Mr. SmartyPants (post: 1352475) wrote:I have a friend of mine at school who came here to get a degree to become a pastor. Then he took some of the religion classes which absolutely tore down his usual Conservative/Evangelical Christianity. Then he began reading things like Moltmonn, then Marcus Borg, then Dominic Crossan...
Then he started reading all this stuff by atheists.
So now he's an atheist whom many of the religion faculty can't even convince otherwise. He's a freakin' genius.
That... kinda scares me. No other decision effects your life more than if you believe in God or not.
I guess that's why Kierkegaard is so appealing to me. Believe in God despite all rationality? Could be total feeling-based, but... hey. If all rationality points towards non-theism, I can still be a Christian.
In truth, the fact that many rational people (who are much more intelligent than I am) reject Christianity does scare me at times. Then again, Christianity has its fair share of genii (Chesterton, Lewis, Kierkegaard, Newton, Waugh, Augustine, Aquinas, Bach, Pasteur, Galileo, Copernicus, Kepler, Planck, Pascal, Michelangelo, Milton, Dante, etc., etc.).
I also went through a time when I read Borg, Ehrman, and Crossan. If your friend accepts their "historical Jesus" premise, then I honestly don't blame your friend for being an Atheist. Their Jesus doesn't sound like someone I would care to devote my life to either. Thankfully, I found a few historians who gave me an alternate viewpoint. Between N.T. Wright and (to a lesser extent) Ben Witherington III, I think there are enough challenges to the Jesus Seminar ideology to allow one to plausibly doubt their conclusions based on historical evidence.
I guess many times it comes down to whether you want to give up yourself or not. Like Chesterton says, "Christianity has not been tried and found wanting, it has been found difficult and left untried." Otherwise, how could Isaac Asimov, a genius who studied the Bible extensively, conclude that he doesn't want to go to heaven because it would be boring? A study of any depth should have cut through any visions of "sitting in clouds, playing harps", yet he held on to them and used them as an excuse to denounce Christianity.
I wonder, has your friend ever read Kierkegaard's "The Sickness Unto Death" or N.T. Wright's "Christian Origins and the Question of God" series?