"Why Christianity Must Adapt -- Or Perish"

by leavingwt 53 Replies latest jw friends

  • leavingwt
    leavingwt

    Why Christianity Must Adapt -- Or Perish

    There is a fundamental question facing Christian sects in America, an ideological distinction that cleaves the many churches into two different camps: is it better to fit the church and Christianity to the world, thus keeping the faith relevant, or is it better to mold the world to the faith? Put more bluntly, whose vision of the future of Christianity is correct: the conservative, literal Baptists or the modern, liberal Episcopalians? Which is best for the people? Which is best for the world? Are their dogmas really so distinct?

    The non-religious of the world will be quick to point out that this is in fact something of a new question, whether the religion should fit the culture or the other way about. Historically, Christianity's church held much more control and influence in daily lives of people around the world. The question of adapting the religion to better fit a morality in flux (most people would say for the better) was moot. The Bible and the Church were both the guide and the morality.

    Modern times have changed the equation. Freedom to practice religion as one wishes implies less central homogeneity among Christians. Without a central core, doctrine can wander. Once you have the freedom to leave to find a better-fitting sect, start your own, or just stop practicing all together, it becomes much more difficult to corral a society. Unless a single sect so dominates a certain area, no specific church or even Christendom can exert enough control to enforce its views. I would posit that voluntary assimilation is no control at all.

    This, of course, is why Brian D. McLaren is on the right path in his most recent work A New Kind of Christianity. McLaren is advocating a different, perhaps upgraded form of Christianity that takes a more objective view of history and employs a better interpretation of the Bible. This allows him to take what he finds good and best in that book, rendering it more applicable and accessible to a modern, educated people.

    At least he recognizes the challenge. As humanity progresses around the world, unlocking the science of the universe, time seems to move more quickly. The pace of progress accelerates, from the depressed call of "nothing new under the sun" to the doubling of human knowledge every decade or so (estimates vary, pick your number); we now expect change as an inherent, paradoxically stable truth.

    How does this fit with the literalist, conservative Christian view? You can see that it is intrinsically opposed; a more liberal interpretation of Christian doctrine could make space for science that promises the great, the life-improving, and the new. A literal interpretation of the Bible offers regressionism and leaves little room for progress. This is exactly where McLaren finds the inherent problem with modern Christianity, and the exact thing that must change: the Bible is a ballast.

    What of a new Bible, one that makes more sense examining the past and is pro-human when applied to the future, releasing past dogma for improvements and corrections? As you may have guessed, it is not necessary to replace the physical work and words of the Bible; it is sufficient to have it become a new book via a fresh reading.

    Now, where does that leave us? The temperate Christians among us might find that to be a fair idea, already having been employing it in everything but name. Most Christians read Genesis and Revelations as allegory and tale, not as fact. The proportion of Christians who take Scripture to be literal truth declines as the education of a population rises, creating an increasingly irreconcilable tension among intellectuals and the religious. Testament to this is the difference in religiosity shown between scientists and the average citizen.

    The relevancy and perceived truth of the Bible among Christians and non-Christians through time has always been changing. But the general trend has long been towards complete repudiation by the non-religious, and reinterpretation among the faithful. McLaren is calling for a much quicker change, a larger, conscious adaptation of the religion's text and therefore the religion itself. This manifests as a firm repudiation of the most odious passages (e.g., how to enslave, when to stone, and so forth are to be disregarded).

    Why should these changes be made now? Is there such a dire need here in the United States? In short, yes. The Pew Forum has a rather revealing recent poll that outlines a quick collapse of American religion. Quick, that is, in a historical context. Given that we have long been a majority-Christian nation, the Pew numbers of aggregate religion are a fair look at how Christianity is surviving in the States. What can we see? Of people born from 1981 on, some 26 percent claim no religious affiliation. Among people born between 1965 and 1980, the percentage of non-believers is a lower 20 percent. Heading farther back, those born from 1946 to 1964 are only 13-percent non-religious.

    A doubling, that is, between the boomers and the most recent generation. As you know, doubling is a geometric function. If the number of non-believers doubles again in 50 years, then by around 2050, the United States will be a majority non-religious country. Clearly, if Christianity seeks to not only stay relevant but viable, it must adapt. The proof is in the numbers; Christianity is suffering.
    The Biblical passages subjugating women to the back of the bus need to be let go to reach the modern woman, who no more expects to be treated as a second class citizen than to be beaten. The passages condemning people born homosexual as abominations need to be released to make the church inclusive. The blatantly incorrect attempts at science and history in the book need to be shut out if Christianity is to attract the educated who could not reconcile the Bible and the real world.

    If Christians want to find some sort of hope to reverse the trend in the game that they are losing, they would be wise to listen to not just McLaren but also the person sitting next to them who left the Church because it never spoke to them. That person is the reason Christianity is suffering a silent crisis.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alex-wilhelm/christianity-must-adapt-w_b_552729.html

  • PSacramento
    PSacramento

    Christianity doesn't need to adapt, it is a faith based religion that advocates love, peace, tolerance and accepteance.

    It advocates NOT judging and forgiving and equal rights for all.

    What needs to change are the people that distort the message of Christ and used it to their own benefit (control) and what needs to change is people ALLOWING this to happen.

  • leavingwt
    leavingwt

    PSac -- Your statements below appear contradictory to me. I'm probably not understanding what you're saying. Please help.

    Christianity doesn't need to adapt
    What needs to change are the people that distort the message of Christ and used it to their own benefit
  • PSacramento
    PSacramento

    What I mean is that the problem with these people is NOT too much Christianity, it is NOT enough.

    There is nothing wrong with Christianity, as per my points above, but there is something very wrong with Christian Organized religions and their heiarchy and there is somethign worng with the people that follow them with a blind eye.

  • leavingwt
    leavingwt

    PSac -- Good luck.

  • The Oracle
    The Oracle

    I have evaluated Christianity, it's history and the actions of its adherents.

    I have decided that it is not something that meets my personal standards of morality.

    It clashes with my value system. I cannot in good conscience support it. My integrity as a member of the human family would be compromised, and I am not willing to do that.

    I am free to decide. My decision has been made. I choose Love. I choose knowledge. I choose wisdom. I reject Christianity.

    Sorry to those who do not agree, but I have to be honest. We are all free to decide.

    If this brings me an eternity burning in hell, then I'll go down fighting for what I believe is right....but guess what? I'm pretty sure I'll be just fine.

    Peace to all and enjoy your evening!

    The Oracle

  • leavingwt
    leavingwt

    "When we debunk a fanatical faith or prejudice, we do not strike at the root of fanaticism. We merely prevent its leaking out at a certain point, with the likely result that it will leak out at some other point."

    -- Eric Hoffer

  • mindmelda
    mindmelda

    I think Christ's teachings are fine. It's too bad that more Christians don't practice them.

    Many people are confusing religiosity, which is basically what Jesus was talking about when he went on about "hypocrites" who are so busy going through the motions of looking pious, with spirituality that they forget that all that is required is treating people in a reciprocal manner to make society better. We've always had those. Nothing new, you can't beat humans for corrupting any system to their own advantage.

    I wouldn't even confuse Pauline writings with what Christ taught...he somehow felt the need to interject some typically torturous rabinical reasoning into the simplicity of what was written down as Christian teaching, so I tend to take that stuff with a grain of salt.

    Even H.G. Wells, an avowed atheist, once said, to paraphrase. that the simplicity of Christ's teachings were so at odds with the need for religion to create ritual and complexity out of innate spiritual traits that people immediately starting interjecting that complexity back into it, when it was simply an appeal for universal brotherhood, understanding that all humans are deserving of justice, equality and compassion.

    Christ is not at fault for that...he didn't demand all the things associated with organized religion, that's all just someone trying to sell you something...one of those other basic human traits, avarice, asserting itself.

    I have no quibble with Christ, Buddha, Confucious, Mohammed and many others who taught basically that same thing, that humans are better off treating each other with fairness, dignity and compassion. I'm not sure I can justifiably blame the worlds great religious figures for how people deified them, corrupted their ideas and used them for their own political and economic ends.

  • moshe
    moshe

    -I think Christ's teachings are fine. It's too bad that more Christians don't practice them.

    What the churches usually teach is Paul's vision of Christianity. It is often hard to separate the original Jesus talk from what was added in later gopsels. I like the Gospel of Thomas as it seems to provide a window into the original Jesus sayings.

  • mindmelda
    mindmelda

    Christ, if anything, was very simplistic philosophically compared to what they were used to hearing. I think Wells was right, people love to complicate things beyond all reason, and simple messages get lost in our need to do so. The simplicity of Christ's teachings were their downfall...but the same could be said of Buddha's.

    But, yes, "Christianity" as we know it is a far piece from Christ. I'm sure he'd look at what many Christians have made of Christianity and think, "Why are you people on my side? You're making my side look bad."

    Well, maybe not in those words, but you get the idea. LOL

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