"Napa Valley"  Brocken InaGlory. Licensed. Creative Commons CC BY-SA 3.0
"Napa Valley"  Brocken InaGlory. Licensed. Creative Commons CC BY-SA 3.0
Welcome to LAST SUPPER RED!!

What if laughter and hilarity are sacred?  Might prayer be less about words and more about how we position ourselves before Mystery?  What if God is less like Santa Claus and more like air?  What if we are defined more by "Original Blessing" than "Original Sin?"  Would Christianity flourish if we followed Jesus instead of worshipping him?  What if "the Kingdom of God" has much less to do with the hereafter and is instead a here-and-now countercultural idea and reality with political and economic consequences?  


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Welcome to LAST SUPPER RED!!

What if laughter and hilarity are sacred?  Might prayer be less about words and more about how we position ourselves before Mystery?  What if God is less like Santa Claus and more like air?  What if we are defined more by "Original Blessing" than "Original Sin?"  Would Christianity flourish if we followed Jesus instead of worshipping him?  What if "the Kingdom of God" has much less to do with the hereafter and is instead a here-and-now countercultural idea and reality with political and economic consequences?  


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"Napa Valley"  Brocken InaGlory. Licensed. Creative Commons CC BY-SA 3.0
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Q earlier observed that one very respectable tradition maintains that the best theology is silence in the face of Mystery.  Yet most of us will wish to talk about God.  Note the italics there.  Ideas "about" God are in a different category from an experience of God.  As Snark observed in an earlier Dialogue, one of the tasks of theology is to reflect upon experience.  As you consider ideas about God in this Dialogue remember that theological ideas are not a substitute for the experience of God . . . of the sacred, the holy, the transcendent. 

Q again plunges his main characters into an extensive theological discussion.  At least they don't end up alienating each other this time.
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At best, theological ideas can point and urge us toward that experience.  Afterwards, we can theologize about the meaning of it.

When people say that they don't believe in God . . . that they're atheists . . . it's not always clear what they mean by "God."  Very often, the idea of "God" they reject is one that some people of faith also find lacking . . . and don't believe in either.  In this Dialogue, Q explores one aspect of this theme.

As an alert reader, you are correct in thinking that "pleonastic,"  "logorrheic" and  "prolix"  are "obfuscatory" . . . which is probably another one!  "In the beginning was the Word . . ." but thankfully it wasn't any of these!  This digression does, however, bring us to Snark's take on some of the negative aspects of imagining God in "theistic" terms.