Primitive Christianity Revived, Again
The Bible contains the writings from a long tradition of people in more-or-less interaction with God. We get the human side of this phone conversation, including what people thought God was telling them... and it makes for a good set of examples of how God operates, how human beings understand (and misunderstand!) God's intentions--and what information we have, partially-muddled, of the efforts a particularly inspired messenger named Jesus made to clarify & carry out those intentions.
Worth searching for a clue or two, yes?
Comment by Nikolas Southwell on 2nd mo. 11, 2011 at 1:07pm
Comment by Tom Smith on 2nd mo. 11, 2011 at 2:13pm In fact, there was largely consensus on the canon long before it was adopted by any Council. This is one of the red herrings liberal Quakers throw around all the time. Of course, in fact, early Quakers rejected the idea of specifying a particular canon. However, they unquestionably accepted everything that is shared by all the major canons of the Christian church (there isn't just one canon - Protestants, Catholics and Orthodox each have slightly different ones).
We need to accept books of scripture as what they are and not impose some standard of our culture upon them. Liberals sometimes provide the other side of the coin to fundamentalists and use a literalistic view to reject scripture, Both sides of the coin are false! They encompass several varieties of literature and follow cultural patterns in writing literature of their time.
Scripture is full of different voices and different perspectives, starting with the first 2 chapters of Genesis with two creation stories, and continuing throughout. This makes it rich, and invites us to further explore within community. And it puts the lie to the notion that some Council imposed some monolithic view in approving a canon.
The non-canonical writings of the early Christian era were either not accepted by most of the early Christian communities as true to Christ's message (the various alternative "gospels" would be included here) or were considered valuable but not rising to the level of scripture (e.g., the Didache). I'm inclined to be respectful of the discernment of the early Christian church on these. This doesn't mean they are without value, but we should be suspicious when they contradict the official canon.
Quaker sympathizer Howard Thurman wrote that what the Bible says isn't true because it's in the Bible. It's because it's true that it is in the Bible. He said this while traveling among Hindus and Muslims in South East Asia as he recognized the Truth at work within them and recognizing that the Truth is expressed also in Hindu and Muslim Scriptures. For myself, I trust the guidance of the Bible, but not because it has the stamp of approval of certain councils. I trust its guidance because it reveals God to me. Other writings - both sacred and profane - can also reveal God to me. But the Bible has a special place in my life because it has most reliably revelaed God to me, and has historically revealed God to Quakers over the centuries. Therefore I trust it as the Word of God.
Comment by David Carl on 2nd mo. 11, 2011 at 10:10pm I've lost the name of this doctrine-- but I've recently read that it's a respectably ancient element within Christian theology: simply put, that God talks baby talk to babies.
So one finds mythology in ancient belief-systems, not because it necessarily carries deep meaning, but because constructing a mythology was the way that ancient peoples solidified their political connections with one another. [Our mythologies for that purpose lack gods and goddesses, but is that such a great improvement?] Much of what you find in early Bible stories is mythology in that political sense. But God too could talk that language!
Much of the Bible is saying, between the lines: "God really cares about human beings, intending to bring us into a more mutually-satisfactory communion as that becomes workable-- and the significance of these events and stories is that they are part of God's way of making that happen."
Moses reportedly had the stone tablets for a foolproof sacred law-- and then, arriving back in camp with them, he found everyone worshiping gold images-- and broke his tablets. A fit of anger?-- maybe partially. But really, this is when he realized that a perfect statement was not what people needed, that if you gave them one they'd just get it wrong and misuse it as well.
People have a lot of blind spots, and we haven't been that easy to communicate with. We learn something new, we forget something old... So I would not read the Bible as a theology text. But it's a great introduction to Divine/human interaction, and a handy reminder of our actual place in the world (another thing that human beings are continually getting wrong!)
Comment by Nikolas Southwell on 2nd mo. 12, 2011 at 1:01pm
Comment by Nikolas Southwell on 2nd mo. 13, 2011 at 4:03pm It takes many hours a month to sift through hundreds of websites to come up with this daily curated list of the best of the Quaker web. If you learn more about Friends and find joy and spiritual growth in the conversations these links provide, please consider supporting the ministry with a monthly subscription.
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James C Schultz commented on Doug Bennett's blog post 'Biblical Inerrancy Watch: the Evangelical Free Church of America'
Doug Bennett posted a blog post
Irene Lape commented on Irene Lape's blog post 'Daily Old Testament and Early Christian Writings: Numbers 31-32 and Origen's De Principiis: Book One - 6-7'
Irene Lape posted a blog postQuakerQuaker is a community of Friends exploring Primitive Christianity Revived: plain witness, ministry, beliefs. Quaker blogs, photos, videos & gatherings. Learn More.
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