Ruth Gledhill
The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Rowan Williams, dismissed the
Christmas story of the Three Wise Men yesterday as nothing but "legend."
There was scant evidence for the Magi, and none at all that there were
three of them, or that they were kings, he said. All the evidence that
existed was in Matthew’s Gospel. The Archbishop said: "Matthew’s Gospel
doesn’t tell us there were three of them, doesn’t tell us they were
kings, doesn’t tell us where they came from. It says they are
astrologers, wise men, priests from somewhere outside the Roman Empire,
that’s all we’re really told." Anything else was legend. "It works
quite well as legend," the Archbishop said.
Further, there was no evidence that there were any oxen or asses in the
stable. The chances of any snow falling around the stable in Bethlehem
were "very unlikely." And as for the star rising and then standing
still: the Archbishop pointed out that stars just don’t behave like
that.
Although he believed in it himself, he advised that new Christians need
not fear that they had to leap over the "hurdle" of belief in the
Virgin Birth before they could be "signed up." For good measure, he
added, Jesus was probably not born in December at all. “Christmas was
when it was because it fitted well with the winter festival.”
He said the Christmas cards that show the Virgin Mary cradling baby
Jesus, with the shepherds on one side and the Three Wise Men on the
other, were guilty of "conflation."
But in spite of his scepticism about aspects of the Christmas story, as
told in infant nativity plays up and down the land, he denied that
believing in God was equivalent to believing in Santa Claus or the
tooth fairy.
"The thing is, belief in Santa does not generate a moral code, it does
not generate art, it does not generate imagination. Belief in God is a
bit bigger than that," the Archbishop said.
Williams was speaking live on BBC Radio Five to the presenter Simon
Mayo when Ricky Gervais, star of The Office and a fellow guest,
challenged him about the intellectual credibility of the Christian
faith.
He said he was committed to belie in the Virgin Birth "as part of what
I have inherited." But belief in the Virgin Birth should not be a
"hurdle" over which new Christians had to jump before they wereaccepted.
He hinted that decades ago he was not "too fussed" with the literal
truth of the doctrine of the Virgin Birth. But as time went on, he
developed a "deeper sense" of what the Virgin Birth was all about. And
he went on to do a literary-critical analysis of the traditional
Christmas card that features, as often as not, a Virgin Mary cradling a
baby Jesus wrapped in swaddling clothes, with shepherds on one side,
the Three Wise Men on the other and oxen and asses all around.
Sometimes the stable is depicted with snow falling all around, and
often with a bright star rising in the East.
Most of it, the Archbishop said, could not have happened like that.
One of the few things that almost everyone agreed on was that Jesus’s
mother’s name was Mary. That is in all the four Gospels. It was also
pretty clear that Jesus’s father was called Joseph.
Williams was not saying anything that is not taught as a matter of
course in even the most conservative theological colleges. His
supporters would argue that it is a sign of a true man of faith that he
can hold on to an orthodox faith while permitting honest intellectual
scrutiny of fundamental biblical texts.
The Archbishop admitted that the Church’s present difficulties, with
the dispute over sexuality taking the Anglican Communion to the brink
of schism, were off-putting to outsiders. "They don’t want to know
about the inside politics of the Church, they want to know if God’s
real, if they can be forgiven, what sort of lifestyles matter more and
they want to know, I suppose, if their prayers are heard."
Williams’s views are strictly in line with orthodox Christian teaching.
The Archbishop is sticking to what the Bible actually says.
Original
Source
|
|
|||||||||
|
Shabbat Times
Subscribe 4 Updates
About Us
Search
Donations
This Month
Month Archive
Recent Photos
Login
|
Archbishop of Canterbury Dismisses Nativity Scene as Nothing but 'Legend'
Comments
No comments found.
Trackbacks
TrackBack URL: |
||||||||
|
|
|||||||||


![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://www.battalionofdeborah.org/logos/valid-rss.png)