The texts set before us all have to do with encountering the primal and basic core of
religious faith. Increasingly, I find a desire to identify what is primal in our lives. When I
went to seminary some thirty years ago there was an inherent suspicion of the primal. The
text was to be demythologized, psychologized, deconstructed, or mined for its moral
maxims, and its capacity to deal with everyday human problems. It is not to say that these
efforts did not bear fruit or bring many to faith. It did leave many of us viewing the