I loved this week in class. Chapter 14 was a discussion of how God works
in the world, or rather how to talk about how God works in the world, how it
really happens is still up for discussion.
Chapter 15 was an introduction to theological ethics and that quagmire, following
on the heels of how God works in the world was, for me, a fabulous
juxtaposition of concepts.
Theological ethics or Christian
social ethics is tied in deeply with how we believe God works in the world on a
very concrete, practical level. The crux
of the difficulty with theological ethics is that there are so very many
theologies out there and when it comes to answering individual moral questions
each person involved holds a stance that may or may not result in a consensus
regarding the issue. Another component
of this is the nature of our world today.
Take the issue of end of life
decisions. Not so very long ago most
people just died usually at home in their beds with their family around them and
it was accepted as part of life, in some small parts of the world it is still
that way. There’s no discussion of
shutting off the ventilator or discontinuing a feeding tube. There aren’t any. The body either lives or dies. The medicine man may be called in, but that’s
about all the options available. If the
patient dies, there’s no one to sue, no reputation of the mega medical complex
to consider, no discussion of the cost of keeping this person alive, no media
to contend with, no possibility of laying the blame onto a product or instrument
malfunction, no concern about precedent and slippery slopes.
The issues listed above should not
affect end of life issues, but they do, every day. It would be wonderful to be able consider “simply”
the theological issues that concern a given ethical situation but life today
just isn’t that easy. I truly believe
that our technological life far outweighs our human ability to intelligently
and ethically deal with it. But deal we
must. So what to do?
It comes to me (and perhaps this has
been said in class) that our deepest understandings of God have not kept pace
with man’s ability to express the ideas that we as metaphysicians believe are
inspired by God. In other words, we’re
good at expressing (producing “stuff”), building on older ideas and concepts, but
it seems that we have left behind the very idea of the allness of God in our
lives. (Of course that’s only one theology.) Sure, the great theological
scholars have brought forth ideas in an effort to concretize God. But that is the problem. Culturally, we have frozen the concept of God
in time while we have built an amazing world on all of the theories and
understandings of other great minds that weren’t dealing with the issue of God
directly, (Although we all know Einstein and many others had their theories
about God.) We cling desperately to the past regarding the very thing that has
brought us to this very modern moment. I
guess I’m a process theologist.
Chapter 14 has a lovely discussion
of Grace, most religions have a concept of that in some form and I think in the
process of trying to do the “right” or “correct” thing as humans we forget
about that. Praying won’t always “fix”
the problem but a trust in our innate connection to a higher power and a
willingness to consciously tap into that when the going gets tough may provide
us with insights that could facilitate more compassionate, intelligent answers
to some of life’s most difficult questions.
And yes, as Christians and participants in the community of mankind we
should get involved AND we need to update our God. (Thank-you Pope Francis)
What you talk about is the very thing Eckhart Tolle calls " The New Earth". Where we live more in the Allness of God, and not in an " idea" of what God is. I personally like the way I feel when I can just be in the Presence, and not trying to be something I am not, or achieve something I "think" is important. I would like to spend my time here in school, BEING, and yes there are assignments, but when I "let go and let God", the process seems to work well.Thank you, Keri!
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