And Hauerwas stated that literalist-fundamentalism and the critical approaches to the Bible are but two sides of the same coin.... (p17)
So, (2) What is literalist-fundamentalism?
Wikipedia defines it thusly: The term "fundamentalism" has its roots in the Niagara Bible Conference (1878–1897) which defined those things that were fundamental to Christian belief. The term was also used to describe "The Fundamentals", a collection of twelve books on five subjects published in 1910 and funded by Milton and Lyman Stewart.
The first formulation of American fundamentalist beliefs can be traced to the Niagara Bible Conference and, in 1910, to the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church which distilled these into what became known as the "five fundamentals":[8]
- The inspiration of the Bible by the Holy Spirit and the inerrancy of Scripture as a result of this.
- The virgin birth of Christ.
- The belief that Christ's death was the atonement for sin.
- The bodily resurrection of Christ.
- The historical reality of Christ's miracles.
The modern pressures of multiple authorities --of science, of scholars, of theologians, of churches, of the individual, of the Nations --how is one supposed to choose which authority is supreme?
I hope I do not have to wax on about Fundamentalism --it has reared its head in every facet of our lives... and it is not limited to one system, one faith.... and has impacted even our daily lives....
But, in 1993, when Hauerwas wrote this book, I do not think many people of mainstream Christian houses of worship, protestant or Roman, feared fundamentalism --it was a fringe activity, left to those who were ignorant and uneducated....
We now know that is not true. Our own house of worship --The Episcopal Church and its sister churches in the wider Anglican Communion, have been wracked with division and schism, much of it fomented in the turbulent arena of biblical interpretation and authority.... Not to mention the fact that much of the public view of what it means to be a Christian at all has been largely shaped by "bible" churches.
So, again, why does Hauerwas suggest that biblical scholarship and fundamentalism are two sides of the same coin?
C'mon --give me your best.... {and then we will get to the (4)--and what does he begin to establish as the "third way" in approaching, reading, interpreting our holy scriptures that we call the "Bible" ??? Like --what does he mean by "necessary mediation by the Church!!!!????}
7 comments:
The necessary mediation seem best expressed on page 35 in backhanded sort of way, when he writes that both fundamentalism and biblical criticism are born of and serve Enlightenment ideologies which result in the assumption that the rational believer can make sense of scripture without the transformational experience of a Christian community.
Both fundamentalism and biblical criticism share a belief that the scripture can be read literally and proved reasonably (ala Enlightenment definitions), both suggest a stand-alone quality to scripture that denies the emphasis on community. This is much better said on page 28.
ps - I've read all of part one, am I caught up now?
Indeed you are Malinda.
Alright all you other lurkers --what say ye?
Kenneth left this comment in the post below --and I thought it perfectly relevent to bring forward:
I've read only the first two chapters, having just received my book. However: (1)Our author takes too simplistic a view of "text," even though he seems to be complex, and (2)"authority" is conveyed just how? Longevity?
Text and context --those do seem to be the questions.... Let's talk about the idea of 'text' and 'authority' --I do not think longevity is the basis he recommends --I am certain he does not believe that our democratic urges are to be utilized... what Scripture 'means' is not to be put to majority vote.
more questions? more thoughts?
So, has anything been said since early October? I am wondering if my browser is missing updates or if the conversation has stopped?
The more I think about the term "fundamentalists" and its cousins, the more irritated I get. Isn't a "fundamental" a basic principle, the foundation of who we are? How did we allow a group of folks seemingly more interested in sexual orientation than in poverty or the exploitation of the powerless to appropriate this term?
Kenneth
Kenneth --I am not sure how to answer your question. Yes, indeed, fundamental is a basic principle, and yes, indeed, the fundamentalist movement began with the basic principles listed above. I think what has come to be the reality in defining a 'fundamentalist' is the inerrancy of scripture and the purist form of atonement theology --which leaves the birth, life, ministry, resurrection and ascension of Christ out as saving acts --only his death on the cross.
And, we should be very upset that the definition of Christian in the popular media and thought depends very much upon the stereotypical fundamentalist view of faith.... there is a book "Saving Jesus" by Heyward that discussing these very disturbing trends.
Post a Comment