DiaBlogue<A>: Orthodoxy, Generously
• (In)coherent
MumblingI was particularly
encouraged by his
promise:"to explain more
fully the variety of reasons that I find Christian beliefs untenable, what
preferable alternatives exist, and why they are preferable. I think we have had
too many claims and too little explanation and support of those
claims."I wholeheartedly agree.
My one concern is that I'd like to make sure the Christian beliefs he is
critiquing are not limited to American Fundamentalism. [Read more] for a
generous proposal to help with that...
As I've mentioned before, I actually agree with
many of Alan's critiques, especially as they apply to Western Christendom, and
most particularly to American Fundamentalism. The real difference between us is
that I think solution lies in going
deeper
into Christianity, whereas he thinks the solution is to go
away
from Christianity.
I am glad to see he
is finally preparing to propose some "preferable alternatives" to Christianity,
so I get to throw stones from
my
glass house for a change.
:-)
Conversely, while I have done my
best to define my own idiosyncratic beliefs, I can appreciate Alan being
unimpressed at my sketchy outlines and lack of a following. Therefore, Alan, I'm
offering to buy you any or all of the following three books, which provide a
much richer picture of Christian orthodoxy I am proud to believe in, and a set
of reasonings I would be happy to defend (and would love to see you work on
refuting):
• A
Generous Orthodoxy by Brian
McLarenThey are available at http://urlx.org/amazon.com/3ce1e, in case you
have trouble with the links. I think I still have your address, so let me know
which (if any) you want, and I'll have Amazon ship them over. Chesterton's book
in particular is pretty short (almost shorter than my blog posts!), so I hope
you take me up on this.Just to be
clear, I don't for a moment think they will convince you to adopt Christianity.
However, I hope these will at least induce you to focus your efforts on the
"real" issues with Christianity, not the trivia which modern Protestantism has
caricatured as "real" Christianity (which is like defining physics based on our
positions on supersymmetry
:-).Best
wishes,-- Ernie P.
Posted: Wed - June 14, 2006 at 05:00 PM