Marcus J. Borg

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Marcus J. Borg


Born
January 01, 1942

Website


Borg was born into a Lutheran family of Swedish and Norwegian descent, the youngest of four children. He grew up in the 1940s in North Dakota and attended Concordia College, Moorhead, a small liberal arts school in Moorhead, Minnesota. While at Moorhead he was a columnist for the school paper and held forth as a conservative. After a close reading of the Book of Amos and its overt message of social equality he immediately began writing with an increasingly liberal stance and was eventually invited to discontinue writing his articles due to his new-found liberalism. He did graduate work at Union Theological Seminary and obtained masters and DPhil degrees at Oxford under G. B. Caird. Anglican bishop N.T. Wright had studied under the same prof ...more

Marcus J. Borg isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.

Part Two of John D. Caputo’s “What to Believe? Twelve Brief Lessons in Radical Theology”

At our February 14 Second Saturday Conversation I attempted to reflect on “week two” the second half of Jack Caputo’s book What to Believe?  Twelve Brief Lessons in Radical Theology. I did not provide a concise summary. Nor was able to crystallize salient points to help us on our journey to radical theology. This is not a shortcoming of Jack’s book or work. Rather a shortcoming of my effort. That

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Published on February 14, 2026 11:20
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Quotes by Marcus J. Borg  (?)
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“The point is not that Jesus was a good guy who accepted everybody, and thus we should do the same (though that would be good). Rather, his teachings and behavior reflect an alternative social vision. Jesus was not talking about how to be good and how to behave within the framework of a domination system. He was a critic of the domination system itself.”
Marcus J. Borg, The God We Never Knew: Beyond Dogmatic Religion to a More Authentic Contemporary Faith

“The Christian life is not about pleasing God the finger-shaker and judge. It is not about believing now or being good now for the sake of heaven later. It is about entering a relationship in the present that begins to change everything now. Spirituality is about this process: the opening of the heart to the God who is already here.”
Marcus J. Borg, The God We Never Knew: Beyond Dogmatic Religion to a More Authentic Contemporary Faith

“the Bible is a human product: it tells us how our religious ancestors saw things, not how God sees things.”
Marcus J. Borg, Convictions: How I Learned What Matters Most

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