Keeping Alive the Rumor of God. Martin Camroux

Keeping Alive the Rumor of God - Martin Camroux


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We now mostly no longer look to God to add to our crop yields or protect us from disease. Recently I was bitten by a dog in Saigon and somewhat concerned in case I might have contracted rabies. I made straight to the hospital and a series of injections. It never occurred to me, as it would have to our ancestors, to pray that I might be protected. As Emily Dickinson wrote,

      “Faith” is a fine invention

      For Gentlemen who see!

      But Microscopes are prudent

      An important factor here is the way science and increasing affluence has extended our longevity. In the Roman Empire the average age of death was around twenty-five. Today we confidently expect to get to eighty and it is not unreasonable to expect twenty years of life when we retire. In the ancient world death was omnipresent, while today for a long part of our lives we can simply forget it. Biblical texts like “You are like a mist that appears for a while, after which it disappears” (Jas 4:14) no longer have the menace or relevance they once had.

      The result is that today Christianity finds itself culturally sidelined, a contested narrative, not the default position which in quite recent memory it still was. Arthur MacArthur was the last general secretary of the Presbyterian Church in England and then joint general secretary of the United Reformed Church. He was born in 1913 and grew up in a part of Northumberland, close to the Scottish border, where Presbyterianism was deeply entrenched. He didn’t have to choose to be a Presbyterian, he just was one.

      IF GOD IS DEAD, IS EVERTHING ELSE THE SAME?

      You may resist this conclusion, but it is inherently logical. Take Martin Luther King Jr.’s famous “The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.” Inspiring as this may sound one has to ask in what sense it is true? Under any circumstances it is very dubious if the universe itself is moral. The often-brutal reality of life does not obviously appear to have any moral purpose. “For the everlasting right, the silent stars are strong” says the hymn. No they are not, they are just silent. The only way this could possibly make sense would be if there is a cosmic reality with a commitment to justice. Or take Desmond Tutu’s stirring words:

      Goodness is stronger than evil;


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