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Notable Articles on the Web or On the Person and Teachings
Nathan Jacobson
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June 17, 2007
A number of recent books making the case against God have hit the best-seller list, most notably Christopher Hitchens' God is not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything and Richard Dawkins' The God Delusion. If you follow the argument closely, you'll notice that the gravamen of the case against God is their judgment that God, and specifically the Christian God, as he is commonly understood, is not good after all. Whatever its status as a logical proof against theism, the argument is existentially forceful because we meet a God in their arguments that is deserving of their unmistakable disdain. The argument against the goodness of God usually advances on three fronts:
- God cannot be good because the world is rife with evil and suffering;
- The God we meet in the Bible, especially in the Hebrew Bible or Old Testament, is repugnant to our moral sensibilities; and,
- Those who claim to follow this God are responsible for epic evils like the Inquisition, the Crusades, and the "troubles" in Northern Ireland as well as for more quotidian evils like intolerance, anti-intellectualism, and being bores.
Clipped by Nathan Jacobson
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June 04, 2006
The recent release of Ron Howard's movie "The Davinci Code" has provoked a renaissance in the controversy that surrounded the publication of Dan Brown's best-selling novel. It is tempting to be dismissive of all the handwringing. Dan Brown's claims are really just a knock-off of parts of the seemingly perpetual parade of novel theories about the life of Christ that make their debut each Christmas and Easter on the covers of Time and Newsweek. One might be surprised that Christians are so easily scandalized by unorthodox claims about the object of their faith when similar claims are such standard fare. And, after all, it's just a novel. On the other hand, in a historically and biblically illiterate culture, Brown's claims do have purchase on the hearts and minds of believers and non-believers alike. To boot, Brown has refused to let his book be dismissed as mere fiction, insisting instead that, "all of the art, architecture, secret rituals, secret societies — all of that is historical fact". Brown's novel wouldn't be the first to leave an indellible imprint on the course of history. So, I, for one, welcome the cottage industry of critical analysis that has accompanied the release of the film. As usual, LeaderU.com is featuring a roundup of essays and interviews including Ron Rhodes' "Crash the Da Vinci Code", Ben Witherington III's "Mary, Mary, Extraordinary", and Sandra Miesel's merciless "Dismantling the Da Vinci Code." Envoy Magazine offers Carl E. Olsen's critique from a Catholic perspective. J.P. Holding at Tektonics.org offers yet another comically titled "review and critique", "Not InDavincible". The New Age Center reprints an article from the New York Times by Bruce Boucher quibbling with Brown's art history, ending with this fabulous quote from Voltaire: "If it's too silly to be said, it can always be sung." There are many more for the Googling. Additionally, Amazon.com is hawking a multitude of books piggy-backing on the success of the Davinci Code. Here are some critical ones.
Clipped by Nathan Jacobson
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June 19, 2004
As war in the Middle East rears its ugly head once again, any person of conscience must wrestle with the question of war. Naturally, on the Web one can find a second front, the war of ideas. At First Things, Richard John Neuhaus' "Sounds of Religion in a Time of War" is a typically well-considered assessment of the war in Iraq while George Weigel brings the "just war" tradition to bear in "Moral Clarity in a Time of War". LeaderU features a number of articles in "Warview: Iraq, the US, and World Opinion". While one could have hoped for wisdom on war from a secular worldview, B. Stephen Matthies at The Secular Web instead offers a critical review of Christian approaches in "Just War Tradition, Pacificism, and Nonviolence" The pacifist position is well represented at Sojourners Magazine and Pax Christi. See "Just? Unjust?" by George Lopez and "Liberation Without War" by Jack Duvall.
The Ragamuffin Gospel, (Questar Publishers, 1993), 54.
The scribes were treated with excessive deference in Jewish society because of their education and learning. Everyone honored them because of their wisdom and intelligence. The "mere children"(napioi in Greek, really meaning babes) were Jesus' image for the uneducated and ignorant. He is saying that the gospel of grace has been disclose to and grasped by the uneducated and ignorant instead of the learned and wise. For this Jesus thanks God... The babes (napioi) are in the same state as the children (paidia). God's grace falls on them because they are negligible creatures, not because of their good qualities. They may be aware of their worthlessness, but this is not the reason revelations are given to them. Jesus expressly attributes their good fortune to the Father's good pleasure, the divine eudokia. The gifts are not determined by the slightest personal quality or virtue. They were pure liberality. Once and for all, Jesus deals the death blow to any distinction between the elite and the ordinary in the Christian community.
The Divine Conspiracy (San Francisco: Harper Collins, 1998), p. 273.
Anyone who is not a continual student of Jesus, and who nevertheless reads the great promises of the Bible as if they were for him or her, is like someone trying to cash a check on another person's account. At best, it succeeds only sporadically.
The Divine Conspiracy (San Francisco: Harper Collins, 1998), p. 134.
Here is a profoundly significant fact: In our culture, among Christian
and non-Christians alike, Jesus Christ is automatically disassociated
from brilliance or intellectual capacity. Not one in a thousand will
spontaneously think of him in conjunction with words such as
"well-informed," "brilliant," or "smart." Far too often he is
regarded as hardly conscious. He is looked on as a mere icon, a
wraithlike semblance of a man, fit for the role of sacrificial lamb or
alienated social critic, perhaps, but little more.
The Divine Conspiracy (San Francisco: Harper Collins, 1998), p. 56.
Historically, conservative Christians became suspicious of any talk of
Jesus as "teacher" because liberals, or "Modernists," used it as a way
of saying that he was not the divine Son and supernatural savior but
"just a good man." In addition, their understanding of salvation by
grace alone cut off from the "essentials" in Christian faith his
teachings about life and God’s kingdom. As we have seen, being a
Christian then comes to have nothing to do with the kind of person one
is. The Modernists, by contrast, professed to regard him as a
great teacher. But then they presented him as fundamentally mistaken
about major elements of his own message, such as when his kingdom would
come, and they explained away all his sayings and deeds that required
supernatural interaction, his teachings and practice of prayer, for
example. Thus they made it impossible in practice to take him seriously
as a teacher.
The Divine Conspiracy (San Francisco: Harper Collins, 1998), p. 15.
Our hunger for Jesus is a signal of who we are and why we are here, and
it also is the basis of our humanity's enduring response to Jesus.
For he always takes individual human beings as seriously as their
shredded dignity demands, and he has the resources to carry through
with his high estimate of them.
The Divine Conspiracy (San Francisco: Harper Collins, 1998), p. xiii.
My hope is to gain a fresh hearing for Jesus, especially among those
who believe they already understand him. In his case, quite frankly,
presumed familiarity has led to unfamiliarity, unfamiliarity has led to
contempt, and contempt has led to profound ignorance.
The Divine Conspiracy (San Francisco: Harper, 1998), p. 13
I think we finally have to say that Jesus' enduring relevance is
based on his ability to speak to, to heal and empower the individual
human condition. He matters because of what he brought and what he
still brings to ordinary human beings, living their ordinary lives and
coping daily with their surrounding. He promises wholeness for their
lives. In sharing our weakness he gives us strength and imparts through
his companionship a life that has the quality of eternity.
Craig Blomberg of The Da Vinci Code: A Novel. by Dan Brown (Doubleday: 2003) in The Denver Journal: An Online Review of Current Biblical and Theological Studies
The most important word in this entire book is the noun in the subtitle; this is a "novel"-a work of fiction. That is important to remember, especially after the statements on page 1, which move the work slightly into the arena of historical fiction, but only slightly. It is true that there are such organizations as the Priory of Sion and Opus Dei. It is true that the author has worked hard to describe accurately the contemporary European locations, including city layouts, buildings, and artwork, in which the plot is set. The statement that "all descriptions of... documents... in this novel are accurate" is, however, highly inaccurate!
A recent article in Strange Magazine, "The Haunted Boy of Cottage City," recounts at length Mark Opsasnick’s investigation into the alleged demon possession that inspired the film, "The Exorcist." In spite of the many years passed and the glut of misinformation that has developed, Opsasnick successfully uncovers each of the previously unknown, crucial facts of the case. His tale is suspenseful and tremendously fascinating, and his relentless and careful striving for the facts is a masterpiece of investigative journalism. In the end, with his discoveries in view, Opsasnick disregards the likelihood of an ‘authentic’ demon possession. But for all his apparent even-handedness, it becomes clear that Opsasnick’s hope from the beginning is to debunk "The Exorcist’s" implicit supernaturalism. After many pages of impressively scrupulous and tedious examination of the facts, he rejects the possibility of an authentic demon possession without even pausing to define ‘demon possession’ or how one might determine the authenticity of such an occurrence. In, "Angelology and Biblical Skepticism." Peter Williams has addressed just such skepticism and dismissiveness toward the reality of spirits. Also consider Steve Waterhouse's list of possible ways to distinguish possesions. Even if the events that inspired, "The Exorcist," do invite naturalistic explanation, it would have served Opsasnick well to have been more careful in his final judgement.
Clipped by Nathan Jacobson
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May 18, 2000
Jeffrey Jay Lowder, founder of the Internet Infidels, offers a welcome clarification of the term 'feethinker,' in his article, "Is 'Freethinker' Synonymous with 'Nontheist?'" He ultimately agrees with Bertrand Russell that what defines a freethinker is not the content of his beliefs, but because "after careful thought, he finds a balance of evidence in their favor." In principle, then, Lowder concedes that a theist could be a freethinker. His unremarkable conclusion is noteworthy because it demurs from the pervasive opinion of many skeptics that the defining characteristic of religious people is their unthinking credulity. Consider, by way of contrast, the Freedom from Religion Foundation's 'nontract' (sic), "What Is A Freethinker?" Still, Lowder rejects the possibility that an Evangelical Christian could be a freethinker. Considering Lowder's familiarity with the recent flowering of excellent Christian scholarship, especially in philosophy, his denial of Christian "free thinking" is, in the end, a bit puzzling.
Christianity teaches that something is profoundly wrong with the human person. We are, among other things, corrupted, dysfunctional, sinful, and at times evil. Furthermore, there is ultimately only one remedy for our condition, and that is salvation from ourselves and our condition by faith in Jesus Christ. This central Christian tenet is often unsettling to Christians themselves and is positively insufferable to the culture at large. Religious Tolerance Online, for example, catalogues all manner of religious perspective with delicacy and precision, raising no quibble with their various beliefs. But it judges the Christian belief in the unique salvific efficacy of Jesus as on par with racism and other forms of intolerance. Observe the author's herculean (and commendable) effort to describe Christian exclusivism's view toward other religions without expressing his/her own frustration and sadness with this perspective. Leadership U. is featuring several articles that seek to justify Christian exclusivism. We especially recommend Rick Rood's "The Christian Attitude Toward Non-Christian Religions," Brad Johnson's, "A Three-Pronged Defense of Salvific Exclusivism in a World of Religions" and Paul Johnson's "The Necessity of Christianity".
"The Encyclopedia of Theological Ignorance", Christianity Today. (September 6, 1999) p. 120.
For me Jesus has become the focal point of faith, and increasingly I am
learning to keep the magnifying glass of my faith focused on him. In my
spiritual journey I have long lingered in the margins, puzzling over
matters like the problem of pain, the conundrum of prayer, providence
versus free will. When I do so, everything becomes fuzzy. Looking at
Jesus, however, restores clarity. For example, the Bible leaves many
questions unanswered about the problem of pain, but in Jesus I see
unmistakable proof that God is the God of all comfort, not the author
of pain.


