A. My personal position is that if a person identifies as Christian that person is a Christian and it is my job to figure out what "being Christian" means to him or her.
B. First of all, I'm posting this in the Theology section because I believe it needs to be looked at from a philosophical/theological perspective. As shown in the following post, we tend to look at "what constitutes a Christian" by "what people believe." That is theological. In my understanding humanism is a life philosophy. I think that would make it a philosophical/theological perspective.
Amethyst, on Nov 16 2008, 11:23 AM, said:
trekkie, on Nov 14 2008, 05:25 PM, said:
I think most people do it for social acceptance, because to wear an "Atheist" label openly is to be outcast. If there wasn't so much outright prejudice against Atheists and other non-Christian groups, I think more people would be comfortable with at least admitting they were Agnostic or Deist.
That is Post 50 from What Do You Think of Liberal Christians?
C. For an example of liberal or progressive Christian I will use Episcopal Bishop John Shelby Spong because:
- there are quite a few videos online,
- he speaks on a wide variety of topics, including his views on the Bible,
- it is clear that he hopes to bring a Christian message to the world,
- he is possibly the most liberal or progressive Christian alive who expects to be taken seriously as a Christian,
- he participated in a debate with a very conservative Christian of equal learning and expertise.
One thing that really hits me is the sincerity of Spong's beliefs. The contrast between progressive and fundamentalist Christian beliefs is underscored like I've never seen anywhere before. I've watched atheists debating fundies but never a progressive or liberal Christian. The topic is sexual ethics.
D. There are 15 YouTube videos as follows:
- Video 1
- Video 2
- Video 3
- Video 4
- Video 5
- Video 6
- Video 7 Spong expresses my reasoning on the situation, i.e. that no one would choose a life of the deep prejudices to which homosexuals are automatically subjected in our society.
- Video 8
- Video 9 Young gay man Roger Montgomery, age 29, dying of AIDS, tells his story.
- Video 10 Montgomery talks about being changed into a hetersexual. In Video 9 he said he does not know if he really was a homosexual or whether it was all because of his background. This raises the question for me re whether he was a real homosexual person. He feels Jesus gave heterosexuality to him as a gift.
- Video 11
- Video 12
- Video 13
- Video 14
- Video 15
E. Bishop John Shelby Spong on "Terrible Texts of the Bible"
That link will take you to the thread on my forums where I posted a number of videos featuring Spong. (Some of this post is copied from that thread.) There is also one on Marcus Borg and the Bible. Borg is also Episcopalian. I was better able to understand Spong's position on the Bible after hearing Borg's explanation.
In the "terrible texts" video, Spong calls himself a progressive Christian. He quotes from the Gospel of John, "I have come that they might have life and that they might have it abundantly." He quotes that verse as being central to Jesus' purpose for coming. Spong believes that anything that violates or interferes with the ability of humans to live life fully cannot be of God. Earlier, he spoke against slavery, intolerance of other religions, abuse of women and children and minority groups. He also spoke for gay and women's rights.
He talks about a journey through the sacred text, shattering the texts of hatred to reveal the God of Love. He uses the story of Hosea and Gomar (recorded in the book of Hosea) to illustrate love. If I correctly understand, the theme of his entire speech is to move beyond the tribal mentality to love all people.
So he seems to be Christian.
F. 'Hell' as an Invention of the Church
That video, also linked from the thread above, has me asking how he differs from a humanist. I see nothing in the entire video that reminds me of his position as a Christian. In fact, his argument would fit very nicely on these, or any other nonreligious, forums. I had to remind myself that all we see is one tiny snippet of a man's life, less than four minutes of interview he is having with a fundy. Even that is interspersed with a scene or two in which he is preaching. The topic is so narrow and the time so short that the maker of the video can make him say pretty much anything he wants to make him say.
G. If we approach this from the perspective that a person who identifies as a Christian is a Christian, and that "being Christian" equals what a person believes, where is the line between Christianity and humanism? Or is there a line? Is humanism of necessity atheist?
If the question is too complex, feel free to respond to any part of it. I've been thinking about this stuff quite a lot recently and would enjoy discussion. Thanks.

Help











