As an interested reader of your columns, I feel that you are
just about the only person I can pose this question to and expect an
intelligent response. The question has to do with whether or not God ever
intervenes in human history to heal individuals or stop natural disasters in
response to prayer. I am 71 years old and have lived most of life under the
ministry of Baptist churches that constantly insist that God heals and
answers prayers. In the reflection of my later years, I have come to wonder
if this makes any sense at all, or is even possible. If God is capable of
inserting himself (okay, herself) into human affairs and to change things in
response to prayers of petition, what is the best way to understand that
he/she sometimes does and sometimes doesn't? It can't be just the urgency
or the numbers of prayers, can it?
I have read Sam Harris' two books that question the very existence of God
and challenges the useful purpose of any religion. He does raise questions
that cannot be easily dismissed, such as why in all of human history, there
is no record of God ever healing an amputee by regenerating a limb or
changing a Down syndrome child to one of normal health. If God does or can
intervene, it is only in situations that can be otherwise explained as
natural phenomena? Or, deeper still, should we even think of a God capable
of inserting himself into human experience? Is "God" something else
entirely?
Your question is a primary and essential one and cuts
immediately to the essence of theological debate today. Yet it is one that
most people who identify themselves with evangelical Protestantism or
conservative Catholicism seem to think they can either ignore or repress.
They cannot. It is also a question that in order to address it adequately
would take a book, not a column.
Sam Harris' criticism of popular religion is right on target.
The weakness of his book is that he assumes that popular religion is what
Christianity is all about.
The intervening, miraculous God is built upon the old idea of
the record keeping Deity who lives above the sky and who swoops down on
earth to split the Red Sea, or to rain heavenly manna on the starving
Israelites in the wilderness. This is also the God who delights in sending
plagues on Israel's enemies, the Egyptians, and drowning them in that same
Red Sea.
This is also a God who apparently has not accepted the insights
of Isaac Newton about how the world operates. It is a world, not of precise
natural law, but of controlled chaos. Most theologians have long since
abandoned such a deity.
When people assert that God intervenes in human life to heal,
they must explain why God does that so sporadically. When people assert that
splitting the Red Sea was a miracle to save Jews from death, they must
explain why God allowed the Holocaust that destroyed Jews by the millions.
It is not a simple subject.
The only thing that needs to be said quickly is that the idea
that anyone knows who God is or how God works is ludicrous. What kind of
human folly is that? I do not think that a horse can describe what it means
to be human. Humanity is a dimension of life and consciousness that is
simply beyond that which a horse can embrace. Similarly, I do not believe
that human beings can describe what God is. The realm of God is simply
beyond that which the human mind can know. The Greek philosopher Xenophanes
once wrote that "If horses had gods they would look like horses!" Perhaps
one ought to observe that most of the deities that human beings have
worshiped throughout history have looked remarkably like human beings,
magnified and supernaturalized. We have no God language to use so we force
our God consciousness into human language. Only when that truth is
acknowledged and accepted can we even begin to answer your question.
The discussion must then turn to the nature of God, again
something we cannot know but about which we speculate endlessly. I believe
God is real, but my human mind and human language can never penetrate that
reality. So I cannot describe God, I can only describe my presumed God
experience and honesty compels me to state that I might be delusional. Only
at that point can we begin a discussion on the reality of prayer.
When I wrote a book entitled, "A New Christianity for a New
World," based on lectures I had given at Harvard University, I sought to
address the issues you raise. The book is almost 300 pages long. It
challenges most of the pre-suppositions of traditional Christianity. It
seeks to find new meaning for the most traditional symbols. It seeks to
move between what I call both the God experience and the Christ experience
which I believe are real and the way both the God experience and the Christ
experience have normally been explained, which are to me dated, inadequate
and generally unbelievable. Your question rises out of that mentality.
I hope this helps though it only scratches the surface of the
territory where an answer can be found. I want to assure you that your
question is the right question and that you are not wrong or weird to be
raising it. Those who continue to repeat the slogans of their religious
past as if they are still operative are wrong and they are increasingly
weird.
John Shelby Spong
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