Monday, October 19, 2009

Biblical Authority or Biblical Tyranny - L. William Countryman


New Adult Class on the Authority of Scripture



On November 8, 2009, we will begin a new adult Christian education class dealing with the Authority of Scripture. We will use the book Biblical Authority or Biblical Tyranny by L. William Countryman. It is available from christianbook.com at a reasonable price. You might also want to check google shopping for the best rate currently, or purchase it used. Alibris has some additional used sellers here and here that also have inexpensive copies of the book (from $1.99 and up). Abe Books also has an extensive list of used copies from $1.56 on up.

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Literalism - the 20th Century Heresy - Confirmation Class Resources I

This is such an important piece of learning for modern Christians in placing the relatively recent development of literalism applied to the Christian scriptures.

Here is a short-form podcast by the Reverend David Simmons on the heresy of literalism.

David has also produced a video lecture given at Murray State for a religion class he taught. The videos below expand upon the material in the audio podcast above. If you prefer audio only, the audio only version of the videos may be found here.

Part I


Part II


Part III


Part IV


Part V

Saturday, August 22, 2009

The Meaning of Life with Fr. Josh



Fr. Matthew has a guest for his show this week - the Reverend Josh Condon. Josh is an old friend from the University of Georgia. Enjoy!

Thursday, August 20, 2009

William Porcher DuBose


From Episcopal Cafe -Daily Reading for August 18 • William Porcher DuBose, Priest, 1918

DuBose's emphasis on the role of experience in the process of salvation underscores the theological significance of Turning Points. Indeed, DuBose's spiritual autobiography was the major theological publication that revealed and developed his theological method in terms of the central role of human experience. Turning Points was a major theological work, akin to Augustine's Confessions. It spells out "the presence and vitality of the Word of God" in DuBose's life. The central role of human experience in his theological method comes across even more clearly here than in his other theological writings because he use the personal details of his conversion, suffering, discovery, and transformation as the experiential basis for his theological reflection.

It was toward the end of the Civil War, after the Confederate defeat at the battle of Cedar Creek in Virginia, that DuBose had a moment of shock and realization. That night his brigade slept behind a line of battle for the first time in the war. At this moment he realized the impossibility of success for the Confederate cause and the world he had known all his life. He "felt as if everything was gone! The end of the world was upon me as completely as upon the Romans when the barbarians had overrun them." With respect to his moment of recognition "under the stars" that the Confederate cause was lost, DuBose states that "such an experience can never be altogether lost, and I go back to it at times for such a sense of the utter extinction of the world, and presence of only the Eternal and the Abiding, as is seldom vouchsafed to one." He recalls that "the actual issue was all upon me that fateful night in which, under the stars, alone upon the planet, without home or country or any earthly interest of object before me, my very world at an end, I redevoted myself wholly and only to God, and to the work and life of His Kingdom, whatever and wherever that might be."

From The Theology of William Porcher DuBose: Life, Movement, and Being by Robert Boak Slocum (University of South Carolina Press, 2000).

DuBose became a thoughtful theologian, teaching at the School of Theology at the University of the South in Sewanee, TN. Some believe that the great Vatican II theologian Karl Rahner may have been aware of his work since they come to such similar positions. Sam Portaro, in his book "Brightest and Best" contends that his influence on the 20th century is unparalleled with his emphasis on the doctrine of the Incarnation.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Fr. Matthew presents - Lectio Divina - Praying the Scriptures

Breathe

Why I am an Episcopalian - David Simmons



Fr. David Simmons has a thoughtful take on why he is an Episcopalian.

He writes in part:

A large portion of the reason for me is because our denomination historically refuses to play the cultural games others have been drawn into. The Episcopal Church is drastically worship-centered. This goes all the way back to the “Elizabethan Compromise” in the Church of England in which unity in worship was considered more important than conformity in belief. This idea was codified in the “Chicago-Lambeth Quadrilateral” (BCP 876) which set out the basics of a generous, creedal orthodoxy which could be affirmed by a wide variety of Christians of good faith.

As I became a member of the church, I noticed how diverse it was. We had Democrats and Republicans, liberals and conservatives, Anglo-Catholics and liturgical Protestants. We had people of color in a culture where Sunday was still the most segregated day of the week. Any conversation in the parish hall that touched on religion was bound to bring up differences. In fact, if one had only come to the coffee hour, one might conclude that this was some sort of interdenominational gathering. But on Sunday mornings, we worshipped together as a family. While I could look at other churches in our town and pin exactly where the members of that church would live and how they would vote, our Episcopal church could not be so categorized.



Read the rest here.