In May 2003, I defended my Masters Thesis in physics. The subject matter of that thesis was one I
had worked on during the previous two years.
It was something that I researched and thought about every day during
that time, so I was fully prepared on the day of my defense. I had become fully acclimated to the rigors
of the scientific method, and the procedure by which scientists hope to inch
forward, ever so slightly, in their pursuit of knowledge and truth. I was very privileged to be the tiniest part
of that process. I was but a mere blip
on the radar, and I was honored to be in the shadow of my professors and
collaborators, who were most brilliant men and women I had ever met. I had changed immensely since I had first
enrolled at NMT as a 31 years old freshman in 1995. I had taken the first steps toward becoming critical in my
thinking, and understanding the importance of methodology. I was immersed in the world of
scientific inquiry and investigation, and the naïve religious beliefs of my
youth seemed a million miles away.
No I was not an atheist.
I still considered myself a Christian.
I still believed. In
something. What exactly I believed in
during that time was a little vague, ill-defined, and evolving over the course
of time. I would not say that it was
syncretistic. I was not trying to
combine all religious beliefs into a single true one. I did not think that all gods were the same. The only religious tradition that made any
sense to me was the one that I was raised in, and the one I converted to in
Calvary Chapel. I believed in Jesus, of
course. And of course he died on the
Cross as an atonement for our sins.
Yes, of course, he died on that cross and rose again three days
later. He was the All-Mighty after
all. But my old beliefs about an His
literal ascension into Heaven – well, I knew far too much astrophysics and astronomy
at this point to know that this post-mortem destination of Jesus could not be
taken literally. The disciples of Jesus
are said to have watched Jesus float off of the ground and rise into
Heaven. The disciples peered into the
sky to watch Him disappear into the clouds.
The person who wrote those Biblical scenes some 2000 years ago obviously
thought that the abode of Jesus was in a place located in the sky beyond the
clouds. But I knew what was up
there. My research work and thesis was
in astrophysics. I had done work at the
VLA radio telescope observatory, and had spent many evenings in the Etscorn
Campus observatory just for fun. I
understood, better than any of the ancient Gospel authors, what actually
comprised the heavens. So where exactly
did Jesus go when he lifted off the earth?
What was his real destination?
Somewhere in the cosmos? Was he
blasting through outer space until He reached his Heavenly Throne? If not, where did He go exactly? This small part of the Gospels, like so many
other small parts of the Bible and of my Faith, retreated into the world of
metaphor and myth. Quite what these
stories meant, I did not exactly know.
All I knew was that stories like this could not be taken as literal
truth. They were true, in some
non-literal sense. But again, I did not
know what non-literal sense I could make of these things I knew to be still
somehow true.
All I knew was that the Christianity in the literal and
exclusive form that I believed in Calvary Chapel was wrong. It was simplistic and willfully ignorant of
too much science and heretical Worldly Wisdom. The world was vastly more enormous and complicated than the
Biblical writers could ever have imagined.
But at the time, I did not dwell on these problems too much. I had other priorities in mind – like
working on my Masters thesis, research and teaching freshman classes.
My way of reconciling myth and metaphor in my religious
beliefs, and what I knew of physical reality came one evening when visiting a
friend. He introduced me to a VHS tape
the he had on a shelf. “You never heard
of Joseph Campbell? Oh, you would
absolutely love him. A whole new view
of the world. He has some very
interesting ideas. Why don’t we watch
some if it!” Yes, this is the kind of
thing we did for entertainment in the tiny farm and university town of Socorro,
New Mexico. So I watched a bit of Bill
Moyers interviewing Joseph Campbell, on the Power of Myth. This was the first time I can remember
hearing somebody compare, even equate stories from the Christian Bible with
pagan mythology. Campbell spoke
endlessly on the mythology of the hero, and how the same hero-themes occur
again and again in our mythologies.
These myths, I later learned, are the chain of literature and
imagination that can be linked back to antiquity and beyond our earliest
rememberings. These themes bridge
cultures and time, and somehow strike a nerve in all of us. They are the same themes that occur often in
literature – because they are the same themes that ultimately make a good
story. Campbell paid particular
attention to the hero-themes in a story like Star Wars, and why we seem to
resonate with these stories so well.
But these themes are also present in our mythologies and our
religions. They are even present in our
Biblical mythologies and traditions.
Joseph Campbell was my introduction to comparative
mythology. This captured my
imagination, but I dared not extend that too far into comparative mythology and
religion. Campbell did dare to do this,
and I had never heard such potentially dangerous ideas before. But I was not too shocked. I had learned by this time in my life to not
be so thin-skinned and ready to be persecuted as I was as a
Fundamentalist. In fact, it was somehow
comforting. By this time, I was fully
aware that much of the Bible could not be taken literally as I had once thought. I was at a loss as to how to reconcile my
evolving Christian beliefs with obviously non-literal Bible stories like Adam
and Eve. But somehow, Joseph Campbell
and his comparative mythology allowed me to admit that Adam and Eve was just
mythology – but mythology with common themes like God’s love and justice,
humanity’s faithlessness, pride, and foolish propensity to be deceived. God could inspire the Bible, and use myth in
His inspiration. Myth was the way God
could communicate these ideas of love, justice and redemption in a way that
transcended all cultures. Since myth
contained elements and themes that were ubiquitous in stories and ideas, people
could readily understand what was in the Bible as myth, but with deeper
meaning. Myth at its best, I came to
believe, was just “symbolic disguisings of the truth”.
With this new rationale, I was able to admit that the Bible
did indeed contain myth, but it was no less inspired by the Divine. Some parts of the Bible, particularly the
fantastic parts in Genesis, could finally be reconciled with my scientific
knowledge. And as long as I did not
travel too far down the trail of comparative mythology, as long as I did not
take comparative mythology to some of its ultimate conclusions, I felt
confident that my Christian beliefs, although evolving, were still ultimately
true.
I had never met a non-believer before I attended University,
but I thought I knew a little bit about them.
I had been told by Pastor Skip that atheists lived meaningless and empty
lives. They were miserable people
because they believed in absolutely nothing.
Skip told us from that pulpit that atheists should just end their
misery, and by following their own rules of logic, should just go and kill
themselves. I had never met a real atheist
before, so it was easy to demonize these godless people. But after befriending one atheist, then
another, and then several more, I had to admit that their lives seemed anything
but hopeless and empty. There was that
cultural divide again. Most of my
friends were foreign students from places like Germany, China, Romania and
Croatia. When I found out that some of
them were in fact non-believers, it was not because they advertised it. It just slipped out, like when I asked one
of them about her belief in the afterlife.
“Heaven? Hell? That
is superstition. When I die, I will
die. That’s it.”
Yet they all seemed somehow normal. I thought they were mistaken, and that
surely our spirit would live on through eternity. But they were not the raging, hateful maniacs that Pastor Skip
told me they would be. They were not
miserable and hopeless; at least they did not seem to be. Pastor Skip would often say that people without
Jesus often seemed to be happy, but that was just a mask for public display. We do not know their real spirits and true
intentions, and deep inside they are all desperately lost, and seeking for God
to fill the aching hole in their hearts.
Pastor Skip constantly warned us about the hypocrisy of non-believers,
but I grew tired of imagining that behind closed doors my non-Christian friends
were actually depressed, lost and miserable people, and I grew tired of
imagining that I knew their hidden but true state of conscious
hopelessness. Pastor Skip confessed
that we did not know their secret thoughts, but he went on to tell us what they
were! According to him, not only all
Christians, but only Christians, had fulfilled and purposeful lives, but
I came to understand that this simply was just not true. I had been as fervent a Christian as I could
be, yet I had to leave such exclusive beliefs behind for my own sanity. At the same time, these non-Christians from
all across the globe were certainly not so miserable that they would be better
off committing suicide. How dare Skip
Heitzig!! He had no business to tell
these fine friends of mine or anybody else to go and kill themselves! What in the world is wrong with Pastor Skip?
The further I got from Calvary Chapel, the more I
discovered, little by little, that nearly everything Pastor Skip told me was
false. Just wrong. Of course he did not lie. I thought, he was
just ignorant of the facts. All his
thoughts were just tainted with his own religious paradigm that he could not
think outside of. He was still,
underneath, an upstanding and moral man.
But at the same time I could understand why many Christians were
reluctant to send their children to a public university only to be exposed to
subversive ideas, cross-cultural pollination, and contrary views. It could do nothing but puncture insulated
and untainted naiveté. Knowledge was
dangerous, just like it was symbolized in the myth of Adam, Eve, and the
tempting, powerful and corrupting fruit of the Tree of Knowledge.
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2 comments:
It is interesting, HiS, that the beliefs you describe here are pretty close to my own, which have lasted for several decades now.
I wonder why you didn't stop there, but I did?
I think part of the explanation must be the influences in our earlier lives as christians. You had Pastor Skip, whereas my main influence as a young christian was CS Lewis. There would be big differences between these two!
CS Lewis was a scholar of history, language and literature. He thought Genesis was myth - though a divinely inspired myth - and he thought the mythical element slowly crystalised into historic fact through the Old Testament. I saw nothing unbelievable or difficult about that.
But even in the NT, we have to be careful. For example, the ascension of Jesus. CS Lewis said, what was God going to do?
Just have Jesus disappear without anyone seeing him go? That would be very confusing!
Have him disappear instantly in front of their eyes? That would be scary.
Have him ride off into the sunset? That would send a message that he was somewhere else on earth.
Have him drop into the ground? What message would that send?
No, the only way to get across what his followers needed to know was to have him rise into the air and disappear - then they would know he had returned to his father.
Of course they believed at that time that heaven was 'up there', and we know now it's not, it must be in some other dimension entirely. But that doesn't matter. CS Lewis also said that once christianity interacted with the philosophy of the time, they were quite able to see that heaven wasn't literally up there, but until then, this was the best way.
So I believe he did go up literally, but that was for their benefit, not because he was going into outer space.
Thanks again for sharing your journey.
unkleE, had I been allowed to believe that myths were contained in the Bible, who knows where I would be today? The tension caused by the things Christianity was forcing me to believe caused me to snap. But I only snapped by leaving Calvary Chapel. That is not what finally made me leave Christianity.
Your view of the ascension was exactly how I would have stated it as a more enlightened Christian in college. Jesus was just meeting his followers where they were. But these rationalizations can seem pretty arbitrary. Take this bit:
Have him disappear instantly in front of their eyes? That would be scary.
Any more scary then flying up into the clouds? Witnessing a transfiguration? Walking on water? Seeing a dead man walk? How does CS Lewis know what the witnesses of the miraculous and fantastic would have found more or less scary? And why does that even matter?
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