Sunday, April 26, 2015
Taste of the BWCA
I found this one at TJ's Country Store in Mahtowa, MN, where the wurst is best. Seriously, they make a huge range of bratwursts and jerkies and they have locally made cheeses. If you don't know what the Boundary Waters are, google it. Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness is the full name and pretty much describes it. The only problem here is, you shouldn't take glass with you when you go there. Camp responsibly, take only pictures and leave only footprints, but when you get back to civilization, have one of these to refresh. It is not too syrupy but sweet enough to replenish the sugars you burned while portaging your canoe 100 rods. Even if you're not a creme soda lover, you might want to try this one. The flavor is not overpowering and leaves no after taste.
Wednesday, April 22, 2015
It's on you
This answer to an audience question
from Tony Jones presents a huge dilemma to Christians. He is saying
the political statements of the past that were justified by religion,
but have since been determined to be wrong, must be addressed by
Christians today. In my opinion, that they aren’t addressed
accounts for many of the reasons people say they don’t go to church
today.
It can’t be avoided. If you say Tony
is wrong, you’re making a political statement yourself. The
question (not shown in the video) was about how to address the
centuries of anti-Semitism. If you say it was wrong, you’re saying
great theologians throughout history, including possibly John the
Apostle, were wrong, which leads to the question of what else they
were wrong about. If you say it was right, then you are anti-Semitic.
If you try to ignore the dilemma, it won’t go away.
When I have asked people questions
about slavery or hell directly I have received a spectrum of answers,
from being given books that describe the reasoning of the people in
those times to blatant lies about what the Bible actually says. When
I speak of those responses in general to others, I’m told I’m
going to the wrong church, and that if I went to their favorite
church, I’d get the right response. This is the run around on a
grand scale.
To keep chasing the rabbit down this
hole, I have to show up on Sunday to some new church, show I’m
sincere, put money in the basket, get a meeting with the pastor, take
an Adult Sunday School class, read the material, ask a specific
question, and get one of those responses from the spectrum I
mentioned above. If I ask enough of those questions, and continue to
express dissatisfaction with the answers, I’m told that maybe
religion is not right for me. Actually, in most cases I’ve figured
that out for myself. Rarely do I need to be asked to leave.
What Tony is saying is, it’s time
religion put that burden of asking questions on itself. He addresses
specifically people who write about religion, I’m saying all
churches and all religious people should be doing this. I should be
able to walk into a church or have an open discussion with any
religious person and ask a straightforward question about their stand
on homosexuality, treatment of women, relationship with Jews and
Muslims, slavery, smiting, or genocide, and I should get a
straightforward answer. They don’t need to know every Bible verse,
but if I show them one that disagrees with their views, they should
agree it’s wrong, or the burden is on them to explain it.
Some people, when confronted with
verses like these will tell you some abhorrent behavior is okay if
God says so. Take the one about beating your slaves, some people have
told me that they think slavery should be legal. More often people
say something more generic about believing in the Word and not being
open to argument about it. I don’t respect their logic or their
conclusion, but I respect them for being clear and firm about their
stand. I respect them more than the person who tries to make excuses
for God’s behavior or starts out making a logical argument but then
switches to a faith statement when their logic fails.
I could make an extensive list, but try
a few for yourself. Think about what your view of morality is, how
the world should work, then look at these Bible passages.
Exodus 21:20
20 If
a man strikes his male or female servant with a stick and he or she
dies as a direct result, the master must be punished. 21
But if the servant survives a day or two, the
master is not to be punished because the servant is his property.
There is a beautiful passage in 1
Kings, chapter 19. You've probably heard it, the one about the still
small voice of God. But the standard lectionary ends at verse 15,
because at that point, God instructs Isaiah to build an army. In the
pages that follow, those armies follow what God tells them to do
here:
15 The
Lord replied to him, “Go! Return to Damascus, and when you get
there, anoint Hazael as king over Aram, 16
anoint Nimshi’s son Jehu as king over Israel, and
anoint Shaphat’s son Elisha from Abel-meholah as a prophet to
replace you. 17
Whoever escapes from Hazael’s sword Jehu will
execute, and whoever escapes from Jehu’s sword Elisha will put to
death. 18
Nevertheless, I’ve reserved 7,000 in Israel who
have neither bowed their knees to Baal nor kissed him.”
This is from a parable in Matthew 3.
You tell me what's going on here:
11 “I baptize you with[b] water for repentance. But after me comes one who is more powerful than I, whose sandals I am not worthy to carry. He will baptize you with[c] the Holy Spirit and fire. 12 His winnowing fork is in his hand, and he will clear his threshing floor, gathering his wheat into the barn and burning up the chaff with unquenchable fire.”
Or this one. What the?
2 Kings 6:29
So we boiled my son, and did eat him: and I said to her on the next day, Give your son, that we may eat him: and she has hid her son.
Or this one. What the?
2 Kings 6:29
So we boiled my son, and did eat him: and I said to her on the next day, Give your son, that we may eat him: and she has hid her son.
Sunday, April 19, 2015
Not really a soda
I bought this at the Whole Foods Co-op in Duluth. That's not part of the chain, they had the name before Whole Foods got to be a big corporation. I tried an original flavor Kombucha before and couldn't finish it. It's sort of like a mushroom shake, with some sawdust added. This was basically the same, with some orange flavor attempting to mask it. You don't see these outside of co-ops much. You really have to be dedicated, or into some sort of sacrifice to get your nutrition this way. It's actually live, some sort of organism. I don't really want to know anymore. It doesn't really qualify as a micro-soda anyway. I just posted this as a public service, not really part of my craft soda series.
Friday, April 10, 2015
How to read the Bible
John Dominic Crossan came up to my
little corner of the world this week. He is a highly respected
theologian, and for good reason. He is also quite entertaining and
his presentation is enhanced by his diminutive stature and Irish
accent. And the lecture was free. If you ever have an opportunity
like that, take it. He is a founding member of something called the
Jesus Seminar, a primary source of material for liberal Christians.
In this instance, he was selling his
new book, “How to Read the Bible and Still be a Christian”. This
interested me because reading the Bible is exactly what made me an
atheist. Also, reading one of his earlier books got me into the
church for 17 years. That was “Meeting Jesus Again for the First
Time”. In both of these books, he lays out the contradictions of
the New Testament and speaks to why they are there. In this recent
lecture, he goes further than I've ever heard him go before into
problems with the Vatican now and how the message of Jesus was
corrupted and altered from the very beginning.
The core of his message is that Jesus
and his early followers were non-violent protesters who sought peace
through the means of justice. The parallel system at the time, being
attempted by the Romans, was peace through victory, using violence.
Crossan begins the lecture with some ancient Roman writings speaking
of Caesar using much the same language as that used for Jesus, as in
“Son of God”, stuff like that. The question for us today is to
look at both of those writings and choose which is the better path.
I'm with him to a point with this, but
when he says “choose”, he is saying to choose who's claim about
being God is true. In this lecture at least, he didn't consider the
option that both are wrong. He was more than willing to show
evidence that humans changed the words and intentions of Jesus, and
not 1,500 years later when Martin Luther said we should read the
Bible as the word of God, but immediately, in the book of Matthew.
It's blatant cherry picking, but he has so much scholarly knowledge
about who did the twisting, how the parables compare, the translation
of the words, the dates the redacting occurred, the political reason
for the redacting, and on and on, that anyone who would dare attempt
to argue with him would be drowned out by such detail.
After the talk, he took questions. I
asked about the “still believing” part, because it didn't seem
that he really covered that. He said it was a choice, it was a
commitment and said it several more times using slightly different
words. I felt that the length of his reply showed he knew his answer
was lacking in some way. He also relied heavily on his analysis of
human culture since the Neolithic period.
He claims that for the last 10,000
years, people have grown steadily more violent. The symbolism of the
farmer Cain killing the herder Abel and then building the first city
is also significant to this narrative, but how that kind of life is
somehow less peaceful than the hunter-gatherer life is not clear.
Anyway, he asks us to look at this increased violence, then look at
the non-violent Jesus movement and choose what we are committed to.
Why I can't choose non-violent Buddhism, I don't know. Why I can't
choose the non-violent protests of Occupy Wall Street and choose no
god and no church, I don't know.
This is typical for a modern Christian
theologians. They can talk all day about flood stories coming from
Mesopotamia and how the early Israelites had to incorporate that
story and add a rainbow at the end. They are more than happy to find
that a letter from Paul they don't like was not written by the same
Paul that appears earlier in the New Testament. They won't bother
much with how God and man were one in Jesus, and instead focus on the
message. And when they're done, they say, "oh yeah, and God's real". I
don't understand how he hangs on to that. One of his fellow members of
the Jesus Seminar, Robert Price, could not. So we can see two people,
equal in scholarly knowledge making different choices.
To me what it came down to is he was
asking me to choose between my faith in my fellow humans or faith in
the story of a failed non-violent protest that occurred 2,000 years
ago. And somehow God fits in there too. What I really meant to be
asking was, why does he think the movement failed? Clearly he
believes the message of the original stories were severely corrupted.
He can no doubt go into great detail about how that corruption
happened and the forces at play that ended with Jesus on the cross.
And he can see the beauty in living up to the call for non-violence
to the point of accepting the verdict and paying the ultimate price.
None of that helps me believe anything divine was at work during any
of this, no matter what form it actually took back then.
I don't fault him for bringing a new
and modern message to Christians who have been handed a corrupted
message for generations. A message that has increased in the level of
corruption in the last 100 years as it has tried to deal with modern
science and philosophy. People who can show a lifetime of commitment
to the gospels and a deep love for the tradition can reach far more
listeners than I can. But as long as they continue to say that
despite all the historical knowledge, they still believe in something
that can't be documented, something magical that we are somehow
missing today, then they are part of the problem. It's why the
movement failed then and why we still have problems discussing
religion today.
This lecture, though disappointing,
serves as a bookend to my journey of the last 20 years. He said he
came to Duluth exactly 20 years ago, and I'm pretty sure that would
have been when I first saw him speak at United Theological Seminary
in the Twin Cities. At that time, things were much worse in Ireland,
and he drew parallels of the evil empire of Rome and the occupying
force of Britain. He didn't use the words himself, but one of the
people who asked a question afterward said, “so, if I'm hearing you
right, we are the Romans”. John Dominic smiled and bounced up on
his toes like a leprechaun and said, “mmm, hmm”.
It is a message we need to get.
Christians today aren't the oppressed minority crying out in the
wilderness. They certainly have nothing in common with the slaves in
Egypt. They often talk like they are, all the while filling their
mega-church parking lots with gas guzzling cars that have enough food
tucked in their seat cushions to make an actual oppressed minority in
the wilderness salivate. But what Crossan is telling them, actually
more like hoping they will get it, is they are the ones who are
enforcing a peace through violence. Rome co-opted their little
community of house churches a long time ago and put the Christian God
in charge of anointing Kings and blessing armies. They kept the part
about peace, but managed to twist the part about how it is best
achieved. They sold them on the lie that they would do just a little
bit of violence, in God's name, then it would be better.
Crossan brings a great message, and one
I'm all for. If we don't get it, we are doomed to repeat the history
of Rome. But I don't think that message will ever be fully
transmitted until you say all of the message comes from people. As
long as you hold out that somewhere in there is a force that can only
be found through faith, you'll never untangle human corruption from
the message of love. The problem is, it's all corruption. We all want
to love everybody, but as soon as we start thinking about how we're
going to do that, we start compromising. As soon as we start
compromising, we start feeling guilty. After that, each of takes off
in a different direction trying to deal with those feelings, whether
it be by eating chocolate, doing yoga or having a string of
meaningless relationships.
For some, the way to deal with it is to
confess those personal faults once a week and get together with
others and sing familiar songs. And there's nothing wrong with
surrounding yourself with people who love you despite your
shortcomings, with finding people who can listen to your troubles,
who can watch you fail and still support you and still believe in
you. Religion does not have the corner on the market for that type of
community. It also helps to have people around you who will challenge
you, who won't let you sink into a pit of despair no matter how many
times you've screwed up. That's something a good church leader does.
It's also something any good leader does. It's something bad leaders don't do, and there are plenty of bad church leaders.
Crossan doesn't deal with why the
movement failed because he doesn't want to see it as a failure. He
says he sees a heartbeat in the Bible, of a coming together as a
community, then being corrupted by power and falling apart, over and
over. Well, of course he does, because that's been happening since
before recorded history. The Bible chronicles some of the times that
happened to certain people who carried a tradition with them through
success and failure, even through exile and slavery. It's pretty
cool. That doesn't inform us at all about their god actually
existing.
There may have been times when bonding
over their belief in that god helped them. Since before Jesus, there
has been plenty of disagreement about that god. It really just got
worse after the first century. When Christianity combined with Rome
and became the sole purveyor of power in Europe, I can see why some
who didn't believe in that power clung to it anyway. They wanted to
eat and live near what they called home. Increasingly today, there
are fewer excuses for continuing to choose to cling those beliefs.
As I often say at the end of my blogs,
all we have is each other. This isn't an exact quote, but John
Dominic Crossan basically agreed with me during this talk when he
said church isn't a place, it's wherever we gather. Of course he
would say that once we get together God appears. Sorry Dom, that's creating disagreement where none is necessary.
Thursday, April 2, 2015
Why the religion debate must be settled
The reason we have a battle going on today between
fundamentalists and mainstream religion, is the question of who God is was
never settled. This is true in most religions, but it is most obvious in
Christianity. Fundamentalists have taken advantage of ignorance to win the
debate for the last 1,700 years. The consequences of them winning again are
much bigger than they have ever been.
We know the name St. Augustine
because he defeated his adversary in debate and gained the favors of the Roman Empire and they proceeded to destroy anyone who disagreed
with their theology. They burned their writings, their churches and sometimes
the people.
We know the name Martin Luther and we have Lutheran churches
because he supported the edicts written a thousand years before him that said
we are born sinners and must pay the church to get us into heaven. Today, we
know the names Rick Warren, Billy Graham and Ted Cruz.
Augustine and Luther had the advantage of a mostly illiterate
populous. Today’s leaders don’t unless we deliberately look away. Augustine and
Luther could say they understood the will of God. We can figure that out for
ourselves. Augustine and Luther had armies to promote their philosophies. We
absolutely cannot allow that to happen this time.
The reason we don’t know as much about the losers of these
debates, is, they lost. The winners picked the books that went into the Bible
and translated it. For a long time they read it to us like children. Once the
dust settled of the fall of the Roman Empire ,
the story changed from being an argument to a story of how the church fathers
had friendly theological discussions and reconciled the differences between
Peter and Paul and figured out what Jesus really meant when he first told his
disciples to gather swords then later to put them away.
What’s funny is, most people today are much closer to being
Pelagianist than they are to being Augustianist. Most people would agree with
the writings of Erasmus over Luther, even though beyond the Erasmus B. Dragon
joke, they aren’t familiar with the name. The problem is, when you try to read
these things, you find their reasons for believing man does or does not
have the will to choose a good action over an evil one is rooted in something
Adam did or something King David said or how God entered the world through
Jesus or all sorts of theological rhetoric.
It’s not too hard to find discussions of Augustine vs
Pelagius that are written from the fundamentalist Lutheran or Evangelical point
of view. They often end like this one, saying,
“Eventually the Council of Carthage (417) condemned Pelagianism. Sadly, this was not the end of it. A concept of semi-Pelagianism surfaced and was addressed in the Synod of Arles (around 473) and the Council of Orange in 529. On occasion, the ideas of the Pelagians and Semi-Pelagians still surface today.”
I think the reason you don’t find mainstream discussions of
this is, that’s not how modern people think. Modern people don’t care about
what two people in funny hats argued about 1,700 years ago. They don’t feel at
all affected by a conversation between Eve and a snake. Erasmus and Ficino and Pico della Mirandola and other early Christian humanist writers referred to Jesus because that
was the philosophy of the day. That was what you learned if you went to
University.
Today, we have a wealth of philosophies to draw on. We (and
I’m talking about people who live in free countries here) have the ability to
evaluate many religions as well as secular philosophies and not lose our jobs
or get our heads removed. We don’t do what Augustine did and simply look at
babies who fight over food and decide original sin is real, we notice how they
aren’t prejudice until we teach them, we ask them to solve problems of
unfairness and see that they do it by sharing, we also look to nature and see
caring and cooperation in our animal cousins. Love is everywhere and it is good,
we’ve figured that out.
Most modern people who go to church don’t want to engage in
theological debate because they don’t see a position there worth defending. And
they are right. Unfortunately, that gets misunderstood to mean that Pelagius
and Erasmus were wrong to say that human dignity is more important than
practicing a certain ritual a certain way. The idea of loving your enemy was profoundly
expressed by a community in the first century. Erasmus said God gave them the
will to choose to do that but ultimately it is human nature to do good.
Augustine said they had no choice, it was grace. Why they thought that doesn’t
really matter. We have much better reasons today for putting the needs of a single
mother above the need to have a consistent doctrine that connects our desire to
care to the words of an author from a dead language.
Liberals lose debates with fundamentalists because they don’t
play the fundamentalist's game. Both sides walk away feeling they’ve made good points because
neither side is listening. Large churches have to accommodate both, or they
won’t be large churches. That’s why I say, if you go to church this Easter, and
you don’t agree with everything the preacher says, don’t put money in the
basket. We treat every other speaker in the world like that. If we don’t like
them, we don’t buy their books or pay to hear them speak. Why do we give churches a pass? If you feel
that there is something wrong with what your church is doing, speak up. If you
don’t, this civilization will go the way of Rome and the way of the European feudal
system.