I have been reading AN Wilson's Paul , not to mention Diarmaid McCulloch's History of Christianity. The very early Christians (and I believe the very early Quakers) thought they were not going to have to keep it up for very long, Jesus was coming back in their lifetimes. Prudence, self-sufficiency and fighting your family's corner were not called for. Jesus specifically said the disciples were not to worry about food or money in travelling in the ministry. Paul, by contrast, says "If a person does not work s/he will not eat". Ananias and Sapphira, in keeping back some money for their own use, were ahead of the game, and paid for it with their lives. (Or possibly they were punished only for not telling the truth.) --There has to have been a slow and unhappy acceptance that Christians were going to have to Keep it Up for a Long Time; and idealism will have got eroded. We need to inhabit that transition, and push the boundaries back in the direction of risk taki...
1- natural destructiveness, eg the Boxing Day tsunami. I feel that Nature is hugely valuable on the whole but distinct from God-the-largely-powerless-carer. I can imagine God grieving over the Boxing Day tsunami, and over every child who dies of an illness we can't solve yet; and rejoicing over every advance in medicine. 2- thinking in terms of a force of evil-- I feel that's a massive buck-passing exercise, though I remember being impressed by Scott Peck's People of the Lie ; must give it another go. 3- sin. To think of sin as infractions of rules seems to me seriously wrong. I think human failure usually comes in the form of callousness, of refusal to feel empathy when we should clearly do so. And what God can very properly charge us with is not giving him/her/it the opportunity to both enlighten us and give us a bit more strength to do The Generous Imaginative Thing. He/she/it will help fast enough if given the chance. And I do buy the Zoroaster vision of the contin...