BaylorJacket said:
I am curious to see if there are any other bears out there who have deconstructed in the past or are currently in the process of deconstructing from their religion.
I personally grew up as a fundamental, evangelical Christian, and over the past year or so have had the time to actually reflect on what I believe. After going through a process of deconstruction and then reconstruction, my faith looks very different from a few years ago, but I am more rooted in my love & respect for Christ than ever before.
Here is just a high level view of some of the things that were challenging for me, and curious to hear if anyone also struggles with the same topics:
- Evolution - coming to the acceptance that Genesis is not a historical textbook on the formation of the universe, and that to not accept the overwhelming scientific evidence for evolution by the majority of Christian churches is head scratching
- Hell - I struggled (and still do) on the concept of hell. How a normal human being deserves to be tortured for infinite time for simply not believing in X, Y, Z
- Salvation - Similar to hell, but do un-reached people really deserve to be separated from God forever for simply being born to a particular geographic location?
- Historical Jesus - Scholars and theologians who have dedicated their lives to studying Jesus now are quite certain that Jesus believed and taught Apocalypticism, and did not even consider himself to be God. This obviously does not mesh well with fundamental Christian teaching.
- The Bible being inerrant - There are more variations in the original manuscripts than there are words in the New Testament.
Thanks for posting.
Not sure if "deconstructing" is the right word for my process, but I empathize with your thoughts.
I'm with you on evolution, though remember with science nothing is final. The idea of evolution has itself evolved.
The idea of hell is much more nuanced in scripture that what the average individual believes.
On historical Jesus, just remember that the "search for the historical Jesus" is a highly subjective and speculative enterprise without much historical data to back it up.
On inerrancy, we actually don't have original manuscripts, so I'm not sure what is the basis of your statement.
A manuscript is a text written by the original author. We do have old texts, but even with them, the variations are nowhere near what your statement suggests.
Inerrancy has a huge number of problems. What kills it right off the bat is that it claims the the scriptures are inerrant in their original manuscripts, which we don't have. People misunderstand that inerrancy doesn't mean that the Bible in their hands is inerrant. Yet many teachers deceive laypeople into thinking that's what it means.
That kills it by itself. But if that doesn't, a second fatal blow is that inerrant interpreters don't exist. We're all flawed and sinful, individually and corporately. So the value of inerrant scripture without an inerrant interpreter is at the least questionable.
Good for you in centering on Christ. That's what we need to do!