This time around we find some rather odd labor negotiations, we see Jacob up to his old tricks again using sympathetic magic to make himself rich (or maybe not), we have some fun at the expense of two thousand years worth of Bible commentators, and finally we witness a treaty that stood meaningless for a millennium.
Wednesday, December 24, 2014
Tuesday, December 16, 2014
Like, We Are Never Getting Back Together. Like, Ever.
Photo credit: Clarence Ji / Foter CC BY |
Let me clarify a bit before I confuse the reader. See, on my end I hold open the possibility that some form of Christianity may indeed one day somehow seduce me to return. I admit that it seems highly unlikely, but I'm not ready to say "never." The brain is a very curious and often fickle organ, susceptible to all kinds of things. Injury, delusion, hallucination, chemical imbalance, narcotics, or any number of things can completely alter cognitive processes. Not to mention the growing list of cognitive errors everyone remains susceptible to. And who knows? Maybe some form of Christianity has it right and I will discover this and become convinced of its truth. Maybe I'll reach a point where it just doesn't matter to me whether or not it's true and I embrace some iteration of it. I consider all of those things possible. I'm talking about what the Bible says, and the Bible agrees with the sentiment expressed by Miss Swift.
Sunday, December 14, 2014
The Convenience and Self-flattery of Apostasy
I suspect that the very existence of apostates might be a bit of an inconvenience for Christians. Not all apostates obviously. Many fit the preferred narrative quite well. These are the folks raised in the church who "go astray" some time around adolescence. It's easy to pick on these folks because their departure often coincides with a time in their lives when they begin questioning the legitimacy of the authority figures around them and rebelling. This also happens to be a time when their hormones begin strongly leading them to engage in thoughts and behaviors that are deemed "immoral" by most Christians. They make easy targets for dismissal.
I'm sure many of these teens really do just want to cast off the shackles of moral standards and do as they please. But there are doubtless others that sincerely wrestle with and reject the faith they were raised in because they realize how intellectually untenable it is. Once their access to things like the Internet become unfettered and they begin having contact with divergent views, this process is likely accelerated. For many their rejection of Christianity is a combination of factors and not merely a simplistic desire to "fornicate with impunity."
I'm sure many of these teens really do just want to cast off the shackles of moral standards and do as they please. But there are doubtless others that sincerely wrestle with and reject the faith they were raised in because they realize how intellectually untenable it is. Once their access to things like the Internet become unfettered and they begin having contact with divergent views, this process is likely accelerated. For many their rejection of Christianity is a combination of factors and not merely a simplistic desire to "fornicate with impunity."
Sunday, December 7, 2014
Complaining about the Exodus Movie
My series on the Pentateuch is plodding along rather slowly and I've still got about another twenty chapters to go before I even finish Genesis, but I'm going to take a break here and attempt a timely discussion of the first part of the book that follows it, Exodus.
You may have heard there's a film coming out this week that uses the early narrative portions of Exodus as its source material. Given the widespread promotion of the film across every platform known to man, you'd have to be living under a rock not to be aware of it. I've never been a fan of these biblical epics, with perhaps the exception of Ben Hur (1959), a film which only briefly intersects the biblical narrative.
When I was a Christian I would usually lament the lack of fidelity to the source material. Now that I'm not one, I'm mainly not a fan of the genre because the films tend to be either hugely slanted toward religious audiences or stand in some kind of half-way point of being critical while still conforming to the expectations of those same religious audiences because money. I suspect Ridley Scott's film will sit solidly in the latter category, though I'm willing to be proven wrong. I'd like to be able to enjoy these films the way I enjoy films like Clash of the Titans (the Ray Harryhausen version, of course), but until such time as the culture I live in can view Yahweh, Moses and Samson the same way they currently view Zeus, Odysseus and Heracles, I don't think I'm going to be able to truly enjoy a film adaptation of a biblical narrative. That's just me. Your mileage my vary.
The Ridley Scott film has already been criticized for its portrayal of events involving specific ethnic groups without casting people in the principal roles that even remotely resemble folks from those ethnic groups. That will not be what many Christians will criticize, however. I'm going to go ahead and address some criticisms from some in the Christian community. The first is the standard complaint that the film is not faithful to "biblical history." The second is how many will be quite put off by the way the deity is portrayed in the film. Some of the early reviews I've read have mentioned that Yahweh is represented by an eleven-year-old boy and that the decisions and actions of the deity are similarly immature and, to borrow Christian Bale's term, "mercurial."
Wednesday, November 19, 2014
The Boxers of Christianity
Deanna, a guest poster over at Neil’s Godless in Dixie blog,
has an excellent post up about the
narcissism of preaching. She paints an all-too-common portrait of members
of the clergy. I have trouble finding fault with it. My only counterpoint would
be to suggest something I’m sure she’d have no problem admitting. That is that
not all preachers completely fit that mold. Certainly some folks will be able to think of
exceptions to many of the otherwise spot-on characterizations she puts forward. The take-away for me is that this particular career path
undeniably shapes and attracts certain people that find great success, acclaim, honor and monetary
gain as a reward for traits like narcissism and megalomania. Of course there are
exceptions. There are probably some decent people in politics too. How does the
system treat them, though? Who fares better?
Tuesday, November 18, 2014
Mistakes of Moses Expanded Universe: Genesis 29:1-30:24
In this installment Jacob goes about acquiring a family while in the service of his uncle Laban. Herein we find an incredible feat of strength, more baffling gullibility, another warning about those tricky neighbors to the north, a curiously silent yet quite active deity, a sibling rivalry involving a uterine arms race with a couple of slave girls caught in the crossfire, the silliest excuses for names you ever did see, and we read between the lines a bit to see how good biblical writers copy, but great biblical writers steal.
Wednesday, October 29, 2014
Survey Says…
Ligonier Ministries recently teamed up with LifeWay to conduct a
survey about the theological views of Americans with a particular focus on evangelicals. I have a few thoughts on
both the survey itself and its results.
The partnership between a Reformed para-church publisher and
the retail arm of the Southern Baptist Convention probably suggests something about
the inroads neo-Calvinists have made within that denomination. This is no
surprise, of course. Al Mohler has been in charge of the SBC’s flagship
seminary (SBTS) for quite some time. Additionally, Calvinistic Baptists seem to
be the only ones within that denomination who are consistently serious about
theology. I might be inclined to argue that when Christian fundamentalism intersects
with middle class pseudo-intellectualism, Calvinism is the meme most fit to
rise to the top. It's difficult not to agree with my friend Neil who observes that it is largely just “gentrified religious extremism.”
Saturday, October 25, 2014
Presuppositional Atheism?
Once upon
a time, not so long ago, I was a Presuppositionalist. I've discussed this
briefly before, but having grown wary and suspect of the weaknesses of
apologetic methods like Thomistic arguments and evidentialism, I turned to the
seemingly-unassailable circularity offered by this “epistemology.” I just used scare quotes there because
Presuppositionalism probably isn’t as much of an epistemology as it is an apologetic
method (if it’s even that). The basic claim of Presuppositionalism is that the
Christian understanding of reality is the only internally consistent worldview
and that the propositions contained in the Protestant Bible, and implicitly the Westminsterian interpretation of those propositions, are to be taken axiomatically.
All other worldviews will fail the internal scrutiny of a reductio ad absurdum.
Monday, October 20, 2014
Mistakes of Moses Expanded Universe: Genesis 28:10-22
In this installment Jacob uses a magic rock to have an encounter with the deity, he has a curious response to Yahweh's promises while setting up a worship center in the wrong place, and we attempt to peel back the curtain a bit and show what source-critical scholars have been aware of for a while now.
Tuesday, October 14, 2014
Elijah and the Apologist of Baal
I Kings 18:17-40
And Ahab went to meet Elijah. And it came to pass, when Ahab saw Elijah, that Ahab said unto him, “Art thou he that troubleth Israel?”
And he answered, “I have not troubled Israel; but thou, and thy father's house, in that ye have forsaken the commandments of Jehovah, and thou hast followed Baalim. Now therefore send, and gather to me all Israel unto mount Carmel, and the prophets of Baal four hundred and fifty, and the prophets of the groves four hundred, which eat at Jezebel's table.” So Ahab sent unto all the children of Israel, and gathered the prophets together unto mount Carmel. For even though this was a ridiculous request, Elijah was some kind of svengali.
And Ahab went to meet Elijah. And it came to pass, when Ahab saw Elijah, that Ahab said unto him, “Art thou he that troubleth Israel?”
And he answered, “I have not troubled Israel; but thou, and thy father's house, in that ye have forsaken the commandments of Jehovah, and thou hast followed Baalim. Now therefore send, and gather to me all Israel unto mount Carmel, and the prophets of Baal four hundred and fifty, and the prophets of the groves four hundred, which eat at Jezebel's table.” So Ahab sent unto all the children of Israel, and gathered the prophets together unto mount Carmel. For even though this was a ridiculous request, Elijah was some kind of svengali.
Sunday, October 12, 2014
Mistakes of Moses Expanded Universe: Genesis 27:1-28:9
In this installment, which we could begin calling "The Old and the Restless", Jacob continues his trickery with the help of his shifty Aramean mother; Isaac makes a careless blunder when casting a spell; Esau gets a really raw deal again because, well, Yahweh just hates him; and then all four main characters act like none of it ever happened.
Monday, October 6, 2014
Ignore what I said about myself; you’re going to anyway
I dislike much
about what professional apologist William Lane Craig does and says and
that dislike extends back to well before my departure from the Christian
faith.
As a good, thoughtful Calvinist I found his philosophical approach to
Libertarian
Free Will, known as Molinism, to be highly flawed and clearly at odds
with
scripture and sound reasoning. I always thought he played fast and loose
with
the clear meaning of the texts of the Bible in order to make his
evidentialist
defenses of Christianity and it pissed me off. What can I say? I was an
Angry
Bearded Calvinist™ without the beard. Well, WLC continues to piss me off
because
of his disingenuousness and deliberate obfuscation and I’m not the only
one.
Bart Ehrman is understandably incensed by this old post from Craig that someone must’ve brought to his attention recently. In it Craig
straight up lies about Ehrman’s personal biography, claiming that it was Ehrman’s
rejection of biblical inerrancy that led to his deconversion. That’s just…I can’t…no.
Anyone remotely familiar with Ehrman’s story should know better, but especially
someone who knows him personally and has actually directly engaged Ehrman in a
pitched debate. He’s been pretty open about it. How open? Well, he wrote a friggin’ book about it. Now, in fairness to WLC, that book came out after this
post. However, as Ehrman points out, the man had access to Ehrman’s email
address. He could’ve just asked him. He didn’t. He just went ahead and
attributed whatever motives and reasons best fit his own preconceived ideas.
Sunday, October 5, 2014
Mistakes of Moses Expanded Universe: Genesis 26
Just picking up a Bible and reading chapters like this one might make a reader come away yawning. Isaac goes to the territory of the Philistines to escape a famine, lies about his wife being his sister, gets rich in the process, develops a rivalry with the locals, gets into a dispute over some wells and settles things with a treaty. When taking other passages into account, however, there are a lot of interesting discrepancies.
Thursday, September 25, 2014
Whenever I hear Christian apologetics...I reach for my Bible
It's true. And yes, I just adapted an oft-misquoted line from a Nazi play for the title of this post. I figured I'd go ahead and get Godwin out of the way from the outset.
It is my opinion that the greatest impediment to the intelligibility of the Christian faith is, in fact, its foundational set of documents. Far from being an asset, the Bible is theAchilles' heel soft underbelly of most Christian systems of belief, especially the more fundamentalist ones. It is my observation that the more reliant upon the Bible a brand of Christianity is, the more easily it is collapsed upon itself. Even brands of Christianity that aren't closely tied to it like Catholicism, Orthodox Christianity, and Mainline Liberal Protestantism largely fall victim to it as well, often via the very arguments those other denominations more closely tied to the Bible would use against them. Time and again the Bible will contain material that just completely wrecks otherwise coherent systems of Christian doctrine and often the heavy-lifting has already been done by some other group within Christianity.
It is my opinion that the greatest impediment to the intelligibility of the Christian faith is, in fact, its foundational set of documents. Far from being an asset, the Bible is the
Monday, September 22, 2014
Mistakes of Moses Expanded Universe: Genesis 25
In this installment Abraham dies (or does he?) but not before knocking up a concubine to the tune of six more sons, Rebekah needs divine intervention to get pregnant and immediately regrets that decision, and Yahweh hates a guy before he's even born.
Thursday, March 20, 2014
Counting the Sunken Costs
"For which of you, desiring to build a tower, does not first sit down and count the cost, whether he has enough to complete it? Otherwise, when he has laid a foundation and is not able to finish, all who see it begin to mock him, saying, ‘This man began to build and was not able to finish.’ Or what king, going out to encounter another king in war, will not sit down first and deliberate whether he is able with ten thousand to meet him who comes against him with twenty thousand? And if not, while the other is yet a great way off, he sends a delegation and asks for terms of peace." - Luke 14:28-32The Lucan Jesus makes a valid point here (although it doesn't really work within his larger point, but that's another story altogether). Before beginning an endeavor it is a good idea to perform an assessment and reasonably estimate whether or not you have the resources and ability to see it through. But what if you've already started building the tower and you realize it's pointless and a foolish waste of time? What if you've already attacked that king and now you realize that not only are you fighting a losing battle, but you're on the wrong side? Do you continue building? Do you keep fighting? Do you count the sunken costs?
But the foundation was good...unlike Christianity |
After announcing my departure from Christianity a pastor remarked to me that he wouldn't be so quick to cast off a faith that he had spent over twenty years actively involved in without seriously examining "the most recent scholarship" produced by people within his particular iteration of Christianity. This was part of a pitch to stall and get me to invest incalculable time going through what turned out to be a ton of additional theological and apologetic material, or as he put it “enough reading for a semester at RTS [Reformed Theological Seminary].”