"Art, like morality, consists of drawing the line somewhere."
--G.K. Chesterton
"The man's body is sacred and the woman's body is sacred.../Each belongs here or anywhere just as much as the well-off, just as much as you."
--Walt Whitman
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This entry was posted on 2/10/2007 6:05 PM and is filed under Bible, Faith and Doubt.
Reverend Sam at Elizaphanian has posted his responses to the Internet Monk's Ten Questions on the Bible. I would perpetuate this meme with my own answers except that Rev. Sam has already said exactly what I would say. (OMG, I'm agreeing with someone - I must be losing my edge.) My favorite is #5: "Q: Is the Bible a human book? A: All books are human. There is a docetic suspicion lurking behind this question – an assumption that because something is human it cannot also bear the stamp of divinity." (Docetism was the heresy that Jesus was solely divine, and his humanity only an appearance.)
FYI, the ten questions are:
1. State briefly what you believe about the Bible. 2. How is the Bible inspired? 3. So is the book of Judges inspired, or only the Gospels? 4. How is the Bible authoritative? 5. Is the Bible a human book? 6. Are there aspects of the Bible that are not divine? 7. Why do you call the Bible a conversation? 8. What do you believe about canonization? 9. Do you reject the inspiration of some books? 10. Anything else you want to say?
I'd especially love to hear Shawna, Hugo, and Eve Tushnet answer these questions, as well as anyone who wants to leave a comment below -- please identify the tradition you come from, and the one you belong to now, which may not be the same thing, of course!