This morning, I've been listening to podcasts--specifically, Ezra Klein's October 15 interview with Eliezer Yudkowsky about how Artificial Intelligence trained on the Internet is very different from anything that has come before. It's interesting to be listening to that interview while writing a sermon for Reformation Sunday and thinking about the even more ancient feast day of Saint James.
I did not realize until this morning just how many James exist in the circle of Jesus. The more famous Saint James is the one we celebrate in July, the one that people celebrate by walking to his shrine in Santiago de Campostela in Spain from a variety of starting points.
James the Brother of Jesus was one of the early leaders of the Church, which may or may not tell us that he's not one of the ones that the Gospel writer of Mark presents as coming to Jesus to try to get him to be quiet. Or maybe he is, and he changed his mind. James the Just is another name given to James the brother of Jesus, which suggests to me that he would be capable of changing his mind.
There are places in Acts and throughout the letters that make up so much of the New Testament that make us think that James is one of the ones in charge of the early Church, along with Peter. He seems to be one of the ones making big decisions for the larger group. He's given credit for helping move the early Church to the inclusion of Gentiles. There are other scholars who see James the Brother of Jesus as more traditional, that it was Paul who reached out to Gentiles and James who argued for staying with Mosaic Law. Circumcision played a big role in these deliberations, according to some scholars.
The more I look for answers, the more I am struck by how much we do not know about the early Church or about Jesus as a historical figure. From there, it's a short realization to how easy it is to make the early Church figures be who we want or need them to be.
Still, I am grateful for their work. On this morning where I've been listening to Ezra Klein's podcast about how Artificial Intelligence through Machine Learning has the capability to destroy the world (more specifically, humans), it's good to remember that the end of the world has been forecast many times, and so far, we persist.
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