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Clay Burell's Library tagged humanism   View Popular

13 Jun 08

http://www.christian-thinktank.com/qburnbx.html

"...Did the Christians burn/destroy all the classical literature?" Interesting rebuttal to the historical claim that Christians burned the Alexandrian Library to destroy classical literature/culture.

www.christian-thinktank.com/qburnbx.html - Preview

history christianity greeks humanism

29 Dec 07

Burke Lecture: John Shelby Spong

Bishop Spong's video lecture, "The Terrible Texts of the Bible." I'd love to see him converse with Harris, Dawkins, etc.

video.google.com/videoplay - Preview

christianity criticism history humanism religion science spong video

28 Dec 07

Valentinus - A Gnostic for All Seasons

  • Excellent (though academic) essay about the central insights of the Gnostic Christian Valentinus, the "Almost Pope" of the 2d c., whose xianity is sane.
    - cburell on 2007-12-28
  • There is no need whatsoever for guilt, for repentance from so-called sin, neither
    is there a need for a blind belief in a vicarious salvation by way of the death of Jesus.
    We don't need to be saved; we need to be transformed by Gnosis. The wrong-headedness,
    perversity, obtuseness, and malignancy of the existential condition of humanity can be
    changed into a glorious image of the fullness of being. This is done not by guilt, shame,
    and an eternal saviour but by the activation of the redemptive potential of
    self-knowledge. Spiritual self-knowledge thus becomes the inverse equivalent of the
    ignorance of the unredeemed ego. The elaborate mythic structures of cosmogonic and
    redemptive content bequeathed to us by Valentinus are but the poetic-scriptural
    expressions of this grand proposition, which has a direct relevance to the existential
    condition of the human psyche in all ages and in all cultures.
  • The Gnostic Saviour: a Maker of Wholeness


    It would be erroneous to deduce from the foregoing that Valentinus negated or even
    diminished the importance of Jesus in his teachings. The great devotion and reverence
    shown for Jesus by Valentinus is amply manifest with sublime poetic beauty in the Gospel of Truth, which in its original form was in fact
    authored by Valentinus himself. According to Valentinus, Jesus is indeed Saviour, but the
    term needs to be understood in the meaning of the original Greek word, used by orthodox
    and Gnostic Christian alike. This word is soter, meaning healer, or bestower of
    health. From this is derived the word today translated as salvation, i.e., soteria, which
    originally meant healthiness, deliverance from imperfection, becoming whole, and
    preserving one's wholeness. What then is the role of the soter of spiritual maker
    of wholeness, if he clearly has no need to save humankind from either original or personal
    sin? What is the state or condition of newly found spiritual health bestowed or
    facilitated by such a healer-saviour?


    The Gnostic contention is that both the world and humanity are sick. The sickness of
    the world and its equivalent human illness both have one common root: ignorance. We ignore
    the authentic values of life and substitute unauthentic ones for them. The unauthentic
    values are for the most part either physical or of the mind. We believe that we need things
    (such as money, symbols of power and prestige, physical pleasures) in order to be happy or
    whole. Similarly we fall in love with the ideas and abstractions of our minds. (The
    rigidities and the hardness of our lives are always due to our excessive attachment to
    abstract concepts and precepts.) The sickness of materialism was called hyleticism
    (worship of matter) by the Gnostics, while the sickness of abstract intellectualism and
    moralizing was known as psychism (worship of the mind-emotional soul). The true
    role of the facilitators of wholeness in this world, among whom Jesus occupied the place
    of honor, is that they can exorcise these sicknesses by bringing knowledge of the pneuma
    (spirit) to the soul and mind.


    What is this pneuma, this spirit, which alone brings Gnosis and healing to the sickness
    of human nature? We cannot truly say what it is, but we can indicate what it does.
    It has been said that the spirit bloweth where it listeth. It brings flexibility,
    existential courage of life. By way of the healing agency of pneuma, the soul
    ceases to be fascinated and confined by things and ideas and thus it can address itself to
    life. The obsession of the human psyche with the importance of the material world and/or
    of the abstract intellectual and moral world is the sickness from which the great saviours
    of humanity redeem us. The obsessive state of material and mental attachments is thus
    replaced by spiritual freedom; the unauthentic values of the former are made to give way
    to the authentic ones brought by the spirit.

24 Dec 07

The Four Horsemen - Hour 2

  • Two parts, one hour each. The West's leading atheists discussing their ideas, questioning them, and showing the humility of science and humanism at its best.
    - cburell on 2007-12-24

Dr. Joan Bushwell's Chimpanzee Refuge : The Four Horsemen: Dawkins, Dennett, Harris & Hitchens at a Coffee Klatsch

  • Excellent discussion of rationalists about the challenge of defeating superstition in a superstitious world. Hitchens talks too much, but makes interesting points.
    - cburell on 2007-12-24
07 Jun 07

Nag Hammadi Library

  • It's hard to overstate the importance of the Nag Hammadi Library for an understanding of the many interpretations of Jesus and Christianity before the Roman Catholic Church--and Imperial Roman police--violently destroyed them.  Many of these original Christian texts bear more resemblance to Buddhism than to contemporary Christian belief. 


    This website has translations of the early Christian texts that were buried in the 4th Century CE to preserve them from the destruction of the first great book-burning in European history.  Essential for religious studies, European history, and informed religious discourse today.


    From the website:

    The Nag Hammadi Library, a collection of thirteen
    ancient codices containing over fifty texts, was discovered in upper Egypt
    in 1945. This immensely important discovery includes a large number of
    primary Gnostic scriptures -- texts once thought to have been entirely
    destroyed during the early Christian struggle to define "orthodoxy" --
    scriptures such as the Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Philip, and the
    Gospel of Truth.
    The leather-bound codices found at Nag Hammadi in 1945


    The discovery and translation of the Nag Hammadi
    library, completed in the 1970's, has provided impetus to a major
    re-evaluation of early Christian history and the nature of Gnosticism. 
    Readers unfamiliar with this history may wish to review the brief
    Introduction to Gnosticism and the Nag Hammadi
    Library
    provided here, as well as an excerpt from Elaine Pagels'
    excellent popular introduction to the Nag Hammadi texts,

    The Gnostic Gospels
    .

    - cburell on 2007-06-07
04 Apr 07

God Debate: Sam Harris vs. Rick Warren - Newsweek Beliefs - MSNBC.com

  • Good debate on the existence of the Christian God, the morality of religion, and the truths of science between evangelical giant Rick Warren and  popular "atheist," writer, and neuroscientist Sam Harris.  In Newsweek, of all things. 
    - cburell on 2007-04-04

American Scientist Online - (Darwin) On the Perils of Publishing

  • Good history of Darwin's fear of publishing his theory. Copernicus all over again? - cburell on 2006-12-29
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