tension between his secular modern view and his faith, which explained the miraculous events of the Bible by thinking of Jesus as “more divine than human … as having the mind and power of God.” The problem, he explains was “I lost the historical Jesus as a credible human being…Because he is more than human, he is not fully human.” Borg resolves this in a creative way by postulating a pre-Easter Jesus and post-Easter Jesus, both important but quite distinct individuals.

I can see his point. I can’t relate to a “superman” Jesus.

But what if there was a way to explain the Jesus in the Gospels without reducing his humanness? What if the problem was not in the historical presentation of Jesus in the gospels, but in Borg’s earlier, admittedly pre-critical interpretation of what he read? What if the gospels don’t, after all, actually present Jesus as “having the mind and power of God”? (Which is not to say that they don’t present Jesus as divine, but rather that our definition of what it meant for him to be fully human and fully divine is colored by layer upon layer of doctrinal assertions, all posited in good faith, but done so without the benefit of the rich historical perspective we now have.) What if being divine meant that the “historical Jesus” is instead the perfect example of what humans were intended by God to be. Isn’t this in line with Paul’s reference to Jesus as both the “the image of the invisible God, the first born over all creation” (Col 1:15) and the “second Adam” (so to speak) who brings life where the first Adam brought death (Romans 5)? It seems to me that in his attempt to preserve the humanity of Jesus, Borg has instead posited a picture of humanity which is far more limited than God intended us to be. Yes, today the perfection of Jesus's example is unattainable, but some day "when he appears, we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is." (1 John 3:2b)

On to Wright's chapter. Where as Borg regularly makes sweeping assertions about what is and isn’t historical about the story we have of Jesus in the gospels, based primarily it would seem on the majority of opinion of scholars, Wright couches his arguments in carefully crafted discussions, attempting to eliminate our many presuppositions about what things mean by addressing each major stream of opinion in turn, in light of historical methods of inquiry.

To Wright the major question is: “why did Christianity begin, and why did it take the shape it did?” From Wright’s perspective Borg’s gulf might need to be bridged. Or it might not exist at all. To even posit such a gulf in the beginning is to necessarily color the investigation…
“I do not know in advance…that a considerable gulf exists between Jesus as he was (the “pre-Easter Jesus,” in Marcus [Borg’s] language) and Jesus as the church came to know him and speak of him (the “post-Easter Jesus”). We might eventually wish to reach some such conclusion; we cannot build it into our historical method." [emphasis added]
There has never been a time in history when we knew so much about the past and this is especially true regarding Biblical history. Couple this with the postmodern penchant to puncture past controlling meta-narratives and we find ourselves in a unique position to reevaluate the conclusions of past historians and priests alike. As Wright puts it:
History, then, prevents faith becoming fantasy. Faith prevents history becoming mere antiquarianism. Historical research, being always provisional, cannot ultimately veto faith, though it can pose hard questions that faith, in order to retain its integrity precisely as Christian faith, must struggle to answer, and may well grow strong through answering. Faith, being subject to the vagaries of personality and culture, cannot veto the historical enterprise (it can’t simply say “I don’t like the Jesus you write about, so you must be wrong”), but it can put hard questions to history, not least on the large topic of the origins of Christianity, and history may be all the better for trying to answer them.

Back to Jeremiah….

Tuesday, March 01, 2005

Influencing our Youth with a Call to Action

I haven't read Jim Wallis' book God's Politics, though I bought it recently after reading about it in Jesse's blog. Now that I've read the following excerpt from Wallis's blog, I'll have to move it up on my list....

Sojourners : Special Features: "An unexpected thing: bringing families together.

I've reported how the book and media events are attracting a new generation of young people and that many students are coming up to get their book signed. At one bookstore, a young man gave me his book to sign and I asked if he was a student. 'Yes, but I'm still in high school.' 'What year?' I asked. 'I'm a freshman,' he said, and I noticed he was there without his parents but with a few of his friends. And something else very moving is now happening at many stops. Parents tell me how their son or daughter had lost their faith and left the church. 'But my son saw you on Jon Stewart's Daily Show and got the book. He just wrote his mother and me to tell us that he is finding his way back to faith.' There was a tear in Dad's eye when he told me that. I've heard many stories like that now, about sons and daughters, husbands or wives, and even parents who hadn't been to a church in many years now taking a fresh look at the issues of faith and how it applies to the social issues they care most about. Reading the book seems to be bringing some families back together again around the issues of faith and social justice."

Evolution is a Friend of Creation, says Evangelical Professor

I generally steer clear of Evolution vs. Creation debates. Not that I'm not interested in the resolution of the apparent paradox between science and Genesis, but too often the debate turns rancourous and divisive. So I wouldn't be surprised if evangelical Professor Richard Colling has encountered a fair share of rancour. Unfortunately, at least in this article in the Christian Post, the results of these encounters seems to overshadow the rest of an otherwise important discussion: Namely whether Evolution is a Friend of Creation as he proposes in his new book Random Designer: Created from Chaos to Connect with Creator. From the reviews on Amazon, it sounds like a more scientific version of the creation story that Neo tells in Brian McLaren's book The Story We Find Ourselves In: Further Adventures of a New Kind of Christian. I'd be interested to hear from other's who might have read Collings' book.

Rembrandt's Late Religious Portraits

Heard about this on the Diane Rehm show today...all 17 of Rembrandt's late religious portraits are on display atNational Gallery of Art - Rembrandt's Late Religious Portraits: January 30 - May 1, 2005. It moves to the Getty museum in LA this summer, but if can't make either one, the NGA website offers a great study of the works.