Chapter 3 . A God for the Gaps
Chapter 3. A God for the Gaps
Modern liturgy and worship is meaningless and unappealing.
We dodoge any idea that the theology which we offer is seriously flawed,
and the clergy, though aware of this, dare not educate their people to new horizons.
We run through all the good things that the church is doing, but fail to identify what it is not.
Jesus also got it wrong, in that the Kingdom, which he proclaimed, never materialised.
The church only took concrete form in the 4th century under Roman authority.
One problem is however that the aspects of God's Kingdom have taken form
outside the coverage of the church, and even despite the church.
Secular society does feed the poor, heal the sick, etc.
The issue of forms of worship, and of worship, should be peripheral.
The Eucharist is unfamilair and off-putting to all but the few.
The need of "outsiders" is for stability, familiarity, and order.
Services should be regular, not over-long and conveniently timed.
There is a common view, shared by those lost to the church. that:
* Christianity's record is pretty poor and its resistance to change deplorable.
* Christianity is not the only answer. All faiths are expressions of man's search for God.
* Missionary activity amongst other faiths should be abandonned.
* Church "mumbo-jumbo", outdated theology, and weasel words are not to be trusted.
* The church's foundation myth (resurrection, moracles etc) have little veracity.
* The church's obsessions with sinfulness and sexual mores are irrelevant.
These problems derive from two outdated ideas:
* The Bible as the inerrant Wordof God.
* The divinity of Jesus.
Discarding these two obstacles would clear a lot of the debris.
However such ideas have been kept secret from congregations.
The church is now reaping the inheritance of its dishonesty.
The laity have never been taught what modern scholarship has discovered,
about the Bible, including the New Testament, and Church history .
As a result, fundamentalism and superstition have thrived.