Here's another excerpt from my book, Reframing a Relevant Faith. This portion is part of the introductory chapter. You can purchase the book from the publisher at http://direct.energion.co/reframing-a-relevant-faith or through Amazon at http://www.amazon.com/Reframing-Relevant-Faith-Drew-Smith/dp/1631991213/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1418159944&sr=1-1&keywords=reframing+a+relevant+faith. A Kindle version is also available at http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=reframing%20a%20relevant%20faith%20kindle.
The book is written for group discussion.
If a relevant and progressive Christianity is to survive and
bear witness of God’s love to the world, the adherents to such a faith, those
who seek to follow Jesus, must embrace a critical approach to the Christian
faith. Critically thinking about the
faith is not equivalent to criticizing the faith, as some may think, although
that may be part of critical thinking.
Rather, thinking critically about the faith is to continue to ask
questions, to inquire about the history of the faith, its present relevancy,
and its future hopes. It is also to
admit its flaws and weaknesses with honesty and transparency.
For this to happen with any degree of success, any question
about the Bible, theology, and the practice of faith must be taken as a valid
question. In dealing with the mysteries
of God, we should never be completely satisfied with the idea that if the Bible
says it, then that settles it. Nor should any of us be entrenched in our own
interpretations of scripture. We should
always be open to new ways of thinking about the Bible and theology, for to do
so leads us toward the truth and the realization that, in the words of Jesus,
the truth will set us free.
I have no doubt that many readers of this book will quickly
identify with what I have to say. At the same time, I have no doubt that just
as many others will find what I have written to be difficult to accept, and
they may even reject these ideas outright. I am not so bold as to think I have
figured it all out. However, I would like to offer my own story that has led me
to many of the ideas I am arguing in this book.
Readers of this book will find out rather quickly that I am
a person who seeks always to ask serious questions about faith. I don’t ask these questions to be
provocative, and I am not simply playing the “Devil’s Advocate”. I am also not seeking to create a straw man
that I can easily attack. I am asking
such questions with a great deal of honesty about my own interpretation of the
Christian faith that has evolved over many years. There are specific reasons why I asked such
critical questions, and why I encourage others to ask challenging questions.
One reason for my determination to raise critical questions
about faith, and why I encourage others to do so, is that I grew up in a
fundamentalist tradition in which queries about the Bible and faith were not
appreciated. This was particularly true
when one tried to ask questions about the inconsistencies found in the Bible,
or when one tried desperately to harmonize a belief in a good God with the
reality of suffering. As a teenager, I
was told that such questions are not important, and even heretical to ask; only
knowing Jesus and believing in him were necessary. I was satisfied with this answer until a
later time when I began to discover the intellectual obstacles one encounters
when approaching the Bible for definitive answers. It was then that I returned to ask those
serious questions, which opened more questions, and which eventually led to
evolutionary, and indeed revolutionary changes in the way I view the Bible and
the Christian faith. I can say with all honesty that this shift in my thinking
did not come easy and it took time. In fact, I fought this for some
time until I realized that venturing into unchartered waters, at least
uncharted for me, led me to a deeper and more satisfying faith.
A second motive for my critical look at the Bible and
Christian faith is that I have perceived an insufficient education in our faith
and in the Bible on which our faith is based, particularly in churches. By this I don’t mean that churches are doing
a poor job at doing Christian education.
Many churches are doing a fantastic job at providing training in the
faith to their members. But there may be
a bit of shallowness to the education we provide, in the sense that we are not
always struggling with tough questions. There is no doubt that asking tough
questions may lead us down paths that we dare not want to travel, but such
questioning may be necessary if we are to make our faith our own.
This deficiency in the kind of Christian education that
promotes critical thinking has led not only to biblical illiteracy, but more
tragically, to ignorance when it comes to biblical interpretation and
theological thinking. Many Bible study
groups do not seriously consider the complexities inherent in reading ancient
texts. Rather they focus only on what
these texts say to us as individuals, as if the books of the Bible were written
with our needs in mind. Furthermore,
churches are not providing tools to help folks think theologically. Instead, theology becomes a separate box of
propositions we always believe, without critically assessing their value for
our context.
Of course, much of the fault lies with those who print such
materials for church groups. Some
materials produced for the purpose of Christian education are often so insipid
and limitedly focused that they only serve to heighten our emotional
experiences without moving us into a deeper and more thoughtful understanding
of God and humanity. While finding personal meaning from the Bible and from our
faith is vitally important for Christians, it is secondary to and flows from delving
deeply into the text of the Bible to discover something outside ourselves and
our own narcissistic needs. The popular
idea that God wrote the Bible for me needs to be stamped out.
Failure to do so will only lead us to assume what the Bible
says, or will cause us to make the Bible say what we want it to say without
giving careful thought and attention to the text itself. Moreover, such Bible readings will limit our
understanding of our faith to simply a personal spiritual experience.
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