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A COMMON MAN, AN UNCOMMON LIFE. Most memoirs, it seems, are written
by the rich or the famous. The author of Moments can make no claim
to either. He simply sees himself as a common man for whom life has
been an uncommon adventure. He grew up in a working class family
where a high school education had been the highest attainment and
went on to earn two master's degrees. He became a minister when he
was nineteen years old and continued in the ministry for six
decades. Over those years he has given several thousand sermons and
presided at hundreds of weddings, funerals, and memorial services.
Over the course of his ministry, furthermore, he progressed from
Christianity to agnosticism. He also married at nineteen and has
been married to the same woman for sixty years. Together they
raised five children, lived in thirteen different homes, been
residents of seven different states. In addition, the author has
been fortunate in that he has been able to travel to some
interesting and exotic places around the globe. All of this might
suggest that he has some interesting stories, which he refers to as
"moments" to share with the world.
REASON, RELIGION, AND THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY
A major characteristic of much of religion in the modern world is
that it lags behind emerging scientific understanding of the nature
of existence and the nature of the universe. The great world
religions, which have much of value to say to the modern world, are
often locked into cosmologies that seemed true in past centuries,
but seem out of sync with the twenty-first century. The author of
this volume of sermons, who considers himself to be a naturalist, a
rationalist and a humanist, has taken as a mantra for his sermons a
sentence from John Locke: "One unerring mark of the love of truth
is not entertaining any proposition with greater assurance than the
proofs it is built upon will warrant." The eighteen sermons in this
volume cover a wide variety of topics, but each one of them is
presented from the perspective that religious understanding in this
century needs to honestly square with contemporary knowledge about
the nature of the universe
Walt Whitman and His new bible!
"No one will get at my verses," Walt Whitman wrote, "who insists
upon viewing them as a literary performance." He may well be the
premier literary figure in American history, and "Leaves of Grass"
may be the single most important work in American poetry, but
Whitman did not see himself primarily as a literary figure. First
and foremost the poet saw himself as a prophet articulating an
appropriate religion for his time. He was, he said, "inaugurating a
new religion." He was attempting to write a new bible! Whitman had
profound respect for the founders of the great world religions, but
felt they spoke to a world long past and not to the modern world.
There are many books on Walt Whitman as a poet, but "Of Life
Immense" may very well represent the most comprehensive attempt
ever to take Whitman seriously and to describe in outline form the
major themes of his "new bible," to deal systematically with the
major doctrines of his "new religion."
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