lpetrich
Contributor
A decade ago, Catholic theologian John Haught did an interview with Salon magazine, The atheist delusion. Most of it was on various other things, like where he claimed that a consistent atheist has to be a nihilist, but he gave us this zinger:
The more conservative and fundamentalist Xians believe that JC's resurrection was literal, historical, and photographable. You could have gone back in a time machine to JC's tomb, and you could not only watch him walk out of it, but also film him doing so.
Some liberal Xian theologians seem to believe that his resurrection was not literal, photographable history, that JC stayed dead in his tomb. But they often express that opinion in weaselly ways and try to camouflage their rejection with rhetorical misdirection, like talking about the experiences of JC's followers. And John Haught seems to follow in that tradition.
So what do such theologians think? That JC's followers had lots of vivid dreams about him, wrote down those dreams, and then misinterpreted those dreams as literal history? Dream interpretation is found elsewhere in the Bible, like in the story of Joseph and the Pharaoh in Genesis 41, so there might be some precedent for that.
So is he trying to say that it's made-up to make people feel optimistic?What do you make of the miracles in the Bible -- most importantly, the Resurrection? Do you think that happened in the literal sense?
I don't think theology is being responsible if it ever takes anything with completely literal understanding. What we have in the New Testament is a story that's trying to awaken us to trust that our lives make sense, that in the end, everything works out for the best. In a pre-scientific age, this is done in a way in which unlettered and scientifically illiterate people can be challenged by this Resurrection. But if you ask me whether a scientific experiment could verify the Resurrection, I would say such an event is entirely too important to be subjected to a method which is devoid of all religious meaning.
What "conservative Catholic theologians" say that? And how long did they last before they were excommunicated? I'm baffled.So if a camera was at the Resurrection, it would have recorded nothing?
If you had a camera in the upper room when the disciples came together after the death and Resurrection of Jesus, we would not see it. I'm not the only one to say this. Even conservative Catholic theologians say that. Faith means taking the risk of being vulnerable and opening your heart to that which is most important. We trivialize the whole meaning of the Resurrection when we start asking, Is it scientifically verifiable? Science is simply not equipped to deal with the dimensions of purposefulness, love, compassion, forgiveness -- all the feelings and experiences that accompanied the early community's belief that Jesus is still alive. Science is simply not equipped to deal with that. We have to learn to read the universe at different levels. That means we have to overcome literalism not just in the Christian or Jewish or Islamic interpretations of scripture but also in the scientific exploration of the universe. There are levels of depth in the cosmos that science simply cannot reach by itself.
The more conservative and fundamentalist Xians believe that JC's resurrection was literal, historical, and photographable. You could have gone back in a time machine to JC's tomb, and you could not only watch him walk out of it, but also film him doing so.
Some liberal Xian theologians seem to believe that his resurrection was not literal, photographable history, that JC stayed dead in his tomb. But they often express that opinion in weaselly ways and try to camouflage their rejection with rhetorical misdirection, like talking about the experiences of JC's followers. And John Haught seems to follow in that tradition.
So what do such theologians think? That JC's followers had lots of vivid dreams about him, wrote down those dreams, and then misinterpreted those dreams as literal history? Dream interpretation is found elsewhere in the Bible, like in the story of Joseph and the Pharaoh in Genesis 41, so there might be some precedent for that.