The Mythology of Scripture Recognizing Scripture As Religious Myth

The Mythology of Scripture Recognizing Scripture As Religious Myth by Robert D. Onsted, published by Xlibris Corporation LLC in March 2010, spans 358 pages and is presented in English. This book explores the declining membership in churches across developed nations, suggesting that outdated doctrines may no longer resonate with contemporary society. Onsted argues for a re-examination of these beliefs to ensure that religions remain relevant in a rapidly changing world.
Readers will find a critical examination of how ancient beliefs and mythologies have shaped modern religious practices. The author discusses the creation of deities by primitive man, reflecting human traits and societal values, and emphasizes the need for a more personal and meaningful connection to the Divine. By addressing themes of religion, Christian education, and social science, this work aims to provoke thought and encourage a transformation within major religions to prevent them from becoming relics of the past.
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Churches throughout the world’s developed nations are losing members in droves. As a result, parishes are downsizing or consolidating to remain intact– in many cases to just survive. There must be a reason, and this author opines that antiquated Church doctrines are no longer relevant to 21st century minds. If religions are to remain viable entities in our rapidly accelerating world, they must be willing to re-examine their outdated doctrinal systems to better resonate with an educated populace. Primitive man created his gods and goddesses and fi nally “God”– in his own image, believing that these entities manipulated the forces of nature that were beyond his own ability to control. In doing so, he imbued his divine creations with his own best and worst attributes because they were what he witnessed around, and about, himself. His gods, like their mythological counterparts, were often powerful, tyrannical and self-aggrandizing beings, demanding praise, worship and blood sacrifi ce; gods who would wrathfully smite those who would not bow down in worship to them. But that was then, and this is now. Instead of rigid religious rules and antiquated beliefs, our psyches crave an inner directed experience of the Divine from which we can derive a sense of value, purpose and meaning for the lives we live. This book hopes to sound a wake-up call to the world’s major religions before they fi nd themselves placed on dusty library shelves, among other “quaint and curious volumes of forgotten lore.” i Unless this reconstruction can happen, religion, as it has existed for millennia, cannot help but wither and die.
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