POC Blog

The random technotheolosophical blogging of Reid S. Monaghan

Buddhist Insight and Christian Truth

In this post I will compare some Buddhist views of suffering, desire, and the attending solution to the human dilemma with that of my own understanding of the Christian faith.  Before beginning with this task I am reminded of some advice I once heard.  A man once said “if you try to make a major world religion look bad in just a few moments, you really do not understand it.”  Such is a reminder everyone should heed. My intention with this essay is not to malign a major religious worldview, but rather to affirm the insight of the Buddhist tradition and the philosophy’s assessment of the human condition.  In this essay I will first lay out the Buddhist diagnosis of the human condition by looking at two of its four noble truths, that of Dukkha or suffering and Samudaya or desire.   I will then communicate my own understanding of the Christian faith on the same topics of suffering and desire.  Next I will look at the solutions offered to the human condition by both religious views.  Finally, I will give some thought to how one might share the gospel with a Buddhist through the concepts of suffering and desire and make some concluding remarks.

Buddhist Assesment of the Human Condition

The Buddha was quite adamant that his philosophy was that of practice and of practical importance to solving the problem human beings face in the passage of life.  He claimed to only have observed our condition, realized the truth about it, and offered the right medicine for people to apply.  Speculation and theorizing, he claimed, was not helpful and should be avoided about things we have little access to through our minds.  The illustration that was offered is that of a man dying with an arrow lodged in his flesh.  If one stops to ask too many questions he places himself in deeper peril.  If while bleeding he asks: What type of arrow is in me?  What is the tip like? What are your credentials for removing arrows? If he asks such questions, the man will continue to bleed and die before he is assisted.  The wise man will just remedy the problem; he will just remove the arrow.  In this essay I will argue that the Buddha did indeed have great insight into the human condition; we are in a desperate situation with arrows lodged deeply in us.  The question I will ask is this; did he know the proper path for removing the insidious darts?  Before we turn to that question, we must first look at his diagnosis.  To do so we will look at the first of the Buddha’s Four Noble Truths.

The first noble truth of the Buddha is that of Dukkha, which means that life is in essence suffering.  From a purely human perspective, life under the sun is to experience suffering, lack of satisfaction, as the writer of Ecclesiastes also teaches; life is vanity of vanities, a chasing after the wind.   I find this world to be very much like the Buddha describes.  In realizing that to live is to suffer, the Buddha then turns to his second noble truth to provide an explanation as to the source of our suffering.  While I find his identification of the source of our suffering to be perhaps incomplete, I find his insight to be helpful.  To the reason for our suffering we now turn.

The second truth tells us that we suffer due to desire or attachment, a self orientation which causes a preoccupation with fulfilling our earthy wants.   We try to quench the thirsts of our desires only to find that the attempt to find satisfaction leaves us even more unsatisfied, full of suffering.   An analogy may be helpful.  Think of a man who is set adrift at sea who has run out of fresh water to drink.  He sees water all around him and he deeply desires to drink.  Yet when he does he only finds that the water will kill him, multiplying his bodies thirst, rather than quenching it.  We desire, we are attached to this world, seeking to quench our thirst in a vast ocean of suffering.  If we drink, we only thirst more; if we continue to desire and stay attached, we will never be released from our suffering and pain.  In summary the Buddha teaches us that our problem in this life is suffering and this suffering is produced by our attached and self centered desires.  It is not hard to guess what his solution to this dilemma might be.   Yet before moving to that very important task, let me first explain my own view of the human condition from my perspective as a follower of Jesus.  Although the reason for our condition finds a very different explanation in my view, the condition we find ourselves is very near to that of these first two of the Buddha’s Four Noble Truths.

My Assesment of the Human Condition as a Christian

As a follower of Christ and the teachings of Scripture, my view of the world is not that far from that articulated by the Buddha.  Indeed, I see a world that is fallen, fractured and quite full of suffering.  This world, as a result of human being’s disobedience to God, is now under a curse; a curse which includes death, disease, and suffering in this present age.  It is a creation under the bondage to decay which is awaiting redemption and is in great need of liberation.   As GK Chesterton once aptly implied, this present age is one resembling a shipwreck, a golden vessel which went down at the foundation of the world and its goods are scattered amidst the wreckage of the world.

Additionally, if our desires and attachments are only for this world, I agree that this is a great source of suffering.  St. Augustine provided me with some great insight in a discourse I read where discussed the Sunnum Bonum, the greatest good for human beings.  His line of thought was that our hope, our greatest good, cannot be found in this world of suffering.  If we place our hope in our health, it can be lost.  If our greatest hope is in wealth, this too can be taken from us against our will.  If our hope is placed in the good of home and family, loved ones too can be lost and taken from us.  If our hope is placed in safety and security, our world is one where people are conquered and goods are plundered.  Our supreme good would have to be found in another place than in this current fallen age.   Indeed, desire and attachment placed in temporal “goods” is an attachment which will lead to despair and suffering.  Ephesians teaches me that deceitful desires are part of our sinful nature and 1 John is very clear that the desires of the flesh, the desires of the eyes and pride in possessions—is not from the Father but is from the world.

Yet my view as a Christian does not hold that all is lost in this fallen world of suffering.  For I am not a pessimist about our current condition and this is perhaps where the teaching of the Buddha and my view greatly diverge.  For the Buddha lives in a world of human problems, and does not allow a divine light into his noble Truths.  As we turn our attention to the solution of suffering and selfish desire, we will see that the gospel calls forth, evokes, directs new desires, where the Buddha only seeks to amputate desire from the human soul.   Though the diagnoses are similar; that we are in need of deliverance from suffering produced by sinful desires, the salve for our condition is very different as offered from Buddha and offered from Jesus Christ.  To this we now turn.

Solutions to the Problem of Misplaced Desires

In examining the Buddhist view of solving the diliemna of suffering caused by attachment/desire we move to the third of the Four Noble Truths.  If Suffering is caused by desire, the Buddhist makes a reasonable, though deeply flawed move.   If desire is the culprit, then he must be terminated.  The third truth, Nirodha, means that desire and attachment to the objects of desire must end.  The goal is to be free from desire so that one will not suffer.  In fact, one must be free of the illusion that he is an entity we would call a “self.”  You realize that you have no essential identity and as a result desire, attachment and suffering fade away as one is extinguished into nirvana.  Instead of removing the arrow from a man’s leg; it seems the solution of the Buddha is to cut off the leg completely.  Even more so, to deny there is an arrow, a “you”, any real reality to any of it at all.  But the questions which arise to me are the following: What if desires, loves, wants, and attachments are essential to human beings?   What if there is a “self” that is intrinsically valuable but does not have to be the center of all things?  Yes, desire can be wrongly aimed and projected to the wrong persons and things; yet this hardly assumes that there is not a proper person for the highest and most intense desires.  In this I find the person of Christ to offer a much more excellent way.

In looking at the human soul many have observed that there is something essential to our nature that longs for relationship and worship.  Human beings are always worshipping – in fact it would not at all be improper to call us homo adorans.  Yet in our fallen state we can aim our affections at many things both good and sinful.  The problem is that our desires are deceitful and our affections are for sin and self, not that I have desires.   My Christian faith and experience informs me that there can be pure affections and holy longings; desires for a person that is true, right, and good.  Our sins need forgiveness and our desires need to be placed firmly upon the living God.  In the gospel we see that our desires need not amputation but rebirth.  Our desires need not to be removed but captured by a greater master; the Lord God himself.

The Buddhist offers meditation as a way to clear and empty the mind and remove earthly desires.  In contrast as a Christian I seek to mediate with a full mind, inflamed and set upon God’s majestic beauty, benevolent character, holy justice, his word and works in this world.  Jesus told us not to kill desire but rather to love fully.  You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, mind and strength.  And you shall love your neighbor as yourself.   How can this happen to selfish people who are stuck in the miseries of sin?  God is his grace redeems us, forgives us, removes our guilt and gives us new loves, new affections, and yes, new desires.  He then fills our lives with his own Spirit to lead and guide us through this fallen world.  All of these things take place under the gigantic shadow of the wondrous promise of his coming redemption of all things.   This world of death, disease, despair, and suffering – even Dukkha, will one day be brought into the full liberation and renewal of the Kingdom of God.  In that day the tears will be dried, hopes eternally realized, and we shall run without amputation with the beauty of consummated and realized desire.

Dialogue With those who Embrace Buddhist Views

When I think about how to apply this understanding to sharing the gospel with others, the method represented in a book I read comes to mind.  In the book, Engaging Unbelief, a Captivating Strategy from Augustine and Aquinas (IVP, 1999), author Curtis Chang looks at to historical models of engaging other worldviews.  To summarize quickly he encourages us to enter the story of the other person by their own presuppositions and definitions.   Second, we retell the story from within that view exposing its flaws in explaining our human condition.  Third, the truthful insights of the worldview may be captured in the broad Christian narrative which better explains where the other view falls short.  In living this in conversation with someone with Buddhist views (something I did in travels to Eastern Europe - lots of Buddhist philosophy floating around today in that idealogical vacuum known as Europe ), there is a great entry to his story via the two Noble Truths regarding suffering and desire.  We can affirm the insight of the Buddha and his good understanding of the human condition.  We can then ask questions about the nature of the solution.  Is all desire bad?  What sort of desire could be good desire?  If there are good desires what are they for?  What if our desire for relationship was a great clue to where our desires ought to find culmination?  In looking at the Buddhist story we can share that only certain desires are corrupting and others might perhaps be a clue to something wonderful, relational, and true.  Additionally asking one other other question is helpful: what if our primary purpose was for love and worship?  We can then affirm the intuitive Buddhist drive for this reality by their practice of prayer (note: Mahayana Buddhists have more of an idea of god than Thervada Buddhists...so ask some questions and see what a person is into).  Prayer is the greatest validation of the I/Thou relationship which can only occur between the self and the “other.”  This urge towards prayer demonstrates something profound in of our nature.  Namely, that desire for someone else is perhaps very essential to being human.   Finally, the themes of suffering and desiring within the Christian story can acknowledge this world of suffering, yet offers a very different solution to our dilemma.  The solution of reconciliation with God, the only one in whom we may loose ourselves in deep desire, even worship, and thereby find our truest selves in the process.

Conclusion

In today’s world many who claim to be disciples of Christ have adopted a view of the world that suffering is somehow abnormal and strange for them.   Christians need to expect and know “to live is to suffer” – too many have been sold a happy, two hand clappy, version of the Christian life, seeking your best life now.  Our Christian forebears in the Bible and on the pages of Church history have told us that this world is indeed fallen, full of disease pain and suffering.  Our Buddhist friends have observed this well.  When all is done we are made not for extinguishing ourselves, but for worship.   The traveling soul on its earthly sojourn will not find ultimate and final rest in anything but worship and relationships.   Indeed Augustine wrote insightfully:

Thou hast formed us for Thyself, and our hearts [the center of our desires]are restless till they find rest in Thee   

 

Resurrection All Stars

 

As a college student at the University of North Carolina I was exposed to two world class scholars on two different ends of the theological spectrum.  One was an evangelical Christian, the other a skeptical historian of ancient Christianity who taught New Testament studies at UNC.

The first, William Lane Craig hold two doctoral degrees.  One in philosophy from The University of Birmingham (England) and the other in theology from The University of Munich (Germany) where his dissertation was on teh resurrection of Jesus.  A few highlights from his Vita:

He has authored or edited over thirty books, including The Kalam Cosmological Argument; Assessing the New Testament Evidence for the Historicity of the Resurrection of Jesus; Divine Foreknowledge and Human Freedom; Theism, Atheism and Big Bang Cosmology; and God, Time and Eternity, as well as over a hundred articles in professional journals of philosophy and theology, including The Journal of Philosophy, New Testament Studies, Journal for the Study of the New Testament, American Philosophical Quarterly, Philosophical Studies, Philosophy, and British Journal for Philosophy of Science.

The second scholar, Bart D. Ehrman, is one of the preminent secular scholars of early Christianity in the world.  Dr. Ehrman did his Phd at Princeton University.  A few highlights from his Vita:

He has published extensively in the fields of New Testament and Early Christianity, having written or edited nineteen books, numerous articles, and dozens of book reviews. Among his most recent books are a college-level textbook on the New Testament, two anthologies of early Christian writings, a study of the historical Jesus as an apocalyptic prophet (Oxford Univesity Press), and a Greek-English Edition of the Apostolic Fathers for the Loeb Classical Library (Harvard University Press).

In short, these two guys are all stars in their circles, both scholars of immense capability and intellect.  

I heard Dr. Craig speak as a student at UNC and Dr. Ehrman was well known on campus to the Christians.  At this point Craig was an established debater but to my knowledge Ehrman was not engaging in public debates.  I always wanted to hear a guy like Ehrman debate a guy like Craig. 

For this reason I was so interested to find the following document: Is There Historical Evidence for the Resurrection of Jesus? A Debate between William Lane Craig and Bart D. Ehrman

This is two big time dudes from differing perspectives debating what, in my view, is the most important topic one can imagine.  Jesus of Nazareth rose from the dead - the culminating miracle of all history - this truth validates God's action in the person of Christ and vindicates the truth of his identity of the Son of God.

The text of the debate is available at the above site and is well worth your time to read.  On last interesting fact.  Both these men had a saving faith experience as teenagers.  Both ended up attending Wheaton, an evangelical college.  However, one left faith in his doctoral studies, one became one of its most influential defenders in our day.  Where will your life land on the issue of Jesus - it is of utmost importance.   For he is the true All-Star and unique Savior of the world.

Reality


Peru Update IV

 

 
One of the last events I spoke at in Peru was an open forum at San Marcos University, the oldest University in Latin America founded in 1551.  There is a great little Wiki on San Marcos here. 

When we arrived it was quite a scene - we walked past a political protest on to the venue where we would be sharing with students.  The room was packed to capacity and filled with anticipation.  I went out to use the rest room and found that there were lines of students around the building trying to get into the venue.  Students packed the chairs, the floor, the aisles, the back of the room and hung in the doorways where many listened in the packed hallway.

It was an unbelievable turn out – I estimate around 300-400 in a very small room.  We only had an hour – 40 min for talk/translation and 20 min for Q and A.  It was incredible – the questions tense, intelligent and poignant.  All were about the Bible, the identity of Jesus, textual transmission, the resurrection…but of course right when it started to get really good I was whisked out the door into a cab, for a 45 min drive across town to another church equipping event. 

The church event went well, but I just wished we could have stayed at the University longer.  Overall the trip was a great time to speak about the true and living Jesus to young people all over the Peruvian capital.  In future trips, I think University forums are a great way to share the gospel with the future young leaders of this nation.

Humbled as always by the faithfulness of our God to use the foolish things of the world (like me) in his eternally decreed plans.  For this I am thankful and give our glory to the crucified one who lived, died and rose for the salvation of his people.  To him I offer thanks and praise from a weary body and soul. 

Peru Update III

We finished up the conference last evening with a strong challenge for Peruvians to study to defend their faith in the marketplace of ideas.  The excitement among all the people was contagious. 

Dale Fincher closed out his time with us with a great seminar of the Gnostic Gospels: Phillip, Judas and Thomas.  He did a great job with explaining why each of these was not included in the Bible and read some the material from these works.  It is always helpful to actually read these works as they are quite fragmentary, incoherant, and doctrinally incompatible with both the Old and New Testaments.

My last challenged focused on the Jesus of the Bible as compared to the Jesus represented in the Da Vinci Code fiction. 

Focusing on Jesus’ True Identity I shared a few of the following thoughts

  • Son of God – Romans 1:4 - was declared to be the Son of God in power according to the Spirit of holiness by his resurrection from the dead, Jesus Christ our Lord
  • Substitute for sin – John 1 – “Behold the Lamb of God – who takes away the Sins of the World”
  • Savior -- But when the goodness and loving kindness of God our Savior appeared, 5 he saved us, not because of works done by us in righteousness, but according to his own mercy, by the washing of regeneration and renewal of the Holy Spirit, 6 whom he poured out on us richly through Jesus Christ our Savior…
  • Sovereign King – He is King and Supreme over all of life, my life, your life.

His Kingdom is greater than all the Kingdoms of Men:

  • Greater than great the Mayan, Incan, and Aztec Civilizations
  • Greater than the Greek and Roman Empires
  • Greater than the height of European Civilizations
  • Greater than Communism
  • Greater than Nationalism
  • Greater than Democracy
  • Greater than Capitalism
  • Greater than Peru
  • Greater than America
His Kingdom is one that unites people from every nation, from every place, into one new people. A people forgiven by God, called by God for worship, called by God to the Kingdom of Heaven.

His Kingdom is one of justice and a good ruler, a Kingdom of Love, and a Kingdom where the great enemies of death, disease, and destruction are forever vanquished. 

Today we went and met with some young adult pastors from Lima who are leading the Christian Missionary Alliance in the country.  These are all the men whom we partnered with for the conference on Saturday night.  Originally I thought there were 500-600 people at the outreach, but today that was only in the packed main meeting room.  Apparently 1200 people were at the event with ever classroom at the facility packed full and watching on closed circuit television.  Amazing.

Tonight there is another outreach in another town called Los Olivos, I pray that God may open the eyes of many through this event.

Tomorrow is the University Open Forum where I will present and then handle any question.  It should be a great time with some very tough questions - I can't wait.

Please pray for us...Out for now... 

Peru Update II

In the last few days in Peru we have been teaching a major Apologetics Conference in Comas.  The nights have been fun but filled with content.  Each evening has a plenary address associated with the Da Vinci Code and the Historical Jesus.  Then we have done practical seminars to assist the Peruvians in using Apologetics in their efforst to share the gospel with their friends.

Here is our line-up:

  • Plenary 1 - Decoding the Da Vinci Code - What is the Truth about the New Testament Gospels
  • Seminar 1 - Sharing Christ with Unbelievers
  • Plenary 2 - The Real Jesus
  • Seminar 2 - Scientology a Newly Created Religion...Identifying Cults
  • Plenary 3 -Jesus is 10 Times Better than the Da Vinci Code (The young adult ministry at the church in Peru is called "10 Times Better")
  • Seminar 3 - Understanding the Gnostic Gospels

Last night I spoke with a man who had been visited recently by Mormon missionaries. He had begun attending the Mormon Church here in Lima, Peru and he was enjoying the teaching.  Unfortunately, they have been teaching him very simple things witholding most of the Mormon teaching.  He was very surprised by what the Mormon church actually teaches and is not reconsidering joining this religion.  I am reminded how many groups do not tell people the strange aspects of their beliefs until someone is very deep in the group.  This is unfortunate, but I am thankful I was able to share with this guy last night - pray that he will examine things thoroughly before making an uninformed decision. 

We wrap up the conference...

Additionally, we went on television today for a lengthy interview about the issues which arise from the Da Vinci Code.  After  racing through the streets of Lima Peru in what seemed to be a psycho cab driver's car, it was great to arrive at the TV station alive.  You would not believe how the cars drive down here.  I felt like we were going "3-wide" in a two lane road way too often.  The TV interviewit was a great opportunity; it went very well with the network being very pleased with the outcome.

I need to get ready for our upcoming meetings this evening.  Thanks for praying for us. 

Peru Update

A team of 16 young people from Inversion has traveled down to Comas, Peru to serve along side a local church in its outreach efforts.  Yesterday we made the jaunts through airports and across latitudinal lines south to our friends home.

After very little sleep, we began our day in worship and prayer with our Peruvian sisters and brothers.  An incredible time together.

Tonight we traveled into Lima for an outreach to young professionals.  Around 1200 came out to hear a lecture I gave entitled "Decoding Da Vinci" - I was able to focus on the trustworthy nature of our New Testament and the divinity of Jesus.  It was blessing to be able to share the gospel and a testimony of the transforming power of God.  After the talk we took questions from the audience for close to an hour.  I was amazed at the desire to know truth and to wrestle with questions about the historical Jesus.  More than anything we all sensed the risen one at work among the people who attended.  For this we offer many thanks.

Tomorrow I preach four services in the morning (a fun Mother's Day message) and then we kick off our Apologetics Conference in the evening.  Dale Fincher of Soulation joins me in the labor tomorrow.  I will speak 11 times in 7 days including two open forums on University Campuses on Thursday May 18.  Kasey, thanks for letting me share the gospel with these students on our anniversary.  Can't wait to celebrate with you upon my return.

Much love to all who are praying for our team

Not Mr. Brown's Fault

Whether you are a left-wing Christian or a right-wing Christian, I found an article on Fox News' web site to be an insightful encouragement with the issues surrounding the Da Vinci Code book/movie.  I know if you read Jim Wallis, going over to Fox News will be difficult for you, but it is worth your time.  The article is written by Father Jonathan Morris, a young, fit for TV looking priest.  Really, they didn't pick a fat balding guy for the faith interviews dude.

There are a couple of quotes I find wonderful rebukes and invitations to Christian people: 

Dan Brown is capable of passing fiction for fact because Christians don’t know their faith — what and why they believe. That’s not Mr. Brown’s fault.

I could not agree more.  It is sad that many churches intentionally dumb down their teaching, leave out huge chunks of the Christian story, and teach little to no church history at all.  When the followers of Jesus, in whom are the treasures of wisdom and knowledge, distill down the faith in to palatable "how tos" we all lose.  And any sort of teaching tosses us to and fro on the waves of the zeitgeist, the spirit of our age. 

One last quote from the article: 

For Christianity, I predict the net result will be a positive one, despite all the bad intentions of its author. In the hype, Christians will ask themselves what and why we believe. And for this we must not forget to say, “Thank you, Mr. Brown."

I have had more e-mails, questions, phone calls in the last two weeks than the last two years combined.  These are coming from interested, questioning, learning Christians who are asking very basic questions about Christian truth and teaching.  A very good thing indeed.  Yes, many thanks to Mr. Brown.

And I do pray that believers share the real Jesus with real people in our world today as a result of all the Da Vinci Buzz.  I am a bit "Da Vinici Weary" but I am not weary of discussing the New Testament, its four gospels, the person of Jesus, his claims to deity, the reality that his is the unique Savior of all people who place their faith (understanding, assent, trust) in Him.  That song I want to sing long after Da Vinci is a tired rental at the local Blockbuster store.

Here is the Link - 'The Da Vinci Code' A Positive for Christianity

Mary of Magdala

This morning at Fellowship Bible Church in Murfreesboro, TN I had the privilege of speakng about the biblical Mary Magdalene.  With so much confusion, speculation, and outright nonsense being taught today about Mary of Magdala, I was encouraged by the opportunity to share about this great woman of faith.  It has been a rich study looking at one of Jesus' disciples, the first evangelist who brought the good news of the resurrection to the rest of the disciples.  I pray the message might be an encouragement to you as you serve the Jesus who loved, forgave, established and called Mary to himself.  Not to be his wife...but to be her Lord and God.

The MP3 is available for download here. 

The Missing Gospels

 

 

Darrel Bock, research professor of New Testament at Dallas Theological Seminary has a new book coming in August which focuses on early heretical Christian documents being touted today by the media and new school in New Testament scholarship.

Having read some of the work by Bart Ehrman (Lost Christianities) and Elane Pagels (Beyond Belief - The Secret Gospel of Thomas) an evangelical voice in this discussion is a welcomed and needed addition.  For those who are interested the work of these two scholars is reviewed - here and here respectively

The book is titled The Missing Gospels - Unearthing the Truth Behind Alternative Christianities and is forthcoming in August from Nelson publishers.  It is available for pre-order now from many places including Amazon.

In every age there are those who want to redefined "Christianity" to be all manner of paths.  19th century liberal theologians wanted to demythologize Jesus and the gospels.  Now a 21st century school of thought desires to present to us a large buffet of Christianitie"s" based on a smorgasbord of "lost" and "secret" gospels.   If one can call oneself a Christian and worship your inner self as divine, choose your own morality, without any sort of holy and just God to whom we must give an account.   Many will jump at this - and use a scholarly argument to do so.  

Those who believe the Gnostic versions of Christianity in my opinion are sincere people who are following a path.  It is however not the path as seen in the earliest of Christian sources - the New Testament.  Therefore no matter what is said and marshaled in defense of "other Christianities" we should know that these are not Christian views at all.  They are aberrant, discarded heresies that our sisters and brothers left behind in the archaeological dust long ago.

Grab a copy of The Missing Gospels when you can.  Just pre-ordered mine...

The Essence of the Code

 

We just completed a two part series on issues related to the Da Vinic code at our church.  There are two messages and a rather lengthy Question and Answer session.

The Essence of the Code - Who do the people say that I am? Jesus asked his followers this question long ago and it remains ever relevant in our day. In this two part series we look at the cultural moment surrounding the best selling novel and major motion picture The Da Vinci Code. In a time when our culture is asking questions about “Jesus,” God’s people have a great opportunity to enter a dialogue with others around some important questions. What is the truth about the origin of the Bible and the identity of Jesus? Who do you say that he is? Join us as we seek the truth about the greatest man who ever lived.

I pray these might encourage you to extend the gospel of Christ in your world...

A Worldview from a Monkey

 


This is a great example of a worldview. A self-referentially incoherent worldview; indeed, nihilism has always cannabilized itself. It cannot be sustained. At least this attempt is a bit funny...or is it?

Check this out - Dance, Monkeys, Dance - then come back...

One interesting feature of this filmstrip is that is plays the rather played out song and dance that "religion" is the source of all wars, then it displays an image of a 20th century war that was related more to atheistic economic theory than religion.  Go figure.  

Additionally, he goes on to say "the monkies have so much potential if they would only apply themselves" - what does that mean?  Potential for what?  For if the worldview of this filmstrip is true...then one monkey way is as good as another - in fact, there is no good, there are just monkies, and we have nothing left to say.  Yet the author seems to have a lot to say...I wonder why that monkey feels compelled to speak?

The Da Vinci Code - Updated

 

On May 19, 2006 the movie based upon Dan Brown's fictional work, The Da Vinci Code The trailer for the film contains the following opening:
 

What if the world's greatest works of art held the secret that could change the course of mankind...forever
Such are the lofty claims of this story. An ancient conspiracy, guarded by intrigue and murder, if revealed to the world would change the very fabric of society. Just exactly what could be such a secret? The Christian faith, the belief of billions on planet earth, is based on a well guarded fabrication that is revealed when a man seeks the truth in renaissance artwork and medieval legends. The book has garnered a huge following and the film will no doubt be a blockbuster success. Ron Howard is directing and Tom Hanks plays the lead role. The production values and cinematic excellence will be high and the story very compelling. From the spending some time on the film's web site today, this project is being undertaken with the highest of quality. It will move people. For those uninitiated with the details of history or the debates about the historical Jesus the story of the Da Vinci Code can be confusing. A fictional work passing for history can be a great fog for people in our day. Many actually "learn" more from films today that responsible history. We must serve our neighbors in such a time as this. This film is a fantastic opportunity for those who follow the biblical Jesus, the Jesus of history, to grow in our understanding of our own faith, its roots, and to share the true account of Jesus with those with whom we live, work and play. I see the following benefits to the conversation which will be had around the film's release.
  1. First, the film is a great opportunity to help one mature in our understanding of the historical roots of our faith. So many are completely ignorant of biblical history and the circumstances of early Christianity. It is a great time to study these issues greatly.
  2. Second, the film will cause “cultural Christians” and young people to struggle with what they believe and why. This will afford great opportunity for crisis and clarification. Which by God's grace can result in deeper commitment to truth. We will need to love and teach in this context.
  3. Third, the film will be a great opportunity, in my opinion, for evangelism – sharing about the Biblical Jesus – not the Jesus of the Davinci Code, but the living Jesus who saves sinners.
Our task then in this season, is to prepare to give a reason for the hope that we have (1 Peter 3:15) with gentleness and respect. One mistake many Christians will no doubt make is to be defensive and reactionary to the film; some will perhaps protest. I thought of writing a lengthy engagment with the content of the book, but realized others more qualified have done so. So as we prepare I have the following encouragment for us all:
  1. First, read the book - check it out from the Library, buy it used. Read it and read it critically, but realize it is fiction.
  2. Read those who understand the fictional aspects and speculations of the book. There are many good books available and several articles on the web. I will list many at the conclusion of this post.
  3. If you see the movie talk to your friends and neighbors about the movie. Especially those who do not know the Jesus of the Bible. Don't look to fight, but to clarify, share the gospel of grace.
  4. Offer articles to friends (Christian or not) who have questions and are struggling with the content - walk with them in it.

On Church History and the Historical Jesus

Recommended Books on the Da Vinci Code

Concise Treatments

  • The Da Vinci Code Cracks - A concise article from Greg Koukl of Stand to Reason.  This is a great first read on the issues surrounding the Da Vinci Code.
  • The Truth Behnind the Da Vinci Code by Richard Abanes.  This work is quick to read and responds directly to passages in the Da Vinci Code.  Very good little reference for those not initiated to the debates which go on scholarly circles.
  • Answers to the Da Vinci Code by Timothy Paul Jones.  This is a long fold out pamphlet which is printed on two sides.  It has a very helpful timeline of the first centuries of the Christian movement.  Very helpful.

More In Depth Treatments 

  • Breaking the Da Vinci Code by Darrel L. Bock Darrell L. Bock is Research Professor of New Testament Studies at Dallas Theological Seminary in Dallas, Texas. He also serves as Professor for Spiritual Development and Culture for the Seminary's Center for Christian Leadership. His special fields of study involve hermeneutics, the use of the Old Testament in the New, Luke-Acts, the historical Jesus, and gospels studies.
  • The Gospel Code: Novel Claims About Jesus, Mary Magdalene and Da Vinci Dr. Witherington is Professor of New Testament Interpretation at Asbury Theological Seminary.  He offers a scholarly evangelical voice in the historical Jesus studies and has published over twenty five books.

Recommended Web Site

  • Jesus and Da Vinci: Who Was Jesus...Really? This site has several excellent links to articles by a wide range of scholars and authors from an evangelical and a Catholic perspective. The abstracts for the articles will give you an idea of each resource.
  • The Truth About Da Vinci - Westminster Seminary has offered an excellent site which describes itself as follows: While this site does engage the culture, it will not be blown about by the winds of opinion and will ultimately become a resource for all spectrums of people desiring to find and know the Truth... not only about "The Da Vinci Code," but more importantly, the Divine Truth.
  • Jesus Decoded - A Web Site From the US Conference of Catholic Bishops.  Though the site is from a Roman Catholic point of view, it offers some excellent insight.  The video trailer for their TV Special is a great overview.

Neo Paganism and Witchcraft

Secret Spells Barbie

In researching some things for an upcoming two part series I am teaching on the Da Vinci Code franchise, I have been reading and listening a bit on about the status of paganism, goddess worship and witchcraft in America today.  

Many have noticed the witch offerings on the rise in pop culture.  From shows like Charmed, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and Sabrina the Teenage witch - the message is that it is hip and cool to be young and casting spells. There are web sites for witches, conferences for witches, and sacred gatherings abounding in America.  The Da Vinci Code goes to great lengths to redeem witchcraft and make it something that is wonderful...just misunderstood because of Christian propaganda.

Today, I listened to a report from NPR's radio program All Things Considered. Very interesting to listen to young teenage girls chanting to call forth spirits, worshipping the goddess, and making up religion like a choose your own adventure book.  Even Barbie, in a "secret spells" flavor, makes a cameo in the audio piece.  Link - NPR : New Religion in America

A few thoughts as to why Paganism/Witchcraft is on the rise here and in Europe.  

  1. Autonomy: For autonomous western people, it offers a way to be spiritual without having god around.  Pagan deities are at your beck and call and can be aligned to do your will.  Many just don't want a sovereign God who requires something of us.
  2. Nature: Environmental fears and nature worship.  To love the mother earth is a virture today (heck, I even think Christians ought to care a whole lot more for the world of which God has made us stewards) and to be one with the earth and nature is a big deal.  Folks who are bent towards environmental activism love the earth - so it is not too far of a move to worshipping it.
  3. Sexuality: We live in a sex crazed society and any way to mix sex and spirituality is going to find traction.  Paganism certainly offers this - a perversion of God's gift of sex.  Many make sex an object of worship or a ritual to be one with the divine, rather than seeing sex as a transcendent pointer to the God who made us and gives loving boundaries for our sexual passions.
  4. Stupid: We are just stupid today.  People believe in nebulous, undefined concepts like "energy" (not in an Einstenian sense, but in a transfer to me that groovy positive vibe kind of sense) that can be cast and moved around to folk through spells and incantations.    And in this view it is not that God acts upon and changes people by his Spirit - but someone's hex on you can do the work no problem.  Many actually believe this sort of thing.
  5. Deification: It makes people the source of power and control of the world.  As people, we just want to be our own god.  Did someone not once say "You shall be as Gods" - yes, this is the ancient lie to which we return like dogs to our own vomit. 

The problem with human beings becoming their own gods is that we are terrible gods.  We are fragile, fallible, and evil and will let ourselves down daily...only searching for the next spell to cast upon our days.  The great truth of the gospel is that God is god, and in his mercy he tells us to quit trying to be the master of our own vessel.  To allow him to forgive us and lead us towards a life that is free.

Paganism was tried and found wanting - long ago.  But as as the book of Ecclesiastes reminds us: There is nothing new under the sun.

It all comes back around again. 

 

Greg Koukl on Da Vinci

I have been reading and researching for a flurry of Da Vinci Code talks I will be giving at our church, at Universities, and for a large conference in Apologetics in Peru.

I had been waiting for Greg Koukl's piece on the Da Vinci code as I find him a clear and helpful author in these type of matters. Once again, Koukl does not disappoint.  He handles the relevant issues without shrouding them too much in the scholarly murk that can accompany such things.  He also gives good points to help us engage real folks about these matters; something we should encourage.

Too often, we are looking for a fight in our apologetic, rather than seeking to love, help, and persuade a friend.  Even worse many engage in imagined debates with "skeptics" by reading books and blogs but never really hanging out with anyone who has questions or who does not share our faith.

Koukl's tone is right on in this. Talk to someone.  Use Wisdom.  Be Knowledgeable.  Have Character.  Engage people, don't just argue with them... 

Here is a link to the current issue of Solid Ground, a great equipping piece surrounding Da Vinci code stuff.

Link - the Da Vinci Code Cracks

Archaeological Finds and So Called Lost Gospels

 

There have been some amazing archaeological finds in the last six decades dealing with the early centuries of the Christian faith. Many are familiar with the Dead Sea Scrolls found at Qumran which contains the scrolls of an apocalyptic sect of Judaism known as the Essenes. This find in 1947 was a fascinating find and of great particular interest to Old Testament Scholars. What the scrolls provided was a look at copies of many of the books of the Old Testament which date back to the time just before Christ. Due to the fact that the earliest still existing Hebrew manuscripts dated to the 10th century AD, the scrolls of Qumran gave us an opportunity to examine the transmission of the books over a gap of some 1000 years. What we found is that the text had been copied quite faithfully even over this long period of time.

Perhaps a less known discovery took place in 1945 in the Egyptian dessert at Nag Hammadi. It had been known for millennia that in the 2nd century the Christian church combated a heresy known as Gnosticism. This teaching held a radical dualism between matter and spirit with spirit being good and matter evil. Through secret gnosis (Greek for knowledge) people could escape the bondage of the physical world and achieve salvation. The Christian version of this teaching held that Jesus was not really a human being, but merely appeared as such. As the human Jesus suffered and died, the divine Christ hovered above laughing at the confusion of people taken in by the appearance. This hyper-divine Christ would reveal secret knowledge to his elect via religious experience rather than conveyed truth in the apostolic writings. Early church fathers such as Iraneus wrote against these 2nd century teachings including many of their writings which he enumerated by name (To see his reference to the content of the gospel of Judas, see this segment of Against Heresies. Additionally, the early church historian Eusebius also named many of these writings. The point to be made is that these writings: Gnostic gospels, epistles and apocalypses were known to the church and rejected by the Christians as false. The great interest of the archaeological find at Nag Hammadi is that some codices (early books) of these works were actually dug up. Believe it or not the discovery was made by a guy named Mohammed Ali (no, not the one who floats like a butterfly and stings like a bee).  This of course shed light on the early debates within Christianity and the sources of the doctrines which the church rejected.  A great archaeological find.

Why then all the buzz about “Lost Gospels” of Thomas, Judas, Mary etc. (Greg Koukl has a good commentary on the use of the term - Lost Books of the Bible) First, for the most part many people, Christians included, are ignorant of church history and have no idea about the world in which the church was birthed, grew and confounded false teachings. Second, there is a new school of scholars and practitioners who paint the early Christian world as a battle between equally valid, possible expressions of Christian faith. Therefore the poor Gnostics, losing the popularity contest years ago, need a new hearing today. Third, the media sensationalizes these things with titles like “Lost books of the Bible” being recovered, etc.

What believers need to know is this. The first several centuries of the church were filled with theological spaghetti and a myriad of writings. This in fact led the church to recognize and canonize the apostolic witness found in the 1st century gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. That which was false, which did not match the tradition handed down from the apostles was rejected and not included what eventually became the collection of the 27 books of the New Testament. The gospel of Thomas, The Apocalypse of Peter, and the gospel of Judas were never part of the Christian Bible, nor will they be. They were lost to history, but not to the Word of God. They were lost to us in manuscript form, many of which we have now recovered. This is a great thing for our understanding of the Gnostics, who they were, what they taught. But it is not ground shaking in that it gives us a “new Christianity.” It simply gives us an up close look at beliefs that were deemed not Christianity at all. And that was decided a long time ago; by the Christians. 

Now don’t get me wrong, people are welcome to believe the Gnostic teachings if they choose (but they are pretty convoluted and esoteric); but let us not come up with some nonsense that the Gnostic way is just another way of being a Christian. This is simply not the case.

On "New Gospels

With all the buzz surrounding the Gospel of Judas, I found this to be pretty funny...

The Gospel of Brutus: A Revolutionary Revelation About the Real Jesus

I'll have a short post on Gnostic gospels up soon...very short, but lots of friends have been asking questions, so I thought I would throw my stick in the fire. 

Book Review: The Science of the Soul


Science of the Soul: Scientific Evidence of Human Souls
Kevin T. Favero Edina: Beaver’s Pond Press, 2004

The nature and makeup of human beings has long been the source of questioning wonder and curiosity. Just what are we? What is the nature of consciousness? Are you human beings merely bodies and brains or is their something that our forebears and many today call the soul? The very fact that we do think, ponder and wonder about such things is in itself a truly amazing phenomenon, unique in what we know about the created universe. In this book, The Science of the Soul, Kevin Favero, an electrical engineer by training, tackles a unique question. Is there good scientific evidence for the inference that human beings have supernatural souls as well as physical bodies?

What is at stake in this debate is very important. If there is no soul, no transcendent reality, no god; if matter/energy is all that IS, then what do we lose? A quote from the Center for Naturalism will help demonstrate what is at stake

Naturalism as a guiding philosophy can help create a better world by illuminating more precisely the conditions under which individuals and societies flourish, and by providing a tangible, real basis for connection and community. It holds that doctrines and policies which assume the existence of a freely willing agent, and which therefore ignore the actual causes of behavior, are unfounded and counter-productive. To the extent to which we suppose persons act out of their uncaused free will, to that extent will we be blind to those factors which produce criminality and other social pathologies, or, on the positive side, the factors which make for well-adjusted, productive individuals and societies. By holding that human behavior arises entirely within a causal context, naturalism also affects fundamental attitudes about ourselves and others. Naturalism undercuts retributive, punitive, and fawning attitudes based on the belief that human agents are first causes, as well other responses amplified by the supposition of free will, such as excessive pride, shame, and guilt. Since individuals are not, on a naturalistic understanding, the ultimate originators of their faults and virtues, they are not deserving, in the traditional metaphysical sense, of praise and blame. Although we will continue to feel gratitude and regret for the good and bad consequences of actions, understanding the full causal picture behind behavior shifts the focus of our emotional, reactive responses from the individual to the wider context. This change in attitudes lends support for social policies based on a fully causal view of human behavior.
Center for Naturalism Internet Site, accessed April 10th 2005. Emphasis Added.

In a naturalistic view there is no person who is responsible for their faults or virtures and therefore no one is truly deserving of praise or blame. We then must configure reality, through politics or force, to “make people” the way we want them to be. One ought to question the one who says he has the ability to "control environments” in order to control the behavior of others. This has been envisioned by many who have taken a naturalistic view as utopian scheme after utopian scheme has oppressed people for the last several hundred years.

If naturalism/materialism is true, then many questions arise. How is matter “good”? How does a purposeless universe give rise to purpose? How does non conscious matter give rise to true meaningful human volition? How do we know that the bumping together of matter and energy in our brains arrives at anything that we would call “true”? These questions find no satisfactory answer from within a naturalistic framework and rightly put the worldview in question.

Favero’s effort in this book is to provide an argument that falsifies naturalism; a most worthwhile pursuit. For if there is something that is beyond matter and energy, indeed supernatural (i.e., beyond or outside nature), even our own souls, then truth, free will, and morality become very meaningful. Now we turn to the argument presented in The Science of the Soul and the attempt to infer the existence of souls from science and logical thought.

The Thrust of Favero’s Argument

The thrust of Favero’s argument for the existence of souls is laid out in the introductory chapter. His basic thesis is that if matter/energy is all that exists, then this matter/energy must by necessity interact according to the laws of physics. We know of no matter that has a mind of its own and decides what it will do autonomously. All matter/energy must follow a natural course including that which makes up human beings. All that we are, our brains and central nervous systems, must up operate by predetermined natural laws. It is then a logical implication that human beings do not have free will. Favero argues that if it can be shown that human beings do indeed have free will, then this volition requires an explanation that is not natural, which is not operating according to the laws of nature. In logical short hand his argument is this:

  • If matter/energy is all there is then there is no free will
  • There is Free Will
  • Therefore matter/energy is not all there is
It is a valid Modus Tollens argument
  • If P then Q
  • Not Q
  • Therefore Not P
With
P = Matter/Energy is all there is and Q = There is No Free Will

With the conclusion being not P = “it is not the case that matter/energy is all there is.”

The bulk of the evidence he then marshals is necessarily in support of the premise that we do indeed have free will. He then argues that the source of the free will we have must come from something other than matter/energy operating according to the laws of Physics. Hence his conclusion, the reality of free will demands a super-natural source, which we call the human Soul.

Support in the Sciences

The middle section of the book is a survey of various scientific fields and their contribution or detraction from the idea that human beings have free will. Each chapter surveys a discipline of science and interacts with the nature of human free will from the perspective of that discipline. The four covered are biology, quantum physics, philosophy and science (soul-brain interface), and mathematics. I will treat each section briefly in turn.

In the chapter on Biology he lays out several views, theistic evolution, special creation, and intelligent design without saying definitively which view he holds. His only contention is that each view does not contradict the existence of supernatural souls and the reality of free will. Only the naturalistic/deterministic evolution of matter + time + chance is incompatible with free will. One of the chapter’s strengths is that all who believe in the soul will find their view fairly represented, yet I did find it a bit contrived that God would at some moment make a pre-Adamic hominid into a “real human” by putting a soul there after the purely natural process of evolution. I think the secularist and some of religious persuasions will find difficulty with such a scenario.

The chapters on Quantum Physics and the Soul-Brain Interface I found to be fascinating and very helpful. Following the work on Sir John Eccles, Favero’s discussion is about how certain quantum phenomena could be the mechanism by which the Soul works out its decisions in the brain. I found this to be a refreshing attempt at explaining in scientific terms what happens as the conscious soul thinks and acts through the brain and the central nervous system. He is very clear that attempts to explain free will by saying quantum reality is the source of such volition are destined for failure. Again, if matter/energy is all there is, then it must follows the rule or laws of physics, even if the probabilistic rules of quantum mechanics. Though quantum fluctuations, and the bundling (or collapsing as some prefer) of the wave function of the electron may be the mechanism of free will, it could never be the source. I find this line of thinking to be a great frontier of study in the science of consciousness.

The final supporting chapter dealt with the discipline of mathematics. The discussion here centered around non-computational aspects of human thinking, namely insight and intuition. This chapter closely follows the work of Roger Penrose in his mathematical study of human thinking. Penrose, though a naturalist himself, stands out against the reduction of human thinking to be analogous to that of a digital computer (see Dennett and Kurzweil). Penrose demonstrates that there are “noncomputational” aspects of our thought that a computer can simply not perform. If one finds halting problems, tiling problems and Gödel’s Theorem of interest (and I must admit I loved this chapter) then the chapter on Math will be a delight.

Weaknesses of the Book

Overall I found the book interesting and a helpful debate on this issue of human anthropology. I did however see a few minor drawbacks. First, the writing style was sometimes a bit redundant with the same thing said in various places. At first this appeared to me a strength, yet I found myself thinking, “you said this already, several times.” Reinforcement is helpful, but after a few repetitions I felt like we were beating the proverbial dead horse. Second, there were a few anachronisms in the history of philosophy that I feel could be corrected. One example is on page 43 where the following statement was made:

During the Age of Reason in the 1600s and 1700s (also known as the Enlightenment), some scientists and philosophers identified the ability to reason as the characteristic that separates humans from other animals.

This is true, but this idea was present in Plato, Aristotle, Augustine and many thinkers much earlier than the Enlightenment. This is not a huge mistake, but can appear a little incomplete. Finally, I noticed a few of the quotations in the book were not footnoted (see quotation from Weinberg on page 253). This was rare as the documentation in the book was otherwise fantastic. These minor drawbacks aside, I now turn our attention to the many strengths I found in the book.

Strengths of the Book

The strengths of the book were many and the following are those which I found outstanding. First, Favero lays out well all the implications in the denial of free will in great detail. He clearly shows the effects on law, morality, relationships, even one’s own internal life, when free will is denied. He connects a denial of free will with naturalistic assumptions or presuppositions about the world rather than a scientific or phenomelogical demonstration that human beings lack free will. In other words, people deny free will because of bias, or prejudice against non-material explanations of the world. The inconsistency of materialists denying free will yet then appealing to people to make choices, decisions, etc. was brought out with clarity and force by direct quotations from the literature. Secondly, the author has clearly done his homework. His survey of the relevant literature was copious and the bibliography is an invaluable resource for those interested in the mind/body problem and physicalist debate. The minor footnoting problem aside, the book is very well documented and expansive in its handling of the subject matter. Third, Favero made great effort to make the work accessible to the layperson. In this goal I think he partially succeeded. For those with any scientific background, even a few college courses, will be able to work through the book. Yet to fully grasp some of the concepts a cursory knowledge of some of the sciences is helpful. Fourth, he makes a great distinction between theological determinism, the idea that God predestines and brings about certain things and naturalistic determinism. The former view supporting some manner of real choice and free will while maintaining God as an active chooser and actor in the world and the latter being a completely closed system of cause and effect with no room for free will in us or in God. This discussion, though brief (see pages 39,40), qualifies “free will” enough where one who holds libertarian free will or theological compatibilism could be in concord with the main argument of the book.

Concluding Thoughts

Overall, I really enjoyed The Science of the Soul and its contribution to the debate on the mind/body problem from a scientific point of view. I was greatly encouraged by the level of research and effort put forth by the author and enjoyed some of the mind puzzles brought forth in the book. The study of consciousness, the nature of humanity, and the resulting societies we will create based upon such knowledge is of utmost importance. People have long assumed they had a self, a soul, which is the true person which they are. This is now questioned in the halls of learning and many are asleep as to the debate and the consequences of wrongly assessing human nature. I thank Mr. Favero for bringing forth the debate with both rigor and passion which is seen clearly in a quote from the book’s conclusion.

It is my hope:
  • that all people can recognize there is overwhelming evidence that leads to the conclusion that they have supernatural souls;
  • that this recognition and the hope for eternal life will help relieve at least in part the depression and suffering experienced by some people;
  • that belief in a supernatuality reality and a supernatural Being is a source of healing for guilt
  • that people will realize how wonderful free will, life, and existence are; and
  • that these realizations will result in an attitude of awe and thankfulness and will renew the joy of living in many people.
Finally, I hope that a recognition that each human soul is made in the image of a spiritual God will help human relations at all levels and lead to a spiritual millennium.
The Science of the Soul, 325 

To this I would only add that these are possible and described by the term “salvation” in the Christian Scriptures. A great truth of the Christian worldview that souls need redemption, reconciliation to God, forgiveness from sin, and thereby be set free to love God and one another. And such was purchased on the executioner’s cross where the Son of God, by his own free will, gave his life as a ransom for many.

The book may be purchased directly from: http://www.scienceofsouls.com/ 

Stand to Reason Podcast

Stand To Reason is now podcasting a weekly audio show.  The current edition is on the Da Vinci Code.  Greg Koukl is a fine ambassador for the gospel.  Add this to your podcast list and update it often.  Koukl mixes the mind of a philosopher with wit and compassion.  His concern is that people grasp truth and give the gospel hearing amidst the flux of contemporay thought and culture.  Check them out:

Stand to Reason trains Christians to think more clearly about their faith and to make an even-handed, incisive, yet gracious defense for classical Christianity and classical Christian values in the public square.

 
[Updated - Justin Taylor notes that STR's podcast is #1 in Religion and Spirituality]

Worldview Training

Brett Kunkle at Stand to Reason has pulled together a great listing of summer worldview training for young people in America.

See his link at Stand to Reason Blog: Worldview Training for Youth

What to do at "Youth Group"

Field trip to Berkeley to interact with the best of secular thought and Unitarian religion.

Great idea Brett Kunkle, may your tribe increase! Stand to Reason Blog: The Berkeley Mission -- Part 1