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Wednesday, February 15, 2006

Nothing mere about it

This post started out with me writing about the book I just finished reading: Mere Christianity. But as I went to my favourite source of gratuitous links for my posts, Wikipedia, I found that the article there was in some ways rather critical of the book, which I have almost nothing but praise for. Its main point concerns Lewis being vague and creating false dilemmas. The piece of the book they choose to illustrate this (evidently a famous portion, quoted by Ronald Reagan at some point...) was one that I found to be particularly profound.

A man who was merely a man and said the sort of things Jesus said would not be a great moral teacher. He would either be a lunatic—on the level with a man who says he is a poached egg—or he would be the devil of hell. You must take your choice. Either this was, and is, the Son of God, or else a madman or something worse. You can shut Him up for a fool or you can fall at His feet and call Him Lord and God. But let us not come with any patronizing nonsense about His being a great human teacher. He has not left that open to us.

Wikipedia's "argument" is that Lewis doesn't consider other reasonable options, such as Christ's claim of being the Son of God being attributed to him later by the writers of the Gospels. To me that argument isn't even really this argument at all. Really, that argument is asking whether or not Scripture is ispired word or a nice piece of literature. With regards to Lewis being vague, I see many of his metaphors as being simplifications, but what good is a metaphor if it is more complicated than the thing it is trying to convey?

This could quickly turn into a rant about Wikipedia and the bias of a system where anyone can write about anything they like, and work their own views into it, but I'll leave that for another day.

Really I would rather talk about the book. I think it should be required reading for anyone who is Christian, is thinking of becoming Christian or isn't Christian and would like to hear some good reasons to think about it. It solidified for me a good number of things that I either understood poorly, or had never thought about. Parts of faith can often be taken at face value as you're taught them, and this pulls those things out and gives a how and why to them.

FInally it would seem that as I slowly read the book a few chapters at a time, the part of the book I was reading would seem remarkably applicable at that exact moment. From Bible study discussions where I would immediately see the connection to what I had read to discussions with friends to random daily events, I would see connections back to the book. Coincidence can be blamed for many things, and maybe I was looking for what I had read and therefore finding it, but it would seem to me that there might be a bit more behind this. In either case, it was a great book: thought provoking, applicable and remarkably readable for what passes as a theology text. Now everyone should go out and read it. Yes, that means you.

5 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I agree, it's a great book - one of my favourites. If you really want to appreciate its simplicity and direct language, try reading one of Lewis' lesser-known apologetics... I remember reading the same page in "The Problem of Pain" three or four times and still having no idea what he was trying to say...

-Adam F

9:34 a.m.  
Blogger James said...

Sorry Art, majority wins in the world of Wikipedia. And the majority of the intellectual world, be it in philosophy or religious studies, thinks that Christian theologians or rationalists haven't a leg to stand on. Talk to Rose about it someday, I'm sure she'll agree that the life of a God-fearing philosopher isn't easy... and is therefore atypical.

I find that when I read a controversial Wikipedia article it can be beneficial (although wickedly time consuming) to read the discussion on the topic as well. Unfortunately, no one has really added much to the page on Mere Christianity. Maybe you can (nudge, nudge...)

11:18 p.m.  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Art, I have always remembered, and tried to quote at times, that part about lunatic or Lord. It's fantastic. Wikipedia might have a good point, but you're right, I think Lewis is saying -given that the bible is true, these are your options- whereas Wikipedia is coming at it from a different angle...
Anyways, I'll have to read it again. When I read it in highschool I liked it so much that I stole it from the school...
ROSE

7:55 a.m.  
Blogger Art said...

Rose, the very thought of you stealing a book from the library is enough to make me chuckle, but I suppose you did it for the right reasons in this case... or something like that.

I think I'll just return this copy and plan on investing in my own later.

1:20 a.m.  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Art
Mrs. K said that was one of the books that has had a major impact with her. That particular quote is probably Lewis's most famous. the encyclopedia misses the point when it says that Jesus was mytholized by the authors. It takes at least two generations for a life to become myth rather than truth. Even if you take later dates for the gospels (and no one seriously takes more than a.d. 70 as the latest),then you are within one generation and still eyewitnesses around. Coupled with the accepted historical fact that the disciples died martyr's deaths over a prolonged period of time over widely scattered places (James in Jerusalem, Peter in Rome, some in Egypt, India and other places) they would independently be dying without each others support for what they knew was a lie.
Jesus was not a good teacher. He was either fully God, or crazy. Can't say he was a misunderstood good teacher. Of course modern interpretation would say that all the statements of his divinity, and all the miracles were added later (as espoused by the Jesus Seminar, etc.)
Tell your buddy Brian to quit watching movies and read some good books

7:24 p.m.  

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