Absolutely yes. 
 
There is more to say than just that, however. 
 
See my e-mail about Michele Bachmann for one part of it.
 
Another part is that I am very ecumenical. Not just sort of, or now and  
then
for special occasions, but as intrinsic to faith itself, for which there  
are all 
kinds of Biblical justifications.
 
Closest to any existing Church that covers some of my beliefs is
Assyrian Christianity. But, needless to say, I am not Assyrian. Main  point
is that Eastern Christianity keeps alive all kinds of traditions  basically
unknown in the western world. More-or-less the way that Western  Christians
take the OT as intrinsic to faith, Eastern Christians, the Assyrians  
anyway,
have a somewhat similar view of other pre-Christian spiritual  traditions
and not only the Hebrew Bible.
 
I really did teach Comparative Religion  --or equivalents--  over  the 
course
of years. Selectively only, but nonetheless a great deal of this has  
genuine
meaning to me. My first introduction to this kind of outlook was during a  
sermon
by a Baptist pastor in Chicago who was talking about E. Stanley  Jones,
once a very famous Baptist missionary, part of his career spent in  India.
Jones  also was very open to other religions  --as long as there  was 
no compromise with faith in Christ. Hard core SBC types deny 
this on principle, but my church at the time was ABC and if the
SBC disagreed, OK, they're entitled to their opinion,  but I sure  didn't
have to go along with it. 
 
ABC and SBC at that time agreed on morality pretty much up and down
the line, and on the centrality of Jesus for faith, and both took a  fairly
fundamentalist view of the Bible, but a good number of chapters
and verses were interpreted to very different effect. Not sure about  this
but I got the idea that if E-Stanley Jones was SBC he would have
been kicked out. But for me he was like a saint.
 
 
All kinds of other things since that time, many years ago, about  which
if you had a weekend and I was visiting Texas, we could discuss  for
48 hours straight, but best to skip it for now. Suffice it to say  that,
for just one example, I never saw a contradiction between the things
in the Baptist church and my friendship with Rev Saito at Chicagoland
Buddhist Church and the many Buddhist insights and truths that I  learned
there. But this is just to get things started. 
 
So, if you're asking if I'm a Baptist the answer is "no,"  but  there
sure are a good number of Baptist values and ways of looking at  things
that are Baptist, no doubt about it. Its just that this is basically  only
the beginning of the story, not the be-all and end-all.
 
Could go into this is a lot of detail but for now this expresses a  few
important points. All kinds of things to say about the Holy Spirit,
for which my point of reference is more original Jewish tradition 
than anything else, but I can't spend the time to flesh it all out 
in an e-mail.
 
Billy
 
-----------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
 
message dated 9/29/2011 9:33:52 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

Do you hold to Christianity? If so, why?  

David

 
"Anyone  who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than 
people do is a  swine."--P. J.  O’Rourke 


On 9/29/2011 10:13 PM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:  
 
Comments in the  text :
 
 
 
message dated 9/29/2011 7:41:16 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, 
[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])   writes:

This was an attempt started  whn you first posted this. I wanted to think 
on it some more.  

Your annotations take a  lot of stuff away. I'm not sure that's to the 
benefit of theology. I  removed the unannotated article. 

More  below.

David

 
"Anyone  who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than 
people do  is a  swine."--P.  J. O’Rourke 


On 9/25/2011 1:46  PM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])   wrote:  
First, the essay as originally published. Then my comments in  BF in an 
annotated version 
which follows.
 
----------------------------------------------------------------------   
Annotated Version


_The Christian  Post_ (http://www.christianpost.com/)  > _Opinion_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/opinion/) |Sat, Sep. 24  2011
Why You Should Take Theology Seriously
By _S. Michael Craven_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/author/s-michael-craven/)   | Christian Post 

 
In J. I. Packer’s 1973 classic Knowing God, he points out that  “ignorance 
of God  --ignorance both of his ways and of the practice  of communion with 
him--  lies at the root of much of the church’s  weakness today.”  And 
just how sure can anyone be that he  or she "knows God" ? While it can be 
maintained that the Bible is a  prime source of revelation, it cannot be 
maintained that it is  only Pure Revelation since, clearly, the text was 
written by  
fallible human beings. The various mistakes in the text in various  places 
--for instance historical inaccuracies in Daniel or the  inconsistent lists 
of disciples in the Gospels--  also tell us that  flaws of the writers are 
often in play. And then there are conceptual  issues. Clearly, for example, 
there are at least two very different  strands in the Hebrew Bible / Old 
Testament, between the worldview of  books like Ecclesiastes and Esther and 
Jonah, for example, and  Deuteronomy and Jeremiah. Moreover, beliefs 
notwithstanding, we are  given conceptions of God in the Bible. The reality of  
God, or 
your choice in characterizing the nature of the divine however  you think 
of him or her or the Unknowable Ultimate, is another matter,  and maybe the 
best the Bible can give us, even if it really is the best  available, 
necessarily won't be the final word.  That is, it is  simplistic to the point 
of 
arrogance to claim that "you"   --anyone--  knows God in an 
"all-questions-answered"  sense.  That is not possible for any of us. Hence the 
 problem is 
one of the inescapable need to muddle  through , somehow, despite large areas 
of  ignorance in our  understanding. Far from being a side issue, the 
agnostic critique of  religious faith is absolutely fundamental. The ignorance 
to  
which Packer refers is first and foremost theological. To some, the term  
theology evokes images of scholasticism and ivory tower elitism with  little 
practical use. However, the science What "science"  ?  Where are the 
testable hypotheses ? Where is the empirical  evidence as the word "empirical" 
is 
understood by scientists ?  As  close to a science as we can find is in the 
writings of Thomas Aquinas,  but even that is more of a philosophy based on 
deductive logic that  anything else. This kind of loose use of an important 
word with serious  meaning really compromises language, and does so in a 
dishonest  way. Theology is a form of philosophy if you want a  more-or-less 
valid comparison. of _theology_ (http://www.christianpost.com/topics/theology/) 
 is simply  the organized and systematic study of God. Every Christian is 
called to  know God and if we deny that responsibility then we deny what it 
means  to be Christian. Therefore every Christian is to be a theologian in 
the  strictest sense of the word. Utterly  pretentious.



DRB: You are tempting me to fire up the soft-copy version of The  Baker 
Encyclopedia of Christian Apologetics, When Skeptics Ask, and When  Critics 
Ask. With these annotations, do you ascribe to  Christianity at all? If so, why?
 
Do I  ascribe WHAT to Christianity ?  I don't understand the question. What 
 is it that
I am or am  not ascribing ?  Can you clarify ?  Thanks
 
 
 I don't really like asking those questions. I struggle to  maintain status 
at amateur theologian. Professional Theologians from  various seminaries 
vary in quality, so I'm not going to guess what Packer  (or this author) 
means. Yes, it does sound pretentious.  



 
I think many in the American church know God in the same way they  know the 
president  --they know some facts about him, where he  lives, what he does, 
and so on  --but they do not have a relational  knowledge of the actual 
person who is president. This could be described  as a cultural theology. A 
biblical theology is more akin to the  relationship between a child and a good 
parent. The child in this sense  has a much more intimate knowledge that, 
through time and maturation,  transmits the character and expectations of the 
parent. Experience only  confirms this knowledge, producing trust, which in 
turn fosters  obedience. This may well be one way to look at the issue, but  
what says this is the only way to do so ?   Nothing.  After  all, the Bible 
itself sometimes says that it is best to regard God as a  friend. And that 
is not the same as a parent-child relationship.  Sometimes it says that what 
we should be doing, which is emphasized by  Paul,  is thinking deeply and 
as objectively--  as  truthfully-- as possible about higher things and hard 
questions, which,  of course, is also a message in the book of Job. Then 
there is Song of  Songs in which the love between a man and woman is how we 
should think  about "theology."  To base one's understanding of theology on a  
parent-child metaphor to the presumed exclusion of other ways of  thinking 
is, quite simply, absurd. Others may take seriously  the study of the 
president and his office, its history, legal powers,  and so forth, but this is 
only 
theoretical since this knowledge exists  apart from any relationship with 
the person who is president. For many,  this is their approach to theology; 
it is only theoretical knowledge  that often serves to “puff up” and make 
people intellectually proud. In  the end, they may be more enamored with the 
office of the president than  they are the person of the presidency.


DRB: Well, if one puts any stock into the Lord's Prayer, it starts  out 
with "Our Father." So why not a parent? I don't know why you are  allergic to 
the term. 
 


Here is the quote, first sentence :
This may well be one way to look at the issue, but what says  this is the 
only way to do so ?
 
The point isn't that a parent metaphor is  b-a-d but that to make this the 
de facto 
ONLY metaphor is to  ignore all the other metaphors in the Bible. Not a 
good  idea.
 




 
A proper biblical theology that every follower of Christ should  pursue is 
one that seeks to know the character, nature, and will of God  as revealed 
in Scripture so that they may live in a way that pleases  him. Are we to 
believe that this is a simple matter ? That this  is an open-and-shut case ?It 
would be nice if it was, but how can  anyone who is realistic take that kind 
of outlook ? The world  is a complicated place and life is hardly a walk in 
the park. There are  trials and tribulations everywhere even if, now and 
then, islands of  peace and  tranquility may exist  somehow.  Besides, try as 
anyone might, the testimony of  "the" Bible is sometimes  difficult to 
discern. This is because, or  partly because, the book is a library of texts by 
different writers. How  do you reconcile the view of God in Ezra or Nehemiah 
with the views in  Proverbs or the Gospel of John or  the Apocalypse ?  A  
simple assertion that they all say the same thing is an evasion  when you get 
down to it. There are consistencies to be found, but  they may require a 
good deal of serious questioning to discover and,  even then, some major 
problem may remain that defy solution   --at least if you are honest about 
where 
you may have gotten to in  your spiritual journey.  There is a practicality 
to  theology that produces relevant wisdom for living in the real world.  
Some refer to this as the Christian worldview, which is really only  another 
way of referring to a coherent biblical theology  ;  it functions less as a 
set of academic facts  than as an analytical framework for living properly. 
How can one  successfully live in the world without knowing about the one who 
made  and continues to govern that  world?


DRB: Packer, while Church of  England all the way, is also a Calvinist. 
Don't know about Craven. (Never  heard of him before this article.) If one 
follows Calvin, for instance,  certain texts are often bent beyond recognition 
as the Calvinist tries  mightily (in some instances) to justify limited 
atonement or irresistible  grace. This seems to be the majority view with lots 
of 
Baptists and  Presbyterian evangelicals holding to it. I think that they 
are building  their theology backwards, but they tend not to listen to me. The 
battle is  always about Biblical interpretation. While the Calvinists build 
a "sound"  biblical system, if some of their fundamental assumptions are 
wrong, then  the whole thing collapses. They can't have that, so they make up 
for their  lack of clear statements from the Bible of their tenets with 
condescension  and derision. 


 
In John 17 : 3, Jesus provides the best definition  of theology  --he 
equates knowledge of God with eternal life. Here,  eternal life is not merely a 
reference to our experience after death,  but a life lived now that is 
qualitatively different from our former  lives and the lives of those around 
us. 
In other words, the greater our  knowledge of God, the more abundant is our 
experience of life in Christ.  This is an unobjectionable and even 
inspirational statement. Yet  this is not to say that it is definitive. After 
all, 
John 17 : 3 is  followed by 17 : 4, and there are many other related texts in 
the Bible.  Verse 4, for instance, tells us that the work we do, presumably 
our  chosen profession,  is important in our understanding of spiritual  
things. Or, in an alternative reading, God gives each of us a mission on  Earth 
and we derive deep meaning from all the tasks that a mission  requires, not 
as hurdles to jump over but as opportunities to learn and  grow. Maybe think 
of this as each of us having our own "labors of  Hercules" to accomplish, 
including  --at least by way of  metaphor-- cleaning piles of horse manure in 
the Augian stables. Another  perspective is found in Wisdom of Solomon 
where it is the story of the  Shekinah that is crucial, she who was with the 
Lord from the  beginning,  his companion and the source of wisdom for all 
mankind.  In other words, personally I sometimes get rather annoyed by a  
tendency among a class of Evangelicals who insist that everything must  be 
reduced 
to the most simplistic understanding anyone can think of, and  that  --and 
nothing else--   is the essence of Christian  faith.


DRB: If you are going to decry simplicity, then I suppose that you  are in 
favor of complexity. No? I think that people have been adding their  own 
restrictions to the requirements for being or becoming a Christian in  order to 
make it difficult to get their "badge of approval." 
 


The point is :  What is the best  way to think about any of this ? 
 
Best may mean most  realistic, most accurate, most to  the point, most 
persuasive, 
and so forth.  

It can mean  simplest, easiest to understand, most "on point."  The  
complaint
wasn't about  simplicity, but about reduction of all ( to exaggerate )  
issues
or beliefs to  their most simple form. At times that is the worst thing to  
do
even if, at  other times, it is the best. Very complex to puzzle  through
many mysteries  in the Bible. But each part of the Sermon on the  Mount
is simple yet  ( mostly ) is profound. It should be easy enough to figure  
out
when to get  your thinking cap on and when you don't really need  to
worry about  levels of meaning or parabolic concepts.
 
Remember,  Jesus did speak in parables and none have surface  meaning.
You need to  think them through to get the point. Then there is Ephesians  5
which is all  about the need for being critical-minded, and Paul,  in  
chapters
10 and 13 in  II Corinthians, makes much of examining facts carefully,  etc,
 
My favorite  verse on this subject is from Hebrews 6 : 1  --
"Let us stop  discussing the rudiments of Christianity. We ought not to  be
laying over  again the foundations of faith..."
 
 
 




 
In recent weeks I have tried to offer critical analysis and a  thoughtful 
response to Christendom’s collapse and the lingering  influence of the 
Constantinian system. Many were challenged and  responded with recognition that 
these are relevant and serious questions  that must be considered if we seek 
to recover a biblical understanding  of the gospel and the mission of the 
church. Others however responded in  ways that reveal a lack of reliance upon 
proper theology  A  "proper theology" as defined Craven is not serious 
theology at  all. It is a species of apologetics, a sub-field of rhetoric. And  
this is extolled as good "theology" ? What a  mischaracterization. and instead 
rely on emotional impulse or  culturally induced ways of thinking, which 
they attempt to validate by  use of selected proof texts.The proof text 
approach is nowhere  more evident than in Craven's writing.  


DRB: Well, that's what a  Calvinist DOES. 











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