i loved the da vinci code
i loved holy bood, holy grail
i even liked the less-well-written 'last templar'
but let's be honest
these portrayals of christians are demeaningly one-dimensional
authors just don't seem to "get" christians
they write us as being scared of the truth, fascinated by folklore, and deprived of all rationale thought in favor of ancient mysticism
for example,
in the last templar
a character makes mention that there is "proof" of the humanity [aka non-deity] of jesus christ
he goes on to state the obvious, that this is threatening to christians, and makes the assumption that we are threatened by the "truth"
and that we prefer the "experience" or "comfort of faith" over "the facts"
but this is where they get it all wrong
see, there is a difference between truth and meaning
things that are true can be proven to be true
but true things are not always meaningful
likewise,
meaningful things don't always have to be factual
[love, for instance, isn't a fact - it's a kind of experience]
the problem with dan brown and raymond khoum is that they think we count our experiences are proof of the veracity of christ's claims
which we don't
in fact,
we believe the teachings of the bible
because there is ample archaeological evidence and scholarly research to prove the worth of the text
despite all of the hullabaloo about the council of nicea and all the pseudopegraphic gospels [gospel of thomas, of mary, etc...]
the scholarly evidence overwhelming supports that the books in our bible are
- written by their claimant authors
- authoritative in local churches [beginning in 1st C palestine]
- consistent with history and biblical theology
- credible [in the case of the gospels] first-hand and/or eye-witness accounts of the life and times of jesus of nazareth
- withstand the rigors of textual criticism [i.e. there's proof that the books we have in our bible are actually the original books written by the original authors] far more so than those of plato, aristotle, or caesar's gaelic wars
in short,
there is real proof that the bible is real [aka a credible, historical document]
that's why we believe it to be true
furthermore,
there are always those who say that jesus never claimed to be the son of god
that this is a distortion of the church or pauline theology
but this is also complete bollocks
there could be no greater student of the hebrew scriptures
or one more fully commensorate with the followers of jesus
than paul
so, when paul traces the claims/miracles of jesus through the hebrew scriptures
[and, then, so does the anonymous author of hebrews]
we get a pretty solid evidentiary set
that,
yes,
jesus did make claims to be god
equal with god
and his teaching supports the idea of a trinitarian god ruling all of the kosmos
so,
again,
we believe in jesus' teachings as they are commonly understood by orthodox theologians
because they're true
but just because they're true doesn't make them meaningful
again - this is where i think our fictional authors get it screwed up
"they" think that "we" overlook the proof/factuality of [1] the biblical text & [2] the claims of jesus because we're scared that the proof doesn't lie on our side
i.e. if we really looked at the evidence, we'd be forced to give up on our superstitions
but this just isn't the case
the scholarly proof
by-and-large
supports the biblical story
we can thank our host of apologeticists for unmistakeably showing us that [lee strobel, josh mcdowell, et. al.]
and i think the reason those authors [brown, khoum, etc...] make that mistake is that they hear us talk about our experiences so passionately and assume that that's all there is to faith
but this is not so
the proof makes it true
but the experiences make it real
real.
the experiences make it real in a way that proof never can
the experiences make it meaningful
which is why we talk about our experiences of god
rather than the proof
particularly in a postmodern world
we've come to take "truth" for granted
and have become disullisioned with the meaninglessness of some "true" things
so, what we've come to want more and more and more
are things that are meaningful
christian spirituality is ferociously meaningful
the experience of god is life-changing
living guided by the holy spirit into a lifestyle of divine cooperation is a fundamentally altering path
which is why we talk about it so much
but let's not be confused
just because we talk about our "experiences" more than our "proof"
doesn't mean there is no proof
it just means that proof isn't enough to affect us
for that, we need something more
we need something real
we need to experience god for ourselves
Tuesday, April 24, 2007
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment