Mclaren - A New Kind Of Christian
#3
Posted 20 March 2005 - 09:16 AM
#4 Guest_jeep_*
Posted 20 March 2005 - 09:45 AM
Cynthia, on Mar 20 2005, 08:02 AM, said:
Cynthia:
I am.I had a most interesting discussion of Spong's "A New Christianity for a New World" last year on this Board. It got down to just two of us, but that's ok. Im am currently studying "A Course In Miracles" with a distant learning group outside this Board, and fnd it fascinating!
Jeep
#5
Posted 23 March 2005 - 10:24 PM
I read the first two chapters at the store. I can't wait to finish it and move on to "A New Kind of Christian". Perhaps we could discuss both books here?
#6
Posted 24 March 2005 - 09:08 AM
#7
Posted 24 March 2005 - 10:00 AM
Quote
You felt you had to skip around to find good stuff?
I laughed so hard reading his introduction and his "Chapter 0 - For Mature Audiences Only" that I had tears coming out of my eyes. I got strange looks from customers at B&N I'll tell you!
I read the chapter on the "7 Jesuses" last night and found that I resonated the most with his "sympathetic interpretation" of the Catholic Jesus. The Liberal Jesus and tha Anababtist Jesus were a close second.
There is some stuff from the book that I want to share already, but I'm going to have to post it later, or I'm never going to get any work done.
This post has been edited by AletheiaRivers: 24 March 2005 - 10:01 AM
#9
Posted 28 March 2005 - 03:16 PM
Anyway, he quotes some CS LEwis stuff I haven't read... almost like Unity or CS (check me on this des) - kind of a fuzzy reality; the facts will appear when people need different answers ... any thoughts anybody? This is unappealing to me, but I keep running across it....
The list of characteristics of the modern age is interesting... much of the stuff we rail about, but he also lists that it *was* a "critical" age - where you were either right or wrong... that postmodern thinking may be more focused on being right with God... not just being right.
#10
Posted 28 March 2005 - 10:17 PM
--des
#11
Posted 29 March 2005 - 07:33 AM
Marcus Borg defines "worldview" as our image of reality--our image or picture or understanding of what is real and what is possible (HOC pg 62).
If you want to get more complicated, Panta in the panentheism thread mentioned "a shared worldview with its own metaphysical (ontological, epistemological, and cosmological) understanding."
We are emerging out of modernism and are adjusting our beliefs--on a world scale not just individually. First there is deconstruction eventually leading to reconstruction. Changing worldviews is a paradigm shift. See the Intro pg xi of NKOC.
"When a paradigm shift occurs, the whole frame of reference changes. Fundamental assumptions undergo transformation, with consequent alterations of all the rules and standards by which inquiry or conversation can occur. A new paradigm signals the emergence of a new worldview-new ways of seeing, interpreting, and making sense of the world and life." Weaving The New Creation, by James Fowler, pg 19
This is probably the single most important thing I learned from McLaren's book--understanding the worldview change and how it is affecting Christianity. HUGE piece of the puzzle for me.
#12
Posted 29 March 2005 - 07:48 AM
(Yes, it was from Chapter four... CS Lewis and McLaren.)
#13
Posted 05 September 2005 - 05:54 PM
#15
Posted 05 September 2005 - 08:56 PM
AletheiaRivers, on Sep 5 2005, 07:58 PM, said:
I've really enjoyed "Reaching for the Invisible God" by Phil Yancey.
Thanks for your quick response. I'm looking forward to reading the two you recommend.

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