06/1/08

Feast of Justin Martyr

In honor of St. Justin, today we post selected quotes from his writings.

Reason directs those who are truly pious and philosophical to honor and love only what is true, refusing to follow the opinions of the ancients, if these be worthless.
1st Apology, Chapter 2

This quote, while quite agreeable to Reform Unitarianism, is ironic in light of Justin’s strong reliance on Hebrew prophets and praise of them as more ancient than European philosophers.

[God] accepts those only who imitate the excellence which are in Him: temperance, justice, charity, and the virtues which are peculiar to a God who is called by no proper name.
1st Apology, Chapter 10

This is one of the many quotes in which Justin asserts the central principle of AUR: that God can have no proper name.

We reasonably worship him [Jesus], having learned that he is the Son of the true God Himself, and holding him in the second place, and the prophetic Spirit in the third.
1st Apology, Chapter 13

This expresses in good pre-Nicene language, the sequential triplicity of the One God, the Son of God, and the Spirit, rather than any sort of coeval trinity.

The Word, who is the first-born of God, was produced without sexual union.
1st Apology, Chapter 21

No one can utter the name of the ineffable God; and if anyone dares to say there is a name, he raves with hopeless insanity.
1st Apology, Chapter 61

To the Father of all, who is unbegotten, there is no name given, because if He were called any sort of name, the person who gives Him the name would be his elder. These words—Father, God, Creator, Lord, Master—are not names but appelations derived from His true deeds and functions.
2nd Apology, Chapter 6

There is, and there is said to be, another God and Lord subject to the Maker of all things, who is also called a messenger [angel] because he announces to humanity what the Creator of everything—above Whom there is no other God—wishes to announce to them.
Dialogue with Tryphon, Chapter 56

AUR understands the “first God” to be the true Unitary God while the so-called second “God” is merely called that due to its divine nature, as in the first verse of The Gospel of John, and in Philo’s theology. As Justin himself asserts, “God” is merely an appelation; terminology is not as important as the distinction between the single uncreated Creator and creatures. It is very clear from Justin’s writings that Christians of his day understood this “second God” (the Logos/Word/Son) to be subordinate to, and derived from, God the Father.

05/8/08

Pentecost – The Harvest of Christ’s Ministry

On the Sunday following Ascension Thursday falls the Pentecost, originally a Hebrew harvest festival known as Shavuot or the Day of First Fruits.  It is also called White Sunday in some Northern European countries.

In Judaism, this day commemorates the descent of the Law on Mt. Sinai, but in Christianity it commemorates the descent of the Holy Spirit on followers of Jesus.

In both cases, a great flowering resulted. Just as the Jewish people were bound by the physical ties of tribe and family, Christians are bound by the mental ties of concept and idiom.  So, in Jewish tradition, Mt. Sinai became covered in blooms and greenery after the Law was revealed, a material flowering.  In Christian tradition, the crowds who witnessed the descent of the Spirit discovered they were granted the wisdom to understand the words of the Apostles in their own language, a mental flowering.

For Reform Unitarianism, these parallel revelations on Shavuot/Pentecost represent a great reconciliation of complementary goods: punitive Law which outlines strict rules of conduct and benevolent Wisdom which over-rules the obstacles of language.

04/24/08

Reformed Unitarian Communal Prayer

Whether during services or delivered as part of a ceremonial occasion, a public prayer presents the leader of prayer with a terrible temptation: to speak to the audience rather than to God. The purpose of prayer is to adjust the relationship between the one praying and the One to whom the prayer is addressed, not to lecture the audience.

Some Catholics recently expressed valid concerns about this sort of co-opting of prayer for pedagogical or even political purposes, in discussion of a prayer to be delivered by Pope Benedict XVI at Ground Zero in New York City, but prepared for him by others. It is a problem common to all religions.

AUR’s stance on this is simple: homilies and sermons are the proper occasions for teaching and discussing; prayers are for setting right one’s relationship with God. Prayer should not be used to make a point to people who might overhear, including the group in whose name the prayer is delivered. As Jesus put it:

When you pray, don’t be like the play-actors, because they love to pray standing in the worship halls and on the street corners to be seen by others. I tell you: they’ve received their reward in full. But, when you pray, go into your room, close the door, and pray to your Father, Who is unseen. Then your Father (Who sees what is done in secret) will reward you. And when you pray, don’t keep on rambling on like the pagans, because they think they’ll be heard because of their many words. Don’t be like them, because your Father knows what you need before you ask Him. – The Gospel Of Matthew 6:5-8

Of course, for the purposes of building and maintaining religious community, spoken prayers are necessary temptations, but they must be faced as temptations, their potential corruptions resisted in a conscious and concerted fashion. The leader of prayer should keep in mind that the advice above was followed by the example known as the Lord’s Prayer, a simple request for basic needs (and a promise to forgive others in return for being forgiven) kept modest with the Humility of Gethsemane: “Your will be done.”

Delivered prayers should be addressed to God, and should not be taken as an opportunity to deliver a sidelong lecture to those within ear shot. The necessary “I” of a spoken prayer necessarily includes the “We” who are participating in the prayer, and the leader of prayer should respect the moral autonomy of this We. Prayers may be topical, but should also be general (where required by ettiquette and piety), non-controversial, and humble.

(The photograph above is from the Roman Catholic parish of Our Lady of Perpetual Help, whose excellent instructions on sincere prayer can be read here.)

04/18/08

Pietist or Liturgical?

One of the major dichotomies of Christian religion is the chasm separating the pietist approach, emphasizing a rigorous Christian lifestyle, from the liturgical approach, emphasizing ritualized public worship.  It may be most appropriate to address this issue as America receives Pope Benedict XVI, the leader of the Roman Catholic Church, which is one of the most liturgical of religions.

It should be noted that American Unitarianism arose from the pietist tradition of Protestant Christianity, which has been very critical and even suspicious of ritual and ceremony.  However, the tide has been turning in favor of liturgical forms recently, and we have learned much in the centuries since the beginnings of American Unitarianism about the important role that social ceremony plays in reinforcing personal lifestyle.

In fact, the supposed conflict of liturgical vs. pietist can be seen as precisely the sort of Law vs. Wisdom, Justice vs. Mercy, Knowledge vs. Life, and Lion vs. Lamb dichotomy that AUR views as the greatest danger to true monotheism, in which all things must ultimately be reconciled.  When these complements are placed in contradiction to one another, as mutually exclusive options in an either/or choice, they defy divine reconciliation and slide into authoritarian and licentious corruption: Law becomes the tool of the tyrannous Beast, Wisdom the excuse of wanton Babylon.

The truth is not found in the mere balance of opposites, as some simplistic New Age philosophies insist, but in their functional reconciliation.  Just as the voice of Yahweh was said (Numbers 7:89) to speak from above the Ark of the Covenant’s “Reconciler” (kaporet, כפורת) and between the two cherubim which Moses Maimonides claimed represented God’s punitive and benevolent aspects, it is in the reconciliation of Justice and Mercy; Law and Wisdom; Knowledge and Life; and Lion and Lamb that the Word of God is found.

To this end, AUR seeks to reconcile liturgy and piety, to use each as the antidote for the other’s flaws, and therefore derive the spiritual benefits of both.  Liturgy should renew pietistic rigor, and instill a sense of coherence between social and individual religion. 

For example, liturgy typically includes some sort of communal prayers for intercession  or pleading, in which the leader of the prayer asks for assistance from God with the congregation closing out the prayer together with some form of doxology.  A common form is, “in the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Ghost, Amen.”  Despite the misunderstanding of this phrase by Nicene Christians, AUR accepts it as a valid doxology with the understanding that it describes a stream-like flow of divine power from God through the Logos to the many gifts of the Spirit.

 However, to insure that such prayers of pleading reinforce the core image of AUR piety, the Prayer in the Garden, the doxology closing the prayers of Reformed Unitarian services should repeat the Humility of Gethsemane, “nevertheless, Your will be done, Amen.”  In this way, the congregational ritual reinforces the attitude at the core of individual piety: the recognition of one’s contingent and temporary nature as a mortal creature before All-Encompassing God.

Is Reform Unitarianism pietist or liturgical?  Insofar that it is truly Unitarian, it cannot idolize either side of the coin.

04/17/08

Twelve Days Of Commission

At the end of the Easter season, AUR celebrates the 12 Days of Commission, beginning on Commission Sunday, 20 April this year, and ending on Ascension Thursday, on May 1st. This time commemorates the charge of Jesus Christ to teach all nations, to baptize, and to obey his teachings.

The text of the Great Commission in the Gospel of Matthew contains one of the proof texts often mistaken as supporting Trinitarianism, and it thus bears comment. 

Jesus tells his disciples to baptize “in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.”  Listing three items does not, by any stretch of reason or imagination, lead to the conclusion that these three are parts of a triune whole, co-equal and co-eval. 

As a son descends from a father (to consider them as co-eval is to deny the Father-Son relationship) and the Holy Spirit is described in scripture as emanating from God, this triple invocation is more accurately understood not as a list of equals, but as a flowing of spirit from the unbegotten Unitarian Creator through the only-begotten Son who is the “firstborn of creatures” and a Holy Spirit which is embodied in a variety of ways.

Rather than a Trinity, this baptism is in the name of a sequential “Triplicity”: the wellspring of the Father pouring out the river of the Son, and issuing into the world through the Holy Spirit like a delta washing out into the sea through a multitude of streams. It is in this truth we baptize, that we might retrace the path of the diverse waters of Spirit, reconciled in the unity of the Logos, by which we may find the One God.

The Twelve Days of Commission conclude in the Ascension of Jesus, which is one of the Four Great Thursdays of AUR, the other three being Garden Thursday, Declaration Thursday, and Thanksgiving Thursday.  This day commemorates the return of Jesus to stand at the right hand of God. 

Just as the Voice of God came to the Jews from between the two angels on the Reconciler (also known, in a poor translation, as the “Mercy Seat”) atop the Ark of the Covenant, the Reconciling Word of God returned to Heaven between two angels who appeared beside him.

03/27/08

The Tension Between UU and Christianity

A very decent and candid discussion of the tension within the Unitarian-Universalist Association community was recently published in UU World, written by Doug Muder who also writes for Daily Kos under the nom-de-plume “Pericles.”  A notable sample:

I’ve been in far too many discussions where Christianity was the unmentioned elephant in the room.  Most of us, I think, live in some kind of tension with Christianity.  Some of us miss it.  Some are running away from it.  Some feel alienated from it or oppressed by it.  And some, like me, feel all those things at the same time.  But like a dysfunctional family with a secret, we seem to have an unspoken agreement not to bring it up.  Say much of anything—positive or negative—about Jesus or the Bible, and many UUs will look at you like you just let out a loud belch.  On those rare occasions when we do discuss it—on the Internet, in discussion groups, or informally at coffee hour—too often we just debate whether Christianity is good or bad.

This haunting of UUs by the ghosts of Christianity is an artifact of the incomplete break made with Unitarianism and Universalism.  Rather than viewing themselves as members of the new faith of Free Religionism, founded in the late 1800s by former Unitarians who were later joined by former Universalists, today’s UUs walk through their religious lives still cloaked in the mummified skin of a dead Christian heritage.

AUR may criticize the continued use of the “Unitarian” moniker by UUs who are no longer ideologically Unitarian, but we sympathize with the discomfort that this cognitive dissonance causes the community and individual members of the Association.  However, that is our view. On this Thursday, we want to honor the other by encouraging AUReform.com visitors to read Mr. Muder’s piece for the UU view of the matter.

03/15/08

The Limitations of Free Religionism and Creedlessness

A February 15th article in the Chicago Tribune about the Unitarian Universalist Assocation’s recent advertising push, describes the problems with the Association’s “Free Religionist” stance quite well.

The Rev. Jennifer Owen-O’Quill, 37, minister at Second Unitarian Church, said all that diversity can leave people feeling lost. “We’re going to give you the opportunity to explore all the religious wisdom in all the world — and good luck,” she said. “That doesn’t really help people form themselves as religious people.”

This is an unavoidable liability in a nominally creedless religion, which does very little except provide people the leeway to explore. One might reasonably ask, in a country where the First Amendment’s Establishment Clause already gives us “the opportunity to explore all the religious wisdom in all the world,” is there really a need for this sort of thing?

But, there are also questions about whether the de jure creedlessness of the Association translates to a de facto creedlessness. Some more traditional Unitarians and Universalists complain of an unspoken anti-theist dogma pervading the organization. Continue reading

02/29/08

The Idolatry of the Book

The new A J Jacobs book, The Year Of Living Biblically, is creating quite a stir.  It is the story of a self-described “agnostic Jew” who decided to spend a year of his life following all of the rules in Jewish scripture.  (Given practical restrictions, Jacobs eschewed certain rules, like stoning adulterers in the street.)  It is being discussed as a commentary on a religious life.

But, is it really?  Jacobs remains agnostic, even though he claims (somewhat absurdly) that parts of the biblical legal traditions, like rituals and the Sabbath, can be “sacred.”  What this seems to mean for Jacobs, in the absence of a belief in God, is that they provide psychologically therapeutic benefits; wearing biblically-mandated all-white outer garments, for example, lightened his mood.

This sort of reduction of religion’s role to psychotherapy is no more legitimately “religious” than the way Creationists often reduce religion to natural history.  If religion is to be anything, then it has to be something on its own terms, not just an amateur version of psychology, sociology, history, legal theory, or moral philosophy. Continue reading

02/14/08

Taking Religion Seriously

Today I would like to talk about the lack of seriousness in religion.  Religion, whether conservative or liberal, often fails to take its subject matter as something real.  Conservatives are more concerned with the sancrosanctity of  received stories about God than God Himself, and liberals are more concerned with God as a story than as a Creator. 

When studying religion, I could not help but notice that the way we talk about religion typically focuses on the terminology and ideology of the religions themselves rather than exploring the subject matter referenced by those terms and ideologies. 

For example, does it make sense to use the same word “god” when talking about the Latin Jupiter and the Jewish El (אל), since Jupiter is a creature while El is uncreated?   If a god (little “g”) is just a divine creature, isn’t that more like an angel, ghost, jinn, or fairy than like uncreated God?  

And, don’t most of these multiple-god religions have some uncreated entity backstage of the universe, bringing it all into existence, as some forms of Hinduism have their Ishvara?   If our definition of what constitutes a theos (θεός) is unclear or equivocal, then isn’t all of our talk about monotheism vs. polytheism just a lot of bunk: not just our coffee-shop-and-sports-bar talk but even the professional work of religious scholars? 

Why should the terminology of Religious Studies (as it is being called lately) be defined any less precisely than any other field of knowledge? Continue reading