Word: pikes
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...order to have a union of Christians as Pike and Blake would advocate, we would need vast machinery and "spiritual or religious bureaucrats" to make it run. Competition in any field is better than uniformity without it. Jesus was extremely interested in the individual and in his spiritual integrity. People need to cooperate in doing the works of Christ, but they need to do it in their own ways, with their own government of the church, with each one having a vital part in it. We have had enough of "ecclesiastical bureaucrats" and of the hierarchy...
...Gospel, said Bishop Pike, is largely communicated by means of myth-not in the sense of an untrue fable ("A good myth is true"), but in the sense of a form used to express complicated and difficult truth, such as the Garden of Eden. Writes Pike: "I do not know a single member of the Anglican Communion-Bishop, presbyter, deacon or layman-who believes this story literally...
Another myth, set forth in the creed, is the idea that Christ "ascended into Heaven." Pike asks "Where? We no longer believe in a three-level universe: a flat earth, Hell below and Heaven above . . . And as for 'sitteth on the right hand of the Father,' I simply remind you that in certain Oriental areas of the Church the phrase is 'on the left hand of the Father,' since in their cultures the latter is the place of honor...
Package v. Product. The virgin birth is a myth, Pike feels, designed to communicate the simultaneous humanity and divinity of Christ; so is the thorny theological concept of the Trinity. "The packaging is not to be confused with the product . . . For example, 4th century church leaders, imbued with a dated Greek philosophy, tried to organize God's revelation of himself into categories which thoughtful people of that time could grasp. They did a good job. They gathered up God's true revelation of Himself as Creator (we might say 'Evolver'), Redeemer (we might say 'Healer...
This is not to say that a story cannot be literally as well as mythically true. "I will quarrel with no one," said Bishop Pike, "even the clergy of South Georgia, about literal belief in any Biblical narrative. We are open as to all that. But as to the meaning which these various narratives are meant to communicate, all the rest of us value-we do not reject-the myth...