Andrew and the grad school god

Andrew Sullivan is out with a new column today that mistakenly conflates religion and philosophy, and fails utterly to understand how ignorant and literal the Southern Baptists hereabouts actually are. But he at least gets this much right:

They are indifferent to the destruction of the creation they say they believe God made. And because their faith is unmoored but their religious impulse is strong, they seek a replacement for religion. This is why they could suddenly rally to a cult called Trump. He may be the least Christian person in America, but his persona met the religious need their own faiths had ceased to provide. The terrible truth of the last three years is that the fresh appeal of a leader-cult has overwhelmed the fading truths of Christianity.

This is why they are so hard to reach or to persuade and why nothing that Trump does or could do changes their minds.

As I have said many times over the past two years, the Evangelical Right simply transferred their loyalties and personal sense of identity from church to Trump; it’s the same relationship, held just as uncritically and irrationally.

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Tweet for the day

Yep … I can remember when George Wallace was odious and a Democrat. Today, he runs the Republican Party.

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Tweet of the day

So y’all need to subscribe for totally fearless consumer reporting.

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Revisiting the historicity of Jesus

What do you know? The historicity of Jesus is once again something that people are talking about.

Was Jesus a historical figure?

Two separate sources recently questioned the historicity of Jesus. But let us set the record straight.

Whether or not Jesus was a historical figure is probably not susceptible of objective resolution; there is too little surviving evidence to settle the question. That ought to make preachers uncomfortable when they howl that “Jesus wants this” and “Jesus wants that” but … you know.

My own view is that the literary Jesus, the 1st-Century hippie portrayed in the Bible, the guy who went around raising the dead and making certain there was plenty of alcohol for parties, is a fraud — but that there probably was a rabble-rousing rabbi upon whom the literary figure is based.

The article I linked to is interesting only because of the poor quality of the arguments.

Of course, there are many Christian sources that testify to Jesus’ existence, such as His apostles like Peter, John, Matthew, and Andrew. There was also the implacable enemy of the Christian Church, Saul of Tarsus, who once dedicated his life to uprooting the fledgling faith. He became converted after having met the risen Jesus on the road to Damascus. He was transformed into the Apostle Paul, an implacable promoter of faith in Christ Jesus, as he often called Him – that is, Messiah Jesus.

Most of these historical sources not only testified that Jesus was real; they were martyred because they refused to deny Him. This was Someone they saw with their own eyes and heard with their own ears.

The first-written of the canonical gospels was Mark, approximately 35-years after the crucifixion according to most Biblical scholars — just before the failure of the Jewish Rebellion and the Christian sect’s eviction from the Temple; Matthew, Luke, and John are generally agreed to have been written after the sect’s eviction, possibly as much as 70-years after the crucifixion. They are political texts based upon hearsay, written by anonymities about whom nothing is known, and which justify their beliefs and condemn their former co-religionissts; as history, they are almost valueless.

Paul’s private psychological experience is totally valueless as history; it tells us nothing. And consider how much easier it must have been 2000-years ago to perform miracles when tricksters Oral Roberts and Benny Hinn have made fortunes by ‘healing’ the afflicted in our own time.

My view that there was probably a cult-leader named Jesus, upon whom the literary Jesus is based, is grounded on an analogy from modern time.

Does anybody, anywhere, believe that Paul Bunyan was a historical figure? A giant lumberjack with a colossal blue ox whose hooves gouged-out the Great Lakes? Of course not — but many folklorists believe that the literary Paul Bunyan is based upon a historical lumberjack around whom tall tales began to accumulate.

At the same time, several authors have come forward to propose alternative origins for Paul Bunyan. D. Laurence Rogers and others have suggested a possible connection between Paul Bunyan tales and the exploits of French-Canadian lumberjack Fabian Fournier (1845 – 1875). From 1865 to 1875, Fournier worked for the H. M. Loud Company in the Grayling, Michigan area. James Stevens in his 1925 book Paul Bunyan makes another unverified claim that Paul Bunyan was a soldier in the Papineau Rebellion named Paul Bon Jean, and this is occasionally repeated in other accounts.

Stewart and Watt acknowledge that they have not yet succeeded in definitively finding out whether Bunyan actually lived or was wholly mythical. They have noted, however, that some of the older lumberjacks whom they interviewed claimed to have known him or members of his crew, and the supposed location of his grave was actually pointed out in northern Minnesota.

I think the growth of the modern Paul Bunyan mythology is probably analogous to what actually happened in the case of Jesus. There was a noteworthy figure about whom stories began to be told, and then the profiteers moved in.

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A bad year for Baptists

SBC Voices reviews 2018 in the life of the Southern Baptist Convention — and there was a lot of bad news.

The Paige Patterson mess: retired, then fired.

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Twilight of the Trads. Concurrent with the Patterson mess came the sudden and complete meltdown of the SBC Traditionalist organization. The whole thing was Wagnerian, brethren, with gods and demigods, warriors (none females, though), monsters, and gnarled sycophants.

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Frank Page, and others, resign for immorality.

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JDG appoints sex abuse group, and that partly in response to the events surrounding Patterson and the #metoo and #metoochurch stuff.

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Housing allowance is on appeal. Last year the cash clergy housing allowance was declared unconstitutional by a federal district judge.

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Paul Pressler news. None good.

Sex abuser exposed, SBC leaders fail to report. There was too much news concerning the SBC that involves clergy abusing underage church members. This one involved both the IMB and the South Carolina Baptist Convention. It is a disgrace that we ever just fire an abuser and send them along to another SBC church or entity position.

It isn’t mentioned in this review, but membership and attendance were down, once again.

Paige Patterson’s squalid conduct has been whispered for years, as has Paul Pressler’s. The privileged tax status of churches has been contested for years, and will doubtless end as growing numbers of Americans realize they’re subsidizing Jack-and-the-Beanstalk nonsense. The practice of sending pedophiles away, to rape some other church’s children, is an indecency that critics have howled about for decades. The growth of grim and humorless Calvinist nonsense has been contentious within the SBC for decades.

All we’re really talking about here, I suspect, is the end of attempting to paper-over real problems with hearty fellowship-smiles — the end of Denial.

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