Rules & understanding

Posted by Mark Fearnall on January 26, 19100 at 06:53:56:

In Reply to: Re: 20 ARTICLES !!! Changing?? Not Officially posted by Jayne Little on January 26, 19100 at
00:04:28:

: If we wish to get back to the teachings of Christ, and those times..what were the essential elements? what aspects were cultural..and what transcended the times. Why were the topics which were included, included...what were the key points..

Who says we can know these things? And how? If their "truths" were subject to culture, are not our's? Which means we won't know the essential elements but only those that fit our culture?

: Knowing that they were written in the language of the time, surrounded by politics and the culture of the time..what should be updated?

As we are subjected to the same, what makes our knowledge any better than theirs?

: I guess I just don't get it the disagreement over this process.
: In my congregation, I can agree to disagree over the words we use to describe God, but we don't disagree on God.
: I can agree to disagree on the words I use to describe the Spirit..and the relationship/process of the Trinity...but we recognize different elements.
: Am I missing something. This group doesn't seem to be getting into the dialogue of what is important in our
faith, as much as why it is so important to stay as we are? 

: I feel like I am listening to a pitcher dialoguing on the proper method to throw a baseball, when all I want to do
is play the darn game!

Jayne,

I like your analogy here! But if you would permit me, I would like to expand on it a bit from my perspective.

It is important to "play the game", you are right. And yes, sometimes it seems like we are discussing the best way to throw a baseball, when that isn't really the most important thing. However, sometimes I am concerned that we are not even playing the same game!

Baseball has rules, and all must abide by the rules or there is chaos - you can change the rules a bit and still remain baseball, but all must play by the same rules. If you use a "football" instead of a "baseball" you are no longer playing the same game. Take, for instance, where you state above that you don't disagree about God. But what if in fact we don't agree about God? And I suspect that we often do not agree about God.

I believe that knowledge about God is secondary. Relationship with God is key, but there still needs to be _some accurate_ knowledge, or there can be little or no relationship. I know God, because I know and see  Jesus Christ (as he comes clothed in the scriptures, with the aid of the Spirit, and the church - my thinking is expanding on this one if you have followed some other threads). Not everyone may agree that we know God in Jesus but then I wonder if we are not playing different games!?

Mark


Posted by Jayne Little on January 26, 19100 at 07:13:32:

In Reply to: Re: 20 ARTICLES !!! Changing?? Not Officially posted by Mark Fearnall on January 26, 19100 at 06:53:56:

I cannot write something for the future..I expect my writings would have to be amended next week. I hope that through community we could create something that would last another 50 years..or until a next major enlightenment occurred..
I thought about a lot last night..and maybe it isn't the articles of faith..that needs changing? Maybe they should be treated as a historical document. coming out of the wisdom of the time.
The question for me then is, is a statement of faith necessary..and it seems that be would like general guidance, to know if you're in, or you're not. Rules are nice...but I think that the most exciting part of the UCofC is the ability   to live in the mystery, the unknowing, the "not knowing the final answer". 
Maybe that is one thing that needs to be included in our "rule book". Tough huh.

On the other hand, I also feel it would be good to show the ways we are comfortable agreeing ...AT THIS TIME..with THESE PEOPLE and WITH OUR KNOWLEDGE. (caps aren't yelling..just emphasis)

The baseball analogy is fun..but I like the football one even better...think of rugby & Aussie rules and football and soccer (football). 
Words are important, but if everyone wants to play, then adjust the game plan.
Football, baseball, and soccer have not had the same rules for 2000 years...not even 50. Things change...women can play baseball...wow..blacks can..wow..now..this analogy has been stretched way past it's normal limites, but it can be used as tool to explore the impacts of rules and change on a community..and how making the rules so tight, it takes the fun out of the game. Give a kid a baseball and they play ball..of some sort.
Start putting too many rules on..and they find something else to do. The trick is walking the line.

I guess one of my other struggles, is how does anyone here know God well enough to decree "this is God". I feel I can say how I understand God to-day, and based on the stories of our ancestors, regarding the teachings of Jesus Christ...and the teachings from the Old Testament. My perspective is also affected by my understandings of the teachings as midrash.(?correct grammar?)..
anyhow, gotta rush to work..thanks for your willingness to share/dialogue Mark.

Posted by Mark Fearnall on January 27, 19100 at 08:50:16:

In Reply to: Re: 20 ARTICLES !!! Changing?? Not Officially posted by Jayne Little on January 26, 19100 at 07:13:32:

Jayne,

I really like this game analogy, though perhaps it is pushing it to limits.

I think part of the differences we have come from what can change, and what can't change. I tend to focus on the latter, whereas I think you are focusing on the former.

I read a great piece by G.K. Chesterton on change [in the work "Heretics"]. "And even in the act of saying that things change, we say that there is something unchangeable." If something does not remain constant, then there cannot be real change. I am familiar with the game of chess. It has had some amazing changes (one of the most amazing is the power of the queen - least to most powerful piece). But there are still things that remained the same. If they didn't, it would be a new game.

And, perhaps incorrectly, that is what I hear in some advances for change in the Statement of Faith. It is what I hear in your statements. Not just a change, but a total rejection of the same under the guise of "change".

Let me explain it another way. I have never understood the modern attempt to get people to act in a certain way [in this case to allow nearly everything] while trying to maintain that this opinion is only a "perspective" and open to error. Why should I follow this way that one offers, when it is not even offered as "truth"? You, yourself, grant that your ideas are temporary and thereby not "truth"... or at best truth for you now until next week (whatever that means). You offer it as only one perspective that will probably change. IMO, there is no truth here. So why would I follow error, or at least the strong possibility of error? When you can say, here it was I know, then maybe we can talk.

If I am wrong, I welcome your correction. But if there is no right or wrong, why should I bother? As Chesterton
wrote, and I agree,

"... no man [or woman] ought to write at all, or even speak at all, unless he thinks that he is in truth and the other man in error." [Chesterton, "Heretics"]

If you believe I am in error, great! Show me why. If you don't know if I am in error - the post-modernist view - then what could you possibly being trying to convince me of?

When you ask "...how does anyone here know God well enough to decree 'this is God'?" I answer: I know by God's Spirit, God's revelation, and the Body of Jesus Christ!

But I suppose the best reply might be, how do you know I don't know? 

Mark

Posted by Peter VanderKam on January 29, 19100 at 10:46:05:

In Reply to: Re: 20 ARTICLES !!! Changing?? Not Officially posted by Mark Fearnall on January 27, 19100 at 08:50:16:

Mark,

In your conversation with Jayne, you said:

: I think part of the differences we have come from what can change, and what can't change. I tend to focus on the latter, whereas I think you are focusing on the former.

That is well possible. Problem is that you (with all due respect) would be hard pressed to define the unchangeable. (Read on)

: I read a great piece by G.K. Chesterton on change [in the work "Heretics"]. "And even in the act of saying that things change, we say that there is something unchangeable." …

Same observation, Mark, Define the unchangeable please.

: … And, perhaps incorrectly, that is what I hear in some advances for change in the Statement of Faith. It is what I hear in your statements. Not just a change, but a total rejection of the same under the guise of "change". If that is what you hear, I invite you to listen again. What Jayne, and others, are admitting to is ignorance as to what the real Mystery is, and requesting that everybody participate in the exercise of trying to unwrap it, … for everybody's benefit.

: Let me explain it another way. I have never understood the modern attempt to get people to act in a certain way [in this case to allow nearly everything] while trying to maintain that this opinion is only a "perspective" and open to error. Why should I follow this way that one offers, when it is not even offered as "truth"? …

You should follow it because of the process involved. You decide to work with Jayne in an effort to gain enlightenment, or you don't, in which case you ought to demonstrate that you don't have to participate as "you are in possession of The Truth" already". Same invitation, put that Truth out in the open for inspection, observation and contemplation.

:…You, yourself, grant that your ideas are temporary and thereby not "truth"... or at best truth for you now until next week (whatever that means). You offer it as only one perspective that will probably change. IMO, there is no truth here. So why would I follow error, or at least the strong possibility of error? When you can say, here it was I know, then maybe we can talk.

Two comments Mark: 
a) nobody here offers anything as The Truth. Jayne invites to discuss in order to work towards greater understanding.
b) I draw your attention to a number of your messages in the last month in which you admit to having changed your mind on certain topics. It follows that you above all ought to know that nobody can say: I KNOW the truth. 

: If I am wrong, I welcome your correction. But if there is no right or wrong, why should I bother? 

As above, keep studying and you may find an answer to this rhetorical question of yours.

: …As Chesterton wrote, and I agree,
: "... no man [or woman] ought to write at all, or even speak at all, unless he thinks that he is in truth and the other man in error." [Chesterton, "Heretics"]

Boy, the silence would be deafening, and ……refreshing, don't you agree? 

: If you believe I am in error, great! Show me why. If you don't know if I am in error - the post-modernist view - then what could you possibly being trying to convince me of?

AFAIAC, I hope you do change your mind and join the honest attempts which are under way to learn to understand the difference between our human knowledge of what is changeable and what is not.  God is unchangeable. The problem is that neither you nor I "know" what that exactly means and what that requires of us.

: When you ask "...how does anyone here know God well enough to decree 'this is God'?" I answer: I know by God's Spirit, God's revelation, and the Body of Jesus Christ!

Final offer: spell it out for all to see what God is and what that entails.

Peter

 

Posted by Mark Fearnall on January 29, 19100 at 18:40:39:

In Reply to: Re: 20 ARTICLES !!! Changing?? Not Officially posted by Peter VanderKam on January 29, 19100
at 10:46:05:

Peter,

If you are looking for a philosophical debate which is what I percieve, you have come to the right place :-) If not,  you can probably ignore what is below. I think you have misunderstood my attempts to engage in understanding together, as I see the striving for the truth as the only acceptable process. If we do not agree here, we might as well be silent as Jesus was before Pilate - "What is truth?"

: That is well possible. Problem is that you (with all due respect) would be hard pressed to define the unchangeable. (Read on)

: Same observation, Mark, Define the unchangeable please.

In what area? There are many things that are unchangeable... The truth of this conversation for one. It is real, regardless of what others believe, or whether others know of it in the future. The reality of this event is unchangeable (even if on the NET).

: If that is what you hear, I invite you to listen again. What Jayne, and others, are admitting to is ignorance as to what the real Mystery is, and requesting that everybody participate in the exercise of trying to unwrap it, … for everybody's benefit.

I was wrong... you are right!

[Really think about that! I mean really think about that! Should I say it again ;-) Hint: Truth and things that are unchangeable.]

: You should follow it because of the process involved. You decide to work with Jayne in an effort to gain enlightenment

What enlightenment? What is enlightement? Please specify without reference to truth which you claim no one can know. Yet, if it is not truth, then how can it be classed as enlightenment?

: Two comments Mark: 
: a) nobody here offers anything as The Truth. Jayne invites to discuss in order to work towards greater understanding.

Understanding of what? To understand something means seeing the truth, does it not?

: b) I draw your attention to a number of your messages in the last month in which you admit to having changed your mind on certain topics. It follows that you above all ought to know that nobody can say: I KNOW the truth. Is that the truth you just wrote?? Wake up and smell the coffee - You are making a truth claim!!

: : …As Chesterton wrote, and I agree,
: : "... no man [or woman] ought to write at all, or even speak at all, unless he thinks that he is in truth and the other man in error." [Chesterton, "Heretics"]

: Boy, the silence would be deafening, and ……refreshing, don't you agree?

Nope. Because you must think you are right in correcting me or pointing these things out, no? Otherwise why would you think I am wrong? If no one can know the truth - we can't even know that!

: : If you believe I am in error, great! Show me why. If you don't know if I am in error - the post-modernist view -
then what could you possibly being trying to convince me of?

: AFAIAC, I hope you do change your mind and join the honest attempts which are under way to learn to understand the difference between our human knowledge of what is changeable and what is not. 

: God is unchangeable. The problem is that neither you nor I "know" what that exactly means and what that requires of us.

Is that the truth (and unchangeable) that "God is unchangeable"? If it is you have just proven my point... if it isn't... well I will let you figure that out.

: : When you ask "...how does anyone here know God well enough to decree 'this is God'?" I answer: I know by God's Spirit, God's revelation, and the Body of Jesus Christ!

: Final offer: spell it out for all to see what God is and what that entails.

You have done a little of that for me, if your statements throughout have been the truth!

Mark

PS. God is love! That entails the sacrifice of God's self (Jesus) for you and I who God loves. Unchangeable truth!

Posted by Brad Morrison on January 30, 19100 at 22:29:06:

In Reply to: Re: 20 ARTICLES !!! Changing?? Not Officially posted by Mark Fearnall on January 29, 19100 at 18:40:39:

Mark:

Rather than say, "I KNOW (any) Truth," I would say, "I BELIEVE as Truth/Real what God has revealed in Jesus Christ."

Would you agree with this distinction?

It seems to me that it would still be human arrogance for me to say, "I know the Truth revealed by God in Jesus Christ."

Perhaps an insignificant distinction?...perhaps the main significance between philosophical discourse and
theological discourse?

Brad Morrison 

Posted by Mark Fearnall on January 31, 19100 at 07:25:43:

In Reply to: Re: 20 ARTICLES !!! Changing?? Not Officially posted by Brad Morrison on January 30, 19100 at 22:29:06:

: Rather than say, "I KNOW (any) Truth," I would say, "I BELIEVE as Truth/Real what God has revealed in Jesus Christ."

: Would you agree with this distinction?

No.

For I know that I am typing on a keyboard at this moment. I know this truth.

I think some might be asking whether I can "know that I know". No, I can't have apodictic knowledge of my knowledge. I can only "think I know", for it could be the case that life is a mirage and I am fooled every moment... Descartes is a pain if you ask me, but has some interesting notions.

I am not a strict rationalist like Descartes. I recognize that much of our knowledge does not come from direct observation or pure reason. But I would affirm that it is "knowledge" nonetheless. It is knowledge based on trust and relationship as well as observation and experience and rationality. As I see it these all are part of the process. For example, relational knowledge is still based on the knowledge that there is really a person/being I am having a relationship with.

I would use Websters 2nd definition of "know" as fitting what I am trying to say "to be aware of the truth or factuality of: be convinced or certain of". I don't think that always requires direct observation or pure reason. I use the pure reason/obervation examples to indicate that there is "some" knowledge to which we can say "I know this truth".

I give a few examples of biblical texts (see below - there are many, many more) which indicate to me that this is the Christian worldview of knowledge.

I do not accept that we can't know "anything". I am sorry, but as much as I respect the work of Newbingin, to me it is silly to say we can't know anything (Greg refers to this in another post). For he at least "knows" that he can't know anything, so he knows something! And if he doesn't know that he can't know anything, then he can't make that claim, right?

Rather convoluted :-)

Matthew 13:11
"To you it has been given to know the secrets of the kingdom of heaven, but to them it has not been given."

Luke 1:76-77
"And you, child, will be called the prophet of the Most High; for you will go before the Lord to prepare his ways, to give knowledge of salvation to his people by the forgiveness of their sins."

John 4:42
"They said to the woman, “It is no longer because of what you said that we believe, for we have heard for ourselves, and we know that this is truly the Savior of the world.”"

Eph. 1:8-10
"With all wisdom and insight he has made known to us the mystery of his will, according to his good pleasure that he set forth in Christ, as a plan for the fullness of time, to gather up all things in him, things in heaven and things on earth."

: It seems to me that it would still be human arrogance for me to say, "I know the Truth revealed by God in Jesus Christ."

Well, I would actually agree, believe it or not. All I am claiming is I know some things, not everything. "I know in part" Paul says somewhere. He does know, but not all, and none of us know everything. [But see I can know that too :-)]

Mark

Posted by Brad Morrison on January 31, 19100 at 21:20:35:

In Reply to: Now Knowledge/Truth posted by Mark Fearnall on January 31, 19100 at 07:25:43:

Mark:

I appreciate the finer points of your argument, and that you are using the word "know" in terms of awareness vs. direct observation/pure reason.

In general, though, I prefer to use "to know" in the first sense, that is, to grasp by pure reason.

Given this definition of "to know" I take a rather Barthian route from there.

For me to say I "know God" makes the incarnation superfluous [granted, though, you do back your position up with scripture].

In accepting Jesus Christ as Lord and Saviour, I submit that I cannot "know" God; rather, I believe what is revealed of God, in general to Israel, and in particular in Jesus Christ.

But the question arises, Can I "know" creation...things...stuff about our present reality...stuff about my self?  Well, if I take seriously the revelation of God in Jesus Christ--the necessity of that revelation/incarnation--then I must come to believe that any assertions of knowledge I may have had previously must have been illusions or partial truths: for in the revelation of Jesus Christ I come to "know" the world with new eyes. As a Christian, I resist saying, "I know such-and-such truth of the world" and instead say "In Jesus Christ I have come to believe such-and-such about the world."

Let me stop here so I can here your comments on these thoughts.

Brad Morrison 

Posted by Mark Fearnall on January 31, 19100 at 22:31:29:

In Reply to: Re: Now Knowledge/Truth posted by Brad Morrison on January 31, 19100 at 21:20:35:

Brad,

I like the way you put things here. With the distinctions you have made I don't think (I won't say I know :-) we are very far apart in our understanding.

If I were, for sake of discussion, to accept that "know" only refers to direct observation/pure reason, I would agree with your direction. Of course then there are many things I can't know.

However, I have rejected and would continue to reject that limited idea of "know". Not only for scriptural reasons, but also because I don't think many of us live that limited in life. For example (got thinking of this as I did a funeral for a friend today and could see the great love of his family), I can say I love my wife, but there is nothing through pure reason or direct observation that can prove the truth of love... yet I would maintain the reality of that love, not just as a possibility but as the truth.

I think that by allowing ourselves to be limited to "rational knowledge" we give in to both the modernist and post-modernist world-view. I do not see Reason and Faith as two separate compartments, but as matters that go hand-in-hand.

I really like your last paragraph, but I would still word it slightly differently. I would say "I believe in Jesus Christ and the reality he reveals (he is) and based on that I can know such-and-such".

However, that is not to take away from your statement. Correct me if I am wrong, but I hear you saying "I believe in order to understand" [Augustine if I remember]... and I have always liked that thinking.

I suppose I would emphasize the knowledge that comes from that believing which is why I would still say I can "know" God... although that isn't quite accurate, because I believe God has made Himself known to me. I arrive at this knowledge through God's self-revelation, not through my reason/works/striving etc.

Mark

: Mark:

: I appreciate the finer points of your argument, and that you are using the word "know" in terms of awareness vs. direct observation/pure reason.

: In general, though, I prefer to use "to know" in the first sense, that is, to grasp by pure reason.

: Given this definition of "to know" I take a rather Barthian route from there.

: For me to say I "know God" makes the incarnation superfluous [granted, though, you do back your position up with scripture].

: In accepting Jesus Christ as Lord and Saviour, I submit that I cannot "know" God; rather, I believe what is revealed of God, in general to Israel, and in particular in Jesus Christ.

: But the question arises, Can I "know" creation...things...stuff about our present reality...stuff about my self? 

: Well, if I take seriously the revelation of God in Jesus Christ--the necessity of that revelation/incarnation--then I
must come to believe that any assertions of knowledge I may have had previously must have been illusions or partial truths: for in the revelation of Jesus Christ I come to "know" the world with new eyes. As a Christian, I resist saying, "I know such-and-such truth of the world" and instead say "In Jesus Christ I have come to believe such-and-such about the world."

: Let me stop here so I can hear your comments on these thoughts.

: Brad Morrison


Posted by Jayne Little on February 01, 19100 at 22:06:07:

In Reply to: Re: Now Knowledge/Truth posted by Mark Fearnall on January 31, 19100 at 22:31:29:

Thank you for this dialogue.

After I posted the question about "know" to Mark, I continued to reflect...and the essential element that I came down to ...is for me the best verb would be "I believe"...and that may be the mathematician/logic element.

Mark & Brad...are you ministers? or theological students...as in active or past study?

Mark, I "hear" you using "know"...as in through my faith, I know, in the depths of my core..

Brad, you are using "belief"...as in there may be more truths that I have not been revealed, or do not yet understood...so I believe.
Is that a fair comparison.

Posted by Mark Fearnall on February 03, 19100 at 07:07:35:

In Reply to: Re: Now Knowledge/Truth posted by Jayne Little on February 01, 19100 at 22:06:07:

: After I posted the question about "know" to Mark, I continued to reflect...and the essential element that I came down to ...is for me the best verb would be "I believe"...and that may be the mathematician/logic element.

: Mark & Brad...are you ministers? or theological students...as in active or past study?

I am a minister at Shawville United Church in Shawville Quebec.

: Mark, I "hear" you using "know"...as in through my faith, I know, in the depths of my core..

I guess I would like to say, through all of me... faith, reason, etc. I find that knowledge is revealed (found) through many different means. I do agree with Brad about striving to submit any knowledge to the revelation of God in Jesus Christ.

I sort of think of it like the "hermeneutical circle". Are you familiar with it? It sees interpretation as a circle that goes round and round. We continue to test various ideas around this circle.

I see knowledge (in life) as this type of circle. It is continually tested against all the ways that knowledge comes to us (not limited to just observation and pure reason). The point which breaks into the circle is Jesus Christ.

I haven't fully explored this idea, so if it is more confusing than helpful just ignore.

Mark 


Posted by Brad Morrison on February 02, 19100 at 22:31:27:

In Reply to: Re: Now Knowledge/Truth posted by Jayne Little on February 01, 19100 at 22:06:07:

Mark & Jayne:

I guess Mark and I would agree with one another withthis statement: our knowledge of the world, human being-ness, and the divine is a knowledge/knowing/gnosis that is always and everywhere (or strives to be) secondary to the revelation of God in Jesus Christ.

Mark, you suggested that my restricted use of "to know" enslaves me to modernist/rationalist epistemologies. On the contrary, I hold to a "narratological" epistemology (a post-structuralist epistemology that is not equated to, but is comfortable with relativist/constructivist epistemology). I can hold to this position because I do subjugate "knowing" to that which I can only choose to believe in Jesus Christ.

Your thoughts?

Brad
soon-to-be Pastoral Care Minister at Grace United Church, Sarnia 

Posted by Mark Fearnall on February 03, 19100 at 06:57:41:

In Reply to: Re: Now Knowledge/Truth posted by Brad Morrison on February 02, 19100 at 22:31:27:

Brad,


You wrote:
: I guess Mark and I would agree with one another withthis statement: our knowledge of the world, human being-ness, and the divine is a knowledge/knowing/gnosis that is always and everywhere (or strives to be) secondary to the revelation of God in Jesus Christ.

I would agree with that!

: Mark, you suggested that my restricted use of "to know" enslaves me to modernist/rationalist epistemologies. On the contrary, I hold to a "narratological" epistemology (a post-structuralist epistemology that is not equated to, but is comfortable with relativist/constructivist epistemology).

Could you please explain more of this "post-structuralist epistemology"... I am not familiar with it at all.

In my Bible reading I came across this famous passage: "If you continue in my word, you are truly my disciples; and you will _know the truth_, and the truth will make you free."

Would that fit in with this post-structuralist epistemology?

Thanks,

Mark 

Posted by Greg Smith-Young on January 31, 19100 at 06:14:10:

In Reply to: Re: 20 ARTICLES !!! Changing?? Not Officially posted by Brad Morrison on January 30, 19100 at 22:29:06:

: Mark:

: Rather than say, "I KNOW (any) Truth," I would say, "I BELIEVE as Truth/Real what God has revealed in Jesus Christ."

: Would you agree with this distinction?

: It seems to me that it would still be human arrogance for me to say, "I know the Truth revealed by God in Jesus Christ."

: Perhaps an insignificant distinction?...perhaps the main significance between philosophical discourse and theological discourse?

: Brad Morrison

Might I suggest a read of "Proper Confidence" by Lesslie Newbiggin. He looks at the postmodern critique of knowing (he agrees that we cannot know *anything*, including scientific knowledge, with certainty. He then argues that we can have *confidence* that what we believe is true. (ie he makes the distinction between confidence and certainty).

Greg

Posted by Jayne Little on January 31, 19100 at 01:26:03:

In Reply to: Re: 20 ARTICLES !!! Changing?? Not Officially posted by Brad Morrison on January 30, 19100 at 22:29:06:

Thanks Peter, Brad & Mark, for continuing this thread.

It is the dialogue on what is mystery that is what I seek in this.
Mystery will be different for you & I.

In some threads, I have shared what I feel of God, Spirit, Jesus Christ, our call, discipleship, ministry..and so on.
I cannot say I understand these subjects. I hope to learn more as I grow.

I do know, I don't understand the Articles.
I am a lay person, not a studied theologian.

I read when I can, and I worship, and I continue to dwell and seek a better understanding.

I wish that those who "understand" the articles, would help those of us, who don't, by even just taking the tiny
step, to put them into to-days language.
I don't understand why this is such a hard task for people to grasp, or why it seems to rattle people.

Is it scary to discuss our faith? It takes personal sharing.

I guess, I just don't get all the ruccous..that is going on over the discussion, as compared to the dialogues on the statements.

still struggling,
jayne 

Posted by Jayne Little on January 28, 19100 at 17:11:34:

In Reply to: Re: 20 ARTICLES !!! Changing?? Not Officially posted by Mark Fearnall on January 27, 19100 at 08:50:16:

Mark, 
Could you tell me, in your words, what you know of God.

I think one of the problems for me, is that the articles are in language from their time.
This is cool, if you are someone who studies them.
For someone like me, a lay person, I need an interpreter.
It is similar for sections of the bible, which when explained to me, in the historical context, make absolute sense.

I guess part of what I am looking for, or hoping will come out of this, is an better understanding of my faith, and my faith as it relates to the amazing spectrum within the UCCan

The other aspect, is to understand what parts of the articles are historical, based on the culture they were written in, and may no longer be relevant, versus that which is the core truths.

Does that explain my participation..and goals?
It isn't that I wish to change anyone's faith, or expect them too..

I do hope that we can dialogue on aspects important to our faith.
I also hope that we will find some "essential agreements".

Jayne 

Posted by Mark Fearnall on January 29, 19100 at 21:00:21:

In Reply to: Re: 20 ARTICLES !!! Changing?? Not Officially posted by Jayne Little on January 28, 19100 at 17:11:34:

: Mark, 
: Could you tell me, in your words, what you know of God.

I know that God cares about you and me, about this world and what's going. I know that God doesn't like wrong-doing (sin) and the fact that we constantly want our own ways, our own desires. I know that we humans have messed up, big-time. We have broken our relationship with God, and thereby with each other. I know that God loves us so much that though He does not casually shrug off the brokeness (for God is holy), God does the work of restoring the relationship Himself. I know that God has done this in the person of Jesus Christ, my Lord and my God, who died, but has been raised from death.

There are other things I know, some with more certainty, some with less, but of these things I am persuaded. 

Mark

: I think one of the problems for me, is that the articles are in language from their time.
: This is cool, if you are someone who studies them.
: For someone like me, a lay person, I need an interpretor.
: It is similair for sections of the bible, which when explained to me, in the historical context, make absolute
sense.

: I guess part of what I am looking for, or hoping will come out of this, is an better understanding of my faith, and
my faith as it relates to the amazing spectrum within the UCCan

: The other aspect, is to understand what parts of the articles are historical, based on the culture they were
written in, and may no longer be relevant, versus that which is the core truths.

: Does that explain my participation..and goals?
: It isn't that I wish to change anyone's faith, or expect them too..

Yes, it makes sense to me.

Mark

Posted by Jayne Little on January 31, 19100 at 01:33:11:

In Reply to: Re: 20 ARTICLES !!! Changing?? Not Officially posted by Mark Fearnall on January 29, 19100 at 21:00:21:

Hi Mark.
Thanks for sharing your understanding of God.

I can't use the word "know", which I see you can.
I use "feel"..
Do you think the difference between the verbs is more than semantics? I do..but I'd like to check with you.

If so, did you always "know". I wonder if that is teaching, or being.

Other things you have said, I would also like to explore with you...but first, I would like to know how you know...it's a deep faith..I say I "know" there is God, Spirit. I don't understand how I know, but I do.
Is that the same for you...or is it something different.

Jayne


Posted by Mark Fearnall on January 31, 19100 at 07:54:16:

In Reply to: Re: 20 ARTICLES !!! Changing?? Not Officially posted by Jayne Little on January 31, 19100 at
01:33:11:

: I can't use the word "know", which I see you can.
: I use "feel"..
: Do you think the difference between the verbs is more than semantics? I do..but I'd like to check with you.

Yes, I suspect that our difference here would be more than semantics.

: If so, did you always "know". I wonder if that is teaching, or being.

Honestly, I can't remember a time I didn't know God. I remember being about 6 and praying beside my bed for forgiveness (believe me I needed it at 6, and still do), but I was convinced of God's existence before that! Now, my knowledge has been corrected at times [I am sure Peter will pick up on that comment :-), but remember Peter that to be corrected means there must be error to correct (and thus there is truth)!] and I have learned more and more of God, or more precisely, God has made more and more of Himself known to me.

If I understand you correctly about "teaching/being" I would say it is both. Who I am develops in many ways including from learning.

: Other things you have said, I would also like to explore with you...but first, I would like to know
: how you know...it's a deep faith..
: I say I "know" there is God, Spirit. I don't understand how I know, but I do.
: Is that the same for you...or is it something different.

It is similar. I can't explain all the "ins and outs" of how I came to know God in various ways (and still continue to learn of God in new and exciting ways - I say exciting but I don't mean they are easy, I tend to fight everything including God, unfortunately). The main "sources" or "springs" of knowledge I have found have been everyday experiences, the scriptures, history, study, the church (body of Christ), and the Holy Spirit (although I am at a loss to explain the great workings of the Holy Spirit).

I have had and continue to have doubts. As much as it might appear by my emphasis on "knowing truth" that I wouldn't have doubts, that would be reading too much into my words.

Mark

 

 

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