[Dialogue] fuNDEMENTALISM PART 3
KroegerD at aol.com
KroegerD at aol.com
Thu Mar 22 06:34:20 EDT 2007
March 21, 2007
The Rise of Fundamentalism, Part III: The Five Fundamentals
One of the things we need to embrace in order to understand the conflicts
being waged in most of the main line churches today is that throughout most of
human history, the average man or woman could neither read nor write. That is
why the Church used art forms, like the Stations of the Cross, or music, like
the various spirituals developed in the black church telling a story in
song, to inform the people about the nature of the Christian faith. This fact
also meant that when a challenge to perceived truth occurred, very few people
ever heard about it or were disturbed by it. Therefore in the 16th century when
a revolutionary view of the universe was developed by Copernicus, suggesting
that the planet earth was not the center of creation, it was not a great
problem for the Church since few people ever heard about it. A century later,
however, when Galileo, who was a far more public figure, embraced the thought
of Copernicus and began to discuss and write about his thinking publicly, he
paid for his notoriety in a trial, which forced him to end his life as a
heretic under house arrest. Why was this cosmological insight so upsetting? The
answer to that was quite simple. If heaven is not just above the sky, then much
of the content of the Bible, from the Tower of Babel to the story of Jesus'
ascension becomes nonsensical. With the rise of an educated class in the
great universities of Europe the Church's ability to control truth and to define
the limits of the debate began to fade. In the 17th century Isaac Newton
brought natural law into western consciousness and consequently contributed to
the shrinking of the realms in which both miracle and magic were believed to
occur. Charles Darwin, once he made his trip to the Galapagos Islands in the
19th century, proceeded to challenge the Church's understanding of human
origins and correspondingly the accuracy of the creation story from the Book of
Genesis. If human beings were not fallen from a pristine position of having been
fashioned in God's image, then the divine rescue that Jesus was said to have
effected with his redemptive act of suffering and dying on the cross was a
solution to an incorrect diagnosis. In the early years of the 20th century
when Sigmund Freud began to analyze the infantile elements in Christianity, the
view of God as a heavenly parent figure was destabilized and much that was
once called holy now appeared to be only neurotic. As a result organized
religion in the western world went into a tailspin. Later in the middle years of
that same 20th century, Albert Einstein confronted the world with the idea that
both time and space were relative categories, and that since all people live
inside time and space, every human articulation of truth was itself relative
and not absolute. This meant that Christianity's absolutist claims for
infallible popes and inerrant Bibles could no longer be seriously entertained.
As each of these now largely undisputed insights began to enter, first the
universities and, in time, the lowest levels of the public schools, their
unavoidable truth was seen to challenge the presuppositions of the Christian
faith and to set up a mighty struggle between religion and contemporary
knowledge. We are still aware of some of the flash points of that struggle in the
United States. There was the Scopes trial in Dayton, Tennessee, in 1925 when a
young biology teacher named John Scopes was put on trial for violating a state
statute forbidding the teaching of "godless evolution" to Tennessee children,
since it was deemed to be contrary to "The Word of God." The trial attracted
national attention since it brought into that small town courtroom two very
well known public figures: Williams Jennings Bryan, a three-time Democratic
Party nominee for President (1896, 1900 and 1908) to defend the literal Bible
and renowned trial lawyer and atheist, Clarence Darrow, to defend the young
school teacher. Such semi-religious propositions as "creation science" and
"intelligent design" are today the lingering residue of that battle. The current
searing conflicts inside Christianity over the place of the Bible in
determining what is to be the role and status of women and the place of homosexuals
in both church and society are nothing more than one final gasp of this age
old conflict. Not to see this is simply to be blind to history.
There is a second source of knowledge that also feeds this current dispute.
This one arises from within specifically Christian circles and reflects the
last 200 years of critical biblical scholarship. In the 18th century Christian
leaders began to probe the Bible with the new tools of scholarship that were
available to them. In the process most of the old assumptions about the Bible
were quickly obliterated. Beginning in Germany, the idea that God dictated
the Torah (Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy) was brought
into question and quickly dismissed. A group of scholars in what came to be
known as the Graf-Welhausen School identified a minimum of four distinct sources
underlying the Torah. None of these sources were as old as Moses, who died
around 1250 B.C.E. and whose life is shrouded in mystery. The earliest source
of the Torah was written some 300 years after the death of Moses. It reflects
the values of what came to be called the land of Judah with its holy city of
Jerusalem, its temple and temple priesthood and the established monarchy of
the descendants of King David, whose memory was regarded as the golden age of
the Jews. The second source was written in the Northern Kingdom called
Israel after a successful revolution against Judah led by a military captain named
Jeroboam. This version extolled the revolution, justified rebelling against
those kings who violated the people's trust, and sought to build up Northern
shrines at Bethel and Beersheba to compete with Jerusalem. It also treated
Joseph, the presumed ancestor of the people of the Northern Kingdom, as Jacob's
favorite son, the child by his favorite wife and made his half-brother
Judah, the patriarch of the South, into a villain. When the Assyrians conquered
the Northern Kingdom in 721 B.C.E. refugees bearing their version of the sacred
story escaped the carnage in Samaria and came to Jerusalem. Later, scribes
pasted these two sacred stories together, sometimes rather crudely, allowing
contradictions to stand side by side as the sacred Torah began to come into
view.
This ongoing story was later impacted in 625 B.C.E. under the reign of the
boy King Josiah when a sacred scroll was found in the walls of the Temple
during renovations. It claimed to be the work of Moses and came to be called the
second (deutero) giving of the law (nomos). It is substantially our book of
Deuteronomy today. Deuteronomy was then added to the new combined version of
the Torah and the whole work was edited in light of Deuteronomy in the third
stage of its development. Finally, when Jerusalem fell to the Babylonians,
first in 596 B.C.E. and later in 586 B.C.E., the Jewish people were carried into
exile. In that captivity, led by a group of priestly writers, a final massive
editing of their sacred story was carried out. The Torah was expanded to
twice its size and it now emphasized faithful worship apart from Jerusalem and
it encouraged those marks of Judaism, like Sabbath Day observance, kosher
dietary rules and physical circumcision, which were designed to keep Jews
separate from non-Jews and to insure their survival as a people separated from their
homeland. With that final revision the Torah generally assumed its present
form. It was then adopted as the law of God in a renewal of the covenant
ceremony under the leadership of the priest Ezra when the exile finally ended. It
was this discovery of the way the sacred text came to be formed over some 500
years that rendered the claim that the Bible was the inerrant Word of God
largely unbelievable.
In time the same critical analysis would be applied to the New Testament.
Scholars discovered first the primacy of Mark and then recognized that both
Matthew and Luke had copied great chunks of Mark into their gospels. In the
process, they had edited Mark, added to Mark, deleted from Mark and changed Mark.
Neither Matthew nor Luke seemed to believe that Mark's text was the 'Word of
God.' Next the contradictions in the New Testament between the gospels and
the writings of Paul were noticed. We began to see, by looking at the books of
the New Testament, how the story grew and developed, when the new traditions
entered and when the supernatural elements got heightened. Assumptions of
divinely-inspired inerrancy died.
By and large this knowledge of and debate about the Bible remained within the
confines of the academies of Christian Europe until the year 1834 when a
young New Testament scholar named David Friedrich Strauss, a professor at the
University of Tubingen, wrote a monumental book entitled "Leben Jesu" or in
English, "The Life of Jesus Critically Examined." With this book, New Testament
scholarship broke out into the public and Christianity began its move into
two camps. Those open and willing to engage the new insights became the
modernists, characterized as "liberals", "secular humanists" and as "non-believers"
by their traditionalist critics, and those who insisted that the Bible was
still the literal, inerrant word of God. In the early 1900's these
traditionalists produced a series of pamphlets designed to defend the literal accuracy of
the Bible. Written and edited primarily by R. A. Torrey and A. C. Dixon,
they articulated what they called "The Fundamentals" of Christianity. With the
support of money from Lyman Stewart, the founder of Union Oil Co. of
California, now called Unocal, these pamphlets were first mailed to 300,000 Christian
workers across the world and were later published in twelve volumes of
essays. Those who held to these fundamentals of Christianity then came to be called
'Fundamentalists.' That is how this word came into our vocabulary...
Next week, I will examine these tracts and what came to be called "The Five
Fundamentals" that were said to form the irreducible bedrock of Christianity.
Then we will look week by week at each of these fundamentals. Surprises await
us, but with those surprises will come a greater illumination of the current
debates that threaten to tear main line churches apart.
John Shelby Spong _Note from the Editor: Bishop Spong's new book is
available now at bookstores everywhere and by clicking here!_
(http://astore.amazon.com/bishopspong-20/detail/0060762071/104-6221748-5882304)
A message from Bisphop Spong
Dear Friends and Subscribers,
I wish to apologize for a mistake in the question and answer feature of last
week's column.
I referred to George Carey as the Bishop of Bath and Wales when he was
appointed Archbishop of Canterbury. The correct designation was Bath and Wells.
This mistake grieves me for two reasons: First, I have on two occasions done
lectures for the Clergy in that Diocese that were held in the Wells Cathedral
and I know that area very well. A former Bishop of that Diocese was my good
friend, Jim Thompson. Secondly my wife is English (from Worthing, Sussex) and
she is my primary proof reader and this mistake was missed by us both.
Furthermore we have also been to Wales on any number of occasions and know
and appreciate that part of the United Kingdom very much. Wells and Wales are
both lovely and do not need to be confused. Especially to my English readers
may I say that I regret this error. It has now been changed on the Master Copy
so that if you wish to read it online again you will find it corrected.
John Shelby Spong
Question and Answer
With John Shelby Spong
David Stegall of Birmingham, Alabama, writes:
I can find countless numbers of biblical commentaries that hold a very
conservative, fundamentalist, evangelical, literal and archaic world view. I
cannot find one biblical commentary with a post-modern (or is it post-post now?),
pluralistic, scholastically valid, metaphorically interpretive contemporary
world view.
I have read most of your books, many of your essays; listened to your tapes
(can I get more? Where?) And I have read most of Marcus Borg's books, some of
John Hick's books and essays. All of you relate alternative (to literalist)
and astute interpretations of biblical stories but where can I get a complete
volume? I know they exist somewhere. An excellent example of this is your
interpretation of the Book of Job.
Can you help me with this? I want to help create a new Christianity for a new
world but I need a way to teach not only educated adults but also lesser
educated adults and children. If we could start out teaching children in a
loving and compassionate, rational way, we would not have to re-program them to a
new cosmology, etc. when they grow up and start realizing that certain things
they were taught in Sunday School and church do not make sense.
Dear David,
I get the sense that you are looking for a one-volume commentary on the
Bible. If I have understood you correctly, they are mostly written by literalists
because those who are not literalists would know how impossible that task
is. The Bible is made up of 66 books, written over a period of about 1000
years, two to three thousand years ago. It is written by Middle Eastern people who
have a Middle Eastern world view during the period of history from 1000
B.C.E. to 135 C.E. The books are written in Greek and Hebrew. There are many fine
commentaries on individual books of the Bible. There are even entire Bible
commentary volumes that literally line the shelves of many pastors, like the
Interpreter's Bible, popular a generation ago or the Anchor Bible series put
out by Doubleday a bit more recently. These volumes are, however, not uniform
in content, with some authors better than others. Many of these volumes are in
fact never opened. Few clergy want to spend much time on I and II Chronicles
or the prophet Haggai, for example. It is far more fruitful to seek out a
major writer who has dedicated his or her study life to a single book or group
of books in the biblical text. I still regard Gerhard Von Rad's "Genesis" as
the best commentary on that biblical book and on Old Testament theological
issues. St. John's gospel has many great commentaries with the most recent one
being Raymond Brown's two-volume work in the Anchor Bible series, which is
still probably at the top of the list for understanding John. The work of C.H.
Dodd and even William Temple on this Fourth Gospel, although two or three
generations old, are still treasured by me. I rank Michael Donald Goulders'
two-volume work on Luke as my favorite. It is entitled, "Luke: A New Paradigm."
Among the great names in biblical scholarship are David Friedrich Strauss,
whose 1834 book, "The Life of Jesus Critically Reviewed," first brought
biblical scholarship out of the academy and into the public. Rudolf Bultmann is
probably the most quoted and defining New Testament scholar of the 20th century.
Ernst Haencken's work on the Book of Acts has not, in my mind, been topped
since its publication almost forty years ago. Outstanding Pauline scholars
range from Martin Luther to John Dominic Crossan.
One way of separating the literalists from the scholars is to look at the
publishing company. The big publishers, McGraw-Hill, Harper-Collins or Doubleday
will not as a rule publish unlearned Protestant or Catholic propaganda
masquerading as biblical commentaries, but small evangelical or Roman Catholic
publishing houses do. Eerdman's, for example, is one publisher I generally
dismiss without much further study.
Finally, if you want to read a book about the Bible as a whole, I recommend
Marcus Borg's, "Reading the Bible again for the First Time" or my book,
"Rescuing the Bible from Fundamentalism." Both are introductory studies from a
modern non-literal perspective.
I'm sorry I cannot give you a simple answer to your profound inquiry. It just
really isn't that easy.
John Shelby Spong
P.S. Audio and video tapes of lectures I have given around the country are
available through Harper-Collins.
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