Saturday, October 22, 2011

Thank You Bishop Spong

I've been reading columns by retired Episcopal Bishop John Shelby Spong for quite a few years. He is an important voice in modern Christianity and, though I often disagree with him about details, I have a lot of respect for him.

There's something that Bishop Spong says about what he calls the "God of theism" that has always bothered me. He seemed to be saying things about God that I disagreed with and I wanted to understand better. I once e-mailed him a question about it but never saw the answer in his column. It turns out that he did answer; I just found what he said in another blog. What he said helped me understand him better, and let me know that we are closer to agreeing than I realized.

Here are question and answer:

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Question and Answer
With John Shelby Spong

Matthew Baugh, via the Internet, writes:

I've wondered for a while about the definition of theism and its implications. There seem to be three central points you use most often. The God of theism is 1) external, 2) supernatural, 3) intervenes in human lives. Does this statement imply that God is the opposite of these three things?

Much of what you write suggests that this is clearly true of point 3. You present God as not intervening and not capable of intervening. The opposite of point 2 would seem to be that God is natural. Is this a correct assumption and, if so, how do you see God as manifest in the natural world? The opposite of point 1 would seem to be that God is internal.

I'm very aware that I might be reading too much into your words but the sense I get is that you suggest that God is internal to human experience. This seems to fit with some modern brain research that suggests that human beings are "hard-wired" to believe in some higher power and to worship it. This research suggests that belief in God is a natural part of being human rather than a social construct imposed from without.

Is this the non-theistic understanding of God? Internal, natural (though not manifest outside of human consciousness) and unable to intervene in the world (except perhaps through God's effects on the consciousness of each believer?)


Dear Matthew,

Thank you for your penetrating and perceptive letter that gives me an opportunity to think publicly once more about the meaning of the word "God" in human experience.

Let me begin by making a distinction. I try not to talk about the "God of theism." I regard theism as a human definition of God. It is not who or what God is. Theism is a human attempt to describe a God experience in pre-modern language. Prior to Copernicus, Kepler and Galileo, people inevitably thought of God as a supernatural presence over the natural world.

Before Isaac Newton, they thought of God as setting aside the laws of the universe to do miracles or to answer prayers. Before Darwin and Freud, they thought of God as the external creator and portrayed God as a heavenly parent. Prior to Einstein, they assumed that these perceptions were objectively true and not subject to the relativity in which all human thought dwells since both the time in which we live and the space we occupy are relative, not absolute. So when I dismiss theism, I am not dismissing God. I am dismissing one human image of God that sought to define a human experience of the divine.

To suggest that if theism is not true then the opposite of theism is true is to make the same mistake. Every human attempt to define God is nothing more than a human attempt to define the human experience of the divine. We can never tell who God is or who God is not. We can only tell another of what we believe our experience of God has been. Even then we have to face the possibility that all of our God talk may be delusional.

When I try to talk of God, I am only talking of my God experience. That is not what God is, that is only what I believe my experience of God to be.

I do not experience God as a supernatural power, external to life invading my world in supernatural power. I see no evidence to think this definition is real. The problem is that most people have most deeply identified this definition of God with God that when this definition dies the victim of expanded knowledge, we think that God has died.

I am not trying to form a new definition. I am only trying to share an experience. In my human self-consciousness at both the depth of life and on the edges of consciousness, I believe I encounter a transcendent other. In that encounter, I experience expanded life, the increased ability to love and a new dimension of what it means to be. I call that experience God and that experience leads me to say that if I meet God in expanded life, God becomes for me the source of life. If I meet God in the enhanced ability to love, God becomes for me the source of love. If I meet God in an increased ability to be all that I am, God becomes for me the ground of being.

I can talk about my experience. Having only a human means of communication I cannot really talk about God. Horses can experience a human being entering their horse consciousness, but a horse could never tell another horse what it means to be human. Somehow human beings have never quite embraced that fact that this is also true about the human being's knowledge of God.

I do not know how God acts therefore I can never say how God acts. For me to say God is unable to intervene would be to say more than I know. For me to explain how God intervenes or why God does not intervene is to claim knowledge of God that is not mine.

I test my experience daily in the light of evolving human language. The result of that is that every day I believe in God more deeply, while at the same time, every day I seem to have less and less beliefs about God. Human beings seem almost incapable of embracing mystery, especially ultimate mystery. I am content to walk daily with the mystery of God. I walk past road maps, past religious systems, even my own but never beyond the mystery of God. I suppose that makes me a mystic, but an uncomfortable, never satisfied, always-evolving one.

I find great meaning and great power in this approach. I commend it to you. Thank you for your super letter.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

A Prayer for Egypt

I heard some disturbing reports about violence in Egypt last week. As you probably know, Egypt was one of the first great successes of the Arab Spring when popular demonstrations managed to dislodge the dictator, Hosni Mubarak. I thought it was wonderful, and was heartened to hear young Arabs and Egyptians rejecting terrorism in favor of the power of peaceful protest.

Unfortunately, there is a dark side to the revolution. A month ago, Egyptian crowds attacked the Israeli Embassy, and just a few days ago saw a rash of anti-Christian violence.

According to reports, a radical Islamic group called the Salafis are targeting the Coptic Christians with several church burnings and acts of violence. The Copts, who have lived in the country since before the time of Muhammed, are upset by the transitional government's lack of action on the matter. To make matters words, a non-violent Christian protest was attacked by the army leaving at least 25 dead and nearly 300 injured.

The government blames a outside conspiracy that wants to destabilize the country while many on the street think the army may be encouraging chaos in a bid to remain in power. This isn't helped by a the fact that the government controlled media will not report the Coptic side of the story or broadcast any story that accuses government forces or Muslims of wrong-doing.

I believe there are many people in Egypt who want to see peace between the different religions, but it's an uphill battle. What looked like good news for all Egyptians may not be such good news for the religious minorities. Only time will tell. I hope that the prayers of the rest of the world will be with Egypt and the whole Arabic world, and I also hope that the eyes of the world will be on them. May peace prevail on earth but may that peace always include justice for all.

(NOTE: I put this entry aside for a week. In that time there have been huge developments in Libya where dictator Moammar Gadhafi has been killed. My concerns, and hopes, for that country are very much like those for Egypt.)

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Happy Halloween (early)


I'm a pastor but I've never seen the sense in the anti-Halloween sentiment that you find in some churches. Children dressing up as ghosts and witches is innocent fun (besides, these days it's more about superheroes and Disney princesses than spooky creatures).

Like anything else, Halloween can be made into what we want it to be. It can be just another excuse for a party, or it can be a time to have some quality time with the kids, or you can even find a lesson in it.

Here's something a parishioner pased on to me that I used in church today. I carved a pumpkin as an illustration. (Man, it's been too many years since I did that.)

THE JACK O'LANTERN PRAYER

"Pumpkin Prayer"

{cut off top of pumpkin}
Lord, open my mind so I can learn new things about you.

{remove innards}
Remove the things in my life that don’t please you.
Forgive the wrong things I do and help me to forgive others.

{cut open eyes}
Open my eyes to see the beauty you’ve made in the world around me.

{cut out nose}
I’m sorry for the times I’ve turned my nose at the good food you provide.

{cut out mouth}
Let everything I say please You.

{light the candle}
Lord, help me show your light to others through the things I do. Amen

By: Liz Curtis Higgs