Unsettled Christianity

One blog to rule them all, One blog to find them, One blog to bring them all and in the darkness bind them.
December 16th, 2011

Christopher Hitchens, 1949–2011

Christopher Hitchens speaking at The Amazing M...

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Christopher Hitchens—the incomparable critic, masterful rhetorician, fiery wit, and fearless bon vivant—died today at the age of 62. Hitchens was diagnosed with esophageal cancer in the spring of 2010, just after the publication of his memoir, Hitch-22, and began chemotherapy soon after. His matchless prose has appeared in Vanity Fair since 1992, when he was named contributing editor.

via In Memoriam: Christopher Hitchens, 1949–2011 | Blogs | Vanity Fair.

He’s gone, I reckon…

But something he said, previously, will stay around:

Marilyn Sewell: The religion you cite in your book is generally the fundamentalist faith of various kinds. I’m a liberal Christian, and I don’t take the stories from the scripture literally. I don’t believe in the doctrine of atonement (that Jesus died for our sins, for example). Do you make a distinction between fundamentalist faith and liberal religion?

Christopher Hitchens: I would say that if you don’t believe that Jesus of Nazareth was the Christ and Messiah, and that he rose again from the dead and by his sacrifice our sins are forgiven, you’re really not in any meaningful sense a Christian.

Click here to read the rest of the interview.

Let me say that what Hitchens has done for Christianity is nothing short of prophetic, or maybe Ecclesiastes-ic

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August 30th, 2011

Doubt, Faith, Certainty and John Polkinghorne

Sir John Polkinghorne

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I have recently discovered an author by the name of John Polkinghorne who both an accomplished scientist and an Anglican Priest. I might trade Robert a Richard Dawkins book for a Polkinghorne book… Anyway, this article is pretty good:

Religious belief in the modern age doesn’t seem to hold much room for uncertainty or doubt. In November of last year, I took Polkinghorne to the Creation Museum in Santee, Calif., to see how he would react to a hall dedicated to certainty. The museum organizers are certain that there was a six-day, 24-hour creation, that there was a literal Adam and Eve, that Darwin and Hitler belonged on the same wall of genetic engineers, and that evolution is a hoax. Polkinghorne stopped at a display that said the Bible has no record of death until Adam and Eve’s sin. (Apparently even animals lived forever before the humans ate the apple.) Polkinghorne gazed at what appeared to be the museum’s certainty and said to me, “The Bible may not have a record of it, but there is plenty of evidence in the fossil record.” Motivating evidence changes one’s beliefs. Or at least it can if we aren’t holding on to our certainty too tightly.

….

Some atheists like Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens are similarly locked into their certainty about the non-existence of God. If something has a religious whiff to it, their certainty takes over and reasonable discourse is the victim. Religion, politics and science all have their fundamentalists who are blinded by their so-called certainty.

Why certainty about God is overrated – USATODAY.com.

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July 30th, 2011

For Discussion… Fundamentalists have no interest in history

Fundamentalists have no interest in history, culture or social or linguistic differences. They are a remarkably uncurious, self-satisfied group. Anything outside their own narrow bourgeois life, petty concerns and physical comforts bores them. They are provincials. They do not investigate or seek to understand the endemic flaws in human nature. The only thing that matters is the coming salvation of humanity, or at least that segment of humanity they deem worthy of salvation. They peddle a route to assured collective deliverance. And they sanction violence and the physical extermination of other human beings to get there. Advertisement All fundamentalists worship the same gods—themselves. They worship the future prospect of their own empowerment. They view this empowerment as a necessity for the advancement and protection of civilization or the Christian state. They sanctify the nation. They hold up the ability the industrial state has handed to them as a group and as individuals to shape the world according to their vision as evidence of their own superiority. Fundamentalists express the frustrations of a myopic and morally stunted middle class. They cling, under their religious or scientific veneer, to the worst values of the petite bourgeois. They are suburban mutations, products of an American landscape that has been perverted by a destruction of community and a long and successful war against complex thought. The self-absorbed worldview of these fundamentalists brings smiles of indulgence from the corporatists who profit, at our expense, from the obliteration of moral and intellectual inquiry. Chris Hedges

ht.

Interesting… I can’t tell if he is talking about religion, science, or political fundamentalists…

Discussion… clearly I see something in there I agree with, although I am uncomfortable in applying it broadly to every fundamentalist.

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January 3rd, 2011

Most Influential Religious Figures of 2010

Pope Benedictus XVI
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From the Huffpost – which, by the way, used me a primary source recently.

Feisal Abdul Rauf and Daisy Khan

Rauf and Khan are “spokespersons for the idea that religious pluralism, understanding and freedom are the appropriate and lasting anecdote to religious extremism and repression”

Pope Benedict XVI

The Pope’s public remarks about various issues “continue to keep him and his translators busy as the world tries to keep up with this complex and engaged leader of the Roman Catholic Church”

Bishop Christopher Senyonjo

“As Uganda considered a bill that would make homosexuality a capital offense, Ugandan Bishop Senyonio stood up for LGBT rights. As a result he has been the target of death threats and condemnations.”

Sister Carol Keehan

As president and CEO of the Catholic Health Association, Sister Carol and other Catholic nuns “declared that the Health Care Bill was, in fact, pro-life. In doing so they courageously went against the Bishops Conference and helped to convince some Catholic congressmen to vote yes, leading to the bill’s ultimate passage.”

Glenn Beck

“Glenn Beck’s Washington rally to ‘Restore Honor’ tapped into the longings of many Americans with the trappings of a religious revival, which led some to question whether Beck himself was becoming a religious leader. The very fact that Beck, a Mormon (which many conservative Christians do not consider Christian), has become a religious icon for conservative Evangelicals shows the extent to which a new interfaith alliance among conservative Catholics, Mormons and Evangelical Christians has blended politics and theology.”

Patriarch Bartholomew of Constantinople

“Named the ‘Green Patrirarch,’ by Al Gore, Patriarch Bartholomew continues to bring international scientists and religious leaders together to call attention to environmental degradation and to argue convincingly why the environment is a religious issue.”

Christopher Hitchens

“Undeterred by his diagnosis of cancer, Hitchens is always up for a debate on the existence of God and the morality of religion. While religious people debate whether or not to pray for his recovery, Hitchens admirably stands by his own rational approach and, according to him, will do so until his very end.”

The Dalai Lama

“While the Dalai Lama’s political capital seems to be on the decline, his spiritual influence continues to be as strong as ever. His Holiness released two books this year: one on his own spiritual journey and the other on the importance of interfaith cooperation. Together the books offer a model of religious integrity within one’s own faith, while respectfully and compassionately engaging across religious boundaries.”

Elena Kagan

When she was asked during her Supreme Court confirmation hearings about where she was on Christmas, Kagan replied, ‘Like all Jews, I was probably at a Chinese restaurant.’ “The openness and good humor of Justice Kagen’s remarks exemplified the best of being true to one’s religious identity while not letting it derail the conversation — a fine line to walk in today’s fraught political and religious landscape.”

Karen Armstrong

Prolific writer and former nun Karen Armstrong used her 2008 TED Prize to create the Charter for Compassion, which begins, “The principle of compassion lies at the heart of all religious, ethical and spiritual traditions, calling us always to treat all others as we wish to be treated ourselves.”

View the slideshow here.

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August 9th, 2010

Chris Hitchens – Refuses to punk out, offers blessing

I agree with him, actually. Here is a man who hates Christianity and religion in general, faced with a possible death sentence (but aren’t we all?), and vows to not turn to Christ on his deathbed.

In his first television interview this week with CNN’s Anderson Cooper, Hitchens said the only time he may “hedge [his] bets” is if he is very ill and half demented and does not have control over what he says.

While “the faithful love to spread these rumours” that on his death bed he will finally accept Christ, the atheist said he would not do “such a pathetic thing” while he’s lucid.

“I could be quite sure of that,” he told Cooper. And if there are any rumors saying otherwise, he said, “Don’t believe it.”

……

Hitchens – who has asserted that he distrusts anything that contradicts science or outrages reason and does not believe in heaven or hell – said he does not pray even as he faces a tough form of cancer.

“That’s all meaningless to me,” he said. “I don’t think souls or bodies can be changed by incantation or anything else.”

He expressed earlier that he was surprised by the number of prayer groups that formed – many of which are praying that Hitchens makes peace with God and gets saved. And he doesn’t want to stop them.

“I say if it makes you feel better, then you have my blessing,” he said of those praying for him.

Turning to Christ on deathbed would be ‘pathetic’, says Hitchens | Christian News on Christian Today.

Good for him, I say. No turning back now, I reckon.

Personally, I don’t like death bed confessions. I believe that when you live your life in full opposition to God and Christ, why punk out at the end, the last few minutes of your life?

I’ll pray for him, but in the end, not even most Christians have the strength of their convictions which I’ve seen some atheists have. We can all hope of a death bed confession – something to tell our children about, as they do with Darwin, Dakes, etc… – but would it really be sincere?

April 7th, 2010

Peter Hitchens – Leaving Atheism

ht.

Peter is the author of a new book on his return to the faith.

February 5th, 2010

Christopher Hitchens, Religious in Spite of Himself?

In a recent interview with a Unitarian minister, the Vanity Fair columnist seemed to be nibbling at the edges of what can only be described as spirituality, leading our author to wonder whether Christopher Hitchens isn’t the best of the New Atheists for his willingness to reject atheistic dogmas.

Christopher Hitchens, Religious in Spite of Himself? | Religion & Theology | ReligionDispatches.

December 8th, 2009

Atheists Are Racists – Nothing but Angry White Men

This is going to go over so well…
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November 27th, 2009

The Changing Nature of Public Religion

From here:

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October 26th, 2009

In the Mail: Something Specific from Random House

Click to Order

Click to Order

Random House has sent along a copy of Karen Armstrong’s book, The Case for God, for review. So far, she is getting excellent reviews on this book, which is in many ways a response to the recent rise of militant atheism -

Reviews

Praise for Karen Armstrong’s The Case for God

“The time is ripe for a book like The Case for God, which wraps a rebuke to the more militant sort of atheism in an engaging survey of Western religious thought.”
—Ross Douthat, The New York Times Book Review

“Armstrong’s argument is prescient, for it reflects the most important shifts occurring in the religious landscape.”
—Lisa Miller, Newsweek

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October 20th, 2009

More on Karen Armstrong’s The Case for God

If I keep going, I am going to have to read this book. Here is an except:

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