Well, I'll give a quick review of the first 50 pages I just skimmed. Granted, I did not read them thoroughly, but I'm a pretty decent "skimmer" due to grad school.
This whole synthesis is interesting, in terms of its ingenuity, but completely resonates as "false" to me. And I'm so liberal most people wouldn't consider me in the religion of Christianity.
In the first fifty pages it basically says that the only way to have spiritual union with God is to have spiritual union in a marriage. So if you're single, tough luck for you. You don't get to become spiritually aware or know God. Hurry up and go sign up for the nearest dating service. Actually, I was kind of surprised it didn't have an add for one, considering the advertisement it was for getting married.
In addition, women have no covenant with God. So, we don't have the responsibility for original sin, but we also are unable to commune with God without a husband. Hmm... I guess all children can't know God until they're married. Ooookayyy...
Now, I am married and have found many spiritual blessings in my marriage. It has deepened my relationship with God. But so have my relationships with lots of people, like the rest of my family. And I knew God long before I knew my husband.
Granted, I haven't read all 370 pages, but I doubt the next 220 are going to redeem this document for me. Jesus said that the Kingdom of Heaven "belonged to little children such as these." How could this be the case if they had to grow up and get married before finding spiritual truth? Jesus was a pretty outspoken guy, and it seems to me that if he wanted everyone to get married and that this was an absolute necessity for spiritual union with God (and, as the authors say, that celibacy is the most horrible thing you can do), that he would have said so a little more plainly than needing 370 pages to put it together. After all, he was pretty clear about being peaceful, loving, humble, etc., right?
Finally, perhaps somewhere in pages 200-300 it starts getting to how everyone being in a spiritually united marriage yields the answers to all our problems in the world today, but it seems unlikely. How does happy marriages result in the end of environmental degradation? People just magically start consuming less and recycling and driving energy-efficient vehicles? How does it end world hunger? I guess I can see how if everybody was super happy in their marriage, it would end war (maybe they'd be too preoccupied
), but we have a lot more problems than just social ones.
Honestly, I don't think this is going to cause the pope to be upset much. The interpretations of scripture are so metaphoric that fundamentalists and conservatives will cringe and call it false doctrine. And the way it excludes women and single people from the covenant of God will eliminate most of the liberals and mystics.