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“Today’s heresy is tomorrow’s dogma,” Banks frequently states. His mission is to get people to think for themselves, not to swallow everything they are taught. Question, question, question he firmly exhorts. Too frequently people take what is handed them theologically and never question it. Not so in his classes.
His mentor, the late Leslie D. Weatherhead, pastor of City Temple Church, London, England, suggests you put those questions “in a little mental box awaiting further light.” He firmly believes that when you study and search further the light will come to you.
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“The best is yet to be as we struggle in this kindergarten of the soul,” he says. “But the ultimate decision to believe or not is entirely in the reader’s hands.”
His own questions about his faith are what led him to write these books. With a Doctorate in Sacred Theology (S.T.D.) after his Master of Divinity from Boston University School of Theology and one also from San Francisco Theological University, he still could not reconcile the theology of the sheep and the goats. From his beginning search in 1965 to the present, he now accepts universalism, the premise that all people are “saved.”
You can imagine what furor that statement provoked. His weekly column, "Between the Cross and the Crossroads," that appeared on the editorial page of the Anchorage Daily News, was so controversial that pastors of the more conservative churches asked him to stop writing. He was upsetting their parishioners. Not so his own Presbyterian church who relished the title of “satan’s church” not because of that identity but because it was making people think. It let the community know that the church he was serving was open to all beliefs. Though he has been retired for several years, that church is now known as More Light Church, a revealing designation.
Hal N. Banks now lives with his wife Eileen in St. Petersburg, Florida. He continues to do research trying to separate the wheat from the chaff.