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Christianity Untrue, Says Teacher
 
Church Wants to Stop Him from Training Students for Ministry
 
By Ray Waddle, Religion Editor, The Tennessean
 
[This article was originally published in The Tennessean,
 August 29, 1998, pp. 1B-2B.]
 
Gerd Luedemann no longer believes in Christianity, and he
suspects a lot of Christians secretly agree with him.
 
The difference is that Luedemann, a noted author here and in
Europe, is going public with his disbelief. The other
difference is he teaches the New Testament in a school in
Germany that trains ministers, and he wants to continue there
despite threats by the churches to kick him out.
 
"People know Christianity is not true, but they won't address
it publicly," Leudemann, a German who lives part time in
Nashville, said last week.
 
"It's the skeleton in the closet. But I want to get the
discussion going. That can only happen if you don't mind being
stigmatized."
 
Luedemann, 52, is a friendly man with a Web site,
www.gwdg.de/~gluedem/, and a twinkle in his eye even as he
declares traditional Christian belief is no longer possible.
 
He insists liberal Christianity is dishonest when it does not
admit its skepticism about the faith's miraculous claims. He
thinks anybody who wants to be a serious Christian ought to
take up fundamentalism.
 
His hunch is that many other churchgoers feel what he feels
but don't admit it -- a deep disconnection between the
miraculous world of Sunday morning Bible teaching and the
daily world of rational laws of nature and social change.
 
"Liberals are dishonest if they think the Bible is on their
side," said Luedemann, who taught at Vanderbilt Divinity
School for three years in the early 1980s and still has
research privileges there.
 
"The Bible is against democracy, against tolerance, against
equality."
 
He has come to embrace a private religion that honors the
mysteries of nature and the subconscious. He believes his kind
of mystical piety is the wave of the future in a
post-Christian era.
 
Luedemann has been called a publicity-monger; he's a scholar
who doesn't shy from notoriety. He's written several books
that question or attack core Christian beliefs, such as Jesus'
Resurrection and his Virgin Birth.
 
He happily appears as the token religious skeptic on local
talk shows and national TV documentaries.
 
His latest book, however, has gotten him in hot water with the
Lutheran churches that underwrite his teaching job at the
University of Göttingen in Germany.
 
The book, The Great Deception, argues the Resurrection was a
pious hoax created, intentionally or not, by Jesus' apostles.
 
"Great Deception - it's an ugly title, but if it's true, why
not tell the truth?" said Luedemann, a family man who was a
passionate Christian preacher as a teenager and later
considered joining a monastery. "Let's not deceive people."
 
The book opens with a "Letter to Jesus" in which Luedemann
bids farewell to the beloved Jesus of his youth, urging the
Redeemer to free himself from the confusions and conflicts of
the modern church and return to the first century.
 
"You proclaimed the future kingdom of God, but what came was
the church. Luedemann writes. "Your message has been falsified
by your supporters for their own advantage, contrary to the
historical truth."
 
The "case of Luedemann" has stirred unease in Germany,
triggered debate about the limits of academic freedom and
raised questions about the aims of liberal theology.
 
The historical-critical methods of theology he teaches in
Europe are the bread and butter of the most prestigious
seminaries in the United States, too, including Vanderbilt
Divinity School.
 
Luedemann argues that liberal theology pretends to affirm
belief but is based on skeptical methods of scholarship that
deny miracles and strip the Bible of supernatural origins.
 
"It sucks the blood out of the gods and in the end prays only
to symbols," be said.
 
The Vanderbilt Divinity dean says Luedemann is "marvelously"
provocative but guilty of "arrogant presumption" if he thinks
people can't be Christian unless they embrace every
traditional creed.
 
"I'm a great believer that the spirit of God is very active in
the world today," Dean Joseph Hough said. "What Jesus revealed
was an extraordinary sensitivity to the presence of the
Spirit. His message is that anxiety is misplaced because God
is trying to create loving opportunities for people in the
world."
 
Hough said Luedemann's analysis assumes Christian belief is
static and unchanging, but that only puts limits on how God
reveals himself to people.
 
"People are perceiving God in new ways all the time," Hough
said. "All those things in the ancient creeds - the
Resurrection, the Virgin Birth - are being reaffirmed and
reinterpreted all the time. More than 50% of the people I know
believe most of that, but they reserve the right to interpret
it the way they want to."
 
Luedemann is also a member of the famous, or infamous, Jesus
Seminar, which has declared many of -the New Testament words
of Jesus were probably made up by later writers.
 
Luedemann said the Jesus Seminar vainly tries to "modernize"
Jesus, turning him into a wandering philosopher instead of
respecting him as a first century figure who is now out of
reach.
 
Luedemann said he still views Jesus as a deeply moving figure,
one of the world's great religious teachers. But he argues
Jesus' grieving disciples, and then hundreds of others,
suffered hallucinations after his death and called it the
Resurrection.
 
One local conservative scholar, Michael Moss of Lipscomb
University, applauded Luedemann for saying what conservatives
have long suspected, that liberal theology "cuts the guts out
of the Gospel itself by jettisoning the miracles from the
story."
 
Moss argued against Luedemann's dismissal of the Resurrection.
 
"There were so many witnesses," said Moss, associate dean of'
Lipscomb's College of Bible and Ministry. "What do you do with
those folks? It's wishful thinking to say they all had the
same hallucination. That can't explain why they were willing
to sacrifice their lives later to tell the Gospel."
 
Meanwhile, a legal conflict is brewing in Germany between the
Protestant church conference and the government over
Luedemann's faculty position at Göttingen.
 
The church conference has a say in who gets to teach on the
theology faculty, but Luedemann's tenured salary is paid by
the state. In a statement released last month the church
organization said Luedemann had in effect disqualified himself
from teaching ministers-in-training because of his views
against the faith. The churches want him off the faculty.
Luedemann would remain a university professor there but would
be isolated, without students or classes.
 
Luedemann said he wants to continue on the theology faculty,
teaching the technicalities of ancient languages and Bible
text analysis, and challenging students.
 
"It's a 'scientific' approach to the texts. My beliefs
wouldn't matter," he said.
 
At Vanderbilt, Hough was asked hypothetically if it would be
appropriate for such a nonbelieving scholar to teach at
Vanderbilt or other modern divinity schools.
 
"I wouldn't rule it out in principle because he's a fine New
Testament scholar, despite some naive personal assumptions,"
he said. "But we can't have teachers renouncing Christianity
in the classroom. If he had no sympathy for our mission to
train Christian ministers, he'd have to decide whether he
could teach in such a classroom. "
 
Luedemann said people owe it to their integrity to seek truth
and risk abandoning cherished beliefs.
 
"Why are we educating people?" he asked. "Is it just a hobby?
Are we interested in truth? It's cynical to say that society
can't tell the truth to itself
 
"We live only once. We have to have the courage to seek the
knowledge of who we are."
 
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