The Presiding Bishop is not speaking in a vacuum. He belongs to a tradition, a powerful theological tradition that is taught in our universities, graduate schools of religion, and seminaries. It is the ecstatic tradition, and theologian George Lindbeck describes it with these words,How we all fit together, how our singularities are made sense of, how our divergent views and different understandings of God's intent are reconciled passes all understanding. All that we can do is to travel on in faith and trust, knowing that all contradictions and paradoxes and seemingly irreconcilable truths which seem both consistent and inconsistent with Scripture are brought together in the larger and all embracing truth of Christ, which, by Christ's own words, has yet to be fully drawn forth and known.(1)
For nearly two hundred years this tradition has provided intellectually brilliant and empirically impressive accounts of the religious life that have been compatible with indeed, often at the heart of the romantic, idealistic, and phenomenological existential streams of thought that have dominated the humanistic side of Western culture, ever since Kant's revolutionary Copernican "turn to the subject."(2)Schleiermacher is the father of this approach. He worked it out in terms of God as "object," and did so for three principle reasons. First, he accepted the conclusions of the philosopher Kant who claimed that God could not be conceived by the mind the way we understand objects. According to Kant objects have properties that we can understand and talk about, things such as color, taste, location in space and time. Further, objects affect us and we affect them. God, for Kant and then Schleiermacher, is never an object. He is not an electron, a tree, a cat, nor can his will be captured in words. He cannot directly affect us, nor us him. He is only present mystically. Secondly, Schleiermacher lived in a culture profoundly affected by science. Science deals with objects, how they affect each other in space and time. If God is never objective, if God never has effects on other objects, then science and faith would belong to two separate realms. Faith would be concerned with a non objective mystical experience, science with objects in space and time. They would never contradict. One result of this was that Schleiermacher did not believe that God did miracles. If God did miracles, this would make God like other objects, affecting things in space and time. Thirdly, historical studies were showing that all knowledge, including the knowledge of God, is relative to its cultural and historical context. Schleiermacher embraced this and claimed that the mystical experience of God was verbally expressed according to one's cultural and historical context. This lead to the possibility that all religions have the same mystical core, yet express it differently according to their differing cultural contexts.
When they of the family of love have it once in their heads that Christ does not signify any one person but a quality whereof many are partakers; that to be raised is nothing else but to be regenerated or endowed with the said quality; and that when separation of them which have it from them which have it not is here made, this is judgment; how plainly do they imagine that the Scripture everywhere speaketh in the favour of that sect. (Hooker, Lawes, Preface, III, 9.)Since the revisionists honor Scripture and tradition, they can worship, study, pray, teach, and promote their agenda shoulder to shoulder with the orthodox while holding utterly different conceptions of the faith. Only when we get to something practical, revision of our language for God, sexual norms, evangelism to those of other faiths, eucharistic hospitality, do we notice any real differences. As a result, it is not enough to simply say that Jesus called God "Father," or that Scripture condemns homosexuality, or that Jesus commands us to evangelize, or that the universal tradition of the church requires baptism prior to Eucharist. The revisionists know all this. They relativize these claims by viewing them as partial expressions of an evolving faith that progressively expresses the Indescribable. To effectively address their perspective, one must penetrate their often conflicting and hazy statements, articulate their critical theological assumptions, compare them with Scripture and the great theological tradition, and reach conclusions regarding truth and falsity, orthodoxy and heresy. Anything less, anything less than real theology, will fail.