lpetrich
Contributor
Opinion | Reverend, You Say the Virgin Birth Is ‘a Bizarre Claim’? - The New York Times - I stumbled across it when I was looking for something else.
Nicholas Kristof interviewed several people on how little of traditional Xian theology one can believe and still call oneself a Xian. I look at that and I think: is it really that hard? Jewish atheists, Hindu atheists, and philosophical Buddhists have no trouble being atheists inside their religious traditions.
He interviewed Serene Jones | Union Theological Seminary the head of that school for Protestant pastors.
About Jesus Christ's resurrection, she says that we can't know for sure whether or not it happened.
Then this zinger.
As to what happens to us when we die,
She also suspects that we are due for another Reformation, the original one being when the Protestant churches split off from the Catholic church.
Nicholas Kristof interviewed several people on how little of traditional Xian theology one can believe and still call oneself a Xian. I look at that and I think: is it really that hard? Jewish atheists, Hindu atheists, and philosophical Buddhists have no trouble being atheists inside their religious traditions.
He interviewed Serene Jones | Union Theological Seminary the head of that school for Protestant pastors.
About Jesus Christ's resurrection, she says that we can't know for sure whether or not it happened.
Then about the crucifixion,But that empty tomb symbolizes that the ultimate love in our lives cannot be crucified and killed.
For me it’s impossible to tell the story of Easter without also telling the story of the cross. The crucifixion is a first-century lynching. It couldn’t be more pertinent to our world today.
That's very far from traditional Xian theology.Crucifixion is not something that God is orchestrating from upstairs. The pervasive idea of an abusive God-father who sends his own kid to the cross so God could forgive people is nuts. For me, the cross is an enactment of our human hatred. But what happens on Easter is the triumph of love in the midst of suffering.
Another big departure. It also means that "God" cannot be described in any meaningful way. But she then goes on to do so.God is beyond our knowing, not a being or an essence or an object. But I don’t worship an all-powerful, all-controlling omnipotent, omniscient being. That is a fabrication of Roman juridical theory and Greek mythology.
SJ considers it much more "awesome" than the claim that JC spent three days in a tomb before rising from the dead and departing from it.The God of Easter is vulnerable and is connected to the world in profound ways that don’t involve manipulating the world but constantly inviting us into love, justice, mercy.
...
For me, the message of Easter is that love is stronger than life or death.
Then this zinger.
So she believes that Jesus Christ was conceived in the usual way. I wouldn't be surprised if she also believes that he was 100% human.I find the virgin birth a bizarre claim. It has nothing to do with Jesus’ message. The virgin birth only becomes important if you have a theology in which sexuality is considered sinful. It also promotes this notion that the pure, untouched female body is the best body, and that idea has led to centuries of oppressing women.
So prayer is pointless, at least in the sense of requesting favors from deities and other such entities.I don’t believe in a God who, because of prayer, would decide to cure your mother’s cancer but not cure the mother of your nonpraying neighbor. We can’t manipulate God like that.
As to what happens to us when we die,
She is sure, however, that nobody will be subjected to eternal punishment.I don’t know! There may be something, there may be nothing. My faith is not tied to some divine promise about the afterlife. People who behave well in this life only to achieve an afterlife, that’s a faith driven by a selfish motive: “I’m going to be good so God would reward me with a stick of candy called heaven?” For me, living a life of love is driven by the simple fact that love is true.
She also suspects that we are due for another Reformation, the original one being when the Protestant churches split off from the Catholic church.