Following gestation over a long period my understanding of what it means to hold to Christian belief has moved away from unquestioning acceptance of church creeds, doctrine and dogma. I do not regard scripture as literally the word of God, nor the result of God's inspiration, and therefore not to be challenged. Scripture, creeds, doctrine and dogma are human creations in their entireties and not the result of activity by metaphysical or anthropomorphic sources.
The bible is not a statement of rules set out by an omnipresent god 'out there' that have to be followed if we are to receive the reward of eternal life. It sets out the ideas of authors over 2000 years ago. The world has moved on. Christian belief evolves: it is not set in stone by manuscripts written long ago. But we should not consign the bible to the dump. It is a valuable source and resource of concepts. Yet we need to remember that it is of human origin and not to be cloaked with the veneer of the divine.
It is my perception that we have allowed ourselves to be hemmed in by church doctrine and dogma and by scripture. No matter what method of biblical interpretation is used: literal, liberal, historical, progressive etc, we permit our ideas to be contained and constrained within the parameters or envelope of scripture. It is as though our understanding of God's purpose is fixed in work composed in a distant past
Surely we can do better than be boxed in by the gatekeepers and guardians of 'the truth'? We can be inspired by concepts attributed by the authors of the synoptic gospels to a person we know as Jesus, but we need to appreciate that the concepts are subjective and capable of varied interpretations, not objective unchangeable 'truth'. Flexibility, not rigidity, is the order of the day.
You might think I am a humanist, or even an atheist, in expressing the opinions very briefly outlined above. I reject both appellations. It is my opinion that inherent within each of us is the power to love: to love our neighbour. So I argue love is God within us, it is our task to tease out what that means. Jesus points the way, but his is not the final nor only word. Our understanding of what it is to love should not be bound by adherence, however interpreted, to scripture. It is not a user manual. Yes, scripture may assist our use of reason, our understanding, and our actions; it must not be used to prescribe or proscribe how we apply the principle of love your neighbour.
Postscript
The post above has been greeted with compliments and brickbats, as I suspected it would given my ecletic audience. It is my preference to keep posts short and this sometimes leads to brevity of expression taking precedence over the nuances of an argument. The post encompasses many ideas but lacks detail and nuance. A poor analogy: the article is akin to providing the answer to a mathematical question without supplying the working out. My 'defence' is that many of my earlier articles detail the thinking that led me to the opinions expressed in the above post.
