Friday, December 26, 2008

Gretta Vosper's With or Without God: A Critique

Gretta Vosper’s With or Without God: A Critique
By
Lloyd Brown

Gretta Vosper’s book is a difficult one to write about. It seems to lack focus, taking pot-shots at too many issues without adequately discussing any of them. It lacks an analysis of the issues raised, is frequently contradictory, sometimes is simplistic and shallow, and is irritatingly peppered with claims that are arrogant and dismissive. To deal with all of these points would take more time and space than I can devote to them in this critique, so I shall discuss only the main issues raised in the book.

The first question to ask is what is this book about? Let us allow the author to answer the question: “It is about finding a way to be the church” (p. 12). We need, she observes, “something new, related to but distinct from what went before” (p. 12-13). How exactly would this church differ from the church of the present? It would be, she continues, a church “freed from its absolute and supernatural claims,” a church “leading in the area of ethics, relationships, meaning and values” that “grow out of our own best thinking” and would not depend on “biblical verses to support them” (p.13). In summary, this new church would be without absolutes, without any references to or dependence on a supernatural God or a supernatural Jesus, and it would be a church that would pay little attention to the Bible because it “can no longer assist us” in discerning “our way toward ethical living” (p.222).

My purpose in this paper is to examine these and other aspects of Vosper’s new church, and to call attention to what I see as weaknesses in her arguments.

First, a few words about the premise expressed as part of her title: “Why the Way We Live Is More Important Than What We Believe,” and her propensity for self contradiction. Vosper is here assuming that what we believe and how we live are discrete and unrelated to each other. Is this really the case? Surely what I believe influences what I do. If I believe that my employee is God’s creation, with a spark of divinity within him, I will more likely treat him with kindness and respect than if I regard him as of no special worth, as a mere economic unit, say.

In fact, in her book Vosper has difficulty separating belief and action. For example, she says (p.90) that apartheid in South Africa was challenged by Christian communities using biblical stories “to argue the rights of people of colour to the justice and freedom that comes with the (Christian) faith.” In other words the action of the people was motivated by their beliefs. Later (p.122) she again argues for the connection between belief and action in these words: “Believing that the universe is either unfolding as it should or that it is wildly off course will cause one to approach a situation in radically different ways.” Further, in discussing leadership in organizations she concludes that “changing their belief system is the single most effective way” of controlling any situation (p.126). Exactly.

Indeed, there is much evidence throughout her book to show that Vosper’s strong point is neither logic nor careful thought. For example, she says that “In a world in which we must consult myriad perspectives to ascertain the truth, it is impossible to name one moral position as absolute” (p.280) However, throughout her book she, rightly, names justice and love as absolutes without, seemingly, being aware of the contradiction. On the same page (p.280) she also says that “We must recognize all life and the earth as holy.” This sounds very like an absolute to me. Vosper has the same problem as most post-modernists. They talk about multiple meanings and argue that there are no absolutes until their own core values are questioned. Then they become absolutists. Vosper is caught in a similar bind, preaching individual interpretation while being dogmatic about her own position, her own, to use the post-modern term, “metanarrative.” Her dogmatism is evident throughout her book and it contradicts her claim that openness is a characteristic of progressive thought. Sadly, she doesn’t practice what she preaches. A part of the openness that she espouses, she says, is the absence of arrogance, a barrier to open conversation (p.180). Yet she concludes, “It seems almost incredible that, with the brilliant minds we have put to the task, we have not yet been able to adequately share progressive scholarship with the wider church” (p.103). The inability to share this scholarship is not because these brilliant minds, among them no doubt is Rev. Vosper’s, have poor communication skills. No, it is due to the poor “theological formation of church leaders” and the distain of those in the pews for the insights and knowledge of these brilliant minds. Instead they are “ensconced within world views that maintain a comfortable sense of divine privilege” (p.103). How is that for openness? Could anyone find anywhere a clearer example of arrogance?

The remainder of this paper will be devoted to the major topics discussed in Vosper’s book: God, Jesus, the Bible, and the church.

GOD

What does Vosper say about God? She says a variety of things in a variety of tones. For example, she speaks about God in the Genesis story as a “bumbling God.” She continues “The first thing we learn about him is that he tires easily. After uttering a sentence or two a day for six days, he needs to take a whole day off” (P.226). The only thing I wish to say about this comment is to point out that it is a good example of her frequent flippancy, her predilection for belittling, her propensity to sneer instead of engaging in serious discussion, and her embarrassing shallowness.

She also makes it clear that she is not a theist. That is, she rejects the notion of God as a supreme reality, a reality that Polkinghorne (1998), a physicist turned theologian, describes as a “mind and a purpose behind the history of the universe”, “a veiled presence…worthy of worship and the ground of hope” (p. 1). Flew (2007) agrees with I.M. Crombie that theism is a belief in God as a transcendent being, and being transcendent, is a mystery and beyond comprehension and can only be talked about in images. (p.46) From this point of view Vosper is right, but is saying nothing new, when she observes that we have created the concept of God. (p.54). In fact, we have created many images or concepts of God. It is the way the limited human mind tries to think about the transcendent. It can only use the concepts and images that it knows to speak of the infinite. God has therefore been named using such images as cloud, fire, wind, rock, fortress, light, lord, king, shepherd, father, judge, and love. However, traditional Christianity has used these images to try to grasp the reality of God, to help others understand something of the mysterious nature of God. But Vosper says that God is a human concept to dismiss God, to show that God is a mere human creation.

Why is Vosper so dismissive of the theistic notion of God? Apparently it is because of evolution. She says, using Dawkins, an atheistic Darwinian, for support: “When we can understand the evolution of any life form as the simple trial and error progressions exposed in Richard Dawkins’ The Blind Watchmaker, there is little reason for us to hold on to God as explanation” (p.233). Others, less naïve than Vosper, have been less willing to accept his view that to accept evolution is to reject God. For example, Collins (2006), a leading geneticist, takes issue with Dawkins, claiming that he is a master at “setting up a straw man, and then dismantling it with great relish” (p.164). He concludes that Dawkins’s flaw is that in claiming that science demands atheism and demolishes God he is “going beyond the evidence,” because since God is outside nature, “science can neither prove nor disprove His existence” (p.165). This is a position, by the way, that Dawkins himself agrees with. However, it hasn’t stopped him from pontificating about the absence of God as if science proves the point.

Other scientists have also taken issue with the notion that to accept evolution is to reject God. Polkinghorne (1998) refers to the Anthropic Principle to make his point. This principle states that the universe is so fine-tuned that it couldn’t have happened by chance. For example, scientists are saying that if the force of gravity were a little weaker or stronger than it is, our planet would not be habitable. Polkinghorne says that this fine-tuning suggests a divine purpose and a divine creator (pp.6-8). Davies (1983), a theoretical physicist, though doubtful that the hypothesis can ever be tested, concludes “It is hard to resist the impression that the present structure of the universe…has been rather carefully thought out” (p.189).

In fact, Darwin himself, though at times ambiguous about the subject, on one occasion wrote that he experienced:

the extreme difficulty…of conceiving this immense and wonderful universe, including man with his capacity for looking far backwards and far into futurity, as the result of blind chance or necessity. When thus reflecting I feel compelled to look for a First cause having an intelligent mind in some degree analogous to that of man, and I deserve to be called a Theist. (Quoted in Miller, 2007, p. 287)

In the light of these views of internationally-know scientists, Vosper should have been more cautious in accepting Dawkins’s views without question or discussion.

So, according to Vosper God is not theistic, not personal, not a reality that one could pray to. What, then, does she say God is? The following are some expressions she uses to communicate her understanding of God: “a presence,” “something…like a feeling,” (p.120), “a feeling that makes you want to be the best person you can be” (p.230), God “dwells in our relationships” (p.250); “god is what exists between two people” (p. 234); “everything that is good in the world” (p.234); God resides within friends and family (p.248). She also says that she’s going to try to drop the word “god” to help us forget about the notion of God as being. “I’m going to use some other word—maybe breath, or love, or pyntrilm” (her own creation) (p.235). She accepts Love, compassion, mercy, and forgiveness as characteristics of God, and when we live out these qualities we are, she says, incarnations of God (p. 249). On another occasion she says that our work in the church is “to create god,” but “Not ‘god’ as anything real that exists separately… from us” (279).

We have to give Vosper credit for trying to describe God in a different way. I also have wished for and thought about others ways of speaking about God, ways freed of preconceived notions and unfortunate associations. So I appreciate the difficulties that Vosper is having. And the difficulties are clear. She seems to be struggling and in the end it is, I think, a failed project. For instance, it is not clear what she means when she says that God is a feeling “that makes you want to be the best person you can be” Does she mean that God is the feeling? Or does she mean that God creates this feeling? In other words, is it the prompting of the Holy Spirit that she is referring to? If so, she hasn’t moved very far from the traditional theistic concept of God.

God as presence is also acceptable to even non-progressive Christians. But what does she mean by God as presence? Is this presence impersonal like energy? Or is it more like a person? Does it communicate? Could we regard the recognition of this presence as the soul’s encounter with the Transcendent?

What can she possibly mean when she defines God as that which exists between two people? Is she saying that the relationship is God? What kind of a relationship, exactly? If it were a loving relationship, is she saying that this love is a finite expression of the infinite love of God? I don’t think she is. I don’t think she would say that our limited, finite expression of love is a reflection of the love of an infinite God as John describes it in his first Letter. God for her is, as far as I can determine, not the Source of truth or value.

The scholars that I have read concern themselves with discussing God as “Infinite intelligence,” “Divine source of life,” “the great unity,” “the Mind and Purpose behind the universe,” “the rational ground of existence,” “Divine Order,” “Absolute Truth,” “Supreme Source of value,” “Creator,” “ the unseen order,” and the like. Michelangelo’ s God, painted on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, is portrayed as a transcendent power behind the order of the cosmos. Isaiah’s God is characterized by power (“Those who trust in the Lord will renew their strength. They will rise on wings like eagles.”), and care and comfort (“Do not be afraid-- I will save you. I have called you by name—you are mine.”). The New Testament refers to Jesus as the living God made incarnate. St Paul says that in Jesus the fullness of God did dwell. None of these concepts are discussed in Vosper’s book. She takes her own advice and creates her own God; but it is a weak, cut-down God with no power, no authority. The following are some brief observations on what I see missing in Vosper’s God:


1. Vosper’s God has no part to play in creation. In eliminating God from creation she undermines a firm foundation for treating the world and God’s creatures with care and kindness. Kung (1981) emphasizes this point. He says he believes in God as creator and therefore is obliged to accept “with greater seriousness, greater realism and greater hope my responsibility for my fellow men and the environment” (p.642). This concept of God helps us understand the world and our place in it.

2. Borg (2003), in his discussion of God, refers to God as “a nonmaterial layer of reality, an extra dimension” (p.63). William James (1958), the great American philosopher and psychologist, called God the “unseen order.” To illustrate the power and importance of this unseen order in people’s lives he wrote a chapter in his book on the experiences of those who have encountered it. (p.58). Vosper seems to confine herself to the space-time world. There is no discussion of encounters with the divine, no references to those from the Bible who have had such experiences, such as Elijah, Saul, Jesus, and the disciples on the Mount of Transfiguration. This aspect of religious life, as far as I can determine, has no place in her church.

3. St. Paul refers to God as one in whom “We live and move and have our being.” One couldn’t say this about Vosper’s God, being, as it is, reduced to human size.

4. The Bible’s God is one of hope in the face of death: “For God so loved the world…that everyone who believes in him shall not die but have eternal life.” Vosper’s God offers no such assurance. It is hard to think of a God which is a symbol of our commitment “to be the best we can be” as offering hope in the face of death.



JESUS

Vosper’s abandonment of the theistic God also influences her view of Jesus. What exactly does she say about Jesus? She is at least consistent. Since there is no theistic God, she logically concludes: “The whole idea of Jesus being the Son of God no longer makes much sense” (237). She resolves: “With the help of scholars and authors who made academic research accessible, we will have set before us a very human Jesus” (p.238). (It should be pointed out here that Vosper frequently refers to modern scholarship and scholars to support her position. One would think in reading her book that all modern scholars supported her views. In fact, few do. Even Borg and Crossan, whom she frequently cites, don’t agree with her in everything. And she makes no references to those modern scholars who disagree with her position, such N. T. Wright, Luke Timothy Johnson, John Polkingthorne, Alister McGrath, and Ben Witherington. It is important, then, not to give too much credence to her references to modern scholarship). Further, she adds something even more astonishing:

But, stripped of the designation as God’s only begotten, complete with its requisite claims to salvation, there is nothing that he said or did that we must take more seriously than anything said by anyone else. What he is purported to have said or done may…have been remarkable for his day” (p.239)

However, she concludes, we should not give any more attentiveness to what he has said and did than “we would give to any person or piece of literature, film or art” (239). So Jesus, robbed of his designation as the son of God, is just another story teller, like Hemingway, Dickens, Flannery O’Connor, or Margaret Laurence. However, having robbed Jesus of his divinity, she proclaims, without seeming to recognize the contradiction, that we should “embrace the being-ness of our own divinity” (p.237). Jesus may not be divine but we are!

She concludes with these words, dismissive, arrogant, and disparaging: “contemporary scholarship strips Jesus of his…divine status and leaves him only as a Middle Eastern peasant with a few charismatic gifts and a great posthumous marketing team” (p. 255). And Bishop Spong, her mentor, in his introduction to her book, calls this “scholarly insight” (p. X1V)!

The resurrection and the crucifixion of Jesus are the two most significant events in Christianity, but not for Vosper. She doesn’t mention the first of these two, a peculiar omission for one writing about the Christian church. And she says almost nothing about the second, though we get something of her attitude about the cross in this pronouncement: “It is my hope that, in time, as the horrific story the cross represents loses it place at the centre of Christianity, the cross will become obsolete, a silent reminder of the past” (p.326). For one who accepts the traditional view of the cross in Christian theology this comes as a shock, an outrage. To begin with, the cross is, as Houston Smith puts it (2005), not only a central symbol of Christianity, but with its “vertical arm uniting heaven and earth, and its horizontal arm symbolizing throwing one’s arms out to others— it comes close to being a universal symbol” (p.110). Yet Vosper looks forward to the day when it will be regarded as obsolete! Alister McGrath (1996) places the cross as the “starting point of authentically Christian theology.” He adds, “The cross is not an individual aspect of theology, but is itself the foundation of that theology.” Further, he concludes that it is also “at the centre of all Christian thought, in that from its centre radiate all Christian statements on ethics…the Christian life, and so on”(p.41). No wonder one is taken aback that a Christian minister makes it her business to try to destroy the central symbol of Christian life and theology, a symbol denoting love, self sacrifice, trust, and forgiveness!

Jesus, having lost his divinity, is left with no “slavific power” (p. 254). This seems to me to be a peculiar position, considering the influence of Jesus in the lives of his disciples and in the lives of people we know and knew. Smith (2005) says of the disciples that they were

men and women who were ordinary in every way except for the fact that they seemed to have found the secret of living. They evinced a tranquillity, simplicity, and cheerfulness that their hearers had nowhere else encountered (p. 78).

Similarly, we have all met people who, having encountered Christ, have experienced such joy, inner peace, happiness, and love that they could not contain them. Might we not conclude that these are marks of the salvific power of Christ?

Not only has Jesus no salvific power, but, according to Vosper, he is not a very good moral teacher either. First, she says that Jesus is not able to provide the “broad base” necessary to “help us wrestle with…difficult ethical issues.” And he is not able to provide this broad base because “his vision is constrained by the context in which it was cast” (p. 155). It is hard to believe that the one who asks us to love one another, to forgive others, to pay more attention to our souls than to our possessions, to regard our bodies as God’s temple, to hunger and thirst after righteousness, who asks us to consider anyone in need as our neighbour can be said to be speaking to his time only. Surely these admonitions are universal and provide the broad base that Vosper is looking for. Surely they provide the necessary foundation for all our actions. If these words “don’t make sense any more” (p.155), I’m afraid that Vosper’s new church with its new God, new Jesus, and new language is not going to do much to save us. If we cannot make sense of them it’s because we have lost our ability to hear Truth.

What are some of the particular aspects of Jesus teachings that she objects
to? She takes issue with Jesus because he tells the rich young man to sell all and give to the poor, and she condemns it as utopian. Taking this incident literally, she says that acting in this manner “can serve to abdicate the responsibilities we have to one another” (p.154). There may be times when such an admonition might be unwise and unrealistic. However, Jesus is faced here with a young man who worships his riches, and seems to think that such a radical statement is necessary to bring him to his senses, to help him realize that his soul is worth more than all his riches. Sometimes Vosper’s literalism, while allowing her to pontificate, makes her pronouncements appear shallow. The superior values to the ones Jesus advocates, she says, are dialogue and diversity. Vosper does not seem to like the authority with which Jesus spoke to the rich young man. She is too concerned about pluralism and diversity to recognize his Truth. I can’t help wondering if Oskar Schindler dialogued and considered diversity when he risked his life to save Jews from extermination. I’d like to think that he recognized the Truth at the heart of existence, the universal moral law and acted accordingly.

Other sayings of Jesus, she says, are either “unhelpful” (divorce) or “unsupportable and exclusive” (“I am the way, the truth and the life”) (p.242-243). What “unhelpful” means here is not made clear. It is merely stated as if her stating it made it so. Jesus regarded marriage as a divine institution and a permanent relationship, likened to the relationship of the Christian Church to Christ (Ephesians 5:28-30). Anyone who observes our present society might have good reason to conclude that divorce has led to the ruination of many families, and further we might at least wonder if the destruction of families is not related to the break down of our society. If we took Jesus’ words seriously and lived by them, we might find them very helpful indeed, certainly to our children who seem to suffer most from the break up of families.

The meaning of “unsupportable” is also not clear. Does she mean it (“I am the way…) is irrational? Is she saying that there is no evidence to support it? Millions of Christians, now and in the past, have been and are witnesses to it. They supported it and do so still. Clearly, then, if has been, supported for two thousand years, it is supportable. One would be very arrogant to say that those who accept Jesus as “the way” were all irrational. As for evidence, after examining his teachings about love, trust, and forgiveness, I find it difficult not to accept it on that evidence. For I believe that Jesus is the Way (capital W) because he embodies those characteristics which are really true to what we are meant to be and to the way human life is. If these are not the way, what would Vosper suggest the way is?

One wonders why Vosper has so little regard for Jesus, taking every opportunity to undermine his authority and uniqueness, to deny him as the incarnation. Maybe it is a part of her pluralist agenda. This pluralism is obvious through her book. She says that divested of their particular rituals, beliefs, and traditions we find that the core values of Christianity are shared by other world religions (p. 101). These rituals and traditions, she further argues, is divisive and a mark of tribalism. Uniqueness, then, is bad; it is divisive. If my theory is correct, one can understand why she has adopted a heretical view of Jesus. When she rejects Jesus as the Christ she rejects what is distinctly Christian, and thus turns Christianity into just another religion. In this way inter-religious cooperation and understanding are enhanced and pluralism is advanced. However, since Jesus the Christ is constitutive of Christianity, it would also destroy Christianity, for unless Jesus is the Christ there is no Christianity.

THE BIBLE

To claim that we should not take what Jesus said and did any more seriously than what anyone else said and did (pp.238-39), one would have to deny what the New Testament says of him. To do that is to argue against the authority of the Bible. Most Christians would have reservations about taking such a strong stand. Rev. Vosper, however, does not. What exactly does she say about the Bible? She says that it no longer assists us in learning to live ethically (p.222). However, this seems to contradict an earlier statement where she observes that the Bible does support us “to live according to life-enhancing values” p.149). Vosper apparently sees no need to explain this contradiction.

The important point to be made here is her claim that the Bible is no longer authoritative. When we adopt this stance toward the Bible, she says, we are free to read the Bible as we want and “to name what is worthy of being welcomed into our places of worship” (p.149).Her approach to reading the Bible needs to be developed further because it is an approach that necessarily robs the Bible of any authority. Her reading is that of a post-modern deconstructionist. The deconstructionist argues that there is no meaning in a text. There is only the meaning that the reader constructs. And since each reader has a different interpretation of a text, it has as many meanings as there are readers. Her advice is that we should look for meaning, not “The Meaning” (p.224). This suggests that neither the author of a text nor an expert reader can tell us what a text means. No one interpretation is any better than any other. There is just the democratic frenzy of interpretations.

Vosper is a good example of this kind of reader. This is what she says about the Bible and the reading of it: “It is just a book …There is no The Meaning. There is only the possibility that something might resonate with you, challenge you…or disgust you. That’s all” (p.240).How dismissive is that! And how post-modern! “Resonate, challenge, disgust” seem to me to suggest a limited view of reading. Disgust suggests annoyance and loathing, but not intellectual engagement. A text that resonates with the reader is one that the reader agrees with. A text that challenges is one that may test one’s ability to think critically about it. However, neither of these responses to a text suggests that the reader will learn from it. And this is congruent with Vosper’s view of reading Scripture. The question, she says, is not “What is the meaning of the story”? Rather it is “What do you make of it”? (p.222), not” what can I learn from this story”? Always the emphasis is on the reader not the text itself. I think good reading calls for careful analysis of a text— the context in which it was written or told, the vocabulary, the language, the genre (history, poetry, letter, story), the purpose. Good reading also calls for humility and respect in encountering the text, and asks us to recognize that it has something worthwhile to say to us. Borg (2002) captures what I want to say when he observes that we should listen to what the Bible has to say, “and let its central stories shape our vision of God, our identity, and our sense of what faithfulness to God means” (31). A reader can register disgust, and feel resonance, or challenge without this humility, respect and analysis, but he/she is not likely to learn much from the text, not likely to discover much of its meaning without them. Good readers remain open to the text and refrain from imposing their own views on it.

Instead of such an analysis, what does Vosper suggest we do when reading the Bible? She says that we should ask such questions as: “Is Jesus acting in a way you would be proud of…? What do you make of it? Does this story evoke a good feeling in you or a bad one”? She also, in encouraging the study of Jesus, gives her students a one-sided perspective of him to guide their reading: He taught people to acquiesce (“turn the other cheek”), “Jesus’ moral teaching is not outstanding,” “No other historical record (other than the gospels) contains anything about Jesus’ miraculous works or resurrection,” These and other points are presented without discussion or qualification, as if there were no disagreement about them. They are meant, she says to “challenge the idealized picture (of Jesus) we’ve held for so long” (pp.242-243). In other words, she feels it necessary to influence her readers’ minds about Jesus before they begin their reading. And further her suggested way to read the Bible not only begins with preconceptions but seems to have its beginnings in her own ideology.

The fact is that Vosper has very little regard for the Bible. Because it is an old book, she says, it is not the word of God for all time, and because the original authors were humans, it is limited in its truth, and there is no “divine being trying to get through to us” (p.220). What are we to make of this view that we have nothing to learn from the ancients? She seems to be saying that there are no universals, that moral values are products of the times, human creations for each generation. The Bible, then, she seems to say, speaks only to the past. If there are no universals, perhaps Vosper is right. But if there are universals we must allow that the ancients have something worth saying, some wisdom to communicate. It is difficult to imagine that Plato, Job, Proverbs, The Sermon on the Mount, and St. Augustine are irrelevant. Is this what Vosper is arguing here? Is this what she really means? If so, intellectually, she must be a very lonely woman.

I agree with her that the Bible was written by humans. For example, it is not a script written by God in a way the Koran is, which is regarded by Muslins as the transcript of a tablet preserved in heaven, and revealed to the Prophet Muhammad. In fact, throughout the Koran God speaks in the first person. The Bible, in contrast, is a composite of books, poems, letters, stories recorded by a variety of people. However, this doesn’t mean that there is no divine “trying to get through to us” in the Bible as Vosper suggests. Since John, Luke, Mark, Matthew, and Paul, for example, are writing of their understanding and experience of God, couldn’t we conclude that the spirit of the divine, through their writings, is breaking into our world and experience? Vosper has read Marcus Borg, and if she had been interested in presenting a more thoughtful and balanced perspective, she could have consulted his ideas on the authority of scripture. Borg (2002) agrees with Vosper. He also sees the Bible as a human product, a human response to God written by those who have experienced God. He concludes, then, that God is not “scripture’s ultimate author” (p.22). Yet he maintains that scripture is for Christians “the most important collection of writings we know” (p.29). He further argues that it defines who we are: “It is the ground of the world in which we Christians live” (p.30). How different this is from Vosper’s view that the Bible is just another book. She says that “once the Bible is set aside as a spiritual resource,” you can “use whatever it is you’re reading” (p. 222). She mentions several examples, two of which are William Blake, the eighteenth century English poet, and Philippa Gregory, best know for her fictionalized biographies. Vosper doesn’t say why she would choose either of them to replace the Bible, except to indicate that they have “deep spiritual wisdom” that we can find there (p.223). (A contradiction should be noted here, because she has already stated rather dogmatically that there is no “Meaning” in the text; we have only the meaning we bring to the text. Apparently there are exceptions). Borg’s view of scripture here is what I call a modification from within the tradition. He takes a non-traditional approach to scripture, but treats it with respect and emphasizes its centrality. Vosper’s, treatment of scripture, however, amounts to an attempt to dismantle it, to undermine completely it position in the Christian tradition.

THE CHURCH

Given Vosper’s views of God, Jesus, and the Bible, what conclusions can we
draw about her church?

1. There will be no reference to an unseen realm, no talk of an encounter with the divine. She seems to dismiss the traditional notion of the transcendent and replaces it with the spirit of the times. The unique truth of Christianity about our redemption in Jesus the Christ will not be preached in Vosper’s church.

2. Because she eliminates the possibility of an encounter with the divine, with the numinous, she creates a church that seems to me to be rather barren. It lacks appeal to the imagination or to our sense of mystery. Nor is it a church that will satisfy our eternal longing for the eternal, for what is always just beyond our reach, for the sense of beauty and love which our everyday experience is but a pale reflection.

3. Her church is not grounded in a very hopeful theology. Having eliminated the transcendent, personal God, Vosper leaves us alone in the universe.

4. Having abandoned the Christ story, there will be no central place for Jesus in sermons, hymns and readings in Vosper’s church.

5. Prayer in Vosper’s church, as I understand it, will not be to God exterior to us, not to an interventionist God, but to a God in ones family and friends who are praying for us. Knowing this we can create mental images of them which will strengthens us. She has written a prayer (pp.252-53) that draws heavily on the famous prayer of St. Francis of Assisi. What is revealing about her prayer is that it makes no reference to God, sin, forgiveness, or eternal life, all important concepts in St. Francis’ prayer.

6. Vosper’s church will be one in which other stories will be placed on a par with scripture.

7. There is not likely to be any reference to the Trinity in Vosper’s church. Her prayer for baptism, for example, uses a “somewhat Trinitarian form” (‘341), but without mentioning the Trinity:

I baptize you in the name of
Life who created you
Wisdom who knew you first
Hope by which you will be sustained (343).

8. Vosper, regarding the story of the cross as horrific, will not grant it a central place in her church.

9. Vosper’s will be a church that will emphasize social issues (pp.284-85). She says that the focus of the Jesus stories “is not on the man called Jesus. The focus is on how to live”(p193).

10. Vosper’s notion of Communion emphasizes community. There is no God, no Jesus, no “in remembrance of Me,” no reference to sin, sacrifice, and atonement. The words of the traditional liturgy, she says, if we really pay attention to them, are “really offensive” (p.259). She concludes “I hope that there will be no need for the sacraments in the next incarnation of the church” (p.259).

My concluding observation is that Vosper’s church is not a Christian church. I cannot see how it can be. She rejects the Christian notion of God, of Jesus, of Scripture, and she also rejects Christian rituals and sacraments. In a church there are always tensions between the autonomy of the individual and the authority of the institution. But a church must have, however loosely defined, common beliefs, practices, and goals. Anyone who cannot accept any of these, is, it seems to me, obliged to leave it.


REFERENCES

Borg, Marcus J. Reading the Bible Again for the First Time. HarperCollins: New York, 2002.

Borg, Marcus J. The Heart of Christianity. HarperCollins: New York, 2003.
Collins, Francis S. The Language of God. Free press: New York, 2006.

Davies, Paul. God and the New Physics. Penguin Books: Harmondsworth, Middlesex, 1983.

Flew, Antony. There Is a God. HarperCollins: New York, 2007.

James, William. The Varieties of Religious Experience. New American Library, 1959.

Kung, Hans. Does God Exist? Vintage Books: New York, 1981.

McGrath, Alister. A Passion for Truth. InterVarsity Press: Downers Grove, Illinois, 1996.

Miller, Kenneth R. Finding Darwin’s God. HarperCollins: New York, 2007.

Polkinghorne, John. Belief in God in an Age of Science. Yale University Press: Yale University Press: New Haven, 1998.

Smith, Houston. The Soul of Christianity. HarperCollins: New York, 2005.

Vosper, Gretta. With or Without God. HarperCollins: New York, 2008.



Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Science and Religion

Science and Religion
By
Lloyd Brown
March 13, 2008


Introduction

Is there any relationship between science and religion? Do they have anything in common? Are their purposes different? Are they in conflict? Does one have any impact on the other? Is there any harmony between them?

There are those who declare that scientists and theologians inhabit two different realms and never the twain shall meet. Scientists, they say, are detached observers of the world and concern themselves with evidence, experimentation, and objectivity. They confine their study to the physical world, and proceed with detachment to discover causal connections between events and objects in nature. The language of science is propositional and mathematical, the purpose of which is to communicate what the world is like.

Theologians, on the other hand, are said to depend on faith and revelation for their knowledge. Knowledge for them is personal and subjective. Their concern is mainly with awe and mystery, with meaning and purpose both in the universe and in our lives. The scientist asks, what are the facts? How did the world begin? What is the nature of the Big Bang? The theologian asks, Why? Why is there a world at all? Why is it orderly and intelligible? The stance of the theologian is one of engagement rather than detachment. He/she focuses on unique experiences rather than general laws, on the inner life rather than repeatable data. The language of theology is closer to poetry than to mathematics, depending largely on symbol and metaphor.

Even this brief and general description of religion and science is useful because it calls attention to the distinctive aspects of both and helps us understand what each contributes to our understanding. It also reminds us that neither gives us a complete understanding of life. Science has been successful in describing the nature of the world, and in doing so has made great contributions to health, technology, and industry. However, it says nothing about how we should live in the world. It is silent about love, kindness, and hope. Religion and science take a different stance toward the world. To science the world is an It, something to be used, manipulated and analyzed. In religion the world is sacred, a Thou, something to be encountered, something with which we establish a relationship and which we experience. Religion, as religion, encounters problems when it makes dogmatic statements about subjects that are the domain of science such as the age of the universe. Similarly, science, as science, cannot give us any particular insight into the nature of God, because it is outside its domain. The existence or non-existence of God cannot be proven by science. Therefore, the pronouncements of scientists on the subject are not scientific statements, and as such carry no special weight.

However, I think the distinction between religion and science as described above are not nearly as sharp and definitive as some writers suggest. This is so because a new paradigm of science has superseded the old paradigm. The old one, the classical Newtonian model, showed the world to be a designed mechanism operating according to deterministic laws. Like any machine, it was regarded as a collection of autonomous parts, each external to the other. The new twentieth century model portrays the world as a living organism, with an emphasis on relatedness and holism, with each element an organic part of the whole. In the rest of this paper I shall make references to the new paradigm to show that while religion and science are independent, there are points of contact between them. The first to be discussed is faith.





Faith

Critics of religion, Richard Dawkins for example, argue that faith is irrational and is a characteristic of religion only. They seem unaware that faith is a necessary part of science. Scientists must have faith in the intelligibility of the world if science is to function. D’Souza (2007, 93) makes the same claim: “Without the…belief that we live in an ordered universe, modern science is impossible.” He further adds that “Science also relies on the equally unsupported belief that the rationality of the universe is mirrored in the rationality of our human minds.” In other words, scientists have faith in the rationality of the universe and the human mind and the consonance between them before they even start their experiments. That is, they (some of them) argue that that there is a living mind deep in the very nature of the universe; and when we apply our minds to it, it yields understanding as if mind were speaking to mind. Einstein also confesses that because our knowledge of the laws of nature is imperfect our belief in the existence of these laws “rests on a sort of faith.” He continues that those seriously involved in the study of science become convinced “that a spirit is manifest in the laws of the universe—a spirit vastly superior to that of man.” He concludes “the pursuit of science leads to a religious feeling of a special sort.” (Dukas and Hoffmann, 1981, 32-33)

Capra (1991, 24) also argues that faith is a part of science. He says that “every leap into novelty, every discovery is an intuitive leap.” And every intuitive leap is an act of faith. All scientists learn to trust this intuitive leap to take them in the desired direction. Capra says they have an insight, early in the discovery process, which they cannot formulate. Perhaps science faith is more intellectual than religious faith which is existential and related to morality and ultimate meaning. However, there is a common element in both. That common element is openness to the discovery of new meanings (Liderbach, (1989, 120-121). In science it may be the anticipated meanings of quantum mechanics before they can be expressed. In religion it may be openness to new perspectives, some of them counter intuitive. For example, secular society operates on the proposition that victory lies in strength. However, the Christian message, symbolized by the cross, is that victory lies in surrender and sacrifice. To call attention to the presence of faith in both science and religion is not meant to conflate the two or to try to undermine their independence as disciplines. It is rather to show that those scientists who denigrate faith, Dawkins calls it a virus, and claims that science is free of it, should rethink their positions and put a check on their arrogance. It is also to remind those who are intimidated by Dawkins’ argument that his case is weaker than they think.


Mystery

I find the world of the new science, like the world portrayed by religion, to be a place of mystery. This is probably what Davies (1986, ix) was thinking when he said that “in my opinion science offers a surer path to God than religion.” Einstein also, in great humility, acknowledges the mystery of the universe. In a letter to his friend Dr. Otto Juliusburger he states, “we never cease to stand like curious children before the great mystery in which we are born.” (Dukas and Hoffmann, 1981, 82) Mehdi Golshani, a distinguished professor of physics, sums up his view of the new science with these words: “Cosmology and the quantum physics have taught us about the immense mystery of the world.” (In Richardson and Slack, 2001, 125)

What are these scientists referring to when they talk of mystery with respect to science? In the mechanistic world atoms are hard, indestructible balls, resembling miniature billiard balls. However, as physicists have probed deeper into nature they have discovered a world that is beyond our direct sensory perception. Apparently, solid particles are no longer solid. Davies (1986, 103) says that an atom only materializes when you look for it, and “In the absence of an observation the atom is a ghost.” Capra (1988, 72) says, in discussing Einstein’s formula E=mc2 ,that “mass is nothing but a form of energy.” Owens (1983, 86) quotes Heisenberg as saying that atoms are not real, because they are not made up of things. They are instead “the sheerest mathematical Platonic forms.” Furthermore, subatomic particles and light both have a dual aspect. Depending on how we look at them, they appear sometimes as particles (quanta, from which quantum mechanics gets its name) and sometimes as waves. This is indeed a very strange world and it appears that the deeper we go into it the more we become detached from the commonsense world of everyday experience. This paradox reminds us of, and may help us to express, the Christian paradox—Jesus as God and man, divine and human.

Liderbach (1989, 85) calls attention to another astonishing characteristic of subatomic particles which he refers to as “tunneling”. Tunneling, he says, describes the escape of particles through a wall which is thought to be impenetrable. Perhaps Liderbach is referring to neutrinos. They are, says Gregory (1990, 121-122), massless, invisible particles that can pass through matter almost as if it didn’t exist! Those who believe in these invisible particles should have no trouble believing in ghosts!

The physical world, then, as Liderbach (1989, 87) observes, seems to be “made up fundamentally of non-substantial presences.” He concludes that to assert that there is a non-empirically based Presence of the Kingdom of God in the world is no more radical than to claim in science that the world is made up of non-substantial presences. Polkinghorne (1998, 44) argues that entities such as quarks, gluons, and neutrinos, though unseen and unseeable, warrant our belief because their existence “provides the basis for understanding what is happening.” He makes the same claim for the unseen Presence of God in the world. Both God and neutrinos may be unseen, but they nevertheless “bear some relation to the actuality of the world,” and make aspects of experience intelligible. The subatomic world of new physics, then, like the one portrayed in religion is a veiled, unpicturable, hidden reality.


Wholeness

The world of new science, like the world of religion, is one characterized by wholeness. Bohm (1985, 148) recognizes this desire for wholeness. He says that we have an “urge toward wholeness which expressed itself in religion and in science.”

First consider religion. The believer in God is also a believer in the interconnectedness of things: The new statement of faith (2006) of the United Church of Canada says that “all parts of creation…are related.” Religion presupposes God as the ultimate ground of all being out of which all things emerge. Scripture connects God and nature by showing us that the world is filled with the glory of God (Psalm 19), and tells us that God speaks to Moses out of a burning bush. This wholeness is in evidence in Jesus’ claim that “I and my father are one.” St Paul in his letter to the Ephesians also emphasizes it: “There is one body and one spirit…There is one Lord, one faith, one baptism; there is one Lord and Father of all mankind.” (Chapter 4, v 4-6) At the Last Supper Jesus emphasized the unity of the spiritual and the physical when he took the bread and the wine and said “This is my body broken for you,” and “This is my blood shed for you.” The Trinity is also a symbol of wholeness. It is not about parts, about separate persons, but about relationships, about a unity of three in one, each existing in and for each other. In the Christian religion the church, while made up of individuals, is a community, a communion, the body of Christ.

What of science? The new science, as we have already observed, reveals a new view of the world. At a deep level it reveals the world as an undivided wholeness. Capra (1988, 78-79) says that “As we penetrate into matter, nature does not show us any isolated ‘basic building g blocks’, but rather appears as a complicated web of relations between the various parts of the whole.” For example, when observing sub-atomic particles it is not possible to separate the observer from what is observed. When scientists study photons, they direct a stream of light on them. In other words, they direct a stream of photons at other photons thus distorting the results. This means that the observer is no longer detached from what he/she observes. The objectivity of the observer is destroyed because he/she by the very process of the study has influenced the results. The claim, then, that quantum science, unlike religion, is completely objective is undermined.

Furthermore, as we have already observed, Einstein claims that matter and energy are a unity. He also posits that space and time are not distinct from each other. He says that there is no such thing as time and space independent of each other. There is only space-time, “a continuum which extends to every part of the universe.” (Liderbach, 1989, 21)

Polkinghorne (1998, 28), and other scientists, have pointed out a peculiarity of subatomic particles that suggests wholeness. Apparently two particles which have interacted with each other will influence each other, however far they are separated. They seem to stay in contact through space and time, behaving as one particle instead of two. It reminds us of the non-locality of prayer where the one praying and the one being prayed for become almost as one whatever the distance between them. One thinks too of the communication between twins who, though they have been separated from birth, make similar choices in their lives. Barbara Brown Taylor (2000, 65-66) says that such phenomena occur “because they belong to the unbroken wholeness of the universe.” She further connects this unbroken wholeness to the metaphor of the church as Christ’s body, which shows that we are more than a collection of parts. She concludes that in communion we are translated “into the mind of Christ”.

Bohm (1987, 148) speaks of a basic reality which he says is “an unbroken wholeness.” This unbroken wholeness he calls the “implicate order” out of which the “explicate order”, the phenomenal, tangible world, emerges. He describes it in a language that is very familiar to theologians--“the ground of all being.” Astonishingly, he concludes that this ground of all being is “permeated with a supreme intelligence that is creative.” This sounds much like, though I wouldn’t want to equate them, the Christian idea of God, the underlying reality that creates and is still creating. In fact, Brian Josephson, (in The Reach of the Mind, 1985, 150) winner of the 1973 Nobel Prize in physics, suggests that science should entertain “the possibility of God or mind which can be taken as an implicate order in the evolving universe.” In other words, both Bohm and Josephson seem to hold that nature is unfolded out of a great mystery, and they commit themselves to discovering the truth about this mystery, a truth larger than themselves. Does this not remind us of the Christian’s search for the truth about God? In both cases the truth seems to be receding, beckoning the seeker to follow. The thing sought may be different, but the commitment, the conviction, and the striving are similar in both cases.

Origins

Does recent science undermine the Christian view of creation? The recent theory of cosmology attributes the origin of the universe to the Big Bang. Boslough (1985, 75) describes this origin in this way:

Into a void, so absolute as to mock any human concept of emptiness, appeared a single point of new potential. And at the very instant of its creation, this point, bearing all matter, all dimension, all energy, and all time, burst out, spewing forth its contents.

Many Christian theologians were delighted with this theory of the Big bang. Unlike the Steady State theory, for example, which held that the universe was eternal, and therefore eliminated the need for God, the Big Bang theory showed that the universe had a beginning. And even scientists allowed that it at least it suggested the possibility of a creator. It seemed as if the story of the Big Bang confirmed the story of Genesis! For like the Big Bang, Genesis insists that the universe came into existence at an instant in time and out of nothing.

Christian theology, before Copernicus, claimed that the earth was the fixed center of God’s creation. However, when Copernicus showed that the earth moved around the sun instead of the other way around, the earth and humans lost their central focus. The result was turmoil in the Christian church. Tarnas (1991, 253) observes that Copernicanism posed a threat “to the entire Christian framework of cosmology, theology, and morality.” It also led to much suppression of the new scientific views and scientists such as Copernicus and Galileo. However, modern scientists have developed a new theory that once again restores human life to its former central place. The theory is called the Anthropic Principle. This principle, in general, states that the universe is so fine-tuned for life that it could not have happened by chance, that it must have been created by a supreme intelligence for the purpose of human habitation. Though the Anthropic Principle is widely accepted among scientists, not all of them accept the religious explanation. Boslough (1985, 109) quotes Hawking as saying: “I think there are clearly religious implications whenever you start to discuss the origins of the universe….But I think most scientists prefer to shy away from the religious side of it.” However, not all of them do. Davies (1986, 189), though doubtful that the hypothesis can be tested, admits the possibility: “It is hard to resist the impression that the present structure of the universe…has been rather carefully thought out.” Polkinghorne (1998, 11), a theoretical physicist turned theologian, is less tentative. He states that “the endowment of matter with anthropic potentiality…is a creative act of a specially divine character.”

It seems, then, that while there is some disagreement between science and religion about the explanation of the Anthropic Principle, the old rather vicious contradiction between them has faded.


Summary

Though science and religion differ widely in purpose and methodology, there seems to be some harmony between them. The following are the significant points of harmony discussed in this paper:

Both are characterized by faith.

Both approach the world as mystery, with wonder and awe.

Both are concerned with a hidden, invisible reality.

Both emphasize wholeness.

Both (though not all scientists) believe that there is another reality underlying the ordinary every day reality. To the Christian the underlying reality is God. To the scientist (e.g. Bohm) it is The Implicate Order or some variation of it.

Both are marked by the use of paradox.

Both have similar notions of the creation of the universe.
Both are committed to the search for truth.

Conclusion

The following are some conclusions that I draw from this brief study of science and religion:

1. The new science with its emphasis on mystery and the veiled, invisible world assumes a perspective similar to the one that Christians need to adopt to recognize the presence of God in the world. Why, after all, is the Presence of God not as real as the invisible world of sub-atomic particles?

2. Polkinghorne says that scientists accept the presence of the unseen entities such as quarks because they help explain what is happening in the world, and are thus related to actuality. Is it not just as reasonable to regard God, though invisible, in the same way?

3. The new science with its tolerance for paradox and its emphasis on wholeness may help Christians to appreciate the presence of both these qualities in such Christian rituals as Holy Communion.

4. Some writers, I am thinking in particular of Bishop John Shelby Spong, have tossed out theism because it seems to run counter to science as represented by Galileo and Newton. However, I believe that writers like Bishop Spong, might have been less likely to reject theism in order to appeal to the modern mind if they had been more acquainted with the new science, with its emphasis on mystery and wholeness.

5 Sometimes as Christians we may have doubts about the rationality of our beliefs--Jesus as human and divine, the presence of the Holy Spirit in our lives, immortality, the invisible God as the ground of being, the validity of prayer. However, if the claims of science discussed in this paper are rational, we should be able to claim with confidence that our religious claims are no less so.


References

Bohm, David. Unfolding Meaning. London: Ark Paperbacks, 1987.

Boslough, John. Stephen Hawking’s Universe. New York: Avon Books, 1985.

Capra, Fritjof. The Tao of Physics. London: Fontana Paperbacks, 1988.

Capra, Fritjof and David Steindl-Rast. Belonging to the Universe. New York: HarperCollins Publishers, 1991.

Davies, Paul. God and the New Physics. Middlesex, England: Penguin Books, 1986.

D’Souza, Dinesh. What’s So Great About Christianity. Washington, DC: Regnery Publishing, 2007.

Dukas, Helen and Banesh Hoffmann. Albert Einstein: The Human Side. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1981.

Golshani, Mehdi. “The Ladder to God,” 120-135. In Richardson, Mark and Gordy Slack (eds). Faith in Science. London: Routledge, 2001.

Gregory, Bruce. Inventing Reality: Physics as Language. New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1990.

Josephson, Brian. In The Reach of the Mind: Nobel Prize Conversations. San Francisco: Saybrook Publishing Company, 1985.

Liderbach, Daniel. The Numinous Universe. New York: Paul;ist Press, 1989.

Owens, Virginia Stem. And the Trees Clap Their Hands. Grand Rapids, Michigan: William B. Erdmans, Publishing Co., 1983.

Polkinghorne, John. Belief in God in an Age of Science. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1998.

Tarnas, Richard. The Passion of the Western Mind. New York: Harmony Books, 1991.

Taylor, Barbara Brown. The Luminous Web. Boston: Cowley Publications, 2000.