 |
Eric Sams
Letters from an Atheist
Letters on Theology and Religion
(from Nancy Wansbrough, Letters to an Atheist, 1988)
|
 |
15.
1
February 1986
Dear Nancy,
Thanks for your latest instalment, again delightfully lively in style
though taut and trim in topic and treatment. But I still stumble at
the same blocks. The fact that Paul said O.K., Gentiles can have N.T.
Christianity, is surely what proves that this was a Jewish
religion? How, otherwise, could the question ever have arisen?
It's not a bit of use pretending that the incarnation is a Christian
invention or addition. It obviously belonged to, and was an integral
part of, Paul's Jewish faith, which he began by preaching to his
fellow-Jews, some of whom accepted it, long before the Gentile
question arose. As to `it is even believed that Jesus never conceived
of himself as preaching beyond Jewry', I suppose that is believed
because Jesus himself said so, which seems to me a good reason. Cf.
Matthew 15: 24.
I'm sorry, but even without circumcision that talk about abstaining
from blood and things strangled still makes me feel like an
eavesdropper in some disgusting madhouse. It is apparently applied to
the Gentiles, but I for one want no part of it. I'm not all that keen
on the incarnation either, which I see as either meaningless or
blasphemous. Among a heaving ocean of religious doubt I have a
rock-like certainty about one thing, and one only: the creator of the
universe, if there is such an entity, was certainly never made flesh,
any more that it was made toffee or India rubber, or sealing wax, or
Gorgonzola cheese.
Love E.
|