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A look at Walter Brueggemann on biblical authority | open source theology

A look at Walter Brueggemann on biblical authority | open source theology


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A look at Walter Brueggemann on biblical authority
Submitted by DanSteiger on 20 November, 2003 - 5:31pm. 
| The place of Scripture in the church today | Interpretation and community



From the outset I would like to add a personal note about Walter Brueggemann’s background. Brueggemann indicates that Psalm 119:105 is his life text:
“Your word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path.” 

Interestingly, it was handed down to him at his confirmation from his father, who taught him “the artistry as well as the authority of scripture”. What a beautiful legacy for a father to leave his son. Aside from his dad, an evangelical pastor who himself loved the Word, Brueggemann’s approach to Scripture was strongly influenced by a number of liberal theologians (of the German variety). 

His association with this latter group has nurtured in him both a special longing for unity in the broader body of Christ (including non-evangelicals), and a penchant for championing the cause of the underprivileged and marginalized elements of society. That association has also reinforced his love for the literary brilliance and divine nature of the Scriptures. All these formative influences are apparent in such statements as this one made in the address he gave at the particular conference on biblical authority under review: “The Bible is essentially an open, artistic, imaginative narrative of God’s staggering care for the world, a narrative that will feed and nurture into obedience that builds community precisely by respect for the liberty of the Christian man or woman.”

Now, enough background. Let’s move on to Brueggemann’s framework for approaching interpretation of the Bible. A base assumption, and two derivative “learnings” (as he labels them) vital to this discussion, are as follows: “How we read the Bible, each of us, is partly a plot of family, neighbors, and friends (a socialization process) and partly the God-given accident of long-term development in faith.” From that Brueggemann concludes that: “The real issues of biblical authority and interpretation are not likely to be settled by erudite cognitive formulation or appeal to classic settlement, but live beneath such contention in often unrecognized and uncriticized ways that are deeply powerful, especially if rooted (as they may be for most of us) amidst hurt, anger, or anxiety.” And further, “Real decisions about Biblical meanings are mostly not decided on the spot, but are long-term growth of habit and conviction that emerge, function, and shape, often long before recognized. And if that is so, then the disputes require not frontal arguments that are mostly exercises in self-entertainment, but long term pastoral attentiveness to each other in good faith.”[2]

Brueggeman’s six facets of biblical interpretation

Beyond these qualifying assumptions, Brueggemann identifies six “facets of biblical interpretation” which he believes are operative (or ought to be) among all those who would maturely attempt to unpack the bible’s meaning and application for today. These he captures in six “I” descriptors: 1) inherency, 2) interpretation, 3) ideology, 4) inspiration, 5) imagination, and, 6) urgency (importance). I will very briefly lay out my understanding of what he is implying with each of these facets, and then I will respond with some of my own commentary on the value and some dangers I personally observe in the application of these.

Let’s start with the first facet. This is not an easy one to articulate, but I’ll give it a try. By inherency, Brueggemann means God’s word is not fixed or frozen - it is the “live word of God.” That authoritative word is embodied in the text of Scripture, but refracted through many authors who were not simply “disembodied voices” but who were speaking the inherent faith into their given context and circumstances. Because of this refraction, and because of the living, active divine breath behind it, the locus of authority is the Bible’s good news and “main theological claims”, and these are what the church at large must base its unity upon. I get the idea that inherency is an acknowledgement that the divine is lurking within the text, but it’s not easy to pinpoint exactly where (beyond that gospel corpus & such main claims as creation, redemption, the consummation of all things, etc.).

With the facet of interpretation, Brueggemann argues that the Bible requires and insists upon “human interpretation that is inescapably subjective, necessarily provisional, and as [we] are living witnesses, inevitably disputatious.” Beyond the baseline of main claims or affirmations of Apostolic faith, we must attach only “tentative authority” to interpretations on almost all questions. He claims that Reformed interpretation too often has involved “a slight of hand act of substituting of our interpretive preference for the inherency of Apostolic claims.”

This process of interpretation that avoids absolute resolution on almost everything the Bible teaches (beyond the most basic of Apostolic claims) is self-evident, Brueggemann claims, in the Bible itself. For example, when God re-iterates the law given at Sinai for a new generation, Moses claims “Not with our ancestors did the Lord make this covenant, but with us, who are all of us here alive today” (Deuteronomy 5:3). The original instruction from Sinai is applied in a fresh manner for a new circumstance. He claims that God actually overturns in some instances some decrees that were in their historic context binding for the people of Israel. He cites God’s original ban from inclusion in community anyone practicing distorted sexuality. In Isaiah 56:3-8 he claims this is overturned for a more inclusive, tolerant perspective. A similar dynamic is observable, he claims, in Deut. 24:1 where it is declared that marriages broken in infidelity cannot be restored. Later in Jeremiah chapter three, Brueggemann sees God actually overturning this original decree in light of new circumstances (where restoration despite infidelity is possible).

The third facet Brueggemann mentions is imagination. In seeking to understand and apply Scripture we ought to employ this faculty of creative imagining to envision “a movement of the text beyond itself in fresh ways.” It takes a measure of fantasy or imagination to “transpose ancient voices into contemporary voices of authority.” Brueggemann claims that we do this all the time in interpretation; for example, he says “those of us who think critically do not believe that the Old Testament was talking about Jesus [what?!!!], and yet we make the linkages. And we make “a huge leap to imagine that an ancient Purity Code in Leviticus 18 bears upon consenting gays and lesbians in the twenty-first century…” (although gay people find supposedly more sound argument in Brueggeman’s earlier idea of situational - perhaps, more accurately, evolutional – abrogation of earlier biblical decrees). I love (and fully concur with) the following summary statement of Brueggemann’s view on imagination in interpretation: “Imagination can indeed be a gift of the Spirit, but it is a gift used with immense subjective freedom which we would do better to concede, even if that concession makes it unmistakably clear that our imaginative interpretations cannot claim the shrillness of certainty but only the tentativeness of our best extrapolations.”

Ideology is Brueggemann’s fourth “I” which is operative as we approach the biblical text. By ideology he means the bias we all bring to the text out of unique design and experience. Our passions, self-interests, anxieties, fears and pains represent a complex filter through which an individual or a group or a culture, filter her/his/their understanding of the Bible. We are essentially context-bound by our unique individual and group filters that we are in some ways permanently marked or skewed in our comprehension and application of certain texts. This introduces a distortion in our perspective that can only be remedied by submitting our convictions to others who interpret out of a much different filter (i.e. a different context and life experience). “There is enough truth in every such interpretive posture and strategy….to make the posture credible and to gather a mass of constituency in order to maintain a sustained voice.” But no posture can rightly be given absolute veracity or claim. None of us can claim to be “innocent” (without vested interest) in this regard.

By the fifth facet of inspiration, Brueggemann does not mean the traditional view of the inscripturation of God’s revelation (i.e. recording in written form). What he means is that the Spirit of God actively breathes through the text and “blows past all our critical and confessional categories of reading and understanding…so that the text yields something other than an echo of ourselves.” This happens as we approach the Bible in prayer and study, or even in times when we may not expect it, when the living Word strikes a special chord in us, individually or corporately. “The script of the book is a host and launching pad for the wind among us that the world cannot evoke and the church cannot resist” - what a powerful statement!

The last “I” in Brueggemann’s hermeneutical repertoire is urgency, or importance (as he puts it, to maintain consistency). Biblical interpretation is not primarily done in order to seize control of the church, but rather to give the world access to the good truth of the God who creates, redeems and consummates. This truth is not to be reduced to formula or technique, or trivialized to solve certain problems or correct certain social inconveniences. We must keep in view that “reading Scripture is for the sake of the missional testimony of the church” - good news that is, first and foremost, for the world.

What I feel is to be gained (or lost) by adherence to Brueggemann’s view of Scripture


On this issue of inherency, the word of God is seen to be lodged within a text that sprang forth from fallible human sources. We are challenged to resist too much familiarity with that text lest we close ourselves to being surprised by what new things God might want to bring out through it. In the language of Karl Barth, it ought to be endlessly “strange and new” to those seeking to encounter God’s living voice through it. I really like that idea of remaining ever open to be surprised by the Word of God – for it to be “rhema” over and over again. But, beyond that, I find this concept an inadequate accommodation for the rigidity of inerrancy. It seems to me it creates more problems than it solves (in terms of helping the Church understand how to bring its life in congruence with sound doctrine).

Brueggemann gets into hot water when he takes this a step further and argues that some biblical witnesses succeeded more effectively than others in bringing out this inherent word. If that is true, then on what basis do we determine where the more authoritative material lies? (Although, if we’re honest, most of us do not attach the same authority to II or III John or even Jude, as we do to other NT epistles – which may well be a step toward the accuracy of Brueggemann’s point). I personally would put more confidence in God’s involvement in insuring that the distortion in transmission to written text was minimized[3]. Otherwise, it seems like the game of telephone, where God’s clear revelation gets all cluttered up in human fallibility; and the best we can hope to find when turning to Scripture is an authoritative gospel nucleus surrounded by a lot of spurious teaching and opinion.

As far as interpretation is concerned, Brueggemann makes a statement which I believe endangers (if embraced) any hope of finally resolving what is authoritative and what is not in the Bible’s teachings: “Interpretive humility invites us to recognize that reading in a particular time, place and circumstance can never be absolute, but is more than likely to be displaced by yet another reading in another time and place, a reading that may depart from or even judge the older reading…The Spirit meets us always afresh in our faithful reading, in each new time, place and circumstance.”

This is a slippery slope, obviously. There is no doubt some truth to certain older teachings being abrogated or overturned by later teachings. But, it seems to me that where there are clear cases of such abrogation, we must be very careful not to overextend that principle and let current political or ideological agendas overturn longstanding interpretations of the text. How Brueggemann actually applies the biblical examples of abrogation cited in his address I find questionable at best. For example it is true, as he argues, that foreigners among the Israelites were in Moses’ day excluded from worship, and then later in Isaiah’s day Israel were given a promise that this was to be overturned in the new covenant God was making. But it is a leap to suggest that this actually meant God was overturning this in Isaiah’s day, and that it might be changed even again in days to follow. This change is set within the context of the promises of the new covenant age, not necessarily that specific moment.

This idea of later biblical teaching replacing earlier teaching has apparently been used to justify arguments for inclusion and acceptance of gay lifestyles within the fold of the church. The Isaiah 56 text appears to be fuel for that justification (I’m not sure that Brueggemann himself espouses that, by the way). In that text eunuchs, a previously excluded group, are shown to now be included in the worship of Israel. What was earlier viewed as a “distorted sexuality” (being a eunuch) in Moses’ day is now to be embraced in Isaiah’s time. The homosexuality of old which was viewed as a distorted sexuality ought to also nowadays be embraced as being sanctioned by more current teaching in the Bible. These sorts of applications strike me as huge interpretive leaps, where certain Scripture is used to justify a present ideological bias.

Brueggemann’s quote above (the one about no reading in any time, place and circumstance holding absolute authority) makes me nervous. But I do realize that many postmoderns do not share my concern (i.e. they would not feel at all concerned whether particular parts of the Bible are authoritative in an absolute sense or not); And they might even honestly ask, why do we as Christians even need to have a text that is absolutely authoritative? Rather than deriding such thinking as naïve, we would do well to ask ourselves how much our quest for certitude is really in itself God-ordained. Having said that, I must confess that my personal motivation to make a stand for and strive to internalize certain Scriptural teachings is very much negatively affected when I perceive a given text or passage as not having a timeless authoritative ring to it. For example, the Apostle Peter urges us to “Be self-controlled and alert. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour. Resist him, standing firm in the faith…” (I Peter 5:8-9). If I do not see this as an absolute command having authoritative sway over my life (e.g. maybe I think the devil is a dated concept), I am apt to drop my guard and act like we as Christ-followers really are not in a serious battle against evil. Or maybe I hear no absolute ring in Jesus’ claims to be the Son of God. I might believe it, but if another church does not, that’s acceptable because who is to say what is absolute? Absolute authority means it’s more than my truth, or only binding because I believe it’s important. It means it is true for anyone because God has revealed that general reality as an anchor in this stage of human history.

I think Brueggemann makes some excellent points on the operation of imagination in interpretation. Indeed, we would do well to own up to that faculty we all employ – and further, see the good in it. The Spirit can and does enliven our imaginations, and no doubt takes us farther than our familiar interpretations (if we apply our creative mind’s in the light of God’s Spirit). But, as Brueggemann rightly asserts, “we must regularly, gracefully, and with modesty fall back from our best extrapolations to the sure apostolic claims that lie behind our extremities of imagination…” This call to “fall back” is reassuring, but does Brueggemann have a sense of what those specific apostolic claims are? Don’t we get back to creeds and confessions, when we start talking in those terms (Were these not an attempt to determine that authoritative “main claim” pool Brueggemann cites?)?[4]

Ideology, or the power of those filters which are the product of our exposure and experience in life, is truly a powerful interpretive force. Brueggemann makes an excellent point here, as there are indeed many Christians who confuse their political leanings with biblical Christianity (e.g. I suppose consumer Capitalism would be a major one for too many American evangelicals, who have adopted this as the uncontested norm for societies). There is great danger in any segment of the body of Christ which allows itself to remain ideologically naïve’ in the face of technology’s shrinking of the world (with its associated easy dissemination of diverse cultural expressions). The consequences of an entrenched narrowness are detrimental to the cause of Christ, as nonbelievers end up rejecting an ideology (even with its merits as far as truth) rather than the gospel itself. As well, it is important to recognize that ideology can be “enshrined in longstanding interpretation” until it is [viewed as] absolute and trusted as decisive authority.

While I agree with Brueggemann’s general point about each of us (including our given group or culture) being context bound, resulting in some distortions in biblical interpretation, I am hesitant to fully embrace his belief that “every such ideological passion…may be encased in scripture itself”. On some levels this may indeed by true of the biblical writers, but how in the world we sort out where and with whom this is evident is certainly a highly subjective determination. Accepting that God has used fallible people (where specific word-choice is not necessarily Spirit-driven, but the inspired or revealed concepts put in the heads of the writers are), I believe we still have other clear didactic material in the NT to help us maturely decide what may have been ideologically-driven (and hence, not necessarily given as timeless truth).

On the point of inspiration as a key facet of interpretation, I think Brueggemann also has good insight. The Scriptures are indeed “the breath of God”, and we must have this overarching appreciation for and humility toward the Bible as we approach it. This posture enables us to catch the “shimmerings” of the text, so that at times we breathe in just what we need to sustain us at the moment. Inspiration helps me resolve the tension of not being able to determine the “good deposit” I am supposed to guard as a leader in the church (recall that the Apostle Paul urged Timothy to “guard the good deposit” – a deposit which Timothy had the prerogative of getting clarification on, but which I don’t). We may find it is impossible to know exactly what constituted the good deposit in Timothy’s mind back then (and what might constitute that exact deposit for us today). But, we can be assured that as we immerse ourselves in the Scriptures, God will see that we come to greater and greater personal and corporate resolution over what that good deposit to be guarded means for ourselves and for our group.

This last facet Brueggemann mentions of urgency or importance is particularly relevant to our times. We see the text of Scripture dissected and trivialized in evangelicalism’s nauseating penchant for pragmatism. The Scripture is distilled down to a formula and proposition handbook, with “precious moments” theologies (God’s promise-a-day, like a one-a-day vitamin) and a Prayer of Jabez prosperity-driven Christianity. May we not let the missional thrust of the Bible get submerged under the avalanche of technique, systematic theologies, and whatever else aimed at mastering the text so that we can “use” it. But, equally, may we not let missional urgency drive us to a quest for more techniques alone; may it also inspire us to be persons who live out the missional testimony (making it visible, and in some cases, more powerful and visible than the stories and words we bring).

In summary, Brueggemann’s contribution to helping us better understand the place of Scripture in the community of faith is substantial. He helps us acknowledge the rallying point for unity in the body of Christ around a simple core of Apostolic claims; the reality of subjectivity in interpretation beyond those simple Apostolic claims; the presence and limits of creative imagination in drawing out meaning from the text; the power of our own ideological filters to distort as we come to the Bible; the all-important role of the Spirit in breathing freshly upon us through His living Word, time after time, as we look to God to help us sense that breath; and, finally, the importance of how all these sum together to produce a message that is crisply and clearly urgent for our world.
---

[1] All quotations attributed to Brueggemann in this paper are taken from the transcripts of his Address to the 2000 Covenant Network of Presbyterians Conference, which took place on 3 November, 2000, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.


[2] These three statements above are well-worth pondering, because they are so pregnant with insight!


[3] Brueggemann’s idea seems to suggest that God breathed into the minds of the biblical writers but left them to their own devices in expressing that. This feels a bit too loose - a hit and miss transmission process which lets some revelation through but obscures other aspects of it. I guess by faith I believe the Spirit was not so passive in that process of transmission of revelation to text.


[4] I think Brueggemann would acknowledge the value of an authoritative core of essentials binding for all churches that claim to follow Christ and His teachings. How much deviation should be tolerated on certain main claims, and how ought we to relate to churches that alter or ignore those main claims, is a subject for ongoing discussion in the Church. Teachers may well “incur a stricter judgment” where they as representatives of the Church permit too much freedom in belief and practice, or alternatively, where they make secondary issues binding essentials (and hence grounds for impeding fellowship with non-adherents).
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Brueggemann and Wright
Submitted by Russ on 20 November, 2003 - 6:10pm.


One thing that strikes me about Brueggemann (not having read any of his stuff) is that he seems very, very concerned that the reader’s interpretation - thus as you state, a near Barthian experience with the text - gets up to the front. He wants to stay rooted somewhere (thus the creed, I take it), but that rootedness doesn’t mean that the text is finally authoritative. This is something you hit in the paper. From my perspective he loses some of his (potential) power at this point, as the reader becomes primary, and the actual text (it seems to me) secondary. I would want to argue more along Wright’s line, using a critical-realist framework (cognizant both of the text’s and my limitations - well, some of them anyway), and hold to the integrity of the text. It’s true that we too sometimes update the Bible, in the sense that many interpret the role of women in ministry today in ways that were unthinkable before. Did the text change, did we get better historical/exegetical/hermeneutical tools? Did God finally bash some theological skulls? But I hope we have the integrity to let the text be the text, and at least explain the principles upon which we would revise interpretations (I get the feeling Breugemann would amen that).

In some ways I want to hold the text and the person (reader) as equals in the game. Not that I am as authoritative as the text, but that my opinion/experience counts too. The text is static in that can’t talk back, any interaction occurs in my brain and heart as I ponder it (and maybe God uses that process). If my opinion is to be respected, so should that of the text, but a text like the Bible shouldn’t be just tossed aside like an opinion off the street. I want somehow to accede authority to the text itself, and not simply reduce it to it’s “voice” as it speaks to me today. It has to mean something whether I experience that or not. I’m babbling. Anyway, I liked the paper. Maybe if you post it, it can be part of a platform for discussion. I notice that Andrew’s got some things in that direction already.
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Better and Better?
Submitted by Spiritboi on 28 August, 2004 - 8:13am.


Did the text change, did we get better historical/exegetical/hermeneutical tools?

This is a key question, and I think the answer, in general, is “Yes.” One of the benefits, I think, of post-Reformation (and even post-Enlightenment thinking, Lord help us!) is the willingness to recognise the Bible as a text, with cultural setting, genre etc. In other words, the whole structure of historical-grammatical exegesis allows us a “better tool”. Post-modernity, too, has introduced a basic humility in interpretation and a willingness to grant a hearing to the “voices at the margins” (no matter how NT Wright may use this phrase with his tongue planted firmly in his cheek).

Thus, we are aware of differing roles for women in today’s society, the influence of sexism on interpretation, etc. I would argue that the hermeneutic involved for many social and personal issues is almost identical, whether it be slavery, women, or inclusion of gay/lesbian people in the Church. As much as we may be uncomfortable with this, the solution is not to selectively apply a critical-realist reading!

Or so I think. Just my two cents.
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Some Clarification
Submitted by Spiritboi on 28 August, 2004 - 7:59am.


Mr. B. does in fact argue that glbtq Christians and people should be included as full members in the church. He contributed a major article to the “Claiming the Blessing” initiative within the US Episcopal Church regarding the blessing of same-sex unions. I don’t think the argument from Is. 56 should be dismissed so easily, since in many quarters (not least certain branches of evangelicalism) even the Leviticus passages are in dispute (in terms of context and meaning).

If it’s more appropriate, if we want to discuss sexual ethics and gay and lesbian people, perhaps we could move to the “Rainbow Community and Emerging Church” forum.
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Brueggemann's article "Claiming the Blessing"
Submitted by Aaron Klassen on 1 November, 2004 - 10:53pm.


I would love to get a copy of this article that you are citing, “Claiming the Blessing”, by Walter Brueggemann.

Rev. Aaron A. Klassen Souled Out Ministries, Chicago
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Claiming the Blessing
Submitted by Spiritboi on 2 November, 2004 - 7:25pm.


The package (including articles by Mr. B. and L. William Countryman) is probably available through “Claiming the Blessing” movement, notably Integrity US. If you need further help, feel free to email me at bible01boi@hotmail.com.

What is Souled Out Ministries?

The Peace of Christ, Rob
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Souled Out Ministries
Submitted by Aaron Klassen on 2 November, 2004 - 9:21pm.


Souled Out Ministries is a Youth Church in the Metro Chicago area, where we have over 72 area High Schools represented. We meet on Saturday nights at eight o’clock, and there is an average of 350-400 youth/young adults that come together to form our community of believers. We also have an “adult” church—which is targeted for parents of the youth, and the youth themselves. I guess we kind of did things backwards…we started the youth church in ‘94, and the ‘adult’ church in ‘02! The Sunday congregation is called, ‘Heart & Soul Church’ (HSC).

My wife, Michelle, and I started a discipleship community within the ministry called, Souled Out Master’s Commission (SOMC). We started last year with 13 students, and this year God has blessed us with 25 committed students who have lain down their lives for our Creator God and His Son, Jesus! We have a ministry in Jerusalem, eretz Yisrael, where we have a summer camps for the believeing youth in the Land. We also have a ministry in Decora, IA, and we are going to Patovah, Italy in two weeks to meet with some life-long friends to pioneer a sister community there. In December 1-10th, we are going to Haiti to do the same. God has just blessed us with a new building, as we are bursting at the seams on Saturday nights! My senior Pastor, Ed Basler & his wife Cathi, and the associate Pastor, Joe Manahan are three of the most self-less and real people that I have ever met, and it is an absolute honor to work with them in building the Kingdom of God!

Our SOMC website is under construction, but here is the address: http://www.souledoutmasterscommission.com

Our Souled Out Ministries (SOM) Website is http://www.souledout.net (from there, their is a link to HSC & International stuff…)

Not sure if you were looking for such a lengthy answer, but I could go into our statement of faith, essentials and non-essentials; what we teach at SOMC, et al…

I noticed that you’re in my tomorrow…in that your date is posting Nov 3rd…I’m assuming that you aren’t in the States? What is it that you “do” for a living?

Aaron
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Walter Brueggemann - Wikipedia

Walter Brueggemann - Wikipedia



Walter Brueggemann
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Walter Brueggemann
Born March 11, 1933 (age 87)

Tilden, Nebraska, US
Education Elmhurst College, Eden Theological Seminary, Union Theological Seminary, Saint Louis University
Occupation Professor of Theology

Ordained United Church of Christ
Writings Over one hundred books, dozens of scholarly articles, largely on rhetorical criticism

Offices held Professor of Theology, Eden Theological Seminary (1961-1986); Professor of Theology, Columbia Theological Seminary (1986-2003); William Marcellus McPheeters Professor Emeritus of Old Testament, Columbia Theological Seminary (2003-present)
Website www.walterbrueggemann.com


Walter Brueggemann (born March 11, 1933) is an American Protestant Old Testament scholar and theologian who is widely considered one of the most influential Old Testament scholars of the last several decades.[1] He is an important figure in modern progressive Christianity whose work often focuses on the Hebrew prophetic tradition and sociopolitical imagination of the Church. He argues that the Church must provide a counter-narrative to the dominant forces of consumerism, militarism, and nationalism.[2][3]


Contents
1Career
2Thought
3Honors
4Publications
5References
6External links

Career[edit]

Brueggemann was born in Tilden, Nebraska in 1933. He received an A.B. from Elmhurst College (1955), a B.D. from Eden Theological Seminary (1958), a Th.D. from Union Theological Seminary, New York (1961), and Ph.D. from Saint Louis University (in 1974). The son of a minister of the German Evangelical Synod of North America, he was ordained in the United Church of Christ. He was professor of Old Testament (1961–1986) and Dean (1968–1982) at Eden Theological Seminary. Beginning in 1986, he served as William Marcellus McPheeters professor of Old Testament at Columbia Theological Seminary, from which he retired in the early 2000s. Brueggemann currently resides in Traverse City, Michigan (2020). He is the editor of Journal for Preachers.[4]
Thought[edit]

Brueggemann is an advocate and practitioner of rhetorical criticism. He has written more than 58 books, hundreds of articles, and several commentaries on books of the Bible. He is also a contributor to a number of the Living the Questions DVD programs and is featured in the program "Countering Pharaoh's Production-Consumption Society Today."[citation needed] Brueggemann participated in Bill Moyers' 1990s PBS television series on Genesis (documented in Genesis: A Living Conversation. Main Street Books, 1997. ISBN 0-385-49043-7).[page needed]

Originally a strong supporter of modern day Israel and its biblical claims, Brueggemann later repudiated Israel for its exploitation of "ancient promises" to create a "toxic ideology," and now affirms his belief that it is not anti-Semitic to stand up for justice for Palestinians.[5]

Brueggemann is known throughout the world for his method of combining literary and sociological modes when reading the Bible. V. S. Parrish categorized Brueggemann as being an exegete and theologian.[citation needed] As an exegete he has composed several commentaries (Genesis, Exodus, Deuteronomy, 1 and 2 Samuel, Isaiah, and Jeremiah). His most notable work was on the book of Psalms, and he has written many monographs and articles on specific portions of the Hebrew Bible. For example, he believes that lament is lacking in current religious faith and practice with detrimental results according to the subject.[6] As a theologian he has been an editor for the Fortress Press series "Overtures to Biblical Theology". His development of Old Testament theological methods consists of literary mode, social function, and dialectical approach.[clarification needed] Titles such as "David's Truth in Israel's Imagination and Memory" (1985), "Power, Providence and Personality" (1990), "1 Kings and 2 Kings" (1982c), "The Prophetic Imagination" (1978), and "Hopeful Imagination" (1986) reflect his interest in the prophetic corpus.[7]

Honors[edit]

Among his honors are:
LL.D., DePauw University, 1984
D.D., Virginia Theological Seminary, 1988
D.H.Litt., Doane College, 1990
D.D., Jesuit School of Theology, 1993
D.Litt., Colgate University, 1997
D.H.Litt., Elmhurst College, 1997
D.D., Huron University College, 2014

There is also a festschrift in his honor: God in the Fray: A Tribute to Walter Brueggemann (eds. Tod Linafelt and Timothy K. Beal, Minneapolis: Fortress Press).

Publications[edit]

  1. Abiding Astonishment: Psalms, Modernity, and the Making of History. Westminster John Knox Press. 1991. ISBN 978-0-664-25134-5.
  2. Advent/Christmas; Proclamation 3: Aids for Interpreting the Lessons of the Church Year, Series B. Edited by Elizabeth Achtemeier. Fortress Press, 1984. ISBN 9780800641016
  3. An Unsettling God: The Heart of the Hebrew Bible. Augsburg Fortress, Publishers. 2009. ISBN 978-1-4514-1953-5.
  4. Awed to Heaven, Rooted in Earth: Prayers of Walter Brueggemann. Fortress Press. 1 December 2002. ISBN 978-1-4514-1954-2.
  5. Belonging and Growing in the Christian Community. Edited by Elizabeth McWhorter. General Assembly Mission Board, Presbyterian Church in the United States, 1979.
  6. The Bible Makes Sense. St Mary's College Press, 1977.
  7. ---. 2d ed. Franciscan Media, 2003, ISBN 9780867165586
  8. Biblical Perspectives on Evangelism: Living in a Three-Storied Universe. Abingdon Press. 1 July 2011. ISBN 978-1-4267-2214-1.
  9. "The Book of Exodus". In The New Interpreter's Bible. Vol. 1. Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1994. ISBN.
  10. The Book That Breathes New Life: Scriptural Authority and Biblical Theology. 2005. ISBN.
  11. The Book that Breathes New Life: Scriptural Authority and Biblical Theology. Fortress Press. 1 January 2011. pp. 171–. ISBN 978-1-4514-1955-9.
  12. Cadences of Home: Preaching Among Exiles. Westminster John Knox Press. 1997. ISBN 978-0-664-25749-1.
  13. The Collected Sermons of Walter Brueggemann. Westminster John Knox Press. 2011. ISBN 978-0-664-23445-4.
  14. A Commentary on Jeremiah: Exile and Homecoming. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. January 1998. ISBN 978-0-8028-0280-4.
  15. Confirming Our Faith, Chapters 4,5,7,8,9,18; edited by Larry E Kalp. United Church Press, 1980.
  16. Confronting the Bible: A Resource and Discussion Book for Youth. United Church Press, 1968.
  17. The Creative Word: Canon as a Model for Biblical Education. Fortress Press. 1 January 1982. ISBN 978-1-4514-1957-3.
  18. David's Truth in Israel's Imagination and Memory. Fortress Press. ISBN 978-1-4514-1958-0.
  19. ---. 2d ed. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2002. ISBN.
  20. Deuteronomy: Abingdon Old Testament Commentaries. Abingdon Press, 2001. ISBN.
  21. Divine Presence amid Violence: Contextualizing the Book of Joshua. Cascade Books, 2009. ISBN 978-1-60608-089-4.
  22. Easter; Proclamation 4 (Series A). Fortress Press, 1989.
  23. Ethos and Ecumenism: The History of Eden Theological Seminary, 1925-1970. Eden Publishing House, 1975.
  24. The Evangelical Catechism Revisited, 1847-1972. Eden Publishing House, 1972.
  25. Fatal Embrace: Christians, Jews, and the Search for Peace in the Holy Land. Synergy Books, 2010. ISBN 978-0-9840760-7-9. Foreword to the book by Mark Braverman.
  26. Finally Comes the Poet: Daring Speech for Proclamation. Fortress Press. 1 January 1989. ISBN 978-1-4514-1961-0.
  27. First and Second Samuel. Westminster John Knox Press. ISBN 978-0-664-23741-7.
  28. I Kings (Knox Preaching Guides). Edited by John H Hayes. John Knox Press, 1982. ISBN 9780804232128
  29. II Kings (Knox Preaching Guides). Edited by John H Hayes. John Knox Press, 1982.
  30. 1 & 2 Kings: Smyth & Helwys Bible Commentary. Smyth & Helwys Publishing, 2000. ISBN 9781573120654
  31. Genesis. Westminster John Knox Press. ISBN 978-0-664-23733-2.
  32. Hope Within History. Westminster John Knox Press. 1987. ISBN 978-0-8042-0918-2.
  33. Hopeful Imagination: Prophetic Voices in Exile. Fortress Press. 1 January 1986. ISBN 978-1-4514-1962-7.
  34. In Man We Trust: The Neglected Side of Biblical Faith. John Knox Press, 1972. ISBN 0-8042-0199-4.
  35. Interpretation and Obedience: From Faithful Reading to Faithful Living. Fortress Press. 1 January 1991. ISBN 978-0-8006-2478-1.
  36. An Introduction to the Old Testament: The Canon and Christian Imagination. Westminster John Knox Press. 2003. ISBN 978-0-664-22412-7.
  37. Isaiah: 1-39. Westminster John Knox Press. 1998. ISBN 978-0-664-25524-4.
  38. Isaiah: 40-66. Westminster John Knox Press. 1998. ISBN 978-0-664-25791-0.
  39. Israel's Praise: Doxology Against Idolatry and Ideology. Fortress Press. 1988. ISBN 978-1-4514-1965-8.
  40. With George R Beasley-Murray, Jeremiah: Faithfulness in the Midst of Fickleness. The Newell Lectureships II edited by Timothy Dwyer. Warner Press, Inc, 1993.
  41. Journey to the Common Good. Westminster John Knox Press. 1 January 2010. ISBN 978-1-61164-008-3.
  42. The Land: Place as Gift, Promise, and Challenge in Biblical Faith. Fortress Press, 1977,
  43. ---. 2d ed. Overtures to Biblical Theology. Fortress Press, 2002. ISBN 978-0-8006-3462-9.
  44. Living toward a Vision: Biblical Reflections on Shalom. United Church Press, 1976, 1982. ISBN 9780829806137
  45. Mandate to Difference: An Invitation to the Contemporary Church. Westminster John Knox Press, 2007. ISBN 978-0-664-23121-7
  46. Many Voices, One God: Being Faithful in a Pluralistic World. Co-Edited with George Stroup Louisville, Kentucky: Westminster John Knox Press, 1998.
  47. The Message of the Psalms: A Theological Commentary. Augsburg Publishing House. 1984. ISBN 0-8066-2120-6.
  48. Old Testament Theology: An Introduction. Abingdon Press. 1 September 2010. ISBN 978-1-4267-2340-7.
  49. Patrick D Miller, ed. (1992). Old Testament Theology: Essays on Structure, Theme, and Text. Fortress Press. ISBN 978-1-4514-1969-6.
  50. Out of Babylon. Abingdon Press. 2010. ISBN 978-1-4267-1005-6.
  51. Peace (ubt Series). Chalice Press. ISBN 978-0-8272-3024-8.
  52. Power, Providence, and Personality: Biblical Insight Into Life and Ministry. Westminster John Knox Press. 1990. ISBN 978-0-664-25138-3.
  53. Prayers for a Privileged People. Abingdon Press. 1 March 2010. ISBN 978-1-4267-1370-5.
  54. Praying the Psalms. St Mary's College Press, 1982.
  55. Praying the Psalms, Second Edition: Engaging Scripture and the Life of the Spirit. Wipf and Stock Publishers. 1 May 2007. ISBN 978-1-55635-283-6.
  56. The Prophetic Imagination. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1978. ISBN.
  57. The Prophetic Imagination. Fortress Press. 2001. ISBN 978-0-8006-3287-8.
  58. Patrick D Miller. Fortress Press, ed. (1995). The Psalms and the Life of Faith. Fortress Press. ISBN 978-1-4514-1971-9.
  59. The Renewing Word. Edited by Elmer JF Arndt. United Church Press, 1968.
  60. Revelation and Violence: A Study in Contextualization; 1986 Pere Marquette Theology Lecture. Marquette University Press, 1986.
  61. Reverberations of Faith: A Theological Handbook of Old Testament Themes. Westminster John Knox Press. 2002. ISBN 978-0-664-22231-4.
  62. Sabbath as Resistance. Westminster John Knox Press. January 2014. ISBN 978-0-664-23928-2.
  63. A Social Reading of the Old Testament: Prophetic Approaches to Israel's Communal Life. Edited by Patrick D Miller. Fortress Press, 1994. ISBN 9780800627348
  64. Spirituality of the Psalms. Fortress Press. ISBN 978-1-4514-1973-3.
  65. Testimony to Otherwise: the Witness of Elijah. Chalice Press. 2001. ISBN 978-0-8272-3670-7.
  66. With Charles Cousar et al., Texts for Preaching: A Lectionary Commentary Based on the NRSV-Year A. Westminster/John Knox, 1995.
  67. With Charles Cousar et al., Texts for Preaching: A Lectionary Commentary Based on the NRSV-Year B. Westminster/John Knox, 1993.
  68. Texts Under Negotiation: The Bible and Postmodern Imagination. Fortress Press. 1993. ISBN 978-0-8006-2736-2.
  69. The Theology of the Book of Jeremiah. Cambridge Univ. Press, 2006. ISBN.
  70. The Theology of the Book of Jeremiah. Cambridge University Press. 2007. ISBN 978-0-521-60629-5.
  71. Theology of the Old Testament. Fortress Press, 2005. ISBN.
  72. Theology of the Old Testament: Testimony, Dispute, Advocacy. Fortress Press. 1 June 2012. ISBN 978-0-8006-9931-4.
  73. Walter Brueggemann, Charles Campbell (1996). Charles L Campbell (ed.). Threat of Life. Fortress Press. pp. 166–. ISBN 978-1-4514-1979-5.
  74. To Act Justly, Love Tenderly, Walk Humbly. (With Sharon Parks and Thomas H. Groome). Paulist Press, 1986.
  75. ---. WIPF & Stock, 1997. ISBN 9781579100643
  76. To Build, to Plant: A Commentary on Jeremiah 26–52: International Theological Commentary on the Old Testament. Continuum International Publishing Group, 1991. ISBN 9780802806000
  77. To Pluck Up, to Tear Down: A Commentary on the Book of Jeremiah 1–25: International Theological Commentary on the Old Testament. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1988. ISBN 9780802803672
  78. Tradition for Crisis: A Study in Hosea. John Knox Press, 1968.
  79. Truth Speaks to Power: The Countercultural Nature of Scripture. Westminster John Knox Press. 2013. ISBN 978-0-664-23914-5.
  80. Using God's Resources Wisely: Isaiah and Urban Possibility. Westminster John Knox Press. 1993. ISBN 978-0-664-25460-5.
  81. The Vitality of Old Testament Traditions. John Knox Press, 1975.
  82. Hans Walter Wolff (1982). The Vitality of Old Testament Traditions. Westminster John Knox Press. ISBN 978-0-8042-0112-4.
  83. What Are Christians For? An Enquiry into Obedience and Dissent. Pflaum-Standard, 1971.

References[edit]

^ "33rd G. Arthur Keough Lectures". Washington Adventist University. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
^ Theology, Paperback (April 15, 2014). "Walter Brueggemann's 19 Theses Revisited: A Clarification from Brueggemann Himself".
^ "The Word That Redescribes the World: The Bible and Discipleship". The Christian Century.
^ Journal
^ Walter Brueggemann, Foreword to "Fatal Embrace: Christians, Jews and the Search for Peace in the Holy Land", Mark Braverman, Synergy Books, 2010
^ Boda, Mark J. (2003). "The Priceless Gain of Penitence: From Communal Lament To Penitential Prayer in the "Exilic" Liturgy of Israel". Horizons in Biblical Theology. 25 (1), 51-75. doi: 10.1163/187122003X00033 ISSN 0195-9085 Brill Online
^ Mckim, Donald (2007). Dictionary of Major Biblical Interpreters. City: IVP Academic. pp. 242–247. ISBN 0-8308-2927-X.

2021/02/10

希修 < 초기불교와 기타 영적 전통들 간의 차이 #5. Personal vs. Impersonal >

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希修 < 초기불교와 기타 영적 전통들 간의 차이 #5. Personal vs. Impersonal >
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어디나 마찬가지이겠지만 미국 역시 코로나 이후 무료 급식소를 찾는 이들이 늘었다. 빈곤층을 위한 교회 봉사활동에 다녀왔다면서 "우리가 이렇게 사랑을 실천할 수 있는 기회를 준다는 것이 바로 코로나가 가져온 하나님의 축복"이라는 글을 어떤 분이 페북에 쓰신 적이 있다. “고작 당신의 보람을 위해 神이 그분들을 빈곤층으로 만든 것이라는 말씀인가요?” 묻고 싶었지만 참았다. A의 일을 B가 시간, 노력, 재능을 들여 도와 준 것에 대해 "부처님이 B를 통해 나를 도와 주셨다"고 기뻐하는 분을 볼 때도, “제가 알기로는 부처님은 인간사에 관여 안 하시는데요. B에 대해 진심으로 감사를 느끼기는 하시는 것인가요?” 역시 묻고 싶었지만 또 참았다.. 이놈의 삐딱함..
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'온우주가 나를 중심으로 돌아간다'고 믿는 저런 수준의 욕망은 논외로 한다 하더라도, 대부분의 영적 전통들에서는 각 존재와 삶/우주 사이에 무척 personal한 관계를 상정한다. 이 세상의 개별 존재들은 바다에서 파도가 칠 때 공중에 떠오른 물방울 하나 하나와도 같고 물방울과 바다 사이의 차이는 착각/착시에 불과하건만 그 물방울은 자신이 본질적으로 바다 ('Consciousness' = 비인격적 神) 임을 이해하지 못 한다, 라는 것이 바로 베다전통의 전제. 각 존재들이 神의 속성을 갖고 있는 神의 일부라고 믿는 종교들은 이외에도 많으며, 자신의 간절한 바람에 神/우주가 응답할 거라는 믿음은 제도종교들의 영향력이 줄어가는 현대에도 여전히 성하다.
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하지만 이런 사고방식에 대해 초기불교는 "그 믿음의 근거는 무엇이지? 자신이 본래 특별한/神性한 존재라고 믿고 싶은 그 마음의 정체는 무엇인지?"라고, 눈을 동그랗게 뜨고서 묻는다. (자신들 포함 모든 생명체와 지구 자체까지 오로지 파괴만 하는 유일한 種이 바로 인간이건만, 스스로 "우리는 본래 선하다/신성하다" 주장하는 종 역시 인간뿐이라는 이 아이러니.) "너를 사랑으로 품어 줄 테니 수고하고 짐진 자들아 모두 내게로 오라!"고 말하는 '자비로운' 이가 초기불교에는 없다. 인과의 법칙은 각 개별 존재의 상황에 대한 정상참작도 예외도 없이 돌아가며, 심지어 부처님조차 우리를 위해 아무 것도 못 해 주신다. 다른 존재들을 위해 부처님이 하신 일은, 윤회라는 이 함정에서 벗어나는 방법에 대한 가르침을 남겼다는 오로지 그 하나뿐.
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종교적 儀式이 업을 거스르지는 못 한다고 부처님은 말씀하셨다 (SN 42.6). 
"Phenomena are preceded by the mind, ruled by the mind, made of the mind."라는 법구경(Dhp I) 구절은 
분명 물질세계에 미치는 정신의 힘을 인정하지만 인과의 한계를 넘지 못 하며, 
업을 초월하는 것은 오로지 스스로 노력해서 스스로 성취하는 해탈뿐. 

베다전통과 그 아류들에서의 수행이라는 것은, 명상을 하면서 'I am,' 'I am'하고 되뇌임으로써 자기 안에서 잠자고 있는 神性을 깨우는 것. ('I am X'라고 하면 나의 정체성은 X로 제한되는데 神은 무한하기에, 그래서 'I am'이라고만 하는 것.) 

하지만 초기불교는 정반대로 각 문장 (생각이라는 것도 실은 머릿속에서 자기 자신과 나누는 대화)에서 '나(I)'라는 단어는 최대한 defocus, blur 처리할 것을 가르친다 ('not self'/'no conceit').
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"불교는 종교가 아니라 철학"이라는 얘기를 어떤 분들은 폄하의 의도를 갖고서 하신다. 그러나 오직 스스로의 노력만으로 삶과 대면해야 하고 나와 personal한 관계의, 나를 사랑으로 지켜봐 주는 神/우주 같은 것을 초기불교는 인정 않으니, 그런 면에선 저 말도 맞는 얘기. 
초기불교에서 ‘보살’은 부처/아라한의 해탈 이전 시기를 가리키는 단어일 뿐이다.
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'불교에 대한 오해 #8. 무아는 영원한 실체가 없다는 뜻'
https://www.facebook.com/keepsurfinglife/posts/1323204904718256
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'무아와 윤회'
https://www.facebook.com/keepsurfinglife/posts/1150079848697430
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"삶에 너무 많은 의미를 부여하지 마세요. 그러면 또 하나의 굴레만 늘게 됩니다. 우리 인생은 길가에 피어 있는 한 포기 풀꽃입니다. 길가의 풀처럼 그냥 살면 됩니다. '나는 특별한 존재다. 나는 특별해야 한다.' 이런 생각 때문에 자신의 하루 하루 삶에 만족 못하고 늘 초조하고 불안하고 후회하는 것입니다. 특별한 존재가 아님을 알면 특별한 존재가 되고, 특별한 존재라고 잘못 알고 있으면 어리석은 사람이 되는 겁니다." -- 법륜 스님
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希修 < 불교에 대한 오해 #8. 무아는 영원한 실체가 없다는 뜻 >

 希修 < 불교에 대한 오해 #8. 무아는 영원한 실체가 없다는 뜻 >

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'무아'를 글자 그대로 '내가 없다'로 해석하는 건 아무래도 와닿지 않고 윤회와도 모순되니, 그래서 대개 "영혼 같은 영원한 실체가 없다는 뜻"이라고들 말한다. 물론 이것도 틀린 얘기는 아니지만, 이런 해석으로는 '잠정적인, 현세에서의 나'에 대한 집착의 해결에는 전혀 도움이 되지 못 한다. "죽으면 썩어질 몸, 즐겨!"를 외치는 쾌락주의자들도 불교의 무아 교리에 부합하는 삶을 살고 있다는 틀린! 결론이 도출되며, 결국은 자기중심주의를 부추기는 꼴이 된다.   

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바닷속 물고기에게 거북이가 아무리 산속 짐승들에 대해 설명해 줘도 물고기로서는 믿기 힘들다. 높이라는 것을 상상조차 할 수 없는 2차원의 존재들은, 자신들을 훤히 내려다 보는 3차원의 존재들을 '神'이라고 여길 것이다. 창문까지 폐쇄된 31층짜리 감옥인 윤회계에서도 5층에 불과한 인간의 수준에선, 옥상으로 탈출하여 해방된( =해탈한) 부처님이 하는 어떤 얘기도 이해 불가일 뿐. 숲 전체에 있는 모든 나뭇잎들( =부처님이 발견한 진리)중 손바닥 위에 올려 놓을 수 있는 몇 장의 나뭇잎( = 苦의 문제)에 대해서만 가르치겠다, 라고 부처님이 애초부터 밝히신 것도 이런 이유 (SN 56.31). 그리고 '나'라는 것이 있느냐 없느냐, 해탈한 존재들은 어떤 식으로 존재하느냐, 우주의 시작과 끝이 무엇이냐 등에 대해서는, 고와 고의 해결에 오히려 방해만 되니 이런 문제들에 대한 형이상학적 사변은 아예 하지 말라고 초기경전의 여러 곳에서 명시하셨다 (SN 44.10, MN 2, MN 72, MN 63). 물고기가 산속 짐승들을 상상조차 할 수 없듯, 해탈 이전의 존재들로서는 아무리 고민한들 이해불가이니 그러신 게 아니겠는지. 

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윤회계로부터 탈출하려면 탐진치를 완전히 끊어야 하는데, 우리가 갖고 있는 무수한 집착들중 가장 강력한 집착이 바로 '나'집착. 그러므로, 미적분을 배우려면 사칙연산부터 시작해서 1, 2, 3차 방정식을 차근차근 배워 나가야 하듯, 수행도 단계적 체계적 접근을 해야 한다. 우선은 '선업을 쌓아야 내!가 이승에서 행복해지고 다음 생에 좋은 곳으로 윤회하며 해탈에도 점점 가까워질 수 있다.'라는 유치한(?) mundane level (A)에서 시작하여, 그 후엔 주체 아닌 행위에만 촛점을 두고서 오온(五蘊) 비롯 매사를 인과의 관점에서만 impersonal하게 파악하면서 팔정도의 8요소를 계발하는 transcendental level (B)을 거쳐야 한다. 그렇게 팔정도의 8요소를 모두 완성!하고 나면 final level (C)에 이르게 되며, 이 시점에서 비로소 '나' 포함 모든 관념과 노력마저 놓음으로써 해탈이 성취되는 것. (8요소를 완성하기도 전에 처음부터 매사 무작정 '내려놓자'만 주입/암기하는 건, 강 건너편에 도달하기도 전에 배에서 내려 물에 빠져죽는 결과가 될 뿐. MN 22.) 

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'파우더룸'이라는 유툽 채널에서는, 각 화장품 회사의 직원을 돌아가며 초대하여 자기 회사/브랜드의 제품들을 홍보하는 기회를 준다. 단, 촬영 시작시 어떤 단어가 쓰여 있는 헤어밴드를 그 직원에게 씌우는데 그 직원은 이 단어를 보지 못 하며, 이 단어를 말할 때마다 경고음이 울리기에 홍보 직원은 해당 단어를 추측으로써 피해 가면서 제품 설명을 해야 한다. 이 영상을 보고서 나는, "삶은 '나'라는 단어를 가급적 말하지도 생각지도 않아야 이기는 게임 같은 것이라고, ‘not self’ 가르침을 이런 식으로 표현할 수 있지 않을까?" 하는 생각이 떠올랐다. “코끼리에 대해 생각하지 마!”라는 얘기를 반복해 들을수록 우리의 머리엔 코끼리 이미지가 점점 더 깊이 각인된다는 George Lakoff의 얘기처럼, 내가 자기중심적이 아니려고 해도 우리의 모든 생각이 '나'를 중심으로 돌아가는 한, 우린 도저히 자기중심적 시각을 빠져나올 수 없다. '나는 이타적인 사람이 되어야지!'라는 결심조차 '나'를 중심에 놓은 것이기에 여전히 '자기중심적'이라는 이 딜레마. "나라는 것이 있습니까?"라는 질문에도 "나라는 것은 없습니까?"라는 질문에도 부처님이 침묵만을 지키신 것 역시 이런 이유 아니겠는지. 

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그러므로 '나,' '너,' '그들' 같은 주체 대신 행위에만 관심두자는 것이 Thanissaro 스님의 무아 해석이고, 매사를 a series of events로 파악하자는 것이 Bodhi 스님의 무아 설명이며, impersonalization이 바로 무아라는 게 Vimalaramsi 스님의 주장이다. 다음은 SN 21.2의 일화.

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[아난다] "우리의 스승인 부처님에게 어떤 변화 (죽음을 의미)가 생긴다면 사리풋타 존자님은 그로 인해 슬픔, 탄식, 고통, 번뇌, 절망 등의 영향을 받으실 것 같습니까?"  

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[사리풋타] "부처님이 오래 사신다면 무수한 존재들을 위해 물론 훨씬 더 좋은 일이겠지만, 스승님께 어떤 변화가 생긴다 해도 내게 슬픔, 탄식, 고통, 번뇌, 절망 등이 일어나지는 않을 것."  

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[아난다]    

(번역 i) "That must be because Venerable Sāriputta has long ago totally eradicated ego, possessiveness, and the underlying tendency to conceit. ... ..." https://suttacentral.net/sn21.2/en/sujato...   

(번역 ii) "Surely, it's because Ven. Sariputta's I-making & mine-making and obsessions with conceit have long been well uprooted ... ..." https://www.accesstoinsight.org/.../sn21/sn21.002.than.html

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'Not self'/'no conceit'를 'to take impersonally'로 해석해야만 이해가 가는 경으로서, 이렇게 본다면 아비담마에서 왜 "'내가 남보다 위'라는 생각도 '내가 남보다 아래'라는 생각도 모두 conceit"이라고 말하는지, "무아는 self-centered (자기중심)도 아니고 other-centered (타인중심)도 아니며 just centered"일 뿐이라는 Charlotte Joko Beck 선사의 얘기는 또 무슨 뜻인지, 이해가 가능해진다. 

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다만 A, B, C중 자신이 어느 단계에 있는지 잘 판단해야 한다. '나를 완전히 내려놓는' = '배에서 내리는' 것은 배가 강 건너편에 안착이나 하고 난 후에 할 일. 8요소를 완성하지도 못 했는데 에고없는 사람인 척 행동하는 건 강 한가운데에서 배에서 내리는 꼴. 아직 강을 건너는 동안은 자신에 대해 정직하고 자아를 건강하게 유지하는 편이 오히려 수행에 도움된다고 타니사로 스님은 말씀하신다.  

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'불교에 대한 오해 #7. 남 집착이 Not Self, No Conceit' 

https://www.facebook.com/keepsurfinglife/posts/1314895325549214

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"The Truth of Rebirth"

https://facebook.com/keepsurfinglife/albums/1174027482969333/

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"The Paradox of Becoming"

https://facebook.com/keepsurfinglife/albums/1123006571404758/

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"'나는 특별한 존재다. 나는 특별해야 한다.' 이런 생각 때문에 자신의 하루 하루 삶에 만족 못하고 늘 초조하고 불안하고 후회하는 것입니다. 특별한 존재가 아님을 알면 특별한 존재가 되고, 특별한 존재라고 잘못 알고 있으면 어리석은 사람이 되는 겁니다." -- 법륜 스님

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Comments

希修

‘무아’ 적용의 한 예.

"박원순을 빼고 봐야 보인다"

https://www.sisain.co.kr/news/articleView.html...

여성운동 동지가 박원순을 보내는 방법 - 시사IN

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여성운동 동지가 박원순을 보내는 방법 - 시사IN

여성운동 동지가 박원순을 보내는 방법 - 시사IN

 · Reply · 3 d · Edited

2021/02/09

[김조년의 맑고 낮은 목소리] 기다림 < 칼럼 < 오피니언 < 기사본문 - 금강일보

[김조년의 맑고 낮은 목소리] 기다림 < 칼럼 < 오피니언 < 기사본문 - 금강일보

[김조년의 맑고 낮은 목소리] 기다림
기자명 금강일보   입력 2021.02.08 


한남대 명예교수


나는 언제 처음으로 왜 무엇을 어떻게 기다리기 시작하였을까? 지금은 또 무엇을 왜 기다릴까?

내 생일이라고 어른들이 말씀하실 때, 그날이 되면 어떤 밥을 기다렸을까? 농촌에서 어머니와 한 집에 살았기에, 언제나 어머니는 집에 계셨기 때문에 나는 어려서 어머니를 기다린 적은 없었던 듯하다. 그러나 강요된 아버지에 대한 기다림, 어른들은 어린 나에게 ‘애비 언제 오나 머리 긁어보라’고 하셨다. 그러면 내 앙증맞은 손으로 내 머리 여기저기를 긁었다. 뒷꼭지 쪽을 긁으면 아직 아버지가 올 때가 먼 것이고, 이마에 가까운 머리를 긁으면 곧 오실 때가 되었다고 어른들은 뻔한 헛짓이라는 것을 알면서도 좋아하셨다. 그렇게 나는 객지에 나가 사는 아버지를 기다린 것일까? 명절 때가 되면 막연하게 나는 버스 정류장에 나가서 그를 늘 막차가 지나갈 때까지 기다렸다. 꽉 찬 버스에서 마지막에 내리는 손님을 떨구고 떠나는 버스를 한참 바라보고 맥없이 집으로 돌아올 때, 언제나 어머니를 생각했다. 어른들 앞에 명절이라고 일찍 나타나지 않는 남편이 부끄러워 그냥 죄송해 할 그 맘이 내 맘에 아리게 솟아났다.

장날이 되면 늦은 저녁나절이나 초저녁에 동구밖까지 나가 할아버지를 기다렸다. 기다림이 길어질수록 어둠은 짙어졌다. 어둠 속에 히끗히끗 두루마기자락 날리는 듯 느껴져 반갑게 그의 발자국 소리 들리는가 귀까지 쫑긋하고 기다렸다. 오시지 않는 그를 찾아 시장 가까이 살던 그의 친구 양약국 댁까지 가면서 할아버지를 기다렸다. 무엇을 기대하면서 기다린 것은 아니었다. 그렇게 하지 않으면 집에 떨어질 날벼락이 걱정되어 억지로 기다린 것일까?

그러기 전 나이가 들어 학교에 가게 됐을 때 막연히 학교 가는 날을 기다렸을까? 말로만 듣던 선생님들이 어떤 분인가를 기다렸을까? 함께 놀고 공부하게 될 다른 동네에서 오는 동무들을 기다렸을까? 새로운 학기가 되거나 학년이 되어 나누어 주던 책이 어떻게 생겼고 그 속에 무엇이 들어 있을까 기다렸을까? 시험이라는 것을 보기 시작하면서 오늘 보게 될 시험문제는 어떻게 나올까 기다렸을까? 중학교에 가고 고등학교나 대학에 들어가기 위하여 시험을 본 다음에 어떤 소식을 나는 기다렸을까? 그러다가 언젠가부터 쓰기 시작한 편지 때문에 빨간 자전거를 타고 빨간 가방을 메고 오는 우편배달부 아저씨를 기다릴 때는 벌써 꽤 생각이 컸을 때다. 아니지, 우편배달부 아저씨를 기다린 것이 아니라 혹시 그 양반이 나에게 오는 편지를 가지고 오지나 않을까 기다리지 않았을까? 언젠가부터 편지를 즐겨 쓰던 나는 나에게 오는 많은 편지를 기다릴 때, 그냥 편지를 기다렸을까? 그 속 귀한 내용을 기다렸을까? 그 중 어느 한 사람의 편지를 특별히 골라서 기다렸을까? 혹시 맘에 두었으나 한 번도 내 맘을 나타내보이지 못한 그녀가 내 맘을 알고 편지를 보내지는 않았을까 무망하게 기다린 것은 아니었을까? 군대에 가 있는 동안 간절히 바라던 그녀가 혹시 면회를 오지는 않을까 마냥 떨리는 맘으로 기다리지는 않았을까?


 
분명하고 확연한 맘으로 기다려지는 사람들이 있었다. 도부장수라고 하는 보따리장사들이 우리 집에 와서 자고 가는 일이었다. 낯선 사람들이었지만, 그들은 우리 집에서 자게 되면 이것저것 재미나는 일을 이야기하고 갔다. 그러할 때는 나는 참 재미가 있었고 기분이 좋았다. 그들이 여기저기에서 보고 들은 것들을 말할 때 나에게는 매우 특이한 소식들이었기 때문이다. 나는 그들을 기다리면서, 그들이 물고 올 괴상하고 재미있는 이야기들을 기다렸던가?

그러다가 도서관에서 이런저런 책들을 살피고 빌릴 때, 이런 저런 탁월한 사람들의 이야기를 찾아갈 때, 그 속에서 무엇인가 놀랍고 깊은 깜짝 깨달음이 오기를 기다렸을까? 우리들의 선생님들이 그렇게 했다면 무딘 나에게도 깨닫는 날이 있을까 기다렸을까? 무망하다고 포기했을까? 그렇게 많은 사람들이 애를 쓰고 고생을 했는데 왜 이 사회는 이렇게 불평등이 가득한 것일까? 있고 없고를 서로 고르게 나누어 살 수 있는 세상이 될 것이라는 것은 쓸데없는 기다림일까? 그렇게 많은 사람들이 아름다운 이야기와 화해로운 말들과 생각들을 펼쳤고 가르쳤는데도 왜 들리느니 전쟁과 다툼의 소리일까? 그런 것들 속에서 깔끔한 화평한 소리 하나 기다리는 것은 허망한 일일까? 여기저기에서 들리는 것은 불평과 불만으로 가득한 듯하다. 있다가 없고 없다가도 있게 되는, 바닷가 물결이 높고 낮게 번갈아 출렁이듯이, 있고 없고 기쁘고 슬프고 불행하다고 느끼고 행복하다고 느껴지는 것들이 하나로 움직인다는 것을 깨닫고 덤덤히 살 수 있는 때가 올 것이라고 믿는 것은 무망한 기다림일까?

가만히 생각하니 내 삶은 기다림이었던 듯하다. 무엇을 기다린다는 것도 없이 그냥 막연히 기다리는 것이 내 삶이었던가? 내 삶만이 아니라 온통 모든 삶이 다 기다림이지 않던가? 어려서 앞으로 살 날이 창창하게 멀리까지 펼쳐질 사람만 아니라, 앞날이 별로 많지 않을 것이라고 보이는 이들에게도 삶은 기다림이지 않을까? 일단 사람이라면, 살아 있는 사람이라면 그냥 기다리는 것만이 있는 것이 아닐까? 맘이 텅 비어있어도 무엇인가로 가득해도 끝없는 기다림이지 않을까? 그렇다면 나는 오늘 무엇을 기다리나? 내가 속한 퀘이커에서는 모든 사람에게는 ‘내면의 빛’이 있다고 말한다. 그 빛이 가리워지지 않고 살짝 빛나기를 기다린다. 빛나는 그 빛들이 다른 빛나는 빛들과 만나 빛의 동무들의 잔치가 일기를 기다린다. 나도 내 속에 있는 빛이 빛나기를 기다리고, 이웃 친구 속에 있는 그 빛이 빛나기를 기다린다. 그 빛들이 함께 빛나기를 기다린다.

金昌 德 크로포트킨(Peter Kropotkin)

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金昌 德
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오늘(2월 8일)은 러시아의 위대한 혁명적 사상가 크로포트킨(Peter Kropotkin)
이 세상을 떠난지 100년이 되는 되는 날입니다. 100년전 오늘인 1921년 2월 8일 새벽 모스크바 근교의 자택에서 많은 동지들이 지켜 보는 가운데 80세의 생애를 마감합니다.
 
지금 우리 사회에서 크로포트킨을 언급하거나 기억하는 일은 별로 없다고 할 수 있을 겁니다. 하지만 그가 활동했던 19세기 말에서 20세기 초 그는 세계적으로 가장 영향력 아나키스트 사상가의 한 명이었습니다. 특히 우리의 근현대사 속에서 크로포트킨은 그 중심에 있었습니다. 예를 들면 단재 신채호가 1925년 1월 2일 동아일보에 발표한 『낭객(浪客)의 신년만필』를 보면 석가, 공자, 예수, 마르크스와 함께 크로포트킨을 인류의 5대 사상가로 꼽고 있으며 이어 “조선의 청년들에게 크로포트킨의 「청년에게 고하노라」란 논문의 세례를 받자!”고 주장합니다. 

그리고 신채호가 유자명과 함께 만든 『조선혁명선언』의 주요내용인 민중의 직접혁명론은 크로포트킨의 혁명이론에서 많은 영감을 얻었다고 할 수 있습니다. 

또한 최근에 읽은 것입니다만 1924년 4월 중국 북경에서 이회영, 이을규, 이정규, 백정기, 유자명, ·정화암 등을 중심으로 『재중국조선무정부주의자연맹在中國朝鮮無政府主義者聯盟』이 결성됩니다. 그들은 1928년 6월 1일 『탈환(奪還)』이라는 기관지를 발행하는데 그 첫 페이지에 실린 「탈환의 주장」이란 논문은 크로포트킨의 주장이기도 합니다. 

이뿐만이 아니라 여기에는 이을규가 번역한 『청년에게 소(訴)함』을 볼 수있는데, 역자 주에 “이 글의 원문은 크로포트킨이 프랑스에 체류할 때 불어로 저술한 것으로 이미 세계 20여 개 나라 말로 번역되었으며, ‘조선말로도 일본 동경의 「근독사(勤讀社)」에서 펴낸 적이 있으나 동지의 입장으로 옮긴 것이 못되어 오역과 누락 심하다” 라고 했을 정도로 이전부터 크로포트킨의 저서는 당시 지식인들의 필독서였다고 할 수 있습니다.

특히 크로포트킨은 개인이 발달하고 성장할 최선의 수단을「상호부조」로 보고 있으며, 인간끼리의 경쟁(이종과의 경쟁도 포함해서)은 경쟁에 참여하는 사람들에게 최상의 이익을 가져오지 않는 경우가 많다고 주장합니다. 이는 일제강점기 약육강식이나 적자생존의 원칙을 주장함으로서 일제의 침략 지배를 정당화하는 사회진화론을 극복하고 그 침략에 저항하는데 근거가 되었던 것입니다.
 
물론 크로포트킨이 활동하던 19세기 말에서 20세기 초는 제국주의에 의한 침탈이 극성을 이루었으며 여기에 산업혁명 이래의 자본주의의 모순이 극대화되던 시기로 21세기를 한참 지난 지금도 크로포트킨의 주장을 그대로 적용하는 것은 다소 무리라고 할지 모르지만 그 가치는 지금도 유효하다고 생각합니다.
 
“지금의 우리의 모든 생산 시설, 도로나 철도, 항만 등등은 이 땅에 살았던 모든 세대들이 전해준 거대한 유산인 것으로 어떤 사상이나 발명도 과거와 현재의 공공재산이 아닌 것이 하나도 없다” 것이 그 출발점이라고 할 수 있습니다. 나아가 “누구나 쉽에 아무 조건없이 이용할 수 있는 공공 시설물의 확충”과 “모든 기구는 참여자들의 자발적 참여와 협약으로 이루어지면 정부의 간섭을 최소한의 것으로 하고 개인들에게 좀더 많은 자유가 허용되어야 한다”는 점 등이 주된 주장이기도 합니다. 이는 “스스로를 사회에 봉사하게 함과 동시에 개인에게 복종을 강요할 수 없는 정부의 실현”이라고도 할 수 있습니다.
 
한 걸음 더 나아가 크로포트킨은 “노동의 권리”가 아닌 “복지의 권리”를 주장합니다.
 
「노동의 권리」란 오로지 누군가에게 항상 지배되는 임금 노예가 되는 권리를 의미하지만 「복지의 권리」란 인간으로 태어난 누구나 인간답게 살고, 그들의 자녀가 자신들 보다 더 나은 사회의 구성원이 되게끔 양육하는 것을 의미합니다.
 
지금 전세계는 코로나19 펜더믹으로 인해 격차가 더욱 심해질 것으로 예상되고 있습니다.
정서적, 경제적 스트레스 요인으로 인해 사회, 경제적으로 낮은 수준의 사람들의 사망률 격차가 더 심해질 것이라는 점과 함께 특히 학교를 가지 못하게 됨으로서 교육의 격차와 이에 따른 소득의 격차가 격심해 질 것으로 걱정하고 있습니다. 즉 크로포트킨이 말한 특수 계층에 의한 교육의 독점과 산업의 독점입니다. 크로포트킨은 말합니다. “출생의 특권과 마찬가지로 교육의 특권을 없애라! 우리가 아나키스트인 것은 바로 이런 특권을 반대하기 때문이다”라고.
















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Yoo Jung Gil

감사합니다. 정말 소중한 글.. 저희가 지금 아나키즘 독회를 하는 중입니다. 다음번 책이 크로포트킨의 <상호부조론... 만물은...>입니다.

金昌 德

Yoo Jung Gil 저도 예전에 읽었던 <상호부조론>을 다시 읽고 있습니다.


Ku Hyun Kim

Yoo Jung Gil 어? 나만 빼고 아나키모임을?


Ku Hyun Kim

金昌 德 ㅎㅎ


Yoo Jung Gil

김규현 언제 실크로드 공부를 청하도록 하겠습니다.


Yoo Jung Gil

김규현 한번 부탁을 드리겠습니다. 저의 공부에 도움을 주시기 바랍니다.


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· 9 h


Ku Hyun Kim

Yoo Jung Gil 저야 영광이지만.
시간 널널했던 제주방콕시절이 적시였는데~~ㅎ


Yoo Jung Gil

김규현 글쎄말예요

金珍雄

요즘 일제강점기 고등교육을 받은 엘리트들에 대해서 공부하고 있습니다. 크로포트킨이 “출생의 특권과 마찬가지로 교육의 특권을 없애라! 우리가 아나키스트인 것은 바로 이런 특권을 반대하기 때문이다”라는 말을 했다는 게 흥미롭네요. 그의 저작은 한글로 번역된 논문 몇 편 읽어본 게 다인데, 제대로 읽어봐야 겠다는 생각이 들었습니다.

金昌 德

金珍雄 제가 인용한 글의 상당 부분은 <빵의 쟁취>입니다. 일독을 권합니다.

Yoo Jung Gil

金昌 德 예전에 읽었습니다만 다시 읽을 계획입니다.


Sunsook Yoo

100년전에 복지의 권리를 주장했다는 점이 인상적이네요


이민형

열심이시네요 명절 잘 보내십시요


이민형 replied
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2 replies


Ku Hyun Kim

김박사의 한결같은 학문적 열정에 늘 찬사를 보내고 있습니다.^♡^





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· 12 m



이민형

빵의 쟁취 전원 공장 작업장 크로포드킨자서전 참고하세요





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· 9 m



이민형

현대과학과 아나키즘도 있네요 시간 나시는 분들은 보십시요





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· 8 m