I will soon put a new book on Kindle Direct Publishing, accessible on amazon.com. Its title is: How Can I Be a Christian? Here is the conclusion to that book.
Conclusion
So how
can I sum up my Christian faith? This whole book is an effort to express my
faith, but summing that faith up is not an easy task. To me, faith is a very
complex thing. It starts with ontology, that is, an understanding of the nature
of being. It includes an understanding of the nature of human language and
proceeds from there. Most Christians, indeed, most people, assume an
understanding of being and of language unconsciously. They can’t articulate
their understandings, but they have them nonetheless. I believe that we must
discuss and decide about them openly, consciously. Here’s how I understand
them.
Being
is multidimensional. There is physical, material being, or at least we assume
that there is and act as if there is.[1]
We take material being as real. Since the European Enlightenment, much of
western culture has assumed that this material reality is the only reality
there is. Western culture is wrong about that. There is another dimension to
reality. It is the dimension of the spiritual. Spiritual reality permeates
material reality. It is the depth dimension of reality. All human cultures,
though not all human beings, have recognized the reality of the spiritual. Even
the materialistic culture of western Europe has never completely lost awareness
of the spiritual.
Human
language is incommensurate with the task of speaking about the spiritual. The
spiritual both inheres in everything that is and utterly transcends everything
that is. We humans can speak meaningfully about the spiritual only in the
language of symbol and the mythic. Most people take their words about the
spiritual literally, that is, factually; but the spiritual cannot be reduced to
fact. Factual truth is important in its own realm, but it is unavoidably
superficial. The language of symbol and myth connects us with the spiritual in
a way mere fact never can. I understand all statements about God and Jesus
Christ as symbols not as statements of fact.
I
believe that spiritual reality is a higher reality than material reality. It is
ultimate reality. It is the reality on which all other reality depends. That is
what we mean when we call God the Creator of all that is. Our call as humans is
to conform our lives to the ways of spiritual reality. None of us will ever do
that anywhere near perfectly. That doesn’t mean we are not called to do what we
can to live according to spiritual values not material ones.
My
primary symbol for the spiritual is the word God. God is Spirit. As Spirit, God
both inheres in everything that is and totally transcends everything that is.
God is not a person, but we can relate to God personally through the use of
symbolic language. Though God is not a person, we can relate to God as a person
as long as we don’t reduce God to humanlike personhood.
I
believe that God has God’s ways of being, has God’s own values, and that those
ways and values are totally different from the ways and values of the world.
God has thoughts, but they aren’t like our thoughts. God has a vision of the
world transformed from the way it is to the way it would be if it operated
according to God’s ways and values rather than its own corrupt ways and values.
God’s ways and values are so grounded in love that we can truthfully say that
God is love. God’s ways are the ways of nonviolence and radical, distributive
justice for all of God’s people. God calls all people to the work of creating a
transformed world through nonviolent action against the powers of the world and
for the wellbeing of all people. The first step in doing that is inner
transformation. God calls us to rid our minds and spirits of the worldly ways
we have internalized so that we can better conform to the ways of God.
I
believe that all profound truth is paradoxical. That God both inheres in all
created being and utterly transcends created being at the same time is a
paradox. It is something that isn’t possible, it’s just true. The Incarnation is
also a paradox. It is simply impossible that Jesus could be both fully human
and fully divine at the same time. It isn’t possible, it’s just true.
I
believe in the Trinitarian conception of God symbolically. We cannot say
anything that is directly, factually true about God. God is too transcendent
for that. We can speak of God in the language of symbol. That’s what the
Trinity is, a symbol for one way to understand God’s reality. The great virtue
of the Trinity is that, because it makes no rational sense at all, it preserves
the ultimate mystery of God. It is a paradox. It is impossible but true.
Nothing can be three and one at the same time, but God is. I believe that the
trinitarian conception of God gives us a mysterious, dynamic, and active God.
I
believe that Jesus of Nazareth is God Incarnate. The Incarnation is another
paradox. It is both impossible and true. No mere human could possibly also be
all of God, but I confess that Jesus was. He was fully human and fully God at
the same time. In this sense my Christian faith is quite conventional. I accept
both foundational doctrines of traditional Christianity, Trinity and
Incarnation, though I understand them symbolically not literally.
I
believe that in Jesus as God Incarnate we humans see and can learn as much
about God as our finite minds are capable of learning. I believe that if you
want to see God, look at Jesus. As God Incarnate he was born, lived, and died
as a human being; and in everything he did God was fully present and doing it
with and in him. In Jesus we see God entering into as much of human life as any
one individual can, even, or especially, the difficult, painful parts of human
life. In Jesus’ death we see the death of God. Yet God is paradox. On the cross
of Jesus God dies, but God remains the infinite, immortal God at the same time.
That, of course, is another paradox. It’s impossible, but it’s true.
I
believe that in Jesus Christ we see how God relates to us humans, to human
suffering, and human sin. God does not scorn human suffering and death. God
enters into them with us. No matter what happens with us during our lives and
even after our deaths, God is with us and for us. Human sin no doubt angers
God, but God does not punish it either in this life or after this life. God is
infinite, universal, unconditional love; and divine love could never punish
anyone because doing so would make God’s love conditional and therefore far too
human.
I
accept Jesus Christ as my Savior, but I do not believe that the Christ event
(the birth, life, death, and resurrection of Jesus as the Christ) brought
anything new into being. It did not get God to forgive sin God had never
forgiven before. It makes no sense to me to say that it did. I see Jesus as
Savior because he shows us in the most direct and powerful way possible that
we’ve always been saved because God scorns none of human life. Rather, God
enters into human life and thereby sanctifies it. All of it.
I
believe that after Jesus’ death his followers had a powerful, life changing
experience of Jesus’ continuing presence with them. We call that experience the
Resurrection. It has great symbolic meaning and power. It means that with God
death is not the end. It wasn’t the end for Jesus, and it isn’t the end for us.
At least, it allows us to trust that death is not the end for us. Jesus’
Resurrection is another thing that isn’t possible, it’s just true.
I
believe that Jesus calls us, as God does, to a nonviolent revolution on earth
to make real what Jesus called the kingdom of God. In Jesus we learn that the
values of the kingdom of God are basically the values of the world turned
completely upside down. The kingdom of God is totally nonviolent. In it, people
never resort to violence for any reason. In the kingdom of God those the world
calls first are last and those the world calls last are first. In the kingdom
of God the rich are brought down and the poor are lifted up. In the kingdom of
God everyone has enough because no one has too much. In the kingdom of God the
spiritual life and values are more important than material life and values. In
the kingdom of God we humans relate to each other in love rather than in the
world’s ways of competition, one-upmanship, oppression, and dominance.
I
believe, as I believe Jesus did, that transformation of the world begins with
the transformation of the self. The world will change when enough of its people
change. Change their ways from violence and domination to the ways of
nonviolence, justice, and peace. To attack the world for its faults without
having first discerned and dealt with your own faults is just the way to more
violence and domination, not the way to true peace.
I
believe that morality is grounded in God’s unconditional love not in codes of
laws and commandments. We can never reduce God’s love to ten commandments or
even to the six hundred thirteen laws of the Torah. Morality is situational,
and that is moral which facilitates wholeness of life for the people involved
in the situation. Morality is always nonviolent. It says “thou shalt not kill”
and means it. Always. In every situation. What is moral in one situation may be
immoral in some other situation. Morality is always judged under the rule of
love, not by whether or not an act conforms to some rigid code of conduct.
I
believe that Christianity is far more about how we are to live this life than
it is about how we are to get our souls to heaven in a next life. Jesus said
almost nothing about how we get our souls to heaven.[2]
I believe that if our souls do go to heaven, we have nothing to do with it. We
don’t save ourselves. Whether there is any reality for us after death, and what
that reality is, is entirely up to God not to us.
I
believe that salvation is more about this life than it is about a next life.
Jesus spent his ministry calling people to be people of the kingdom of God in
this life not to be people in heaven in some afterlife. Salvation in this life
is coming to know God’s unconditional love. It is to rest our minds and our
spirits in that love. It is to live out of that love and to share it with as
much of the world as we can.
I
understand faith as trust not as the acceptance of unproven factual assertions.
I know that everything I believe about God may be wrong. The possibility of
error is unavoidable when we speak of that which transcends our ability to
speak about it. Yet in faith I trust that what I understand about God is not
false, or at least that not all of it is. I don’t know anything about
God. I try to understand God as best I can, then live in trust under
that understanding of ultimate reality.
I do
not believe that Christianity has the only truth or that it is the only way to
a proper relationship with God. Both Christianity and other faith traditions
are true to the extent that they connect people with ultimate reality, which a
tradition may or may not conceive of as God, and false to the extent that they
connect people to something else. It’s obvious, if we’ll just open our eyes and
our minds, that people all over the world find their connection with God in
Judaism, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, Shintoism, Sikhism, Baha’i, and a great many other faith
traditions. We Christians have no right to condemn them just because they don’t
find their connection with God the way we do. We should thank God that we
humans can find God in so many different ways.
I
believe that the Bible is a purely human product. It was written by men (sadly
not by any women) who were people of their own times and places. Their writings
express their understandings of God, which are not necessarily God’s
understanding of God, nor must they be our understanding of God. I see the
Bible as an invitation into dialogue with its ancient authors. There is much
wisdom in the Bible, but there is also much that is false, some of it
appallingly false. One of the challenges of faith is to discern which Bible
passages express divine wisdom and which express earthly error. The Christian’s
standard for making that distinction is Jesus, and therefore it is love.
The
basics of my Christian faith are then these: God is real. God is Spirit. God is
love. Jesus Christ is God Incarnate. God calls us to lives of love. God calls
us to transform the world into one ruled by love, and God demands that we do it
nonviolently. I believe with Jesus that transformation of the world begins with
transformation of the self. Without individual transformation away from the
ways of the world and toward the ways of God, transformation of the world is
not possible. I believe that God’s grace is universal and unconditional. I
believe that we humans are called to behave ourselves not from fear of
punishment but in response to God’s love for us. So my bottom line is this: God
is real. We know God in Jesus. Love is the standard for everything.
I
don’t live a life of love better than anyone else, but I know that God has
forgiven my failures and everyone else’s before we even commit them. For that
greatest of all of God’s gifts, for God’s universal and unconditional grace, I
say with all my heart: Thanks be to God!
[1]
For a much longer discussion of this issue see Appendix 1 of my book Liberating
Christianity.
[2] A
couple of parishioners once attacked me for not telling them how they could get
their souls to heaven. I didn’t say this to them, but I never told them that
because I don’t believe they had to do anything to get their souls to heaven,
not that they would have believed me had I said that to them.