Greg Boyd on how God enters the cosmic dance through Science, Scripture, and Us. We explore faith & doubt, quantum physics & relativity, Christ-shaped politics, and the hard parts of the Bible!
Greg Boyd is an internationally recognized theologian, preacher, teacher, apologist and author. He has been featured in The New York Times, The Charlie Rose Show, CNN, NPR, BBC, and is the co-founder & senior pastor of Woodland Hills Church in St. Paul, Minnesota. Greg has authored 20 books, including his best-selling "Letters From a Skeptic" and "The Myth of a Christian Nation".Greg Boyd's graphic book on science: The Cosmic Dance: What Science Can Teach Us about the Nature of Time, Life, God & Humpty Dumpty"If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough." - Albert EinsteinSurely You're Joking, Mr Feynman talks about how breaking things down simply is the only real way to understand themThe nature of things seems to be spontaneity and openness. We're dance partners with God.Quantum physics, Complexity theory, Chaos theory, and Relativity.Newtonian physics seemed deterministic, modern physics seems indeterminist. Quantum physics seems participatory.How Relativity theory might support determinism, and Greg Boyd's alternate explanation.The Open View of the future & Open Theism (see also our previous interview with Thomas Jay Oord)Our lives make a differenceScriptures suggest that God sees the future as a set of possibilitiesThe greatest imaginable God is a God who creates genuine possibilitiesGod knows things that "might or might not" happenAn omniscient God doesn't need to determine the futureGreg Boyd's book on the subject: God of the PossibleGreg Boyd's book Benefit of the Doubt: Breaking the Idol of Certainty"Certainty-Seeking Faith is a Form of Idolatry"Biblical faith is about covenant, not certaintyIf faith is about intellectual assent, it actively discriminates against people who are intellectualReal faith is faith "in the face of uncertainty"Micah's essay on scriptural faith & the movies: The Faith of the MartianHow to read the hard parts of the BibleGreg Boyd responds to issues Derek Flood raised in our previous interviewReading the Bible for the surprise ending: The Sixth Sense and The Book of Eli and how they're like the BibleThe Bible has to be read backwards: It all points to ChristOther approaches to this problem: Eric Seibert, Derek Flood suggest the bad things simply didn't happenEven if it didn't happen, Christ says that the narrative points to him. Which forces us to wrestle with the text.God is a missionary, and gets his hands dirtyThe crucified Christ suggests a God who allows himself to be revealed through sin.How God improvises with his people: 1 Samuel 8 on how God can ordain a king, even though he doesn't want them to have a king.How God takes on the appearance of an ancient near-eastern deity in response to people's demands and expectations.Politics & The Religious RightSome brief thoughts about Christians in politicsThe error of focusing on one cause, and the error of trusting in one regime to change thingsBeing a person of faith is not going to make you smarter politically, but it may very well make you dumberIs the kingdom of God about polarization?Jesus' apostles were from all over the political spectrumSee some alternate Christian approaches to politics: The And Campaign and Public FaithFurther reading:Rachel Held Evans' interview with Greg BoydAn atheist view of Greg BoydExplanation of the Cosmic Dance: "I would describe The Cosmic Dance as a cross between a humorous graphic novel (the writing is framed as a playful discussion among photo-shopped versions of my friends and other characters), on the one hand, and an introductory book on contemporary science and the open view of the future (or “Open Theism”), on the other. In this book I try to explain, at a “Dick and Jane” level, Quantum Physics, Chaos and Complexity Theory, Non-Equilibrium Thermodynamics, and Relativity Theory. I then argue that, in their own distinctive way, each of these theories encourage us to understand life, creation and even God as a sort of open-ended, creative, spontaneity-filled, adventurous dance."Greg Boyd on Twitter and ReKnew.org