Babylon at the gates

Jeremiah is the prophet for our times – he is the one who warned Judah that having the Temple wouldn’t save them from the armies of Nebuchadnezzar, and that the people of Israel had to return to the living God.

We don’t have a literal army encamped around our civilisation (not yet anyway) but we can see the dimensions of the forces which will destroy our way of life – in sum, the Limits to Growth. In so far as our civilisation is based upon the physical growth of our economy, then so far will it cease in the foreseeable future. How far in the future? I don’t know, but I feel that our civilisation is like St Sebastian and the first arrows have already hit.

I wanted to say this because it puts my comments about AGW in their proper context. In particular, I feel that much of the sturm und drang about climate change is a displacement activity. It is as if Jeremiah spent his time shoring up the defences of Jerusalem. That time has come and gone my friend. Which is why my thoughts these days are more along the lines of ‘Why bother saving the planet?

We have our instructions and commands and we know what it is that the Lord requires of us. If we pursue that path then the Lord’s patience will be our salvation: “If my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then will I hear from heaven and will forgive their sin and will heal their land.” (2 Chronicles 7.14)

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Loved this, in e-mail from Tess: “It’s fascinating to see how theology has meandered through a maze of ‘not quite right’ solutions to the evidence God gives us about his character and our purpose. It resembles quite strongly the struggle physicists are currently having trying to find a unifying field theory of everything. Every solution they find that fits some of the data fails to explain something else, or even contradicts something else. Theology seems like water trying to find a path down a mountainside, sometimes carving channels, sometimes bouncing off rocks.”

5 Deeply de-Christian doctrines

Joe tagged me with this (and the people I would tag have already been tagged, so I won’t bother). Basically, anything good which gets raised too high becomes de-Christian; anything which is less than God which starts taking on divine attributes (especially perfection) becomes idolatrous and oppressive, and thereby de-Christian. So with that said…

1. Sola Scriptura: not just meaningless but, in so far as it eclipses the truth that a human being was the incarnate Word of God, anti-Christian.
2. Papal Infallibility: ultimately it is the consensus fidelium which is infallible, but even there, there are some things which we cannot stand just yet.
3. Private Judgement: source of the ten thousand things and all manner of distress. Has a role as part of an iterative process, it cannot be a final locus of authority on its own.
4. Penal Substitution: if suggested as one possible metaphor for understanding atonement, I can just about bear it; when imposed as the only possible understanding then it is the ultimate “doctrine of man” and graceless.
5. “Family Values”: source of much of our present distress, and not something that Jesus was particularly supportive of. There is the individual in their relationship with God, and then there is the church family. Biological links come some way behind that, at least as Jesus taught.

More on Rowan: that time has come and gone my friend

First off, if it wasn’t clear from my preceding post, I do agree a very great deal with what Rowan said, and if I had been there I’m sure I’d have found it exciting and inspiring to hear him speak in these terms. My difference with him is subtle, but, IMHO, significant nonetheless.

At one point, Rowan says this: “Hulme is right surely that the scale and complexity of the challenge we face mean that no one solution will suffice. We need to keep up pressure on national governments; there are questions only they can answer about the investment of national resources, the policy priorities underlying trade, transport and industry and the legal framework for controlling dangerous and destructive practices.”

From my perspective, political activism at this point is somewhat nugatory. When the discussion about the Limits to Growth first came to public prominence nearly forty years ago I think that there was a tremendous opportunity for political engagement to make a difference. I believe that if the message of LTG had been heeded at that point in time then the possiblity of maintaining ‘the world as we know it’ was strong.

We are not at that point. Despite a very great deal of environmental activism through the ensuing decades, the trajectory of our civilisation has not been changed and I believe that a more-or-less ‘hard’ crash is inevitable. Actually, ‘inevitable’ is still the wrong word – I believe that the hard crash has begun, and that we are going to spend the next fifteen to twenty years living through what could be called ‘world-historical-events’ – at least the equivalent of World War II, although I retain a selfish hope that England might be spared the trauma that it experienced at that time.

I feel that political engagement (on the large scale) is rather like wrestling for control of the steering wheel _after_ the car has gone over the edge of the cliff. It is a pointless exercise. In other words, don’t try and grab control of the wheel, try to ensure that the seatbelts are secure and the crash bags are functioning properly. Or, as my favourite line from ‘The Day After Tomorrow’ has it, “that time has come and gone my friend… save as many as you can.”

Part of my perspective here is that the larger situation is chaotic and unknowable. Much is written from the climate change perspective about the chaotic side of things, but that argument so often proceeds from a narrow and ‘unaware-of-LTG’ perspective that it undercuts itself. The best example of this, for me, is the way in which the IPCC doesn’t take the peaking of resources into account. The interactions between the various different aspects of the crisis will sometimes exacerbate and sometimes mitigate each other, and this is one reason why I think climate change (on its own) is overblown as an issue. (Let me make clear, when I express scepticism about climate change, it is a little like someone saying of a crashed and written-off car – hey, at least the left wing panel is undented.)

In addition to this, one aspect that I am pondering is what the hospice movement has to teach us at this present moment. I accept John Michael Greer’s distinction between ‘problem’ and ‘predicament’ and what is at stake is how we are going to respond to the predicament, not how we are going to solve the problem. (Rowan was sharp on this point: “Mike Hulme’s book is helpful as a warning against too readily buying in to extravagant language about ‘solving’ the problem of climate change as if it were a case of bringing an uncontrolled situation back under rational management, which is a pretty worrying model that leaves us stuck in the worst kind of fantasy about humanity’s relation to the rest of the world.”)

So, gathering these threads together, I believe that what we are called to do – as Christians – is not to focus upon what will ‘solve’ or ‘fix’ or even ‘address’ any of the manifold aspects of the crisis. I believe that God is in the crisis, still working to reconcile the world to himself, and that it is way beyond any individual or group of individual to pretend to “solve” all the aspects of our situation. To put this in another way, I do not believe that we are “responsible” for the world, or to keep the world in good order. When Rowan talks about “a rediscovery of our responsibility for” the material world then I start to feel uncomfortable.

Part of the problem – what has led to our predicament – is a sense of humanity being mightier than it is. As Byron put it “God may and does call us to a role of responsibility for one another and his good world. But to believe that we bear the full burden of the future of life is another form of human hubris, and like all hubris, it will eventually crush us.”

You could say – to change my metaphor somewhat – that we have been swept by a current into a tunnel and we don’t know how or if we are going to come out. What we are called to do in this situation is exercise a very great deal of faith in God’s purposes for us, and cleave to his intentions for our small scale patterns of life. As Rowan himself says, “we ought to beware of expecting government to succeed in controlling a naturally unpredictable set of variables in the environment or to produce by regulation a new set of human habits. We need equally, perhaps even more, to keep up pressure on ourselves and to learn how to work better as civic agents.”

In other words, what is not pointless – and what I firmly believe is a Christian duty at this point – is to be “politically” engaged at the local level, principally through the Transition Town process, and to actually change our patterns of life – in the sorts of ways that Rowan hinted at (eg gardening). Martin Luther’s teaching – if the world were to end tomorrow I would still plant a tree today. Our relationship with God, and our relationships with our neighbours, are not abstract and can be directly meaningful in a way that striving for a particular global outcome simply isn’t.

This is why Jeremiah is our guide. He was chastised by God for trying to intercede on behalf of the Jewish people, to try and prevent the immense suffering that they were about to experience. It was too late for that. Jeremiah was called to be a witness, to be a sign that God had not abandoned the people and that there was still room for hope (I particularly resonate with the way in which he purchased land as a pledge of what is to come – very timely for us I believe). That is what I think we need to do – change the world from the inside out, start to live differently in the here and now, not be distracted by fantastic tales about what may or may not happen (including mine), and trust that if we are right with God then he will be right with us – that his grace is not exhausted or his mercy spent, and that, perhaps, enough righteous men will be found in Sodom to stay his hand.

Archbishop Rowan calls us to be human

In a way rather similar to what I’ve been banging on about for the last few years.

Rowan says “We do justice to what we are as human beings when we seek to do justice to the diversity of life around us; we become what we are supposed to be when we assume our responsibility for life continuing on earth” and later “this surely is the main contribution to the environmental debate that religious commitment can make… it is to hold up a vision of human life lived constructively, peacefully, joyfully, in optimal relation with creation and creator, so as to point up the tragedy of the shrunken and harried humanity we have shaped for ourselves by our obsession with growth and consumption”, and later “What we face today is nothing less than a choice about how genuinely human we want to be”.

In other words, ‘Let us be Human’.

I do have differences with his perspective though, and whilst they will take a much longer post (even a book [grin]) to flesh out, I’d summarise it like this:

Rowan is still looking outwards – seeing the ecological crisis and saying we will not be fully human until we act in a way that safeguards creation. So safeguarding creation is the end purpose in mind. In this way, Rowan is channelling the Green perspective – giving a Christian spin to an agenda that is already in place.

What I want to do is look inwards. I want to give a fully Christian account of the ecological crisis. (See this and this.)

I see the ecological crisis as a symptom of two deeper crises, which are inter-related but still separable. The most important crisis is a spiritual one; we have forgotten God, we have succumbed to idolatry, and therefore wrath is descending upon us. The second is like it, namely this: we have abandoned any sense of social justice and our lack of concern for our neighbour is one of the prime drivers behind environmental catastrophe.

In other words, if we get our spirituality in order, if we worship God correctly, and if we safeguard the poorest amongst us, then the ecological crisis will be solved as a consequence of that.

If we carry on trying to fix the ecological crisis as an end separate to those two prime commands, then we will never be fully human. In particular, if we succumb to fear in our plans (which seems to be such a large part of climate change activism) then we will never get the spirituality right – and it is the spirituality that is more important.

I wish I could get a publisher… DLT? Continuum?

Some links

John Hobbins starting to look at human sexuality and the image of God, which is relevant to the marriage question (I’ll be returning to that soon).
Bishop Alan on the media; loved this “one message to angry vicars who feel misrepresented becomes “Forget Fleet Street. It simply doesn’t matter any more.” The Trafigura fuss brings home part of that point.
Joe the Evangelist on Mission and Worship (I disagree with Joe, but I’ll write separately about that).
Dave Keen links to this interesting polemic against celebrity culture. I think the rant is against a symptom rather than the cause though (the cause being, IMHO, the collapse of virtue diagnosed by MacIntyre).
BNP supporters are planning a bombing campaign, allegedly (h/t Chelmsford Anglican Mainstream).
Some gorgeous Rachmaninoff (I recommend checking that site regularly to get a fix of the heavenly).
Bishop Peter Selby on the Anglican shenanigans: “Protestations of our opposition to homophobia will count for little in an environment where our representative actions speak far louder than our words.” (h/t Wounded Bird)
Finally, for Al: one sense in which I am most certainly a liberal – and I should add, if home-ed becomes illegal, it’s one of the few things that would persuade dearly beloved to emigrate to the States (something I ponder regularly).

A brief question about marriage

Just thinking out loud here: is Christianity tied to any particular view of marriage? That is, if the social patterns of marriage changed drastically from what is conventionally acceptable today, and the Church blessed the process, would anything essential to Christianity be lost?

A handful of points:
Jesus tells us that marriage is an earthly arrangement, not a heavenly one;
– Scripture witnesses to a variety of marriage styles, especially polygamy;
– on the other hand, Scripture also often portrays the heterosexual bond as normative (eg Mt 19.4-6);
– it’s probably the particular virtues involved (fidelity, honesty etc) that are crucial for Christian life;
– in Christian history there have been times (eg medieval era) when marriage was restricted to those who were comparatively wealthy, eg with property, so marriage as such is not a universal;
– more recently, polygamy still seems to be tacitly accepted in some Christian areas, the argument being that monogamy owes more to Roman culture than to Scripture (although there are good scientific arguments for monogamy too).

With this I’m just trying to get clear about what is at stake in the discussion about the blessing of civil unions, and what it would mean if they were called ‘marriage’, and, more broadly, what would happen if a wider culture embraced or accepted a wide variety of “alternative” lifestyles.

My suspicion is that the answers to my opening questions are both ‘No’ and that Christianity can function, flourish and ‘be itself’ in all sorts of diverse contexts.

Something brief on Anthropogenic Global Warming (AGW)

Ian has asked “why that one source (Yamal) is so important to your overall belief in this subject”.

The short and direct answer is that the Yamal data underlies much of the advocacy surrounding AGW, specifically that it seems to be the major grounds for believing that our present climate is warmer than it was in the Medieval Warm Period (MWP). This is the graph accepted by the IPCC in 1990 to show the change in temperature over the last thousand years. Note that the MWP is warmer than the present.

This was replaced after 1998 with the ‘hockey stick’:

The principal scientific source for the ‘Hockey Stick’ relied on data from Yamal (see this wikipedia page for more background).

Now, it could well be the case that even without the Yamal data, the evidence for the late twentieth century being warmer than the MWP is robust. I’m open to that being the case. My concerns are different, because, in the end, I’ll believe what scientists tell me on matters of scientific fact (in other words, when they stop using words like ‘consensus’ and just say ‘this is how it is’ – after all nobody talks about a consensus when discussing, eg, gravity, or the sun being at the centre of the solar system.)

I think that:
a) the science supporting the AGW hypothesis, and the alarmist predictions built on it, is not as robust as it is claimed to be. I think this because i) the IPCC does not take into account the peaking of fossil fuel resources; ii) the (on-going) Svenmark research exploring solar/cosmic ray influence on climate; and, yes, iii) the sort of arguments that McIntyre makes;
b) in other words, I think that scepticism about AGW is not illegitimate, I believe that it is intellectually respectable;
c) because I think this, I find the attempts to repress debate (either by suppressing the data, eg with Biffra) or by ridiculing, scorning and doubting the moral fibre of sceptics to be distinctly lacking in virtue. If the science is robust then it will stand up to the most virulent of partisan criticism, and will emerge all the stronger for it (this is not to say that some criticism isn’t simply partisan and deserving of scorn, only to ask for discrimination);
d) because of the prevalence of c) I have come to see that there are aspects of idolatry involved in the AGW consensus. In particular I believe that many people accept AGW because it fits into a wider picture of belief about what is wrong with the world today. As it happens, I share that wider picture of belief (basically, the ‘Limits to Growth’ argument), I just don’t believe that we can build a better future on the back of c) – that is, I really do believe that it is the truth that sets us free and that fear paralyses us (and I think the AGW consensus is trying to force change by amplifying the fear. I see this as morally wrong and spiritually unsound);
e) my motivation in sharing information like that about Yamal, therefore, is much more to do with wanting to combat that idolatry than wanting to object to the bigger picture, and all that it entails. The difference in personal behaviour required in responding to AGW or responding to Peak Oil is pretty small.

That ended up being less brief than planned. I should add that for some time (eg in my early LUBH talks) I accepted the AGW consensus. Two things started to shift me on it: first the IPCC ignorance of Peak Oil, second reading this book. I became more sceptical the more I studied the question. Now I would class myself as an agnostic/mild sceptic on the specific AGW issue, but definitely a critic on the ‘wider aspects’ of what is involved.

Some thoughts on Worship (i)

I’ve been thinking about Banksy’s post on Greenbelt, and the discussion that the Sunday service generated on Greenbelt’s own website. I was going to write some further comments about what I thought was bad about it (and some about what was good) but the more I’ve pondered, the more I want to go back to first principles. So a short (three or four post) sequence on worship, to put my criticisms of GB in context.

This post is really some ground clearing thoughts.
a) Worship doesn’t have to involve God. That is, something can be worshipped without being God – money, power, celebrity and so on. Worship is essentially about giving worth _to_ something, praising it and celebrating it.
b) The claim of the believer is that the worship of the living God gives life, whereas worship of anything else (dead gods/idols) bleeds life away.
c) Worship (good worship) normally requires some form of ecstasy, which is not a comment about little yellow pills, rather that the person sharing in the worship should be in some way taken ‘out of themselves’. Ecstasy in this sense doesn’t have to be an awe-inspiringly joyful and eye-popping flashes of light (though it can be those things); it can be the ‘still small voice of calm’.
d) Another way to describe this is to talk about a sense of transcendence, that those sharing in the worship become aware of something bigger than their own preferences and concerns. That ‘something bigger’ may or may not be God.
e) An example of worship which is transcendent but not necessarily ‘of God’ is this:

In the next post I want to talk about what makes ‘worship’ into ‘Christian worship’.

Other posts in this series:

What makes worship distinctively Christian
Participation and Performance
Worship is useless
Greenbelt 09