Belief Net is currently offering a self-administered theological inventory.
You answer a series of theological questions and end with a score that
places you in one of five categories along a spectrum ranging from atheism
to fundamentalism. Each of the five categories is characterized by typical
beliefs, plus the name of a prominent American churchman whose teaching and
preaching are examples of that style of belief. You will be relieved to
learn that you are the poster boy for the most liberal category, next to
atheism at the end of the spectrum.
With all due respect to my friends at BeliefNet, that chart is both
misleading and profoundly inadequate to ascertain any data about anyone,
primarily because they do not define any of their terms. For example,
strictly speaking, atheism does not mean asserting that there is no God. It
is rather an assertion that the theistic understanding of God has become
unbelievable. That is a distinction that the people at BeliefNet do not
understand.
We are in our world today in a period of intense theological upheaval.
That upheaval is characterized by both a rise in fundamentalism and a
corresponding increase in the number of people who reject all religious
symbols as no longer meaningful. So we have religious fanaticism confronting
an increasingly secular society. In this divisive atmosphere, there are the
Jerry Falwells and Pat Robertsons on one side and the Richard Dawkins' and
Sam Harris' on the other.
I find myself generally in agreement with the criticisms of organized
religion, including Christianity, leveled by Richard Dawkins and Sam Harris.
Their biggest problem is not their criticism, which I find quite accurate,
but that the Christianity they reject is a very poor representation of what
Christianity was meant to be. It is because they know no other Christianity
than this popular expression, they believe that atheism is the only viable
alternative to the Christianity they have known and rejected. They have
never explored the essence of Christianity because that essence lives in
such tiny and hidden places. I think the theism of popular Christianity is
dying and that is why many people think Christianity is dying. The idea that
God is a supernatural being, who inhabits outer space somewhere and who
occasionally intervenes in this world in miraculous ways, is not a credible
concept to me. Since this is the only concept of God that many people can
imagine, they see atheism as the only viable alternative. Nothing reveals
better the bleakness of so much of contemporary Christianity.
I am a believer who is not a theist. Some people mistakenly assume that
an atheist is the same thing as a non-theist. Nothing could be further from
the truth. If anything, I am a god-intoxicated human being, perhaps even a
mystic. I experience God as 'Other,' as 'Transcendence,' as 'Depth,' and as
the ultimate meaning of life. I believe that humanity and divinity are not
separate categories, but represent the eternal spectrum of human experience.
Divinity is the depth dimension of humanity. I see this God presence lived
out in the human life of Jesus of Nazareth. I search the Scriptures to find
images of God that transcend the theistic images of the childhood of our
humanity; the old man in the sky with the magic power that permeated
primitive religious thought. I find it in the unwillingness of the ancient
Jewish writers of our sacred story to have the name of God spoken by human
lips since no human mind can embrace the reality of God sufficiently to
speak the divine name. I see it in the Jewish commandment that we are never
to make an image of God since nothing made with human hands or constructed
by the human mind can finally be big enough to capture the Holy God. Yet
religious people constantly think that the human creations of scripture,
creeds and doctrines have somehow embraced the wonder of the holy. These
are nothing more, however, than verbal "graven images." I find the Bible
in some places is reduced to defining God in impersonal images because the
personal ones become so false when literalized. So God is defined in what I
call the minority voices of the Bible as like unto the wind, the rock and
even as the power and source of love.
When human beings talk about God, all they are really doing is talking
about their human experience of God. When that truth is faced, certainty of
expression disappears but the experience of God does not. I wish not only
that the people at BeliefNet, but also most religious reporters in our
newspapers and above all the radio preachers, were aware of and could
embrace that human limitation.
John Shelby Spong
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