- Apr 30, 2013
- 33,064
- 20,450
- Country
- United States
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- United Ch. of Christ
- Marital Status
- Private
- Politics
- US-Democrat
I am a Lutheran but have recently been visiting a United Church of Christ congregation. I consider myself a very liberal Lutheran, and I take a certain liberal German approach to the Book of Concord, that it's an historic document and not the end of theology. I have gone through some faith deconstruction over the COVID pandemic as I stayed indoors, became a vegan, and did alot of personal work on myself (mostly taking up mindfulness meditation again), while I watched the world around me seemingly erupt into a paroxysm of insanity.
I still identify as a Christian because I am interested in Jesus' concept of the Kingdom of God and the philosophical interpretation of cosmogenesis offered by Teilhard de Chardin, even though I consider myself a religious pluralist/inclusivist (I accept other, non-Christian religions as valid experiences of God or the Infinite). I am looking for a religious community where I can get some human contact with people of goodwill that support each other, and where people are trying to grow spiritually and in wisdom, and I figure a church like the UCC might be a place that encourages that.
The people at the UCC are friendly and the congregation is more diverse than the Lutheran church I went to before COVID, where I am still a member. I have been going off and on for several months, and it's relatively close to our apartment (only about two miles away). It's a small church and has suffered alot due to COVID and people passing away due to a mostly elderly membership. It's an open and affirming church, which is OK with me, and there are several gay or lesbian members, as well as some people that are black or hispanic. That's good, because at my Lutheran church, there are alot of elderly people, or people with very midwestern type, Lutheran pietistic values, and almost all white. The people at the UCC seem to take a more active approach to their faith and alot more comfortable with diversity.
I want to know more about the UCC's beliefs. According to their website, they accept the Augsburg Confession as an historic statement. Does that mean a Lutheran interpretation of the Lord's Supper is acceptable?
I ask because I talked to the pastor over coffee hour and said they believe Jesus is "spiritually present". But in the liturgy, the pastor says "the body of Christ; the bread of heaven". So I am a bit confused. I also told her that Lutherans don't believe that Christ is encapsulated within the bread, but we do believe that we eat and drink Christ's body and blood. The presence of Christ is a sacramental mode, and not locally confined, but the bread and wine do participate in the reality of Christ's person (perhaps something akin to the doctrine of transignification, but I prefer to think of it as "transfiguration".
I do not accept Calvin's notion that we are "lifted up into heaven", as I don't find that notion in any particular ancient patristic source, and I turn Zwingli's logic on it's head: the infinite is capable of the finite. I believe this is also consonant with several modern metaphysical systems which have developed since the time of Reformation.
I still identify as a Christian because I am interested in Jesus' concept of the Kingdom of God and the philosophical interpretation of cosmogenesis offered by Teilhard de Chardin, even though I consider myself a religious pluralist/inclusivist (I accept other, non-Christian religions as valid experiences of God or the Infinite). I am looking for a religious community where I can get some human contact with people of goodwill that support each other, and where people are trying to grow spiritually and in wisdom, and I figure a church like the UCC might be a place that encourages that.
The people at the UCC are friendly and the congregation is more diverse than the Lutheran church I went to before COVID, where I am still a member. I have been going off and on for several months, and it's relatively close to our apartment (only about two miles away). It's a small church and has suffered alot due to COVID and people passing away due to a mostly elderly membership. It's an open and affirming church, which is OK with me, and there are several gay or lesbian members, as well as some people that are black or hispanic. That's good, because at my Lutheran church, there are alot of elderly people, or people with very midwestern type, Lutheran pietistic values, and almost all white. The people at the UCC seem to take a more active approach to their faith and alot more comfortable with diversity.
I want to know more about the UCC's beliefs. According to their website, they accept the Augsburg Confession as an historic statement. Does that mean a Lutheran interpretation of the Lord's Supper is acceptable?
I ask because I talked to the pastor over coffee hour and said they believe Jesus is "spiritually present". But in the liturgy, the pastor says "the body of Christ; the bread of heaven". So I am a bit confused. I also told her that Lutherans don't believe that Christ is encapsulated within the bread, but we do believe that we eat and drink Christ's body and blood. The presence of Christ is a sacramental mode, and not locally confined, but the bread and wine do participate in the reality of Christ's person (perhaps something akin to the doctrine of transignification, but I prefer to think of it as "transfiguration".
I do not accept Calvin's notion that we are "lifted up into heaven", as I don't find that notion in any particular ancient patristic source, and I turn Zwingli's logic on it's head: the infinite is capable of the finite. I believe this is also consonant with several modern metaphysical systems which have developed since the time of Reformation.
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