Author
Liz Honeyford Uxbridge, Ont.

Rising Indignation

I’ve just read the March issue and feel a rising indignation within me, particularly due to two articles that put Jesus Christ on the same level as any other “saviour”—Two Kinds Of Knowledge—or with Mohammad—Journey To The Centre Of Our Faiths. I don’t get it? I don’t get how anybody who has met Jesus can then say He is not Lord of all Lords, God of all Gods, King of all Kings, Saviour of all saviours.

The phenomenal world

Science rests on the presupposition that the phenomenal world is perceived only through the five senses. Anything beyond that is not a fact and scientifically verifiable. Religion, on the other hand, is based on experience. This experience is communicated from person to person and generation to generation through rituals, dogma, theology and so on. More often than not, these instruments or vehicles of communication become institutionalised and substitutes for The Experience.

Science and religion

I would agree with Dr. McLelland’s view that science and religion should not be treated as opposed to each other, they should be both able to correspond with and compliment each other; their relationship is more subtle and intimate than generally acknowledged.

A particular worldview

Dr. McLelland rather neatly categorizes the first eleven chapters of Genesis, up to the birth of Eber (the first Hebrew?) in 11:14, as Saga. Such a division of the Genesis account is quite arbitrary, to say the least, and is done to support a particular worldview or cosmology. McLelland implies that a more prevalent literal understanding did not become widespread until the 19th century rise of fundamentalism. Saga, of course, need not be synonymous with Legend, and in fact may be rooted in history. The historicity of the biblical accounts of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph was accepted both by the Israelites and the early Christian church, and is accepted by a majority of Christians today. Yet those particular chapters (Genesis 12ff.) contain many more of the elements of Saga than do the first eleven chapters.

The leading edge

Rev. Dr. McLelland writes in his usual entertaining yet provocative style. As usual, he is writing about the current leading edge of theology. In today’s world, that edge is of course inter-faith dialogue. McLelland calls us to recognize with humility that we as Christians may not be the apple of God’s eye, but rather that we recognize that other faiths could be circling around God with their varieties of faith and truth just like us.

The whole truth

Dr. McLelland surmises that science develops many theories on many topics in a quest for the truth and then uses these theories to reach a conclusion it believes to be true. However as has been demonstrated it never ends there and there are always unanswered questions and new theories to consider. Science never quite obtains the whole truth and often leads to confusion. For example—the claims as to the veracity of the Bible in such areas as the age of the creation of humans and the building of a large boat (Noah’s Ark) have never been satisfactorily disproven.

Breaking a Personal Silence

Thank you for your article, Breaking the Silence, February, about clergy and human weakness. Too many have carried emotional burdens, too heavy, for too long. My father tried lay ministry in northern Ontario over 50 years ago, when I was very young. With no guidance, and with unrecognized emotional issues going in to the position, he struggled, floundered and attempted suicide before his trial year reached an end. He carried this “secret” deep inside ever since; never telling anyone—not his own family, not his siblings, nor any friend. I believe this isolation; his anger and his shame affected his whole life. He is in a nursing home now, 87 years old, struggling with dementia. To what extent his occasional violent outbursts relate back to these old issues is anyone’s guess. Ministers, priests, deacons, and all leaders of the church give so much to so many, but often at great cost.

Water and Security

I look forward to reading more from Rev. Ian Clark on water in the Jordan Valley. According to a detailed, thought provoking, and sad CBC Radio documentary, drought is not the only issue. Security is indeed a matter of water, as Clark states, but water supplies are being managed primarily to supply and secure Israel, notably Israeli settler communities dotted across the West Bank on hill tops, and Israeli farming.

Disappointed Online

Re: story on ‘awesome healing mission by the Blue Mountain Pastoral Charge, N.S.’ This submission appeared only in your online version and not in the printed magazine.

Illuminating Tradition

Donald Jackson works at his tilted desk. Courtesy of St. John’s Bible.

The Saint John’s Bible follows in the tradition of the painstakingly crafted manuscripts of the Middle Ages. The seven volumes took a decade to create, and feature the work of artist and calligrapher Donald Jackson, who works in the Scriptorium in Wales.

In the 1970s, Jackson expressed his lifelong dream to create an illuminated Bible. The Saint John’s Bible was officially commissioned by Saint John’s University and Saint John’s (Benedictine) Abby in Collegeville, Minnesota in1998, and its first lines—the opening sentences of John’s gospel—were penned on Ash Wednesday in the year 2000.

Always New

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The Death Of Adam: Essays On Modern Thought
By Marilynne Robinson
Mariner Books

“Then felt I like some watcher of the sky when a new planet swam into his ken.”
– John Keats

Yes, that has been my reaction to Marilynne Robinson’s collection of essays. This work was first published over ten years ago but has only recently received public acclaim because of Robinson’s highly successful novels. Her novel Giliad won the Pulitzer Prize in 2005 and her more recent parallel novel Home has received many favorable reviews.

These Essays On Modern Thought are deserving of similar attention, and more! Adherents of Reformed Christianity should be especially grateful that at last, among public intellectuals, we have a champion. Her essays on Calvin are both revealing and revolutionary. After generations of Calvin and Calvinism’s being denigrated and ridiculed, finally Calvin and even Calvinists are being carefully reread.

Abraham and Sons, Inc.

Mary Burr/istockphoto

Religion began both East and West long before the Hebrews appeared. Before their covenant and law, myth-and-ritual emerged around the globe with evolving humanity. In Mediterranean lands the great mysteries arose, with liturgy and sacraments and union with the god (the books of Ephesians and Colossians have them in mind: Christianity is the true Mystery). Then came a different sort of faith, a response to certain traumatic events in the life of the patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. The call of Abraham to leave home and journey to the promised land becomes a metaphor for three religions: Judaism, Christianity and Islam. Abraham’s sons Ishmael and Isaac feature in the drama in which God made covenant promises that both should beget many faithful children, and father great nations. (You can read all about it in Genesis 15-18).

The Power to Change

M. Trommer/iStockphoto

John Calvin’s influence on the Korean church is enormous. The largest Protestant denomination in Korea is Presbyterian, and there is not just one, but hundreds of Presbyterian denominations. Presbyterianism has become a big part of the Korean Christian spirituality. This tendency continues on with Korean immigrants in Canada. The majority of Korean Protestants in Canada have a Presbyterian background.

One of the most profound influences of Calvin on Korean Christians is his emphasis on the supreme authority of the word of God which is characteristic of the Korean Presbyterian spirituality. The preached word has been the most important aspect of the Korean Christian life. All church activity starts with worship and the preached word is a necessary part. Every worship must have some kind of scriptural reflection or meditation, for without it, it is not considered worship.