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Homebrewed Christianity

Equipping grassroots theologians for creative thinking, engaging, and living.

You are here: Home / 2009 / Archives for April 2009

Ron Farmer’s Quest for a Satisfying Hermeneutic: Homebrewed Christianity 51

April 28, 2009 by Chad Crawford 1 Comment

farmerOur guest this week, as we take a ride on the hermeneutics train, is Dr. Ron Farmer, religious studies professor at Chapman University and dean of Wallace All Faiths Chapel in Orange, California.  Farmer discusses five approaches to scripture that he found in what he calls his ‘quest for a satisfying hermeneutic’.

Next week, we keep the train rolling with Tim Conder of Durham, North Carolina’s Emmaus Way.

Books and Essays by Ronald L. Farmer include:

Beyond the Impasse (Studies in American Biblical Hermeneutics)

Revelation (Chalice Commentaries for Today)

Jesus, Then and Now (contributor)

Creative Transformation, Summer 2008 (also includes articles from Alecia and Tripp Fuller!)

We also have a call from a deacon who tells us about starting an emergent cohort in a galaxy far, far away. We encourage all HBC deacons near and far to call in and leave us a message at 678-590-BREW.

We weren’t able to fit everything in the episode, but Tripp and I also have a little wager going on the 3-game series between the SF Giants and the LA Dodgers. If Tripp’s team wins best of 3, he gets my doppelbock homebrew. If my team wins, I get his Rocky Patels.

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Filed Under: podcast, politics Tagged With: Chapman University, dodgers, doppelbock, Emergent Cohort, Emmaus Way, giants, hermeneutics, Rocky Patel, Ron Farmer, Star Wars, Tim Conder

Is it too late? Earth Day 2009 with John Cobb

April 25, 2009 by Tripp Fuller Leave a Comment

John Cobb was the first to publish a book by a philosopher on environmental ethics.  Is It Too Late? A Theology of Ecology came out in 1972 and was revised in 1995, but remains today as pertinent as ever.  Dr. Cobb made a special guest appearance in my Eco-Philosophy class this past week on Earth Day and delivered a passionate no-note speech and answered questions from the class.  It is always a treat to get to hear Cobb speak and he did not disappoint.  Cobb takes his philosophical and theological awareness to the field of ecology and presents a pragmatic look at the present while offering the hope of a different future.  Is it too late?  For some yes, but it need not be for all.

I hope you enjoy listening to the audio and more than that I pray that Cobb’s voice will help inspire more of us to participate in the change we need.

Is it too late? Earth Day 2009 with John Cobb (Click to stream audio OR right-click and save-as to download the MP3)

Filed Under: media, politics, science, thinking

Philip Clayton @ Pomomusings

April 24, 2009 by Tripp Fuller

Philip Clayton is a guest blogger on pomomusings today as a part of the pluralism 2.0 series.  His post is on the interwoven nature of our identities.  Go check it out and if you have a response leave him a message there because it looks like he is responding.

Adam was right to have us start with the question of pluralism: does it or does it not require us to think differently about our Christian identities? I am going to say yes.

Filed Under: engaging, pomo

Philip Clayton’s Reply to Rep. Shimkus

April 22, 2009 by Chad Crawford Leave a Comment

Dr. Philip Clayton, a Christian theologian and philosopher from Claremont Graduate University who specializes in the intersection of religion and science, has recorded a reply to Rep. Shimkus’ (Ill.) use of the Bible in a House hearing on global warming. Shimkus basically offered a couple of prooftexts to justify his irresponsible political position, followed by ludicrous scientific claims, and presented them as if his statements were the infallible word of God instead of an out-of-context interpretation of scripture. I applaud Dr. Clayton’s respectful tenor given the level of lamitude of arguments from an elected official.

Source: Transforming Theology Blog

Filed Under: thinking Tagged With: global warming, Philip Clayton, transforming theology

God’s Carbon Footprint: Evangelicals and Global Warming, Cont.

April 21, 2009 by Chad Crawford 14 Comments

jesusworldonfireThis post is a continuation of an earlier one where I shared a chart from the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life. The chart showed that white evangelicals are the religious group with the smallest percentage of people who believe that human activity is causing the Earth to warm. Now that it’s Earth Week, I want to comment more about the categories of responses I hear from evangelicals against protecting Creation.

The first argument I mentioned I like to call ‘God’s Carbon Footprint’. It involves Jesus’ imminent return to judge the Earth and destroy it with fire. So our current carbon footprint is barely noticeable compared to the one God will leave during the terrible end times. We in the U.S. are most familiar with this eschatology because of the Left Behind series, but it’s also very prominent (and spreading) in the global South.

The interesting thing about this belief system (and why it is so popular?) is that, on the one hand, it gives oppressed people hope that their suffering on this Earth will end any day. And on the other hand, it gives wealthy countries like ours license to pillage the Earth’s resources and keep others in poverty. Rep. John Shimkus’ recent statements that only God can destroy the Earth probably fit into this category, with the additional point that the very idea of anthropogenic climate change is an attack on God’s sovereignty. It is an excuse to be completely apathetic about or outright opposed to the MDGs. (The MDGs are a set of goals to address the world’s biggest problems – not a Miller product).

N.T. Wright calls this belief ‘more mythical than biblical’. He adds, ‘It is an attempt to make sense of some bits of the New Testament. It was always the literature of the dispossessed … it’s now become the literature of the rich masses in parts of America.’ His recent writings on the afterlife have challenged popular beliefs that he says have strayed from the biblical text.  When we die, according to Wright, there is a period of time in which we are ‘with Christ’ in a holding pattern, and then we will be physically raised to live on a reconciled, physical new Creation. Where we will be is even better than an ethereal, spiritual realm called Heaven. Here is a relevant quote:

If you really believe that what happens at death is that you leave behind the world of space, time and matter, you are never going to be bothered with it again, you’re never going to have a physical body again and that ultimately God is going to throw this whole world on the rubbish heap somewhere, then what’s the fuss to work for justice in the present?’ he said. ‘What’s the fuss about AIDS, what’s the problem about global debt, you know these are trivial and irrelevant. What matters is whether you’re going to heaven tomorrow or next week.

A brief response to the ‘God’s Carbon Footprint’ argument:

I know how difficult patience can be when there are people say hateful things about Christians who are concerned about global warming, or any of the MDGs, but I want to offer something brief in response.

I don’t think abandoning dispensational theology is necessary to embrace the privilege of partnering with God for the reconciliation of the Earth and its inhabitants. When the Thessalonians didn’t see the point of doing anything until Jesus returns, they received a stern warning. Maybe today’s Thessalonians need a similar warning?

As Andrew pointed out in a comment on the first post, there are a number of groups of evangelicals who believe this is an issue that deserves to be addressed, including the EEN, Deep Green Conversation, Flourish, Restoring Eden, and the recent Southern Baptist statement. There are probably people in these groups who have a similar eschatology and still see the importance of this work.

Maybe some readers have more to add about how to respond to this argument against creation care. This is a deep divide among evangelicals. Might it even be the biggest barrier to working together to solve the climate crisis? It deserves more attention than I can give in this post.

I’ll also have a post about the ‘Worshiping Creation’ argument and finishing up on Earth Day with the ‘Distraction’ argument.

Filed Under: thinking Tagged With: dispensationalism, global warming, left behind

Why the New Atheists aren’t that new….

April 20, 2009 by Tripp Fuller 5 Comments

The New Atheists have been drawing a bunch of media attention that last few years and the responses from a variety of theists have continued to come in.  In the video below Philip Clayton discusses why, as a philosopher of science, the New Atheists aren’t that new.  Primarily he points out that the science they (and Dawkins in particular) found their movement on is out dated.  Any way, I may post more on this later.  I want to read David Bentley Hart’s new book on the topic.

Filed Under: engaging, media

Bart Ehrman and “Jesus, Interrupted” with Tony Jones: Homebrewed Christianity 50

April 20, 2009 by Chad Crawford 9 Comments

ehrmanHomebrewed Christianity celebrates its 50th episode, and there’s no better way to do it than with Tony Jones, author of The New Christians, interviewing Dr. Bart Ehrman. Dr. Ehrman is the James A. Gray Distinguished Professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and controversial author of several best-selling books, including God’s Problem: How the Bible Fails to Answer Our Most Important, Why We Suffer, Misquoting Jesus: The Story Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why, and his most recent Jesus, Interrupted: Revealing the Hidden Contradictions in the Bible (And Why We Don’t Know About Them).

The two didn’t get into too much detail about Bart’s latest book, since biblical contradictions aren’t new to Tony. They instead discuss Bart’s motivations for writing his books that many find so challenging to faith in the authority of Scripture. Subjects that come up in the interview are philosophical hermeneutics, objectivity, inerrancy vs. infallibility, and the merciless Stephen Colbert.

Ehrman’s recent Holy Week appearance on The Colbert Report: colbertnation.com

OK. We always say this, but this one is a must-listen.

We’re thankful to Tony for lending us this fantastic audio for a very special 50th episode. He recorded the interview for his Beliefnet blog, ‘The New Christians’ at blog.beliefnet.com/tonyjones

You can also keep up with Tony at: tonyj.net

If you would like to congratulate us on our first 50 episodes, give us a call at 678-590-BREW.

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Filed Under: podcast Tagged With: Bart Ehrman, inerrancy, infallibility, Jesus Interrupted, Tony Jones

Evangelicals and Global Warming

April 16, 2009 by Chad Crawford 11 Comments

Here’s an interesting little chart from a 2008 survey:

warming

Is it evangelical theology or the high overlap between conservative politics and evangelicals that contributes most to these statistics?

I’m developing a hunch. Religious arguments against addressing global warming usually fall into the following basic categories:

  1. ‘If you think it’s hot now, wait until Jesus comes back.’ Long before global warming gets serious, Jesus will come back on a white horse, judge us, destroy the wicked with flames, and take the righteous to heaven. Just wait until you see the carbon footprint of an angry God.
  2. ‘You’re worshiping creation instead of the Creator.’ Caring for the Earth is a subtle form of paganism. Recycling leads to buying a fuel-efficient car, which leads to drum circles and neo-druid solstice rituals.
  3. ‘The Great Commission has nothing to do with lowering GHG Emissions.’ Addressing the threat of global warming doesn’t help anyone accept Jesus as Lord and Savior. Therefore, anyone or any church involved in protecting the Earth is distracted from our calling to present the gospel so that people can be saved. Worse, these people are spreading this distraction to others. So this type of ‘ministry’ is actually causing countless unsaved people to go to hell, and the blood is on the hands of the global warming alarmist Christians.

I’ve been on the receiving-end of all of these statements, and I’m not at all exaggerating on the wording. Show me a Christian argument against global warming, and I will show you how it fits into one of these three categories. As we get closer to Earth Day, I’m going to be addressing each one, but I want to get back to the survey and my initial question.

The above responses aren’t at all concerned with whether an increase in CO2 from fossil fuels is causing the earth to warm at a rate that will cause the most vulnerable communities in the world to suffer from drought, hurricanes, floods, and other natural disasters. None of them addresses the scientific evidence.

My hunch is that the evangelical theology from deniers doesn’t cause people to doubt the existence of anthropogenic climate change; it causes them to think that concern about it leads Christians astray. Denial of human-caused global warming is usually aimed at the scientific claims, and sounds like, ‘The earth is actually getting cooler.’ Or, ‘Warming is a natural cycle caused by the sun.’ Or, ‘Methods of measuring historical CO2 levels are untrustworthy.’ These denials compliment arguments against climate legislation, such as capping emissions.

Maybe this is an obvious distinction, but I think it’s important when it comes to having productive conversations with our friends on the subject. When people make a theological argument against care for creation, it’s about their (sometimes) sincere belief in what work is important for Christians to be involved in. When the science is attacked, it’s often because of conservative political ideology. But often these groups overlap, as the survey demonstrates.

Filed Under: engaging Tagged With: climate change, global warming

Resurrection in North Carolina

April 14, 2009 by Tripp Fuller 2 Comments

Here’s my brother and best friend playing a little ditty in chapel at WFUDS. It entitled ‘Resurrection in NC.’ Enjoy!

Filed Under: living

Pluralistic Relativism

April 14, 2009 by Tripp Fuller 14 Comments

I found this gem of a quote from Ken Wilber on his problem with pluralistic relativism. It is sure to get a rise out of you. Tell me what kind.

Wilber describes how critical theory (the variety of postmodern deconstructive practices) can result in pluralistic relativism; “it claimed that all truth is culturally situated (except its own truth, which is for all cultures); it claimed there are no transcendental truths (except its own pronouncements, which transcend specific contexts); it claimed that all hierarchies or value rankings are oppressive and marginalizing (except its own value ranking, which is superior to the alternatives); it claimed that there are no universal truths (except its own pluralism, which is universally true for all peoples).”

(A Theory of Everything, 37)

-check out his recent free stuff on James Fowler

-I will be reviewing ‘The Future of Christianity‘ once I find time.  It is a video series Wilber does with Father Thomas Keating.

Filed Under: quotes, thinking
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