Quotes & Sayings


We, and creation itself, actualize the possibilities of the God who sustains the world, towards becoming in the world in a fuller, more deeper way. - R.E. Slater

There is urgency in coming to see the world as a web of interrelated processes of which we are integral parts, so that all of our choices and actions have [consequential effects upon] the world around us. - Process Metaphysician Alfred North Whitehead

Kurt Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem says (i) all closed systems are unprovable within themselves and, that (ii) all open systems are rightly understood as incomplete. - R.E. Slater

The most true thing about you is what God has said to you in Christ, "You are My Beloved." - Tripp Fuller

The God among us is the God who refuses to be God without us, so great is God's Love. - Tripp Fuller

According to some Christian outlooks we were made for another world. Perhaps, rather, we were made for this world to recreate, reclaim, redeem, and renew unto God's future aspiration by the power of His Spirit. - R.E. Slater

Our eschatological ethos is to love. To stand with those who are oppressed. To stand against those who are oppressing. It is that simple. Love is our only calling and Christian Hope. - R.E. Slater

Secularization theory has been massively falsified. We don't live in an age of secularity. We live in an age of explosive, pervasive religiosity... an age of religious pluralism. - Peter L. Berger

Exploring the edge of life and faith in a post-everything world. - Todd Littleton

I don't need another reason to believe, your love is all around for me to see. – Anon

Thou art our need; and in giving us more of thyself thou givest us all. - Khalil Gibran, Prayer XXIII

Be careful what you pretend to be. You become what you pretend to be. - Kurt Vonnegut

Religious beliefs, far from being primary, are often shaped and adjusted by our social goals. - Jim Forest

We become who we are by what we believe and can justify. - R.E. Slater

People, even more than things, need to be restored, renewed, revived, reclaimed, and redeemed; never throw out anyone. – Anon

Certainly, God's love has made fools of us all. - R.E. Slater

An apocalyptic Christian faith doesn't wait for Jesus to come, but for Jesus to become in our midst. - R.E. Slater

Christian belief in God begins with the cross and resurrection of Jesus, not with rational apologetics. - Eberhard Jüngel, Jürgen Moltmann

Our knowledge of God is through the 'I-Thou' encounter, not in finding God at the end of a syllogism or argument. There is a grave danger in any Christian treatment of God as an object. The God of Jesus Christ and Scripture is irreducibly subject and never made as an object, a force, a power, or a principle that can be manipulated. - Emil Brunner

“Ehyeh Asher Ehyeh” means "I will be that who I have yet to become." - God (Ex 3.14) or, conversely, “I AM who I AM Becoming.”

Our job is to love others without stopping to inquire whether or not they are worthy. - Thomas Merton

The church is God's world-changing social experiment of bringing unlikes and differents to the Eucharist/Communion table to share life with one another as a new kind of family. When this happens, we show to the world what love, justice, peace, reconciliation, and life together is designed by God to be. The church is God's show-and-tell for the world to see how God wants us to live as a blended, global, polypluralistic family united with one will, by one Lord, and baptized by one Spirit. – Anon

The cross that is planted at the heart of the history of the world cannot be uprooted. - Jacques Ellul

The Unity in whose loving presence the universe unfolds is inside each person as a call to welcome the stranger, protect animals and the earth, respect the dignity of each person, think new thoughts, and help bring about ecological civilizations. - John Cobb & Farhan A. Shah

If you board the wrong train it is of no use running along the corridors of the train in the other direction. - Dietrich Bonhoeffer

God's justice is restorative rather than punitive; His discipline is merciful rather than punishing; His power is made perfect in weakness; and His grace is sufficient for all. – Anon

Our little [biblical] systems have their day; they have their day and cease to be. They are but broken lights of Thee, and Thou, O God art more than they. - Alfred Lord Tennyson

We can’t control God; God is uncontrollable. God can’t control us; God’s love is uncontrolling! - Thomas Jay Oord

Life in perspective but always in process... as we are relational beings in process to one another, so life events are in process in relation to each event... as God is to Self, is to world, is to us... like Father, like sons and daughters, like events... life in process yet always in perspective. - R.E. Slater

To promote societal transition to sustainable ways of living and a global society founded on a shared ethical framework which includes respect and care for the community of life, ecological integrity, universal human rights, respect for diversity, economic justice, democracy, and a culture of peace. - The Earth Charter Mission Statement

Christian humanism is the belief that human freedom, individual conscience, and unencumbered rational inquiry are compatible with the practice of Christianity or even intrinsic in its doctrine. It represents a philosophical union of Christian faith and classical humanist principles. - Scott Postma

It is never wise to have a self-appointed religious institution determine a nation's moral code. The opportunities for moral compromise and failure are high; the moral codes and creeds assuredly racist, discriminatory, or subjectively and religiously defined; and the pronouncement of inhumanitarian political objectives quite predictable. - R.E. Slater

God's love must both center and define the Christian faith and all religious or human faiths seeking human and ecological balance in worlds of subtraction, harm, tragedy, and evil. - R.E. Slater

In Whitehead’s process ontology, we can think of the experiential ground of reality as an eternal pulse whereby what is objectively public in one moment becomes subjectively prehended in the next, and whereby the subject that emerges from its feelings then perishes into public expression as an object (or “superject”) aiming for novelty. There is a rhythm of Being between object and subject, not an ontological division. This rhythm powers the creative growth of the universe from one occasion of experience to the next. This is the Whiteheadian mantra: “The many become one and are increased by one.” - Matthew Segall

Without Love there is no Truth. And True Truth is always Loving. There is no dichotomy between these terms but only seamless integration. This is the premier centering focus of a Processual Theology of Love. - R.E. Slater

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Note: Generally I do not respond to commentary. I may read the comments but wish to reserve my time to write (or write off the comments I read). Instead, I'd like to see our community help one another and in the helping encourage and exhort each of us towards Christian love in Christ Jesus our Lord and Savior. - re slater

Showing posts with label Christian Heresies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christian Heresies. Show all posts

Thursday, January 16, 2014

The Jewishness of the Messianic Scriptures



Introduction

Long years ago I became inadvertently involved in the (Jewish) Christian-based Torah movement (see a sampling list of Christian sectarian and gnostic movements here). At the discretion of my pastor I put together a Passover Sedar Feast during an Easter celebration to a congregation of second- and third- generation Dutch immigrants steeped in Reformed doctrine. To be sure this would have been a very odd type of Easter observance to these Western European emigres steeped in Dutch Reformed traditions, and yet, when done, became a visibly moving blessing to all.

A year later I found myself and my family at a new church plant that quickly became involved (quite innocently) in a Gentile proselyte movement based upon Torah study and led by a sect of well-meaning Gentile Christians wishing to "touch the hem" of our Rabbi Jesus' garments in form, function, doctrine, and structure. They held to a type of pseudo-Christian teaching that pretended to be informed by a Jewish-mindedness but in actuality were bending the Scriptures to suit their favored outlooks and ideas about Jesus and the church, while willfully revising hoary orthodox doctrines based upon their sectarian outlook. All-well-and-good except for the fact that it smelled sectarian right from the outset.

For several years I personally resisted this group's skewed "Jewish" teachings of the Bible until finally my new church home came around to this same idea after having pursued it hard during this time of spell and entrancement. One of our favorite teachers to the church was a Mr. Robert Vander Laan from Hope College in Holland, Michigan, whose video I present below. He had a hunger for the Jewish God of Scripture, and in all things wished to "fill" the atmospheres of the church's New Testament witness with insightful Hebraic words and phrases, customs and traditions. Especially as they revolved around Jesus and New Testament Christology.

It was commendable but again, the sect of people he attracted were looking to aggressively re-write church doctrine in a decidedly unorthodox way. Eventually this interest within our very young church became a questionable fad and regrettably died away because of the tension it brought when attempting to rewrite Christian doctrines in sectarian fashion however its basis and foundation.

A Christian sect focused on Judaism

What tension? That Jesus was primarily looked upon as God's prophetic Rabbi (priest) rather than as humanity's Rabbinic Saviour. That the (Gentile) church was a dishonourable place of cultic worship and better located in home cell groups on a Saturday evening lighting candles, singing psalms, wearing tassels on one's clothing, and bedecked in yarmulkes (Jewish skullcaps). That the apostle Paul was a Jewish Christian heretic who didn't deserve to be read - only the gospels of Jesus alone - and that all of the NT Scriptures must be held in a forced subservience to the Old Testament teachings of Judaism as this sectarian  movement wished to interpret them. Ecclesiology was re-written. Eschatology was re-written. The Christian Gentile calendar scrutinized, criticized, and disavowed. And generally, there was a forced doctrinal migration back into Old Testament worship (however it was comprehended) which was strongly recommended and acceded to by all active participants in this group.

Here was an instance of trying to capture New Testament teachings through the eyes of Jesus and Paul gone awry. Rather than leading to a deeper grace of understanding with our wanna-be "Jewish" Christian brethren it became a steep divide demanding all Messianic Christians to become Jewish Christians. A divide that was misappropriated and finally fell apart under its own weight of conjectures and hot passions that would worship God in the "right way." The Jewish way. As they understood it.

Hence, as much as I would like to recommend Ray Vander Laan's Bible Lands series... I do so with reservation based upon the hindsight mentioned above. Rather than serving as helpful insight and instruction it became a misdirected passion by a sincere sect of Christians wishing to remake the Christian Church Jewish instead of Messianic. A group that perceived God's fullest blessings only upon those few Christian followers dedicated to a culture of Jewishness, rather than teaching that both Jews and Gentiles alike were equally blessed by the grace of the Saviour regardless of a culture participation or ethnicity. That would divide Scripture to exclude much of the New Testament (such as the apostle Paul's writings), while rewriting standard church eschatologies of Kingdom  theology in a purer, fuller strain of a Jewish Kingdom rather than as a combine traversing all nations, tribes, and people. That is, the gospel of Jesus, in accordance to His Kingdom teaching, is trans-national, trans-cultural, trans-temporal - and not Jewish only-and-ever-and-always. It was a sectarian movement that had grand motives but held very bad, unbiblical theology, as strange as it sounds. It was as much mystical as it was confounding and sadly bound by a hard-headed leadership intolerant of all things of the church that were non-Jewish and Gentile-based (which included most of the Western/European Protestant heritage and Eastern Orthodox traditions).

Hence, as much as RVL's videos are very good, one must remember he is self-trained and hearkens back as one of the progenitors of these well-meaning, but doctrinally misplaced, "Olive-Branched" church sects seeking "purity" of worship through acts of the flesh by donning Jewish dress and adopting a Jewish diet, calendar, attitude, and temper as they interpreted it. Whose height of information always flowed first-and-foremost from today's orthodox Rabbinic Judaism (which is a good place to begin if you are to begin somewhere in order to understand Judaism). But the emphasis was so one-sided in this effort that the old observations by Jesus in the New Testament about the Scribes and Pharisees were beginning to haunt the doctrines of this newer sectarian Jewish-Christian group. They were fast becoming guilty of the very things Jesus had warned the Pharisees and the Scribes about 2000 years earlier.

Since then, I believe RVL has parted ways from these kinds of Christian groups while moving into the larger streams of evangelicalism if I read his website accreditations properly. Now mindfully, this is not meant to be a diatribe against our Jewish/Christian brothers and sisters but against the practice of proselytizing Christians into a Judaistic-form of Christianity knit by an interpretive Jewish form and structure. It is one thing to understand the church's heritage and attempt to capture its meaning but quite another to subtend the church into divisions within the Lord's body. Where one group is more favored of God than another. Where only the "inner" sanctum of "true" believers receive God's fullest blessings.

This kind of attitude is what makes this religious effort more of a sect and not simply another kind of protestant denomination. It has moved away from mainstream Christian orthodoxy. And though I do not wish to muddle things up, we should also further distinguish between Messianic Christian fellowships with deep Jewish roots from non-Jewish Christian sectarian groups... the former being more orthodox than the latter. The one places emphasis on Jesus while the other places emphasis on tradition. The one brings its Jewishness to Scripture as part of its heritage while the other forces it in and all else out. It is a different attitude or spirit of worship from one to the other and stands readily apparent to the questioning eye.

But to those who would add to the Lord's salvation by works of the flesh let us not think that God favors only those Christians who become Jewish in their Christian attitude. Or that God's Kingdom-to-come is going to be strictly Jewish and not multi-ethnic or multi-national. Or that God's greatest favor is reserved to those church fellowships dedicated to a kind of Jewish-mindedness rather than a Messianic-mindedness. The task of the Holy Spirit is not to proselytize Christian Gentiles into becoming Jewish Christians but Messianic Christians who know-and-respect the Jewish background and history of the Scriptures without becoming perversely sectarian in perspective.

Jewish Orthodoxy's Historical Connections

At present, most of contemporary Jewish orthodoxy has been based upon Old Testament manuscripts that can go no further back in textual variant than to that of the 6th century AD. The orthodox church itself also has a similar association with that of its own New Testament Scriptures because of the ravages of time and space to ancient documents and human cultures. And thus, when speaking of Jewish orthodoxy we must realize that its own history was being consolidated around the same time of Christianity. Even though Judaism goes further back in time than Christianity in its present iterations of itself it is about the same age as that of early Christianity. Now this is a stunning statement so we should go on to explain what this means....

In Jesus' day the Judaism we read of in the New Testament was in its earliest forms. We speak of it as an incipient (= early) form of early Rabbinicism (cf, Wikipedia - Origins of Rabbinic Judaism) which means that it was yet in its infancy during Jesus' time and not fully developed until around AD 200. What helped propel its consolidation was the religious rivalry it was experiencing from the early Christian church as Jewish Christians spoke the same Old Testament Scriptures and preached Jesus from its pages as God's revealed Son and Savior. Those Jews not similarly convicted were then motivated to increase their efforts to centralize around prominent aspects of their Jewish faith as distinguished from early Christian interpretations and practices of an unbounded Judaism decoupled from tradition and bounded unto the person and work of Christ Jesus. (I would go further to testify that it was this Yahwistic faith that Ezra and Nehemiah preached that Jesus much later took and re-orientated towards Himself. For followers like John the Baptist's Essene fellowship this was an easy adoption to make. But for other Jews not so much so).

Hence, the consolidated Rabbinic faith of AD 200 is the one that now serves as the basic structure for today's Jewish orthodoxy seeking to re-capture any of its earlier traditions as it may through archaeological research and discovery, legends and traditions, even as Christianity does as well. A rich religious history that attests to the sad legacy of man's evil and hate upon cultures that can no longer remember its own histories having been ripped apart by genocidal rage and death. The Jewish culture has been on of those unfortunate people groups that have suffered for thousands of years from war, deprivation, lost of faith and hope, death, mass exile, and various forms of national resurrection.

Even so, the Judaism we read of in the New Testament Scriptures from Jesus' and Paul's day was one that was birthed during the Inter-testamental period between the Testaments. A period the church considers as the "silent" period between the Old and New Testaments when God did not speak to His people but one that actually was not so historically silent or so lost from God as once was thought. For it was within this time period that God began to resurrect His people and culminate His promises to them through His Son. It would be a period of restoration begun at Nehemiah and Ezra's separate returns from Babylonian exile (450-350 BC) and resulting in a number of Jewish groups of varying belief and religious structure.

That this Intertestamental period must be understood as a time when the ancient Jewish faith purposely gathered together its remaining documents and oral histories with a dedication of mind-and-will that sought to retain its very ancient, very fragmented, very fractured, and mostly lost, Jewish traditions. This we know as the Second Temple period after the Babylonian exile. A period where remaining Jews dedicated themselves to restoring their faith and traditions.

Traditions that would flow forward through a multitude of interpretive sectarian Jewish doctrines during those 350-450 Intertestamental years into the Gospel accounts of Jesus. Accounts that saw Jesus debating with the priests of His day as to their private understandings and interpretations of their ancient Jewish faith. From these debates we gather that the Jewish faith then was as divided as the church is today around its many doctrines of God and Scripture.

That John the Baptist's Essene group was but one of those divided Intertestamental Jewish groups. A group that was popular within some regions of Israel and happened to be the one that Jesus' cousin (John) would become involved with. A group from which even Jesus would teach some of their beliefs to His surrounding countrymen either as a way to start a discussion or to modify a debate (it made for good semantics and great contemporary discussion).

Accordingly, early Judaism (or incipient rabbinicism) was a movement that would continue to solidify after the early church's formation (thus, incipient Christianity between AD 26-36) to eventuate into a body of beliefs some 200 years later even as the early Church Fathers were doing the same for the Christian belief. It is this rabbinicism - or early Jewish faith - that forms so much of today's Jewish orthodoxy. An orthodoxy whose remaining talmuds and tanakh (the tanakh is the Jewish canon of Scripture composed of both the OT + the Jewish Apocrypha) can only extend to around AD 600 in testimony to its hoary Jewish texts and manuscripts blighted by the ravages of time and war, loss and death. (cf. Wikipedia - The Talmud is composed of (1) the Jewish Mishna which is the oral records of the Torah and, (2) the Jewish Gemara, which are the teachings or commentaries derived from the oral Torah).

An orthodox Jewish faith that appreciates Jesus' reform and the Apostle's message, but a faith that does not regard Jesus as their Messiah. Nor the Apostle's New Testament writings as their Scriptures. Which prefers Judaism in its own cultural right as God's saving function of grace while seeing God's redemption as proceeding through the nation Israel itself by its practices and beliefs, and not through the Church that was formed in the New Testament on the day of Pentecost by the Holy Spirit made of both Jew and Gentile.

And while it is true that we observe the same God, venerate the same Jewish traditions, and seek the shalom of God in truth and love with all of humanity, the dividing line - as with all things in life - is Jesus as God's Son and Saviour. Who encompasses in His Person all the Jewish traditions and customs by His Name, Acts, Word, Incarnation, Redemption, and Resurrection.

Who is the Holy Lamb of God become our High Priest, Holy Prophet, and glorious King, by Yahweh's will and Spirit. Who is very God of very God. And very Lord of very Lord. Who is one in essence with the Father, and in Triune fellowship with both Father and Spirit.Who forgives sin because He is the sin bearer, the atoning sacrifice, divine mediator and advocate of all creation. Who is, in Himself, our very Shalom.

Conclusion

Hence, we stand in sympathy with any Christian church or movement wishing to more fully understand the Judaism of the Bible.... Thus the emphasis today on the "New Perspective of Paul" (NPP) popularized by N.T. Wright, James D.G. Dunn, and E.P. Sanders. It is a movement away from our sparse Westernized view and enculturated Gentile traditions of Scripture back to its rightful (Ancient) Near Eastern (ANE) outlook and how that movement might helpfully informed the Protestant, Orthodox, and Catholic traditions in thought, attitude, doctrine and grace. But without the spiritual or Scriptural demand that those past, or present, church traditions must be modified towards any pretended Jewish form-and-function. That all Gentile traditions past, present, and future, may be content in-and-of themselves without any lessening of the divine grace of God through His Son.

That by trying to religiously observe the ancient Jewish culture (as perceived through the eyes of Judaism's contemporary orthodoxy) as a Christian man or woman is no more an act portending God's favor and righteousness than any other human acts wishing to add to Jesus' atoning salvation. A salvation that is at once Spirit-wrought by divine hands and not by human hands alone (or by traditions, teachings, acts of the flesh, lifestyle, attitudes... all is of human pride and self-rigtheousness). Rather, we utilize those traditions, teachings, acts of the flesh, lifestyles, attitudes as a testimony to our humanness and God's great grace in accepting us as we are and how we are. Nothing more and nothing less.

That the Gospel of Jesus does not require Gentiles to become any more Jewish than Jews are required to be any less Jewish. That God's Kingdom is formed of all nations and will not be Jewish alone so as to be more pleasing to Him. That the Gospel is founded on Jesus alone and not on man's traditions, customs, or any one particular culture that is any more sanctified than any other cultural grasp of the Lord Jesus. As such, this is the type of postmodern movement that we can stand behind and rightfully commend to any Christian wishing to follow the God of the Bible in His ways, heart, passion, and graces.

R.E. Slater
January 16, 2014

RVL | ON Green Pastures



Uploaded on Jul 14, 2011

Sheep in desert pastures need a shepherd to lead them. There is sufficient grass, but it is sparse. Sheep left on their own will wander searching for grass and eventually die. Staying close to their shepherd is a matter of life and death.

This clip is an excerpt from Ray Vander Laan's full-length Faith Lessons™ Vol. 12, Walking with God in the Desert.

View more clips and access the full-length Faith Lessons™ video series at: http://rvl-on.com

View complete series here: http://followtherabbi.com/

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To read more about Orthodox Judaism go here:

Jewish Orthodoxy - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_orthodoxy

The Jewish Talmudhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talmud#Manuscripts_and_textual_variants

Origins of Rabbinic Judaismhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origins_of_Rabbinic_Judaism

The Jewish Canon of Scripture, the Tanakhhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tanakh

The Jewish Apocrypha/Pseudipigrapha (as part of the Tanakh)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_apocrypha
 and herehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudepigrapha (as distinguished from the Christian NT texts)



Thursday, October 31, 2013

Trick-or-Treat? What Does It Mean to be Unified in Christ?


 
Frankly, I don't follow Christianity Today (CT) any more. I use to care greatly about what they thought and published but since my "rebirth" from my evangelical stupor over the past dozen years and more I have found CT, its contributors, and its selective readings of today's theological issues, topics, and ideas, naïve at best, and dissembling at worst. 
 
/dɪˈsɛm bəl/  verb, dis·sem·bled, dis·sem·bling.
verb (used with object)
 
1. to give a false or misleading appearance to; conceal the truth or real nature of: to dissemble one's incompetence in business.
2. to put on the appearance of; feign: to dissemble innocence.
3. Obsolete . to let pass unnoticed; ignore.
 
Today's article from October 22nd more than proves my point. Here, Christena Cleveland gives an agreeable argument for the necessity of embracing Christian unity in its diversity of cultural ideas, theology, and adaptation of Christianity, uplifting difference and dissimilarity as admiral marks of any mature organization, religion, or faith. And in reply comes CT's officious proclamation under an amanuensis (sic, a person employed to write what another dictates, or to copy what has been written by another; a secretary.) that these ideas are agreeable to a point before marking off uncrossable sanctioned barriers. Barriers which, if crossed, makes a Christian anathema to their (evangelical) faith, to be described in whispered tones of being (or becoming) a false prophet carrying an unchristian gospel only worthy of biblical rebuke, reproof, condemnation, judgment and wrath. Where such a one is to be abandoned from the hallowed halls of the body of Christ unless an acceptable level of "homogeneity" is restored in balance with the general beliefs and tenets of evangelicalism's main ideas and message.
 
Hence, while Cleveland argues for the idea of unity within an enlarged Christian fellowship beyond the more restrictive definitions of its borders and boundaries, CT's reviewer rejects this auspicious idea by warning that it is a ruse, or a trick, to get Christians to betray their faith:
 
"While I find this "trick" beneficial, it does not fit every scenario. As an evangelical theologian committed to ecumenical unity framed by grace and truth, I wish Cleveland would have helped distinguish more clearly between areas where theological reconciliation is possible and areas where it is not." - CT
 
In effect, to bear the attitude of a general Christian acceptance of a (non-evangelic) brother or sister falls under the Halloween-like guise of conveying a godly "love and unity" which is basically a slick authorial "trick" or rubric that would open up any culpable reader to the dangers of moving away from the bastions of evangelical Christendom. The reviewer goes on to suggest that to take the author's attitudinal perspective would be like departing from the "narrow road" cautiously travelled unto an exiting off-ramp leading to a "larger road" of certain spiritual death, misleading ideas, and a disingenuous Gospel. Though the idea is good, it is not good enough when it leads to unsanctioned biblical ideas and teachings.
 
"Take, for example, 1 John 4:18 ("There is no fear in love. But perfect love drives out fear"), to which Cleveland refers briefly in her treatment of the culture wars. The epistle's emphasis on love in chapter 4 appears only after a renunciation of teachers who deny the Incarnation. While doctrinal differences can be used to humble, strengthen, and enhance our perspectives, they often convey unbridgeable boundaries. "Perfect love" insists on certain rightful boundaries between truth and falsehood. This is not because we "fear" those on the other side, but because out of love we don't want them to be deceived." - CT
 
In sanctimonious unction the reviewer than proclaims the preferred "contextual" reading of 1 John 4 by qualifying Jesus' admonition to love one another with the apostle John's further admonition to hold to Jesus' incarnation (v.15)... or, in modern evangelical parlance, to only love those who are of the same doctrinal "brotherhood." Suggesting that all other Jesus-followers are not of God, but false and untrue. To this arena of demarcation we then get the unstated rubric of the three kinds of biblical "love" in the Bible - eros, phileo, and agape (translated: deeply passionate love; brotherly love within the church's fellowship; and godly love for those outside the church; as it is normally described).
 
The idea being here of carefully qualifying who is "in" or "not in" the true church's fellowship. And in this sense, to beware of deceptive ruses suggesting indiscriminately love in Christ as a binding blinder so that its participants become unaware of the false gospel that it conveys. A gospel bourne of false prophets and teachers. Not that this reviewer suggests that Cleveland is a charlatan, just that her idea contributes to the unqualified idea of an indiscriminate love that can be hazardous to evangelicalism's stricter theological walls of "biblical truth." Choosing always for truth over love, rather than love over truth. For those who wish this latter course, beware the larger consequences of becoming proselytized to a more worldly, less "Christianized" ideas beyond one's current fellowship. It is a message of fear. And unduly so as I will explain.
 
For the "trick" here is actually a "treat" not cooked in a witch's brew of discord and canker, but in the delights of discovering a newer, unbounded land of freedom shed of its religious blinders and deceptions. Which brings me to my reasons for leaving the attitudinal boundaries of my more restrictive evangelicalism, to a broader definition of what my Christian faith should bear. Yes, I believe in an incarnate Christ. It is one of the bedrocks of my faith. But I no longer qualify my faith by an adherence to evangelicalism's ideas of strict inerrancy, spontaneous creation, a dipolar God, a gospel of wrath, judgment, and exclusivity, nor any other dozens of qualifiers.
 
I have decided to "progress" beyond my formerly closed theological boundaries to a more open center-set nexus of a Jesus-centered faith. That is, a faith in which Jesus is first, and not my beliefs about my Christian religion first. To be marked as a Jesus follower rather than a follower of my temple, my church, my dogma, doctrine, or religious tribe. It is less rigid, more reflective, more open and accepting of postmodernism, and of science in general. It grants to biblical studies a historical, narrative theology and multi-vocal biblical hermeneutic, that leads out in unconditional, non-qualifying love that is inclusive and not exclusive. That serves others and not itself. And does not lead out in judgment and condemnation, or by denominational drivers or doctrinal barriers.
 
It is postmodern, emergent, and progressive in traditional Christian orthodoxies by updating one-and-all with today's newer research and biblical discoveries. Importantly, it is willing to critique its former idea of itself by deconstructive and reconstructive philosophical elements. Is unafraid of its doubts about God, His Word, or of the church in general. Does not have the incessant demand of needing answers and solutions to every event or mystery uncovered in the Bible or within our lives (that is, it tries to be non-apologetic realizing that all apologies but support their own narrower epistemologies even as I am doing now in this apology for my faith :/ ). Is critical of itself, its epistemologies, and its pride, and is properly confessional where, and when, this is possible. It is active in Christian love and reclamation of people in humanitarian projects; this Earth in ecological restoration; and in philosophic discussions. At the last, it is an apocalyptic Christian faith that doesn't wait for Jesus to come, but to become in our midst."
 
Though CT's reviewer likes the idea of unity within the Church it must be a unified church around his own ideas of what the Christian faith is - as set out in its dogmas and doctrines. By this admission, unity is a good thing, but it can also be a lamentable thing should it disrupt and destroy the fabric of evangelicalism as it is presently understood by its official organs of media dissemination (churches, schools, seminaries, and so forth).In the process, it refuses genuine discussion and openness to biblical movement and sway, preaching fear instead of hope; blind allegiance to its binding agencies; and exclusion to any unlike itself. It has become its own templed bastion similar to the Pharisaical Jewish laws and teachings in Jesus' day needing its pillars broken, and dividing curtain ripped in twain, that the Word of God's good news can be released to all of mankind, and not to the elected few.
 
So then, what does it mean to be unified in Christ? Is it a trick, or is it a treat? For many Christians they see it as a trick. But for some, they have unexpectedly discovered it to be a great, sumptuous treat that will last far beyond the sugar-rush of evangelical doctrine. It is become a hollowed celebration of freedom and not a Halloween of dungeons and dragons, if I may misuse the adage. To those few adventurers, be worthy of your exploration to God's unknown lands of bounty awaiting you. As Joshua's spies soon discovered, they dwelt in a land of "milk and honey," though they rightfully feared the "giants" of their day. For such explorers our giants have become bound Christian tradition against a rampant atheism set abroad and about. It will take the wisdom of God to search out and reclaim by the power of His Spirit in loving proclaim.
 
R.E. Slater
October 31, 2013
 
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by Paul Louis Metzger
October 22, 2013

Monday, July 15, 2013

Should Christians Resist the Pressure to Interpret the Bible Culturally?

 


Have you ever overheard comments that seem at first erudite - filled with great wisdom, learning and scholarship - but after some time of unconscious, mental gnawing in your heart-and-soul you begin to find such statements gnawing on you in a way that is no longer erudite? In fact, it has by then become one of those linguistic cankers you wished you never had heard, or ever hear again?
 
One such popular, de facto, statement that seems to pop-up all-too-frequently is the one that states confidently, "You know, with today's issues and contemporary news events Christians must resist the pressure to interpret the Bible culturally." A statement which seems harmless at first upon hearing it, until it ruminates in your head all day long, ceasing to go away like a bad song that endlessly loops around-and-around-and-around. Until finally delivered to your soul, added with a little salt-and-pepper and a dash of smug self-assurance, as if there could never be, at any other time or place, disagreement with this homey dialectic.
 
It is at that point that I realized how excluding, how pompous, how short-sighted and delimiting, such a definitive statement like this can be. I was left wondering just what news items we are talking about? What ideas of man that might be challenging the Bible to cause it to bow down to the pressures of the day? Whether there might be a select group of Christians called by God to be His own specially endowed shepherds to guide us lowly masses into the Biblical lands of learned, revealed, truths? A special group of mystics and revelatorys who have liturgically conjured up the proper boundary waters in which to dive-and-play less God becomes angry with mankind's endless questions, searches for truth and justice, and spiritual restlessness?
 
If whether today's Christians must resist living within the hoary bounds of contemporary cultural pressures of interpretation and nuance? To withdraw to a monastery, or missions lands, or even nature's temples itself, if only to define the limitations of God's holy existence within this world. To somehow retrograde all human affairs and mindsets in order to hold on to the conjugations of the church's past generations of sanctified Christian writings? If whether it is fair play, or not, to ask the God of the Bible whether today's concerns might be His concerns at all? Or if whether He only spoke for yesteryear's more literately attuned generations in a specially adapted cultural language that has long since past? If whether my daily concerns, and my generation's excruciating scholarship, have become one of those "lost" Sodomistic societies visited by God's holy angels only to be excluded from the temples of His all-compassionate wisdom.
 
At some point I realized by the tone, tenor, and delivery, of the conscripted statement above, that I was being excluded from that hallowed body of Christians who alone are privileged to act as God's chosen Levitical priesthood maintaining all that is hallowed and godly. That they alone were the selected ones divined by God's call to determine what may be culturally biblical or not. And whether such events are news worthy or should be damned and judged with the soiled masses of mankind.
 
No less was the idea that there existed a preferred interpretation of the Bible. One that was learned in hermeneutically extricating the hallowed script of God's Word so that when all was said-and-done we had arrived in the holy lands of Jerusalem lying between the two realms of light and darkness in a justifiable manner that extracted the ends to justify the means. And without this sanctified method (or literal code) of biblical interpretation we may never be able to enter into the holy lands of God's rest and refuge.
 
And so my heart-and-soul debated daily within itself until at-the-last I arrived exhausted, confused, and not a-little-angered by the culturally-reflective statement designed to be self-sustaining to an exclusionary body of "proper" Christians who-only-themselves, could hold to the "correct(ed)" truths of God's Word. Become its select purveyors of truth and dissemination. They alone had attained to a preferred, self-reinforcing hermeneutic that disallowed anything but their own ideas and beliefs about cruciform ministry, interpretation, and outreach. Their epistemological corrollaries and systematically derived theorems, much like their arguments and beliefs, were self-propagating without remediation or onslaught. Here was were God resided, and to be of God I too must likewise reside within their conscripted congregations lest I be banned as unworthy of templed conversation.
 
Issues of evolution, homosexuality, gender equality, religious pluralism, cultural ethnicity, biblical literacy, literalness and classic statement, had long ago been decided in their minds by past generations of Christians steeped in blood, war, injustice, greed, unworthiness, oppression, and pride. Mere mortals such as myself were not allowed to question the revered likes of Augustine, Aquinas, Luther, Calvin, Moody, or Piper. These are the sacrosanct men of record to whom we must bow allegiance. Not the Jesus of the Scriptures who questioned the learned of His day.
 
All then has become "Amen and Verily" in common cultural assent by dying religious traditions and denominations that even now, in their death throes, look blindly upon the moiling tempest seeds of humanity held not-unlike themselves, in epistemological turmoil, seeking a Redeemer lost from speech within the congregations of God's own churched people. Though holding onto the keys of their own assured redemption, they continue clutching to keys that cannot unlock the hearts-and-minds of those lost beyond their own cathedral walls of golden truths.
 
Unable to speak to the masses the church today speaks a religious language that heaps contempt upon any who may disagree with its "cultural" interpretations of the Bible. Making of the Bible an idol of the very book they would attest (known as bibliotry). And making a religious image of a sacrificed Savior meant to be received by all. This, to me, is the most egregious, contemptible form of Christianity. Making of itself an object and a religion, of the God whom seeks to love us as we would seek to love Him. Become closed to the needs of the world abounding around itself. Unable to speak to its needs because we are too threatened by our own fears of losing the truths we deem important to uphold if we are to be faithful. Speaking of God through a Christianity become closed, exclusive, and self-justifying. Unwilling to challenge itself in its own logics and self-perpetuating closed beliefs. A system where God will not reside so long as He has become quantified by our own religious reasonings and fallacies. This is neither godly nor God-like. It smacks of man, and of man's corruptible, proud, heart.
 
"If we must judge, let us first use the mirror on our own wall for practice."
 - anonymous
 
"Perhaps a greater tragedy than a broken dream is a life forever defined by it."
- Sheridan Voysey
 
R.E. Slater
July 15, 2013
 

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