Quotes & Sayings


We, and creation itself, actualize the possibilities of the God who sustains the world, towards becoming in the world in a fuller, more deeper way. - R.E. Slater

There is urgency in coming to see the world as a web of interrelated processes of which we are integral parts, so that all of our choices and actions have [consequential effects upon] the world around us. - Process Metaphysician Alfred North Whitehead

Kurt Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem says (i) all closed systems are unprovable within themselves and, that (ii) all open systems are rightly understood as incomplete. - R.E. Slater

The most true thing about you is what God has said to you in Christ, "You are My Beloved." - Tripp Fuller

The God among us is the God who refuses to be God without us, so great is God's Love. - Tripp Fuller

According to some Christian outlooks we were made for another world. Perhaps, rather, we were made for this world to recreate, reclaim, redeem, and renew unto God's future aspiration by the power of His Spirit. - R.E. Slater

Our eschatological ethos is to love. To stand with those who are oppressed. To stand against those who are oppressing. It is that simple. Love is our only calling and Christian Hope. - R.E. Slater

Secularization theory has been massively falsified. We don't live in an age of secularity. We live in an age of explosive, pervasive religiosity... an age of religious pluralism. - Peter L. Berger

Exploring the edge of life and faith in a post-everything world. - Todd Littleton

I don't need another reason to believe, your love is all around for me to see. – Anon

Thou art our need; and in giving us more of thyself thou givest us all. - Khalil Gibran, Prayer XXIII

Be careful what you pretend to be. You become what you pretend to be. - Kurt Vonnegut

Religious beliefs, far from being primary, are often shaped and adjusted by our social goals. - Jim Forest

We become who we are by what we believe and can justify. - R.E. Slater

People, even more than things, need to be restored, renewed, revived, reclaimed, and redeemed; never throw out anyone. – Anon

Certainly, God's love has made fools of us all. - R.E. Slater

An apocalyptic Christian faith doesn't wait for Jesus to come, but for Jesus to become in our midst. - R.E. Slater

Christian belief in God begins with the cross and resurrection of Jesus, not with rational apologetics. - Eberhard Jüngel, Jürgen Moltmann

Our knowledge of God is through the 'I-Thou' encounter, not in finding God at the end of a syllogism or argument. There is a grave danger in any Christian treatment of God as an object. The God of Jesus Christ and Scripture is irreducibly subject and never made as an object, a force, a power, or a principle that can be manipulated. - Emil Brunner

“Ehyeh Asher Ehyeh” means "I will be that who I have yet to become." - God (Ex 3.14) or, conversely, “I AM who I AM Becoming.”

Our job is to love others without stopping to inquire whether or not they are worthy. - Thomas Merton

The church is God's world-changing social experiment of bringing unlikes and differents to the Eucharist/Communion table to share life with one another as a new kind of family. When this happens, we show to the world what love, justice, peace, reconciliation, and life together is designed by God to be. The church is God's show-and-tell for the world to see how God wants us to live as a blended, global, polypluralistic family united with one will, by one Lord, and baptized by one Spirit. – Anon

The cross that is planted at the heart of the history of the world cannot be uprooted. - Jacques Ellul

The Unity in whose loving presence the universe unfolds is inside each person as a call to welcome the stranger, protect animals and the earth, respect the dignity of each person, think new thoughts, and help bring about ecological civilizations. - John Cobb & Farhan A. Shah

If you board the wrong train it is of no use running along the corridors of the train in the other direction. - Dietrich Bonhoeffer

God's justice is restorative rather than punitive; His discipline is merciful rather than punishing; His power is made perfect in weakness; and His grace is sufficient for all. – Anon

Our little [biblical] systems have their day; they have their day and cease to be. They are but broken lights of Thee, and Thou, O God art more than they. - Alfred Lord Tennyson

We can’t control God; God is uncontrollable. God can’t control us; God’s love is uncontrolling! - Thomas Jay Oord

Life in perspective but always in process... as we are relational beings in process to one another, so life events are in process in relation to each event... as God is to Self, is to world, is to us... like Father, like sons and daughters, like events... life in process yet always in perspective. - R.E. Slater

To promote societal transition to sustainable ways of living and a global society founded on a shared ethical framework which includes respect and care for the community of life, ecological integrity, universal human rights, respect for diversity, economic justice, democracy, and a culture of peace. - The Earth Charter Mission Statement

Christian humanism is the belief that human freedom, individual conscience, and unencumbered rational inquiry are compatible with the practice of Christianity or even intrinsic in its doctrine. It represents a philosophical union of Christian faith and classical humanist principles. - Scott Postma

It is never wise to have a self-appointed religious institution determine a nation's moral code. The opportunities for moral compromise and failure are high; the moral codes and creeds assuredly racist, discriminatory, or subjectively and religiously defined; and the pronouncement of inhumanitarian political objectives quite predictable. - R.E. Slater

God's love must both center and define the Christian faith and all religious or human faiths seeking human and ecological balance in worlds of subtraction, harm, tragedy, and evil. - R.E. Slater

In Whitehead’s process ontology, we can think of the experiential ground of reality as an eternal pulse whereby what is objectively public in one moment becomes subjectively prehended in the next, and whereby the subject that emerges from its feelings then perishes into public expression as an object (or “superject”) aiming for novelty. There is a rhythm of Being between object and subject, not an ontological division. This rhythm powers the creative growth of the universe from one occasion of experience to the next. This is the Whiteheadian mantra: “The many become one and are increased by one.” - Matthew Segall

Without Love there is no Truth. And True Truth is always Loving. There is no dichotomy between these terms but only seamless integration. This is the premier centering focus of a Processual Theology of Love. - R.E. Slater

-----

Note: Generally I do not respond to commentary. I may read the comments but wish to reserve my time to write (or write from the comments I read). Instead, I'd like to see our community help one another and in the helping encourage and exhort each of us towards Christian love in Christ Jesus our Lord and Savior. - re slater

Saturday, September 27, 2025

The Deep History of Jericho



The Deep History of Jericho

by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT-5

At the end of this essay are provided a number of maps, images, and videos to
help show the diverse and complex interpretations of the ancient tell, Jericho


1. Middle Paleolithic Jericho (c. 200,000–50,000 BCE)

Essay: Jericho as a Hunter’s Oasis

Long before Jericho became a city, it was a spring in the desert. The spring of ʿAin es-Sultan, gushing from beneath limestone hills, made this corner of the Jordan Valley one of the few reliable water sources in an otherwise harsh and arid land. Middle Paleolithic hunters — Neanderthals and early Homo sapiens — likely returned here season after season, drawn by the abundance of game. Stone tools found in the area, shaped with Mousterian technique, testify to a human presence stretching back hundreds of thousands of years.

This was not yet “Jericho” but a place of convergence: water, animals, plants, and humans meeting in a micro-ecology. To imagine this period is to picture nomadic bands moving across vast steppe-like landscapes, carrying fire and flint, following migrations of gazelle or wild cattle, and pausing where the spring gave life. These temporary encampments, ephemeral as the season, planted the seeds for the continuity that would one day make Jericho the oldest continually occupied site on Earth.

Middle Paleolithic (c. 200,000–50,000 BCE)

  • Who: Early humans (Neanderthals and later Homo sapiens).

  • Evidence: Flint tools and Mousterian-type artifacts found in the Jericho oasis region.

  • Lifestyle: Nomadic hunter-gatherers, temporary camps near the spring of ʿAin es-Sultan.

  • Significance: Establishes Jericho’s oasis as a recurring stop in human migration.


2. Upper Paleolithic Jericho (c. 50,000–20,000 BCE)

Essay: Memory in the Landscape

By the Upper Paleolithic, humans in the Levant had developed greater symbolic capacity. Microliths and fine blades suggest precision in hunting and tool-making, while ornaments and pigments hint at ritual expression. The oasis at Jericho, already familiar to generations, became part of a cultural map — a remembered place where water, animals, and plants converged.

Though still nomadic, these groups may have begun to leave traces of memory in the landscape: hearths where fire burned repeatedly, paths worn by feet returning each year, perhaps even stories tied to the spring itself. In this way, Jericho began to carry continuity across generations. It was not yet a village, but it was already a place of belonging. In the imaginations of its visitors, Jericho was more than geography: it was a remembered refuge in the long Ice Age journey of humanity.

Upper Paleolithic (c. 50,000–20,000 BCE)

  • Who: Homo sapiens with advanced tools and symbolic practices.

  • Evidence: More sophisticated flint blades and microliths.

  • Lifestyle: Seasonal hunting camps; use of wild plants and animals.

  • Significance: Prelude to semi-sedentary living, though still mobile groups.


3. Epipaleolithic / Natufian Jericho (c. 12,500–9,500 BCE)

Essay: The First Huts of Memory

The Natufians mark a turning point in human history. At Jericho, they built small circular huts with stone foundations — the first true architecture of the site. For the first time, people were not merely camping but staying put. They harvested wild cereals from the valley, ground seeds into flour, and stored food in pits. They buried their dead near their dwellings, adorning them with shells and beads, linking the living to the ancestors.

Jericho under the Natufians was a semi-sedentary community, balancing mobility with permanence. Here we glimpse the emotional weight of place: huts as homes, graves as memory anchors, the spring as a lifeline. What had been seasonal became enduring. The Natufians made Jericho into a proto-village, one of humanity’s first experiments in rooted life.

Epipaleolithic / Natufian Culture (c. 12,500–9,500 BCE)

  • Who: Natufians — semi-sedentary hunter-gatherers.

  • Evidence: Stone-founded huts, ground stone tools, ornamental burials.

  • Lifestyle: Beginnings of permanent settlement, harvesting of wild cereals.

  • Significance: The immediate foundation for Jericho as a proto-village.


4. Pre-Pottery Neolithic A Jericho (c. 9,600–8,500 BCE)

Essay: The First City Walls

With the end of the Ice Age, Jericho blossomed. The community expanded into a true proto-city of perhaps 2,000 people. Mud-brick houses rose, circular at first, then increasingly complex. Farming replaced foraging as domesticated barley and wheat grew in nearby fields. Hunting continued, but the community now lived on surplus food — a revolution.

Most astonishing was the construction of Jericho’s stone wall and tower. Rising nearly 30 feet, these were the earliest monumental structures in the world. Did they protect against enemies? Against flooding? Or did they mark sacred space, a statement of human unity? Whatever their purpose, they represented collective labor and communal vision. Humanity at Jericho had crossed a threshold: no longer small, scattered bands, but a society organized to shape its world.

Pre-Pottery Neolithic A (PPNA, c. 9,600–8,500 BCE)

  • Who: Early agriculturalists.

  • Evidence: Round mud-brick houses, storage pits, earliest city wall and stone tower (28 ft tall).

  • Lifestyle: Farming and hunting combined; permanent village of 1,000–2,000 people.

  • Significance: Jericho often called the world’s first “city.”


5. Pre-Pottery Neolithic B Jericho (c. 8,500–7,000 BCE)

Essay: Ancestors in the House

Jericho’s houses became rectangular, signaling a new order: geometry imposed upon domestic life, rooms for storage, work, and family. Agriculture expanded, with goats, sheep, and pigs domesticated. The population grew. Yet the most haunting discovery comes from within these homes: plastered skulls.

Jericho’s people buried bodies, then exhumed skulls, covering them with plaster to recreate faces. These were kept in houses, perhaps as ancestral guardians, perhaps as objects of ritual communion. In these faces we glimpse a society that sought to preserve memory tangibly, refusing to let the dead vanish. The home was both dwelling and shrine, a place where life and death intertwined.

Jericho of the PPNB was not only materially advanced but spiritually complex — a society whose roots in the soil were matched by roots in the ancestral past.

Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (PPNB, c. 8,500–7,000 BCE)

  • Who: Expanded Neolithic community.

  • Evidence: Rectangular houses, plastered skulls (ancestor veneration), domesticated goats and sheep.

  • Lifestyle: Farming, animal husbandry, organized communal religion/ritual.

  • Significance: Cultural and technological flowering of early urban life.


6. Chalcolithic & Bronze Age Jericho (c. 4,000–1,200 BCE)

Essay: From Oasis to City-State

By the Chalcolithic and Bronze Ages, Jericho had become a fortified urban center, with walls, gates, temples, and trade. Its position near the Jordan River made it a hub of exchange. Pottery flourished, metallurgy emerged, and Canaanite religion added a new layer to the city’s identity.

This was the Jericho remembered in the biblical story of Joshua — a walled city of Canaan, strategically vital and symbolically powerful. While archaeology complicates the biblical timeline, the cultural truth remains: Jericho was long remembered as a threshold city, a place whose walls defined both its security and its destiny.

Where once nomads gathered around a spring, now kings ruled and armies fought. Yet the ancient memory of Jericho as an oasis of life endured, shaping its role in myth, scripture, and history.

Chalcolithic & Bronze Age (c. 4,000–1,200 BCE)

  • Who: Urbanized Canaanite city-state.

  • Evidence: Large fortifications, temples, pottery, trade networks.

  • Lifestyle: Complex society with kingship, economy, and religion.

  • Significance: Jericho enters the historical record — later remembered in the biblical story of Joshua.


Closing Reflection

Jericho as a Palimpsest of Human Becoming

Jericho’s history is not a single narrative but a layered testimony to the human journey. Across more than ten millennia, it has been shaped by water, stone, memory, and imagination. Each epoch, from the Paleolithic hunters who camped by its spring to the Bronze Age kings who ruled from its fortified walls, reveals not only a new stage of settlement but a new expression of what it means to be human.

At its deepest levels, Jericho is defined by continuity of place. The oasis of ʿAin es-Sultan drew people again and again, long before there were cities, agriculture, or even permanent dwellings. The spring was an anchor of survival in the desert, a reminder that life could flourish in unexpected places. This continuity transformed Jericho into a memory landscape, where generations built upon the presence of those who came before.

As centuries passed, Jericho became a crucible of change. Here, hunter-gatherers became farmers, nomads became villagers, villagers became builders of towers and walls, and families became ancestors remembered in plastered skulls. Each layer marks a threshold of becoming, a moment when human imagination reached further: to cultivate the earth, to shape architecture, to bind the living and the dead in ritual, to construct boundaries that signaled both fear and belonging.

Jericho is thus a palimpsest — a manuscript overwritten but never erased. Beneath each new city lies the faint trace of older ones, reminding us that civilization itself is an accumulation of memory, labor, and hope. To study Jericho is to glimpse humanity’s restless desire to settle, to secure, to remember, and to transcend.

And yet Jericho also embodies fragility. Its walls fell more than once. Its people abandoned it in times of drought or conquest. What endures is not the permanence of its structures but the resilience of its location — the spring that called humanity back time after time. Jericho teaches us that civilization is never absolute, only provisional, always in process.

To call Jericho the “oldest city in the world” is to miss its deeper truth. Jericho is not just old — it is alive in layers, an unfolding story of human adaptation and imagination. It is the story of our species learning to belong to a place, to transform necessity into community, and to weave survival into meaning. In Jericho we find the origins of city, ritual, and memory — but more than that, we find the enduring process of becoming human.

Summary Visual (Deep → Historic Layers)

  • 🌊 Natural Oasis (200,000+ BCE onward) → human attraction to spring.

  • 🪨 Stone Tool Camps (200,000–20,000 BCE) → Paleolithic presence.

  • 🏚 Natufian Huts (12,500–9,500 BCE) → semi-sedentary life.

  • 🧱 Neolithic Jericho (9,600–7,000 BCE) → walls, tower, farming, ancestor cult.

  • 🏰 Bronze Age Jericho (4,000–1,200 BCE) → fortified city of Canaan.




Area of the Fertile Crescent, c. 7500 BC, with main sites. Jericho was a foremost site of
the 
Pre-Pottery Neolithic period. The area of Mesopotamia proper was not yet settled by humans.

RiddleMaps.com

Jericho is located on the west side of the Jordan Rift Valley, just north of the Dead Sea. It is situated on a fertile plain irrigated by a natural spring, which makes its location highly desirable for settlement in an otherwise arid region that receives less than 10 inches of rain annually. Archaeological excavations of the site have revealed that people settled here as early as 9000 B.C.E. Jericho is mentioned prominently in both the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament. The Jericho of the Hebrew Bible is located on the modern-day mound known as Tell es-Sultan. Most references to Jericho in the New Testament refer to the area southwest of Tell es-Sultan that developed around a huge palace complex first built by the Hasmoneans and later rebuilt and expanded by Herod the Great. - RiddleMaps.com

Jericho is one of the earliest continuous settlements in the world

A 3D reconstruction of Jericho

BAR - Three Discoveries at Jericho

The Spring of Jericho

The Spring of Jericho

The biblical Battle of Jericho


Wikipedia - The Walls of Jericho

The Walls of Jericho

JERICHO - Unveiling the Secrets of the World's Oldest City
Documentary Part1

Tell es-Sultan, Ancient Jericho:
Urban Diversity in Palestine - Lorenzo Nigro

Friday, September 26, 2025

What Is a Processual Reading of the Bible?



What Is a Processual Reading of the Bible?

by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT-5



Introduction

If reality itself is processual, that is, always in motion, relational, and becoming, then the Bible can also be read as a processual text of lively compositions. Instead of viewing biblical narratives as a static deposit of divine facts, we might understand it as a dynamic record of evolving encounters between God, creation, and humanity. Its stories are not frozen mytho-historic relics but living testimonies of growth, struggle, and transformation.

[I use mytho-historic as a cautionary awareness to reading the bible blankly, woodenly, even literally, as it was culled, collected, and composed, to reflect a theo-historic view of God, people, and their socio-religious legacies which must require our contemporary redaction across multiple levels of engagement such as we our doing here in this essay.
This, as opposed to our earlier educations by our denomination or faith group teaching that the bible was a divine deposit consisting of fixed, divine formulae, rather than a growing opus of ancient beliefs and practices evolving over time attempting to explain who God was, is, and is doing presently. - re slater]

This means that the figures of the Bible are not perfect icons but people-in-process, their lives unfolding through doubt, failure, and renewal. The events of the Bible are not single, closed moments but turning points in an ongoing narrative of a people wrestling with their place in the universe. Further, the "becoming God" who is revealed in Scripture is not a distant or unchanging deity in the sense of being unmoved by our circumstances, but is deeply relational-and- responsive to the world as it is affected by human choices. Who is continually engaged in co-creating healing, value, and love, with us across all that we call life.

So then, to read the Bible processually (rather than as closed, unconnected events) is to see it as an unfinished, evolving story. One that continues it's journey through us. That is, God's journey coupled with our journey, in joint collaboration and co-creativity. We are not merely interpreters of Scripture but participants in the same Scriptural process of becoming. What follows is an exploration of how this way of reading the bible - and God's Self in relation to ourselves and the world - might reshape our understanding of past biblical lives, events, and communities which might open fresh pathways for the church's evolution towards a "spiritually enlivening and becoming faith" in today's socio-religious narratives of societal harm, oppression, sin and evil, currently being conducted by the maga-trumpian church upon humanity.



I

1. Creation (Genesis 1-2)

Traditional Reading: God creates a finished, perfect world in six days.

Processual Reading: Creation is not a one-time act but an ongoing process of becoming. The “days” may be symbolized as processual stages of order emerging from a cosmic chaos. This teaches that God is not outside of creation dictating fixed cosmic forms but coaxing novelty and complexity into an ever evolving cosmic existence. The creation story of Genesis then becomes an invitation: that even as creation continues evolving today - currently understood as "climate change" due to a "world-wide ecological collapse" imposed by man's unheeding "anthropocene era" - we are to become ecologically wise co-creators with God in shaping earth's responding future under our applied energies and acts.


2. The Call of Abraham (Genesis 12)

Traditional Reading: Abraham is chosen once-for-all as the father of a nation.

Processual Reading: Abraham’s journey is an illustration of a processual faith in lively stages of becoming. As he doubts, fails, and negotiates with God, Abraham continues to grow in trust and assurance of the God who called him from Ur of the Chaledees into the Land of Canaan. The promise, “I will bless you and make you a blessing”, is an open-ended, unfolding promise not only to himself but to all generations who would trust and follow God's call to love, to forgive, to heal. Abraham models not divine perfection but divine relational growth, showing that God’s call is dynamic and adapts to a myriad of human responses and circumstances.


3. Exodus Liberation (Exodus 1–15)

Traditional Reading: A miraculous liberation of Israel through signs and plagues.

Processual Reading: Exodus reveals a continuous process of event-liberation beginning with Israel’s cries for deliverance,  to an evolving series of confrontation with Pharaoh, culminating in their release and harsh wilderness journey towards personal and spiritual freedom. God cannot grant or provide freedom instantly but must work with a willing respondent, Moses, the people of Israel, and even the stubbornness-and-hard-heartedness of Pharaoh. In retrospective, the Exodus of God's people is never finished, in every new, processual struggle for justice will echoe the creational cry for deliverance and liberation.


4. The Exile (2 Kings 24–25; Jeremiah; Isaiah 40–55)

Traditional Reading: A punishment for Israel’s sins.

Processual Reading: Israel's exile is a dynamic story of processual loss and reorientation. In repetitive stories of exile (first Northern Israel, then Southern Israel), the once tribal federation, and later  Jewish monarchy, must rethink it's wayward practices and harming acts before God’s healing and restorative presence: once a people tied to land and temple, now a people lost upon foreign lands needing hope and adaptation to their current circumstances. The prophets reinterpreted Israel's suffering as a path toward spiritual renewal, showing how personal and societal catastrophe may become a process of corporate transformation. Exile is not the end of the story but the seedbed of new redemptive visions of covenant and restoration in whatever fashion it may become correspondent to the conditions of the time. As example, today's Palestinian people living in Gaza have experience great injustice and hardship, death and destruction, at the hands of "God's people"... standing in their societal narrative, how might they - and we - respond, repent, and restore the futures of one another toward greater loving harmony and value?


5. The Life of Jesus (Gospels)

Traditional Reading: Jesus’ mission was predetermined: to die for sins.

Processual Reading: Jesus’ life was an evolving process of becoming fully the Christ - growing in wisdom, compassion, and courage as he embodies God’s love. Even his ministry evolves as he listens, responds, heals, teaches, and adapts to people’s needs. In penultimate movement, his life and death upon a Roman cross of humiliation and suffering is not a fixed, one-time, atoning transaction but a timeless, relational series of transactions where divine love suffers with humanity and transforms creational despair into new possibilities of healing and love.


6. Pentecostal Empowerment (Acts 2)

Traditional Reading: The Holy Spirit descends once, marking the birth of the church.

Processual Reading: Pentecost is ever a process of divine empowerment that begins in Jerusalem but spreads and evolves across era-specific cultures, languages, and centuries. The Spirit of God is never static but a life-force continually breathing new life into communities, continually adapting the gospel of Christ into new, living contexts. Pentecost is then, an ongoing process between God and humanity where every renewal of the church is part of the Spirit-filled journey of becoming.


7. Revelation Renewal (Book of Revelation)

Traditional Reading: A literal roadmap to the end of the world.

Processual Reading: Revelation is a process-vision born from a Spirit-community under oppression. It transforms despair into symbolic hope, affirming that God’s love will guide history towards healing. The imagery (doors, thrones, new creation) points not to fixed predictions but to open possibilities: that in every eschatological age, God invites us into new thresholds of justice, beauty, and renewal.


In Summary

A processual reading of biblical narratives does not dismiss the Bible’s life stories or events but  refreshes and reframes them as dynamic encounters between the Divine-Human Cooperative in a dynamically evolving and living story. Each moment of Creation, Call, Liberation, Exile, Incarnation, Empowerment, or Resurrection Renewal is significant life-stage of a larger process where God and humanity continually shape one another towards generative becoming.



II

1. The Bible as Process Text

The Bible is not a frozen archive of divine dictation but a living record of evolving encounters with God. Its stories, laws, poems, and visions reflect the process of communities struggling to name, understand, and live in relation to the divine.

  • Early traditions portray God as tribal warrior, while later prophets proclaim a universal and merciful God.

  • Laws are reinterpreted (Exodus, Deuteronomy, Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount), showing adaptation to new contexts.

  • Narratives are rewritten (Kings vs. Chronicles; Isaiah in multiple stages), revealing that Scripture itself is a process of reinterpretation.

This means we honor the Bible not for static finality but for its dynamic witness to ongoing becoming.


2. Biblical Lives as Living Processes

Instead of treating biblical figures as unchanging heroes or villains, a processual reading sees them as imperfect yet dynamic participants in God's unfolding purposes:

  • Abraham is not simply “the father of faith” but a man who struggled, doubted, and grew into faithfulness across failures and doubts

  • David is not simply “a man after God’s own heart,” but a king whose moral failures and spiritual songs shaped his processual becoming towards a capable leader for Israel.. We see David's struggle and successes in his psalms reflecting his spiritual process.

  • Peter is not “the Rock” from the start, but a fisherman continually transformed through denial, forgiveness, and yet also, his restoration by God towards his calling to lead the church of Christ.

This approach honors their journeys rather than freezing them in final judgments.


3. Biblical Events as Processual Turning Points

Biblical events are not isolated miracles or timeless decrees but process-events that shape and reshape communities. Across the bible we read of the divine-human relationship as continuous, nested processes rather than as one-time, closed acts:

  • Creation: Was not a fixed act of God transacted once, but is an ongoing emergence of creational novelty.

  • The Exodus is a process of liberation still echoing in every human struggle for justice, not simply a single moment locked in the experiences of a past ancient generation.

  • The Exile is not an act of divine punishment but a reorientation of catastrophe birthing prophetic visions of repentance and renewal proving identity, community, and assurance of God's abiding presence.

  • Jesus' Life, Death, and Resurrection is not only a transactional moment in history but an unfolding series of ongoing possibilities towards redemptive transformation in the world beginning first with the repenting church.

Each event is part of a larger unfolding of events all moving across open futures that are not sealed or preformed. Today, God's people are those who align with justice, mercy, and love as earthly invitations to continue the divine story of reclamation and renewal.


4. Scripture as Process Testimony

The Bible itself can be read as the record of evolving human encounters with God. Texts do not reveal one fixed picture but show development, conflict, reinterpretation, and creativity:

  • Laws shift across eras as communities adapt (compare Exodus, Deuteronomy, and Jesus’ teaching).

  • Images of God grow from warrior to shepherd, from lawgiver to suffering servant, from distant king to indwelling Spirit.

  • Theology matures as people wrestle with disaster (Lamentations), exile (Isaiah), injustice (Amos), or persecution (Revelation).

This reflects a processual truth: humanity is growing in its vision of God.


5. God in Processual Relationship

Perhaps most importantly, processual reading reframes God not as distant and immutable figure, but as a dynamically relational and responsive deity empowering all of creation in evolving networks of transactional redemption:
  • God “repents” or “changes” his heart and mind (as in Genesis 6 or Exodus 32) because divine love is ever and always dynamically engaged with an evolving creation via its suffering and triumphs.
  • God’s covenant promises adapt across timeful contexts, whether with Noah, Abraham, Moses, David, or Christ, each life event and life force widening the scope of divine fidelity committed to widening responsive creational freedom "to become" in generative value one to the other.
  • Jesus' Incarnation embodies the fullest processual revelation of a God-with-us who becomes with humanity and creation in a shared, co-evolving journey of human struggle, opening new paths toward wholeness and healing, rather than succumbing to non-authenticating patterns of stagnancy, regression, or resistance to God's ever-moving Spirit.

6. The Early Church in Communal Processual Becoming

Between Pentecost and Revelation lies the story of the early church - itself a witness to process.
  • Pentecost initiates, but the Spirit’s works unfold in adaptation: Jewish to Gentile mission, house churches to networks, diverse gifts to shared mission.
  • The church wrestles with conflict and discernment (Acts 15, Paul’s letters), showing that unity emerges through process, not uniformity.
  • Communities embody unfinished processes of faith living testing practices of love, justice, inclusion, and resilience under persecution.
  • The early church becomes a model for every age: faith as communal becoming, shaped by Spirit, history, and struggle.

7. Revelation: Vision of Open Future

Revelation is not a fixed roadmap but a visionary process-text born of crisis. It transforms despair into symbolic hope:
  • Doors, thrones, and new creation signal thresholds for renewed becoming, not closed predictions.
  • It proclaims that divine love persists amid empire and suffering.
  • Its end is not final destruction but renewed creation: thus teaching open horizons of continuing transformation.
  • Revelation’s power is not in foretelling an apocalyptic end but in inviting continual hope and faithful endurance.

8. Implications for Faith Today

A processual reading reshapes how we engage Scripture now:
  • Scripture as dialogue: not rulebook but conversation partner in discernment.
  • Ethics as adaptive: love must be embodied differently in each context, as Jesus modeled within his own cultural context.
  • Hope as unfolding: setbacks and crises can birth new futures, as exile birthed restoration, as crucifixion birthed resurrection.
  • Mission as contextual: like the early church, we must reimagine the gospel for our pluralistic world.



Living Process for Today

Aspect     Traditional Reading     Processual Reading Implication Today
Scripture     Rulebook     Dialogue     Discernment
Ethics     Timeless rules     Adaptive love     Contextual justice
Hope     Fixed destiny     Ongoing renewal     Resilience
Mission     Static formula     Contextual gospel     Pluralistic engagement


Conclusion

To read the Bible processually is to see it as a living witness to divine–human becoming. The lives of its figures, the events of its narrative, and the unfolding of its communities all testify to a God who is not fixed and distant but relational, responsive, and co-creative. This way of reading resists finality and opens us to the truth that the story is not yet finished. We, too, are participants in the same process, called to co-create with God in love, justice, and hope.

Thursday, September 25, 2025

What Is Process Christianity?


What Is Process Christianity?

by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT-5



1. Introduction

Christianity is the world’s largest religion, with deep historical roots, global diversity, and profound cultural influence. It is centered on the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ, understood as God’s unique revelation of divine love. Over two millennia, the Christian tradition has grown into a vast family: Catholic, Orthodox, Protestant, Evangelical, and many others.

Yet, as the world changes, Christianity must continually re-examine itself. New scientific discoveries, ecological crises, philosophical shifts, and interfaith encounters all raise pressing questions. What does it mean to follow Christ in the twenty-first century? How should Christians understand God, the world, and salvation in light of modern knowledge and experience?

Process Christianity is one such contemporary re-examination. Rooted in process philosophy (especially in the process philosophical work of Alfred North Whitehead), it interprets Christianity not through the (Platonic et al) metaphysics of timeless substances but through the categories of becoming, relationality, and novelty/creativity. It is both deeply faithful to Christianity’s essence and radically open to reinterpretation.


2. Christianity: The Traditions and Evangelicalism

Traditional Christianity (Catholic, Orthodox, Protestant)

Christianity’s “Great Tradition” is expressed through three major branches:

  • Catholicism: Centered on the Pope in Rome, Catholicism emphasizes the sacraments, apostolic succession, and the unity of the universal church. Its theology draws heavily on Augustine, Aquinas, and the scholastic synthesis of Greek philosophy with Christian faith.

  • Orthodoxy: Eastern Orthodoxy treasures continuity with the early church, the mystical experience of God’s energies, and the beauty of liturgy. The Orthodox vision of salvation (theosis) emphasizes participation in God’s life.

  • Protestantism: Emerging from the Reformation, Protestantism stresses scripture as the ultimate authority, justification by grace through faith, and the priesthood of all believers. It is an eclectic collection of past philosophical approaches and has produced a wide family of faith traditions - Lutheran, Reformed, Anglican, Methodist, Baptist, Pentecostal, and beyond.

Together, these streams shaped the cultural, theological, and institutional life of global Christianity. They carried immense depth but also inherited limitations - especially a God seen through classical metaphysics as unchanging, impassible, and omnipotent in coercive control.

Evangelical Christianity

Evangelicalism is a subset of Protestant Christianity that emerged with great vitality in the 18th and 19th centuries. It spread through revival movements, missionary work, and later the global growth of Pentecostalism. Hallmarks of Evangelicalism include:

  • Biblicism: Strong emphasis on the authority (and often inerrancy) of the Bible.

  • Conversionism: The necessity of a personal conversion or “born again” experience.

  • Crucicentrism: The cross of Christ as the center of salvation, often in substitutionary or penal terms.

  • Activism: Evangelism, missions, and social reform as essential expressions of faith.

Evangelical Christianity has been a source of spiritual passion, missionary zeal, and social engagement. Yet it has also tended toward narrow literalism, exclusivism, and alignment with political-cultural agendas.


3. Why Process Christianity?

Process Christianity emerges as a response to the limitations of both the Great Christian Tradition of Catholicism, Orthodoxy, and Protestant and the relative new lense of 18th-20th century Evangelicalism.

  • The Great Tradition, influenced by Hellenistic metaphysics, often pictured God as unmoved, unchanging, and beyond relationship as a transcendent cosmic monarch. This made it difficult to reconcile God with suffering, change, and human freedom.

  • Evangelicalism, while vibrant, often reduced Christianity to personal salvation, biblical literalism, and juridical atonement (see the 3-part series on Atoning Sacrifice), sidelining ecological care, interfaith dialogue, and systemic justice.

Process Christianity asks: What if God is not the unmoved monarch of classical theology, nor the severe managerial overseer of evangelical culture, but the inspirational and relational companion of creation? What if salvation is not escape from the world but the healing of the world itself?

By anchoring itself in process philosophy, Process Christianity reimagines the Christian story in categories of relational love, persuasive power, and co-creative partnership.


4. What Is Process Christianity?

Process Christianity is Christianity reframed through process thought:

  • God: Not a remote ruler but the Most Moved Mover - present in every moment, feeling the world’s joys and sorrows, guiding with persuasive love.

  • Jesus Christ: The fullest embodiment of God’s relational presence. His life, death, and resurrection reveal not simply a legal transaction but the depth of divine solidarity with creation.

  • Holy Spirit: The ongoing energy of God in the world - animating creativity, inspiring justice, and sustaining communities of compassion.

  • Bible: A dynamic, evolving testimony of humanity’s encounter with God - a library of voices rather than a static code.

  • Salvation: The flourishing of creation, the reconciliation of relationships, and the fulfillment of God’s loving purposes - not escape from history but creational transformation within it.

  • Church: A community of co-creators with God, partnering in ecological care, justice, and spiritual renewal.


5. Differences in Theological Orientation

AspectTraditional ChristianityEvangelical ChristianityProcess Christianity
View of GodImmutable, impassible, omnipotentSovereign authority, intervening rulerRelational, dipolar, persuasive love
View of JesusSavior through incarnation & sacramentsSavior through atoning death (often penal substitution)Embodiment of divine love, model of relational solidarity
BibleAuthoritative, interpreted with traditionInerrant, literalDynamic witness, evolving testimony
SalvationSacramental participation, grace, faithPersonal conversion, assurance of heavenHealing of creation, co-creative partnership with God
PowerGod as ruler over all historyGod as interventionistGod as persuasive, non-coercive
ChurchInstitutional, sacramentalGathered believers, evangelisticRelational community, co-creative with God
MissionExtend the faith, preserve traditionConvert the lost, defend truthCollaborate with God toward justice, peace, and ecological wholeness

6. Applications of Process Christianity

Faith & Worship

Worship becomes not obligation to a monarch but communion with a companion God. Prayer is dialogue with a relational presence who truly responds and suffers-with creation.

Ecology

If every creature is a “drop of experience” within God’s body (Whitehead), then ecological care becomes central to discipleship. Creation-Care is not backdrop but participant in God’s life.

Justice

God’s love empowers social transformation through persuasion and solidarity, not coercion. Process Christianity aligns faith with movements for equity, peace, and liberation.

Interfaith Dialogue

Process categories - relationality, creativity, becoming - provide common ground for respectful dialogue with Buddhism, Islam, Hinduism, Indigenous spiritualities, and secular humanism. More so when processual elements between each faith are identified and enlarged between differences.


7. Conclusion

Christianity, in its traditional and evangelical forms, has offered the world profound gifts - deep worship, vibrant mission, spiritual renewal. Yet both have also inherited limitations from metaphysics and culture.

Process Christianity does not discard the Christian story; it deepens and expands it. It honors the central narrative - God’s love revealed in Jesus Christ - while reframing it in categories that resonate with science, ecology, justice, and interfaith community.

At its core, Process Christianity proclaims:

  • God is not aloof but relational.

  • God is not coercive but persuasive.

  • God is not static but the living companion of creation.

This vision calls believers not to withdrawal but to co-creation - partnering with God in the ongoing adventure of the universe.