Searching for God # 52
Many Christians in the West, N. T. Wright says, have the goal of their faith completely upside down. Instead of seeing Christianity as God renewing the whole world and uniting Heaven and Earth, many believers think the point is simply for their souls to escape to Heaven when they die.
Wright argues the New Testament teaches the opposite: God
comes to dwell with us, and Jesus’ resurrection launches a new creation that’s
already underway. Ephesians shows that God’s plan has always been to unite all
things in Christ—and the Church is supposed to be a preview of that new
creation right now.
Because of this misunderstanding, Christians often
misread the End Times, spiritual warfare, and even the afterlife. Wright says
ideas like the rapture and apocalyptic timelines aren’t in the New
Testament—they’re modern distortions mixed with Western philosophy.
True spiritual warfare, he says, isn’t about blaming
people or seeing demons everywhere. It’s about living faithfully as a united,
Spirit-filled community that reflects God’s future in the present. (N. T.
Wright*, from Facebook page of Will Horn)
*Rt. Rev. N.T. Wright or Tom Wright is an English New
Testament scholar, Pauling theologian, and Anglican Bishop. He is currently
Senior Research Fellow, University of Oxford
I recently heard a professional woman declare, ‘I know
that Jesus is coming back and I sure do want to be ready, ‘cause I sure don’t
want to have to stay here.’
The apocalypse is a word that has been used to anticipate a second
coming, tied to the Judgement Day, coming in part from the book of Revelation,
a mode of literature with which the contemporary world is unfamiliar. Linked
with the Crucifixion and Resurrection, it provides considerable ‘cover’ for the
justification of the proposition of judgement that has plagued the church and its
adherents for centuries. And, let’s acknowledge that a metaphor of classical conditioning,
with rewards for ‘good behaviour’ and ‘surrender’ to a saviour have served the
ecclesial development movement for a long time. God as critical parent, with a
clear and readily grasped set of goals and objectives, is a metaphor that can
be grasped by both child and adult, on a literal, empirical level. It supports
the privatizing of sin, and the capacity of all to make judgements about the sins
of others. It also supports the ‘moment of ‘conversion/confession’ and
surrender, for the fulfilment of the ‘fishers-of-men’ image that is frequently
deployed by the evangelists.
Enabling and even ‘arming’ ‘believers’ to ‘save the world’ from
the sins of which each of us is responsible, provides a template for many to
serve both church and self in piling up numbers of new ‘believers’. The notion/teaching
that a new creation is already underway, at least from this perch, is congruent
with Tolstoy’s non-violent confrontation of evil with force, without the added
appendage of dividing the ‘superior converts’ from the ‘inferior pilgrims.’
It is the waves, ripples, and even rivers of division and conflict
with each parish that, from my limited experience, have left parishes
foundering on the shoals of a deep divide between the literalist judges and those
who read and understand with more of a metaphoric and poetic perspective. Little,
if any, formal discussion is available on the subject of how, if at all, the
imagination plays a part in the formation and sustaining of a faith perspective.
If faith is defined as ‘holding an intellectual conviction’ about specific
truths of history, as in ‘I believe that yesterday’s temperature was a minus 5
Celsuis’ then dispute about that ‘conviction’ is without recourse to appeal,
irrelevant, dismissable and abhorrent.
Such a divide of both perception as well as ‘perspective’ and
the attitudes and emotions that come with each perspective, is frequently cause
for bitter and intense disagreements. I once heard a professor of theology note
that he had spent much of his scholar-life attempting to wrestle with the
conflict between science and religion. Does such a continuing study not begin
with a proposition of incompatibility? And what if such incompatibility does
not exist and each is reconcilable with the other?
The notion of ‘time’ and a savior’s literal, historical, as
well as meta-historical return at some far-off time in the distant future,
enables those who favour such a vision to take much less seriously the
conditions under which we are living right now. Conversely, some might even
believe that their ‘charge’ and conviction is to ‘bring about the Kingdom of
God right here right now’ as we have heard from some in the MAGA movement.
Finite perceptions of both time and money, especially, bring
with them a degree of urgency on the one hand and obsessive-compulsion on the
other. Scarcity of both, as an over-riding metaphor, perspective and even ‘belief’
have plagued the church in many quarters for centuries. Sanctity and reverence
for God have both been encaptured, as some would see it, in the church’s ‘poor church
mouse’ image as well as in such attitudes as silence on steroids within the
sanctuary, constricted notions of legitimate subjects for church formal debate,
and a reductionistic God as ultimate ‘super-ego’ or critical parent or final judge.
How, pray tell, is such a retinue or menu of scarcities
congruent with the abundance of God’s unconditional, unrestrained, and
ubiquitous love in all of its many forms? That question is not ‘penned’ as
rhetorical! Too many lives have been twisted, torpedoed, submarined, sabotaged
and utterly decimated by failing to ‘live up’ to the standards of morality,
ethics and religious commitment, or by believing that those lives were ‘beyond
redemption’ given an ethos of choking judgement.
And one of the more tragic aspects of such a cultural
dynamic has been the impunity of accountability and responsibility of the Christian
church for limiting the imaginations of millions as to the nature of God, the
nature of ‘living a good life’ and, of course, the inverse. I once heard another
Anglican bishop comment, ‘The church has fallen into the trap of being ‘politically
correct’!’
Politically correct has so many implications that it is
likely impossible to account for all of
them. Being agreeable, being friendly, being of good humour, being kind, and
being uplifting and inspiring are all reasonable expressions of being ‘politically
correct’ and have been adopted almost as a template for the contemporary transactional
culture. As a life-long retailer, my father knew that by restraining his choice
of topics with customers to the weather and perhaps the latest Maple Leafs’
score, he would avoid tension and conflict. Concentrating on the needs of that
customer, for a specific piece of hardware, fishing equipment, paint selection,
building material or bone china, he rarely if ever strayed outside the
boundaries of ‘nice man’ in order to preserve his reputation as a ‘nice-guy’
with whom to do business. Taboo were both religion and politics!
Think for a moment about those moments in our lives when ‘something
went wrong’ and how each and every time we asked ourselves ‘what did I do wrong?’
as the initial emotional and intellectual assessment of the situation. Millions
of us have lived with a proverbial ‘cawing crow’ sitting on our shoulder as an
inheritance of the Christian church. How many times have we measured our
moments of specific choices as ‘different’ from the example of our parents,
whose example was set from such constrictions as ‘sobriety,’ ‘abstinence’ or ‘excess
frugality’ or ‘reticence’ or ‘withdrawal’ or ‘not volunteering’ or ‘not applying’
or ‘failing to disclose how I feel’….all because, whether consciously or
unconsciously we ‘thought’ or ‘believed’ or ‘considered’ or ‘were told’ that to
open up was ‘too much’….and ‘too much’ came from morality and an ethic as well as a
conventional social tolerance, all of it conditioned by an underlying religious
imperative?
For these and many other constrictions we have the church to
‘thank’ if only we would dare.
Is this legacy in part an inheritance from scripture read in
a constricted and constricting manner?
It simply will not do, it is a cultural luxury that we
can no longer afford, if ever we could, for any Christian on the whims of an
uninformed and culturally driven piety to read the Bible and to pronounce upon
its meaning with any less effort than these questions (in this case
antisemitism) require. (Peter J. Gomes*, The Good Book, Reading the Bible with Mind and Heart, p.119)
(Gomes was arguing against the case that Jews had fallen from God and that the
only way back was to cease to be Jews and to become Christian.)
*Peter J. Gomes, ordained a Baptist clergy, was professor and
Pusey Minister of Harvard’s Memorial Church and Professor of Christian Morals
at the Harvard Divinity School. He died in 2011.
Gomes observes the ‘assigning of sin’ to institutions as
compared with the privatized sin of personal malfeasance. He notes that social
activists who discern and disclaim the sin of the institutions call it a ‘system(s)
failure. And he notes that such sin is abstract, with juxtaposed with personal,
private sin.
What I am positing here is that much of the theology of the
Christian church, as practiced, is (or has been) focused on private sin, given
its clear dimensions, diagnosis, and irrespective of whether scripture holds a
strong position of concurrence. An example, from Augustine would be that ‘sex
is sin’ while not all sex is sin and not all sin is sex.
Such a perception can be applied to homosexuality. We read
in Gomes:
In his study Christianity, Social Tolerance and
Homosexuality, John Boswell concluded his chapter on the New Testament texts
having to do with homosexuality with these words:
The New
Testament takes no demonstrable position on homosexuality. To suggest that Paul’s
references to excesses of sexual indulgence involving homosexual behavior are indicative
of a general position in opposition to same-sex eroticism if as unfounded as
arguing that his condemnation of drunkenness implies opposition to the drinking
of wine.
Gomes was asked to speak to a rally at Harvard in 1991 about
the expressed experience of abuse of gays and lesbians, Gomes, himself a homosexual.
Here is a direct quote from that address from the New York Times reprinted on npr.org
in a piece entitled Peter J. Gomes, ‘Harvard’s Pastor dies by Korva Coleman,
March 1, 2011
I do not know when the quality of life has been more
violated….I am a Christian who also happens to be gay…Those realities, which
are irreconcilable to some, are reconcilable in me by a loving God.
In his own work, The Good Book, writing about that same
incident, Gomes writes:
I warned of the dangers of Christian absolutism, with the
appropriate references to the Spanish Inquisition and the Salem witch trials
and I dismissed the easy references to scripture and the rathe glib social
analysis as unworthy of thinking of charitable Christian debate. (Gomes op.
cit. p 165)
And after the barrage of criticism that greeted him subsequently,
much of it from the Bible, (he writes):
Many of my critics, chiefly from within the religious
community, asked if I read the same Bible they did, and if I did how could I possibly
reconcile my position with that of scripture? When arguments failed, anathemas
were hurled and damnations promised. The whole incident confirmed what had long
been my suspicion (as it is also this scribe’s). Fear was at the heart
of homophobia, as it was at the heart of racism, and as with racism,
religion---particularly the Protestant evangelical kind that nourished me (and
this scribe too!)---was the moral fig leaf that covered naked prejudice. I further
concluded that more rather than less attention must be given to how we read the
scriptures, what we bring to the text, what we find in the text, and what we
take from the text.( Gomes op. cit. p. 166)
With respect to ‘constrictions’ based on some kind of assumed
piety, I was accused by a supervisor, while a deacon, of being ‘much too
intense for me’….to which I responded without skipping a breath, “Well, I am
also too bald; deal with it!” She phoned the bishop later that day to recommend
against my ordination. With respect to biblical interpretation, my homilies
have been dubbed heretical, and I the antichrist, by those whose reading of
scripture echo those of Gomes’ scriptural-based critics.’ In first year of
theology studies, I encountered a literal interpretation of scripture from
class mates who upon hearing one member of our Field Education Class claim that
Hitler had gone to heaven, (a provocative statement uttered doubtless to arouse
the ire of those known as ‘fundies’) retorted, “That’s not true and I know it
isn’t true because the Bible says so!”
There is much to ponder upon reading the Bible, and one
starting place might be that of a kindergarten kid, ‘I’m in kindergarten here;
please help me and my wonder! I am in awe but not in fear!’

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