davidk, on Jul 22 2008, 10:52 AM, said:
Jen,
Perhaps you can help straighten out what still appears to be a conflict.
1. The open system allows for revelational truths from God. You believe in "divine guidance". Could you please explain the differences and 2. how by your own analysis do you determine who is being led properly and who are not? Those that are not Jim Jones, please.
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3. I do not say the progressive position on the Bible never claimed whether or not you found "anything of value" from it, but that the P position does not believe it to be the propositional revelation from God. In other words, the Bible has value but is not "The Word of God".
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4. As far as science goes, was it your intention to say God's intervention is restrained by the physical world? If you don't mind, one more. 5. How can an 'event' be considered a miracle if it too must only happen in "the context of scientific laws and principles"?
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To extrapolate or summarize a position I may take on topics not addressed is too broad of an assumption to be reasonably made. However you may continue to criticize my position, the rant @ 10:07 only served to confirm my claim of P ideaolgy being unable to defend any position confirming a truine Godhead. You have not taken this question any further than my post #13 on June 7:
"Dear McKenna,
So by now I hope you have read enough on the Trinity to realize "Progressive" Christianity has no doctrine sustaining it; and for progressives adopting anything orthodox is incomprehensible."
Good morning, Davidk. I will try to answer the questions you posed, and for clarity's sake I have added numbers to the questions you posed.
1. To be clear, I believe in divine guidance. Also to be clear, I agree with JosephM about the cost to us when we, as human beings, attempt to put black-on-white labels on the complex issues we are discussing here. I do not personally use the label or even the concept of "open system" except in my discussions with you. "Open system" versus "closed system" is a mental construct you have chosen to use, Davidk, to help you refine your discussions. I am not obliged to use or defend your terminology.
I stated clearly in Post #58 that I believe we live in a complex quantum universe. This is neither a "closed system" by your definition, nor an "open system" by your definition. The quantum universe that I live in is the same quantum universe that leading scientists are pursuing in their studies. It is the post-Newtonian, post-Einsteinian universe that is informed by the 1982 results of Alaine Aspect
et al's experimental support for Bell's Interconnectness Theorem. It is the quantum universe where non-local effects ("spooky action at a distance," as Einstein disdainfully called it) are part of the scientific reality. The universe is as the universe is. To put it another way, God's universe is the Truth that JosephM describes. God's universe is beautiful to me, and the fact that I understand only the barest portion of it at a scientific level means that I have lots more scientific questions to pursue
in parallel to (not in opposition to) my questions about love and mystery and miracles.
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2. how by your own analysis do you determine who is being led properly and who are not? Those that are not Jim Jones, please."
Your desire to exclude the "Jim Jones" of this world from the discussion about who is being "led properly" is naive and inconsistent with the scientific facts about mental illness. There are and always have been many "Jim Jones" figures who have been tragically afflicted with major mental illness -- DSM-IV diagnoses such as schizophrenia, psychotic depression, uncontrolled manic episodes in bipolar disorder, along with Axis II issues of severe narcissism (a.k.a. grandiosity and delusions of power and specialness), and issues of substance abuse that can exacerbate the previously mentioned mental illnesses., not to mention full-blown psychopathy. These illnesses can be accompanied by hallucinations, delusions, atypical religiosity, and paranoia. It has not been uncommon in history for individuals suffering from these painful mental illnesses to claim they have been chosen by God to deliver God's people from suffering, or to herald the End Times. It is irresponsible and disingenuous to pretend that mental illnesses are separate from and unrelated to religious issues. A theologian who presumes to look at the issue of "revelatory messages" while failing to factor in the realities of psychotic delusions is IRRESPONSIBLE.
I agree with JosephM when he says, "And if one falls, will not that one be picked up by God who is the author and finisher of that which was started?" God is always there beside the mentally ill individual, since God is beside all God's children. JosephM also says, "If you 'ask the father for bread, God will not give you a stone'." I'm not quite sure what JosephM means here, but I understand this biblical statement to mean, "If you ask the father for bread, God might give you Zyprexa/olanzapine along with the bread to help your brain heal its psychosis."
I believe that God watches over every creature on Planet Earth, not just homo sapiens, but all life. I believe that God the Mother and God the Father, along with God's children (the non-corporeal beings I call souls or angels) are always guiding us, always helping us, always answering our questions. Therefore, Davidk, I do not agree with the position implicit in your statement that some people are "being led properly and [some] are not." The way you have worded this position makes it sound (at least to me) as if people can be divided into two camps: those whom Spirit leads properly and those whom Spirit deigns
not to lead properly. This makes it sound as if Spirit is selecting a chosen few to be leaders. As you may recall from past discussions between you and me, I do not believe at all in the idea of "chosenness" in our relationship with God. I do not believe that some groups or individuals or races are "chosen." I am certain that many groups and individuals and races
believe they are chosen by God,
believe they have been singled out to receive special deals and special covenants, but that is an issue related to narcissism, not spirituality.
God has no favourites. God loves all their children equally. God leads all their children equally.
But not all their children
listen equally.
Some of God's children here on Earth prefer not to pay any attention to the divine guidance and messages they continually receive from God. There is no absence of guidance. There is no "void" in the relationship when it comes to God's presence and participation in your life. If there is a void, or a sense on the part of a human being that God is not there, the problem isn't God's lack of presence. The problem is the individual human being's
refusal to accept the reality and intensity of God's loving hand.
In other words, I believe that all people are properly led. Our God is so loving and so amazing that it is impossible for our God to not lead us at all times and in all ways.
If you want to discuss the details of where we're being led and why, Davidk, then we're back to questions about atonement and salvation. I believe that "God don't make no junk," and that our souls are created in a state of perfection that cannot be erased, even when we behave like the biggest jackasses in history during our time of human incarnation. I think God is so amazing and so courageous and so brilliant that God could not possibly create a soul in a state of "original sin." I think that the problems we create for ourselves on Planet Earth stem from the way in which we choose to wire our biological brains. We intentionally set about to teach children to hate others (as opposed to loving others), to compete with others aggressively and narcissistically (as opposed to sharing our strengths with others), to treat status as the true meaning of "success" (as opposed to humble service and commitment within a loving community). We force our brains to be wired to these settings, and then we wonder why we can't hear the voice of God whispering to us right now!
3. 'The P position does not believe it to be the propositional revelation from God. In other words, the Bible has value but is not "The Word of God".'
This statement accurately reflects my personal position. I believe the Bible has value, but is not the only source of revelation from God. I look for God in all aspects and dimensions of life. I look for revelation in the beauty of a baby's grin. I look for revelation in the scent and velvety splendour of a bearded iris. I look for revelation in my dreams (most of my dreams are biological housekeeping dreams, but every once in a while I get a dream that has a message for me . . . if I can just figure the darned thing out!). I look for revelation in the hearts of the people I meet in my everyday life.
So no . . . when compared to all these marvelous wonders, one book just doesn't cut it.
4. "As far as science goes, was it your intention to say God's intervention is restrained by the physical world?"
No, this was not my intention. God the Mother and God the Father ARE the physical world. They are intimately entwined in the implicate order (the quantum universe). As Popeye might say, 'Thems that makes the "rules" can breaks the "rules."'
5. How can an 'event' be considered a miracle if it too must only happen in "the context of scientific laws and principles"?
Well, now, Davidk, I can tell by your question that you have not personally experienced what it feels like when a miracle is taking place around you. (If you have experienced a miracle, then I do not understand the combative nature of your question, in which you try to create a false dichotomy between miracles and science.)
A miracle, Davidk, is not an event that appears to contravene conventionally understood scientific laws and principles. By that definition, today's newest scientific finding is always yesterday's miracle.
A miracle is an intense emotional experience of God being right there with you. A miracle may or may not be accompanied by an unusual "event," such as a bullet that doesn't kill you when by all rights it should have. A miracle feels like -- are you ready for this? --
redemption. A miracle is a moment of intense emotional humbleness. It's the moment when you finally "get it." It's the moment when you realize you've been behaving like a complete shithead in your life, and God loves you anyway. I mean, God really . . . really . . . REALLY loves you and forgives you. It's the moment when you realize you are one of God's Original Blessings, and you're so overcome by humbleness and gratitude and TRUST in God that you simply must change your human choices. You simply must live up to your own potential to love and forgive others. God has given you a wondrous gift of love and forgiveness, and you just know deep in your heart and soul that you MUST "pay it forward."
It feels like grace. It is not the kind of grace that the apostle Paul talks about -- the kind that plops onto your head like an egg dropped there by the Holy Spirit. The miracle of a miracle is the deep bond of love and trust that is unquenchably forged between your heart and God's heart. It's hard to put into words, but you'll know it when you feel it. You cannot acquire a miracle, or pray your way into a miracle. The only way to feel this miraculous state of redemption is to
listen to what God is whispering to you about Divine Love and Forgiveness.
I am sorry if you have not felt this kind of bond in your relationship with God, Davidk. You attack others on this site because we are suggesting an integrated, balanced, holistic way of understanding what God is saying to us. You continue to compartmentalize the spiritual experience, to try to break it down into small little categories and labels. You are projecting onto us the fears you have about your own relationship with God. Part of you -- your true inner self, your soul, your heart, your best self -- knows there is a void in your relationship with God. You claim to feel the divine love, but your words and your actions speak to the fear you feel -- the fear that has been instilled in your mind by the conservative teachings you so vigorously attempt to uphold, the fear that you are not worthy of God's love.
You know, you may be surprised to hear this, Davidk, but I once held conservative views, both politically and religiously. I used to believe that crap in the Anglican Book of Common Prayer that goes, "We are not worthy so much as to gather up the crumbs under thy table."
If you're waiting for us to persuade you that you really are loved by God, then go ahead -- make God's day. Accept their love. Accept their forgiveness. Allow yourself to accept that Jesus was correct about the divine message of loving your God and loving your neighbour. It'll hurt when you open your heart (I won't deny it hurts when you start to feel the love), but God will help you through the pain if you really want the help.
I know because I've been there.
Love Jen
This post has been edited by canajan, eh?: 14 August 2008 - 10:28 AM