the jesus-daddy: another look at the word abba

Like father like son...

If you look deeply into the palm of your hand, you will see your parents and all generations of your ancestors. All of are alive in moment. Each is present in your . You are the continuation of each of these people.”
Thich Nhat Hanh quote

Ab ‘ab (Hebrew) [from the verbal root 'abab to blossom, bear fruit] Father, hence founder, forefather, ancestor; by extension, teacher or counselor. Originally a Babylonian name.
Fifth month of the Hebrew ecclesiastical or sacred year, according to the system used after the Babylonian captivity; also the 11th month of the civil year. Likewise the 11th month of the Palmyrenes and Syrians, equivalent to July-August and the zodiacal sign Leo. See also ABBA .

I and the Father are one – (John 10:30)

Was Jesus claiming divinity? Who was the Father? (Was he like the -father?) What does father mean in the Hebrew tongue? These are very important questions, and the answers might change we see Jesus and God.

 Essentially, one of the many things Jesus could claiming is that he is the founder of the world. That he is the founder of the faith, which would usurp Abraham as the father of Judaism. This is incredibly inflammatory language to using to a crowd of people who have held for centuries that it was ‘father Abraham’ that God chose as the progenitor of Judaism and its practices. In some sense, its as if Jesus is re-writing history. He is saying that what he is offering is more valuable than what Abraham offered. If anything, Jesus is also demonstrating what it means for us to follow after him. That to follow after him not only means to like him, but that we too are the re-writers of the faith. This is incredibly powerful and empowering language.

The history of the term itself is Chaldeen in origin. It was also a title used by Rabbi’s. It would be later used in some of the Eastern Orthodox Churches as a title for bishops and is still used in some of those same circles today. It’s also a word that is defined by action rather than just the role. The act of a father means someone is who is giving of themselves or benevelont. It is referred to in the sense of caring and protection.

Ehad is the Hebrew phrase for one. It is defined as several components or parts coming together to be one.  Typically, this is spoken of in terms of the Christian doctrine of the Trinity (the three in one); Father, Son and the Holy Spirit. However, if you look at this information historically, this could also be referring to the ancient pantheon of Gods that were  borrowed by the Jews from the neighbouring/warring Canaanites. The Elohim (“we”) refers to El who is the God of Gods, or sometimes referred to in the Torah (Old Testament) as the “Lord of Lords”. Yahweh was one of the gods along with Baal who were situated under the rule of El. So, the idea of Ehad being the word used for Jesus’ claim for unity with God comes from the same idea of God (El) claiming unity with the Divine Council. Ehad is the idea of pluralism becoming one, all the while maintaining its pluralistic identity. Something I think we could learn to do better.

The word for ‘I’ in Hebrew is the word ‘anokiy’ (aw-know-kee). It is the personal plural pronoun. It infers a plurality of identity, but its also the same Greek word for ‘ego’. Freud referred to the ego as consciousness.  Without making this anymore mystical than it already is, lets tie this all together! The word I is also the same word for I that God uses in Genesis when speaking of . It is a term of being or is-ness, it is also a term in perpetual motion, not unchanging, but rather a constant evolving. So, here is where Jesus could be equating with God. Or at least, if anything, having unity with the Divine that empowers him with divinity (and by inference it passes on to us).

One more quick note on forefathers. In the Hebrew culture forefathers were the rockstars. They had the authority. They had the major influence on how the Jewish people developed and would develop (this is why you see the heavily relying on the words of Moses) their culture based on the words and deeds of their ancestors. In this culture, you as a person weren’t only defined by your own name, you were also defined by the name (reputation) of your own father. But also, Jesus could be saying that because he is connected or in a direct lineage of the ancestors that he has the same authority as them. That he too is like Abraham, Jacob, Isaac and the many others. That he shares their authority and can be trusted like them. Again, incredibly evocative language.

The word Abba is the word for father. It is a cognate of the word ‘av’ which means forefather. Jesus invites us to relate to God as Abba, the same as did. Again, an incredibly inflammatory suggestion. As you might know the word Abba is different from the title of Father, because it connotes intimacy. It means we’re romantically intertwined with the Divine. Abba is easily yet loosely connected (as you see from the definitions at the beginning of the post with the word ‘forefather’. So, what if what Jesus is saying isn’t only that he is one with the Divine, but that he is also one with the forefathers as well? This is deeper than ancestral worship (although there are some verses in the New and Old Testament that lend themself to this idea) and I am not claiming that all, but if you are in a culture where the people you look up to and seek authority from are your forefathers, than Jesus himself isn’t just claiming divinity he is also claiming the authority to help re-shape Judaism, re-shape their minds.

I am not questioning whether Jesus was God, how he was God is a whole different question.

 I also think that we don’t take his claims far enough, in several different places he invites us to see and interact with God equally as he himself does. This is another inflammatory statement, he is not only saying that he is divine, but that we are too. He also isn’t stating that he is the only ‘son of god’, but that we are too (later on, Paul would refer to a community he wrote to as the ‘sons and daughters of god’ (TNIV). Which has the same connotations. These again are incredibly powerful words that if we apply them will transform how we treat others along with ourselves.

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Romans 6:23: More About Identity, and Less About Everyone In Sin

Day 303: My Identity

Romans 6:23 — For the wages of [is] death; but the gift of [is] eternal life through Jesus Christ Lord.

tends be rendered as a verse that describes idea that all people are hidden in ‘sin’, and since all people are ruled by sin then all people die. That all people are headed to a destructive place called hell.

(Rather than dealing with a better rendering for sin as well as the mythology and rhetoric behind the ancient idea of hell, I would like to spend some time picking apart and re-contextualzing the verse.)

If you notice in this verse context, is consistently making a contrast. He goes from verse-to-verse demonstrating either the destructive nature of sin or the complete and full gift of salvation. (In this context, salvation also means healing or restoration.) living as we are meant to be. living out of the best ‘us’. and so the less we spend our energy not being ourselves the better we live out our salvation.

the word for wages is opsōnion — it is related to the wages of a soldier who deserved his pay. it was also used to describe a human to human transaction; for example, in the ancient times sometimes a debt was paid by one working for another to settle their debt. “The law was very strict in requiring daily payment of wages.” More on Wages here.

Thanatos is the Greek word for death. It tends to be defined in the bible as physical death, but i think its also important to remember that Thanatos was also a minor part of Greek Mythology. It is death personified. death in a person.

Maybe in this context, it might be better rendered as ‘the ability for a person to bring destruction everywhere they go when they are not living out the best . The word also is connected to the idea of pestilence. which brings death. basically, the idea here is that sin and our intentional alignment with it can only bring daily destruction.

the word for eternal is better rendered as a ‘life of the ages’, or ‘life as you were intended to live out’.

So it seems Pauls is creating a contrast between two-types of people. people who align themselves with sin purposefully, will only experience and bring destruction wherever they go. those who choose to live out of the best them they were meant to be, bring healing and hope. so, then in this light it is less about how all of humanity has lost the plot and more about how all of us can choose to be people who either leave destruction or leave hope in the wake of our choices. which one are you striving to be?

So then the term connotes itself to the idea of a daily experience of sin. Sin defined as people not living out the best them.

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genderless christianity: why women should be treated as equal

racism sexism speciesism

Many Kabbalists conceive of God as embodying both male and female energies, which were divided during creation as part of the process of emanation. They speak of the shekhinah, which in traditional Judaism means the divine presence on earth, as the feminine aspect or mystical bride of God.

The Hebrew used to denominate God in Genesis is Elohim. This is a plural formed from the feminine singular ALH (Eloh) by adding IM to it.

The ancient desert wanderers who encountered God on their 40-year outdoor camping trip experience God not only as a Him, but also as a her. The Jews nicknamed the glory of God ‘Shekinah’, it connoted the presence of God. Shekinah in the Hebrew tense is female. The personification of God’s fame (hebrew idea of glory modernized means ‘fame’) is female rather than male. I think this is an important distinction that can be too easily glossed over. God isn’t simply male or female. God embodies both. God created both.

It seems that there is still a silent expectation in many churches that males are to be leaders. males are to lead the way. males are the ‘head of the household’. the latter model tends to be the predominant archetype for a good husband. the guy who is the ‘bread-winner’, who is in charge and has it all together. this kind of approach doesn’t take into account the holistic nature of god. it only endorses an imbalanced worldview on god. and so then it puts us in a position where we support a one-sided paradigm, which hurts men and women. I would even go so far as to say if we willingly choose to see the male role as a dominant one that we denigrate the full character of God. That if we choose to mistreat, abuse or women in the name of misunderstood decontextualized verses, that we have become followers of a decontextualized collection of cultural documents that have somehow landed in the unintentionally uneducated hands of people who are to work out their theories of control on others.

 I know that sounds harsh, and I realize I may be coming from a place where I have seen men use scripture to beat women and cheapen their value as a integrated part of humanity, but this doesn’t devalue the reality that all women have something to add to society, to culture, to our understanding of scripture, ethics, psychology and etc. What this means for men, is that we have a responsibility to not only intentionally step down and allow equal space and footing for women to develop themselves but to also seek out opportunities to rebuild the DNA of our society and churches towards a gender equilibrium that would rival and redeem the years lost. Without women we could not understand the feminine heart of God. We would not be able to understand the heart. The emotion. The passionate mother heart of God. We would have an incredibl anemic view of God which would give us a lopsided view of divinity.

at one point in his letter says something to this : “…there is neither Jew nor Greek…male nor female….” — was being counter cultural to the script of his own day. He was promoting a genderless society. one that saw humanity as one, not segregated by gender. not him or her, but people who demonstrated the vast creativity of God in their gender. Maybe this is what we , is to be counter-cultural to our own society, to our churches, and to our maladjusted misinterpretations of scripture. God is beyond as well as beyond our genders. We need something better.

We should intentionally step aside and allow and even advocate for women to be treated as equals, not as a helper. Not as one who needs permission from a male figure to any such thing. In fact, as men, we simply treat women as equals. In a society that is still quite male-centered, if we choose equality over habitualized culture, we might just turn the tide. It is possible. We can it, but we have to start .

Also check out my wife’s blog (she is a Gender Rights Advocate) who has some great thoughts on the subject:

                                                                           http://womanami.blogspot.com

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what does it mean to be a Body?

paul used metaphor of Church a . what is a ? it is something that matures, changes (doesn’t stay the same), challenges itself, and even at time has to divorce itself from the very things it once thought were true. a is a live, organic and moving. i think we need to find that Church somewhere out there….

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church, tin man, and conditionin

Jumping Brain by Emilio Garcia

our is a complicated highways of nerves and synapses and a billion other processes involved. one of is to help create habits or rituals. once we create a habit highways in brain make a shortcut, so from that point on when we participate in that practice, brain than defaults to shortcut over another way. so any other ways is automatically excluded, maybe even to point of being ‘wrong’. If anyone or anything else comes up with something entirely different it isn’t just a in thought, they literally have to change their mind. its actually quite a grueling process. but maybe thats why a lot of new information/theology on God, Church, Truth, Scripture and like are all coming as a shock to system, because not only is there fear but also work that goes into to changing their whole worldview. If you think of Church as a  living organisim (this is why I think Paul used Body as a metaphor; also because it changes) then that presumes that it will progress even mentally. If that is true, than what has happened is Church in ancient times (post-disciple;post-’acts’) has allowed certain habits to perpetuate themselves within Body. We have become more like Tin Man, dried up and afraid of our new heart. A new heart is what we . A new heart for god, others, theology and social justice. But to get it we might have to realize that we are responsible to have to let go of some of our rituals and habits that keep us from discovering God on his own terms (post-church, post-bible, post-theology, post-understanding).  to break the habits we have to intentional and aware that it will cost us everything, maybe that is why Jesus told his followers to ‘count the cost’. To let it all go before chasing after him. It isn’t easy or comfortable, but if we are to the organic alive Body that we were once, than it might that we have to get up and start out of thousands of years of conditioning. There is hope, and its on the otherside of our habits….

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morality: on the inside.

Moral Compass

Reach for your goal. Reach for the stars. Chase your dreams. Since our childhood, most of us have been inundated with philosophy that everything we want achieve is outside rather than in. That life is about finding ways get what we want. It is consumerism dressed up in the fads achieving our personal potential. If you grew up in the for example, you get taught that ‘God’s mysterious will’ is nowhere near. That his will is somewhere out there. That our lives are about guessing at where his will is and what its supposed look like. But even outside the confines of claustrophobic Christianity there is this life message that whatever we’re searching is completely and utterly separate from us. I think we have also come do the same with morality.

We’ve gotten it in our heads that morality is a plumbline we grapple for or wrestle others over.  But what if morality is deeper than something that’s out there? What if morality has been ingrained within us? Maybe somewhere deep down embedded in the acids of our DNA is the coding for morality. Somehow people know at a very young age that stealing is wrong. Most people try to explain it away as parental nurture, but there is more to it than that. Or that we go to any country in the and somewhere somehow we all know that killing is destructive behaviour.

For some, morality is something that is either taught, learned or gained through familial contact or social interaction. Yet there are people who didn’t have good parents or no parents at all and grew up without much social interaction or exposure to accessible information and yet can interact with a culture and still know the basic ‘rules’ fo morality. For others, morality seems to be something we have to achieve to or earn. That the more we do the more moral we become. If that’s true, than morality has always been a commodity we can purchase. Then morality sits in our hotel vending machines waiting for us to choose it.

But, morality isn’t a rule. It isn’t a plumbline. It isn’t a tool to determine who is in and who is out. It is something that part of each person. We don’t earn morality. It earns us. The more in touch with our humanity we become the more moral we become. Morality is a gene. But not a gene that we can see or study. Its a gene that progressively evolves over time, but unlike any other gene it is effected and altered by the decisions we make and don’t make. It is transformed by compassion and deformed by the lack of it.

Morality isn’t a characteristic that was somehow born out of the ancient Christian scriptures. It wasn’t birthed out of the introduction of evolution. It isn’t a course you can take at a university. There’s no degree you can get in morality. Morality is in us. We are all moral. Its we choose to use that knowledge that will determine we nurture the growth of that morality within us. So, the origins of morality lie in each human but are grown through the intentional everyday process of making choices.

If morality is subjective than is there a plumbline is the first apparent question? If there is a plumbline it is found in a multi-systemic worldview. Morals are encouraged by living in a moral society or community. They are also spurred on by what we choose to expose our minds to. Moral subjectivity is not the enemy to the progress of any society, the enemy is when homogenous morality is used as way to marginalize people into our neat little boxes. Moral subjectivity leads a society to embrace diversity by seeing that their worldview isn’t the only right one. Moral homogeneity says everyone needs to see everything the same.

Now the problem comes when someone thinks that their moral worldview is much more valuable than the person standing next . The moment that moral subjectivity becomes moral superiority is when things like the Holocaust or the Crusades leave open scars on our history. Events like this instill just enough fear in people that to even hear words like ‘moral subjectivity’ force to cringe at the next global episode likely to occur because of such terminology.  Most tend to blame the development of such atrocious acts on the lack of parenting skills or chock it up to bad highschool experiences. For the most part people tend to blame events outside of the perpetrators life to help explain why they are the way are. But maybe its deeper than attempting to victimize those that have made historically destructive decisions.

Decisions belong to those who make them. The after-effects of someone’s decision are the life-long souvenirs they will carry with them. And those souvenirs are indicative of the origins of where they learned to make moral choices. If the origins of moral subjectivity lie in the heart of a person than no longer can people blame outside unseen forces. If moral subjectivity is true than one can only blame themselves. This is an incredibly empowering discovery because than it means that everyone is responsible to developm morality in light of their journey. This doesn’t mean that there aren’t objective morals to follow, it means that our development can remain subjective all the searching for the objective. That we don’t have to push, pull and prod our way through the library to find the one book that teaches us how to be all things moral. This reality leaves us with a responsibility not only to choose progress but to help one another on our journey, and by doing so we help usher in a new morality that is much needed in light of our current cultural shift.

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all haven’t sinned. being exclusivist is the ultimate stop sign.

Egypt faces, without words

Rom 3:23 For all have sinned; all fall short of God’s glorious standard (or fall short of glory of God).

most people render this verse a universal proclamation of the depravity and falleness of man. that we are all going to ‘hell in a handbasket’. but is that what is said?

i think its important to remember that the majority of the time when paul uses a ‘you’ in his letters he isn’t directing the ‘you’ to those outside his audience, he is directing it to the readers/hearers. or even what some might call universal proclamations tend to not include the universe within which most traditional theology sets the stage for universal depravity. take for example the first few words — ‘for all’ — which the in greek for this phrase is better rendered ‘for all of those who’. paul is dealing with a specific issue, he is also referring to an older set of scriptures, more specifically to the verse in the OT where God supposedly tells the nation of Israel that not one among you is good (there’s that ‘you’ showing up again; remember God wasn’t talking to the world, he was speaking thr0ugh a prophet to the Israelite followers). Paul is relating this terminology to make a point that this new grace that the are receiving isn’t cheap grace. It comes with an inherited experience. A inherited family that they are not a part of. Then Paul goes to talk about the idea of sin. remember the word is singular, not epidemic. and two it is directly related to personal journey that is experienced and sought out throughout our life. so he is tell them that no one in their community is who they should be. (because there were some in the community who thought they were better than others because they thought following  jesus was all about the law — this is why Paul says before and after these verses that has been made right. Paul is dealing with this destructive spirit of exclusivity here. some were saying only those who follow the list of the right things to do are good enough to call themselves followers. Paul nips that whole way of thinking in the bud by cutting out the legs from underneath those who have gotten too big of a head for the group they are a part of.

the next section is this idea of falling short. the word in the greek is hystereo. it means ‘lack’. deeply rooted in the origin of the word is this idea where the effect in the cause lags behind. so instead of having a cause and effect, one right after the other, the results don’t come immediately or directly after the cause. it would be like putting some money in a vending machine and making your selection and then coming back the next day to get your selection. or using paints to paint a picture, but the picture itself doesn’t show up until hours later. it is this idea that people haven’t caught up with they are meant to be. that we are learning what it means to follow christ. everyone. not just a few. and that no one can pull rank. in fact, the word also connotes a sort of partnership. so paul is actually chastising those who are to be exclusive by challenging them to see that by being exclusive they are partnering with their lack, they are partnering with the ‘who’ they are not meant to be. and by doing so, they don’t make god famous (which is the idea behind the hebrew word for glory). that we don’t draw people to jesus when we think we are better than others. and a good reminder is to see that we all jesus. Paul goes into the atonement theology on the verses between these two. but the point is clear, exclusivism stops us from being who we are meant to be.

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an atheist speaks out: how christians and atheists can work together

Turtles All the Way Down

a really good friend of mine who is an atheist shares his thoughts on bacon, god, and how christians and atheists could work together. here is his article.

                                                                                                                                                                                                          by James Millar.

 
I USED to a vegetarian – but bacon frying in the pan smells so good doesn’t it?  It was a life choice based on the basic principle that I did not want consume a sentient being. A personal choice – a personal view. However, I was always surprised by the confrontational response I would generally receive when I revealed detail of my life. It was a constant irritation to me, that others seemed to feel compelled to confront my belief system head-on. With a sigh, I would brace myself, yet again, for a bombardment of hackneyed counter-arguments. Not that they ever managed to shake my personal conviction that my choice was the right one for me.
My vegetarianism has lapsed, but I still try and eat food which has been ethically sourced and have a great sympathy with the compelling arguments put forward for vegetarianism – maybe in the future I’ll be a veggie again, sausages taste so good though.
The reason I bring this up is like vegetarianism, atheism, seems to evoke a similar response. I have for many years held the belief that there was no god, no higher being guiding life, no holy spirit, that we are just animals, like any other inhabiting the . A result of evolution – no less no more.
My name is James and I am an atheist.
There I’ve said it….I’m out the closet, because ever since I’ve held this viewpoint I have tended to keep it to myself. Perhaps it’s because I find the sight of atheist heavyweight Richard Dawkins, attempting to intellectually bludgeon the religious slightly unsettling. I’m not driven by to impose my viewpoint on others, frankly I don’t care enough. But I expect my beliefs to be respected and I don’t want to be hammered by religious dogma either.
I understand the hostility to my world view.

 Atheism calls into question one of the core beliefs of those with a religions conviction. The atheist doesn’t get ‘faith’ I’m afraid, he is needs convincing with scientific fact. Basically, if the argument is conceded that there is no intelligent design, no heaven and hell, no higher being guiding us through life then the house of cards collapses. If I had spent my life believing in God I might react in a similar fashion. 

Never the twain shall meet then?

I think not, there is common ground. There is a dialogue to be opened up here. I doubt there will ever be any concession on the diametrically opposing views of the existence or not of God. But I think Christians and Atheists do have a lot in common. Both have spent time pondering the big questions in life – where do we come from, why are we here, what happens when we die. More importantly though I think, both believe in promoting and nourishing the inherent goodness of the human race. Put simply; we believe that people should be good to each other.  I feel this, as a belief is far more important than a debate on the existence of a higher being. I would equally lack interest in a debate on whether fairies live at the bottom of the garden, I don’t mean to be offensive, that’s how I feel about it.
The only way in my view that the two can progress, is to leave that debate at the doorstep, and talk about humanist philosophy. I want to be decent, kind and honest to my fellow humans, not so I’m in God’s good graces, but because it feels good and I know on a fundamental level it is the right thing to do. But whatever the drive; those who care about helping others should come together, talk, take action and try and make this a world we are not ashamed to hand over to our children. Bacon’s burning, got to go!

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should we love everyone, really?

Plus haut 

i saw short interesting thought on the whole Glenn thing. Check it out here or below: http://www.urbanonramps.com/?p=2204 (pay special attention to the bottom lines, very good indeed)

On March 15, 2010 .

I haven’t seen the video of Glenn Beck’s call to “run away” from churches that teach social justice. Nor have I read much on the responses by the many – see the Sojo God’s Politics blog for a round-up – who disagree with Beck. (So how do I know these things, you might ask? I scan twitter feeds and email subject lines and pick up the plot.)

Nevertheless (famous last words), here’s what was on my mind when I woke up this morning:

Love Glenn Beck as you would love yourself.

That’s a take-off from Matthew 22:36-40. If you are a Christian, you are supposed to love people first. Not agree with first. Or disagree with first. Or speak to their power first. You are supposed to love first. This is an equal opportunity, ahem, encouragement. On both the center-left and the center-right I hear ugly caricatures of the opposition-du-jour. So a question to the wise: “What does it mean to love Glenn Beck as you would love yourself?”

As for Beck himself, he seems to have really stepped in it this time (did he mean to? that’s always the question with show hosts), because it isn’t just so-called left wingers who affirm social justice efforts in churches. As an example, The Heritage Foundation created and just released a DVD series for use in churches entitled – wait for it – “Seek Social Justice.” (Disclosure: Yours truly appears in the video and study guide.)

By the way, here’s some bonus sermon illustration material. You substitute all sorts of people, and groups of people, for “Glenn Beck” or “your neighbor.” To wit:

Love illegal immigrants as you would love yourself.

Love oil industry executives as you would love yourself.

Love President Barack Obama as you would love yourself.

Love President George W. Bush as you would love yourself.

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u2 video remake: if i don’t go crazy tonight

U2 – I’ll Go Crazy If I Don’t Go Crazy Tonight from David OReilly Vimeo.

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