Wow Rohan. You might nearly have knocked me off the perch as chief heretic
around here.

I would suggest that the questions you ask are all related to the death and
dying of "supernatural theism" (Marcos Borg's terminology) and eventually
the church will have to wrestle with these questions at all levels of
decision making before it can ever hope to be a meaningful presence in the
modern world.

Grace & Peace
Allan



----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Rohan Pryor" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "insights-l" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, August 12, 2004 12:26 PM
Subject: RE: Praying for Rain


> [Disclaimer: Greg lightly touched a nerve in asking a good question which
> reveals something of the underlying theology of our faithful practices
that
> too-often lies unconscious and unaddressed (IMO this is the sort of
> theological question we should be thrashing out on the floor of the
> Assembly, way before sexuality). Passion follows, and comes from my own
> personal experience and a deep desire to understand what theology says to
> this experience, and what experience says to this theology. My wife and I
> are deeply grateful for the blessing of our son, who turned one year old
> about two weeks ago.]
>
> The link between rain and earthly fertility is obviously ancient, as is
the
> link between earthly fertility and human fertility.
>
> In the Old testament God is also given the power of procreation,
> specifically God "opens" or "closes" wombs, and it's again easy to assume
> that the exercise of this power must be related to whether the womb-bearer
> has been "good" or "bad" (otherwise god would be an unreliable and
sadistic
> bastard, surely). That is, barrenness is often a sign of God's rebuke, and
> of course in contrast when it rains (metaphorically), God's
> apparently-favoured ones have heaps of sons (and many daughters too,
> thankfully).
>
> But again we encounter the same problem as Greg flags: "bad" people have
> kids too (and often many of them), while "good" folks lie barren. We have
> several couples in our friendship network who have struggled with
> barrenness for many years, some for over a decade. They're "good" people,
> caring people, often deeply Christian people who have prayed faithfully
for
> God's blessing. And some of these fear that they're barren because of
> something "bad" they once did. What kind of cold-hearted god would refuse
> such faithful and heartfelt petitions from a committed couple with the
> capacity to bring up children in loving and secure families, whether or
not
> they were once "bad"? Where is Grace? And in contrast, why are the teenage
> single mothers who smoke while nursing their kids so bloody fertile?
>
> To return closer to Greg's issue, if you prayed for rain in Bangladesh
> recently, you overdid it. Or if you were praying for rain in Australia and
> accidentally thought of Bangladesh, maybe you'd better be more careful
next
> time. How in heaven's name can we seriously pray for rain, or even
> pregnancy, with the expectation that God will fulfil our personal wishes?
> Better surely to pray for those affected by each situation, and for those
> who can help such situations. Some situations can't be "fixed" by even the
> most earnest prayer (terminal cancer is one example that comes to mind),
> and that's not through any lack of faith in God's "healing power".
Miracles
> do happen at times, but also at others they don't, and if it all depends
on
> faith and the depth of prayer, god is a real bastard. I don't thing God is
> one, even if the parentage of Jesus is a bit vague.
>
> Tongue removed from cheek, passion returned to box.
>
> Regards,
>
> Rohan
>
> Rohan Pryor
> Manager, Information Technology Services
> Synod of Victoria and Tasmania
> Uniting Church in Australia
>
> Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Ph: (03) 9251 5243
> Fax: (03) 9654 4110
> Website: http://vic.uca.org.au
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Greg Crawford [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, August 12, 2004 11:02 AM
> To: insights-l
> Subject: Praying for Rain
>
> I note in today's Daily Telegraph the Anglican Dean of Sydney, Phillip
> Jensen,
> is calling for next Sunday to be a national day of prayer for rain. He is
> quoted
> as saying, "Only God can make it rain". This is in the context of an
> article
> expressing great sympathy for those who are drought-affected.
>
>
>
> Of course, this raises the question about prayer for rain. Is this a valid
> prayer, or, as some have said, "when it rains, it rains"?
>
>
>
> In the Old Testament, drought is often a sign of God's rebuke. I can only
> assume, living in the place which has recently had the State's highest
> rainfall,
> that God is giving his sign of approval to my ministry.
>
>
>
> In the New Testament, Jesus says God sends rain on the good and bad alike.
> Now
> that's going to bugger up my theology above, so I'll just have to assume
> that
> these words were put on Jesus' lips by some faith community living in a
> drought-affected area. And after all, since there are more books in the
Old
> Testament than the New Testament, there are more scriptures in support of
> my
> theory.
>
>
>
> Just a special request: Can all of you praying for rain please have it
> confined
> to the bright cycle of the Moon? That is, between first and last quarter.
> It's
> one thing to have "showers of blessing", but I would also feel "blessed"
if
> I
> could have some clear, starry nights as well. So would those who want to
do
> shearing during this time.
>
>
>
> I'll have to take my tongue out of my cheek, 'cause it makes my face look
> even
> stranger. Is it valid to pray for rain? If God can create a universe,
can't
> God
> make it rain? You can't say that God doesn't interfere in nature. Crikey,
> virgin
> births, miracle cures, resurrections and the like!
>
>
>
> Regards
>
> Greg
>
>
>
>
>
>
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