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Friday, September 29, 2017

Ty Cobb, the Wrath of God, and the Power of Fake News

Ty Cobb, as baseball fans are aware, is famous for being an amazing player.  He was the first person voted into the Baseball Hall of Fame and still holds the record for having the highest lifetime batting average.  He is also certainly one of baseball’s most infamous players - widely known for being an angry, racist, and wrathful individual.

Charles Leerhsen, author of the award-winning book Ty Cobb: A Terrible Beauty, in a fascinating speech shows that much of what we think we know about Ty Cobb is… wrong.

Leerhsen tells the story of how in doing basic research by using original sources, he quickly discovered that, while Cobb was not perfect, he was certainly not the rage monster popular opinion has made him out to be.  It turns out that a man named Al Stump, a hack writer, wrote a scandalous piece about Mr. Cobb that was shared over and over by people who were trying to correct its errors but instead ended up perpetuating a lie.

Yes, it seems that Ty Cobb’s legacy was a victim of fake news.

And it seems that popular culture wanted to believe in a caricature (“Cobb was a wrathful person and player”) more than they wanted a complete picture.

But, Ty Cobb is not the only “wrathful” victim of fake news – there is another whose reputation has been misshaped and mishandled.   

Many people have misperceived God as a mad, violent deity.  This is an extremely popular view (remember, the most famous and formative sermon in American history is Jonathan Edwards’ “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God”!).   Many of us have heard and incorporated narratives of God as wrathful and those misconceptions have taken on a life of their own.  That “fake news” has become the story we expected, wanted and embraced.
But if we follow Leerhsen’s example and do a little digging, will the research support that perception?

In the New Testament, the Greek words often translated as anger, rage, indignation or wrath are used both in reference to God and in reference to humans.  I’ve categorized the verses below using the NIV:
1.      Texts that caution humans against being wrathful/angry/indignant:
a.      1 Cor. 13:5 – Love, “does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs.”
b.      Eph. 4:26 - “’In your anger do not sin’: Do not let the sun go down while you are still angry,”
c.      Eph. 4:31 – “Get rid of all bitterness, rage and anger”
d.      Col 3:8 – “rid yourselves of… anger, rage…”
e.      1 Tim 2:8 – “lift up holy hands in prayer, without anger or disputing.”
f.       James 1:19 – “everyone should be… slow to become angry.”
g.      James 1:20 – “because human anger does not produce the righteousness that God desires.”
2.      Texts that tell humans to hate evil and wrongdoing
a.      Rom 12:9 – “Hate what is evil; cling to what is good”
3.      Texts that refer to a connection between law and wrath:
a.      Romans 4:15 – “because the law brings wrath. And where there is no law there is no transgression.”
4.      Texts that refer to Jesus being angry:
a.      Mark 3:5 – Jesus, “looked around at them in anger and, deeply distressed at their stubborn hearts, said to the man, “Stretch out your hand.” He stretched it out, and his hand was completely restored.
5.      Texts where God is described as having anger/hate/wrath:
a.      John 3:36 – John the Baptist says, “Whoever believes in the Son has eternal life, but whoever rejects the Son will not see life, for God’s wrath remains on him.”
b.      Rom. 1:18 – “The wrath of God is being revealed from heaven against all the godlessness and wickedness of men who suppress the truth by their wickedness.”
c.      Rom 2:5 – “But because of your stubbornness and your unrepentant heart, you are storing up wrath against yourself for the day of God’s wrath, when his righteous judgment will be revealed.”
d.      Rom 2:7-8 – “To those who by persistence in doing good seek glory, honor and immortality, he will give eternal life.  But for those who are self-seeking and who reject the truth and follow evil, there will be wrath and anger.”
e.      Rom 3:5 – “But if our unrighteousness brings out God’s righteousness more clearly, what shall we say? That God is unjust in bringing wrath on us? (I am using a human argument.)”
f.       Rom 9:22 – “What if God, choosing to show his wrath and make his power known, bore with great patience the objects of his wrath – prepared for destruction?”
g.      Rom 12:19 – “Do not take revenge, my dear friends, but leave room for God’s wrath, for it is written: “It is mine to avenge; I will repay,” says the Lord.”
h.      Rom. 13:4 – Christians should respect human government because “He is God’s servant, an agent of wrath to bring punishment on the wrongdoer.”
i.       Eph. 5:5-7 – “For of this you can be sure: No immoral, impure or greedy person – such a man is an idolater – has any inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and of God.  Let no one deceive you with empty words, for because of such things God’s wrath comes on those who are disobedient. Therefore do not be partners with them.”
j.       Col 3:6 – Paul instructs them to leave behind a list of sins… “Because of these, the wrath of God is coming.”
k.      1 Thess. 2:16 – The people persecuting the Christians “heap up their sins to the limit.  The wrath of God has come upon them at last.”
l.       Heb. 3:11 & 4:3 (citing Psalm 95:11) – Because of Israel’s disobedience and rebellion… “I declared an oath in my anger, ‘They shall never enter my rest.’”
6.      Texts that refer to the destruction of Jerusalem or a future punitive judgment
a.      Matt 3:7-8 & Luke 3:7 – John the Baptist says to the Pharisees and Sadducees, “You brood of vipers! Who warned you to flee from the coming wrath?  Repent!”
b.      Luke 21:23 – Jesus in talking about the upcoming destruction of Jerusalem says: “How dreadful it will be in those days for pregnant women and nursing mothers! There will be great distress in the land and wrath against this people.”
c.      Eph. 2:3 – “All of us also lived among them at one time, gratifying the cravings of our flesh and following its desires and thoughts. Like the rest, we were by nature deserving of wrath.”
7.      Texts that refer to the way Jesus saves us from wrath or future punitive judgment:
a.      Romans 5:9 – “Since we have now been justified by his blood, how much more shall we be saved from God’s wrath through him!”
b.      1 Thess. 1:10 – Paul refers to how they’ve stopped worshipping idols and are now following Jesus, “who rescues us from the coming wrath.”
c.      1 Thess. 5:9 – “For God did not appoint us to suffer wrath but to receive salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ.”
8.      Texts that refer to wrath in the book of Revelation
a.      Rev. 6:16-17 – “They called to the mountains and the rocks, “Fall on us and hide us from the face of him who sits on the throne and from the wrath of the Lamb! For the great day of their wrath has come, and who can withstand it?”
b.      Rev. 11:18 – “The nations were angry, and your wrath has come.
The time has come for judging the dead, and for rewarding your servants the prophets and your people who revere your name, both great and small—
and for destroying those who destroy the earth.”
c.      Rev. 14:10 - “they, too, will drink the wine of God’s fury, which has been poured full strength into the cup of his wrath. They will be tormented with burning sulfur in the presence of the holy angels and of the Lamb.”
d.      Revelation 14:19 – “The angel swung his sickle on the earth, gathered its grapes and threw them into the great winepress of God’s wrath.”
e.      Revelation 15:1 – “I saw in heaven another great and marvelous sign: seven angels with the seven last plagues—last, because with them God’s wrath is completed.
f.       Revelation 15:7 – “Then one of the four living creatures gave to the seven angels seven golden bowls filled with the wrath of God, who lives for ever and ever.”
g.      Revelation 16:1 – “Then I heard a loud voice from the temple saying to the seven angels, “Go, pour out the seven bowls of God’s wrath on the earth.”
h.      Rev. 16:19 – “The great city split into three parts, and the cities of the nations collapsed. God remembered Babylon the Great and gave her the cup filled with the wine of the fury of his wrath.”
i.       Rev. 19:15 – “Coming out of his mouth is a sharp sword with which to strike down the nations. ‘He will rule them with an iron scepter.’ He treads the winepress of the fury of the wrath of God Almighty.”

While there certainly are a basketful of references to God’s anger/wrath, it would be interesting to follow that up with a study of how many times God described as loving or holy or good.  My guess is that there would be significantly more than references to his wrath…

But, my objective in this post is not to ask you to ignore references to anger/wrath/indignation on God’s part.  Instead, I think the references to wrath of God have been misread and have distorted our image of God.  There are two examples that I’ve found helpful in trying to understand the relationship between anger and the Almighty. 
  • Memory and Children – Let’s imagine a mother who asked her grown daughter to relate how she remembers her childhood.  The daughter responds by saying that her clearest memory is of her mom grabbing her gruffly by the side of a busy road.  The mother’s mouth hangs open in shock as she considers all the eating and playing and enjoying each other’s company that happened over the years. As they discuss the memory, it turns out that what the daughter is recalling is the one time when the mother had to save the daughter by pulling her out of a busy street to protect her from a passing car.  Could it be that the stories of intense emotion, the ones that may stand out the most, may not be the ones that should define our overall experience of God?   If they seem out of character, could there be a good reason for that?
  • Maps and Globes – Taking a 3D object and turning it into a 2D image inevitably distorts it.  Because of this most of the maps in our classrooms and offices are wildly inaccurate.  Greenland looks to be the same size as Africa in those pictures, but the truth is that is laughably incorrect.  Any time we squash something flat to get it to fit on a page, we will alter what it is in reality.  I think that is similar to how we have misinterpreted the wrath of God – by smashing a view of God flat on a page we have distorted God’s important desire for justice as modeled in Scripture and made it into a dominant feature on the theological landscape when in reality – it is just cold, small, (and relevantly minor) Greenland.

For the rest of this post I would like to examine this topic by asking a few questions and sharing some observations.  So here goes…

1.      Does the phrase “wrath of God” mean what we think it means?

One text from the Old Testament that can help us address this issue of God’s wrath is found in Psalm 7:10-16.  That psalm talks about God as a righteous judge who prepares to go against the ungodly **in wrath** but interestingly the examples given in the following verses show that the damage done to the disobedient people is all self-inflicted.  Could we say that God’s wrath is a dish best served cold, or maybe more simply put, God’s wrath is a dish that is… self-served?  When we live contrary to the essence that God has called us to be, we cause trouble for ourselves and initiate our own destruction (we serve the dishes of wrath to ourselves). 

2.      Is “wrath” even really the best word for what God experiences?  

I’m not convinced that “wrath” is the best translation of what God experiences because in modern English it tends to mean uncontrolled anger or rage.  Would it be more accurate to use different terms like God’s “righteous anger” or God’s “deep commitment to justice”? 
In talking about this topic with our Makua friends, they differentiate between three different words: “Urusiya” means to be upset or angry.  “Uviruwa” is a stronger reaction that could be violent (they brought up the examples of the flood in the time of Noah or of Jesus cleansing the temple).  But the word that sounds the most like wrath is one they borrow from Portuguese, “raiva,” which means rabid anger or rage and is interestingly also the word for rabies!  The Makua Christians I’ve talked to say they certainly see how a “just anger” is a good and important part of God’s character but they don’t believe that God has “raiva.”
If wrath is uncontrolled anger or rage, does that seem to fit with the character of God? I don’t think so, especially if that that is the kind of anger that human beings are specifically instructed in Scripture not to have.

Exodus 34:6; Numbers 14:18; Psalm 86:15; Joel 2:13 all say that God is slow to anger and abounding in love.  The Apostle Paul certainly knew those scriptures and that is why I don’t think he would ever see wrath as a definitive quality of God.  A God that doesn’t get angry at injustice wouldn’t be good, but serving and worshipping a rage monster wouldn’t be good either. What we need here is more than a caricature – we need a complete picture. 

In talking this through with Rachel, she has shared the example of how if one of our daughters gives the stink-eye (an expression of contempt) to her sister, something like anger flashes inside of Rachel, an intense reaction that serves as a catalyst for a stern intervention – necessary to deal with the way they are treating each other.  God gets angry at our sin and injustice because of what it does to us, how it divides us, and how we are enslaved and trapped by it more than his own personal offense at it.  God is more angry at sin and the way it holds us captive to sin, death and Satan because what we do shapes who we are as individuals and how it effects the way we treat each other. 

So, re-framing the wrath of God does not mean perceiving God as a “pushover buddy” who enables your bad behavior. Instead, he is more like the true friend who calls you to live at a higher level – he takes away your keys so you won’t drive drunk, but it you are hell bent on doing things your own way and reject being in relationship with him… things will not go well for you.  So, God’s response to injustice is not generally to “nuke the place,” but may be more like a smart bomb to address the heart of the problem.  It seems to me that what God experiences is less like wrath and more like a “judge’s legitimate emotional reaction to injustice.”

3.      Is Jesus saving us from God’s wrath? 

Certainly not.  God is NOT like a wrathful, abusive parent who is interrupted in his plans to inflict harm on us by our benevolent older brother (Jesus) stepping in to take the beating for us.  The Scriptures affirm that God’s character is revealed fully in Christ (John 14:9).  God and Jesus are not doing some kind of divine good cop/bad cop routine. Jesus is not saving you from God.  God loves you immensely.  Nowhere in the Bible does it explicitly says that God poured out his wrath and punishment on Jesus instead of on us.  God doesn’t kill Jesus.  Instead, incredibly, God deals with our sin by submitting to all the brokenness that we throw at him – through his own death on a cross. God didn’t kill Jesus – we did! (that’s what Peter says in Acts 2:36 – human beings did this!)  But that’s not the end of the Story – Christ triumphs!  We don’t have to live under guilt, shame and fear because Christ has defeated Sin, Death and Satan!  That is really good news!  Instead of being stuck in Darkness – God brings us into his kingdom of light and love and life!

Conclusion

On a recent podcast, I heard Leerhsen describe his surprise at the push-back he has gotten from people who are angry at him for questioning the dominant narrative about Ty Cobb as a wrathful player.  It makes me wonder if whether followers of Jesus who try to counteract fake news about God as a wrathful deity should be prepared for push-back as well…

Thanks for reading… this is certainly still a work in progress.  My hope is that we can keep learning and growing and begin to see a more complete picture of the God revealed in Christ and move past the destructive caricatures of a God full of wrath. 

May we grow in our understanding of both the love and justice of the God and Father of our Lord Jesus!

Grace and Peace,

Alan

Friday, September 22, 2017

September 2017 Newsletter

Hello everyone,

We’ve had an intense few months and wanted to share some of what has been happening over here with you.  Back in April, I had surprise hernia surgery – it still amazes me that Rachel and I were able to travel down to South Africa, get a diagnosis, have surgery and return home to Mozambique in less than 2 weeks!  My recovery has definitely been slower than I expected but I’m feeling almost all the way back to normal.  We are so thankful for all the love and support we’ve received from so many of you.  Thank you!

Unfortunately, not long after our return to Montepuez there was a different kind of drama – this time surrounding documentation.  Our team’s status and the process of our personal residency documents became rather complicated.  In July, thankfully, we were allowed to renew our family’s permits, but we still would love your prayers for resolution of this issue for our team as a whole.  We are grateful that the church’s own documentation issues are finally resolved. At a gathering back in May, we witnessed a beautiful ceremony where local church leaders chosen by the people were given the paperwork they needed from the person who fills that role at the national level.  It was a great day and big sigh of relief for everyone involved. 

Besides our regular meetings with church leaders and deacons, two ministry events stand out in our minds.  One was the inauguration of the church building in the village of Siwewe – it was such an encouragement to see many members from other churches in the area gather to celebrate the completion of their place of worship – one man had walked for over three hours to get there!  The teaching and singing that day were lively and it was amazing to think about how far that church community has come.  

Another memorable event was spending a few days with a new church plant in Merenge. At earlier stages in our team’s work here we were much more hands on with helping new churches get off the ground.  But these days, especially in certain regions, new churches are planted and we often do not visit until the community is more-or-less established.  So, back in July, it was fun to spend time worshipping and doing baptisms with the new church plant in Merenge.  Church leaders from nearby villages had done the visits and evangelism and it was a blessing to get to participate in a small way with them in this effort.   

These days, our time is spent more working with the Theology School (“Instituto Teológico de Cabo Delgado” in Portuguese).  I have taught five week-long classes over the past few months on the subjects of: Preaching, New Testament Survey, and a class on the Giants (Defeating Problems Facing the Church in Cabo Delgado).  Next month, Rachel will be teaching on Church History, her first class in the Theology School. Typically, these are intensive, one-week classes and our team usually offers 2-3 of them each month, mostly here at the team property, where we are in the midst of a building program to construct classroom and dormitory space as well as a cafeteria.  For now, the food preparation is based out of our family’s yard, so it will be nice when the Theology School can move into the new buildings :).  Special thanks to Jeremy Smith for leading the construction!  Over 110 students have taken at least one class in the Theology School so far – a pretty amazing number considering that this is only our second year of operation in this format.  We are excited to see how God can use this school to bless the churches in Mozambique.

In June and July, we hosted 10 great interns from Harding University.  They learned to speak some Portuguese and Makua, job-shadowed us as we went about our normal ministry routines, and also spent a weekend by themselves staying with a trusted Mozambican family.  Our kids love having interns and this group was no exception.  They were a blessing to have in our homes and in our lives for the six-week summer internship.  Here is a picture of our early worship together at the beach in Pemba on the Sunday before they returned to the United States.

Near the end of the internship, Abby and Rachel left Mozambique for a three-week trip to the United States.  She’s working on a Master’s Degree in Historical Theology from Harding School of Theology in Memphis and it was a blessing for her to take a class on campus this summer.  While she was in class and researching her paper in the library, Abby traveled around with my parents to see family in Tennessee and Alabama as well as getting to reconnect with friends she made during our year in Searcy, AR.  They also got to see Rachel’s parents and many, many, many other special people (I tried not to be too jealous)!  Their visit to the USA was capped off beautifully by attending the wedding of former interns, Ethan and Morgan McGaughy.  On their way back home, they met up with Ellie, Katie and I in South Africa for doctor and dentist visits as well as some vacation time.  We enjoyed zip lines, game drives, lion petting and elephant rides (of course!) before returning to Montepuez.

At the beginning of this month, Goncalves Inacio, Jessica and I hosted a Conservation Agriculture Seminar for the farming associations we have been working with over the past few years.  About 50 people attended this refresher course where we reviewed key principles and practices, made compost together and covered some new territory about grain storage and marketing.  It was a good event and we also collected data on the different associations to assess how we are doing at meeting the goals for the program.  



  
Lately, Rachel has been going through the Sermon on the Mount with women from the Menhuene cluster in the Ancuabe district.  This is an area that the Westerholm family has spent a lot of time with and she has enjoyed getting to know these women.  This group has many more literate women than the clusters she has worked with in the Montepuez district but they have not spent much time studying together.  Please pray for the Kingdom of God to take root and produce fruit in their lives!


The team kids’ school just started last week and the girls have really enjoyed it.  Katie is in 2nd, Ellie is in 6th and Abby is in 9th grade… wait, how did that happen?  How can we have a high schooler???  

We are so thankful to have Cindy Mercer with us.  She retired after a career teaching in Ohio and bravely decided to come join us to teach the team’s kids.

We usually have two teachers for the four different grade levels but we still need one more teacher.  So… if you, or someone you know would be interested in teaching at our team school in Montepuez, please let us know and we can send more information.

Also, at a recent meeting of the church leaders in our Province, they decided to set aside the week of October 1-7 for prayer and fasting about true conversion (including repentance and life-change) and true love (and unity) among the believers and churches in Cabo Delgado. You are invited to join us in this time of prayer and fasting for God’s Kingdom in Mozambique!

Please pray with us:
  • For resolution for our team’s document issues
  • For God to use the Theology School to bless the churches
  • For the followers of Jesus to live lives marked by true conversion and true love

Grace and Peace,

Alan and Rachel


Raising Rebellious Teenagers: The Gospel as an Anti-Rebellion Rebellion

School just started for the kids on our mission team last week here in Montepuez and I’ve been thinking about a video that Abby and I did for the Downtown Church of Christ youth group at the beginning of the 2016-17 school year.

Abby and I were asked to share about the meaning of the Gospel and we set it in different terms than are usually used to consider it:

The Gospel as an anti-rebellion-rebellion.

We hoped to show how, in significant and real ways, following the Gospel for me (Alan) as a parent means… raising rebellious teenagers.  Here’s a slightly adapted text of what we shared.  Hope you enjoy it!

Alan

-----

Matthew 9:35 says, “Jesus went through all the towns and villages, teaching in their synagogues, proclaiming the good news of the kingdom and healing every disease and sickness.” (NIV)

The word “Gospel” literally means good news.  And the good news that Jesus announced over and over again was that the kingdom of God was at hand and everyone was invited to enter it. 

Here in Mozambique, our friends are very familiar with the idea of kingdoms.  I’ve known kings and queens and even a 'king of kings.'  So, when we talk about Jesus’ Gospel or good news with our Mozambican friends it’s natural to talk about contrasting kingdoms: the Kingdom of Light verses the Kingdom of Darkness. 

Our African friends also know what it is like to announce a new, coming kingdom.  Back in 1975, Mozambique won its independence from the Portuguese colonial powers.  People who heard the good news of the victory would go to neighbors and friends and share the good news that the old Empire had fallen – there was a new regime.
One of my favorite verses is Matthew 9:35 because it summarizes Jesus’ ministry so well.

Matthew tells us that Jesus traveled to a bunch of different villages announcing the good news that the Kingdom of God was near. He taught in the synagogues about how to live lives pleasing to God. And it says that he healed people of all sorts of physical and spiritual diseases. When the church is acting like the body of Christ, it follows his mission. By doing those three things it serves as a sign of God's coming kingdom.

In that way, the church functions as 'God's Kingdom Embassy' set up here on earth… An embassy that exists in enemy territory.  So, people who are dissatisfied with life in this world - a kingdom reigned by sin, death and Satan - have been issued a standing invitation to leave that corrupt kingdom of darkness and begin to live under God's good reign.

What that means is that Christians are part of a rebellion – okay technically it is an anti-rebellion-rebellion.  Satan first rebelled against God and set up a competing Evil Empire.  And Christians are those who live in open rebellion to Satan’s Kingdom of darkness.  So, followers of Jesus are those loyal to the true king.  You are part of that rebellion.

In Mere Christianity, C.S. Lewis says, “Enemy occupied territory – that’s what this world is.  Christianity is the story of how the rightful king has landed, you might say, landed in disguise, and is calling us to take part in a great campaign of sabotage.”
“A great campaign of sabotage.”  I know it may not always look like it in Searcy, AR, but to the Powers and Principalities of this world – what you are plotting to do as a youth group is sabotage – it is seditious to the Kingdom of this world.  Now the way we do this, our rules for engagement mean that we don’t have to carry weapons or coerce people by force.  No, we are part of a peaceful insurgency.  And I know it takes a lot of work to remember who we are, because the world pummels us with messages that call us to assimilate to their ways, but the truth is that the Powers are threatened by your presence.   So, as you get ready to go back to school, you don’t have to tell anyone that you are part of this rebellion – just go out and act like Jesus.  Follow the way of the Gospel - the good news.  Announce the Kingdom (invitation).  Teach the way of the Kingdom (initiation).  And display the Kingdom of God by your actions (demonstration).  That’s good news as Jesus told it and lived it.

The gospel is the good news that the kingdom of God has come near and you and I can be a part of what God wants to do in the world.  We don’t have to live in a kingdom of death and darkness and disease…  The good news is that we are invited into a kingdom of light and life and liberty and love.

When Abby was baptized, her Mom and I were so excited, but we also knew that what she had done was really serious.

She’s now a full-follower of the Gospel and is part of the great anti-rebellion-rebellion against the forces of darkness in the world.  And if you are a Christian you also are called to be a rebellious teenager, subverting the Evil Empire and your leader is the true King of Kings.   


Monday, September 18, 2017

Christendom, Scholarship and Kierkegaard

Image result for Kierkegaard a single lifeI just finished Stephen Backhouse’s Kierkegaard: A Single Life and enjoyed learning about the famous Danish philosopher’s thinking and influence.  Backhouse frames Kierkegaard in his context – one defined by Christendom.  While that is certainly very different from the setting we find ourselves in Mozambique (!) I thought this one section, in particular, was very insightful:  
“‘Christendom’ does not begin and end with the established church.  In short, the ‘established church’ might well be Christendom, but not all ‘Christendoms” are established churches.  Christendom is a way of being, thinking and feeling that has far more to do with the cultural appropriation of Christianity than it does with any specific legal agreement between church and state.  Christendom is what happens when people presume they are Christians as a matter of inherited tradition, as a matter of nationality, or because they agree with a number of common-sense propositions and Christianized moral guidelines.  Kierkegaard sees Christendom as a process by which groups adopt, absorb, and neuter Christianity into oblivion, all the while assuming they are still Christian.  Christendom is adept at shielding itself from its own source, for Christianity’s original documents offer a deeply challenge precisely to the form of civilized life that Christendom represents.” (Backhouse 172)
Kierkegaard himself puts it this way:
“The matter is quite simple.  The New Testament is very easy to understand. But we human beings are really a bunch of scheming swindlers; we pretend to be unable to understand it because we understand very well that the minute we understand we are obliged to act accordingly at once. But in order to make it up to the New Testament a little, lest it become angry with us and find us all together wrong, we flatter it, tell it that it is so tremendously profound, so wonderfully beautiful, so unfathomably sublime, and all that, somewhat as a little child pretends cannot understand what has been commanded and then is cunning enough to flatter Papa. Therefore we humans pretend to be unable to understand the N. T.; we do not want to understand it. Here Christian scholarship has its place. Christian scholarship is the human race’s prodigious invention to defend itself against the N. T., to ensure that one can continue to be a Christian without letting the N.T. come too close… I open the N.T. and read: ‘If you want to be perfect, then sell all your goods and give to the poor and come and follow me.’ Good God, all the capitalists, the officeholders, and the pensioners, the whole race no less, would be almost beggars: we would be sunk if it were not for… scholarship.” (Backhouse 172-3 quoting from Kierkegaard’s Journals and Papers, 2872 (X3 A 34 n.d., 1850)
Ouch – for someone who has benefited from and finds much value in scholarship this last comment hits a little too close to home… but I can certainly appreciate that the temptation to let scholarship stand between us and the clarity of the biblical text is a real one.  A temptation that seems especially powerful for cultures shaped by Christendom.

Backhouse neatly summarizes Soren Kierkegaard’s position like this: “The Christianity of Christendom is not the Christianity of the New Testament.” (180)

I want to continue reflecting on what the connections between Christendom, Scholarship and Christianity mean for both our host culture in Mozambique and our home culture in the United States.

Grace and Peace,

Alan 

Sunday, September 17, 2017

Friday, September 8, 2017

New article in the International Journal of Frontier Missiology

It has been a pleasure to collaborate with Logan Thompson on a recent article for publication in IJFM!  

Logan and I look at how globalization and other significant cultural shifts mean that Christians who want to engage their world must possess greater competency in a variety of atonement explanations. The article highlights the influence of Athanasius (an early church father) and shows how recapitulation/theosis addresses the problem of shame/death and serves as a useful “path” for bringing the meaning of the work of Christ into both the Makua-Metto culture of Mozambique and American youth culture.

Here's the link if you are interested in checking it out:
From Mozambique to Millennials: Shame, Frontier Peoples, and the Search for Open Atonement Paths in International Journal of Frontier Missiology vol. 33, no. 4 (Oct-Dec 2016)