• IT’S A PATRIOTIC THING. In yesterday’s OC Reg ('In God We Trust' goes up in Huntington Beach chambers), we learned that the city of Huntington Beach has now nailed its spankin’ new “In God We Trust” motto to a wall.
As the Reg explains, the city council voted in April to make a motto display, so they made one, and it’s round. They stuck it behind the dais in the council chambers.
In the Reg article, Councilman Joe Carchio offers my favorite quote of the day:
"To me it has nothing to do with religion…It is the motto of our county…it is a patriotic thing."A person so inclined could spend a nice afternoon unpacking that remark.
• THE BIBLE AS LITERATURE. Meanwhile, the Huntington Beach Union High School District must decide whether or not to offer a “Bible as literature” class, a proposal that was raised and then rejected (too little demand, etc.) a year and a half ago. (Huntington Beach trustees to discuss Bible class tonight.) Evidently, the matter is—or is perceived to be—a hot potato by school district trustees, for they’ve “refused” to discuss the matter for a year now, or so says the Reg.
Could be they simply felt that the matter had been settled.
But in June, people showed up at the board meeting to support the class.
One trustee, Matthew Harper, had been pressing for the matter to be discussed for a year, but he finally got a colleague to help put the matter on the agenda three months ago.
So tonight’s the night.
“Bible as literature” courses are common at the college level. For instance, Irvine Valley College offers Literature 40, “Introduction to the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament)” and Literature 41, “Introduction to the New Testament.”
Obviously, "Bible as literature" courses tend to approach “the Bible” as a piece of literature. But that may raise issues for those who view it as the Word.
Here’s how the above courses are described in the IVC course catalog:
LIT 40: This course offers a general introduction to the Hebrew Bible…, with particular focus on historical, textual, cultural, and literary issues. Students will consider the historical development of narrative, lyric, dramatic, and legal texts that eventually came to constitute the Hebrew Bible; explore questions of authorship and textual evolution; and study the processes and themes by which these writings exerted a formative influence on the development of Western Literature.I think these courses are great, but taking one of them must be a weird experience for a believer. I mean, if the Bible is the word of God, then what's all this stuff about apocrypha and disputes and Babylonians?
LIT 41: Lit 41 offers a non-doctrinal, literary and historical introduction to the New Testament and related texts. Of central interest in the course will be consideration of the various cultural, philosophical, and literary contexts out of which the Christian Bible emerged. Students will engage in such topics as the representation of Jesus; the influence of Paul; the nature and role of the early Christian churches; the variety of interpretive approaches to the text; the composition and formation of a canon; the relationship of Jewish eschatological and gnostic literature; and the influence of central New Testament themes, characters, and motifs on subsequent literature.
Textual evolution? I recall being a young believer. In my mind, the Word didn't evolve. It was spoken. And that was that.
Suppose you owned Moses' Ten Commandment tablets (I know, I know, but work with me). You've always taken them to be the writings of God, carved by lightning on a mountain top thousands of years ago.
But, one day, you notice some marks on the bottom of the tablets. You get out your glasses; you get really close. You read: "Made in China."
Kinda takes the starch out of the whole thing, doesn't it?
• GOD HATES YOU. Yesterday, Gustavo Arellano posted about local preacher Robert Morey—think of a cross between Charles Nelson Reilly and Elmer Gantry—who seems to be pissing people off and weirding them out. (ANOTHER FORMER ROBERT MOREY PARISHIONER LEAVES.)
Gustavo explains that some who leave Morey’s church in Irvine are spilling some cult beans. Gustavo includes a YouTube video of Morey, preaching about how God doesn’t love everybody. In fact, he hates "certain people." Probably you. Check it out:
OK, Morey's church isn't in Huntington Beach, but I bet he visits there a lot.