You excite me, not upset me. I enjoy your posts: you stimulate my mind such that there is almost an unbrokered connection between my thoughts and my fingers on the keyboard. My mind, heart and fingers dance.
Responding to your level of reaction is the best thing for me to pay attention to where I am in my spritual journey.
Sorry, if you think I am attacking you. If I am, please provide some evidence for that and I will be glad to discuss those instances with you. I only ask that in defense of clarity, you bring up one problem at a time so that we can both focus on that one until we move on.
Agreed?
I am not the kind of Christian who looks at my faith as a set of requirements but a living relationship. Because this is how I think and feel, I am oviously going to study the Bible in my own way.
I do think a poetic approach to sacred writing is mandatory for anyone who is interested in getting beyond a surface, literal reading of the Bible. But many are quite happy with their own approach. I fault the secular education system for this disparity. Many of us are ignorant of our own tradition.
A classical education would help, I think, as prepatory to an approach to Scripture. So would an acquaintance with myth, metaphor, similie, parable and poetic literature. America's spiriual underpinings, our political and social philiosophy, our Western literary heritage, our architecutre and art cannot be connected to a spiritual struggle if we are not conversant in the classics.
When most Christians hear of such an approach to the Bible, they are understandably put off. There are those, generally speaking, that see Christianity as a set of requirements and then there are those that see Christianity as a relationship.
I am of the latter and all relationships--if you have ever felt love or believe that beauty and knowledge triumph over power--know that a relationship is dynamic, waxing and waning and enriching itself with each turn of the spiral.
Like Jesus said: people point to the Kingdom and say there it is or here it is, but the Kingdom is spread out upon the world and men do not see it.
Don't be too quick to judge, One-Eyed Jack! Lighten up! Let's continue to "play in the fields of the Lord."