Thursday, July 31, 2008

Glimpses of the Drower Collection

For those interested in Mandaean studies, the Drower Collection in the Bodleian Library in Oxford is the only collection of Mandaic manuscripts of its kind in a Western library. Although poking around the library's web page doesn't provide much information about the collection, one can see glimpses of the manuscripts in photos taken as part of a survey of the condition of conservation of Asian manuscripts in the library's possession. The photo on the right is of Alma Rišaia Rba (The Great ‘First World’) DC (i.e. Drower Collection) 42. There are also photos of DC 36, The Thousand and Twelve Questions.

The Latest Dharma Initiative Video

The latest Dharma Intitiative video was shown at ComicCon, and there are several bootleg recordings of it on YouTube.


I'm currently on a computer without speakers, and so I'm grateful that BuddyTV has a rundown on the contents of the video. Apparently it makes even clearer that we have a "time war" going on (as someone from the future already revealed to me a while back). Obviously the power to know the future, and/or to change the past, is one that people would fight, kill and die for.

It is nice that the internet and video games are being taken more seriously by the makers of TV shows and movies, as ways of continuing the story outside of the films and episodes themselves. If nothing else, these help keep fans interested during the painfully long waits between seasons.

Quote of the Day (Stephen J. Nichols)

"Contemporary Christian Music...represents for many contemporary evangelicals the sum of their theological training and discipleship" (Stephen J. Nichols, Jesus Made in America: A Cultural History from the Puritans to the Passion of the Christ (Downers Grove: IVP, 2008) p.16).

The Lure of Sithendom

In my last post I did not intend to suggest that one can make a facile equation between religious fundamentalists and the Sith. In fact, I think that the "religious Right" of our time has much in common with the Sith at their most sinister, and the Jedi at their most hypocritical.

In comparison with the Sith, recall how Palpatine used Anakin's fear of death - the death of his beloved Padme - and of losing what he had. The desire to cheat death and the promise that this can be accomplished has been manipulated by lots of religious groups to win adherents. And when one throws in the promise of powerful miracles that will make your problems go away, you have not merely fundamentalism, but that of the televangelists whose Bibles apparently contain a misprint and say "Go, sell all you have and give to the rich".

No religious tradition can avoid the potential for exclusivism that leads to fundamentalism of sorts. Anakin's "If you're not with me, you're my enemy" sounds rather like the words attributed to Jesus, "Whoever is not with me is against me". Yet elsewhere, Jesus is recorded as saying something much more inclusive: "Whoever is not against me is for me". Trying to hold to both will simply have you running in circles. In the end, it may not be that goodness is self-authenticating as good, but that the struggle is to define as good that which is loving and selfless and kind, to define it as good first for ourselves, and then to seek to win others to that point of view. For as Obi-Wan said, much depends on one's point of view.

As for the Jedi, they often traded in absolutes too. The dark side is too dangerous. Once you start down that path, it will forever control your destiny. It is not the Jedi way to kill prisoners. But Yoda's words about the dark side proved false: one can come back. And when confronted with a dangerous Sith, Mace Windu was willing to cast aside principles and kill Palpatine.

There is nothing wrong with Christians having ideals that we regularly fail to attain. That is as it should be. It is when we pretend we achieve them and are judgmental on those who differ from us only in that they got caught that we become hypocrites, driving people to give up not only our hypocrisy but the ideals with it.

Luke Skywalker redefined the Jedi way. He "brought balance" (with his father's help), finding that he could love and be attached, without sacrificing all his values and who he is in order to save his sister at any cost. That's the great challenge: to not become what we are fighting against as we fight.

The greatest struggle is not to defeat evil. The greatest struggle is to hold to that which is pure and noble as good, and to not cast it aside in an attempt to defeat those who seem to have cast it aside themselves. For the challenge of our great epic stories - whether that of Jesus or that of Luke Skywalker - is to not repay evil for evil, but to overcome evil with good.


The Dark Side of Christianity

I just watched Return of the Jedi again. It always gets me thinking. It seems to me that Christianity has a dark side, just like the Force. Like the Force, it is powerful, but its power takes on different characters depending on those who seek to use and experience it for good or evil ends. And of course, this means that somehow we have to discover a way of discerning good Christianity from bad, just as with the Force or with any religious tradition. This is the thing that undermines many good Jedis and turns them into Sith, and many good Christians and turns them into fundamentalists. If one simply follows the power, then the dark side may seem to bring its own evidence. That's where the power is, so it must be right. How can we counter such logic?

Are things like love, kindness, patience and self-control self authenticating as being good? If not, how is a Jedi, or a Christian, or anyone else to find his or her way?

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Around the Blogosphere

Ken Brown has been invited to join the Dharma Initiative. If you talk to Ken, tell him I've heard that a man named Sayyid Jarrah is looking for him. But seriously, do check out the Dharma Wants You site. If nothing else, it is one more thing to do to pass the time until LOST returns.

Ken Schenck continues hissurvey through James D. G. Dunn's Partings of the Ways, this time focusing on the chapter about "Jesus and the One God".

Quixie has interacted with a post of mine.

Theolog has a post on the problem of the non-problem of evil.

April DeConick has blogged about "those exclusive Gnostics."

Drew has reposted an earlier post on atheism, the wager, the burden of proof and the qualitative leap.

Henry Neufeld has a post about Uncommon Descent.

Internet Monk has book recommendations for post-evangelicals.

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

A Great Question That Brought Someone Here

There have been and continue to be lots of great, insightful, amusing, and even bizarre keyword searches that bring people here. But this one is worth noting and reflecting on. Someone typed into a search engine:


That is a marvellous question, one that has the potential to burst the whole End Times hype approach to the Bible and Christianity like the abnormally inflated balloon full of hot air that it is.
Why do so many who supposedly revere and respect the Bible demean it by treating it as thought it is the sort of vague fit-all pseudoprophecy of the sort that prognosticators have always come up with so that no one could ever say they were wrong, always vague enough that something would fit? This fundamentalist approach, rather than honoring the Bible, makes it into the sort of "prophecy" that Woody Allen famously parodied with his prediction "Two nations shall go to war, but only one shall win".

Also, as a great post on Experimental Theology noted (which I drew attention to a while back), all this Left Behind nonsense assumes that the antichrist is clever enough to deceive the whole human race, but not to read the Book of Revelation and do a few things differently to at least try to avoid ending up at the fate predicted. As that post puts it:

So you have to figure, on the eve of the battle, that he might think back on his whole life, where each step has been predicted in perfect detail, and wonder, "Hmmmm. Maybe I shouldn't fight this battle tomorrow on the plains of Armageddon. Seems like a bad idea. Maybe I should, well, CHANGE TACTICS! Fight the battle somewhere else. Like Boise, Idaho."
So why doesn't the Bible just say "The antichrist's name will be Barack Obama, and I'm telling you in advance so that Christians won't try to prevent his election and thus screw up the prophecies and delay the rapture"? Because it doesn't actually make any of the sorts of long-term predictions that are sometimes claimed. It certainly applies texts with the benefit of hindsight to new situations. But the only seemingly precise "prophecies" that (more or less) consistently get things right are those in the Book of Daniel, and that's the very reason for dating the book not in the time of the Persian Empire, but the time of the Maccabean Revolt, up until which time it follows the course of events with increasing detail, and after which it predicts the end of the world and the final resurrection. So-called "Bible believing Christians", in their utter disrespect for the Bible, force the Bible to be "right" by inserting in such places leaps into the distant future that are not mentioned in the text (which they supposedly wish to adhere to), and treat phrases like "at that time" as if they were the equivalent of "fast forward".

The irony in it all is that the author of Revelation did tell readers who the Beast was. It gave a code that early Christian readers could and did crack, but the Roman authorities would in all likelihood miss. He who had ears to hear heard, but since then, Christians who can't believe the Bible wasn't written directly for them continue to misread, misconstrue, and misinterpret. And they do so because of an egotism and a prideful certainty about "what the Bible means" that are perhaps more directly and more obviously at odds with the Bible's teaching than all their End Times speculation.

Happy Birthday, NASA!

Actually, I suppose today is more the day to celebrate NASA's conception rather than its birth. But still, it is an important thing that occurred 50 years ago today. On this day in 1958, president Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the creation of the National Aeronautic and Space Administration into law. It is hard to imagine that a mere half a century ago so much that we now take for granted was just a dream...

Bucket List of the Evangelical Nation

The movie The Bucket List is a moving tale about two people who meet in the hospital, both having been diagnosed shortly before with terminal cancer, and given 6 months to maybe a year to live. I happened to watch the movie at just about the same time as I read and finished Christine Wicker's book The Fall of the Evangelical Nation (New York: HarperOne, 2008). Since her book suggests that Evangelicalism in America is also a terminal case, I thought it would be interesting to reflect on the movie and the book together. Indeed, since the very notion of a "bucket list" is to consider what you'd most want to do before you "kick the bucket", it seems that it might be appropriate for Evangelicalism to start working on its own "bucket list".

Evangelicalism has, of course, always placed an awareness of mortality quite central to its message. Indeed, the challenge "If you died tonight, would you go to heaven?" is a staple of Evangelical preaching. But that is a matter of individual mortality. What should the Evangelical movement in the fundamentalist form it has taken throughout much of the twentieth century do in the face of the possible death of the movement? Is it confident that it will be viewed by God in a way that merits a "Well done, good and faithful servant"? Will it be remembered by future generations of humans as a blessing or a blight on human history? Of course, Evangelicals have become well trained at ignoring popular opinion, and that is at once a great strength (since the majority is often wrong) and a great weakness (inability to hear criticism has certainly been known to contibute to an early demise).

Wicker's book is about the fact that Evangelical Fundamentalists or "the Religious Right" are not as numerous, and are not doing nearly as well as their publicity would have us believe. Wicker's investigations led her to learn from the statistics and spokespeople of various denominations that their numbers were inflated. While some claimed as many as one in four Americans was an Evangelical, it turned out that double counting, counting those coming in but not taking notice of departures, "sheep shuffling" and other factors suggest that those who actually hold a bare minimum of fundamentalist religious beliefs are perhaps 7% of Americans, and a quarter of the numbers claimed by and perhaps in some way associated with Evangelical churches. And in terms of their moral behavior, there are few statistical differences between Evangelicals and others, and that seems to have been the case as long as statistics have been kept. What that means is that Evangelicals have made claims to be different, to be upright in a way that the rest of society is not, that do not correspond to reality (pp.80-82). When a major "conservative" figure is caught in hypocrisy, we should not be surprised. What is remarkable is that, when so many have been caught, the myth of difference and the facades that often hinder rather than help it continue.

Among the shocking suggestions in Wicker's book is that moderate and progressive Evangelicals outnumber the right wing by 1% (p.54). That means that if the moderates and liberals can find their voice and the courage to use it, fundamentalists could lose their hold over most denominations! Evangelicals are often thought of as the fastest growing religious group in the U.S. In fact, they are only growing compared to mainline denominations (newer denominations normally do better than older ones), and are not keeping up with the rate of population growth. The category that is really growing is that of non-believers (p.53). But it should also be noted that those leaving conservative Evangelical churches are in many cases doing so for profoundly spiritual reasons, because they are persuaded that God is not as depicted by fundamentalists (pp.125-126).

How is it, then, that there are such loud and indeed powerful voices for fundamentalism? Part of it is that being loud and talking tough can do much to counter being outnumbered. Of course, in the schoolyard we call that bullying. Part of the story is that fundamentalists are so good at making others feel like they ought to believe and live as they do (or claim to, in the case of the live part). But part of it is the power of religious experience and of a grand narrative that claims to make sense of it all. As Wicker writes, "Hardly anything is more important to human identity than the stories we tell about life and about ourselves...Without identity humans are lost...People will starve to death without lifting a finger against those who have food but will murder over an event that happened one hundred years ago" (p.155).

What makes Wicker's book so powerful is that she tells the stories of fundamentalist Evangelicals sympathetically even though she is an ex-Evangelical herself. On the one hand, she notes that the power of Evangelicalism seems to be available without the doctrine: the Twelve-Step program of Alcoholics Anonymous discovered that surrender to a Higher Power works even if the notion of that Higher Power is vague, or is clear but different from the Christian one. If the Apostle Paul's argument about the Gentile Christians is anything to build on, we could ask "Does God transform your lives because you accept fundamentalist beliefs, or because you surrender to a higher power?" Where might such a line of reasoning take us?

Wicker also appreciates the role of Evangelical beliefs and practices in her own life (pp.202-203). Prayer and seeing God's hand in things enabled her to find "blessings" where she might not have looked hard enough to see them had she not had an Evangelical worldview. So perhaps the question Evangelicalism needs to ask itself is, if we can have the power of counting our blessings without the dogma that repels and divides, just what reason is there to cling to the dogma? Thankfully, significant numbers of Evangelicals as well as other strands of Christianity seem to be asking just such questions.

This brings me back to The Bucket List. Carter (one of the two main characters) is clearly a Christian, as is his family. He is faithful to his wife, not because he feels obligated by a watching eye from heaven but because he is loyal. He talks about God as creator and about afterlife, but includes Egyptian beliefs in the discussion of the latter, and doesn't claim to know "where the river goes" as it flows beyond this life. He doesn't call for his new friend Edward, who is bitter and alone to say a sinner's prayer in order to be sure he'll get to heaven. He challenges him to find the joy in his life.

This is the message and an expression of the faith of most Christians, if Wicker's book is anything to judge by. In a sense, this movie is "evangelistic", but for that non-dogmatic perspective that emphasizes not dogma but love, family, relationship, compassion, loyalty, and other things that are not the sole property of Christians, and which fundamentalist dogma is sometimes even a hindrance to.

The movie's challenge is that we all, at some point in our life, might make a "bucket list", a list of things we'd like to do before we die, that focuses on things or places, on achievements or accomplishments. But when actually confronted with death as an actual, imminent and inevitable reality, for most of us it all comes down to people. The happiest people are those who realize this before they have six months to live and know it. But for many people, what they pursue are things to distract from their lack of true joy.

That's the message of Christianity, when you take away the things that we cannot really be certain about and the things that people disagree about. And it would make sense to put proclaiming that message high on Evangelicalism's bucket list. If we do, then the various movements and offshoots that are arising out of and in reaction to fundamentalist forms of Evangelicalism may look back on its legacy and remember it fondly, even though they would not resurrect it even if they could. It is too late to salvage Evangelicalism's reputation to that extent (Wicker notes on p.143 that Evangelicals rank just above prostitutes in how outsiders esteem them). But as The Bucket List suggests at one point, perhaps the measure of a life, and of a movement, is to be found in those who measure themselves by us.

There are plenty of people out there who, to echo the words of Jesus, Evangelicalism has made into "every bit as much a son of perdition as ourselves". But as Edward Cole found, it is not too late to discover what really matters, even at the end. So what should Evangelicalism (and the Protestant mainline, for that matter) put on its "bucket list"? What would you put on yours?

Monday, July 28, 2008

Obama Has Come, Just as the Prophets Foretold

I thought I had finished with the subject of Barack Obama, who for some is a Messianic figure, while for others he is the antichrist.

Apparently not.

The Times Online in the UK has a wonderful humorous telling of the 'Obama Gospel' in Biblical fashion, entitled "He ventured forth to bring light to the world". You should definitely take a look.

HT Scotteriology

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Data and the Skywalkers

Does anyone know if the religious themes of science fiction films and TV shows is going to be the subject of a panel discussion or other organized event at any upcoming conventions? I'm just wondering. I'd also be interested to know of any articles, books, documentaries or other projects in the works on this subject, which you all know is of ongoing interest to me.



I also overheard (sitting in CiCi's Pizza recently) that Brent Spiner (a.k.a. Lt. Cmd. Data from Star Trek: The Next Generation) has released an album. I've also heard that Mark Hammil appears on the album.

Saturday, July 26, 2008

Best of Blogging Barack

Here's a run down of my posts on Barack Obama so far:

How I Know Barack Obama is NOT the Antichrist
Take The Barack Obama Blasphemy Challenge
Left Behind With Obama
Around the Blogosphere (Barack Obama the Antichrist?)
If Barack Obama is Anti-American, You Will Become a Millionaire
Obama Confesses to Being Hindu Muslim Antichrist
Obama's Faith...In Hanuman?

I still get lots of visitors searching for Barack Obama and keywords like "antichrist", "Nicolae Carpathia" and even "Gematria", and so I thought I'd collect the links to all my recent posts on this subject here. See also "Barack Obama On Faith".

I've had quite a few visitors from Digg, so if you find any of these posts helpful, please do Digg them!

Is the Bible "Biblical"?

Over at the Awakening blog they've been discussing my post "Fundamentalism: Fundamentally Unbiblical". The discussion seems to have taken off, and some of you may want to peek in. If you enjoyed the original, you may want to check out the sequel! :-)

Friday, July 25, 2008

Minnesota Coconut Growers

In a recent comment, Peter Milloy drew my attention to the web site of the Minnesota Coconut Growers. It was created to illustrate that having a web presence proves nothing. I've only been to Minnesota once, but it was in winter, and it was enough to make me pretty certain that it's climate is, shall we say, less than ideal for growing coconuts.

But does that mean that we should simply fall back on common sense? No, that doesn't work either. Common sense could easily persuade us that the earth is flat, or that evolution is impossible, and it is certainly never going to help with Quantum mechanics. Our common sense is shaped by experience, and it is certainly important to listen to, but sometimes the influences that have shaped our experience can mislead us.

There is still no substitute to finding out what the majority of experts in a given field have to say. The experts may be wrong, but there is nothing better that one can do then go with the best available conclusions based on the available evidence. We can't know what future discoveries may uncover, and we shouldn't use that uncertainty to assume that our own preferred viewpoint will one day be vindicated.

Just ask the Minnesota Coconut Growers.

Quote of the Day (Christine Wicker)

"The idea that Evangelicals are taking over America is one of the greatest publicity scams in history" (Christine Wicker, The Fall of the Evangelical Nation: The Surprising Crisis Inside the Church (New York: HarperOne) p.ix).

Be It Unto You According to Your Faith...In What You've Read On the Web

I'm trying to make it an aim of my introductory Bible class not only to give students an opportunity to think for themselves, but also to help them learn how to grasp what the scholarly consensus on an issue is, if in fact there is one. In a time when the information that appears at the top of the list after a Google search is not necessarily the most reliable, and students seem to have trouble discovering those academic article databases our university libraries pay so much to put at their disposal, I am coming to the conclusion that we cannot simply send people forth to do their own "research" and expect them to come back with a balanced sense of the best understanding available through the work of experts in the field in question.

One will often hear people appeal to scholarship in support of their viewpoint. Just a few examples from around the web:


"The historical evidence is overwhelming—the Jesus of the Bible never existed"

"Science disproves evolution"

"Egyptian chariot wheels found in the Red Sea [prove the Exodus account in the Bible accurate]"

None of those statements reflects the actual state of our knowledge. Each of them can be found well-represented on the web, and one can surely find someone with a PhD who will affirm the point of view in question. But checking mainstream scholarship on the historical Jesus, biological evolution, or the origins of the Israelites will give a very different impression. Sure there are disagreements on some issues - but it is important to understand who disagrees with whom, and why.

It is important for all those who teach, whether in the liberal arts, the natural sciences, or other fields, to help students not only learn to investigate for themselves, but also to learn how to identify reputable sources, how to get a sense of the scholarly consensus (if there is one), and how to distinguish between scholars disagreeing in large numbers (which usually suggests the available evidence is not entirely conclusive) from situations in which all but a few fringe individuals agree.

Of course, it is fair to point out that sometimes what was once fringe has become mainstream. But that shouldn't be an excuse for a non-expert simply picking a fringe view because they happen to like it. The only way a fringe view should become mainstream is because of persuasive arguments and/or new evidence - not because of their increased "wikiality" or because they win a popularity contest among the inadequately informed.

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Desecrated

P. Z. Myers has apparently followed through on his threat to desecrate a Catholic communion wafer. He subjected the Qur'an and Richard Dawkins' book to the same treatment, just to be fair.

Ken Brown has coverage and reflection from a Christian perspective.

I don't have time to write more at the moment - but don't let that stop you from discussing!

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

What is an Atheist?

It is certainly true that much contemporary discussion between (and about) atheists and religious believers suffers from the tendency to assume that "God" means (and can only mean) one thing, usually the classic theism of Christianity as reduced into the understanding of popular Christianity today.

Equally problematic, however, is a lack of clarity about what is meant by atheism and atheist. Does being an atheist mean one denies theism? If so, then one can be a deeply spiritual atheist, even a religious atheist. In fact, one can even be a Christian atheist. On the other hand, if atheism means one denies any notion of "god" whatsoever, any form of religious belief, anything other than reductionist materialism, then I know many "atheists" who will probably no longer be entirely comfortable bearing the label.

So what does "atheist" mean to you? And is the solution to the confusion simply to point out that just as "Christian" and "God" do not refer to single positions, concepts or definitions, so too there are different brands of atheism, and different understandings of what it means to be an atheist?

This post is largely a response to a post on EvolutionBlog entitled "Saving Religion from Religion Scholars" (see also The Bad Idea Blog and Unreasonable Faith, as well as Liberal Pastor and Threads from Henry's Web). I'm not sure Jason Rosenhouse is concerned with saving religion from scholars so much as saving atheism from scholars like me who raise this issue about what it in fact means. Take a look!

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Review of James A. Herrick, Scientific Mythologies

Review of James A. Herrick, Scientific Mythologies: How Science and Science Fiction Forge New Religious Beliefs (Downers Grove: IVP, 2008).


Some books are annoyingly bad, but others may seem even more annoying because they had the potential to be excellent, and yet in the end are marred by a narrow ideological slant, apologetic interests, and/or an inability to examine their own worldview as critically as that of their opponents. James A. Herrick’s Scientific Mythologies falls into this latter category. Although it is filled with much that is interesting and even important, like so many works of apologetics, it has little to say to anyone who did not already assume the book’s conclusions before they began reading.

Herrick’s chosen subject is an important one. Much has been written and many views promoted at the intersection between science (or, more precisely, speculative science), science fiction, and religion. Many ideas that are by no means new or innovative somehow seem more plausible if they are couched in scientific-sounding terms. Herrick’s purpose is “to explore the various ways in which the Western world’s present spiritual needs are being addressed by a new mythology, an emerging canon of transcendent stories that provides meaning to our lives and that organizes and directs our individual and social decisions...Lurking in the background of this discussion will be the question of whether our largely unexamined new mythologies actually represent what their advocates claim for them – that they are a much-needed alternative to more traditional perspectives on God, people, and the destiny of the human race, an alternative that will open a spiritual pathway into the increasingly technological future” (p.13).

The reference to those other views as “alternative”, and the Christian one Herrick takes for granted as “traditional”, warns the attentive reader of a problematic slant the author has from the outset. For Herrick will rightly point out that some of the views that are coming back into favor are in fact rather ancient. Indeed, the author delights in sticking the warning label “pagan” on numerous other viewpoints. Yet this point ought to lead naturally to an acknowledgment that at one time those ideas were traditional, just as Christianity was once alternative (see p.41 as just one place where this issue ought to have been addressed but is not). And so, although the book’s back cover makes reference to “our post-Christian West”, in fact, the book demonstrates clearly the author’s inability to understand, and thus adequately address, that very situation. One example can be seen on p.27, where Herrick writes that “our scientific mythologies are a powerful cultural engine for inventing and for propagating a worldview that stands in marked contrast to, and seeks to move audiences away from, traditional monotheistic religious perspectives, in particular the Judeo-Christian tradition” (see also pp.38-39). This is not the voice of a Christianity confident in telling its own story in the context of contemporary pluralism, but the whine of beleaguered Christendom. This will become clear time and again throughout the book.

The introduction and the chapter that follows (entitled “New Myths for a New Age”) set the stage for what is to follow. Science fiction, it is rightly pointed out, aims not merely to entertain but to persuade (p.26). This could be said of much literature, and specifically much fiction. Does the Left Behind series not aim to persuade more than (I am tempted to say “rather than”) entertain? Be that as it may, it is certainly true that stories and in particular science fiction films and television have made certain speculations about the future (and indeed, the present in other parts of the universe) seem more plausible, aided by the latest in animation and special effects. Early in the second chapter, Herrick mentions the sense many have that older religious ideas are outmoded, and that there is a need for new thinking in response to our new scientific knowledge. If only Herrick had a greater familiarity with the historical depth and breadth of the Christian tradition, he might have been able to highlight some of the interesting ways in which Christians have always reinterpreted and re-expressed their faith in response to changing contexts and progressing knowledge. Alas, instead such voices tend to be placed in opposition to Herrick’s own viewpoint, which he considers to be simply a telling of “the old old story”, and yet which is itself more fundamentally shaped by modernity than Herrick seems to know. We see this as he speaks of the creation by science and science fiction of “new myths” to replace “old creeds” (p.29). Not only does this reflect one particular understanding of the Christian faith as inherently creedal, as a set of propositions to which one ought to give one’s assent. It also places “myths” and “creeds” in an opposition to one another that is at best odd and at worst misguided.

Vagueness about what Herrick means by “myth” permeates the book, but he seems to assume that its meaning is pejorative (even though he offers a quotation to the contrary on pp.31-32) and he refrains from using the term in relation to Christianity. Yet if one means by myth “stories by which we interpret our experience and which give expression to our core values”, then Christianity clearly has such stories to offer. Likewise, if one means “stories that interpret the world using language that does not match the best understanding modern science can offer”, then here too Christianity has “myth” to offer in its Sacred Scriptures and other writings of the Christian tradition. Herrick is right to quote Mary Midgley’s dictum that “we do not have a choice of understanding it [viz. the world] without using any myths...at all” (quoted p.36), although he seems not to fully grasp its meaning, much less its implications for Christianity. And while he rightly describes contemporary “myths” as “blending well-substantiated facts with freewheeling speculation, scientific research with straight fiction, and objective observation with subjective worldview peddling” (p.36), one would have to be quite blind not to see how well this description applies to much popular Christianity. Above all else, it is the author’s unwillingness or inability to critically investigate parallel weaknesses within a Christian context that most powerfully undermines the important things the book has to say.

As Herrick concludes his second chapter, he returns once again to a facile contrast between the Judeo-Christian tradition (as though this were something monolithic and easily essentialized) and the new myths. If his approach were not so lacking in humility and self-criticism vis-à-vis his own heritage, it would be easier to acknowledge that the question Herrick is asking is a valid, and indeed an important one. Many make the same simplistic contrast Herrick himself does, between Christianity (treated as the monolithic and clearly outmoded tradition) and everything else (treated as new, fresh and exciting). Yet much that has gained in popularity in our post-Christian society is neither more scientific nor more compatible with science than Christianity, neither newer nor less mythical nor more obviously “better” than the tradition they are discarding. But in order for Christianity to make the best case for itself that it can, there is a need for religious conservatives to let go of the pompous arrogance of Christendom, and to rediscover the resources not merely to say traditional words, but to relate traditional meanings to a world and worldview very different from that in which the Biblical authors wrote.

The chapters that make up the remainder of the book examine specific “myths” of contemporary science fiction religion. Each chapter reads much like the works of the heresiologists of the early church. Key individuals who have propounded new ideas in the realms of speculative science, science fiction and religion are mentioned, together with a summary of important and often less well-known writings of theirs and an overview of their key claims and ideas. The first to get such treatment (in chapter 3) is “The Myth of the Extraterrestrial”. As with most of the chapters, rather than work chronologically, the chapter jumps from epoch to epoch. This is particularly significant in chapter 3, however, because as Herrick acknowledges, the possibility of extraterrestrial life is not new to Western thought in general or the Christian tradition in particular (pp.52-53). Yet rarely if ever does Herrick acknowledge that discussions of this topic arose naturally from Christian theological presuppositions (pp.45-46). When a Christian theologian such as Nicholas of Cusa engages such issues, Herrick suggests that it is due to borrowing from the philosophies of Islamic Spain, which he claims were rooted in “Zoroastrianism and Persian astrology” (p.46). Herrick seems unaware that Islamic philosophy was rooted in Greek philosophy, and indeed was the means whereby European thinkers rediscovered Greek philosophy after the “Dark Ages”. But just as the propaganda movie Expelled avoided including Christians who are scientists persuaded by the evidence for evolution, since it would spoil the culture war the movie seeks to foster, so to Herrick seems to assume that anyone who takes seriously these thoughts about extraterrestrials must in some way be connected with paganism, the occult, or materialism. Alas, those who are actually familiar with Biblical studies or the history of Christian thought know that there is no way to simply draw such a firm dividing line, with everyone lined up nicely into two opposing camps.

Giordano Bruno may well have been a heretic in the eyes of many different branches of Christianity in his time, but so too was Isaac Newton. Yet even though Herrick does not mention Newton by name, Herrick lifts up Christianity as providing the basis for the scientific enterprise. Selectively reading and citing history will not persuade those who know a subject well. And so the aim seems to be apologetics targeting those who are among less well-informed Christians, inclined to see the world in the same black-and-white, us vs. them way that Herrick does. The truth is that there have been Christians both in the sciences and in opposition to them; Christians speculating about extraterrestrials while other Christians denounced such speculations. Neither viewpoint is simply “the Christian viewpoint”.

Herrick repeatedly mentions the lack of scientific evidence for extraterrestrial life (pp.48, 72). On this point he is quite correct, yet still not entirely fair. Herrick quotes Michael Crighton as pointing out that after 40 years of searching there is still no evidence (p.72). Yet humans dreamed of flying for much longer than that before achieving it (see p.81). The existence of life elsewhere is still a matter of speculation rather than confirmed fact, but it is reasonable, well-informed speculation. It would make sense to ponder the issue before it becomes an urgent matter of fact, since once it does it will be much harder to think clearly and with any degree of objectivity. Herrick’s lack of clarity on the meaning of “myth” returns at the end of this chapter, when he asks whether national policy on the scientific search for extraterrestrial intelligence has “been driven by a Myth” (p.72). Earlier he seemed to acknowledge that myth is more than simply pre-scientific explanation, and that we cannot do without stories that embody our values. Would Herrick equally object to the myths that affirm the equal worth of all human beings guiding public policy? A clear, accurate discussion of myth and values, and their relation to policy, would have been helpful here.

What is quite possibly the most interesting subject of all, namely how one makes sense of extraterrestrials within a Christian framework, is never addressed directly (cf. p.53). The same is true of our modern scientific cosmology and its displacement of earlier understandings (including, but not limited to, those cosmologies reflected in the Bible). In his chapter 4, “The Myth of Space”, Herrick alludes to how science has turned “the heavens” into “space”, yet he never really addresses either the parallels or the relationship between them. One could suggest that ancient Jewish apocalyptic was a form of early “science fiction”, in the sense that it involves humans travelling to the heavens and meeting strange celestial beings, and at times also the latter visiting earth (and even providing humans with advanced technology and interbreeding with them). Neither Hebrew nor Greek distinguished between “heaven” and “sky”, since the assumption was indeed that the dwelling place of God and angels was “up there”. What does one do with stories such as Luke’s story of the ascension of Jesus, in which he goes up into the sky and it is understood as his being exalted to the right hand of the Father? How does one make sense of it in the context of our current understanding of the universe? Addressing such questions, taking them seriously, seems a more worthwhile endeavor than the castigation of those who dare to ask them and reach conclusions Herrick finds unacceptable. At any rate, Herrick only goes back to the seventeenth century, whereas here too much earlier stories of celestial journeys ought to have been included, as they provide a natural point of contact between the “Judeo-Christian tradition” and modern science fiction. In a nice quote, Herrick points out that “What makes SETI scientific is not the absence of propelling myths – for those are clearly at the forefront in SETI – but the presence of telescopes” (p.92). But Christians have looked through telescopes too, ever since they were invented, and have sought to find ways of relating their faith heritage to what they saw there.

In a similar vein, Herrick seems surprised that science fiction writers tell stories in which travelers in space encounter deceased relatives (as in Contact and Solaris, for instance). Yet Christians speak regularly about “going to heaven when you die”, and as a cosmology in which heaven is literally “up there” is replaced with space above and around us, it is natural to explore such questions. The answers given by various writers may be open to criticism, but the line of inquiry itself should not be surprising.

Herrick notes C. S. Lewis’ concern about space exploration deriving from Psalm 115:16, “The heavens are the LORD’s heavens, but the earth he has given to human beings” (see pp.88-89). He also asks whether such as whether such explorations can be justified in view of more immediate, pressing concerns such as poverty (pp.90-91). I hope most people will concur that there is something troubling about searching for intelligent beings who might exist while ignoring those around us who clearly do exist and are in desperate need of our help. Yet understanding our place in the universe and discovering new technologies that can help alleviate poverty are themselves important, and ideally one might hope that science and exploration would be prioritized below matters of social justice but above other things we spend our money on. Western wastefulness and luxury seem to be the issues most directly standing in the way of alleviating poverty, rather than space explanation or other areas of scientific investigation.

Herrick makes an important point at the end of chapter 5, which is probably one of the most important ones in the book. As we’ve spread our influence and control across the earth, we’ve often done so in ways that have shown us to be lacking in moral guidance and principles. To assume that once we get into space, things will be different, is unrealistic. We cannot escape from ourselves and human nature in space. If we wish to have a future in space that is morally different, with poverty and injustice left behind as things of the past, then we must address those issues in ourselves in the present (p.96). This leads naturally into chapter 5, “The Myth of a New Humanity”. Herrick declares this one of the most dangerous of the new mythologies he includes in his book (p.98), and he is undoubtedly right. Genetic manipulation, eugenics, technological enhancement and supplementation of our biological beings, and other such subjects treated in this chapter are indeed extremely pressing concerns.

In this chapter, Herrick rightly addresses a common mythological misappropriation of evolution in popular thought. Many think of evolution as progress. But while competition for resources have led to beneficial adaptations, there is simply no reason to think that the survival of the fittest will lead to spiritual progress, or endow us with telepathy, flight, and other seemingly supernatural abilities, as in the X-Men or Heroes. Herrick brings up the connections between science fiction and notions of a “superior race”, often coupled not merely with racism but the idea of manipulating human evolution through selective breeding or eugenics. In more recent times, interest in selective breeding has been lessened as the possibility of direct manipulation of the genome has become a real one (and it is unfortunate that Herrick appears to be unaware of the movie Gattaca which addresses this subject). At times, however, Herrick seems more interested in discrediting science fiction (particularly that of the first few decades of the 20th century) through their connection with racism. Yet rather than it being clear that sci-fi influenced this aspect of the “spirit of the age”, the reverse may be the case, since science fiction envisages the future in ways that reflect the views and values of the time in which it was produced.

If one looks at the churches of the American South (for instance) both before and after that particular historical juncture, as well as more widely during that epoch, there is just as much evidence of Christians engaging in acts of evil and even interpreting the Bible in racist ways. Once again, a failure to apply criticisms fairly undermines the power of the criticisms. In addition to not fairly acknowledging Christians’ failings, Herrick also fails to mention science fiction’s successes. Star Trek was certainly pioneering in making an African-American woman an officer on the bridge of the starship Enterprise, and for offering the first interracial kiss on American television. Science fiction reflects the age in which it is written, but it has also dared to offer important challenges at times. The new Battlestar Galactica is comparably challenging in the ways it addresses issues like torture or our demonization and dehumanization of our enemies. It seems that placing a story in a science fiction setting allows issues to be addressed in ways that would be tolerated less easily if the story being told were happening here and now on Earth.

It is in this chapter that one of the most troubling aspects of Herrick’s book became apparent to me. In addressing H. G. Wells’ view of the masses of ordinary people as well as different races, Herrick depends largely on quotes from Wells that he received second-hand from other sources. This is not an isolated instance in the book. What is more, when one checks the primary sources, one finds that the quotations do not precisely reflect them. This is presumably a result of the use of second-hand sources (Herrick specifies that he is dependant on Carey’s Intellectuals and the Masses for the quotation, and never refers to Wells’ Anticipations). In our day and age, when many classic works of literature can be found online, there is simply no excuse for not checking the primary sources themselves. Here are the quotations from Herrick and Wells himself:

Herrick: The “nation that most resolutely picks over, educates, sterilizes, exports, or poisons its People of the Abyss will be in the ascendant” (p.107).

H. G. Wells, Anticipations (p.212): The nation that produces in the near future the largest proportional development of educated and intelligent engineers and agriculturists, of doctors, schoolmasters, professional soldiers, and intellectually active people of all sorts; the nation that most resolutely picks over, educates, sterilizes, exports, or poisons its People of the Abyss; the nation that succeeds most subtly in checking gambling and the moral decay of women and homes that gambling inevitably entails; the nation that by wise interventions, death duties and the like, contrives to expropriate and extinguish incompetent rich families while leaving individual ambitions free; the nation, in a word, that turns the greatest proportion of its irresponsible adiposity into social muscle, will certainly be the nation that will be the most powerful in warfare as in peace, will certainly be the ascendant or dominant nation before the year 2000.
In view of such an imprecise quotation in the one instance where I tried to verify Herrick’s source material, it is impossible not to wonder how accurately Herrick’s presentation of other individuals’ views reflects what they wrote in a fair and balanced way (see for instance p.114, where only secondary sources are cited in attributing views to Alexander Graham Bell, Thomas Watson, and Alfred Russell Wallace).

Abilities such as telepathy are often attributed to more “highly evolved” beings, whether human or alien. Yet scientific research has lent no support for the claims of parapsychology, and indeed has tended to undermine them. Here, the relationship between science, science fiction, and religion is rather complex. As Herrick notes, “Even among the religious faithful, two-thirds of Catholics and half of Protestants accepted ESP as true” (p.118). If science fiction has often incorporated such abilities, skeptics who demand scientific scrutiny have found no evidence (in spite of the Amazing Randi offering a million dollar reward to anyone who can demonstrate them under close inspection). Does the popularity of such notions even among Christians indicate that many of us are unwilling to subject our beliefs to such critical scrutiny? At the very least, this suggests that science and science fiction are not always allied, nor are they consistently lined up against the views held by Christians. But in some streams of Christian thought, believing without evidence, or even in spite of evidence to the contrary, is considered a virtue. Should it be any surprise when Christians are found to believe things that are not supported by our best scientific understanding, that are not backed by adequate evidence (if any at all)? If belief in extraterrestrials without clear confirmation is inappropriate, ought Jews and Christians to believe that the Exodus is a literal historical event? The challenge of taking evidence seriously, even when it challenges our assumptions and cherished beliefs, faces us all equally irrespective of our worldview.

In the conclusion to this chapter, Herrick rightly points out that “Scientific data do not speak for themselves, and the blueprint for an improved humanity cannot be assembled from a mountain of facts about computer capacity and the human genome. A transcendent story about humanity and its destiny – a myth – will guide the creation of the New Humans” (p.126). Yet merely contrasting the scientific quest for an improved humanity with the Christian vision of the salvation accomplished through Christ’s death is an inadequate way of addressing this subject. The truth is that psychology, neuroscience, and biology have often at the very least supplemented traditional Christian approaches to human transformation – at times challenging them, at times supporting and enhancing. But simply contrasting them, as though the only option is to choose between the two, is clearly inadequate. The Christian tradition has always been in dialogue with those of other traditions, and if one were to say that anything “tainted” with pagan associations must be excised from Christianity, then not only science fiction, but also the prologue of John’s Gospel would have to go. “The Christian view” (for Herrick assumes that there is a single, monolithic Christian viewpoint) is once again said to be the “traditional” viewpoint (p.126), and Herrick contrasts its “preexistent creator God” with “Kurzweil’s lower deity of evolution”. But the challenge for Christians is not to hide from either the overwhelming evidence for evolution or from the possibilities for future technological enhancement of our lives, but to be voices for the ethical exploration of such possibilities. As Herrick rightly points out, the Biblical “myths” emphasize the equality of all human beings as descendants of a single ancestor “made in the image and likeness of God”. For Herrick, this seems to represent a stop sign to be held before further scientific progress along the lines that Ray Kurzweil and others have imagined. But for those who have already faced the challenge of making sense of the value of those Biblical stories in relation to our current scientific knowledge, the sign does not say “STOP” but “CAUTION: Danger Ahead”. For there is indeed a need for voices calling for the fruits of our technological explorations and discoveries to be used in an ethical manner, to better our lives rather than cause harm. But Herrick seems to fear such improvement of lives through technology, since each step may lead people to stop asking the questions for which his understanding of Christianity has pat answers already prepared.

In chapter 6, “The Myth of the Future”, Herrick accuses preoccupation with the future of distracting from life and meaning in the present. This is certainly true, but it is also true that what we believe about the future can shape how we live in the present. And it is equally true that those forms of Christianity which place all their emphasis on an other-worldly afterlife have a similar outlook and even at times a similar effect. When he writes that “the future can acquire a religious quality, a vision of a better world to come that is modeled on a perfect world of the past” (p.137), I felt certain he would bring the Book of Revelation into the discussion, with its transforming vision of the future and its echoes of Eden. But here too Herrick seems unaware of how much that he finds problematic in science fiction exists deeply rooted within his own tradition as well.

When he brings Francis Bacon’s The New Atlantis into the discussion, he downplays that this is an attempt to allow science and Scripture to interact, and draws instead facile contrasts between scientific and spiritual wisdom (pp.139-140). In ancient Israel, Wisdom was not limited to the sorts of moral advice embodied in the Book of Proverbs, or explorations of the meaning of life and problem of evil such as are found in Job and Ecclesiastes. The New Atlantis, in viewing scientific wisdom as a divine gift (p.142), stands firmly in that earlier tradition that viewed God as the source of wisdom that included developments in areas like mining and medicine.

In his conclusion to this chapter, Herrick alludes to the Biblical story of the Tower of Babel (p.156). But here too he seems insensitive to the difference between our perspective and the story’s. In Genesis, God is depicted as descending from heaven to cause the humans’ plan to fail. If Herrick truly believes that story is a literal factual account of a historical event, then his book is unnecessary: God will do the same to bring today’s human enterprises to naught if he is displeased. But in fact, all the evidence points to the Tower of Babel story being more akin to political satire, depicting the Babylonians’ great civilization as “confusion”, and their unfinished ultimate Ziggurat as testimony to this. Had Herrick been familiar with Biblical scholarship on this story, he might have found in it a Biblical model for poking fun at the lofty and at times haughty visions of humanity today.

Chapter 7 addresses “The Myth of a Spiritual Race”. In many respects this chapter is the most disappointing for its glaring inability to be self-critical. Although the criticisms made of the embracing of supposedly scientific eugenics in science fiction particularly of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Herrick offers no acknowledgment of the church’s failure to be united in rejecting racism. On the contrary, as Herrick acknowledges, the myth of a superior spiritual race was for the most part focused on a white European race that had eventually become Christian (p.166). Racist interpretation of the Bible, understanding the mark of Cain as skin color, is infamous but never mentioned in Herrick’s book. Nor, in his treatment of Mormonism or elsewhere, does he deal with European Christianity’s frequent inability to make sense of the existence of Native Americans as human beings with souls, since it was inconceivable that God would have left human beings in far off places without the Gospel being sent to them. Indeed, the “extraterrestrial challenge” to Christianity is the same basic issue, enlarged onto a galactic or indeed universal scale. Rather than address why large numbers of Christians aligned themselves on issues like race or slavery in ways that we are today ashamed of, Herrick suggests that the only bulwark that could have been effective against the myth of race would have been “a fully formed Christian theology” (p.179). Herrick at this points speaks much like those whom Jesus criticized in the Gospels, who claimed that if they had been alive in the time of the prophets, they would never have persecuted and killed them (Matthew 23:29-36). This option is always a popular one: to think that if I had been around back then, I surely would not have been deceived. This is but one more instance of Herrick’s outlook, supposedly a Christian one, being demonstrably at odds with the challenge of Jesus to be self-critical and, when necessary, repentant.

Herrick concludes this chapter by pointing to Superman as a “counterfeit Christ” (p.189). To simply denounce as a “counterfeit” any story that echoes but does not precisely reproduce the details of the Christian story is an inadequate analysis. The Christ of much of popular Christianity can just as easily be evaluated as “counterfeit” by the same standard, but this does not help us to understand either why such counterfeits are so popular, or what to do about them. Nor does it address historical issues, such as whether the “Christus Victor” of the early church, who lives on particularly in the Eastern Orthodox tradition, is also judged by him to be a “counterfeit”, since there is little more emphasis on the “suffering servant” than in the Superman story. What was needed was a move beyond mere polemical rhetoric to a substantial, detailed, and balanced analysis.

In his chapter on “The Myth of Space Religion”, Herrick once again fails to acknowledge that questions about extraterrestrials arose naturally within a Christian framework of discussion. He emphasizes that much space religion is less scientific than some of its earthly counterparts (p.212), and it is certainly true to say that it is at the very least no more scientific. But what valid points he makes here are too little, too late, and are colored by his assumption that, if these sci-fi religions are only so much nonsense, the claims of Christianity can be validated easily and uncontroversially (p.213). Had he focused more on fleshing out and defending his statement that “regardless of what space exploration reveals, the Christian faith continues to announce truths that resonate with the human spirit and that no contact with alien intelligences can overturn” (p.213), this chapter might have been more useful. But it becomes clearer here than anywhere else that Herrick’s presumed audience is made up of Christian who already know in what ways the Christian message resonates with their spirit. If the book is intended to be a work of insider polemic, perhaps that is fair enough. But even if the aim is theoretically apologetic, then a better treatment was needed of how to communicate the faith that resonates with the Christian’s spirit to those who have come to find “space religion” attractive. And any Christian reader who is aware of Biblical scholarship, Christian history, or the breadth of expressions of Christianity will be as frustrated with Herrick’s simplistic characterizations as a non-Christian reader would.

Chapter 9, “The Myth of Alien Gnosis”, treats “Gnosis” in a broad and vague way rather than in the sense in which this terminology was used in the case of the “original”, ancient Gnosticism. That is appropriate, however, since few of the neo-Gnostic groups that have appeared in our time are interested in reviving all elements of ancient Gnosticism. Herrick gets off to a weak start, as he comments that “It does not seem to trouble either Dyson or Rees that there is no evidence to support speculation about either superintelligent aliens creating us as part of a thought experiment, or that such an idea might have had its origins in a work of science fiction” (p.216). Does Herrick really mean to open this can of worms? Claims about intelligent aliens are, at least in theory, provable. (Indeed, it is poignantly ironic that Christians have been making use of this plausibility to try to claim that Intelligent Design is science, but that is another can of worms best left sealed). Whether one can ever prove claims about a supernatural event 2,000 years ago by using the tools of historical investigation, on the other hand, is in serious doubt, and the troubling lack of evidence for and even evidence against key events in the Biblical story, such as the Exodus from Egypt and conquest of Canaan, rears its head once Herrick raises the issue in the terms that he does. And in some instances, such as when he mentions the idea that human beings are made from “star stuff” (p.217), Herrick seems unaware that this is not speculation but scientific fact. The choice of words may indeed be striking and poetic, but its underlying point, namely that we are made from elements brought into existence in stars and cast adrift by supernova, has been proven beyond reasonable doubt. And when it comes to claims to knowledge not attained through investigation and evidence but mystical or psychological experiences, Herrick has not shown that a first-century visionary has more to say that is worth listening to than a 20th-century visionary. He may, but without justifying the assumption, we once again feel that Herrick’s book will only be meaningful to those for whom Christianity is a comfortable shoe, a warm familiar blanket that is so taken for granted that no challenge or question, however well documented or pertinent, can unsettle it or cause it to be subjected to critical scrutiny in the way the views of others are with great enthusiasm.

In the book’s conclusion, Herrick finally acknowledges that ultimately it is “story against story” (p.252), but he has throughout the book shown himself unable to genuinely reconcile himself to that situation and address readers appropriately, by trying to show how Christianity’s story makes sense even in our worldview today, which is so different than that of the earliest Christians. When Herrick gripes about what others are doing, but fails to address legitimate questions and concerns raised by people today about his own faith, one starts to suspect that Herrick doesn’t in fact have answers to those questions. And some readers will therefore conclude that Christianity doesn’t have those answers. And so Herrick’s book does the Christian faith more harm than good.

Perhaps the most glaring omission is Herrick’s failure to include for consideration the various forms of science fiction and pseudoscientific religion manifested within Christianity. Obvious examples include the Left Behind series (which resemble the outlook of the X Files in many interesting respects) and even more so “creation science” which seeks to use scientific-sounding language and false claims about scientific evidence to give support to their very modern, recent reinterpretation of what the Bible supposedly teaches. Young-earth creationism is a form of science-fiction religion, which does precisely what Herrick ridicules others for doing, namely seeking to bolster the claims of ancient religion with the authority of modern science. But science undermines claims about a young earth as effectively as claims that Hanuman and his monkey army built Adam’s Bridge (pp.250-251).

Throughout his book, Herrick almost entirely ignores those works of science fiction that constructively engage the “Judeo-Christian tradition”, like Mary Doria Russell’s The Sparrow and Children of God, or Ray Bradbury’s “The Fire Balloons”. He is often confused or inaccurate about the details of science fiction televisions shows and films he mentions – he seems unaware that the new Battlestar Galactica is neither a continuation nor a remake of the earlier series from the late 70s (p.168), and he calls the midi-chlorians from Star Wars “midi-chlorines” (p.184). He does not write as a fan but as a critic whose criticisms do not reflect any genuine appreciation for that which is being criticized.

Let me conclude by saying that what is perhaps most unfortunate about Herrick’s book is that it does have an underlying point that is valid, which because of the book’s shortcomings are likely to be missed. Many forsake Christianity not because the alternatives are new, better, or more scientific, but simply because they are different from Christianity as they’ve known it. Yet the more experiential, mystical, open-minded faith they are seeking is represented within the Christian tradition as well, if only they knew where to look. And so what is most heartbreaking is that Herrick, in seeking to make this point, does so with the attitude, and as a representative of that type of Christianity, that most commonly drives people to look elsewhere. And so ultimately, Herrick has nothing to offer such individuals that might attract them back to Christianity, since Herrick shares with them the assumption that his own narrow brand of Christianity is the only sort there is. And a Christianity that is unaware that it, as well as science fiction, was gullible when it came to horrors like racism, will have little to offer as a voice of moral guidance as we move into what are indeed dangerous realms of future technological possibilities.

Monday, July 21, 2008

Sex in the Biblioblogosphere

The biblioblogs (among others) seem to have turned their attention of late to the Bible's "naughty bits". Here is a sampling of some of the blogs that have focused on topics related to sex in recent days:

Doug Chaplin has been looking at sex and the censored Scriptures. He looks at texts of "queer terror", too.

Codex looked at the Uncensored Bible.

James Crossley considers Evangelical erotica.

Sex comes up at the Lambeth Conference too - once the media looks into it, that is.

This web page on oral sex in the Bible (HT Sex Secrets) helps those who have trouble getting beyond the pomegranates in the Song of Songs' metaphors.

And of course, there are the things one cannot do if one wants a certain Hebrew Bible job.

Latin sex is much less interesting.

Fringe Faith (take two)

Apparently there is more to posting on a Wordpress blog than I know. I'm not sure when the post will appear over at the Crowded Handbasket, but in case it doesn't, I'm duplicating it here...

It seems somewhat typical of me that I used th occasion of my first post over there to problematize the reason for that blog’s existence.

I resonate with the identity of the Crowded Handbasket blog - the fringe, the heretics, the outliers. And I have a penchant to like underdog views, and underdog composers in music. If I was more into sports, I’d support underdog teams.

But when it comes to faith, I wonder whether there isn’t a sense in which all faith and all the faithful are “fringe”. After all, Christianity began as a fringe movement within Judaism (itself a fringe faith of a fringe people on the world scene). And those who have taken their faith completely seriously have always been a small minority.

What about those who have defined the faith, who composed the creeds? They may have been a powerful minority, but they certainly were on the whole better educated, and undeniably more influential in the church, than the vast majority of Christians. And so when it comes to Christian faith, the “official” version has itself always been defined by a fringe group, a minority, albeit a powerful one.

Fundamentalists today, through their dishonest claims to “believe the whole Bible” and “take it all literally”, have cowed many other Christians into silence by making them feel like somehow they aren’t “good Christians”. But in most churches, few attain (and I suspect many do not aspire to) the radical rhetoric of some of their leaders.

I’d like to suggest that all faith is fringe faith. All our experiences and all our convictions and all our points of view are always a small subset of those of human beings in general.

So as we engage various other viewpoints on this blog, let’s remember: they’re on the fringe too. They may think that their fringe viewpoint is obviously correct, and ought to be what all people of faith everywhere think. But go easy on them. That’s just a defense mechanism they use, because unlike us, they are living in denial of their fringe existence…

Faithful Fringe

I've posted on the subject of the "faithful fringe" over at the new blog The Crowded Handbasket where I was invited to participate. Do take a look!

Friday, July 18, 2008

Help Wanted: National Center for Science Education seeks Communications Coordinator

The National Center for Science Education recently posted this job opening:



Help wanted

Communications Coordinator


NCSE seeks a communications coordinator, who will be responsible for NCSE's overall communications strategy, reporting to the executive director. Tasks include:


  • Providing guidance for creation of journalist-oriented webpages; ensuring that web presence of NCSE is maximized for disseminating news and information.

  • Interacting with other staff to identify newsworthy items being produced by NCSE staff, and to identify story angles to reach NCSE's diverse audiences.

  • Identifying and maintaining relations with key personnel in news rooms; interacting with other staff to mine current communications efforts and programs for news; providing background, news tips and illustrations when available to news rooms.

  • Coordinating interviews for other staff and associates and providing media training when needed; developing a potential list of story leads and potential list of interviewees on various topics and in various geographical areas.

  • Providing media assistance to various networks of citizens for science education across the country as appropriate.
Excellent communication skills, both written and oral, are necessary, as are a high degree of computer literacy and the ability to work cooperatively.

Three to five years of newsroom or media relations experience expected. Candidates must have at least a college degree; advanced degrees in the sciences, particularly biology and geology, or in the history and/or philosophy of science, and/or science education, are pluses. A record of involvement in or understanding of the creationism/evolution controversy, or church/state separation issues in general, is also a plus.

This is a full-time permanent position with medical, dental, and retirement benefits in Oakland, California, to start as soon as possible. Telecommuting is not an option. Travel and public speaking will be required. Salary range in mid-to-high 40s or higher commensurate with experience.

Send c.v., cover letter, three published clips, and the names of three references to NCSE, either by mail to NCSE, 420 40th Street, Suite 2, Oakland CA 94609-2509, by fax to (510) 601-7204, or by e-mail to coco@ncseweb.org. No calls, please. Materials must arrive by August 8, 2008, to be considered. NCSE is an equal opportunity employer.

LOST Nation of Islam?

I happened across information about the Nation of Islam's mythology recently. It never struck me before that one part of its teachings at one point involved an island on which a renegade scientist named Yakub who creates an inferior race that comes to dominate the planet. Whenever I hear "island" and a version of the name "Jacob" in close proximity, I inevitably think of the TV series LOST.

The Wikipedia article on Yakub also mentions that an author names Chi-Town Ben wrote a book, Yakub's Grafted Devils, that supposedly features ideas of fate, time dividing "wheels", and the importance of Gemini (i.e. twins).

Has anyone noticed these possible connections before? Has anyone explored them?

What This Blog Is About

31 Million Miles To Earth

Via New Scientist I found this great video clip of the earth as seen from 31 million miles away:

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Let Jesus Contend with P. Z. Myers!

I have refrained from jumping into the discussions about the removal of a Eucharistic wafer (or "cracker", if you prefer) from a church by another individual and then, in protest to the heated reactions from Catholics, once again by P. Z. Myers, outspoken atheist.

Myers has received threats and various other sorts of hate mail. But I think this case provides a wonderful opportunity for Christians to revisit the story in Judges 6:25-32 about Gideon (also called Jerub-Baal).

I will leave those unfamiliar with the story to read it. What I propose is to imagine that the story is shifted into our time, and it is P. Z. Myers' father who responds to the angry crowds that have gathered at his door, asking for him to be handed over to be put to death:

"Are you going to plead Jesus' cause? Are you trying to save him? Whoever fights for him shall be put to death by morning! If Jesus really is God, he can defend himself when someone desecrates his body" (reworked from Judges 6:31, NIV).

Would that Christians would learn to listen to the stories in their Scriptures in a self-critical rather than a self-righteous way!

What options are open to the person who looks at both this Biblical story and this current event? One is that the God worshipped by Christians is no more active in the world than Ba'al. If that option is too much to bear, then there are certainly alternatives. What if Jesus is not interested in defending himself? What if the whole point of the cross was to express the idea of a God who is so far from like our human egotism and lack of self esteem that God feels no need to defend himself?

There is always a third option: that God is angry with Catholics, and has sent P. Z. Myers against them much as God is said to have sent the Assyrians against the Israelites. In that case, the appropriate response is to repend, not to threaten God's messenger!

There are plenty of ways that Christians of various sorts might appropriately respond to this situation. I think that death threats and hate mail should be far further down the list than they are. But what this incident really goes to show is this: for most "Christians", what Christianity is about, what the Bible says, what the Eucharist represents, all of that is irrelevant. Christianity is simply a tribe to which they belong and any insult to which they will respond to in a way that, ironically, is incompatible with much that has historically been felt to be central to the Christian faith.

In the mean time, I propose nicknaming Myers "Jerub-Jesus" from now on. Or you can call him "JJ" for short instead of "PZ". Somehow I doubt he'd mind.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Fundamentalism: Fundamentally Unbiblical

The title of this post says it all: Fundamentalism is fundamentally unbiblical.

Now, before you ask, I obviously don't mean that Christian fundamentalists do not quote the Bible in support of their views, beliefs and practices. They do. Of course, they consistently condemn others for "picking and choosing" and yet that is what they themselves are doing, but that's not the subject of today's post. Just about anyone who wishes to can be "biblical" in the sense of finding verses that support their views, and hoping no one notices the ones they aren't quoting. (In fact, fundamentalists have found a solution to this problem. They call it "interpreting Scripture by Scripture. It means that if the Bible says something you agree with, you can dismiss any places that seem to disagree with those verses you like, since they can't possibly mean what they seem to mean, since Scripture cannot contradict Scripture. Oh, my...)

I'm not even accusing them of being unbiblical in the sense that they are at odds with parts of the Bible. They are. But parts of the Bible itself are at odds with parts of the Bible, and some of what I think certainly is too, and it would be hypocritical to criticize them for being unbiblical in this sense.
So in what way is Christian fundamentalism fundamentally unbiblical? In short, they deny that the Bible is what it is. To claim that the Bible is simple when it is complex, to claim that it is clear when it is not, to claim that it is uniform when it is diverse, to claim that it is monolithic when it is pluriform, to claim that it is flawless when it is characterized throughout by the limitations and failings of its human authors - what could possibly be more unbiblical than this?



Elsewhere around the blogosphere, Faithful Progressive points out the irony that right-wing "Christians" show through their attitudes that they accept scientifically-dubious social and economic Darwinism, while fighting against the scientifically sound theory of evolution. The World's Fair shares links to podcasts about Darwin and creationism. John Wilkins and Olivia Judson agree on getting rid of Darwinism. Iyov highlights the Green Bible. And there are a couple of interesting new blogs worth noting: Crowded Handbasket is for those of us who are officially unorthodox, while Theological Scribbles addresses everything from hamburgers to 1 Enoch from a Charismatic perspective.

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

How (Not) To Speak of God

Peter Rollins' book How (Not) To Speak of God (Brewster: Paraclete, 2006) gives voice to the phenomenon of the emergent church in remarkable ways. Rather than engaging in deductive and increasingly abstract reasoning in the tradition of classical theology, Rollins tells a multitude of parables, speaking at the intersection between the profoundly Biblical and the postmodern.

Here are just a couple of samples of the interesting things Rollins has to say:

"Not only is Christianity atheistic insomuch as it rejects ideas of God which stand opposed to those found in its own tradition (the early Christians were called atheists because of their rejection of those deities worshipped by the Romans), but there is also a sense in which Christianity is atheistic because it rejects its own understanding of God. For a Christian who does not simultaneously reject the idea of God that he or she affirms implicitly claims that the one he or she worships can be held within his or her systems of belief" (p.97).

Such statements reflect an appreciation for the mystics who spoke so eloquently about the limitations of language, creating a space for God through their words, rather than filling the void with their inadequate statements (see p.42).

One of my favorite parables is this one:

There is an ancient story, passed down through the generations that tells of a group of unknown disciples who witnessed the bloody crucifixion of Christ. Not able to stay another moment in the place were their Messiah had just been crucified they packed their few belongings and left for a distant shore. With great sorrow they turned their back on the place of their birth, never to return. Instead they founded an isolated community far away from Jerusalem. On the first night that they set up camp each disciple vowed to keep the ground holy, they promised that as long as they were permitted to live they would keep the memory of Christ alive and endeavour to follow the way that he had once taught.

The community lived in great solitude for over a hundred years, spending their days reflecting upon the life of Jesus and attempting to remain faithful to his ways. All this despite the overwhelming sorrow in their hearts and the harrowing sacrifices that such a dedicated life required.

Endless days passed until at dawn one morning, a small band of missionaries stumbled upon the isolated settlement. These preachers of the Word where amazed by the community that they found, they were startled by the fact that these dedicated disciple’s of Christ had no knowledge of his resurrection and ascension. Without hesitation the missionaries gathered together the entire community and taught them about the events that had transpired after the horrific crucifixion of their Lord, telling them of His victory over sin and death and the subsequent rewards we can partake of because of this.

That evening there was a great celebration in the camp. Yet, as the night grew dark, one of the younger missionaries noticed that the leader of the community was absent. This bothered the young man and so he set out to look for the elder. After some time he eventually found the leader kneeling in the corner of a small hut, on the fringe of the village, praying and weeping.

”Why are you in such sorrow”, asked the missionary in amazement “for now is the hour for great celebration”.

”Indeed” replied the elder, who was all the while crouched on the floor, ‘this is an hour for rejoicing, but it is also a time for great sorrow”.
“For over a hundred years we have followed the ways taught to us by Christ. We emulated his teachings faithfully even though it cost us deeply, and we remained resolute despite the belief that death had defeated Him and would one day defeat us also”.

The elder slowly got to his feet and looked the missionary compassionately in the face.

”Each day we have forsaken our very lives for Him. Why? Because we judge Him wholly worthy of the sacrifice, wholly worthy of our being. You find me now, praying for myself and for my future generations, for I am fearful that we may one day follow him not because we love Him and believe him to be worthy of that love, but rather because we love ourselves and want the treasures of eternal life that he offers”.

After offering these thoughts to the young missionary, the elder left the hut and made his way to the celebration, leaving the teacher on his knees in quiet contemplation.”


(According to this site, this was adapted from an Islamic story. Rollins (p.122) attributes it to Jon Hatch).

Secured Hotmail?

Here's the latest scam to make it past the spam filter and into my inbox. Note that this alleged executor who doesn't know your name and doesn't tell you who he represents wishes you to write to him at a "secure" e-mail address...which turns out to be a Hotmail address!

You'd have to be pretty gullible to fall for this, but presumably if you are reading this, you're gullible but just smart enough to do a bit of research. Here's my advice to you: this is a scam, and all such e-mails are scams. Don't fall for it!

Another scam I heard about recently is trickier. There is apparently a phone scam, where they call and ask why you didn't report for jury duty. When you say you were never notified, they ask for personal information to verify who you are. That's a scam too. They don't need your social security number to look up whether you were called for jury duty. Just tell them to send you a copy of the letter again. Give them a fax number if you think they might be legit. But don't give out your social security number!

___________________

Good day To You.

I am facilitating for a private investor who want to invest his financial estate in long-term business venture in your country/company under your supervision. My names are Dr.Simon Munro Barker, the Estate Executor & Legal Representation.

You will be required to;

[1]. Receive the funds.
[2]. Invest and Manage the funds profitably.

The amount available for the investment is Sixty-Five Million United States Dollars (US$65,000,000.00) My client is willing to negotiable percentage Management Commission as soon as the funds arrives your bank account.

We expect to hear from you urgently as this is a high priority Investment Placement and kindly send the following information to enhance communication;

1). Full Names and Address
2). Company Name and Address
3). Telephone, Fax, Cell phone numbers & secured Email Address (s).

I will give comprehensive details when You reply positively my secured Email: simonmbarker@hotmail.com. On receipt of this letter an immediate telephone call is necessary.

“I long to accomplish a great and noble task, but my chief duty is to accomplish humble tasks as though they were great and noble. The world is moved along, not only by the mighty shoves of its heroes, but also by the aggregate of the tiny pushes of each honest worker” HELEN KELLER

Yours in Service

Dr.Simon Munro Barker
For; S.M.Barker Notary Public

Monday, July 14, 2008

The Serenity Prayer as Case Study of Oral Tradition

Stephen C. Carlson has recently posted a link to a blog post by Benjamin Zimmer of Language Log, discussing the evidence for the date and transmission of the famous "serenity prayer", best known today (via widespread print dissemination) in this form:

"God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to tell the difference."
This is a great case study of oral transmission, as Stephen points out. It has even made the news. Those who are interested in oral tradition in early Christianity (and in particular those who have been diablogging about it recently) will want to take a look (and hopefully come back here afterward to talk about it!)



Also on the subject of oral tradition, today I started reading an article that Judy Redman recommended. The article is Robert K. McIver and Marie Carroll, “Distinguishing Characteristics of Orally Transmitted Material When Compared to Material Transmitted by Literary Means,” Applied Cognitive Psychology 18, no. 9 (2004) 1251-1269. The article's research on the different degrees of verbatim agreement at length between different genres (jokes and poems vs. general storytelling) and different modes of transmission (reproduction without access to texts, with access previously but not at the time, and with continuous access to source texts) is important for the study of the Synoptic problem, early Christianity, and many other topics. Most readers of this blog will be able to get access to the article through EBSCO or some other similar database, via their academic or public libraries. I'd welcome discussion of this article too, if any of you are interested! Spread the word (orally or in writing)!

Sunday, July 13, 2008

License to Wed

I just finished watching an entertaining comedy, License to Wed, starring Robin Williams as a priest who requires couples planning to get married in his church to take his marriage preparation course. In essence, he puts stress on them beforehand, so that they learn how to deal with conflict and, more than that, to recognize their differences and be honest with one another. The movie certainly isn't destined to be a classic, but it is truly funny and makes a good point in the process.

Many will know that relationships, marriages, require such honesty. Keeping your true feelings bottled up, resenting, ignoring, pretending, playing a role to the public - that may indeed preserve an image of a 'perfect marriage', but it won't give you the real thing, real intimacy.

Now what would happen if we made similar honesty basic to the lives of our churches, too?

Discussing the Exodus

There is an interesting post (and the makings of a good follow-up discussion) about "Rabbis' and Christians' Views of the Exodus" over at the blog Debunking Christianity. Don't let the name put you off - they are atheists, but they are really about debunking fundamentalism. I suspect that the diverse range of readers here might make an interesting impression if you give them a visit! In particular, a lot of discussions about the Exodus are not well informed by actual reliable information, and I know there are some regular readers who actually are knowledgeable about the subject.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Ancient Authors' Practices and Procedures

This post is a question, addressed first and foremost to readers who may be scholars and students of ancient history and/or the Bible, but also to others.

For some time, researching the interrelationship of the Gospels and the question of sources used, I've often found myself wondering about the procedures these ancient authors may have used. If Luke used Mark and Q, or Mark and Matthew for that matter (I make this latter specification since I hope Mark Goodacre may answer!), then how would he have worked on his own literary opus? Are we to imagine him with his sources stretched out around him as he wrote? Or would he have had one or more assistants, ready to read to him alound at request? Or some other method?

Do we have any ancient authors who have written about the procedures that ancient authors such as historians followed? Any recommendations on things that have been written (whether primary or secondary sources, ancient or modern) that answer this question?

Thanks in advance for your help!

Lyrics of the Day

"Feel" by Chicago
So everybody's pulling you in all directions
You don't know how much longer to take it
So you've learned how to fake it

That smile on the outside's fading fast
Like the things that you thought for sure would last
But they didn't
You know something's missing
Is it your life you're not living?

[Chorus:]
Your heart is cold, your soul is numb
You don't like who you've become
You played the game and paid the cost for long enough
So grab the reins, take the wheel
Lose what's not and keep what's real
It's not too late,
Just close your eyes and feel, feel

You can't tell if you're happy or sad
Can't tell the good from bad
You're senseless
To waste your senses
Maybe stop thinking with your head
Start using your heart instead
Just try it
You just might like it
Aren't you dying to start livin'?

[Chorus]

Every breath that's going through you
Take each day that's given to you
To love back the ones who love you, yeah, yeah

[Chorus]

You can't tell if you're happy or sad
Can't tell the good from the bad
Feel and stop thinking with your head
Start using your heart instead

Your heart is cold, your soul is numb
Yeah, yeah, yeah
You've played the game for long enough, oh, no, no
Everybody's pulling you in all directions

"An Extraordinary Life" by Asia
A perfect day
Or so I say
From where
I'm standing
This rollercoaster ride
Fate will decide
The ending

Love everlasting
Or lost on the way
The smiles
And the frowns
The ups and downs
Of fortune turning
The twists and turns
The lessons learned
The bridges burning

Nights to remember
And never forget

Go, seize the day
Wake up and say
This is an
Extraordinary life
Enjoy today
Come what may
This is an
Extraordinary life

I gave it all
My cards have fallen
But I'm still alive
And in the end
Believe my friend
I will survive

Glory and heartache
And some of the joy

Go, seize the day
Wake up and say
This is an
Extraordinary life
Enjoy today
Come what may
This is an
Extraordinary life

All of the good times
and all of the bad
Responsibility is totally
Mine I know
I rightly stand accused
But I believe
That I can change
Yes
I can change my world

Go, seize the day
Wake up and say
This is an
Extraordinary life
Enjoy today
Come what may
This is an
Extraordinary life

What can I add? There are bands from the 80s that are still going strong, or even making a comeback with their original lineup, and writing songs that will stop you in your tracks when you hear them on the radio.

Friday, July 11, 2008

Quote of the Day (John Derbyshire)

John Derbyshire (of "The Corner" in the National Review) had the following to say about the bill which Governor Bobby Jindal signed into law recently, the "Louisiana Science Education Act", supposedly intended to defend "academic freedom":

Whether or not the law as signed is unconstitutional per se, I do not know. I do know, though — as the creationist Discovery Institute that helped promote the Act also surely knows — that the Act will encourage Louisiana local school boards to unconstitutional behavior. That's what it's meant to do.

Some local school board will take the Act as a permit to bring religious instruction into their science classes. That will irk some parents. Those parents will sue. There will be a noisy and expensive federal lawsuit, possibly followed by further noisy and expensive appeals. The school board will inevitably lose. The property owners of that school district will take the financial hit.

Where will the Discovery Institute be when these legal expenses come due? Just where they were in the Dover case — nowhere! What, you were thinking that those bold warriors for truth at the Discovery Institute will help to fund the defense in these no-hope lawsuits? Ha ha ha ha ha!

Helping to defend creationist school boards in federal courts is not the Discovery Institute's game. Their game is to (a) make money from those spurious "textbooks" they put out, and (b) keep creationism in the news so that they don't run out of lecture gigs and wealthy funders. So far as those legal bills are concerned, Discovery Institute policy is: Let the dumb rubes fund their own stupid lawsuits.

Proudly NOT Associated With Any Who's Who

I received an invitation from yet another Who's Who today, this time by ordinary mail. This one was Cambridge Who's Who. Given what I've learned and experienced about other Who's Who organizations, I'm not surprised that they emphasize that they are proudly not associated with any other Who's Who organization.

This one is much glossier, with a blog and a more impressive web presence than some of the others. But they acknowledge that all they are is a database of contact and biographical information.

I first heard of Cambridge Who's Who from Annoyed Librarian. There's also a collection of links at Scam.com (which can't be a good sign) and an entry at Rip-off Report. Others have posted their own points of view, insights, and even video content online about their own experiences. You be the judge.



As for me, I'm not just proudly not associated with any other Who's Who. I'm proudly not associated with any Who's Who whatsoever.


Wishing The Book Of Genesis Unmythical Doesn't Make It So

Via Wishing Doesn't Make It So, I've ended up participating in a discussion at the New England Pastor blog on "The Mythical Book of Genesis". I suspect many regular readers may also find the discussion interesting and worth joining in.

Thank God For Blessing Us With A Fallible Bible

Lately I've been wondering what would happen if conservative Christians kept the same notion of a Bible that was verbally inspired, in which God determined precisely what it should contain in every detail, but also took seriously the fact that the Bible contains what appear to be differences of viewpoint, discrepancies, and in some cases apparently irreconcilable contradictions. What if one also approached this matter with the assumption that God is honest, loving, and considerate?

Perhaps, rather than assuming that the difficulties are in the Bible to test our willingness to switch off the minds God gave us, and take a leap of faith (or of gullibility), it could be assumed instead that the difficulties are there to be taken seriously, to teach us.

What we'd end up with is a Bible that can serve fundamentalists' kindergarten-level needs, but can also help readers get beyond kindergarten, even force us beyond it when the time was right, when we were old enough mentally and spiritually to read carefully and notice details.

But instead, what has happened is that some loud and unruly children who found the new and challenging things they were teaching in first grade too much to bear, went back and took over the kindergarten, and told those in it that the Principal wants them to stay there, and that those who leave kindergarten because they come to find it unsatisfying or problematic are backsliding. And alas, many identify Christianity itself with the loud voices of these unruly, overgrown kindergarten kids. But what if God has providentially placed in the Bible clues that are meant to lead you to eventually realize that what God wants from you is precisely what the loud voices of fundamentalism condemn: taking responsibility for your own actions, for your moral judgments, and learning to live with uncertainty, yet not without faith?

My appeal to fundamentalists is this: try approaching the Bible as though you actually believe what you claim to: (1) that God is honest, (2) that God means for you to study the Bible carefully and in detail, and (3) that God put everything that is in the Bible there for a reason.

Maybe it will enable you to finally stop repeating kindergarten and graduate to first grade. Eventually you'll face some spiritually tough years, spiritual 'adolescence'. But spiritual maturity and adulthood await you on the other side, and if you're willing to be honest about doubts and questions, there are many, many Christians who will help you. In spite of what you've heard, there are a lot of teachers, resources, friends, and interesting experiences God has in store for you beyond the comfort of kindergarten.

You probably don't want to merely play with blocks your whole life (although LEGOs never stop being fun). Why settle for the spiritual equivalent of doing just that?

Thursday, July 10, 2008

What The Blogosphere Says

Doug Chapin has recommended abandoning talk of "what the Bible says", with further discussion by Henry Neufeld and Sean the Baptist. Paul Flesher compares ancient and modern readers.

The news about the Revelation of Gabriel is being followed by PaleoJudaica, Stephen Cook, Think Christian and many others.

Creationists are appealing to the Flintstones in their support. A philosopher has taken on the idea of irreducible complexity. New Scientist covers the latest legal threat to evolution and thus to decent science education.

Faithfully Liberal asks what the religious Left is doing. Open Parachute looks at religion and ceremony. SF Gospel tries to clear up Terry Pratchett's statements about God. Metanexus' The Global Spiral has an excerpt from Roy Clouser's The Myth of Religious Neutrality. At the Center for Progressive Christianity, Terri Murray writes about "Myth-Busting the Religious Right", while there's a sermon by Paul Knitter on Jesus, the way that is open to other ways. NPR has a piece on Christine Wicker, whose book on Evangelicalism I hope to read soon. The Berkley Center has a new site tracking religious rhetoric used in political campaigns.

New iPhone Feature Needed

The current iPhone enables one to make and receive phone calls, e-mails, and text messages, view pdf files, photos, and videos, not use turn signals, and drive at 15 MPH in a 30 MPH zone.

Rumor has it the next generation of iPhone will include an additional safety feature: an airbag, for those instances where one inevitably careens into oncoming traffic while using it.

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

The Mandaean Calendar and the Egyptian Calendar

The Mandaeans use a solar calendar which consists of 12 months, each consisting of exactly 30 days, with an additional 5 days added at the end of the year which do not belong to any month. Apparently, this same calendar was used in ancient Egypt throughout most of its history. An additional day once every 4 years was added to the calendar before the first century C.E. The Jews down the ages have used a lunar calendar for the most part, and advocates of a solar calendar took an approach not entirely unlike that of the Egyptians, but aiming for a 364-day year, as in the case of the calendar advocated in the Book of Jubilees.

Does this evidence show a connection between the Mandaeans and Egypt which goes back earlier than the first century B.C.E.? Could the Mandaeans have adopted the calendar without ever having lived in Egypt, just through reading or hearing about it? The latter seems unlikely. Other minor details of Mandaean belief (e.g. the name Ptahil, which resembles that of the Egyptian deity Ptah) might also make a connection with Egypt plausible. This need not mean actually living in Egypt proper, since Egypt's territorial holdings reached much further. Would living in the vicinity of the Jordan during the Ptolemaic era have been enough to account for this similarity? Could the Mandaeans simply have come up with the same solution to the problem of the calendar independently of the Egyptians?

The question I'm most interested in is whether the Mandaean calendar allows us to figure out anything at all about the origin and history of the Mandaeans.

Cartoons Around the Blogosphere

John Pieret has a "cracker" of a post. Ann Fontaine highlights some bloggers who are blogging the Qur'an. Ken Schenck continues working through James D. G. Dunn's The Partings of the Ways. The Evolution of the Mystery talks about miracles. Scot McKnight has a little exercise for young theobloggers. Jim West shares Joe Zias' thoughts on the "Revelation of Gabriel". Chris Heard's two interests, teaching Bible and role playing games, are finally converging. Mark Goodacre blogs the Doctor Who season finale, "Journey's End". C.Orthodoxy points to a Christianity Today article about why hell gets more movie time than heaven.

Here's the latest from ASBO Jesus:

I think it may perhaps be beaten by this gem from Abtruse Goose (HT Pharyngula):

But even that did not make me laugh as hard as this little promotional video, brought to you by "Christians for worshipping and praising the God of the Bible, or else" (HT Debunking Christianity):

What's $1.5 Million Between "Friends"?

Here's another scam e-mail I received. As usual, when they make it through the spam filter, I post a warning, since I get lots of gullible people finding their way to my blog searching for key words and names from the e-mail, since somehow they think the e-mail might be real and worth checking.

Here's the contents of the most recent one. It is a scam. No one wants to transfer money to a complete stranger. No one. Not now, not ever. And by the way, FEDEX has its own e-mail addresses - they don't need to use Gmail's free service...
_____________________


Dear Friend,

I have been waiting for you since to contact me for your Confirmable Bank Draft of $1.5M United States Dollars, but I did not hear from you since that time. Then I went and deposited the Draft with FEDEX COURIER SERVICE, Cotonou, Benin Republic before I travelled out of the country for a 3 Months Course and I will not come back till end of the year What you have to do now is to contact the FEDEX COURIER SERVICE as soon as possible to know when they will deliver your package to you because of the expiring date. For your information, I have paid for the delivering Charge, Insurance premium and Clearance

Certificate Fee of the Cheque showing that it is not a Drug Money or meant to sponsor Terrorist attack in your Country.The only money you will send to the FEDEX COURIER SERVICE to deliver your Draft direct to your postal Address in your country is ($95.00 US) Dollars only. Being Security Keeping Fee of the Courier Company so far.Again, don't be deceived by anybody to pay any other money except $95.00US Dollars. I would have paid that but they said no because they don't know when you will contact them and in case of demurrage.

You have to contact the FEDEX COURIER SERVICE now for the delivery of your Draft with this information bellow;

Contact Person: Rev William Momoh
Email Address:fedexcourerservices@gmail.com
Telephone:+229-97695456

Finally, make sure that you reconfirm your Postal address and Direct telephone number to them again to avoid any mistake on the Delivery and ask them to give you the tracking number to enable you track your package over there and know when it will get to your address.Let me repeat again, try to contact them as soon as you receive this mail to avoid any further delay and remember to pay them their Security Keeping fee of $95.00 US Dollars for their immediate action.You should also let me know through email as soon as you receive your Draft.
Yours Faithfully,
Ben Anni

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Lived Long and Prospered


The news is just breaking in the blogosphere that Sir John Templeton, founder of the Templeton Foundation, has passed away. He was 95. He is best known for his financial success, and for his work in promoting a free market approach to religion and constructive dialogue between religion and science.

More Wildlife From Our Yard

Here are some better video clips of our hummingbirds:




And now for a couple of clips of a deer that visits our garden regularly.



Doctor Who: Journey's End, Creation's End, God's End?

I just watched "Journey's End", the season finale of Doctor Who. This post contains spoilers. It also explores the Bible and theology in light of this episode of Doctor Who that you may find disturbing. Reader discretion is advised.

Loren Rosson is of course right that there were ad hoc resolutions to issues, unconvincing waves of magic technobabble that made problems resolve themselves. But that just means it was Doctor Who we were watching. The show has always tied itself up into temporal paradoxes that could only be resolved in unsatisfying ways. Whether that excuses this aspect of the show I won't say. But I'd like to look beyond storyline flaws (which one can find anywhere, even in the Bible, if one is looking for them) and try to reflect on the story this two-part episode told.

The story was akin to the story of the Flood. But the Biblical flood story is just one example of a Biblical narrative that tied itself up in knots that it couldn't disentangle in a satisfactory way. The earlier flood story, found in one version in the Gilgamesh epic, was not without problems. Gods of great power who nonetheless rely on humans for food. Gods who can't find a better solution to the problem of human noise problem than extermination.

But when an ancient Israelite author tried to co-opt that story (which was too familiar and could not simply be discarded) into monotheism, it created the ultimate theological conundrum. How does one account for a single God both destroying the world and saving humanity? So it was that the traditions that stem from ancient Israel's ended up with a God whose love and severity seemed impossible to balance, a God who was both Doctor and Dalek. A God who eventually is portrayed as judging humans for sacrificing their children, but earlier (in the Flood story) was willing to sacrifice his own children, his own creations, for the sake of a moral abstraction. Thankfully, somehow, without realizing it, most of us who cherish the Bible have managed to strive for an ideal of parenthood that excels that in this particular story.

The flood story, in both the Gilgamesh Epic and in the book of Genesis, is about an undoing of creation. In ancient Israel's dominant conception at the time Genesis was put into something like its present form, the world was created from a watery chaos, and the flood reverted creation to that initial state, "formless and void". The "reality bomb" in the Doctor Who episode "Journey's End" had a similar effect, breaking apart the bonds that hold reality together, at the level of atoms, but in essence telling the same sort of story in contemporary scientific terms.

I wonder whether the Doctor Who story makes more sense than the Genesis story, and whether we can ever hope to come up with a better one than either of these two. In Doctor Who, the Doctor and his friends fight to preserve the universe, while Davros and the Daleks want to destroy it and leave only themselves. The part of the Daleks is more akin to the deity depicted in the Genesis flood story, while the Doctor is more like Abraham, pleading for Sodom and Gomorrah, rejecting the option of an "Osterhagen Key" that decides that ripping apart a planet, or a universe, is better than letting life continue to exist even with all the pain, suffering and death that is a part of it. Yet if we value existence itself, we still confront paradoxes, since it is the universe that has given rise to both those that value it for its own sake, and those that would rather wipe it out altogether than share it with those different than themselves.

The flood story was supposed to reinforce ethical monotheism, but the more we reflect on it, the more its deluge wipes away such earlier ways of thinking and leads us on to new insights and still greater mysteries.

The theological aspects of this episode are not finished, however. For the Doctor becomes "Trinitarian", almost regenerating, then directing the extra energy into his severed hand, which then becomes a Doctor who is part human and a Donna who is part Doctor. We thus have two variations on the notion of Christ, the incarnational model and the apotheosis or exaltationist model.

Donna's case shows what is wrong, not necessarily with either model, but with the idea of a person becoming God or God becoming a person in anything like the manner much of popular Christianity imagines it. We end up with an infinite mind in a finite person. Just calling it a mystery doesn't help. If we were to place even the mind of the most advanced life form we can imagine inhabiting our universe into a human being, it would either burn the human out or be limited by its new host. The notion of a God-Man has always faced problems, and we must posit either a kenosis, or a Nestorian-type separation, or something. To simply state that there is neither separation nor confusion is to cause confusion, not only in the creed but in our minds.

And so we find this episode revealing to us one of the deepest truths, one of the darkest secrets. We do not know. The mystery of God, of existence, of why we are here, has not been given a definitive answer, either dropped from heaven or issuing forth from human minds, hearts and souls. We remain with uncertainty, about the past and about the future.

And so we turn ourselves to smaller mysteries that we may one day be able to answer. For instance, will what happened in this episode count as one of the Doctor's regenerations? Does his not using all the regeneration energy this time cause the anomaly that occurs between his twelfth and final regenerations? Will the "Doctor" who left with Rose be at all connected with that?

In the end, we are left with the Doctor - a smaller, more manageable deity that we can ponder. He is quite human, for a time lord, but for precisely that reason we do not expect him to be perfect. We can accept him as benevolent, and yet (as Davros dies accusing him) at the same time "Destroyer of Worlds".

Has the time come to take a more "Hindu" approach to Christianity, and resign ourselves to an ultimate, unspeakable mystery, and to human manifestations thereof that we do not pretend have the perfection of the ultimate? Is it time to let the flood carry away the notion that any concept we might come up with of the divine would ever be truly good, any more than we ourselves are good?

Monday, July 7, 2008

Hummingbirds

Here's the first of several short videos of hummingbirds at our feeder that I'm in the process of uploading to YouTube.

Ancient Texts Online: Rising Messiahs and Reproduced Mandaean Sources

A 2,000 year old stone tablet has (once again) been making news headlines because of its possible reference to a Messiah who rises after 3 days. Of course, the truth of the matter is that there are numerous difficulties involved in reading and then interpreting the text.

Help for those trying to make an informed judgment about the text is provided by The Aramaic Blog, who have helpfully posted images of the transcribed text, as well as a link to an article about it. NT Wrong has short excerpts from Israel Knohl's article.

I've yet to take a proper look at it, but it would make sense in the context of my current thinking about the rise of early Christianity if the motif of "in three days rise again" was already traditional, and the disciples who fled back to Galilee came to believe that Jesus had risen "on the third day" not because they knew a tomb had been found empty on that day, but because they believed that was what must have happened "according to the Scriptures".
In other ancient Messianic news, Jim West continues his summaries of Antonio Lombatti's Italian posts on the Talpiot tomb.
In connection with another of my current interests, I would also like to mention that a couple more classic translations of Mandaean texts into German by Mark Lidzbarski have been made available in Acrobat PDF and other formats at archive.org. In addition to the Ginza, there is the Book of John (in two parts) and the Mandaean Liturgy. What a fantastically helpful resource archive.org provides!

Sunday, July 6, 2008

You Don't Know The Language Until You Can Say "Fireman"

I'm always on the lookout for resources related to the Mandaic language, primarily its ancient classical form, but also the modern spoken version. (If anyone ever comes across a copy of the Drower and Macuch Mandaic Dictionary, please let me know!) Today I came across "Mandaean school lessons in English", in fact a single lesson in a Word document. The early pages of this online lesson are confusing, with what seems like it should be an introduction to the Mandaic alphabet in fact giving Arabic letters (go here for a clearer presentation of the Mandaic alphabet). But eventually it gets to a conversational lesson. And before its over, you will know how to say fireman in the modern Mandaic dialect.

Mandaic as a spoken language has persisted more among Mandaeans in Iran than those in Iraq, perhaps because Farsi is from a completely different language family (Indo-European), whereas Mandaic and Arabic spoken in Iraq are both Semitic languages, and in all but a very few places, various forms of Aramaic found themselves overpowered by the ease of transfer to Arabic as a spoken language.

Meanwhile, I'm enjoying working on Syriac, and trying my hand at not only the Peshitta but also a new chrestomathy (i.e. selection of texts) published by Gorgias Press, `Enbe men Karmo Suryoyo. And reading various Mandaic texts in English translation today (with consultation of the facsimile of the original and/or Drower's transliteration at key points), I found some very interesting hints about the group's history and relation to Judaism and other traditions. I'm looking forward to getting some of my findings and thoughts so far into writing over the coming week!

Saturday, July 5, 2008

Christian Identity and Dalit Religion in Hindu India, 1868–1947

My colleague Chad Bauman's forthcoming book on conversion to Christianity in India is now listed on Amazon and on the publisher's web page. Here are the details:

Chad Bauman, Christian Identity and Dalit Religion in Hindu India, 1868-1947 (Studies in the History of Christian Missions) (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2008).



Congratulations, Chad!

Friday, July 4, 2008

Happy Independence Day!

It is the 4th of July, and in the United States, we often find people mixing Christianity and nationalism in ways that are at best ironic, and at times downright contradictory. The 4th of July is thus an appropriate day for reflection on Christianity, nationalism, and what might have been different had the colonies in the New World not fought for their independence.

First, we should remember the ways that Jesus challenged the nationalism of his time. There has been some interesting discussion of Bible translation in the blogosphere lately. If we're going to translate so as to make the meaning intelligible to any reader in a language today, then we have to effectively translate the impact of the story or saying, and the shock it would have caused to its original hearers.

I wonder how many American Christians would value their Bibles as highly as they do now in theory, if they contained such dynamically equivalent translations, and said things like "Many will come from Iraq and Afghanistan and take their place in the kingdom of God, while many Americans will be cast out." Ouch!

We also need to remember that today we celebrate our declaring our independence from a "Christian empire", and our independence surely contributed to the weakening and downfall of that empire. With the wealth and potential for expansion that ended up in the hands of the United States rather than Britain, presumably England's empire would have remained powerful for much longer. Its holdings also included the Middle East, and so all those lines that the British drew when they withdrew, creating nation-states that separated people who wanted to be together and lumped together people who wanted to be separate, would perhaps not be there even today.

Where would the Baptists and others who valued religious freedom have fled to?

Without this loss of prominence and dominance, would the Church of England have become such a broad tradition with such a progressive outlook in at least some quarters, ordaining women and eventually even homosexuals?

If the "United States" had remained part of this "Christian empire", then rather than celebrating our independence today, there might be many groups, including Christian groups, hoping and praying and perhaps even fighting for their independence from us.

Think about it... and remember, if we don't use our independence wisely, Alan Baxter, John Cleese and/or the Queen might still revoke it...

Have a happy 4th of July!

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Exploring Our Matrix contains no four-letter words

The Blog-O-Cuss Meter - Do you cuss a lot in your blog or website?

The Passion of the Flying Spaghetti Monster



Wednesday, July 2, 2008

An Appeal To The Public About Intelligent Design

Scientific theories are tested by scientists, whether in labs or in real-life scenarios that relate to the theory. Taking measurements, creating laboratory scenarios, painstakingly eliminating extraneous influences in a controlled environment, making repeated observations - all that is the stuff of science, the way science proceeds.

The proponents of "Intelligent Design" (or cdesign proponentsists, as they are also known) has chosen to promote its "theory" (thus showing it to in fact be an ideology) before the court of public opinion. It has bypassed all the methods that have been tried and tested over recent centuries, the methods that have made science such a powerful mode of inquiry, and have made use of distractions and switcheroos when legitimate scientists have analysed their claims. They have claimed that the public can assess the evidence, can make the right choice.



Yet when a conservative, Republican-appointed judge is called upon to examine the evidence regarding their claims to be doing science, and finds against them, they complain that he was "ill equipped to preside over the case".



Public, I am appealing to your intelligence directly. The proponents of Intelligent Design are presenting their message to you directly because they are confident that you are sufficiently "ill equipped" to be taken in by their claims. They are pandering to you, confident that you will vote with your gut rather than take the time to carefully investigate their claims. They are sure you will be swayed, not by the scientific evidence, but by the Christian apologist's prologue and the context that sets for their message. In short, they are banking on you deciding matters according to truthiness rather than truth.



Members of the public, I appeal to you to not allow these charlatans and tricksters to insult your intelligence in this way. Check their claims, investigate the facts, and show them that the public is smarter than they have hoped.

A Puzzle For The Would-Be Student Of Mandaic

OK, let me see if I've got this straight. There are scarcely any resources readily available to enable one to learn Mandaic, and most of the resources that have ever existed are out of print and, if one can even find a copy, very expensive.

Yet there are apparently enough people who know Mandaic for there to be a market for these "I Can Be You Mandaic Teacher" T shirts on amazon.com.

Hmm...

If anyone else is working on the language (or planning or hoping to do so), all I can say is I hope you encounter someone wearing this T-shirt!

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Family Guy: Blue Harvest

At the recommendation of several of my students, I watched the Family Guy - Blue Harvest, the Family Guy Star Wars parody episode. Although there was a fair bit of rude humor and other aspects that are not for the faint hearted, some of it was so well done as to deserve a recommendation.

Among the funniest moments were these [SPOILERS ALERT]:

Princess Leia trying to save her message for Obi-Wan, and R2D2's interface is like Windows. The menu says things like "You need to download Real Player 7 to continue"...

Tatooine's talk radio station WTAT discusses the liberal media's claims that Hoth is melting.

John Williams gives a live performance of the wonderful, haunting music that plays while Luke watches the binary sunset. As a result, conductor and orchestra are all killed when the Stormtroopers come back looking for the droids - which leads Luke to complain that now they'll have to do the rest of the show with Danny Elfman!

Han Solo says that hyperspace always looks so freaky - and out the cockpit is the opening from the Tom Baker season of Doctor Who.

On Death Star News, in order to reassure those who found the destruction of Alderaan controversial, report on the finding of weapons of mass destruction on the planet. They also report on the Ewok pride parade.

On the Death Star, they try to find their way around using a mall map, encounter the imperial march as elevator music, end up in a Stormtrooper church, and try to take a couch with them that had been thrown away, which they found in the trash compactor.
I have no plans to ever watch Family Guy again. If you are unfamiliar with the series, be warned that it is not at all for children: the episode I watched contains profanity, drug references, allusions to Obi Wan Kenobi having been a pedophile, and all sorts of other nastiness that is supposed to be funny. But as far as adults are concerned, anyone who is a Star Wars fan ought to see this one episode (which you can watch online) of Family Guy. There is enough great Star Wars humor in it to make it worth putting up with the rest. And be sure to watch it all the way through to the end, where there is a self depricating reference to Robot Chicken having beaten them to the punch with its own cartoon Star Wars spoof!


Nosrim wa-Minim = Nasuraiia wa-Mandaiia?

Scholars of both the Bible and Rabbinic literature will be familiar with discussions of the Eighteen Benedictions (Shemoneh Esreh) and the debates about the history and original form of the "birkat ha-minim", the "blessing (i.e. cursing) of the heretics". Many New Testament scholars have intersected with this subject as it has been discussed in connection with the setting of the Fourth Gospel.

Eventually, Christianity did indeed become a significant enough factor for Judaism to need to interact with it in a major way. But just how much of a problem was Jewish Christianity in the first few centuries? In fact, the number of specifically anti-Christian polemical passages in early Rabbinic literature is relatively small.

I've argued in an article I wrote about "two powers heresy" that the original focus of this designation was Gnosticism, and only later it came to be applied to Christian beliefs. It may well be that Gnosticism was a more serious issue for Judaism in the earliest period.

If so, and if as seems likely the Mandaeans originated as a Jewish Gnostic sect, then could the condemnation of the heretics in some forms of the Eighteen Benedictions have singled them out? Could the (mostly Gentile) Christians who assumed they were important enough to be singled out for cursing in the synagogues have had an exaggerated sense of their importance to Jews?

The rabbis have always loved puns. Perhaps it is time to seriously consider whether the curse on the "minim" and "nosrim" may not have been aimed at the "mandaiia" (Gnostics/Mandaeans) and "nasuraiia" (Gnostics/Nasoreans), two key self-designations of the Mandaeans.

Intelligent Design Is Pure Science...

"Intelligent Design is pure science" has been the claim of the movement associated with this name from the outset. And now you can read about it in a brand new book that explains what Intelligent Design is. The foreword to the book is written by a well-known conservative Christian apologist (and one of the authors is that famous apologist's son).

Hey, wait a minute...How are we supposed to parody this viewpoint when the reality sounds like a joke?!

At any rate, John Pieret has a better explanation of what Intelligent Design is (or why it is).

Elsewhere in the blogosphere, NT Wrong has an interview with the author of Saving Darwin (also here) and statistics on Republicans and creationism. Open Parachute has posts on "I didn't come from a monkey" (OK, maybe monkeys that can count) and whether most Americans are persuaded by the evidence for evolution. The Evolution of Mystery has a scary Gallup poll and Bob Cornwall has more Pew findings. Pisteuomen looks at the Genesis creation stories as parody. The Center for Progressive Christianity has news, book reviews and sermons.

Mystical Seeker has several interesting posts on subjects like "Why Religion?" and Keith Ward's book Rethinking Christianity. Biology in Science Fiction has Robert Sawyer on the relevance of sci fi for today. Metanexus has several posts on cybernetics, transhumanism and the posthuman future. Blogging Faith has a post on politicians' beliefs about salvation. And at long last, Codex has the XXX Biblical Studies Blog Carnival. That should get a few hits from people looking for something else...