Beautifully Entangled

Column by Rev. Dr. Mark Sandlin on 24 June 2021 3 Comments

Could it be, as some psychologists suggest, that ‘pure’ altruism doesn't exist? According to them, when we help strangers, there is always some benefit to us personally, even if we’re not aware of it. This could include gaining respect from others, helping us feel good about ourselves, or for some Christians it could increase our chances of getting into heaven.

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Question

Why follow Jesus and worship him if you don't believe all of scripture?

Answer

Dear Ellie,

Great question, and a familiar one given our traditional understanding of the authority of scripture.  If any part of the Bible can be proven to be inaccurate, or impossible to take literally, then doesn’t the credibility of whole Bible collapse?

This is the reason why so much effort goes into claims that there are “no historical errors in the Bible.”  It is the “hole in the dike” theory.  Any crack in the infallible façade of scripture will ultimately lead to the collapse of the whole witness, including all claims about Jesus.

But perhaps it would be helpful to think of it this way.  If it could be proven that George Washington never chopped down a cherry tree and then refused to lie to his father about it, would that mean he was no longer the father of our country?  If the well-known tale about Abraham Lincoln walking three miles to return a penny is a myth, does it mean that he is no longer a towering figure in American history who signed the Emancipation Proclamation?   Of course not.  Likewise, if there are exaggerations, alterations, and myths in the gospels, would Jesus of Nazareth disappear as a spiritual exemplar, the definitive revelation of the love of God for millions?  The accuracy of written records can never fully determine the story of central figures in human history.  We can’t get things right in a newspaper story about things that happened yesterday.

Instead of elevating the written record over all else, we should also examine the obvious effects of such figures on those whose lives were changed, or in whose memory enduring and transformational communities were founded.  I have long believed that our focus should not be entirely on the text itself, but on the behaviors of those who followed Jesus, especially the counter-cultural witness of the early church.  I believe Jesus wanted to be followed, not worshiped, so the ultimate credibility of any Jesus Community resides in its good works and its radical commitment to inclusion and nonviolence.  When you see that, you can believe.

~ Rev. Dr. Robin R. Meyers

 

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