Daily Archives: September 21, 2019

Adam and Chris Builders of The Clergy Project – Patheos

Posted: September 21, 2019 at 1:43 pm

Editors Note: In this post, the original secret Clergy Project Forum Moderators celebrate TCPs 1000 milestone. I asked them to address the following issues relating to their early involvement:

How you got involved; what was it like working on this new idea; how you felt then, how you feel now; what opening day of the secret blog was like; how your activity/interest changed over time; your thoughts on the group now having 1000 participants.

Here are their responses. /Linda LaScola, Editor

==============================

By Adam Mann, aka Carter Warden

I got involved with The Clergy Project, initially through a phone call with Dan Barker at just the right time and then being in the Dennett-LaScola Tufts Study. Also, my fervor to get out of ministry and do something meaningful played a big role in my eagerness to set up the first Clergy Project private site.

Working on this new idea was tiring and invigorating at the same time.For me, it provided hope during a time of helplessness, and was my way of proclaiming my disbelief while remaining anonymous.I felt extremely fortunate and honored to have been trusted and included in the formation of The Clergy Project. I still feel that way today.

On the day that the secret blog opened, I felt nervous excitement, considering that I was experiencing it all from my church office!

In terms of how my activity and interest changed over time, obviously it was heavy up front and for about two years until my career change required me to step away and let others work on the site and moderate the forum.

I distinctly rememberbeing excited to beset up as member number one on the private forum by Mike or Andy from the Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason and Science (RDRS), which had provided our early platform.And I wondered what that number would eventually be one day.I hope The Clergy Project has been and will continue to be a real agent of change, not only for individuals struggling to make sense of their new worldview without religious faith, but for members of society at large who need to know that its okay to question religion.

Adam and Chris also developed the Public Page for The Clergy Project when it went up in October of 2011. Here is an early draft of the home page.

By Chris

I am Chris, one of the two original participants of The Clergy Project. I entered full time pastoral ministry in 1996, and for a time presented a progressive Evangelical message to the congregations I served. Over time, I became troubled by a number of the questions that Christianity did not seem to answer. In particular, the issues of theodicy and the problem of evil and the highly edited nature of scripture became concerns for me. For a number of years I became involved in the Emerging Church movement, which seeks to approach these questions with a sense of openness. However, I was still deeply unsatisfied with the Churchs overall sense of certainty and its closed attitude. Through a process of deep personal searching, I grew into the awareness that I no longer connected with the supernaturalist claims of modern Christianity.

I was immediately hopeful about the prospects of The Clergy Project, for the purpose of community and connection with others of similar experience if nothing else. My primary hope was that a network of post-supernaturalist communities would emerge. These communities would be led by former ministers and designed to connect people together, and to help people ask the deeper questions of life free from the limited constraints of both dogmatic religion and hard rationalism. That is still my hope for the future of The Clergy Project.

After the launch of the private TCP forum, I was surprised that so many of the people applying for membership were former ministers. In some cases, applicants had not served in decades and were no longer experiencing the stresses of leaving the ministry. I had hoped that there would be more ministers, like me, who were actually currently serving and who were looking for guidance and support.

Thankfully, many currently serving ministers have joined TCP since then, and my hope as the group reaches the 1000 participant milestone is for more to become involved and find support.

I am thankful for my involvement in the early stages of The Clergy Project. I left ministry in 2011, transitioning to work in the nonprofit sector. While I am not involved in any aspect of the freethought movement today, I am grateful for the community I found in TCP. I have moved on to lead a life today that is free from dogma, and free to explore the questions of life with openness, curiosity, and hope.

========================

Bio:Carter Wardenis a former conservative pastor of 25 years, now openly atheist. Using thepseudonym Adam Mann, he was a founder of The Clergy Project, its first member and one of its first forum moderators.Adam was one of the original five interviewees in the 2010 Dennett-LaScola article, Preachers who are not Believers. While still in ministry, he wasinterviewed undercoverby ABC World News Tonight and theCanadian Broadcasting Company.Carter made his change of beliefspublicat the Freedom From Religion Foundation National Convention on October 7, 2016. Carter is now a member of the Secular Student AllianceSpeakers Bureau. He hopes that his story andsongswill bring encouragement to clergy who feel trapped because of changing beliefs, people who fear openly identifying themselves as non-religious, andanyone who desires to be honest and genuine about personal beliefs, identity and personal expression that may go against societal norms.

Bio: Chrisis a former pastor, having served for over 18 years in moderate Baptist churches in the southeast US. He now holds a fully naturalistic view of reality, having come to this position partly because he takes the Bible too seriously to take it literally. He has had a fulfilling secular job for several years and he and his family now spend time together enjoying the natural world, free from the chains of dogma.

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Adam and Chris Builders of The Clergy Project - Patheos

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The Lost Genius of the American Settlement – ChristianityToday.com

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As we accelerate into a year of intense presidential politics, CT will offer essays about how evangelical Christians understand our times and what our response should be. This is the first in an occasional series. --Eds

We live in a time of shifting sand. The avalanche of social, political and legal changes weve experienced has left many believers reeling. They are troubled by what they see but also befuddled about how to respond. Amid much wringing of the hands they hear some calling for a circling of the wagons; others insist we must take America back; still others counsel engagement with the culture, often on its own terms. Confused by their times, many Christians remain uncertain about what Israel should do.

This last phrase is drawn from 1 Chronicles 12:32. The historical setting of this passage was also a time of shifting sand. King Saul had become unstable and was all but finished; yet he was still powerful and dangerous. The young upstart David appeared to be the future, but he was scarcely a sure thing. Israels tribes faced a ticklish decision. Each had to decide where their loyalties should lie. The tribe of Issachar made the right decision. This, the chronicler informs us, was because they understood the times and knew what Israel should do.

Crafting a wise and godly response to whats taking place around us requires that we understand our times.

This is the challenge many evangelical Christians face in our own generation. Crafting a wise and godly response to whats taking place around us requires that we understand our times. To gain that understanding, however, we must be willing to look beyond our societys presenting symptoms to underlying causes. Only then can we make sense of our current cultural predicament.

Thoughtful accounts of how weve gotten to our present plight are many and varied, from Charles Taylors massive A Secular Age, to Rod Drehers thumbnail sketch (The Roots of the Crisis) in The Benedict Option. Yet the story we need most wont be found in any of these books. Its a little-appreciated technical narrative told by law professor Steven D. Smith in a very different kind of book: The Rise and Decline of American Religious Freedom (Harvard, 2014).

Smith is the co-director of the University of San Diegos Institute of Religion and Law. His book was not written either for or about evangelical Christians, and it does no special pleading on our behalf. Its a book about the law. More specifically, it is a detailed chronicle of American jurisprudence on the subject of religious freedom, from the founding of the nation to the present. Smiths careful analysis deserves in-depth attention, but we will settle here for only the briefest summary of one of the books key insights.

The tale were after begins in December of 1791, when Americans approved ten new amendments to the Constitution they had ratified just two years earlier. The first enumerated right in these amendmentspreceding even the freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of assemblywas Americas so-called first freedom, the freedom of religion. Thus the Constitutions Bill of Rights begins with these striking words: Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.

Surprising to many today, this wording was originally designed as not much more than a jurisdictional limitation, stipulating that the federal government (Congress) must keep its hands off religion. With no federal laws for the judicial branch to adjudicate or the executive branch to execute, Americas new central government was to leave religion alone. Religious matters were to be left to the states or local jurisdictions.

Yet it was inevitable that complications would arise. The interplay of intricate questions surrounding the freedom of conscience, freedom of religion, freedom of worship, and the relation of church and government led early on to the development of what Smith calls the American settlement: a distinctive and uniquely valuable approach, says Smith, to the challenge of religion in American society.

This settlement was designed to accommodate two contending interpretations of America, both of which were in play from the beginning. Smith calls these the providential and secular interpretations. The providential interpretation recognizes vertical premises such as the self-evident claim of the Declaration of Independence that all humans are created equal and endowed by their Creator with unalienable rights. The secular interpretation prefers a horizontal view of America that disallows any such vertical tethers.

The important point for our purposes is that under this arrangement both of these interpretations played significant roles in shaping the nations law, government, policies and public education. The idea was that both options could and should be openly contested in American society. The genius of the American settlement, says Smith:

was that instead of officially elevating one or the other of those interpretations to the status of constitutional orthodoxy and condemning the other as constitutional heresy, the American approach left the matter open for We the People to reflect on and debate and negotiate on an ongoing basis.

By this means, says Smith, America long managed to avoid the basic blundernamely, of officially preferring one among competing faiths or would-be orthodoxiesthat in earlier centuries had produced civil havoc and often war in European societies.

Roughly seventy years ago, argues Smith, Americas Supreme Court committed the basic blunder of granting official preference to one among competing faiths or would-be orthodoxies.

So it was, so to speak, for the first two-thirds of American history. Now fast-forward to the middle of the 20th century.

Roughly 70 years ago, argues Smith, Americas Supreme Court abandoned the wisdom of the American settlement. It committed the basic blunder of granting official preference to one among competing faiths or would-be orthodoxies. Beginning with a series of decisions from the late 1940s into the 1960s, the Court declared the secular interpretation of America to be the nations official dogma. Though still widespread at popular and ceremonial levels, providential ideassuch as the claim that the source of our human rights is God rather than the state, or that mans law is but a mask of Gods lawwould no longer be permitted any official role in Americas law, government or public education. The nation went officially horizontal, creating at the core of American society a massive, ever-expanding governmental dead zone devoid of providential thinking or reasoning.

It doesnt take much connecting of dots to recognize this mid-20th century shift as the root of todays culture wars. In 1991, sociologist James Davison Hunter popularized this term in his aptly-subtitled book, Culture Wars: The Struggle to Define America. There he described the conflict as political and social hostility rooted in different systems of moral understanding.

The end to which these hostilities tend is the domination of one cultural and moral ethos over all others. Let it be clear that the principles and ideals that mark these competing systems of moral understanding are by no means trifling but always have the character of ultimacy to them. They are not merely attitudes that can change on a whim but basic commitments and beliefs that provide a source of identity, purpose, and togetherness for the people who live by them.

As a sociologist, Hunter early on recognized that when the complexities of Americas culture wars are distilled to their essence, the underlying contest is between two different systems of moral understanding. Said Hunter, The cleavages at the heart of the contemporary culture war are created by what I would like to call the impulse toward orthodoxy and the impulse toward progressivism.

The orthodox impulse is oriented vertically toward some external definable, and transcendent authority. The impulse toward progressivism is oriented horizontally toward a spirit of rationalism and subjectivism. Hunters orthodoxy thus parallels Smiths providential interpretation of America, while his progressivism parallels Smiths secular interpretation. Says Hunter, the contest between these two worldviews and their respective social and political agendas is cultural conflict at its deepest level. It is a conflict over the very meaning of America, who we have been in the past, who we are now, and perhaps most important, who we, as a nation, will aspire to become in the new millennium.

Again, Smith stresses that the struggle between these two interpretations of America was present from the beginning. What transformed their ongoing arm wrestling match into the deep cultural impasse it has become was the earlier abandonment of the American settlement. By this move, says Smith, the Court:

thereby unlearned the lesson that Americans had taken from the religious strife that had afflicted post-Reformation Europenamely, that if among competing faiths one is to be singled out as the officially preferred position, then the devotees of the various faiths will fight for that honor (and, perhaps more urgently, will fight not to be among the losers).

This dynamic explains much of the bitter acrimony of our current national discourse. As Smith observes, its a natural consequence of the shift from a situation of open and legitimate contestation to a discourse structured in terms of constitutional orthodoxy (political secularism) versus constitutional heresy (political providentialism).

Todays secularists tend to scorn the notion that there exists in America any so-called war on Christianity. Comedian and TV personality Jon Stewart, for instance, offered up this sardonic prayer:

Yes, the long war on Christianity. I pray that one day we may live in an America where Christians can worship freely! In broad daylight! Openly wearing the symbols of their religion . . . perhaps around their necks? And maybedare I dream it?maybe one day there can be an openly Christian president. Or, perhaps, 43 of them. Consecutively.

There is a campaign taking place, not against Christianity but providentialism in general. Christianity is simply the most prominent example.

Stewarts clever sarcasm should serve as a warning against overstating the case. Measured against other times and places, Christians have it easy in America. What cannot be denied, on the other hand, is the reality of the ongoing cultural struggle described by Smith and Hunter. There is a campaign taking place, but its not against Christianity per se. Its against providentialism in general. Christianity is simply the most prominent example.

This development is no illusion. Its a predictable aftereffect of the constitutional shift recounted in Rise and Decline. It was triggered seventy-some years ago when the secular interpretation of America was declared the cultural winner. Its social and political agenda, empowered by a now weaponized Constitution, began a steady, easily-documented advance through the second half of the twentieth century. It was inevitably a messy, inconsistent, up-and-down affair, but the overall trend was clear.

Then, after the turn of the century, that trend hockey-sticked up. Fresh developments signaled a new secular aggressiveness. On issues such as gender, homosexuality, marriage, the unborn and religious freedom, providentialist resistance by voters or legislators was summarily slapped down by the courts. The legal thumb that had always weighted the scale in favor of Americas first freedom shifted to the anti-discrimination cause. Livelihoods hung in the balance as conscience-driven proprietors resisted the secular push. Massive corporate boycotts were organized against states daring to buck the tide. The full weight of the executive branch of the federal government swung in behind the radical agenda. On campus, language and thought police ratcheted up the enforcement of their PC rule book. Dissenting voices were shouted down at the podium or punished by social media mobs. With few notable exceptions, the cultures elitesintellectual, legal, media, entertainment, corporateappeared to be singing in unison from the same secular score.

It began to dawn that this was not just more of the same. A spate of new books with alarming titles began to appear, arguing that America had passed some sort of tipping point. Evangelicals found themselves not only out-of-step with their secularized culture but increasingly in its cross hairs. Not just in official settings but in Americas broader culture, taking a stand on the truth claims of the Bible generated accusations of bigotry and intolerance. Such claims were no longer merely mistaken; they became hate speech that creates hostile environments that make others feel excluded and unsafe. Those who offered such claims found themselves castigated as sexist, racist, misogynist and homophobic. Traditional Christian and pro-family groups were newly labeled social extremists.

These seemed to be ominous new developments. In truth they were in large measure the predictable fruit of the constitutional shift chronicled in Rise and Decline:

In a regime of open contestation it is possible to disagree respectfully. . . . [But] where disagreements are framed, not in terms of legitimate contesting conceptions but rather in terms of an official position or orthodoxy versus heretical and illegitimate deviations, respectful disagreement becomes difficult; it is replaced by a discourse of accusation, anathematization, and abuse.

Ever since the 2016 election, pundits have been scratching their heads over the high percentage of evangelical Christians who voted for Donald Trump. For many this remains an ongoing puzzle. How can those who so willingly censured the moral failures of previous Oval Office occupants, they ask, now so conveniently overlook the shortcomings of this one?

The preferred answer of those on the left, as well as the some of the never-Trumpers on the right, seems to be that evangelical support for Donald Trump represents a hypocritical sacrifice of moral principle. Speaking of conservatives in general, opinion writer Bret Stephens put it this way in the New York Times:

It was once the useful role of conservatives . . . to stand athwart declining moral standards, yelling Stop. They lost whatever right they had to play that role when they got behind Trump, not only acquiescing in the culture of shamelessness but also savoring its fruits. . . . Trump-supporting conservatives the self-aware ones, at least justify this bargain as a price worth paying in order to wage ideological combat against the hypostatized evil left. In fact it only makes them enablers in the degraded culture they once deplored.

Is this a fair assessment? In the case of some Trump supporters, perhaps it is. They seem willing to back Mr. Trump no matter what he says or does. In other cases, however, this simplistic analysis misses the mark. The stories told by Smith and Hunter offer a more nuanced key to solving the evangelical/Trump riddle.

The 2016 election did not offer evangelicals the luxury of voting for a candidate to their liking. They were forced to choose among four unattractive options: not voting at all; squandering their vote on a meaningless independent candidate; voting for a continuation or acceleration of an aggressively secular agenda they believed was toxic for America; or voting for the mercurial Donald Trump. The first two options seemed an abdication of their electoral duty. Their only real choice was between options three and four. This dilemma forced them into an any-port-in-a-storm strategy. Whatever the downsides of option four, they calculated, at least it wasnt option three. So they cast their vote accordingly.

In the 2016 election evangelicals found themselves forced to decide: Which of two unlovely things would live? This continues to be the civic quandary many evangelicals face in todays polarized America.

For many of these Trump voters their decision felt like a mirror-image of Sophies choice. In William Styrons searing story, Sophie was forced to decide which of two lovely things, her son or daughter, would die. In the 2016 election evangelicals found themselves forced to decide: Which of two unlovely things would live? This was, and continues to be, the civic quandary many evangelicals face in todays polarized America.

Our focus has been on understanding our times. Space precludes turning now to framing a godly response. For starters, though, an excellent way to begin might be to steep ourselves in the godly counsel of 1 Peter, a letter addressed to first century exiles and sojourners whose allegiance to Christ and his word also placed them at odds with their prevailing culture.

In any case, this much is clear. No superficial assessment of Americas current struggles will do. Evangelical Christians need to think deeply about what theyre facing: the mounting cultural dominance of a very differentand increasingly intolerantsystem of moral understanding, one that is anchored in the purely horizontal assumptions that became official Americas established religion (worldview, set of ultimate beliefs) 75 years ago. The cultural battle lines of today are but the latest ripple effects of that irreversible shift.

Crafting a godly response to this reality must begin with the recognition that our societys illness is not a temporary ailment; it is now a chronic condition, one which is likely to demand of Americas 21st century evangelicals a much more costly Christ-like response than many of us have yet contemplated. Behold, Jesus said, I am sending you out as sheep in the midst of wolves, so be wise as serpents and innocent as doves.

Duane Litfin is Wheaton College President Emeritus and author of numerous articles and books, including, most recently, Pauls Theology of Preaching (IV Press).

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Outgrowing Atheism: it’s time for Richard Dawkins to grow up – ChristianToday

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Atheist bestselling author Richard DawkinsYouTube/Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason & Science

Although its readers were to name him one of the top three intellectuals in the world, Prospect magazine gave a scathing review to Richard Dawkins' anti-religion polemic The God Delusion, writing at the time, "It has been obvious for years that Richard Dawkins had a fat book on religion in him, but who would have thought him capable of writing one this bad? Incurious, dogmatic, rambling and self-contradictory, it has none of the style or verve of his earlier works." That did not stop TGD becoming a multi-million copy bestseller.

At a personal level I am thankful to Richard Dawkins because he opened the door for me and others to proclaim the Good News of Jesus to tens of thousands who would not have heard it otherwise. In fact, I have met more people who were converted to Christ through Dawkins, than have been converted to atheism. I wrote a book called The Dawkins Letters, which the Lord still continues to use.

There was however a down side to this the level of vitriol from what I came to recognise as the New Fundamentalist Atheists, was at times overwhelming something which rather sadly was encouraged by Dawkins with his mocking and sneering tone. And the arguments Dawkins used (largely borrowed from previous atheists such as Bertrand Russell) although simplistic and nave, were repeated ad nauseum in schools and through the secular media.

Which brings us on to Outgrowing God: A Beginners Guide, Dawkins latest book, published on September 19. It is designed for young people so I was interested and intrigued by what he would say. Had his argument developed? Would he have taken account of the weaknesses? Would he be able to explain and discuss in such a way that young people could grasp and think for themselves?

The arguments he uses are just a rehash of those in TGD, as are many of the illustrations and stories. So we have all the old ones atheists just worship one god less; evolution proves there is no God; you don't need God for morality; and of course the oldie but goldie, 'who created God, then?'.

He's even got the same old stories and illustrations the cargo cult, the universe where you have a green moustache, the (mis) citation of Hitler etc.

Dawkins pontificates as though he were an expert in subjects which he knows very little about. Space does not permit me to list all the subtle and howling errors. But here are a few of the simplistic lowlights.

People worship Jesus all over the world today because of a historical accident in AD 312; the Trinity is polytheistic. Paul says virtually nothing about the life of Jesus. Until now nobody doubted the Gospels. Revelation was the inspiration for the doctrine of the rapture. There is little or no evidence for the existence of Abraham, David, Moses and perhaps Jesus didn't even exist. If he did, he may have said some cool things but he really was not nice.

Dawkins does strain at gnats while swallowing camels. He is so desperate to disprove the Bible that he will grab any bit of confirmation bias he can. He confidently asserts knowledge he does not have. One example is his claim that Abraham could not have existed when Genesis said he did (2nd millennium BC) because camels (mentioned in Genesis) were not domesticated until hundreds of years afterwards and yet we have evidence of camels being used in the 3rd millennium BC.

If you want to understand how Dawkins works, take this example: "No serious scholar today thinks that the Gospels were written by eye-witnesses."

Here you need to grasp how Dawkins uses language. "Serious scholar" means 'someone who agrees with me'. If they don't they obviously can be neither serious nor a scholar. Which is why he can dismiss, if he even knows about, Professor Richard Bauckham of the University of St Andrews, whose serious scholarly work Jesus and the Eyewitness is an authoritative piece of academic research.

Likewise when Dawkins confidently asserts that no "educated theologian" believes that Adam and Eve, or Noah is history. But I'm educated (two degrees) and I'm a theologian, and I believe they are history. I may be wrong. But Dawkins' simplistic Emperor's clothes attitude 'any intelligent person will see that the Emperor is wearing the finest clothes' is easily exposed.

One of my favourites is his repeated argument that there is very little about Jesus in the contemporary written histories of the first century. Why should there be? Jesus was a Jewish peasant on the fringes of the Empire who died an ignominious but not uncommon death. Why would any contemporary historian write about him?

Or how about this: "'Isn't it remarkable that almost every child follows the same religion as their parents, and it always just happens to be the right religion!" Dawkins misses out the rather obvious point that this is also true for secular atheists whose children happen to follow their position which remarkably happens to be just the right position!

Then there is the unlikely anecdotal hearsay evidence that he uses, for example, when he asserts that when he asks Christians what the Ten Commandments are, they can only remember one 'thou shalt not kill'. Either his Christian acquaintances are extremely limited or he's not telling the truth. Most of us can remember about not stealing, committing adultery, keeping the Sabbath, etc.

He is also not averse to twisting the Bible to make it mean what he wants it to mean: "What the Sixth Commandment originally meant was 'Thou shalt not kill members of thine own tribe.'"

But it's not just in his attempt to diss the Bible that Dawkins shows both illogicality and a lack of knowledge. It's also when he asserts his own faith. To him evolution is much more than a scientific theory that explains how life develops it is the theory of everything. It proves that things are getting better - including wars, human morality and the world in general.

Whilst mocking the God of the gaps argument (an argument that we do not use) he sets up his own blind faith the science of the gaps. We don't know but one day science will be able to explain (and sort) everything. He believes so passionately that science and Christianity are opposed that he cannot seem to comprehend the many Christians who are scientists.

One area where I was surprised was his argument for abortion:"You can define a fertilized egg as a human being if you like. But it doesn't have a nervous system, so it can't suffer. It doesn't know it's been aborted, feels no fear or regret. A woman has a nervous system."

If Dawkins were being consistent and logical, this would mean that he is opposed to all abortion after a few weeks when the baby does have a nervous system.

He is hopelessly all over the place with morality. On the one hand, he argues that the universe has no moral properties, and that there should be no lines and boundaries. On the other, he argues against the "immorality" of the Bible and for the absolutist belief that "causing suffering is wrong" unless of course it is the suffering of the unborn child, or the Christian who is refused the right to educate their child according to their faith.

Conclusion

In summary, all I can say is that he's done it again. Richard Dawkins has managed to produce a book on theology, history, philosophy, ethics and science that is even worse than his first.

Outgrowing God is a dumbed down version of TGD, which itself was a dumbed down version of more classical atheist arguments. Apart from the half of the book that is about evolution and where the writing is at times beautiful and often informative, it is poorly written, badly researched and relies on ridicule and ad hominem rather than rational and intelligent discussion.

Dawkins wants to assure us that the atheist emperor is covered in a fine robe of scientific rationalism. He argues that those who do not see this are 'uneducated' and to be frank, quite thick. Of course there are those in the fawning interviews and book reviews who will declare that the emperor is fully clothed and in his right mind. But his book only demonstrates that the emperor is naked.

The childish arguments and sneering mockery only show his inability to see beyond his own prejudices and preconceptions. It's time for him to outgrow his atheism and mature in his thinking. If our society follows the philosophy and faith of Dawkins we will be heading into a dark abyss. It's time for another Christian Enlightenment.

David Robertson is director of Third Space in Sydney and blogs atwww.theweeflea.com

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Living with ALS: The Three S’s of life Spontaneity, Serendipity and… – Communities Digital News

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CHARLOTTE, NC: Some of the most joyful moments in life occur at times when an unanticipated series of events align themselves to create memories that can never quite be explained and certainly never be duplicated. It is the Spontaneity, Serendipity, Synchronicity of life.

In the simplest of terms, most of us would refer to them as you had to be there moments.

We have all had them, and no manner of explanation or retelling of the events can ever completely replicate the pleasure of the experience by the participants.

Perhaps another, deeper and more philosophical, way to put it is to call it the Three Ss: Spontaneity, Serendipity, and Synchronicity.

In their own way, each of this trio of phenomena is related.

Over the years, I have come to revel in the serendipity of travel as one of the driving forces for my wanderlust passion. It lies deep within my psyche and growth as a person in ways I could never have fully attained in a classroom or a book.

For me, the classroom and books come after the experience in ways that serve to reinforce what I have discovered and promise to further arouse my curiosity.

No matter who we are, it is the anticipation of such events that create the excitement of a journey before we ever take the first step out of the front door. The sensation is much the same that football fans experience before the Super Bowl.

All too often, the game is not able to live up to its billing because the hype diminishes the reality of the expectations.

Likewise, travel is also filled with unpredictability and possibilities. However, unlike sports, an entire destination becomes the product rather than the limitations of a finite playing field. Thus, the opportunities for unique and awe-inspiring occurrences are enhanced and magnified by the destination.

One of my high school classmates, who is also someone whose life has been broadened by travel, describes serendipity as those delicious random mysteries that appear like magic in our lives.

While those are some pretty heavy-duty words, Jung simplified their meaning with the following example:

I was sitting opposite (a patient) one day, with my back to the window, listening to her flow of rhetoric. She had an impressive dream the night before, in which someone had given her a golden scarab a costly piece of jewelry. While she was still telling me this dream, I heard something behind me gently tapping on the window. I turned round and saw that it was a fairly large flying insect knocking against the window-pane from outside in the obvious effort to get into the dark room.

This seemed to me very strange. I opened the window immediately and caught the insect in the air as it flew in. It was a scarabaeid beetle, whose gold-green color most nearly resembles that of a golden scarab. I handed the beetle to my patient with the words, Here is your scarab. This experience punctured the desired hole in her rationalism and broke the ice of her intellectual resistance.

Although the affliction frequently denotes more negative connotations than positive.

On the other hand, if you think about it, be it for good or for bad, life itself is an amalgam of events that are either serendipitous, spontaneous or synchronous or some blending of the three.

Not long ago, an ALS patient wrote a poem that upon first reading appeared to be little more than his own private pity party. Truthfully, I had to force myself to re-read it, but by the time I finished the second review, I realized that the message was, indeed, one of hope.

As the author later clarified,

If we are honest with ourselves, life is only temporary for anyone. All ALS really does is to provide a slightly more defined awareness of the inevitable.

That being the case, I plan to continue my pursuit of the Three Ss until I am no longer able.

Following that, I can sit back and savor each precious moment, encounter and person who passed through the pageant that has been my life.

Even ALS cannot take that away from me.

About the Author: Bob Taylor is a veteran writer who has traveled throughout the world. Taylor is an award-winning television producer/reporter/anchor before focusing on writing about international events, people and cultures around the globe.

Taylor is the founder of The Magellan Travel Club (www.MagellanTravelClub.com)

Read more of What in the World and Bob Taylor at Communities Digital News

Read more of Bobs journeys with ALS and his travels around the world

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Living with ALS: The Three S's of life Spontaneity, Serendipity and... - Communities Digital News

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Pipeline Pawns: Restaurateur Faces Bankruptcy As National Grid Fights For New Pipeline – CBS New York

Posted: at 1:42 pm

NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) Another National Grid customer is being used as a pawn in the utilitys fight for a gas pipeline.

A Vietnamese restaurateur now faces bankruptcy.

This comes as the states Public Service Commission tells CBS2 in each of the cases it has so far examined, the utility was wrong to deny service to its customers.

CBS2s political reporter Marcia Kramer continues to demand answers from those responsible.

ARE YOU A NATIONAL GRID CUSTOMER WHO HAS BEEN DENIED SERVICE? TELL US ABOUT IT BY CLICKING HERE

The sign in the window of Pho 86, a Vietnamese restaurant in Bensonhurst, says coming soon. It has been up for three months. If it doesnt come down soon, the owner will have to declare bankruptcy.

Every night, I can not sleep. I think about the restaurant. No gas, and my dream, my future, gone, Peter Lee told Kramer.

Hes another victim of the gas moratorium declared by National Grid as it battles with the state over a new pipeline.

Lee borrowed money and spent his life savings to open his restaurant, believing that when the renovations were done, National Grid would turn on the gas for his six stoves. They said no.

No gas. No reason. Nobody know, Lee said.

Nobody told you when you wanted to open your restaurant you wouldnt be able to get gas? Kramer asked.

No one tell me, nobody, he said. Its horrible.

If National Grid doesnt relent in two months, hell be forced to close up shop before anyone gets a chance to taste his food.

I think America, everything good, and cannot be like happen to my life, Lee said. Like that.

Kramer took Lees case to Gov. Andrew Cuomo, as she has in a number of other cases. Cuomo asked the state Public Service Commission to look into it, and they are.

This comes as a department spokesman offered a stunning revelation: In each of the six cases it has probed, it found National Grid acted improperly. The spokesman said in a statement:

National Grid has justified the moratorium as a mechanism to prevent increased demand for natural gas, but in the cases that we have examined to date, the company did not demonstrate that the customers would in fact increase demand.

National Grid was ordered to provide service. The company, not happy about it, said it will simply exacerbate the current supply shortage, and potentially put the system at risk.

Peter Lees story is similar to the 2,600 other home and business owners in Brooklyn, Queens and Long Island denied service.

Brooklyn Assemblyman Robert Carroll says the state should think about finding a new gas supplier.

What I think theyre doing is trying to hold hostage those 2,600 people so that the Department of Environmental Conservation will change their opinion on a pipeline theyve deemed environmentally unsound, Carroll said.

Kramer asked to interview the president of National Grid, but a company spokesperson said not at this time. Shell continue to ask.

State officials say that consumers considering home or business renovations that require shutting off the gas supply should check with the utility first to make sure service will be restored.

ARE YOU A NATIONAL GRID CUSTOMER WHO HAS BEEN DENIED SERVICE? TELL US ABOUT IT BY CLICKING HERE

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Pipeline Pawns: Restaurateur Faces Bankruptcy As National Grid Fights For New Pipeline - CBS New York

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Classic Portland Deli Kenny & Zukes Is Filing for Bankruptcy – Eater Portland

Posted: at 1:42 pm

Jewish deli brand Kenny & Zukes, which includes a sandwich shop, a bagel bakery, and a counter in the airport, is filing for bankruptcy. According to Willamette Week, owner Ken Gordon made the choice to tackle mounting debts.

Earlier this week, Gordon sent an email to investors announcing plans to reorganize under Chapter 11. Gordon told the alt-weekly that the decision was brought on by a recent civil suit, which claims the restaurant owes $184,494 to a local food distributor. By filing for bankruptcy, Gordon can pay off the restaurants debts in full while lowering the overall monthly payments.

Gordon says the restaurant is in no danger of closing, and is, in fact, considering further expansion. Gordon says the restaurant may raise prices on menu items, but the owner does not plan to lay off any employees as a result of the decision.

There has been some breaking news that were going through a Chapter 11 reorganization. This is true. The inference is that we are in trouble and our future bleak. NOTHING could be further from the truth, Gordon writes in a post on the restaurants Facebook page. The reorganization is due to past debt, and we have a plan to make all our creditors whole, and to give us some breathing room to do what we do best.

The original restaurant has been open since 2007, when Gordon and then-partner Nick Zukin decided to get into the deli game. Zukin is no longer affiliated with the restaurants.

Kenny & Zukes [Official] Kenny & Zukes [Facebook] Portland Pastrami Staple Kenny & Zukes Is Filing For Bankruptcy [Willamette Week] Previous Kenny & Zukes coverage [EPDX]

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Classic Portland Deli Kenny & Zukes Is Filing for Bankruptcy - Eater Portland

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College Of New Rochelle Officially Files For Bankruptcy – legal Insurrection

Posted: at 1:41 pm

Final bidding procedures and deadlines will be announced once approved by the court.

This is the end for this school. The only thing left to do after this is sell the property.

Patch reports:

College Of New Rochelle Files For Bankruptcy

The College of New Rochelle officially filed for bankruptcy Friday, and the main campus will be sold via an auction. The college, which closed its doors Aug. 10 after 115 years, filed for Chapter 11 in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in the Southern District of New York.

According to a spokesperson, Mercy College will lease the campus and utilize the facilities for educational activities through 2020.

A&G Realty Partners and B6 Real Estate Advisors, who were retained by CNT as real estate advisors, announced that the deadline to submit qualifying bids to participate in the bankruptcy auction is anticipated to be in early November.

Final bidding procedures and deadlines will be announced once approved by the court.

Mark Podgainy of Getzler Henrich & Associates, the interim chief restructuring officer for the college, said the bankruptcy filing is the final chapter for the institution.

Over the course of the last 115 years, CNR has provided more than 87,000 students women and men, both traditional age and adult learners with the opportunity to better their lives through education, he said.

We are pleased to have two well-respected and experienced firms in A&G Realty and B6 Real Estate Advisors to oversee the sale of the campus as it transitions to its next chapter, Podgainy said.

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College Of New Rochelle Officially Files For Bankruptcy - legal Insurrection

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FBI was on the case months before Reagor Dykes filed bankruptcy – KLBK | KAMC | EverythingLubbock.com

Posted: at 1:41 pm

LUBBOCK and AMARILLO, Texas Court records that were filed Tuesday and made publicly available on Friday showed the FBIs Amarillo office began an investigation into Reagor Dykes on February 1, 2018.

In August 2018 Reagor Dykes filed for bankruptcy one day after Ford Credit Motor Company went public with allegations of fraud and default.

On Friday, federal prosecutors released a statement saying former Reagor Dykes employees Sheila Evans Miller, 52, and Diana Herrera Urias, 53, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bank fraud. They did so in front of a federal magistrate in Amarillo, according to prosecutors.

Millers plea deal calls for no more than five years in prison and restitution of roughly $23 million. Urias plea deal calls for the same terms.

Their former boss, Shane Smith, pleaded guilty on a conspiracy charge in June and will be sentenced at a later date to more than 20 years in prison. He agreed to be responsible for $50 million of restitution. Smith was the Chief Financial Officer.

Link: Factual Resume of Sheila Evans Miller

Link: Factual Resume of Diana Herrera Urias

Court records said Miller, Urias and Smith were running an extensive check-kiting scheme. Check kiting is a form of trading checks between bank accounts to make it look like the accounts have money when they do not.

Court records said the check kiting was done by Reagor Dykes at FirstCapital Bank, Aim Bank, FirstBank and Trust, IBC Bank, Liberty Capital Bank, Peoples Bank, Vista Bank, and Branch Banking & Trust Company.

The FBI learned in its investigation that the check-kiting scheme grew over time and, just prior to the collapse on June 26, 2018, RDAG had an entire team at its headquarters designated to kite checks, newly released court records said.

Related Story: Images tell the story: a look inside the former Reagor Dykes Ford dealership in Plainview

Employees under Smiths supervision would every day make up random dollar figures on checks until they totaled the amount needed to cover each negative balance.

RDAG had an entire team at its headquarters designated to kite checks.

The court records quoted emails dating back to October 2, 2017 wherein Smith was communicating openly with other employees about how much money needed to be covered. They referred to these checks as blue checks.

The amount needed, for example on October 2, 2017, was $280,000 or more, according to court records.

By July 2018, the amount of daily checks was more than $5.4 million although the court records said some of these were possibly legitimate. Most were not, court records said.

The newly released court records do not say why the case came to the FBIs office in Amarillo rather than Lubbock where Reagor Dykes was based.

The newest court records also do not reveal why the fraud continued until Ford discovered a problem during an emergency audit in the last week of July 2018. Fords initial discovery, according to previous court records, was floor-plan fraud not check kiting.

A floor-plan is a particular kind of loan to cover automobiles at a dealership. Ford said Reagor Dykes falsified sales records to put off or avoid paying money that was owed on the floor plan.

Whats left of Reagor Dykes remained in bankruptcy on Friday. A plan has been proposed to sell the locations and pay off some of the debts.

Related Story: Two Reagor Dykes Employees Plead Guilty To Bank Fraud Conspiracy

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FBI was on the case months before Reagor Dykes filed bankruptcy - KLBK | KAMC | EverythingLubbock.com

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BDO: Retail bankruptcies and store closings climb in first half – Furniture Today

Posted: at 1:41 pm

NEW YORK First the bad news: Retailers across many sectors closed more than 7,000 stores in the first half and the pace of retail bankruptcies picked up during that period, according to BDOs Bi-Annual Bankruptcy Update out this month. Whats more there are a few furniture and bedding retailers making the bankruptcy list.

The good news: Only one furniture-industry connected retailer was listed on a separate store closings table (not necessarily tied to bankruptcies) for closing 25 or more stores in the first half.

Also, BDO said it expects the pace of bankruptcies to slow down in this second half (more good news), but not the rate of closings (bad news).

The international accounting and business consulting firm said that bankruptcy pace accelerated since late 2018, noting last years holiday sales failed to meet expectations, with December retail sales dropping 1.6% from the month prior the weakest sales performance since December 2009.

That lackluster performance contributed to 10 bankruptcy filings in the first quarter of this year alone, BDO said, including the petitions filed by Payless ShoeSource, Gymboree and Charlotte Russe. A table in the report lists 14 retailers that filed for protection in the first half. Home furnishings industry names included Innovative Mattress Solutions, which filed in January, Z Gallerie filing in March and Hollander Sleep Products in May. The industry filings culminated in asset sales for IMS and Z Gallerie and reorganization and a debt-for-equity swap at Hollander, a maker of pillows, comforters, foam toppers and other sleep products.

BDO listed 19 retailers that have announced closings of 25 or more stores in the first half (led by Payless 2,354 closures) for a total of 7,282 stores. Rent-A-Center (125 stores closures announce) was the only furniture-centric company on that list. Apparel and footwear retailers accounted for more than 60% of all the closings and planned closings.

In an outlook section, BDO said, Despite the large number of bankruptcy filings and store closures, overall retail sales remained solid through the first half of 2019 and continue to show positive signs, thanks to a strong economy, record low unemployment and rising wages. These positives lead the firm to believe the risk of a significant downturn for the rest of this year is slim, although it added that retailers should remain cautious.

Some of the headwinds or current conditions that could put pressure on retailers and consumers going forward, include ongoing tariffs and expected increases on Chinese import tariffs and consumer debt, which reached record levels (more than $4 trillion) including rising mortgage, credit card and student loan debt.

Looking ahead through the end of 2019, we expect to see additional bankruptcy filings but at a slower pace than the first half of the year and for the heightened rate of store closures to continue, BDO said.

For two more takes on recent store closings and opposing views on what it all means, see this story.

Please feel free to email or call me with all of your retail news and tips, including expansion news, successful merchandising and marketing strategies and anything else you would like to see covered by Furniture/Today. Contact me directly at cengel@furnituretoday.com or 336-605-1129.

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BDO: Retail bankruptcies and store closings climb in first half - Furniture Today

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PG&E fire victims, bondholders offer PG&E bankruptcy exit plan – Manteca Bulletin

Posted: at 1:41 pm

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Pacific Gas and Electric Co. bondholders and wildfire victims have joined forces and proposed their own reorganization plan as they try to wrest control of the bankrupt company from its stockholders.

The two groups told PG&Es bankruptcy judge Thursday their proposal would include a $24 billion settlement to pay everyone owed money because of fires started by the companys power lines in recent years, the San Francisco Chronicle reported.

PG&E has offered to pay individual victims from a trust capped at $8.4 billion and reached settlements with insurers and local governments of $11 billion and $1 billion, respectively.

The bondholders proposal would invest $28.4 billion in exchange for a 58.8% stake in the utilitys parent PG&E Corp., diluting the firms who currently own shares of the company. The investment would fund creation of a $24 billion trust, in cash and stock, to pay claims from various fires in which the company was involved.

The trust would be acceptable to wildfire victims because they would designate someone to manage the process, attorneys for the committees of wildfire victims and bondholders involved in the PG&E case said in their joint filing.

In an email, PG&E spokesman James Noonan noted the two settlements the company has already reached with parties in the bankruptcy case and said the company is committed to working with the remaining individual plaintiffs to fairly and reasonably resolve their claims.

___

Information from: San Francisco Chronicle, http://www.sfgate.com

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PG&E fire victims, bondholders offer PG&E bankruptcy exit plan - Manteca Bulletin

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