Old Jewish proverb

Steve Greenburg, an Orthodox Rabbi and a senior educator at the National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership in New York, spoke Monday at the College of Charleston on homosexuality in the Jewish tradition.
The “Charleston Post & Courier” ran an article about the lecture, and here is a few paragraphs where Greenburg tells an ancient Jewish

That two-way street illustrates a distinguishing characteristic of the Jewish faith: “God so loved us, He gave us Torah,” he said. He gave Jews the Book, and it is up to man to read it, learn it, interpret its meanings and apply its lessons.
“There is no such thing as (biblical) literalism,” Greenberg said. “Language is simply too slippery. Of course, that was understood from the beginning.”
To illustrate the point, Greenberg recounts an old Jewish proverb:
Three rabbis are arguing about the best method to purify an oven. One insists it’s already pure, the others – a majority – say it’s impure. But the dissenting rabbi is undeterred. In an attempt to prove he’s right, he calls on God for help.
The oven is pure as the aqueduct flows backward, he declares. And with a rumble, the aqueduct flows backward.
That’s no proof, say the other two, ignoring God’s intervention.
The oven is pure just as this tree uproots itself! Sure enough, the tree tears itself from the ground.
That’s no proof, say the other two.
So the dissenting rabbi calls on God one last time: “Send down a voice from heaven to tell my brethren the truth!”
And God, in a booming voice, speaks of the purified oven.
Even this is insufficient to appease the two rabbis, for purification is addressed clearly in the Torah: Divine revelation, then, is accomplished in the house of study, with an eye bent on the book, not turned to heaven.
When the dissenting rabbi tells God what has transpired, God laughs. “My children have defeated me!”
With this anecdote, Greenberg argues for the “rich possibilities” of sacred texts. Nothing is black and white, he said, nothing so austere that mankind can afford to forgo argument and exploration.

I truly desire to better understand the way Jews approach, interact with, understand, and apply the Torah (and all the Law and the Prophets). This will, or should, speak volumes to us as Christians as we approach, interact with, understand, and apply the Old Testament and all of the Bible.
via: Titusonenine

The Duke University incident

The Duke university sex scandal had nearly come to an end. It wasn’t pretty. One of the Lacrosse students, Reade Segilmann, issued a statement. Perhaps, despite everything that was so wrong about the whole incident, something good will come of it. If the students and everyone else involved will be able to come away from this with the same kind of attitude as Segilmann’s, perhaps redemption is possible.
From Segilmann’s statement:

This entire experience has opened my eyes up to a tragic world of injustice I never knew existed. If it is possible for law enforcement officials to systematically railroad us with no evidence whatsoever, it is frightening to think what they could do to those who do not to have the resources to defend themselves. So rather than relying on disparaging stereotypes, or creating political and racial conflicts, we must all take a step back from this case and learn from it. This tragedy has revealed that our society has lost site of the core principle of our legal system, the presumption of innocence.
For everyone who chose to speak out against us before the facts were known, I sincerely hope that you are never put in a position where you experience the same pain and heartache that you have caused our families. While your hurtful words and outrageous lies will forever be associated with this tragedy, everyone will always remember that we told the truth, and in the words of Abraham Lincoln, “truth is the best vindication against slander‘. If our case can bring to light the some of the flaws in our judicial system as well as discourage people from rushing to judgment, than the hardships we have endured over this past year will not have been in vain.
As the healing process begins for our families, I feel as though it is my responsibility to create something positive out of this experience. During my time away from school I got the chance to learn a lot about myself: Who I am and who I want to be. This case has shown me what the important things in life really are as my entire perspective on the world has changed. I view this situation as a unique opportunity to make a difference and I know that there are many people who can benefit from the lessons I have learned.
I fully intend on continuing my education and look forward to pursuing the goals I have set for myself. I have the deepest appreciation for my educational and athletic opportunities and my dream is to return to both by this fall. My ultimate aspiration moving forward, is to live a life that will make all of those who stood by my side throughout this injustice, proud to know that they defended the truth.

First Communion

I am in Ohio this weekend for my nephew’s first communion. It really wasn’t his “first communion,” that happened in The Episcopal Church, where he was baptized. Now, he is going to a Roman Catholic school and participating in the Jesuit parish church, so the need for his first communion. It was good.
There was a reception for family and friends at my brother’s and sister-in-law’s house afterwards. Lots of people. A whole slew of kids below 10 and most below 5. Uncle Bob (that’s me) is not used to being around so many kids for such an extended period of time. I had a lot of fun and the kids were great, but man does all that energy wear one out. As all the parents will say, “We’ve learned to tune it out.” Oh, well, good for that, but I am yet to learn that particular skill.
Here comes my nephew down the stairs. He is 3 and about the cutest little guy you could imagine!

A different way of knowing

Jon Meacham, editor of Newsweek magazine, introduces a long article on religion in last week’s edition. Meacham is an Episcopalian and I’ve seen him on a number of television programs surrounding issues of faith. In reading is long introduction, the influence of his Anglicanism and the Prayer Book come through.
For instance, the article asks the question, “Is God real?” and then enters into a “debate” between Rick Warren, pastor of perhaps the most influential mega-church in the country – Saddleback Church in Orange County, CA – and author of the very popular “The Purpose Driven Life,” and Sam Harris, atheist and author of two books on why there can be no God (“The End of Faith” and “Letter to a Christian Nation”). In his introduction, Meacham describes Warren as one who “…believes in the God of Abraham as revealed by Scripture, tradition, and reason.” (emphasis mine) This three part formula of “Scripture, tradition, and reason” will be quickly recognized as the Anglican “Three legged stool” and describes how Anglicans deal with issues of Truth.
Now, Warren may well have taken to referring to the Anglican formula as his own, and more power to him. However, I wonder whether Meacham is graciously applying his own Anglican understanding upon Warren. As an Evangelical, I don’t know whether Warren would include Tradition and Reason as two authorities in discerning Truth. Anyway, I think it great that Meacham’s Anglicanism comes through.
Second, Meacham is discussing the perennial and eternal, it seems, debate of whether God exists or not. He writes, “There are, of course, religious counter-counter arguments to these counter-arguments; the debate goes on world without end.” (emphasis mine) Again, here we see the influence of the Book of Common Prayer in Meacham’s word selection. We can also see the influence of the 1928 Prayer Book or Rite One from the 1979 Prayer Book, whether because of the poeticalness of the combination of these three words or whether he truly prefers Elizabethan English I don’t know. But again, being an Episcopalian comes through in his writing, at least for this article.
Now, Meacham quotes Harris in the introduction as saying, “I doubt them equally [the Biblical God, Zeus, Isis, Thor…] and for the same reason: lack of evidence.”
My first thought was, “It is a different way of knowing.” Meacham describes Blaze Pascal’s descriptions of his vision of God that resulted in his writing what we know as the “Pensées.” The brilliant mathematician tries to describe this seemingly unexplainable experience of the voice of God speaking to him. It is a different way of knowing.
Michael Polanyi did much research in the concept of “knowing” and how we judge what is knowledge and how we prove we have such knowledge. He came up with the notion of the “Tacit Way of Knowing.”
Polanyi said something like: in the West, this rational system we have, knowledge is judged by what we can reproduce through tests and other such “proofs.” He said that if we had to have a serious operation, we would want to make sure the surgeon was the best – that he knew what he was doing. Yet, if that surgeon where to go back and retake some of the entry-level exams during his first year of medical school – chemistry, physiology, etc. – he would probably flunk the exams. We in the West would tend to say he did not have the knowledge necessary to be a competent doctor or surgeon, yet we know he is. Polanyi then says to look at our grandmothers. They make bread by touch – no recipe, no list, and if we demanded that they write down exactly the measured ingredients and the process, they couldn’t. The bread is made through a way of knowing that the rational West has a difficult time acknowledging. Tacit knowing, intuition, and perhaps this knowledge of God.
We cannot “prove” that our grandmothers REALLY knew how to make bread if we demand a rational detailing of the process. We cannot “prove” that God does not REALLY exist because we cannot give a rational detailing of empirical facts of evidence. Knowing God is a different way of knowing than chemistry and its empirical evidences.
We want to demand that there really is only one way of knowing – Western, rational, materialistic, and empirical. In some ways, these guys are “Rational Fundamentalists” (use of the word “fundamentalist” is perhaps unfair, but…) – there is little or no recognition or allowance that there can honestly be other ways of knowing or interpretation of observable evidence. They close themselves off to perhaps a whole different means of discovery, expansion, and knowing beyond ourselves.
Meacham writes about Pascal’s Wager: “It is smarter to bet that God exits, and to believe in him, because if it turns out that he is real, you win everything; if he is not, you lose nothing. So why not take the leap of faith?”

Found this while reading: Confessions of a Carioca, so I took it.
I like his Title line, “‘Liturgy Nerd’ was not one of the options!” Ditto.

What Be Your Nerd Type?

Your Result: Literature Nerd
 

Does sitting by a nice cozy fire, with a cup of hot tea/chocolate, and a book you can read for hours even when your eyes grow red and dry and you look sort of scary sitting there with your insomniac appearance? Then you fit this category perfectly! You love the power of the written word and it’s eloquence; and you may like to read/write poetry or novels. You contribute to the smart people of today’s society, however you can probably be overly-critical of works.
It’s okay. I understand.

Social Nerd
 
Drama Nerd
 
Gamer/Computer Nerd
 
Science/Math Nerd
 
Musician
 
Artistic Nerd
 
Anime Nerd
 
What Be Your Nerd Type?
Quizzes for MySpace

From the Gospel according to John

We need to keep in mind:
John 16:12-15 (NIV)

“I have much more to say to you, more than you can now bear. But when he, the Spirit of truth, comes, he will guide you into all truth. He will not speak on his own; he will speak only what he hears, and he will tell you what is yet to come. He will bring glory to me by taking from what is mine and making it known to you. All that belongs to the Father is mine. That is why I said the Spirit will take from what is mine and make it known to you.”

Hallelujah Nuns

Easter Day may be over, but Easter Week is still with us. So, here is a wonderful thing to watch:

(Turtle Creek Chorale doing Handel’s Hallelujah Chorus, with nuns)
via:Preludium (Mark Harris)

Brains, biology, sheep, and Christian ethics

In my Christianity Today daily e-mail news update, there was a short article entitled Re-engineering Temptation about the controversies resulting from the blog entry by Al Mohler, president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, KY, on possible Christian responses to ideas of preventing homosexuality through hormonal therapies that prevent prenatal homosexuality or negate the sexual temptation for one’s own sex in adulthood.
This short article dealt with the Christian ethics if a true biological component is confirmed in the establishment of a homosexual orientation (not preference).
In the article, the author mentioned a five years study being conducted at the Oregon Health and Science University by Dr. Charles Roselli. This paragraph really caught my attention, for one reason that the author of the article didn’t attempt to refute it.

“The story begins at the Oregon Health and Science University, where Charles Roselli studies homosexual sheep (about 8 percent of rams are gay). His research, now more than five years old, has confirmed a link between brain chemistry and sexual preference. But his data does not indicate whether chemistry or preference comes first.”

At least this seems to suggest that if we look to nature for signs of right theological definitions and concepts, then we will need to conclude that within nature, homosexuality is present and a normal part, even if in small percentages.
So, here are two links to press releases by the university concerning the research of Roselli:
BIOLOGY BEHIND HOMOSEXUALITY IN SHEEP, STUDY CONFIRMS
BRAIN DIFFERENCES IN SHEEP LINKED TO SEXUAL PARTNER PREFERENCE
If science is done well, it will tell us what is observably and verifiable factual. What we choose to do with that information, those theories, those facts, is the realm of ethics and theology.
Alan Chambers, president of the ex-gay umbrella group “Exodus International” commented in the article:

“People like me who struggled with it and found freedom are more than sufficient proof that we can overcome our genetics,” he said. “Science will never trump the Word of God.”

Frankly, I agree with him, with a caveat. Science and theology deal with two different realms of knowing. Each, rightly construed, should inform one another, not conflict. After all, good science will help us understand what God has wrought. Good theology will help us understand what to do with the knowledge.
Science will never trump Scripture, but Scripture rightly understood will never contradict good science. This was the thought of those ancient Christian monks who developed the beginnings of our modern understanding of science and the observation of the world as it is.
What science may well do is help us understand whether we have rightly interpreted and understood the Word of God! In this case, if science gives us reliable and verifiable evidence that there is in fact a biological determinate concerning homosexuality, then the way we approach, understand, and apply the Word of God concerning this issue may well need to change – not because God changes or the Word of God changes, but because we are wrong in our traditional understanding and application of the Word of God.
After the science, then theology comes into play. What shall we then do?

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