2017/04/12

The Resurrection of Jesus - QuakerQuaker

The Resurrection of Jesus - QuakerQuaker




The Resurrection of Jesus

Posted by Forrest Curo on 12th mo. 8, 2012 at 3:11pm in Quaker Talk

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What do you really think about the resurrection of Jesus?
Why do you think so?

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Reply by Bill Samuel on 12th mo. 8, 2012 at 5:46pm



I think the resurrection is real. An orthodox Jewish scholar once studied it and concluded that Jesus' followers would have never gotten it together to start a movement if the resurrection wasn't real. I think that is true.


As in the case of most important ideas, there is more than one truth here. Paul notes that we must die to ourselves in order to be born again as a new creation. There is a pattern here.


And of course this follows the natural order, which involves a lot of death and rebirth.



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Permalink Reply by Patricia Dallmann on 12th mo. 9, 2012 at 1:52pm



I think the following passage from Penington shows the seventeenth-century Quaker acceptance of the historic event of the crucifixion and resurrection, while also emphasizing the significance of the inward work of Christ in bringing one into knowledge of and union with him. Penington addresses a Puritan challenger:

That charge of thine on us, that we deny the person of Christ, and make him nothing but a light or notion, a principle in the heart of man, is very unjust and untrue; for we own that appearance of him in his body of flesh, his sufferings and death, and his sitting at the Father's right hand in glory: but then we affirm, that there is no true knowledge of him, or union with him, but in the seed or principle of his life in the heart, and that therein he appears, subdues sin, and reigns over it, in those that understand and submit to the teaching and government of his Spirit (Quaker Spirituality, p. 144).

Fox speaks of Friends as being "witnesses to this Jesus and his resurrection" (Works 5:86-7), thereby emphasizing, as does Penington, the inwardly experienced resurrection, rather than the historic one that occurred 16 centuries before, which would've been impossible for them to have witnessed. So, Quakers didn't deny the outward history, they simply focused on the risen Christ within.

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Permalink Reply by Forrest Curo on 12th mo. 9, 2012 at 7:36pm

I'm not sure why I started this discussion... or whether it was entirely "my" idea.

I remember someone at Pendle Hill, around Easter, suddenly being shocked by the realization: "What if he really was raised up from death?"

I (and no doubt many others here) know from (concrete) personal experiences that God can and does do miraculous things. If there can be small miracles there can be larger ones... and yet this whole event (whatever it "looked like") goes radically against the conventional common sense judgement of what is "possible" and what is not.

I agree that the history of Christianity is inexplicable on any other basis -- Certain people were powerfully, convincingly shown that Jesus, after being as thoroughly killed as the authorities could possibly do, was still alive, conscious, participating in the movement he'd started.

And that he also was done with that mission. "Nevertheless it is to your advantage that I go away, for if I did not go away, the Counselor will not come to you; but if I go, I will send him to you." As I read this, I am certain that there has never been, and can never possibly be, a living person without the Spirit in him -- but what I think this is saying, is that people were almost entirely looking to that Spirit outside themselves. The disciples saw it at work in Jesus; and as long as he remained physically present they kept looking for it outside themselves.

In the 17th Century -- If that's what the Christian scriptures said, that's what people almost uniformly agreed to. For some of us today -- this is still what they believe they must believe, as a matter of conventional common sense. But as I said, it utterly devastates what the larger, public society holds up as conventional common sense. So, I was wondering, which 'common sense' did people here find cogent? -- and how do they feel the tension of this?

In my own case, I found NT Wright (who credits the scriptures more literally than I would) making a pretty plausible historical case -- utterly convincing, at least, on the point that this is what early Christians were sure had actually happened. And that this wasn't some accidental misapprehension on their part, but something bound up in the fulfilment of God's intention for the world.

But I don't think anyone can believe it on the sole basis that early Friends thought so, or that the Christian scriptures say so. There's a bottom line or two here. 1) That this wasn't just some ordinary person whom God decided to bring back to show it could be done -- and then showed only to a few favoured people. Jesus was raised up as vindication, to show that the authoritative religious establishment could and did get God's intentions wrong -- while what Jesus was doing and saying actually did express God's will. 2) We aren't going to get this ( because it is so entirely crosswise to 'common sense') except as Pennington is saying here, by recognizing God's intentions via God's presence at work inside. Without this, we couldn't trust God to be telling us anything true or useful in these somewhat bewildering texts....

What else?

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Permalink Reply by Marianna Boncek on 12th mo. 9, 2012 at 8:25pm

I don't think it matters one way or another really. 

Have your read The Life of Pi (or seen the movie). 
Pi asks, "Which story do you prefer?" 

If you need/want/desire to believe that Jesus was raised from the dead and it helps your faith or gives meaning to your life, then great. 

If someone chooses to believe in the resurrection symbolically and it helps them live a good life than that is ok, too. 

If someone believes it's just a story, then that person can move on to other things that help them live their life to their fullest. Believe. 

If it doesn't matter, then I don't think there is any pressure or need to believe.



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Permalink Reply by Forrest Curo on 12th mo. 9, 2012 at 8:35pm



Marianna Boncek said:

If someone chooses to believe in the resurrection symbolically and it helps them live a good life than that is ok, too. If someone believes it's just a story, then that person can move on to other things that help them live their life to their fullest.



I want to 'believe in' whatever is actually true.

One element of what is called "faith" is the trust that if you're willing to face whatever does turn out to be the truth -- this will turn out to be something one can live with, and even love. (There is another meaning that goes beyond that, but we'll get into that later, maybe.)

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Permalink Reply by Patricia Dallmann on 12th mo. 10, 2012 at 11:10am



Forrest wrote:


"We aren't going to get this ( because it is so entirely crosswise to 'common sense') except as Pennington is saying here, by recognizing God's intentions via God's presence at work inside."

I think that this is correct. Before some of these stories and writings make sense, they need to be read from a different perspective. Fox spoke of "opening" the Scriptures, and by that he meant explaining the spiritual meaning so that they made sense to people who hadn't yet made the same inward discovery that he and others in the early movement had. For an example of the futility of trying to make sense of these matters from a common sense perspective, look at the conversation with Nicodemus in John 3.

This is not to say that nothing can be done using our natural faculties to further our way. In your response, Forrest, to the whatever-floats-your-boat comment by another writer, you upheld the importance of struggling to find and then subjecting yourself to the truth, however difficult that proves to be. This devotion to truth is the stuff of which Quakers are made!  A parable that teaches the importance of using our human capacities well is the one about the talents in Matthew 25, verses 14 through 30.

Though using our intellect and our integrity to both find and value truth will never gain us an understanding of heavenly things, our discernment is exercised and improved by using these capacities in an honest, diligent way. And we need to improve our discernment if we are ever to follow the inward movement of the Spirit. Using these highest human powers (intellect, integrity) prepares us for receiving the wisdom that comes from above; in traditional language, it prepares the Way of the Lord by making his paths straight. This is the teaching of John the Baptist, who immediately precedes the Christ, both in the Scriptures and also within.









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Permalink Reply by Petros on 12th mo. 10, 2012 at 1:10pm



If Jesus did physically and bodily resurrect, then was His ascension physically and bodily a process of going up into the sky?



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Permalink Reply by Forrest Curo on 12th mo. 10, 2012 at 5:42pm



Agnikan Ashwin said:



If Jesus did physically and bodily resurrect, then was His ascension physically and bodily a process of going up into the sky?



This doesn't appear to be a consistent element in the stories. Furthermore, it's hard to say where this "up" would be... In the direction of what? Much like Jesus conceived as physically seen returning in the sky everywhere -- difficult to do on a spherical Earth.




Luke [http://lightthruthepages.wordpress.com/2012/10/13/luke-24/]


"Then he led them as far as Bethany, and blessed them with uplifted hands; and in the act of blessing he departed from them." New English Bible: "Some witnesses add 'and was carried up to Heaven'."




New Oxford Annotated Bible, 1973 (Revised Standard version): "While he blessed them, he departed from them, and was carried up into Heaven." "Other ancient authorities omit 'and was carried up into Heaven'."




"Luke" in Acts ( after spending "forty days" with them): "As they watched, he was lifted up, and a cloud removed them from their sight." [Think also of Daniel, 'One like us sons of Adam' going to the Ancient of Days to be given dominion over the Earth.]


--- ----- -----



The actual resurrection stories seem quite inconsistent, except as ways of conveying the fact that everyone concerned had experienced Jesus as physically present. The body involved seems to be "in this world but not of it", ie Jesus can eat a physical fish, if he wishes, but can also pass through a solid wall simply to demonstrate that he isn't limited by such things.


----- ------ ------




God had to enable Jesus to return to his people, in order to achieve the results we observe -- a rapidly growing movement, supporting the royal claims of a man whom everyone else agreed was dead. The sudden appearance of "death plus resurrection" as an attribute of the Messiah -- based on what? Nothing in "The Scriptures" that anyone else has found before or since. But if your candidate for Messiah comes to a bad end -- and then reappears, alive -- It seems to demonstrate that God isn't going to let a little thing like death stand in the way of 'His' will for us.




Having Jesus physically ascend into the sky, however... Could he? Sure. Did he need to? I don't think so. That's why I'm less inclined to affirm any such thing... or think it matters particularly.




An ambulance worker I knew in the 70's -- had the day off, and had taken LSD. A neighbor of his had taken too many pills, and he found her near death. He said he'd seen her floating up into a dark tunnel of some sort, and floated up after her to bring her back. But while he was doing this, he was physically dialing 911, and doing everything he knew on a physical level to pull her through.



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Permalink Reply by James C Schultz on 12th mo. 10, 2012 at 6:34pm



I think it happened. Why? Because it makes sense to me from my understanding of the whole bible and the claim/fact that many of the people who we are told were there at the time somehow got a lot of people to believe it and died trying to get even more people to believe it. Why die for something that isn't going to make you rich or powerful? Something has to be happening to transform lives. People can't even stay on diets or stop smoking even though they know they ae ruining their health. Something powerful had to happen to transform His disciples - of course I believe it is still happening and people are still being transformed. I know I have been.



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Permalink Reply by David Bundrick on 12th mo. 11, 2012 at 11:32am



I believe that Jesus was a man of human parentage, and that his death was precisely like that of any other man or woman. It is his life that should be of importance to us, not his death. Isn't that more in line with what we are about - how we live our lives and not being too concerned about things we can never know?

Incidentally, if we base our beliefs solely on what our forebears believed, in the early days of Christendom, well over half of Christians did not believe Jesus was divine, and many of those were the "barbarian" Germanic tribes. If Clovis had not opted to convert his Franks to trinitarian Christianity, thus tipping the balance, history could have been quite different.



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Permalink Reply by Forrest Curo on 12th mo. 11, 2012 at 2:58pm



There's an assumption implied in your belief that this is a "thing we can never know" -- that God is not real to enable us to find the truth of Jesus' life.

Yes, his life is crucial: Who is this man they say was resurrected? -- and what is the significance of him dying "like any other man or woman," beaten almost to death and then hung on a cross to show what happens to people like that?

It is highly unlikely that our forebears got everything right -- There'd be little need for us if they had, and at least much less we'd need to reconsider.

You can certainly read the Gospel of 'John' as saying, in several places, that we are as divine as Jesus. Any 'God-conscious' Hindu knows this. But the question here is whether Jesus 'natural' death led to a highly atypical return to life, embodied life at least in some sense.

The significance of that is, for one thing, that The Good Guys aren't losing. And that the World is not a swindle, not a hopelessly unjust and tragic misery. They can hang us up to die, but that's a temporary setback; the Fix is in.

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Permalink Reply by David Bundrick on 12th mo. 12, 2012 at 9:12am



Well, I didn't think it a mere implication, but I'll state it affirmatively. We can never be sure of anything we're told to believe without a shred of scientific poof. I would like to believe that Confederate gold is buried in my back yard and am free to do so, but at least that is a belief that can be substantiated or refuted by excavation (so far my wife has resisted). If someone wishes to believe Jesus is a demigod, the product of the mating between a god and a human, and that he literally died and came to life at a time when corpses begin to stink, I have no objection (as long as they let me fantasize about the gold). Personally, I think Jesus was a man, conceived and perished like any man. But religious beliefs can never be substantiated or refuted. We cannot know these things. It's better to see the light in all people and live our lives accordingly.







Forrest Curo said:



There's an assumption implied in your belief that this is a "thing we can never know" -- that God is not real to enable us to find the truth of Jesus' life.




Yes, his life is crucial: Who is this man they say was resurrected? -- and what is the significance of him dying "like any other man or woman," beaten almost to death and then hung on a cross to show what happens to people like that?




It is highly unlikely that our forebears got everything right -- There'd be little need for us if they had, and at least much less we'd need to reconsider.




You can certainly read the Gospel of 'John' as saying, in several places, that we are as divine as Jesus. Any 'God-conscious' Hindu knows this. But the question here is whether Jesus 'natural' death led to a highly atypical return to life, embodied life at least in some sense.




The significance of that is, for one thing, that The Good Guys aren't losing. And that the World is not a swindle, not a hopelessly unjust and tragic misery. They can hang us up to die, but that's a temporary setback; the Fix is in.

---

Permalink Reply by Forrest Curo on 12th mo. 12, 2012 at 12:47pm





David Bundrick said:



... We can never be sure of anything we're told to believe without a shred of scientific poof...


The essence of science is "Test all things, and believe what checks out."


If you test the proposition: "God can teach and guide me," with your life, it works. You won't need to "believe" anything "we're told to believe", as such. Some of what people tell you will turn out true, not all of it.


Science will help you understand the workings of anything that holds still long enough to be measured, but scientism turns out to be just another one of those things "we're told to believe."


The Bible? What various people thought had happened in the course of a long historical interaction between God and humans, who got some of it right and some of it wrongheaded.


But when you know, from your own life, that God continues to teach and guide you -- then you can't doubt that this is part of a long divine courtship of the whole silly human race, in which that book plays a prominent role. You literally can't imagine that God is not using this flawed book to communicate with humanity in general, and you among them. It doesn't mean that they, or you, have necessarily gotten it right.


A significant number of people who had literally known Jesus became convinced, by something, not "that they'd been told to believe" he was alive, or had expected any such thing, but that they'd encountered him restored to life after a very ugly death -- and this made all the difference in their lives & subsequent history. God could have fooled them... but this isn't some pointless detail like the state of Mary's hymen. The whole story says truly mind-blowing things about God's power, the nature of this universe, the way God does and doesn't act through it -- and the meaning of that condition we call "death," along with everything else that happens to human beings in this world.



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Permalink Reply by David Bundrick on 12th mo. 13, 2012 at 8:04am



Alas, I do envy true believers - I really do, because life would be so much easier. Mark Twain defined "faith" as "believing in what you know isn't so". I cannot make myself believe in a super being out there who micromanages this vast universe, even to the point of "communicating" with one species. All I can do is believe that all people are good and deserve respect and kindness, even ones who do apparently very bad things, and live my life accordingly. I'm an old man, and I've tried drinking the kool aid a number of times, but it's never taken hold. The best to you, friend.


Forrest Curo said:





David Bundrick said:



... We can never be sure of anything we're told to believe without a shred of scientific poof...


The essence of science is "Test all things, and believe what checks out."


If you test the proposition: "God can teach and guide me," with your life, it works. You won't need to "believe" anything "we're told to believe", as such. Some of what people tell you will turn out true, not all of it.


Science will help you understand the workings of anything that holds still long enough to be measured, but scientism turns out to be just another one of those things "we're told to believe."


The Bible? What various people thought had happened in the course of a long historical interaction between God and humans, who got some of it right and some of it wrongheaded.


But when you know, from your own life, that God continues to teach and guide you -- then you can't doubt that this is part of a long divine courtship of the whole silly human race, in which that book plays a prominent role. You literally can't imagine that God is not using this flawed book to communicate with humanity in general, and you among them. It doesn't mean that they, or you, have necessarily gotten it right.


A significant number of people who had literally known Jesus became convinced, by something, not "that they'd been told to believe" he was alive, or had expected any such thing, but that they'd encountered him restored to life after a very ugly death -- and this made all the difference in their lives & subsequent history. God could have fooled them... but this isn't some pointless detail like the state of Mary's hymen. The whole story says truly mind-blowing things about God's power, the nature of this universe, the way God does and doesn't act through it -- and the meaning of that condition we call "death," along with everything else that happens to human beings in this world.



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Permalink Reply by Forrest Curo on 12th mo. 13, 2012 at 11:42am





David Bundrick said:



Alas, I do envy true believers -



If you want to talk about what I'm not talking about, this puts you in good company -- closer than you know to people who think I should swallow the Bible whole. It's not about "believing in" but about being open.




Observing what it is that observes is one good way in -- but so is questioning your own assumptions.



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Permalink Reply by James C Schultz on 12th mo. 13, 2012 at 1:46pm



Unfortunately being a true believer isn't that easy. First there's the fact that just because you believe doesn't mean you understand. Second is the fact that just because you know what is the right thing to do doesn't mean you want to do it. Third is the fact that just because you want to do what right doesn't mean everyone else does or that the world will not trample you if you do. I could go on but you get the idea.:) In many ways it's harder than not being a believer. The difference to me is that I'm happier and that's in spite of not understanding everything that happens, well at least some things that happen; still not being able to stop eating too much ice cream; and still going crazy trying to make some money in a profession that rewards those with a lack of integrity.



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Permalink Reply by Betsy Packard on 12th mo. 23, 2012 at 6:49pm



I do believe in a "higher power" as addiction assistance groups refer to a supreme being. I believe the greatest gift we were given as human beings is the gift of free will, which means to me that this supreme being (or is it a collective pantheon as some cultures throughout history and into the prescoincent believe) is not into micro management. The laws of nature were put in motion, if I drop something it falls down as opposed to dropping up as in space. Sometimes there are anomalies to the norms, and often we do not have explanations for those anomalies.

As for Jesus, to me he was an awesome teacher. It was the need to recruit pagans that the myths developed. Look at how many religions throughout history have heroes with virgin births, deaths and resurrections (with resurrections coinciding with the coming of spring). Christianity is a hybrid. The Bible has a lot of good stuff in it, some of the OT is historically correct! The Psalms are poetry, much of which was written by David, including during the time when Saul was pursuing him. But then we get to the New Testament and eventually the Council of Nicea, and human agendas and politics slid in the door.

Christianity in its most basic form doesn't believe Jesus was a demi god like Helen or Troy or Hercules. Christian dogma says Jesus was fully human AND FULLY GOD. Then we have the Trinity, which is not once mentioned in the Bible itself. (Then there's the mishrad about the 3 Magi, which the Bible never says how many of these Zoroastrians came from Persia! The 3 gifts are symbolic. It's a story meant to teach certain values, not to teach fact.)
---
To me, Jesus was an awesome teacher who not nearly enough of his supposed followers actually follow! He really boiled things down to the essentials: Love God, Love One Another. What could be easier?

To me, Jesus was a Buddha. There have been multiple Buddhas throughout human history, people who have deeply spiritual lives who try to teach us a better way to live with each other. I do believe that there is that which is of "God" within every person, and I'll even take the step of saying within all sentient beings.

I was raised to believe in the viigin birth and the resurrection 3 days (or so) after horrific execution. Letting that belief go was a conscious decision for me, and in no way does it lessen the importance of Jesus the man for me. In no way does it lessen his teachings.

But I keep in mind that the Bible as we know it is a compilation that was greatly influenced by human agendas and politics, and the similarities Christianity has with other belief systems throughout history tells me it's a hybrid of multiple religions.

And I do not use the word "Christian" to describe myself, for oh so many reasons, including all the horrific actions that have occurred under that label.
----


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Permalink Reply by Forrest Curo on 12th mo. 23, 2012 at 10:27pm



Much of that "OT" is not at all historical; and there seems to have been politics involved from as far back as it goes....




But who was it with this "need to recruit pagans"?




'The Church', as just another Jewish sect -- and not at all militant, as these groups went -- ought to have done just fine without a massive missionary effort. Actually the main explanation I know for violent opposition from both the Roman authorities and rival Jewish groups was the fact that Christians were making pagan converts in significant numbers, and not imposing the traditional disciplines on them. Noncompliance with pagan customs was okay with Romans as long as the perpetrators were Jews practicing their inherited traditions -- but that tolerance got brittle if sectarians started corrupting respectable Romans; it got difficult for Jewish congregations to maintain if the authorities were likely to confuse them and their services with some mass-market sect that was recruiting pagans and teaching them to defy Roman customs, while not really teaching them how to be proper Jews.




Now if it was God who'd seen "a need to convert pagans", that puts those "myths" on a different footing.




It doesn't necessarily render them accurate; it does imply something more than human craziness behind them.




I can't see that stories of a virgin birth would have gained Jesus any followers... "You're telling me this guy was born without a father, so I should accept his Torah interpretations and expect the imminent arrival of God's reign? Huh?"




But convincing experience of Jesus' living presence, after he'd been publicly executed & was presumed dead -- That would change matters significantly. "People thought he was a false Messiah, because dead folks don't become King. But he's alive; God raised him up & he'll be back soon with legions of angels; you just wait!"




Many 1st Century Jews were sure that "the Kingdom of God" was going to be reestablished by a massive revolt ala the Maccabees, only for real this time. Certainly these groups weren't expecting crushing military defeat and the destruction of the Temple -- but they proved to be gravely mistaken about God's intentions & how these would be realized.




It doesn't look like contemporary Christians had a much better track record, in terms of predicting the immediate future -- except that they weren't expecting a Kingdom based on military might, and don't seem to have bought into those disasterous revolts.




As for God's long term intentions -- what that Kingdom ought to look like when it arrives -- That seems to have been the burden of Jesus' message; and nice ethical precepts seem to be only part of it.



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Permalink Reply by David Bundrick on 12th mo. 25, 2012 at 8:37am



If you have not already, pick up a copy of the Jefferson Bible. Thomas Jefferson, a Deist but not a Christian cut and pasted the gospels, deleting such nonsense as the virgin birth and the "miracles" and leaving the important parts. Makes for good reading.


Betsy Packard said:



I do believe in a "higher power" as addiction assistance groups refer to a supreme being. I believe the greatest gift we were given as human beings is the gift of free will, which means to me that this supreme being (or is it a collective pantheon as some cultures throughout history and into the prescoincent believe) is not into micro management. The laws of nature were put in motion, if I drop something it falls down as opposed to dropping up as in space. Sometimes there are anomalies to the norms, and often we do not have explanations for those anomalies.





As for Jesus, to me he was an awesome teacher. It was the need to recruit pagans that the myths developed. Look at how many religions throughout history have heroes with virgin births, deaths and resurrections (with resurrections coinciding with the coming of spring). Christianity is a hybrid. The Bible has a lot of good stuff in it, some of the OT is historically correct! The Psalms are poetry, much of which was written by David, including during the time when Saul was pursuing him. But then we get to the New Testament and eventually the Council of Nicea, and human agendas and politics slid in the door.





Christianity in its most basic form doesn't believe Jesus was a demi god like Helen or Troy or Hercules. Christian dogma says Jesus was fully human AND FULLY GOD. Then we have the Trinity, which is not once mentioned in the Bible itself. (Then there's the mishrad about the 3 Magi, which the Bible never says how many of these Zoroastrians came from Persia! The 3 gifts are symbolic. It's a story meant to teach certain values, not to teach fact.)





To me, Jesus was an awesome teacher who not nearly enough of his supposed followers actually follow! He really boiled things down to the essentials: Love God, Love One Another. What could be easier?





To me, Jesus was a Buddha. There have been multiple Buddhas throughout human history, people who have deeply spiritual lives who try to teach us a better way to live with each other. I do believe that there is that which is of "God" within every person, and I'll even take the step of saying within all sentient beings.





I was raised to believe in the viigin birth and the resurrection 3 days (or so) after horrific execution. Letting that belief go was a conscious decision for me, and in no way does it lessen the importance of Jesus the man for me. In no way does it lessen his teachings.





But I keep in mind that the Bible as we know it is a compilation that was greatly influenced by human agendas and politics, and the similarities Christianity has with other belief systems throughout history tells me it's a hybrid of multiple religions.





And I do not use the word "Christian" to describe myself, for oh so many reasons, including all the horrific actions that have occurred under that label.




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Permalink Reply by Betsy Packard on 12th mo. 25, 2012 at 11:20pm



Yes, David. Jefferson was a product of the Enlightenment, the Age of Reason. I've long been familiar with Jefferson's version of the Gospels, and interestingly enough, he felt that he followed the teachings of Jesus, and that this entitled him to refer to himself as a Christian. (I take issue with just how closely he followed Jesus' teachings, but then I remember to "judge not." <G>)




Unfortunately, some folks these days take Jefferson's reference to himself as a "Christian" to mean that he was a Christian in THEIR sense of the word. They take it completely out of context, and then use this as "evidence" that the "founding fathers" were "Christians." <sigh> Ah, the pitfalls of generalizations.





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Permalink Reply by David Nelson Seaman on 2nd mo. 11, 2013 at 11:37am



I would like to thank David for bringing up the Jefferson "Bible" and Betsy's repsonse. Its' essence, consisting of New Testament passages attributed directly to the sayings made only by Jesus, was a refreshing reprieve from the New Testament for me when I first encountered it . Jefferson certainly beleived in God, as did all of the Founding Fathers, and the Age of Enlightenment did seem to provide wise counsel in avoiding any declaration of a specific faith statement in the Consititution of the United States, the thought being that religious tests should not be instituted, or required, by government. We owe Jefferson a great deal of thanks for this.


Early Friends may have had a far differnet view, however. In a query made by Jonathan Evans on the teachings of Elias Hicks at the Pine Street Meeting in 1826, it was said by the elder Evans, that " the Society of Friends beleived in the atonement, mediation and intercession of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ". "We believe him', said he, " to be the King of Kings and Lord of lords, before whose judgement seat every soul shall be arrainged and judged by him. We do not concieve him to be a mere man, and we therefore desire that people may not suppose that we hold any such doctirnes (the teaching of Elias Hicks ), or that we have any unity with them". Willian Penn wrote, on this point, the following: "the Coming of Jesus Christ in that blessed manifestation ( in the flesh ) was to the Jews only, and quotes Mathew xv, "He was not sent but to the lost sheep of the house of Israel", and again in John 1, " He came into his own, and his own received him not".


The issue of Jesus becomes more pronouned in the theological life of America when in 1828, Ralph Waldo Emerson gave his famous " Harvard Divinity School Address". He said that while Jesus was a great man, he was not God. This enraged the Protestant community, who termed him an atheist and corrupter of young minds. He was not asked back to Harvard for 30 years. However, by the late 19th century, the doctrine that Jesus was not God was routintly accepted by Unitarians ( and some Quakers, I believe ), through the rejection of the doctrine of the Holy Trinity, although he was recognized as an extrodinary human being. Which goes full circle back to Jefferson.


When asked to believe if Jesus is God, one must seem to hold the doctrine of the Holy Trinity in order to justify that particular belief. Any thoughts on this ?





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Permalink Reply by Forrest Curo on 2nd mo. 12, 2013 at 12:01am



Jesus was clearly a 'unitarian' -- that is, Jewish rather than a conventional 'Christian'.


But trying to decide which quotes were 'really him' and which were the excesses of later followers is not necessarily as easy as Jefferson thought. One can easily distinguish which passages resonate as true from those that seem spurious or exaggerated -- but then one has to leave open the possibility that one simply hasn't found the meaning, given that Jesus was almost certainly speaking Aramaic & needing to rely on metaphor, sometimes very exhuberatedly so.


Quotes that suggest 'The Trinity' may simply be misinterpretations of 1) Jesus speaking prophetically 'for' God and 2) a mystical sense that he, and the rest of us, are incarnations of God's Spirit -- something that Genesis definitely hints at, not to mention later Jewish mystics.



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Permalink Reply by David Nelson Seaman on 2nd mo. 12, 2013 at 5:01pm



Thank you for your insights, Forrest. Much of what was attributed as being said by Jesus seems like a retelling of pre-extant wisdom literature that permeated the cultures and faith tradtions in the area of Canaan. I seemed to have dodged the ressurection question, but there is a litany of savior gods before the Old Testament, such as Baal, Tammuz, Mithras, Horus, Adonis etc., which have similities to the ressurection story of Jesus- and in which the population was versed. I lean towards thinking Tammuz as being the model, although the influence of Horus encompased a larger geographical area due to vast influence of Egypt and its scholars. Don't we all wish the great library at Alexandria had not been burned down by a Christian mob ?




While many of todays Christians would like to identify the United States as a Christian nation, one following the teachings of Jesus, there is a historical document in our archives penned by Washington in 1796 and signed by Adams 1797, that avoided making that claim. The peace treaty with Tripoli stated it clearly:




" As the government of the United States is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion; as it has no character of enmity against the laws, religion, or tranquility of Musselmen; and as the said States never have entered into any war or act of hostility against any Mehomitan nation, it is declared by the parties that no pretext arising from religious opinions shall ever produce an interruption of the harmonies between the two countries."




I think that by not imposing and adopting Jesus as a national icon we have perhaps honored him in ways more befitting to him than any nation, collectively, has the capacity to fullfill. The worship and place of Jesus in individual religous faith is well assigned and relagated, I think, to preserve this divinity. I am not sure Washington and Jefferson were being short sighted on this matter.







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Permalink Reply by James C Schultz on 1st mo. 31, 2014 at 11:41am



I don't know why I stumbled upon this and I don't want to take part in the general topic but I thought it would be interesting to point out that people who have after life experiences speak of floating upwards (with one person I met telling me she was floating downward, fearfully, before she came back).


Agnikan Ashwin said:



If Jesus did physically and bodily resurrect, then was His ascension physically and bodily a process of going up into the sky?

2017/04/11

Resurrection? | The Postmodern Quaker

Resurrection? | The Postmodern Quaker

Resurrection?


Was Jesus raised bodily from death after his crucifixion? And is belief that he was raised necessary for Christian faith and practice? Compelled by those questions, in 1989 I made a critical analysis of the biblical resurrection testimony. I concluded that Jesus’ body probably corrupted in the earth some two thousand years ago, but I was able to affirm that my faith does not depend upon an ancient miracle-story. The following is a more polished version of the essay I wrote back then. The essay presumes the historical existence of Jesus, about which I am now agnostic; I hope that it will prove interesting for readers regardless of their opinion on that question.
----
William Blake: Christ after the resurrection
Then entered also that other disciple, who had arrived at the tomb first; and he saw, and he believed [Mary’s news, that Jesus’ body had been removed]. For they had not as yet perceived that scripture requires him to rise from the dead. — John 20:8-9
Biblical scholars have spoken of two aspects of the resurrection, the objective and the subjective. The former usually refers to the question of what, if anything, happened to Jesus after his death, while the latter refers to the rise of the resurrection belief in the minds of his disciples. In examining the Christian scriptures’ testimony to the resurrection of Jesus, I found that the texts provide keys to understanding both aspects in a way that does not require belief in supernatural interventions. I also found that the two aspects constitute a unity.
Critical examination of the Christian scriptures reveals that the authors did not share our modern concept of history: they shaped narratives and even the words of Jesus to suit their theological and literary purposes, and they invented apparently historical events to serve as vehicles for the communication of religious messages. Such activities can be seen in, among other things, textual developments from earlier to later works (compare, for example, the Jesus of Mark to the Jesus of John), and they resulted in contradictions among the various books. The historicizing tendency in particular provides us with a key for understanding the two forms of resurrection testimony that seem to point to objective, historical events; namely, the story of the empty tomb, and the accounts of appearances of the risen Jesus.
The meaning of the empty tomb has been debated since early Christian times. Certainly the fact that someone’s tomb is discovered to be empty does not prove, or even suggest, that the person has been raised from the dead. If Jesus’ tomb was in fact found empty, there are reasons other than his resurrection why it may have been so. Perhaps there was confusion about where he’d been buried. Perhaps someone removed the body. The evangelists recognize the ambiguity of the empty tomb: all of them provide one or more messengers to reveal the meaning of the scene (although in John’s book, Jesus himself appears before the angels can explain). Matthew even provides unsympathetic witnesses in the form of guards – witnesses not to the resurrection itself, for the scriptures never assert that anyone witnessed the resurrection, but to the rolling away of the stone by an angel.
The empty tomb, then, is at best ambiguous; it may also be apocryphal. Like other victims of Roman crucifixion, Jesus may have been thrown into a common grave after his death. According to Acts 13:29, it was those who had Jesus crucified who buried him. That presents the possibility that the burial in a tomb belonging to Joseph of Arimathea, whom Luke 23:51 explicitly excludes from those who had Jesus crucified, is a legend, and that the empty tomb tradition is a product of the Christian scriptures’ historicizing tendency. Mark, the earliest of the canonical gospel books, originally included no appearance narratives, but ended with the young man’s revelation of the resurrection to the women, who “said nothing to anyone, for they were afraid” (Mk. 16:8) and whose testimony may have had little weight in a patriarchal society. The story of the empty tomb, with its messenger of revelation, is reminiscent of theophanies in the Hebrew scriptures. In the absence of appearance stories, it could have served the Markan tradition as a narrative vehicle for the belief that Jesus had been raised.
Unlike the earlier Mark, the other gospel books do provide narrative accounts of appearances of Jesus. There are, however, unresolvable contradictions among them. (See “A Comparison of N. T. Resurrection Accounts” for details.) Further, those relatively late compositions are replete with elements of myth and legend. We cannot simply assume that they record what we would consider to be objective history; on the contrary, they appear to be instances of historicization.
Earlier than those narratives – and in contradiction to them – is 1 Corinthians 15:3-8, where Paul gives us a sequential listing of appearances with no narrative detail. The list seems to be part of a liturgical or credal formula that predates Paul’s letter. Consequently, the passage is often cited as a proof-text for the historicity of appearances of Jesus. However, it is possible that the passage is a composite of a pre-existing formula and additional elements. The original formula would have proclaimed simply that Jesus died in accordance with the scriptures, that he was buried, and that he was raised from the dead in accordance with the scriptures. The list(s) of appearances, including the appearance to him, would have been appended by Paul (and, perhaps, a redactor). While this view does not preclude a relatively early date for the appearance tradition, it does suggest that the earliest proclamation of the resurrection, as represented by the formula Paul quoted, may not have included it.
Some scholars have held, therefore, that the appearance stories represent a visual model for experiences of forgiveness and vocation that implied the continuing presence of Jesus. I agree that “appearance of Jesus” was probably an articulating model for the disciples’ experience. However, it seems likely to me that it was the idea of Jesus’ resurrection which first dawned upon the disciples; from that revelation came the confidence that neither the forgiveness and vocation Jesus had offered them nor the Kingdom he had proclaimed had been nullified by his death. That, I think, is a more natural sequence of events. In either case, however, it was the revelatory experience of Jesus that was primary; the appearance accounts would serve as a common narrative vehicle for communicating that experience.
We find, then, that we can be confident of the historicity of only one event: somehow, some disciples came to believe that Jesus had been raised from death. In attempting to understand that event, we must give full weight to the transformation it effected in those disciples. People who had fled in fear at Jesus’ arrest, and who may at first have believed that the crucifixion was God’s rejection of Jesus and his message of the Kingdom, began to proclaim that Jesus had been exalted to God and would soon bring in that Kingdom in power. I don’t think that locating the rise of that faith solely in the disciples’ continuing to be inspired by Jesus’ message does justice to their transformation. The disciples staked their salvation and possibly their lives on their resurrection belief. As Paul says, they understood that anyone who would fabricate such a story would be guilty of misrepresenting God (1 Cor. 15:15). It seems to me that their belief in the resurrection of Jesus could not have arisen without some objective event or reality as a catalyst.
I submit, however, that we have only to look to the Hebrew scriptures for that reality. It has been established that, then as now, it was not unusual for scripture to be applied to current events as if it had been written specifically about them. The disciples of Jesus had experienced the Kingdom of God breaking into history in the person and ministry of Jesus — in other words, they had experienced themselves as living in the eschaton, the end-time that heralded the resurrection of the dead and the birth of God’s new world. They had trusted that what had begun in a small way in their lives would inevitably and soon become a reality for all the world. But the idea of the Kingdom of God, and the expectation of its imminent arrival, would have come to Jesus and the disciples through scripture and through their interpretation of events of their time in light of scripture. When the Kingdom seemed threatened by the crucifixion, the disciples would have looked to scripture for the meaning of that event as well. It was, then, scripture itself that provided the objective basis for belief in the resurrection.
If scripture was the objective element, then the disciples’ application of scripture to current events is the key to the subjective aspect of the resurrection belief. The disciples found revelation in scripture that God’s eschatological servant would suffer and die but would not be abandoned to the power of death. One source of that revelation would have been the psalms. In Mark 15:34 and Matthew 27:46, for example, the dying Jesus quotes the beginning of Psalm 22, crying out “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” That psalm goes on to describe how the psalmist, “dry as a potsherd,” watches ruffians cast lots for his clothing (v. 18) — a scene that Matthew has historicized in 27:34. Psalm 22 ends with a paean of praise to God; evidently, God did not abandon the sufferer in the end. The theme of deliverance is sounded in other psalms as well. In Psalm 18:4-19 we read, “When the cords of death held me fast … then in anguish of heart I cried to the Lord … [and] he reached down from the height and … rescued me because he delighted in me.” Psalm 16:10-11 declares, “… for you will not abandon me to Sheol [death] nor suffer your holy one to see the pit. You will show me the path of life; in your presence is fullness of joy, in your right hand delight for evermore.” And Psalm 116:3, 16b says, “The cords of death bound me, Sheol held me in its grip. [But] you have undone the bonds that bound me.” The psalms, then, pointed to Jesus’ deliverance from death. But they were not the only scriptural sources of light on the fate of Jesus.
Among other scriptures, the book of the prophet Isaiah was a rich source of material for primitive Christianity. That complex and composite book contains marvelous visions of the Day of the Lord and the Kingdom of God. It asserts that the dead will rise (see Is. 26:19), although the idea of an eschatological resurrection is more fully developed in apocalyptic books such as Daniel and Enoch. More importantly, the book of Isaiah describes a “suffering servant” in terms that were later applied to Jesus. It speaks of the innocent servant of God who is despised by his people, suffers and dies for the sins of many, is buried, and is brought back from death and rewarded by God. Scripture revealed to the disciples both the meaning of Jesus’ death and the fact of his vindication by God through his resurrection. Thus their earliest proclamation was that Jesus had died and been raised in accordance with the scriptures.
In scripture and its interpretation by the disciples, then, the objective and subjective aspects of the resurrection are united. They coalesce in a divine revelation received through sacred writings as interpreted in light of the disciples’ experience of the incipient Kingdom. Scripture disclosed that Jesus had not died a failure; his death was a part of the process of the Kingdom’s arrival. That process had begun with his ministry and reached a climactic point in his resurrection to God’s right hand, and it would continue on to its inevitable and imminent conclusion – the coming of the Kingdom in fullness and power. The revelation prepared the disciples to open their hearts to the spirit of Jesus and to continue his work of proclaiming the Kingdom and living out its implications.
I believe that this analysis of the rise of the resurrection faith has much to commend it. It accepts the evidence of critical research that the writers of the Christian scriptures were concerned with proclamation (kerygma), not with objective history. It respects the integrity of both the primitive Christian and the twenty-first-century, post-Christian world-views, as well as that of the biblical texts themselves. And it understands the events narrated in those texts in terms of natural, human processes – in a way that does not, however, rule out the possibility of revelation.
Of course, this view means that Jesus’ resurrection, while it may have mythic and spiritual truth, is not historical in the same way in which — presumably — his life and death are. For some, this conclusion is unacceptable. Paul, for example, felt that “if Christ has not been raised, then your faith is vain; you are still in your sins. Consequently, those who have gone to repose in Christ are perished. If it is for this life only that we have hope in Christ, then we are the most forlorn of all” (1 Cor. 15: 17-19). Paul and other primitive Christians, believing that they lived in the “last hour” (1 John 2:18), expected the imminent completion of the eschaton — “the end, when [Christ] gives the kingdom to God the father, nullifying all [worldly] sovereignty, all authority and power” (1 Cor. 15:24) — when the dead would be raised to eternal life in Christ. Without a bodily resurrection of Jesus Christ, “the first-fruits of them that slept” (1 Cor. 15:20), their faith would have felt groundless.
But our horizons are necessarily broader. We know that the eschaton was not fulfilled some two thousand years ago: the simple fact of our existence in a world of injustice, pain, and death tells us that that expectation, held by primitive Christians and apparently even by Jesus himself, was wrong. The outward Kingdom did not appear as promised; the parousia, the coming on the clouds of the Son of Man in power and glory (see Mt. 24), failed to occur. If the scriptures are to speak meaningfully to us as critical thinkers today, we must read them, as our Quaker forebears (following the evangelist John) have taught us, in the inward sense: Christ can be raised and revealed in power within us, defeating the spiritual death in our hearts, lifting us into a new and different life. The scriptures direct us not so much to the past or future as to the present, in which they open for us a way to authentic being, a way out of self-absorption and into compassionate and just relationship. Almost two millennia after the failure of the parousia, the scriptures point to the inner revelation of the spiritual power that was in Jesus. Giving ourselves over to that power, we know the resurrecti

A Quaker Understanding of Jesus Christ, Part 1, by Arthur O. Roberts - QuakerInfo.com

A Quaker Understanding of Jesus Christ, Part 1, by Arthur O. Roberts - QuakerInfo.com


A Quaker Understanding
of Jesus Christ
Part 1 of 4

by Arthur O. Roberts
Originally published October 1, 1999 at Suite101.com
[EDITOR'S NOTE: This article is taken, by permission, from an article, "A Quaker Understanding of Jesus Christ", by Arthur O. Roberts in Quaker Religious Thought, Vol. 29, No. 3, July 1999. Due to the length of that article, it is published online in four parts. The article was adapted from a paper read at the Quaker Theological Discussion Group, Orlando, Florida, November 21, 1998, and responses to it. Arthur Roberts is a past Editor of Quaker Religious Thought. He is the author of many journal articles, poems, devotional pieces, books, and other writings. He has served in the past as Professor of Religion and Philosophy and as Dean of Faculty at George Fox University, as well as a pastor in Friends' (Quaker) churches. Quaker Religious Thought is published two times a year, and subscription information can be obtained from Phil Smith, Religion Department, George Fox University, Newberg, OR 97132.]

Introduction

In this paper I first state five assumptions about truth basic to theological expressions by 17th century Quaker leaders. Then under twelve headings I summarize what early Friends believed about Christ, supported by citations. After this I identify seven contemporary cultural barriers to acceptance of these early Quaker beliefs about Christ. I then summarize certain points at issue and suggest lines of resolution.

A.  Basic Quaker Assumptions About the Nature of Truth

  1. God reveals truth.
  2. Christianity is based upon revealed truth.
  3. Revealed truth is transformational, and not just cognitive.
  4. Truth is fully comprehended through obedience.
  5. Christian truth claims are experientially and rationally credible.

B.  What early Friends believed about Christ

1.  There is unity in the Christ as historically revealed and as spiritually received.
This is very clear to anyone who reads early Quaker writings. It is also apparent that 17th century Friends shared with other Christians a firm belief in the unique, messianic nature of Jesus of Nazareth. What Quakers labored against was a prevalent unbelief in the immediate presence of Christ. They labored to show that the universality of Christ is coherent with the particular historical incarnation, that Christ was not encapsulated within priestly ritual nor within the Scriptures that testified of him.
My friend, the late John H. McCandless, in a presentation to the New Foundation Fellowship, Fernbrook PA, 12/31/88, (cited in New Foundation Papers, No. 60) stated:
It is important that we recognize the unity between the inward and the outward teachings; this explains why early Quakers never had any trouble accepting New Testament teaching and ethical precepts. If they were guided inwardly by the same Jesus Christ who had spoken outwardly in Scripture, then they did not expect that there could be any sort of contradiction between scriptural teachings and the inward guidance that came to them.
William Penn stoutly defended Quakers against the accusation that they deny Christ to be God. He called this charge "a most untrue and unreasonable censure," and, citing John 1:9 and 8:12, declared that the "great and characteristic principle" of the Quakers is, that Christ as the Divine Word enlightens everyone. Penn also defended Quakers against the accusation that they deny the human nature of Christ. "We never taught, said, or held so gross a thing," wrote Penn, who further affirmed the manhood of Christ Jesus--"of the seed of Abraham and David after the flesh and therefore truly and properly man, like us in all things, and once subject to all things for our sakes, sin only excepted." (The Key, sections VI and VII)
2.  The Bible authentically defines the person and work of Christ.
Robert Barclay stated it plainly: "We believe that everything which is recorded in the holy scriptures concerning the birth, life, miracles, suffering, resurrection, and ascension of Christ actually happened." (Apology, Proposition 5, xv, Freiday Edition p. 88. See also Proposition 3 on Scripture). To get a feel for how Barclay actually drew upon Scriptures as the "true and faithful record" one only has to scan the pages of his Catechism. An example:
"Q.  Was Jesus Christ really crucified and raised again?
A.  For I delivered unto you first of all, that which I also received, how that Christ died for our sins, according to the scriptures: and that he was buried, and that he rose again the third day, according to the scriptures. I Cor. 15. 3, 4." (Philadelphia, n.d., 16).
George Fox quibbled with Baptists over the term "word of God;" they wanted to use it as a synonym for the Bible, whereas Fox insisted the term denotes Jesus Christ. Fox buttressed his arguments from the Scriptures themselves, which, said Fox, are the "words of God." In many similar phrases, Fox exhorted people to read the Scriptures "sitting down in him who is the author and end of them." (Journal, Nichols Edition, pp. 32ff., 145ff. and ad passim) That Quakers held an inclusive view of revelation did not discredit the Bible, but elevated its importance as an outward test and spiritual guide.
We believe that the Holy Scriptures are the words of God; for it is said, in Ex. xx. 1, "God spake all these words, saying," etc., meaning the ten commandments given forth upon Mount Sinai. And in Rev. xxii. 18, saith John, "I testify to every man that heareth the words of the prophecy of this book: if any man addeth unto these, and if any man shall take away from the words of the book of this prophecy" (not the word,) etc. So in Luke i. 20, "Because thou believest not my words." And in John v. 47xv. 7xiv. 23; and xii. 47. So that we call the Holy Scriptures, as Christ and the apostles called them, and holy men of God called them, viz., the words of God. [from Some of the Mysteries of God's Kingdom Glanced At, 1663]
3.  Christ's resurrection occurred, signifying spiritual renewal and life after death.
A contemporary Friend, Gusten Lutter, Jr. asks "How can people deny the resurrection and still claim that Christ has come to teach his people himself?" Lutter writes:
Jesus' Resurrection fuses the Incarnation. It is a claim that God is (now)connected in an intimate (physical) way with Creation, perhaps in a way that was not before. Jesus raised was not a spirit untouched by thirty years in a mortal coil. The marks of his life were upon him, and (promise to be) with him eternally. Jesus' resurrected body promises us that our lives are real, even from the standpoint of a Creator who could unmake us at will. When we ask, "Was the Resurrection an historical event?" we are asking "Was it real?" Real to us, material, available to the senses. At the same time, when we say, "God raised Jesus from the dead," we are giving what we saw (through the eyes of the disciples) in three dimensions greater depth. The three dimensional surface of Jesus' body becomes transparent to the eyes of the spirit, and we see God in and through him. The incarnation & resurrection make claims about the world without which the New Testament (the books of the New Covenant of God with God's People) is [merely] a nice story. (To: friends-theology@xc.org Gusten Lutter, Jr. Wed, 08 Jul 1998 14:28:39 -0600)
4.  Christ's life, death and resurrection is the procuring cause of human salvation.
For George Fox it was central to "the people of God called Quakers" to let everyone know, whether Jews, Turks, Christians, or heathens, that "there is no salvation in any other name under heaven, whereby they must be saved but in the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, crucified and raised from the dead." (Works 5, 87) Early Friends did not use scholastic atonement theories but used a variety of Biblical metaphors to affirm casuality. To the question: How doth Christ convey life? Isaac Penington wrote:
As the living Word; as the promised seed. He soweth the seed of the kingdom in the heart, in which is life: and as he maketh way for this to spread and grow up in and leaven the vessel, even so he quickeneth and gathereth into his life. Again, he is the enlightening word, the quickening word, the word of wisdom, the word of power, the word of love and reconciliation, whose voice worketh mightily towards the destroying of sin, and saving of the soul from it.
Job Scott, at the end of the eighteenth century, stressed the outer-inner meaning of Jesus' death in a plenary rather than substitutionary mode. He speaks for the conservative Quaker tradition:
Christ...has shown us plainly that nothing will do, short of death in us. That the death must be in man; that we must die to all creaturely corruption, as he died to the creaturely life. "In that he dies, he died unto sin once," says the apostle, "and in that he liveth, he liveth unto God." Though he was sinless, yet he died unto sin; he died to the very first risings and motions of evil; for "he was in all things tempted as we are." In yielding to these temptations, lust would have been so conceived as to have brought forth sin, but in dying, instantly, the death of the holy cross, to every motion whose tendency was unto sin, he is properly said to have died unto sin. And herein, as well as in his death on the cross outwardly to the life of the creature, he has powerfully taught us the necessity of dying with him unto all sin. He that will lose his life for his sake, shall save a divine and eternal life with and in him. But he that will save his life, will not die with him unto sin, must and shall lose it. He that will reign with him, must suffer with him; and he that will rise with him in the newness of the divine life, must first be buried with him in that baptism which is into real death unto all sin, even the baptism by which the floor of the heart is thoroughly cleansed. [from Essays on Salvation by Christ, ca. 1793, pp. 40-44 in Quaker Heritage Press edition]
William Bacon Evans, a weighty Philadelphia Friend during the first part of our century, blessed his generation with religious verse. One of his sonnets, "The Gospel" speaks to the atoning sacrifice of Christ.
Best of Good News! which science ne'er contrived,
Nor charlatan devised, nor sibyl saw -
Whose swelling words the undiscerning draw
Toward panaceas idle and short lived -
O prodigy of Grace in Heaven prepared!
Strong in the might of all-embracing law;
Love without bound, outreaching to withdraw
From toils of hell and death the sin-ensnared;
Thou son of God and Son of man in one!
Who bare our loads of sin upon the tree,
With empty hands of need we come to Thee!
Salvation promised, preached in everyone;
  For us Thou tasted vinegar and gall,
  O miracle of Love encircling all!
  -- 10th, IV, 1942
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5.  The indwelling Christ is a reality distinct from persons indwelled.
George Fox frequently referred to Christ as the substance, fulfilling the types and shadows of the past, offering a greater reality, one subordinated to God the creator, not to man the created. Christ has come, he said, "to redeem, translate, convert, and regenerate man. . . out of all the true types, figures, and shadows, and out of death and darkness, up into the light, and life, and image, and likeness of God again as man and woman were in before they fell." (Nichols ed. Journal of George Fox, p. 367)
Friends such as Stephen Crisp repeatedly emphasized a spirituality that, even in its fullness retains a lowliness of spirit before the indwelling Christ. No one can become smug about the Light of Christ. Immediate revelation increases rather than decreases awe before the Lord. Indeed, Crisp warned that Satan deceptively comes as an angel of light to draw away from the "simplicity of the Truth" those who haven't fully died to self. Such persons are beguiled into "libertinism." In their carnal reasoning they put their trust in uncertainties and neglect weighty matters; or they decide hell is only in one's conscience, or that death annihilates one anyway so why struggle, or that if one falls short of righteousness now they can make it up in other bodies in the hereafter. ("A Faithful Warning" in Gospel Labours and Writings, Philadelphia: 1822, p. 340-1)
6.  Personal and corporate experiences of Christ constitute valid knowledge.
Robert Barclay asserted that divine inward revelations are integral to true faith, and that they "possess their own clarity and serve as their own evidence," and cohere with right reason ("well-disposed mind") and "common principles of natural truths."(Apology, Freiday ed., Prop. 2, p. 16).
Isaac Penington defended the sensible understanding of the triunity of God:
Now consider seriously, if a man from his heart believe thus concerning the eternal power and Godhead; that the Father is God, the Word God, the Holy Spirit God; and that these are one eternal God, waiting so to know God, and to be subject to him accordingly; is not this man in a right frame of heart towards the Lord in this respect? Indeed friends, we do know God sensibly and experimentally to be a Father, Word, and Spirit, and we worship the Father in the Son by his own Spirit, and here meet with the seal of acceptance with him. (Works iv:360, Quaker Heritage Press ed.)
7.  The universality of Christ the Light is affirmed by the particularity of Jesus.
When early Friends used the term light they referred to Jesus Christ, to the historical, redemptive, event, not just to an inner spiritual quality. To know Christ as the Light eternal means "as he was yesterday, is today, and will be forever" wrote Isaac Penington. He drew parallels with the rejection of Jesus Christ inwardly by establishment religion in his day and rejection of Christ historically by the Jewish leaders. The stone which builders rejected, is nonetheless, the cornerstone. Professing believers acknowledge Christ as the rock in words but miss doing so in substance. For the early Friends, after a night of apostasy, the rejected stone was again, in England, reaffirmed. (See Works, Selections and Letters. Philadelphia, 1818, pp. 80ff.)
8.  There is no "natural light" of conscience separate from the Light of Christ.
Robert Barclay asserted that the power to determine right from wrong, although sometimes described as "the law of nature" in reality is not distinct from the Light of Christ. For Barclay it is a "universal evangelical principle. . . that the salvation of Christ is shown to every man, whether Jew or Gentile, Scythian or Barbarian, of whatever country or kindred" Which is why, he adds, that "God has raised faithful witnesses and evangelists in our age to help all become aware of the light within themselves and to know Christ in them." (Apology Prop. VI, XXVIII, Freiday, pp.123ff.) The early Friends did not denigrate nature but sought to recover a Biblical unity between God as creator and God as redeemer. This unity they envisioned as divine election through an accessible logos, Christ, rather than through a limited, predestined, redemption.
9.  God's Spirit is intrinsically linked to Christ (filioque).
Early Friends referenced their usage of the term Spirit to Jesus Christ. This was the case whether they used the term Christ, or metaphors such as light and seed, or the word Spirit. In short, they had a Christo-centric doctrine of the Holy Spirit. This doctrine conveyed an understanding of the universal and saving light graciously available to all persons. It was clearly linked to the spiritual nature of baptism. Of the Pentecostal experience recorded in the Acts George Fox wrote, "Baptized by one spirit into one body. . . is the answer of a good conscience toward God by the resurrection of Jesus Christ. . . Christ is the substance, whereby we are baptized into his death." Fox quotes Paul approvingly, "those that are baptized into Christ have put on Christ." (Galatians 3:27). (Saul's Errand to Damascus, cited in Early Quaker Writings, p. 258.)
10. Christ's presence in the world does not foreclose a fuller future coming.
In his often-reprinted Apology, Barclay refutes accusations that theiremphasis upon the contemporary presence of the Kingdom implies no belief in a future life. The Quaker insistence upon accepting judgment of the Light now doesn't imply disbelief in a final judgment, or in heaven or hell. Just talking about the outward life of Christ, he wrote, won't redeem or justify people, they must know "Christ resurrected in them." If people partake of the first resurrection, i.e., inward redemption from sin, they are better able to judge the second resurrection. We are called, he said, to be the first fruits of those who serve and worship Christ not "in the oldness of the letter but in the newness of the Spirit" until "all the kingdoms of the earth become the kingdom of Christ Jesus."(Apology, Freiday ed., p. 439. See also Barclay's Catechism, Chap. XIV, cited in Early Quaker Writings, p. 348).
11.  The church, as the body of Christ, witnesses to God's kingdom.
Writes Fox: "Now Christ is the heavenly, living, spiritual head of these his heavenly, living, spiritual members: and he that sanctifieth and they that are sanctified are all of one. . . So here you may see the unity and the love that is betwixt Christ and his church, which is his body, which he is the head of." (Works V., p. 306)
12.  Christ is real both in and outside of time.
A citation from Job Scott speaks to this mystical blending of time and eternity:
It may be thought by many, that Christ is not the son of any but God, and the virgin Mary; but Christ himself positively declares, he that doeth the will of his Father, "the same is his mother, and sister, and brother." Shall we suppose he only meant that they were dearly beloved by him, and owned "as if" they were his nearest relations? By such glosses and interpretations, is the true meaning of many of his deep, and deeply instructive sayings qualified away. But, verily, he meant as he said; and had he not carefully confined his words to a strict meaning, he might have called such his father too. But in the spiritual sense in which he was speaking, no man can possibly be his father, but God. It is true that we read of his father David: In regard to his outward genealogy and descent, David was his forefather; but in regard to his birth in man, none can be Christ's father but God only. And in order to hold this forth to mankind, even his body that was born of the virgin, was conceived by the overshadowing efficacy of the holy ghost, without the agency of any other immediate father but God. Thus the outward holds a lively analogy with the inward. But though, speaking of the inward, no man can be his father, yet man can and must be, his "mother," as well as "sister and brother," if ever he comes to be truly regenerated and born of the "incorruptible seed and word of God." This new birth is ever produced by the overshadowing of the holy ghost upon the souls of men. [from Essays on Salvation by Christ, ca. 1793, pp. 40-44 in Quaker Heritage Press edition]
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C.  Current cultural barriers to accepting early Quaker beliefs about Christ

1.  Scientific method questions the credibility of revealed truth. This is particularly so in respect to empirically unverifiable claims, such as miracles, the resurrection of Jesus, the mystical presence of Christ within believers and in the church, and the afterlife. A scientific rejection of the supernatural erodes the Christological assumptions which formed the basis for the Quaker awakening. These assumptions affirmed a revelatory unity between God acting in creation and in redemption.
2.  A predilection for psychological explanations makes theological ones seem archaic. According to this world view, inner feelings and subjective states can be empirically explained without reference to salvation language- to "God talk" and altered without the need of divine agency. Television confessionals and talk shows reveal the pervasiveness of psychological explanations in our culture. This stance weakens the force of the 17th century movement by implying that theological language, e.g. "there is one Christ Jesus, who can speak to thy condition," is a pre-scientific way of describing events that are now more credibly understood, and dealt with, in psychological terms.
3.  A mind set that the self is sovereign. This mind-set blunts the early Quaker experience of the Light coming as terror and judgment before bringing assurance and peace. This enthronement of self-esteem makes penitence, discernment, submission to authority, covenant commitments, and acceptance of external discipline difficult. Furthermore it facilitates self-justified conduct. This mind set is considerably at variance with the normative Quaker emphasis upon self-denial.
4.  An assumption that cultural pluralism entails religious and ethical relativism. This produces a penchant for diversity that prizes inclusiveness as the highest form of tolerance, that delights aesthetically in discovering peripheral religious views. This position attracts religious seekers unhappy with dogma or organizational structure, but it weakens central Christian doctrines of creation, incarnation and atonement, and it diminishes awe before the Lord God almighty. When truth is considered disparate rather than coherent, unified actions become difficult to achieve, resulting in an inordinate preoccupation with process, including modes of worship, moral discipline, and decision-making. As settled convictions become fewer, ethical options multiply and Biblical/covenantal authority weakens. For Quakers this means that in meetings "gathered for business" consensus becomes rather than reflects the "the mind of Christ."
5.  A rejection of any foundational universe of discourse. All systems of thought accordingly are viewed as provisional products of human thought. In rejecting foundational concepts of any sort (Platonic, Biblical, or enlightenment, or blends thereof) post-modernist epistemology challenges Quaker assumptions about the nature of truth. From a reductionist perspective such an epistemology reduces Quakerism to instructive sociological phenomena - a museum exhibit of human religious behavior. From a pluralistic perspective such an epistemology releases Quaker, or other religious truth claims, from a burden of empirical proof. Neither a disparagement of religious claims nor their exclusion from canons of rationality accords well with the passionately unified spiritual, rational and moral convictions of the first "Publishers of Truth."
6.  A flirtation with neo-animism. To replace abandoned mystery ("Christ in you the hope of glory"), or from a sense of unfulfilled spirituality, some Quakers have turned to neo-animistic paganism, in forms such as goddess or new age religions. These approaches substitute myth making for theological reflection and naturalistic ethics for Biblical morality. Fox's vision on that ancient haunt of demons, Pendle Hill, ("a people in white raiment to be gathered to the Lord") may be better understood by Friends (Latino, African, Inuit) more recently freed from animistic fears and priest-burdened religion than by modern neo-animists who bask in the socio-cultural benefits of a culture leavened by reason while rejecting its theological foundation.
7.  The substitution of 'notional' theology for spiritual experience. Although normatively anathema, 'notional' religion assails Friends along the whole theological spectrum, from fundamentalist to humanistic theologies. The word "credo" simply means "I believe." The negative connotation of "creedalism," refers to the substitution of propositional for experiential truth, of head knowledge for heart knowledge. The current cultural animus against religious dogma is more severe now than in the seventeenth century, and may be numb to the forces of secular dogma. Nevertheless, William Penn's warning against "superfining" (prooftexting) Scripture texts, is still relevant, although more diversely applicable. Penn wrote:
Men are too apt to let their heads outrun their hearts, and their notion exceed their obedience, and their passion support their conceits; instead of a daily cross, a constant watch, and an holy practice. The despised Quakers desire this may be their care, and the text their creed in this, as in all other points; preferring self-denial to opinion, and charity to knowledge, according to that great Christian doctrine, 1 Cor. Xiii. (The Key, Section V).
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D.  Certain points at issue and possible resolution

1.  What reality informs the metaphor? A leading Quaker metaphor is "light." Is its ground a rational construct, a universal idea such as love, a non-embodied world spirit; or is its reality Jesus Christ, the incarnate, risen Lord? Early Friends would say the latter. So do I. The same goes for other key metaphors, such as Seed, Truth, etc. A definiens entails a definiendum., otherwise there is no meaningful discourse, no existential import. Gnostic answers seem to relieve some Friends from a cultural burden they find awkward, namely, affirming an incarnated spiritual reality. But such answers betray the ethos of the 17th century Quaker awakening of the Church and are at variance with its apologetic, prophetic, and devotional literature. Such answers generally fix upon a substitute reality, e.,g. Platonic, Hindu, or Buddhist conceptualizations, which have their own ontological problems.
I suggest a better resolution: to affirm the unity of Christ in history and in the heart. And to do so confidently and devoutly. This has been a major Quaker witness. It should be so again. By affirming both the particularity and the universality of Christ, in word and deed, Quaker testimony is as relevant in our pluralistic culture as it was in the 17th century. We engage in religious dialogue with integrity when we speak from the strength of this conviction. Quaker belief in the universal and saving light affirms a Gospel that is unique and central without being exclusive. I think this message will speak to persons who hunger and thirst for righteousness, who want to affirm the Good News of Christ within a global culture.
2.  Is Christ one term in a series of culturally-based synonyms or a unique and essential referent for these linguistic variables? Do advances in human knowledge through the sciences and through global cultural and technological interaction require Friends to subsume their story to a larger one? If so, would that larger story be ecumenically Christian or ecumenically religious? Can one with integrity assert that early Friends "were on the right track" to a larger religious vision but were restrained by the boundaries of a now outmoded world view? I think not. Such a judgment strikes me as parochial in making contemporary western culture the test of truth. Such a judgment seems both narrow and elitist. It denies the "scandal of particularity" which is Jesus Christ, the Word of God for all persons for all time. To resolve the problem requires a patience with how people use culturally variable synonyms to signify the spiritual reality that is Jesus Christ. As Augustine said, God is greater in our thoughts than in our words and greater in reality than in our thoughts. But we can also firmly resolve fully to affirm the referent of such linguistic signs - the Word made flesh, who dwelt among us, whose glory we, too, have witnessed.
3.  What is phenomenal and what is epiphenomenal? Does a reality affirmed by scientific reason and logic carry the Gospel reality on its back, as it were, or is the Word spoken in Jesus Christ the reality that carries reason and logic? To use a Venn diagram, which circle encloses other manifestations of reality: revelation or science? To use another metaphor, which is text and which is commentary? The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom, said the Psalmist. So said the early Friends. So say I. To stand in awe before a transcendent God may require of Quakers a needed poverty of spirit, which in Jesus' list constitutes the first step toward the virtues of peacemaking and holiness.
4.  Is the early Quaker view of the Bible, as the inspired words of God, central or peripheral to Quaker understandings about spiritual reality? Some critics have claimed the Gospels were written to rationalize the failure of Jesus. Some Friends eagerly embrace the views of the Jesus seminar people who deny historicity to the accounts of Jesus, particularly the miraculous claims about nativity and resurrection. Are we to replace Barclay with Borg? Can we sustain a Christian understanding of the Spirit while rejecting the outward authority of the Scriptures which our fore parents stoutly declared were given forth by the Spirit? No. We may quibble about interpretation, and we shall continue to seek guidance of the Spirit in discernment, but Friends cannot, without squandering their theological inheritance, deny the Scriptures as providing "clear testimony to the essentials of the Christian faith" and the "only proper outward judge of controversy among Christians." (Robert Barclay, <(Apology, III, VI). I ask Bible scholars and ministers to approach the text with reverence befitting the "words of God" lest notional religious activity erode the work of the Holy Spirit, lest Bible study become a trade and not prayerful inquiry into the will of God.
Last year on the Internet occurred an extended discussion of George Fox's Letter to the Governor of Barbados. It is well known that some Friends are uncomfortable with it, claiming that such propositional orthodoxy was contrived for prudential reasons. A Friend from Spain, however, discounted the issue of political correctness. He writes of this document: "We can see the first ideas of Friends referring to Jesus and the Bible. They were not humanistic, secular or philosophical ideas. They were really biblical. What was most characteristic in a Quaker was to be biblical! We have walked a long way from then to now and I think that the way has been not the best. In Jesus, César Vidal."
David Johns sent the following quotation, which shows the Barbados letter to be consistent with other testimony. George Fox wrote from Worchester prison, "Something in answer to all such as falsely say, the Quakers are no Christians ..." (Andrew Sowle, 1682).
We believe concerning God the Father, Son and Spirit, according to the testimony of the holy Scripture, which we receive and embrace as the most authentic and perfect Declaration of Christian Faith, being indited by the holy Spirit of God that never errs. 1st that there is one God and Father, of whom are all things. 2ndly, that there is one Lord Jesus Christ, by whom all things were made (John 117) Who was glorified with the Father before the World began, who is God over all blessed forever (John 14). [3rdly] That there is one holy Spirit, the Promise of the Father and the Son, and Leader, and Sanctifier, and Comforter of his people (I John 5) . . . [Christ] exercises his Prophetical, Kingly and Priestly office now in his Church, and also his Offices, as a Counselor and Leader, Bishop, Shepherd and Mediator, he (to wit) the Son of God, he exercises these Offices in his Household of Faith, whose House we are, that are believers in the Light, & by faith ingrafted into Christ, the Word, by whom all things were made; and so are Heirs of eternal Life, being elected in him before the World began. . . . Can there any good thing come out of Nazareth? we say with Philip, "Come and see."

Conclusion

David Finke, a Friend from Illinois Yearly Meeting, raised an evocative question about cultural barriers to modern Friends accepting early Quaker theology:
What makes it so hard for us to say with George Fox that "There is one, even Christ Jesus, who can speak to [our] condition," or that "Christ has come to teach his people himself"? In my increasing travels among Friends in recent years, I've found this as a joyous proclamation - in deed as well as word - among Friends for whom it is absolutely obvious that what makes us Quakers is our encounter with the Living Christ, the Presence in our Midst, the Friend who transcends the power of death. (printed in Winter '97-'98 issue, Among Friends)
Many years ago, a British Friend, Maurice Creasey , disturbed by non-Christian trends within the Society of Friends, wrote the following:
Whatever else may be learned from a study of our origins, this much at least is clear: that the early Quaker teaching concerning "the universal and divine light of Christ" was a message concerning the action of God rather than the nature of man. . . Friends were united in the certainty that the same power, wisdom, and grace of God which had ever been seeking to save man from his futile desire for autonomy, and which had been concretely revealed and expressed in Jesus Christ, was now available to lead into all truth those who trusted and obeyed it. (Christ in Early Quakerism. Philadelphia: The Tract Association of Friends, undated.)
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2017/04/05

알라딘: 국가와 교육 - 메이지 국민교육사



알라딘: 국가와 교육 - 메이지 국민교육사










국가와 교육 - 메이지 국민교육사

이권희 (지은이) | 케포이북스 | 2017-03-05
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[외국어.수험서.컴퓨터 - 셜록 스테인리스 컵, 클립보드, 분철쿠폰]
정가 22,000원
판매가 19,800원 (10%, 2,200원 할인) | 무이자 할부



양장본 | 327쪽 | 232*155mm | 631g | ISBN : 9788994519975
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권력과 근대라는 관점에서 근대 일본의 교육 실태와 교육사상사적 의의를 규명하고자 한 책. 메이지기 일본의 근대 교육체계의 성립 과정과 교육사상의 창출과 변용 양상에 대한 고찰을 통해 근대 일본, 일본인의 자기 분열적 사유체계 형성의 메커니즘과 그 한계를 분석했던 연구 성과물을 대폭 수정,보완해 엮은, 저자의 지난 몇 년간의 노력의 작은 결과물이다.

그리고 이것은 현대 일본인의 에스니시티(ethnicity)의 연원에 대한 규명이었으며, 한일 양국의 화해와 미래지향적 관계를 방해하는 심화한 갈등 요소들을 객관적으로 규명하고자 했던 인문학적 성찰의 모색이었다.





책머리에

제1부 근대 국민국가와 교육
제1장 | 근대교육의 출발
1. 들어가는 말
2. 황도(皇道) 이데올로기의 대두
3. 근대 천황상의 확립과 ‘황도주의’ 교육
4. ‘황도주의’ 교육의 좌절과 보통교육 시행
5. 맺음말

제2장 | 학제의 교육이념
1. 들어가는 말
2. 양학에 대한 관심과 학교의 발견
3. 학제 반포 이전
4. 학제의 교육이념에 대한 재검토
5. 맺음말

제3장 | 국민국가 만들기와 교육
1. 들어가는 말
2. 학제 제정





저자 : 이권희
저자파일
최고의 작품 투표
신간알리미 신청
최근작 : <국가와 교육>,<근대 일본의 국민국가 형성과 교육>,<고사기 왕권의 내러티브와 가요> … 총 5종 (모두보기)
소개 :
일본 상대문학 및 근대 교육사상 전공. 단국대학교, 한국외국어대학교, 일본 도쿄대학 총합문화대학원에서 수학. 문학박사. 현재 단국대학교 일본연구소 학술연구 교수로 재직 중이다. 고대가요를 중심으로 하는 내러티브 분석을 통해 『고사기(古事記)』의 구조론 연구에 진력해 왔으며, 최근에는 근대기 일본 국민국가 형성 과정에 있어 교육의 역할을 제도적?교육사상적 접근을 통해 규명하는 작업에 주력하고 있다. 『일본문화 속 에도 - 도쿄 표상연구>(공저, 제이엔씨, 2009), 『古事記 왕권의 내러티브와 가요』(제이엔씨, 2010), 『근...


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한일 양국의 반목과 갈등의 역사는 그 뿌리가 깊다.

고대 한일관계는 협력과 부조(扶助)의 역사보다는 지배와 피지배의 허구를 구축하기에 급급했으며, 근대 한일관계는 가해와 피해의 역사로 점철되어 왔다. 그리고 현재 두 나라는 종군위안부 문제로 상징되듯이 한 치의 양보도 없는 자국 중심적 역사인식에 독도를 둘러싼 영토문제가 맞물리면서 끝이 보이지 않는 긴 터널 속에 갇혀 버렸다. 이에 자국사 중심의 역사인식을 극복하고 심화한 갈등의 요소들을 상호이해 속에서 객관적으로 이해하며, 한일 양국의 특정적이고도 부정적인 대결과 해묵은 갈등 구조를 해소함으로써 참된 화해를 통한 미래지향적 한일관계 구축에 이바지하는 인문학적 성찰이 그 어느 때보다도 절실히 요구되어지고 있다.

오늘날 한일 양국의 반목과 갈등의 원인 중 하나로 ‘공적(公的) 기억’에 대한 인식과 소비의 차이가 지목되고 있다.

‘기억의 정치학(politics of memory)’이라는 표현에서 알 수 있듯이 ‘공적 기억’이란 ‘자명한 사실들의 집합체’가 아닌 공공의 이익, 혹은 ‘공공선(公共善)’을 위해 구성과 재구성을 반복하며 만들어낸 인위적 산물인 것이다. 여기에는 당연 과장과 왜곡이 작용한다. 이는 과거사에 대해 누구의 기억을 ‘정통한 기억(authentic memory)’으로 간주하고, 또 어떠한 방식으로 그것을 보존?확산해 나가느냐 하는 문제에 대해 특정 단체나 국가 권력이 개입하고 있음을 의미한다. 한일 양국이 과거사 문제로 대립을 반복하는 핵심 이유는 기억하고 싶은 ‘공적 기억’의 내용이 다르고 이를 만들어내고 소비하는 방식, 다시 말해 역사를 수용하고 인식하는 방식에 결정적인 차이가 있기 때문이다.

정치사상가 마루야마 마사오[丸山眞男]는 아시아?태평양전쟁의 종료 후 그와 동시대인들에게 절대적인 가치체(價値體)였던 천황(天皇)과 천황을 정점으로 하는 수직적 국가 질서, 천황과의 거리에 비례하는 권력의 존재 양태 등을 비판하고, 아시아?태평양전쟁에 임했던 일본 지배층의 심리분석을 통해 누구도 책임지려 하지 않는 ‘무책임의 구조’를 파헤쳐 ‘국체사상’의 허구성을 폭로했다. 그러나 일본이 근대화되어 가는 전 과정에서 다양한 기재를 통해 창출되고 연습(沿襲)되어 온 ‘국체사상’은 마루야마의 바람과는 달리 21세기 현재도 일본?일본인?일본사회를 지배하는 ‘절대선(絶對善)’으로 작용하고 있다. 뿐만 아니라 ‘집단 기억’ 창출의 근원적 사유체계를 형성하며 일본인의 보편적 윤리감각을 밀어내고 자기 성찰적 역사인식을 방해하는 지배 사상으로서 굳건히 자리 잡고 있다. 이에 오늘날 한일 양국의 반목과 갈등을 유발하는 일본 우경화 문제의 본질을 정확히 들여다보기 위해서는 무엇보다도 일본인들의 윤리관과 역사인식이 어떠한 기재를 통해 만들어지고 연습 되어 왔으며, 또한 어떠한 방법으로 공적 기억과 내셔널리즘을 형성하는가 하는 메커니즘에 대한 분석이 선행되어야 한다. 이는 오랜 세월 자연스럽게 체계화된 ‘사유(思惟)’에 기인하는 것이 아니라 교육과 미디어 등의 문화 권력에 의해 인위적으로 형성되어 유전되어 내려온 특정적 ‘사유체계(思惟體系)’에 기인하는 것이다.

한 시대의 교육이념과 이를 실행하고 수용하는 방식에 관한 연구는 특정 시대와 사회를 이해하는 효율적 테마이다.

왜냐하면 각 시대마다 지향하는 교학이념이 다르고, 교육을 통해 형성된 자아와 다양한 가치관은 오랜 세월 인간의 관념을 강하게 지배하기 때문이다. 특히 어린 시절 보통교육을 통해 공유되는 공공적 가치체계는 일생 개인의 사유와 행동을 통제하는 ‘규범’으로 작용하며 국가와 민족, 나아가 세계를 인식하는 인위적 사유체계를 형성하기 때문이다.
일찍이 일본은 전 국민을 대상으로 한 보통교육의 실시를 통해 국체사상이라는 특정적 사유체계를 창출해 냈으며 결과적으로 근린 제국(諸國)을 불행한 역사의 소용돌이로 몰아넣은 비극의 역사를 낳았다. 오늘날 동아시아 3국간의 과거사를 둘러싼 갈등과 반목 또한 그 연원을 거슬러 올라가 보면 근대기를 통해 형성된 국체사상이 네오내셔널리즘(neo-nationalism)이란 이름으로 그 외피만을 갈아입었을 뿐 의연히 일본인들의 역사관?세계관 속에 뿌리 깊게 자리 잡고 있기 때문이다.

저자는 지금까지 ‘근대 일본의 국민국가 형성과 교육’이라는 커다란 문제의식을 견지하며 메이지기의 학제(學制)와 각종 교육령(敎育令) 등의 분석을 통해 근대 일본의 국가주의 교육이 어떠한 방법으로 ‘국민’ 내지 ‘민족’을 형성해 왔는지를 다각적으로 분석해 왔다. 저자가 이렇듯 메이지기의 교육에 관심을 갖는 이유는 근대 국민국가 형성기라고 할 수 있는 메이지기를 통해 국가권력에 의해 구상되고 시행되었던 그 어떤 제도나 정책보다도 교육이야말로 ‘국가(國家)’와 ‘국민(國民)’이라는 ‘상상의 공동체(imagined association)’를 만들어내고, 절대 군주국가에 대한 충성심을 창출해 내기 위한 가장 유효한 장치로 기능했다는 점에 주목하고 있기 때문이다. 즉, 일본의 근대교육을 일본인들의 생활세계를 지배하는 특정적 사유체계 형성의 기재로서 이해하며, 권력과 근대라는 관점에 입각해 근대 일본의 교육 실태와 교육사상적 의의를 밝히고자 했던 것이다.

총 3부 9장으로 구성된 <국가와 교육-메이지 국민 교육사>는 메이지기 일본의 근대 교육체계의 성립 과정과 교육사상의 창출과 변용 양상에 대한 고찰을 통해 근대 일본?일본인의 자기 분열적 사유체계 형성의 메커니즘과 그 한계를 분석했던 연구 성과물을 대폭 수정?보완해 엮은, 저자의 지난 몇 년간의 노력의 작은 결과물이다.

그리고 이것은 현대 일본인의 에스니시티(ethnicity)의 연원에 대한 규명이었으며, 한일 양국의 화해와 미래지향적 관계를 방해하는 심화한 갈등 요소들을 객관적으로 규명하고자 했던 인문학적 성찰의 모색이었다. 이는 다이쇼[大正], 쇼와[昭和] 시대 제국주의 사상 형성과 교육의 문제를 포괄하고, 나아가 1911년 조선교육령(朝鮮敎育令)으로 시작되는 우리의 근대교육 연구를 위해서도 꼭 짚고 넘어가야 할 식민지 문화 권력의 구상화(具象化) 문제를 포함하는 것이기도 하다.