Shoes to die

delivered on August 7, 2011 at Sayville Congregational United Church of Christ

During the extended period that began with the Enlightenment, the guiding premise for modern thinkers was that human reason and the scientific method alone could create a better world. In many ways reason was deified, attained the status of a god, with many abandoning the notion of salvation in Christ for the notion of the self-salvation of humanity. This became the great project of modernity, to create a better world through reason and enlightened self-interest. Mathematics and the physical sciences began to kick the legs out of the edifice of the Enlightenment before the First World War, with Gödel’s Incompleteness Theorems and Einstein’s Theory of General Relativity adding uncertainty to what had seemed known. But it was the First World War itself that killed modernity, as well as countless millions of humans. For it was science and reason that produced the weapons of mass destruction and terrible killing machines used in the conflict. If the Enlightenment was not discredited after the First World War, it certainly would be after the Second, with the use of science in the Manhattan project and the birth of nuclear weapons. Continue reading “Shoes to die”

Icebergs to Melt

delivered on July 31st, 2011

They say you can’t really get more than one point across in a sermon, and they are probably right, but I was on a tear this week and there are way too many in this one, so I figured I’d tell you what they were so you could choose which one to listen for… if you choose an early one, you might even squeeze in a nap. Here they are: everything before Moses is probably a folktale, Christians played a key role in the abolition of slavery, Anabaptists are kinda cool, we’ve got to do something about economic slavery, and children are starving right now, right here in the U.S. In fact, now that you know what I’m going to say, maybe I should just sit down and get us all to the beach that much sooner. Or maybe not… Continue reading “Icebergs to Melt”