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

-----

Note: Generally I do not respond to commentary. I may read the comments but wish to reserve my time to write (or write from 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

Saturday, January 12, 2013

A Response to Dr. Geisler's Interpretive Reaction to Emergent Postmodernism

 
I recently stumbled upon Dr. Norman Geisler's rant against postmodernism and the emergent church and came away with very strong feelings regarding Evangelical Christianity's persistently stubborn nature to update its orthodoxies, dogmas, and philosophical beliefs. As a popular spokesperson for Evangelicalism, Dr. Geisler's running commentary (found further below) would be a very accepted understanding of all things "not-itself," or "unlike itself," by which I mean that "If it isn't Evangelical, than it isn't from God (and most likely from the devil!)."
 
Consequently, I can only feel great sadness for a group of God's children who wish to isolate themselves from the postmodern world not realizing that this very same world they would separate themselves from is very much within their midst, and everywhere around. To think that one may so simply declare postmodernism to be an "unreality" which must be checked is to show the greatest of delusions in pretending that one's present beliefs in an age of modernism held all of God's truth and beauty.
 
No, the fault is not in postmodernism, but in modernism's secularity that led to all of Dr. Geisler's misguided beliefs. For how could a war be fought over slavery and commit so many of the American population to death and destruction? Or, how could millions of Jews and ethnic non-Germans be murdered in the most abhorrent forms of wickedness? Or, how could Asian communism be fought in such heinousness in the belief of Christian might and superiority while it destroyed its own institutions at home? Or, how can Western civilization continue its consumerist dominations of Second and Third World countries to the harm of their resident populations struggling within tyranny and greed? For all these things evils have been committed in the name of Modernism. The very same name that the Evangelical Church finds itself defending in the name of God.

No, the fault is not in postmodernism, but in modernism's unbiblical, and ungodly, mechanistic system that presents itself to civilization to accept and not question. And it is no wonder that so many other forms of philosophy have been spawned in the wake of modernism's unchecked secularity. Thus, to be a postmodernist is to reject all things modern, that are supposedly regarded as "foundational, knowable, rational, and reasonable." In fact, a further distinction to postmodernism is that it is postsecular in its authenticated forms... meaning that it is attempting to resolve what it means to live beyond modernism's secularity. To live with an open hand that gives to the poor; a spirit that speaks up for the injustices done to the unempowered; a mind that readily accepts the mandate to find a better way than the Enlightenment's stepchild of modernistic hedonism, isolation, materialism, selfishness, greed and closed boundary sets of belief and knowing.

I also noticed the subtly deceptive argument by Dr. Geisler of substituting one teeny, tiny word, "anti-" for another very good word, "post-" so that he could expand his description of postmodernism to include all things not evangelical. To me, the word "post-" is a very good word filled with promise, potential and a positive hope for godly, biblical change. Whereas the word "anti-" all too readily tells us of evangelicalism's spirit of negativity, exclusivity, and condemnation upon all who would oppose its mindset and revelatory, God-minded, knowledge of the Emergent Church.

For in response to modernism's secularity has arisen not only postmodernism's era built upon searching hearts hungry for the knowledge of God, but of all things hopeful, beautiful, and meaningful. To which the Emerging Church has responded to the same in obedience to, and study of, the holy Scriptures of God's Word. That very Word to which Dr. Geisler claims by his special powers of holy insight in especially knowing that God's Emergent Church isn't aggressively studying, researching, discussing, practicing, and integrating all the many academic fields and disciplines of man's sciences and humanities during these brighter days of postmodernistic discovery and joy.... At least to the "biblical" conclusions which he wishes to see come forth.

And yet, amazingly, the Emergent Church spans all Christian faiths, denominations, associations and fellowships. Perhaps not in name but in the spirit of Christ seeking to share God's hope and love through Jesus their Lord by not only the written and spoken word, but by ready hands and feet, human desire, strength, compassion, mercy and forgiveness. Moreover, the Emergent Church is a global effort blown upon by the Spirit of God to all men everywhere, seeking a pluralistic, multi-ethnic message telling of God's Kingdom come in the person of Jesus and held resident through the church's very acts and deeds until Jesus comes again as Lord and King. Its message is one of Grace. Hope. Healing. Love. Mercy. Forgiveness. Resurrection. Reformation. Transformation. Reclamation. Rebirth. And Regeneration.
 
This is not the same church and body of believer's that Dr. Geisler definitively claims that it is. And I would submit, when reading through Dr. Geisler's Evangelic accusations that we postmodern, emergent followers of Christ, show a depth of wisdom and mindfulness of spirit to resist similar closed debates and perjurous arguments. For the Emergent Church's ministry is not to the Scribes and Pharisees of the Christian faith, but to the woman at the well, the leper at the pool, the broken body of a little girl lowered through a thatched roof, the despised, the hated, the downtrodden, the neglected, the overlooked, and undervalued. These are the Emergent Church's congregants. Not the well to-do in their mega-churches and shiny cars and deep pockets supporting Christian radio, Christian presses, bookclubs, magazines, journals and high-minded, self-serving academic societies. To all of these the word of the day is "deconstruction." Learn to look first to the log in your own eye before casting aspersions upon the body of Christ. Then may come the reconstruction of Christ found in the Emergent Church of Postmodernism that you deny as misguided, fallen, and unblessed by God its Father.
 
Yes, I would agree that it is laudable to stand up for one's religion, its traditions, and traditional folklores. And yes, many good ministries and missionary efforts have been expended in the name of Christ since the 18th century. Too many to count, in fact. And to this Emergent Christianity is beholden to, and thankful for the many godly souls and Christian witnesses that have given body and soul to Jesus. These of God's faithful are our sources of inspiration for greater missions still to come in the name of our Lord and by the power of His Spirit. But in this day-and-age of dispatching grace, God is saying even to such as these to question yourself, your assurances, your closed-mindedness, your beliefs, and belief structures, and to learn to be part of a greater community of fellowship than first imagined. Not all people are against you. Nor are they against your way-of-life and freedom to practice a preferred style of received faith as first learned from dear parents, preachers, and Sunday School teachers. But nor are Emergents content to follow unquestioning Evangelic belief structures dipped in the assuring wells of modernity any further - Francis Schaeffer not withstanding. For there are just as many forthright and valiant hearts outside of the evangelical midst who are likewise seeking after the face of God in all diligence and graceful mindfulness.

No, you are not alone. And in fact, you will find many sympathetic Emergents regarding your existential dilemma. A dilemma that doesn't know how to lower the barriers it has set so high for itself. Of boundary sets, rules, and internal decorum that needs visitation and self-awakening. And when done, a body of emerging believers who can likewise sympathize with you knowing the malevolent whirlwinds that will rush in to confuse, trouble, and bother you when beholding a more wide-open world of sunshine and light flowing into the darkness that once blinded the religious eyes and soul. And yes, Mark Driscoll, your first instincts were right, but you were caught up in a new movement learning to speak its first beliefs as a child... than retracted its former speeches and tried to say it again, and again,  and again, even until now. With books which are imperfect. Inside movements requiring maturity. And weekend dialogues seeking help and assistance from fields afar. Such is the chaotic state of Emergent Christianity (and for that matter, Emergent Theology) each of which are still growing and discovering, reaching and reacting, integrating and ingesting, to the needs and demands of the 21st century's postmodernism seeking expression, authentication, compliance, and participation. Of which Relevancy22 is one such small attempt as it stumbles along trying to envision all things God with its newly opened Emergent eyes to the mandates of Jesus, our Savior and Lord.

Which is one of the reasons why I have taken as much time as I have to present to those wishing to leave their religious "territorial familiarities" with a patient blogging style about faith and unbelief, doubt and exploration, rejection and harm, and the love and healing to be found in Jesus when all is said and done. To show how to be content without answers. To seek to ask better questions that are more open-ended and less filled with the internal need to control discussion, or the religious rancour of unquestioning self-knowing. To re-learn how to explore and ask biblically-oriented questions that are not evangelically couched with religious fervor and disquieted zeal. To find Jesus amid one's self-doubts, personal events of unfaith, and theological tension. And especially the mystery of God's patient goodness amid personal storms of upheaval. Sharing stories of other Emergents, laity, missionaries, pastors, and theologians, who are likewise making this same arduous journey of unknowing and personal dissettlement. Who, as shrouded applicants to the grace of God, are just beginning faith's journey of personal deconstruction (and the reconstruction to come) as Emergent newborn babes. Who share in the tragic stories of other seekers come up on the other side of unbelief to rediscover a newer purpose and meaning to directionless lives once filled with the meager scraps of secular modernism's blinded creeds and ascents.

No, the world is not at an end. Just our little systems and epistemological boxes which we have used to fence God in-and-around. Surrounding God's glorious Word and divine acts of Spirit-filled immanence to a corresponding skeptical religion filled with superseding fears to the God-breathed changes occurring in the world of humanity we think we understand but don't. For just as springtime can come into a weary world's wintry embrace, so can Emergent Postmodernism re-awaken the trembling birdsong and green grasses held in a broken world of sunlit hope and beauty. One just needs to know where to look... which in this case, curiously, is from within. From within our closed epistemologies of truth which must re-learn humility and grace, nurture and guidance. For truly the work of the Lord of the Harvest is great. And greatly does He need all the many hands of His children as can be brought to bear upon the harvest fields of the gospel of Jesus. Join us. Don't fight against God and be frustrated, discouraged, and by-and-by become irrelevant to the deeds and ministries at hand presented by broken people in need of God's grace and healing. But become one in the fellowship of the Father, and in the unity of His Spirit of Peace, who have been made whole upon the cross of God's Son, the Godhead Three.

For the evanglical world is creating its own firestorms of unnecessary opposition not realizing that Emergent Christianity has come into the midst of postmodernism to reconstruct an emerging faith, an emerging worship, an emerging Spirit-building made without hands into a global world of rapid change and cultural assimilation. Its brand is the cross of Christ. Its marker one of meekness and mercy. Its handle as the little lost lamb carried in the arms of its great-and-good Shepherd. It is opposed to institutionalized religion - even to that of itself. And vigilant to obey after the Lord her Saviour in all things spoken about the Kingdom of God - from its foundation stones made upon the Sermon on the Mount, to its unwalled gates opened to the hope found in trusting God's all knowing leadership, however withholding our doubting spirits may be. Though risen, God is re-incarnating each-and-every day by submittal to His will. By a faith that leads out upon its knees, beheld in tear-stained faces, scraped hands and dusty feet. By hearts willing to bow before the majestrariums of God's all-mighty and unsearchable works of glory. Delivered from the crumbling institutions of humanity. And opened to new, unexperienced futures brilliantly filled with possibilities to both Lord and Church. Even so Lord, come.

R.E. Slater
January 12, 2012
 
 
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
 
 
The Emergent Church: Theological Postmodernism
 
by Norman L. Geisler
March 2012
 
The Key Influence on Postmodernism
 
The post-modern movement finds its roots in Friedrich Nietzsche and the death of God movement he spawned. The whole post-modern movement can be cast in this context. Nietzsche wrote: “God is dead. God remains dead. And we have killed him. How shall we, the murderers of all murderers, comfort ourselves?” (“The Madman” in Gay Science, 125). But once they pronounced that God is dead, then the rest of post-modernism follows logically. For if there is no absolute Moral Law Giver, there can be no absolute moral law (subjectivism). Likewise, if there is no absolute Mind, then there can be no absolute meaning (conventionalism) or absolute truth (relativism). Further, if there is no objective meaning, then there cannot be an objective interpretation of a text. Hence, deconstructionism follows. So, the death of God leads to the death of every other area of thought and life as follows:
 
1. “Death of God”--Atheism
2. Death of objective truth--Relativism
3. Death of exclusive truth—Pluralism
4. Death of objective meaning--Conventialism
5. Death of thinking (logic)—Anti-Foundationalism
6. Death of objective interpretation--Deconstructionism
7. Death of objective values--Subjectivism
 
 
Key Influence of Postmodernism on Theology
 
Post-modernism in theology has been called Post-Protestant, Post-Orthodox, Post-Denominational, Post-Doctrinal, Post-Individual, Post-Foundational, Post-Creedal, Post-Rational, Post-Absolute. Actually, “Post” = “Anti” since post-modernism is opposed to everything listed above which they see as part of the modern world.
 
The North American father of post-modernism in evangelical theology, wrote: “But for me…opposing it [Postmodernism] is as futile as opposing the English language. It’s here. It’s reality. It’s the future…. It’s the way my generation processes every other fact on the event horizon” (McLaren, The Church on the Other Side (COS), 70). He added, “Postmodernism is the intellectual boundary between the old world and the other side. Why is it so important? Because when your view of truth is changed, when your confidence in the human ability to know truth in any objective way is revolutionized, then everything changes. That includes theology…” (McLaren, COS, 69).
 
 
Key Books by Post-Modern Theologians
 
Brian McLaren wrote The Church on the Other Side, A Generous Orthodoxy, and A New Kind of Christian. Stanley Grenz, the grand-father of the movement wrote: A Primer on Post-Modernism, Beyond Foundationalism, Revisioning Evangelical Theology. Rob Bell hit the front page of Time magazine recently with his denial of Hell in his book, Love Wins. He also wrote Velvet Elvis: Repainting the Christian Faith. Doug Pagitt & Tony Jones penned, An Emergent Manifesto of Hope and Tony Jones wrote, The New Christians: Dispatches from the Emergent Frontier.
 
 
Basic Beliefs of Post-Modernism
 
There are many beliefs of post-modernist. We will list the key views and show how they are making self-defeating claims. This is what the apostle Paul urges us to do when he said “We destroy arguments and bring every thought captive to Christ” (2 Cor. 10:5).
 
 
Anti-Absolutism
 
McLaren wrote: “Arguments that pit absolutism verses relativism, and objectivism versus subjectivisim, prove meaningless or absurd to postmodern people” (McClaren, “The Broadened Gospel,” (in “Emergent Evangelism,” Christianity Today [Nov., 2004], 43).
 
As we shall see, the root problem with post-modern thought is that it is self-defeating. It cannot even state its view without contradicting itself. For example,
 
1. Relativism Stated: “We cannot know absolute truth.”
2. Relativism Self-Refuted: We know that we cannot know absolute truth.
 
 
Anti-Exclusivism
 
Another aspect of post-modern thought is its pluralism or anti-exclusivism. McClaren wrote: “Missional Christian faith asserts that Jesus did not come to make some people saved and others condemned. Jesus did not come to help some people be right while leaving everyone else to be wrong. Jesus did not come to create another exclusive religion” (A Generous Orthodoxy, 109).
 
“But Christianity’s idea that other religions cannot be God’s carriers of [redemptive] grace and truth casts a large shadow over our Christian experiences (Samir Selmanovic, in Pagitt, An Emergent Manifesto of Hope, 191). “Christianity is a non-god, and every non-god can be and idol” (192). “God cannot be hijacked by Christianity” (194). “If a relationship with a specific person, namely Christ, is the whole substance of a relationship with the God of the Bible, then the vast majority of people in world history are excluded from the possibility of a relationship with the God of the Bible…” (194). “To put it in different terms, there is no salvation outside of Christ, but there is salvation outside of Christianity” (19). “Would a God who gives enough revelation for people to be judged but not enough revelation to be saved be a God worthy of worshiping? Never!” (195)...
 
1. The Anti-exclusivism claim: “It is wrong to make a claim that one view is exclusive truth as opposed to opposing views.”
2. The Self-refutation: The anti-exclusivist claim is exclusively true as opposed to exclusivism.
 
Anti-exlusivism is just another term for pluralism. The problem is clear. The claim that no view is exclusively true is an exclusivistic truth claim itself.
 
1. The Claim of Pluralism: “No view is exclusively true.”
2. The Self-Refutation: It claims that its view (that no view is exclusively true) is exclusively true.
 
 
Anti-Foundationalism
 
As Stanely Grenz noted in the title of his book Beyond Foundationalism, the post-modern movement is opposed to epistemological foundationalism. That is, they are opposed to the view that there are self-evident principles at the basis of all thought. “The theory that at the bottom of all human knowledge is a set of self-inferential or internally justified beliefs; in other words, the foundation is indubitable and requires no external justification. For the conservative, the sacred text of Christianity is indubitable, established by an internal and circular reasoning: ‘‘The Bible claims to be God’s truth, so therefore it’s true.’’ (Jones, The New Christian, 19).
 
The basic principles of foundationalism include the laws of logic, such as the following:
 
1. The Law of Identity (A is A).
2. The Law of Non-Contradiction (A is not non-A).
3. The Law of Excluded Middle (Either a or non-A).
4. The Laws of rational inference.
 
For example, it is a rational inference to conclude that:
 
1. All A is included in B.
2. All B is included in C.
3. Hence, All A is included in C.
 
There are different kinds of rational inferences. There is categorical inference (above). And there is hypothetical inference (below):
 
1. If all human beings are sinners, then John is a sinner.
2. All human beings are sinners.
3. Therefore, John is a sinner.
 
There are also disjunctive inferences: Either a person is saved or else he is lost (but he cannot be both at the same time and in the same sense). So, if he is not saved, then he must be lost. Given these kinds of principles being the bedrock of foundationalism, it is difficult to see what one could have against these venerable laws of thought.
 
 
Nonetheless, Stanley Grenz wrote a whole book against Foundationalism titled: Beyond Foundationalism. McLaren wrote: “For modern Western Christians, words like authority, inerrancy, infallibility, revelation, objective, absolute, and literal are crucial…. Hardly anyone knows …Rene Descartes, the Enlightenment, David Hume, and Foundationalism—which provides the context in which these words are so important. Hardly anyone notices the irony of resorting to the authority of extra-biblical words and concepts to justify one’s belief in the Bible’s ultimate authority” (McLaren, Generous Orthodoxy 164).
 
To reduce their view to a simple proposition, they claim the following:
 
1. Claim of Anti-Foundationalism: “Opposites (e.g., A is non-A) can both be true”
2. The Self-Refutation: They hold that the opposite of this statement (that opposites can both be true) cannot be true. 
 
It must be false. But if the opposite of true is false, then they are using a foundational logical principle to deny foundational logical principles. This is self-defeating.
 
 
Anti-Objectivism
 
Another characteristic of post-modern thought is subjectivism. Grenz wrote: “We ought to commend the postmodern questioning of the Enlightenment assumption that knowledge is objective and hence dispassionate” (Grenz, A Primer on Postmodernism, 166). Put in simple form:
 
1. The Claim of Anti-Objectivism: “There are no objectively true statements.”
2. The Self-Refutation: It is an objectively true statement that there are no objectively true statements.
 
In short, their anti-objectivism makes an objective truth claim. Hence, it is hanged on its own epistemological gallows. It self-destructs.
 
 
Anti-Rationalism
 
Another characteristic of post-modernism in theology is anti-rationalism. It is a form of fideism that denies that reason has no place in matters of faith. Grenz chided “Twentieth-century evangelicals [who] have devoted much energy to the task of demonstrating the credibility of the Christian faith…” (Grenz, PPM, 160). He added, “Following the intellect can sometimes lead us away from the truth” (Grenz, PPM, 166). Of course, he seems blissfully unaware of the fact that not following basic rational thought will lead you there a lot faster!
 
McLaren, added: “Because knowledge is a luxury beyond our means, faith is the best we can hope for. What an opportunity! Faith hasn’t encountered openness like this in several hundred years” (McLaren, COS, 173). He urged: “Drop any affair you may have with certainty, proof, argument—and replace it with dialogue, conversation, intrigue, and search” (McLaren, Adventures in Missing the Point, 78). But here again we are faced with a self-defeating claim:
 
1. The Claim of Fideism: “There are no reasons for what we believe.”
2. The Self-Refutation: There are good reasons for believing there are no good reasons for what we believe.
 
To state it another way,
 
1. The Claim of Fideism: “Knowledge is a luxury beyond our means.”
2. The Self-Refutation: We have the luxury of knowing that we can’t have the luxury of knowing.
 
 
Anti-Objectivism (of Meaning)
 
The term that describes anti-objectivism in meaning is Conventionalism. It claims that all meaning is culturally relative. There is no fixed meaning. Meaning is not objective. But here again we are faced with self-destructive claims:
 
1. The Claim of Conventionalism: “There is no objective meaning.”
2. The Self-Refutation: It is objectively meaningful to assert that there is no objective meaning.
 
The post-modern dilemma is painful. It cannot even express its view without borrowing from its opposing view. It literally has no ground of its own on which to stand. It is living on borrowed capital.
 
 
Anti-Realism
 
According to post-modern theology, there is no objective world that can be known. Rather, “the only ultimately valid ‘objectivity of the world’ is that of a future, eschatological world, and the ‘actual’ universe is the universe as it one day will be” (Grenz, Renewing the Center, 246).

1. The Claim of Anti-Realism “There is no real world now that can be known.”
2. The Self-Refutation: We know it is really true now (i.e., true in the real world now) that there is no real world now that can be known.

One cannot really know now that there is no real world now. For “really” implies there is a reality to know. And if there is a real world now, then one cannot deny it without implying it.


Anti-Certainty
 
Protestants believe the Bible is infallible (Matt. 5:17-18; John 10:35), but not any interpretation of it—like an alleged infallible Papal pronouncement. However, lacking infallibility in all matters of Faith does not mean we lack certainty in some matters. The principle of perspicuity (clarity) affirms that the main teachings of Scripture are clear and we can be certain of them. For in the Bible the main things are the plain things, and the plain things are the main things. Of these we can have moral certainty. Post-modern Christians challenge that one can have any certainty in our knowledge of the Bible. McLaren put it this way: “Well, I’m wondering, if you have an infallible text, but all your interpretations of it are admittedly fallible, then you at least have to always be open to being corrected about your interpretation, right?... So the authoritative text is never what I say about the text or even what I understand the text to say but rather what God means the text to say, right?” (McLaren, NKC, 50).

1. The Claim of Anti-Certainty: “My understanding of the text is never the correct one.”
2. The Self-Refutation: My understanding of the text is correct in saying that my understanding of the text is never correct.

In short, the claim that one is certain that he can never be certain about anything the Bible teaches is a self-defeating claim.


Anti-Propositionalism
 
It is an essential truth of evangelical Christianity that the Bible contains proposition truth claims. That is, regardless of the literary form (story, parable, poetry, or proverbs), the Bible contains truth that can be stated in propositional form. In short, the Bible contains doctrinal truths. But Grenz and other post-modern theologians claim that: “Our understanding of the Christian faith must not remain fixated on the propositional approach that views Christian truth as nothing more than correct doctrine or doctrinal truth” (Grenz, PPM, 170). So, “Transformed in this manner into a book of doctrine, the Bible is easily robbed of its dynamic character” (Grenz, Revisioning Evangelical Theology, 114-115).
 
1. The Claim of Anti-Propositionalism: “Our view of the Christian faith must not be fixed on propositional truth (doctrine).”
2. The Self-Refutation: We must be fixed on the propositional truth that we should not be fixed on propositional truth.
 
What the anti-propostionalist fails to see is that denying propositional truth is a propositional truth. Denying doctrine is a doctrine. Denying creeds is a creedal statement.
 
Another post-modern claim connected to this is the following:
 
1. The Claim of Anti-Propositionalism: “Doctrinal truth is not dynamic.”
2. The Self-Refutation: It is a dynamic doctrinal truth (of post-modernism) that doctrinal truth is not dynamic.
 
But doctrine is dynamic! Ideas have consequences! E = MC2 is a proposition that had dynamic consequences—it produced an atomic bomb. Likewise, biblical truth has consequences. The truth of the Gospel has consequence; it is the power of God unto salvation (Rom. 1:16). To deny the Gospel or its underpinning doctrines is to destroy the power of the Gospel.
 
 
Anti-Orthodoxy
 
Post-modern Christian Dwight J. Friesen speaks out against orthodoxy--the belief in orthodox doctrines of the Bible. He wrote: “Jesus did not announce ideas or call people to certain beliefs as much as he invited people to follow him into a way of being in the world…. The theological method of orthoparadoxy surrenders the right to be right for the sake of movement toward being reconciled one with another, while simultaneously seeking to bring the fullness of conviction and belief to the other…. Current theological methods that often stress… orthodoxy/heresy, and the like set people up for constant battles to convince and convert the other to their way of believing and being in the world” (Friesen, in EMH, 205). Therefore, “in orthoparadox theology propositions and truth claims are more important than ever but not as litmus tests of correct belief or practice; rather, truth claims become launching pads for differentiated relationship…. Orthoparadox theology is less concerned with creating ‘once for all’ doctrinal statements or dogmatic claims and is more interested in holding competing truth claims in right tension” (Friesen, in EMH, 209)
 
1. The Claim of Post-Orthodoxy: “We should not insist on being right about doctrine.”
2. The Self-refutation: We insist on being right in our doctrine that we should not insist on being right in our doctrine.
 
The creed on non-creedalism is itself a creed. One cannot deny orthodox doctrine without believing that his doctrine (teaching) on this matter is orthodox.
 
 
Anti-Condemnationism (Universalism)
 
Much of post-modern theology embraces various forms of universalism—the belief that ultimately no one will be lost. All will be eventually saved. In short, there is no hell—at least no one with anyone in it. McLaren tried to side-step the issue by claiming, “More important to me than the hell question, then, is the mission [in this world] question." (McLaren, Generous Orthodoxy, 114). Jesus reconciled “all things, everywhere.” And “Hell is full of forgiven people.” Rob Bell wrote: “Our choice is to live in this new reality or cling to a reality of our own making” (Bell, Velvet Jesus, 146). He added, “So it is a giant thing that God is doing here and not just the forgiveness of individuals. It is the reconciliation of all things.” (Bell in “Find the Big Jesus: An Interview with Rob Bell” in www.beliefnet.com). His recent book Love Wins claims that God will keep on loving everyone in this life and in the next until everyone accepts it.
 
1. The Claim of Universalism: “All persons (free agents) will be saved.”
2. The Self-refutation: All persons (free agents) will be saved, even those who do not freely chose to be saved.
 
C. S. Lewis pinpointed problem with universalism:
 
When one says, “All will be saved,” my reason retorts, “Without their will, or with it?” If I say, “Without their will,” I at once perceive a contradiction; how can the supreme voluntary act of self-surrender be involuntary? If I say, “With their will,” my reason replies, “How, if they will not give in?” (The Problem of Pain, 106-107). 
 
As C.S. Lewis put it elsewhere, “There are only two kinds of people in the end: those who say to God, `Thy will be done,’ and those to whom God says, in the end. `Thy will be done.’ All that are in Hell, chose it. Without that self-choice there could be no Hell” (The Great Divorcce, 69). Jesus said, “O Jerusalem, Jerusalem,…how often I have longed to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, but you were not willing” (Mt. 23:37). Contrary to Rob Bell, it is because God is loving and man is free that there must be a hell. God can’t force people into heaven anymore than we can force someone to love us. Love always works persuasively but never coercively.
 
 
Anti-Individualism
 
Another dimension to much of emergent thinking is anti-individualism or collectivism. McLaren wrote: “He said he had been raised, as I had, to believe that the central story of the Bible was about saving individual souls. The gospel, as he (and I) had understood it, was about getting individual souls to heaven…. First, it smacked of selfishness. Would God want a heaven full of people who wanted to be ‘saved’ but didn’t want to be good?… Second, in a postmodern context, he said, the individualism of this approach sounded downright evil…” (McLaren, A New Kind of Christian, 62).
 
Unfortunately, it is self-defeating to claim God is interested in group but not in individuals. For all groups are made up of individuals. And while good wants us to belong to a body and to have unity in our community of believers, nonetheless, in the final analysis all salvation is individual. God does not save people by groups or even families. He saves them one by one, individual by individual. This, of course, plays into the hands of ecumenism and the world-church movement which, as we know, is a characteristic of the end-times. Salvation is only found in the whole, not in each person or part. Indeed, the bible says, “Each one of us shall give an account of himself to God” (Rom. 14:12).
 
This anti-individualism is manifest in the post-denominationalism of the post-modoren chrch. As Friesen put it, “Orthoparadox theology may be understood as supporting a form of ecumenism, which broadens the conversation beyond the church to include and engage cultural voices” (Friesen, in EMH, 209). Of course, this post-denominationalism will lead ultimately to the super-denominationalism of the world church. Tony Campolo tells how this union of seemingly opposed views may emerge. In his book Speaking My Mind he says: “A theology of mysticism provides some hope for common ground between Christianity and Islam. Both religions have within their histories examples of ecstatic union with God, which seem at odds with their own spiritual traditions but have much in common with each other. I do not know what to make of the Muslim mystics, especially those who have come to be known as the Sufis. What do they experience in their mystical experience? Could they have encountered the same God we do in our Christian mysticism?” (149,150)
 
 
Anti-Inerrantism
 
Evangelical Christians affirm that the Bible is the inerrant (without error) Word of God. Why? Because the Bible is the Word of God, and God cannot error (Jn. 17:17; Heb. 6:18). So, the Bible cannot err.
 
This historic and biblical position is opposed by the anti-inerrantism of postmodernism. McLaren wrote: “Incompleteness and error are part of the reality of human beings” (McLaren, COS, 173). Grenz added, “Our listening to God’s voice [in Scripture] does not need to be threatened by scientific research into Holy Scripture” (Grenz, Revisioning Evangelical Theology, 116). He added, “The Bible is revelation because it is the [errant] witness to and the [errant] record of the historical revelation of God” (Grenz, ibid., 133).
 
McClaren rejects the view that: “The Bible is the ultimate authority…. There are no contradictions in it, and it is absolutely true and without errors in all it says. Give up these assertions, and you’re on a slippery slope to losing your whole faith” (McLaren, GO, 133-134). He claims that “Hardly anyone notices the irony of resorting to the authority of extra-biblical words and concepts to justify one’s belief in the Bible’s ultimate authority” (GO, 164).
 
However, the anti-inerrancy view is also trapped in self-contradiction. Consider the following:
 
1. The Claim of Errantists: “No human writing is without error.”
2. The Self-refutation: This claim (that no human writing is without error) is without error.
 
Like all the foregoing self-defeating claims of post-modernism, they set the trap and fall in it themselves. Jesus declared: "Your Word is truth." (Jn. 17:17). He added elsewhere, “If he called them gods, unto whom the word of God came, and the scripture cannot be broken." (Jn.10:34-35). “Laying aside the commandment of God, you hold the traditions of men…, making the word of God of no effect through your traditions.” (Mk. 7:8, 13). Paul declared that “All scripture is given by inspiration of God…."(2 Tim. 3:16). The Scripture is the Word of God (Rom. 9:6) and God cannot err (Titus 1:2). Jesus said, “’It is written’…by every word that proceeds out of the mouth of God.” (Mt. 4:4). Since the Bible is the very words of God, then to attribute error to the Bible, is to attribute error to God.
 
This is not to say that there are no difficulties in the Bible. There are. But St. Augustine's dictum put it well: “If we are perplexed by any apparent contradiction in Scripture, it is not allowable to say, The author of this book is mistaken; but either [1] the manuscript is faulty, or [2] the translation is wrong, or [3] you have not understood.” (Augustine, Reply to Faustus 11.5)
 
 
Emerging Problems with the Emergent Church
 
Post-modern theology is self-defeating. It stands on the pinnacle of its own absolute and relativizes everything else. It is an unorthodox creedal attack on orthodox creeds. It attacks modernism in the culture but is an example of postmodernism in the church. In an attempt to reach the culture it capitulates to the culture. In trying to be geared to the times, it is no longer anchored to the Rock. It is not an emerging church; it is really a submerging church.
 
As Mark Driscoll aptly put it, “The emergent church is the latest version of liberalism. The only difference is that the old liberalism accommodated modernity and the new liberalism accommodates postmodernity” (Mark Driscoll, Confessions of a Reformation REV, 21).
 
The Emergent Church is the Submergent Church. To put it poetically: The Emergent Church is built on sand, and it will not stand. Christ’s Church is build on Stone, and it can not be overthrown (Matt. 16:16-18)
 
 
Answering a Final Objection
 
Some post-modernism try to avoid the painful logic of their own self-defeating statements by claiming that they are not making any truth claims. Strange as this may seem, it does not solve their problem. C. S. Lewis pinpointed the problem well when he wrote “You can argue with a man who says, ‘Rice is unwholesome’: but you neither can nor need argue with a man who says, ‘Rice is unwholesome, but I’m not saying this is true.’ I feel that this surrender of the claim to truth has all the air of an expedient adopted at the last moment. If [they]…do not claim to know any truths, ought they not to have warned us rather earlier of the fact? For really from all the books they have written…one would have got the idea that they were claiming to give a true account of things. The fact surely is that they nearly always are claiming to do so. The claim is surrendered only when the question discussed…is pressed; and when the crisis is over the claim is tacitly resumed” (Lewis, Miracles, 24). In short, either the post-modern is making truth claims or he is not. If he is, then his views are self-defeating. If he is not, then he is not even in the stadium. He can’t play the “game” unless he is on the field. By claiming that he is making no truth claim, then he has disqualified himself in the arena of truth.
 
 
Works Evaluating Post-Modern Theology
 
There are many works evaluating aspects of post-modernism. The following works are highly recommended for further consideration.
 
Adler, Mortimer. Truth in Religion.
Carson, D. A. Becoming Conversant with the Emerging Church.
Carlson, Jason. “My Journey Into and Out Of the Emergent Church.”
Driscoll, Mark. Confessions of a Reformation REV.
Geisler, Norman. DVD on Post-modernism (www. InternationalLegacy.org).
Geisler, Norman. Systematic Theology in One Volume. (link)
Gibbs, Eddie and Ryan Bolger. Emerging Churches.
Howe, Thomas ed., Christian Apologetics Journal, volume 7, No. 1 (Spring, 2008, www.ses.edu/journal.htm)
Kimball, Dan. The Emerging Church.
Myron Penner ed., Christianity and the Postmodern Turn (pro and con)
Rofle, Kevin, Here We Stand.
Smith, R. Scott, Truth and The New Kind of Christian.
Robert Weber, Listening to the Beliefs of Emergent Churches (pro and con)
 
 
Copyright © 2012 NormanGeisler.net - All rights reserved



 

Friday, January 11, 2013

Emergent, Postmodern Theology's Resurrection of Christian Orthodoxy

How a Lutheran Pastor Envisions Emergent Christianity


A New Reformation? Emerging Theology is shaking Christianity, says Pastor Paul Nuechterlein of Prince of Peace Lutheran Church in Portage
http://www.mlive.com/living/kalamazoo/index.ssf/2010/03/a_new_reformation_emerging_the.html

Published: Saturday, March 27, 2010, 7:00 PM Updated: Tuesday, March 30, 2010, 4:29 PM


Rev. Paul Nuechterlein
Studying the gospel: The Rev. Paul Nuechterlein, senior pastor of Prince of Peace Lutheran Church in Portage, conducts a Bible study on the Gospel of John at his church on a recent Sunday morning.
 
 

RELATED CONTENT
READING LIST
On ‘emerging’ theology
  • “John for Everyone,” Parts 1 and 2, by N.T. Wright (Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 2002)
  • “Surprised by Hope: Rethinking Heaven, the Resurrection, and the Mission of the Church,” by N.T. Wright (Harper One, 2008)
  • “Saved from Sacrifice: A Theology of the Cross,” by S. Mark Heim (Eerdmans Publishing Co., 2006)
  • “The Deliverance of God: An Apocalyptic Rereading of Justification in Paul,” by Douglas A. Campbell (Eerdmans Publishing Co., 2009)
  • “A Generous Orthodoxy,” by Brian McLaren (Emergent/YS/Zondervan, 2004)
  • “A New Kind of Christianity: Ten Questions That Are Transforming the Christian Faith,” by Brian D. McLaren (Harper One, Feb. 1, 2010)

CONNECT

In response
“Goodbye Emergent: Why I’m Taking The Theology of the Emerging Church to Task,” Grand Rapids pastor and author Jerry Bouma’s response to “emergent” theology: tinyurl.com/jerrybouma
KALAMAZOO — Nearly 500 years ago Martin Luther posted his 95 theses in Wittenberg, Germany — a move that set off a shakeup in the Christian Church that became known as the Protestant Reformation.

Now there’s another movement brewing that could change Christianity just as dramatically, says a local pastor whose denomination takes its name from Luther.

“It’s 8.8 on the Richter scale,” says Pastor Paul Nuechterlein, of Prince of Peace Lutheran Church in Portage. “If the last huge change in Christianity was at the time of the Reformation, it looks like we’re going through that kind of change again.”

If you’re a biblical scholar, this change probably isn’t news to you — “I think it’s been under way for 50 to 100 years,” says Nuechterlein — but if you’re a Christian sitting in a pew of your local church, it might be.

The change Nuechterlein is talking about is a change in how some Christians view the meaning of an event at the heart of Christianity — Jesus’ crucifixion.

While Christian theology is, of course, a complex subject that takes way more than a newspaper article to address, here’s an attempt to summarize traditional thinking on the crucifixion: Jesus died on the cross to save human beings from their sins. God is a just God who would have had to punish us for our sins unless he sent Jesus. But God is also a gracious God, and Jesus stepped in and took the punishment for us, sacrificing himself and thereby atoning for our sins. If we believe in Jesus, we’ll be spared eternal damnation and go to heaven when we die to be with him.

Nuechterlein (pronounced NECK-ter-line) has a shorthand phrase for this interpretation — he calls it the “turn or burn” message. And he says it can be traced historically to the atonement theology of Saint Anselm, who lived in the 11th and early 12th centuries.

Nuechterlein and others in the world of emerging or emergent theology hold a different view that “flips atonement upside down,” Nuechterlein says.

“Christ came to end that sacrificial logic (that God required a sacrifice for our sins),” Nuechterlein says. “It’s not God but we who are wrathful and punishing. God offers a lamb so we might see (our) sin and accept God’s alternative, which is goodness and grace and mercy.”

Jesus, as the lamb of God, intentionally walks into “what are essentially our engines of punishment” and shows us that “God is love, that God is not about violence at all,” Nuechterlein says.

“When John says God is love, he doesn’t say, ‘And sometimes wrath and anger.’ Love — that’s the power that sustains the universe.”

Nuechterlein’s view is echoed in a piece by Abbot Andrew Marr in this year’s Easter newsletter of St. Gregory’s Abbey, a Benedictine near Three Rivers affiliated with the Episcopal Church. “The Gospel record and the apostolic preaching in Acts suggest that Jesus’ death says a lot more about human beings than it does about God,” writes Marr. “ ... Jesus did not come to die; he came to give life and to give it abundantly.”

A merciful God

So what does Nuechterlein make of those Old Testament stories that refer to an angry God?
 
Essentially, those stories reflect a limited understanding of God and project human flaws onto God, he believes.

The Exodus story, for example, has God slaughtering the firstborn children in Egypt through a plague, he says. “You could compare that to Pat Robertson saying the earthquake in Haiti is punishment from God for the Haitian people selling their soul to the devil centuries ago,” Nuechterlein says. “Most people say, ‘That god is not my God.’ That interpretation in Exodus is a Pat Robertson sort of interpretation. ... Jesus is trying to help us unlearn that.”

In others cases, people misinterpret or miss the point of an Old Testament story, Nuechterlein says, as with the account of Abraham going up a mountain to sacrifice his beloved son Isaac. “In Hebrew, the god who asks Abraham to do that is Elohim, and that’s the garden variety word for god,” Nuechterlein says. “The one who stops him is the angel of Yahweh. The true God is stopping us from following the old god who demands sacrifice.

“That is not what the true God is about. All of the prophets say God doesn’t want this. God wants justice and mercy.”

Valuing the Bible

Nuechterlein, who turned 54 earlier this month, grew up with “the standard kind of atonement theology,” he says. But “the best of Lutheran theology is uneasy with that,” he adds.

Nuechterlein credits, among others, French biblical scholar Rene Girard and British bishop and theologian N.T. Wright with helping him develop his newer way of thinking. He also noted that author and pastor Brian McLaren is bringing “emerging” thinking to a wide audience.

“He is helping us to understand that this is a big time of change,” Nuechterlein says.

Nuechterlein’s perspective — like that of other “emergent” thinkers — entails a view of the Bible that some would say is more sophisticated than seeing it as inerrant in every word. Others, though, would say he doesn’t take the Bible seriously enough, and Nuechterlein knows that. But he begs to differ.

“A different sort of faith would say I don’t value the Bible, but I value it very much. It’s the key and center to my faith,” says Nuechterlein, who has spent 25 years in the ministry.

“Here’s how I look at the Bible,” he says. “... If there is a true God, how would that true God ever get through to us? I think the Bible gives us the picture. God chooses Abraham and Sarah (and their descendants). He has a covenant relationship with that people over centuries. It will take centuries for the true God to get through to us so we will get it. ... Christians have just as famously missed the point [of God's revelation] as so many stories in the Old Testament did.
“The point of scripture is to take this journey where God helps us learn who God truly is.”

Judgment and hell

As opposed to traditional views of salvation and judgment, Nuechterlein has “more of a sense of universal salvation — that God came to save the whole creation.” But he acknowledges that “a lot of this is a mystery. We just don’t know exactly what’s going to happen.”

Nuechterlein says he has a problem with the Reformation concept of justification by faith — the idea that one gains salvation and eternal life by believing in Jesus rather than by doing good works. For Nuechterlein, it’s neither belief nor good works that bring salvation.

“One thing that happens with the Protestant doctrine of justification by faith is that believing becomes its own works righteousness,” Nuechterlein says. “(The apostle) Paul’s message is unconditional grace. It’s not about my belief, but about Jesus’ faithfulness. God in Jesus Christ has a rescue mission. God sends Jesus to unconditionally save us from the powers of sin and death. ...

“We’re already rescued, and it’s an unconditional rescue mission. Some of us would probably not want to be saved from the powers of sin and death, but God did it anyway.”

Biblical language about judgment and hell, in Nuechterlein’s view, is about the consequences of our sin. “When Jesus says, ‘Those who live by the sword die by the sword,’ he’s saying that violence and accusation and punishment bring their own kind of judgment,” Nuechterlein says.

“Someday violence will just kind of sink down into its own hellhole,” he adds. And “if I continue to live my life according to violence, I miss out on what life is all about.”
A gospel class

Nuechterlein is currently teaching a class at his church that incorporates some of these ideas about salvation and judgment. He says his ideas are received “fairly well” by his congregation.

“I’m not aware of any movement to oust me yet,” he jokes. Getting more serious, though, he adds, “When someone does have a negative reaction, that provides an opportunity to talk and learn together.”

For his class, which is focused on the Gospel of John, he’s using a book by Wright, “John for Everyone.”

While Wright’s views have influenced Nuechterlein’s thinking, the two differ on some matters. Unlike Nuechterlein, Wright presents a view of Jesus as God’s agent of final judgment and rejects the idea of universal salvation.

“Judgment is necessary — unless we were to conclude, absurdly, that nothing much is wrong or, blasphemously, that God doesn’t mind very much,” Wright says in his book “Surprised by Hope.”

But Wright talks of the final judgment as a time to be longed for and celebrated, a time when “the creator God will set the world right once and for all,” bringing it back to a state of justice and truth through Jesus.

Wright is reluctant to consider whether some people won’t be part of God’s transformed creation. But he suggests that maybe those who persistently refuse God’s love and rescue will one day, after death, end up no longer bearing the divine image at all and will exist in “an ex-human state.” But he says he doesn’t want anyone to suppose he knows much about this subject or enjoys speculating about it.

In Wright’s view, as in Nuechterlein’s, God’s purposes are bigger than the issues Christians often focus on.

In thinking about God’s purposes, says Wright, our challenge is “to focus not on the question of which human beings God is going to take to heaven and how he is going to do it but on the question of how God is going to redeem and renew his creation through human beings and how he is going to rescue those humans themselves as part of the process but not as the point of it all.”

For Nuechterlein, one of the implications of believing in a redeeming, nonviolent God is this: “It helps me orient my life around life, not violence and death. That I can live in that spirit today makes a huge difference in my life.”
 
 
 

James Grier Website, Audio Sermons & Lectures (updated)




TEACHINGS ON ETHICS AND
BIBLICAL THEOLOGY

by Dr. James Grier



Personal Reflections on
Conservative Evangelicalism

by R.E. Slater


The audiocasts here provided are testament to my past education in the Regular Baptist denomination first marked by it's dispensational fundamentalism, and later, by a conservative evangelicalism refined in the fires of Covenantal Reformed teachings rejecting the Baptist plank of Arminianism and replacing it with Calvinism as its pejorative systematic. Dr. Grier was an excellent speaker and capable communicator who reaffirmed this common approach by many my Christian tribe. To know where Christianity stood in the 1970s and 1990s is to listen again to its many reflections on God, Scripture, and Christ's Atonement.

However, I created Relevancy22 as further personal testament to Spirit-led divine inspiration  I received years ago urging me to expand my inherited discipleship in the Westernized Christian faith both i) progressively and, ii) as a way to find a biblical hermeneutic which might allow me to do this. After many years I have found that I cannot find a biblical interpretation any better than the "Love of God" as the central theme of Scriptures as shown to us in Jesus, as both divine Son of God and Lord of Lords Immanuel who has come to bring salvation to all.

I have sadly noticed over many years of observation that where the re-engaged biblical center of God's love runs astray is in those sincere or zealous Christians who follow God and translate His divine loving acts for divine wrath, judgment and hell if rejected - such as John Calvin had done in his Dogmatics (c.1536 - 1559). Similarly, when reading the biblical Gospels, Jesus spoke specifically to the religious Jewish leaders of his day as to their human perversion and idolatry of God which they were reinforcing through accumulated ungodly religious laws and sacraments over the centuries.

Hence, if I err as a follower of Jesus, it will be in speaking to God's love through-and-through-and-through all previously held Christian beliefs, dogmas, doctrines, creeds and confessions; and across as wide a range as I can ecologically, civilly, economically, politically, and socially. Like the many Venerable Bedes of our past common centuries who spoke to the Spirit-command of mercy, grace, forgiveness and Christian Humanism; or today, to that same subject of Christian Humanitarianism and Social Justice; so I urge all Jesus followers to speak God's love into all areas of life regardless of the abuses taught by the church into these same areas demanding grace.

And yes, James Grier does reiterate these same centuries-old pervasive church doctrines of sin and judgment as common to the fundamental and evangelic forms of Christianity I was raised in. He will argue these persuasively, regularly, and with vigor. All to which I will disavow, and in the same spirit of alacrity, speak persuasively, with vigor, and in regularity, as testament to God's enriching, infilling, healing love. Thus and thus, Relevancy22's shouts to a new message of God's love and against the sin that overcomes us in our self-righteous and sanctimonious Christian spirits.

An "Eco, Civil, and Socio, Christ-filled Humanitarianism" is far better for the world than any Christian ideologies urging:

i) civilly-exclusionary-dominionism; or,

ii) religiously-reinforcing-kingdom-reconstruction dogmas; or,

iii) any forms of Christian-White-Supremacist-fascist crusades held against civil democracies wishing to expand the legal rights of their polyplural, multiracial, and multicultural communities.

Better, to replace these zealous, agitating, unloving, church beliefs with a Christ-filled, God-filled love, centered in people of all kinds, than to exclude, berate, chastise, and belittle those who live differently to the unChristian ideals none of us can live up to... nor should we. I know of no better Gospel (Good News) of God than love, welcome, embrace, and resistance to both human and religious evil. God is a God of love, not a God of evil.

R.E. Slater


* * * * * * *


INTRODUCTION TO DR. GRIER
Dr. James Murray Grier (1932-2013) joined the staff of Grand Rapids Theological Seminary in 1982, having earned degrees from Baptist Bible College and Seminary, Grace Theological Seminary, and Westminster Theological Seminary.
Dr, Grier served as Executive Vice President and Academic Dean for 16 years. In addition, he also held the position of Distinguished Professor of Philosophical Theology until 2012.
As we recall his contributions and consider his legacy, we invite you to engage selected resources from his work and ministry.


CONFERENCE SESSIONS

Creation (MARBC 2009) 
Death, Dying & Euthanasia (Critical Session) 
Genetic & Stem Cell Research (Critical Session)
Reproductive Technologies (Critical Session) 


TEACHING SERIES 















ADDITIONAL SERMONS 





----------------------------------------------------------------------------------


PLEASE NOTE:
The site and links below may no longer be operative but are kept as an indication of some of the additional sermons and lectures Dr. James Grier had developed over a lifetime of speaking and engagement in evangelical thought.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------



SERMONS BY DR. JAMES GRIER


~ the links below may no longer be operative ~


Reproductive Freedom Contrasted with a Biblical Theology of Family
The Dawn of the Age of the Spirit – Morning Service, West Cannon Baptist
Church: God’s Temple/Presence- Evening Service, West Cannon Baptist
A Legacy of Grace (at Grace Community Church 75th Anniversary)
The Triumph of the Servant – Isaiah 52:13-53:12 (at Metropolitan Tabernacle)
The Local Church as a Body of Believers in Christ – 1 Corinthians 6: 19-20 (at Ridley Hall Evangelical Church)
The Gospel: A Funeral Homily for Dan Cummings
God’s Glory and Presence – Installation Service
The Corruption of Man - Genesis 3
Corruption of Society – Genesis 4
Triumph of Grace – Isaiah 6
Behold My Servant! – Isaiah 42:1-9
The Servant Triumphant – Isaiah 52:13-53:12
Jesus and the Spirit: Baptism & Temptation - Matthew 3 & 4
The Baptism of the Son of God – Matthew 3
The Testing of the Son of God – Matthew 4
Theology of Prayer: Part 1 – Matthew 6
Theology of Prayer: Part 2 – Matthew 6
Jesus’ Sermon on Missions – Matthew 10
Come Unto Me – Matthew 11
Mine Eyes Have Seen – Luke 2, Christmas Sermon
The Unspeakable Gift – Luke 2, Christmas Sermon
The Advent – Luke 2
Your Heavenly Father Will Give… – Luke 11:1-13
Gathering Riches for God – Luke 12:13-21
The Great Banquet – Luke 14
The Father of Two Lost Sons – Luke 15
Lost and Found – Luke 15
The Return of the Glory/Presence – Acts 2
The Impossible Possibility – Acts 2
From Glory to Glory – 2 Corinthians 3:18
I Timothy 4:6-16 – Ordination Sermon
The Word Above All Words – Hebrews 1:1-4
The Death of Death in the Death of Christ - Hebrews 2:1-18
What Have We Come To? Hebrews 12
The Church: God’s Temple/Presence pt. 1 – I Peter 2:4-10
The Church: God’s Temple/Presence pt. 2
The Investiture of the Lamb: Revelation 5
Hallelujah to the Triumphant Christ: Revelation 19
I Make All Things New – Rev. 21
We Shall See His Face – Revelation 22



LECTURES BY DR. JAMES GRIER

~ the links below may no longer be operative ~


The Trinity – Part 2: London Reformed Baptist Theological Seminary
The Trinity – Part 3: London Reformed Baptist Theological Seminary
Islam’s Global Challenge to the Gospel
Myths & Misconceptions Concerning Homosexual Behavior & Genetics
The Biblical Basis for Heterosexual Behavior: An Evaluation of Homosexuality
Growing Old in God - Biblical and Ethical Considerations
Growing Old in God – Practical and Personal Reflections
Spiritual Responses to Dementia
Ministry in a Postmodern Context: Our Times and Culture
Ministry in Postmodern Context: Alternative Responses
The Ground of Certainty: Part 1
The Ground of Certainty: Part 2
Bio-Ethics: Do the Ends Justify the Genes
Bio-Ethics: Reproductive Technologies
Bio-Ethics: Death, Dying & Euthanasia
Missional Ministry in a Postmodern Context
What Do You Know for Sure?
The God Who Is



THURSDAY EVENING BIBLE CLASS

Delivered at Grand Rapids Theological Seminary 
by James M. Grier



~ the links below may no longer be operative ~


Jonah Retold:
Adventures in Cross-cultural Listening


10 Words 


Biblical Theology of Prayer


The Reformation Cry 


Ancient Light for Modern Times