Showing posts with label theology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label theology. Show all posts

Thursday, February 28, 2013

From a Facebook Conversation


Essay for Bill LaBarre on “Method” for determining what to believe.

I can only interpret "method" as "what I do."  It does not produce proof or utter certainty in the Cartesian sense:  those are forms of control, and as described above regarding the respective positions of 1) God and 2) creatures [us], control of any sort is out of the question.  But, such as it is, this is my “method”.  I listen to the gospel proclamations of the church and meditate on them.  Yes, I have a Bible, but in order to get somewhat beyond my own cultural limitations regarding “what it means to read this book,” I listen to others in the body of Christ (i.e., the Church) who have gifts of understanding and ministry that differ from mine.  They see things that I don’t see until they show me.  Further, I listen to (read) what other Christians from other places and times have written.  Further again, I listen to what non-Christians say regarding their objections to the faith.  This also involves the application and continuing reapplication of reason and observation.  Theology must be tossed back into the refining furnace again and again.

In the complexity of the gospel message there are threads that are more central and others that are more peripheral.  I try to see the harmonies and the dissonances that are in my understanding of the message, and then occasionally pick apart my construct and re-weave to produce a pattern that is more faithful to the central themes.

The most central theme is Jesus the Christ, not a doctrine, but a person.  Of course there are doctrines about Him, but even they point away from themselves back to this person.  Listening here means prayer and getting away from my internal noises.  Listening also means writing small essays like this one, listening to the resonance of these words and whether they faithfully echo my faulty perceptions through the Spirit of God in Christ.

Faith is less a content of belief (although it is that, also) than it is a mode of perception.  The passage from Hebrews 11 that you quoted does not oppose faith to knowledge, but to grasping for control.  It opposes my conceptual control with trust.

Faith thus described still ought to make sense.  We should expect that it does.  God commands us to worship Him with our minds as well as with heart, soul, and strength.  This means that we use them, not leave them at the door of the church.

But faith, as a mode of perception and thinking, also conforms to the nature of our position relative to God.  Demands that God meet our cultural (largely Cartesian) requirements for certain knowledge are inappropriate at several levels.  Aside from being personally insulting and presumptuous, they miss the nature of the object being studied.  If our seeking after knowledge does not conform to the nature of the task at hand, we can no more expect correct results than if we take a magnifying glass to the smell of roses to find what musical key it is in.  Again, this is a category error. 

Instead, the exercise of faith brings the entire man both physically and spiritually into the appropriate place of perception and thought, namely into the activity of worship where God promises to meet His people.  There we hear the proclamation of the gospel from the pulpit (as described in a comment above), and we hear God’s words riding on the words of the liturgy, on the music of the hymns, on the words of the sermon.  God confronts me in my sin, and even more so in the proclamation of forgiveness that we hear in worship.  He confronts me in my incapacity to meet the demands of life, but even more He appears in the prayers of the people as the faithful One who gives us not only the obvious blessings but also the sometimes painful blessings of growth.  He appears in my hunger to touch and hear Him, but He appears even more in the sacrament of the Lord’s Supper as a fore-taste and promise that He is with us spiritually now and will return physically.

This exercise of faith is not mere credulity.  It is an experiment, like sitting in a garden and letting the scent of the flowers approach you so that you can savor them before you make decisions about them.  It asks not merely about the structure of the rose, but about its beauty as such.  It does not merely examine behaviors, but asks if those behaviors betoken a deeper significance.  It is an exercise in humility and openness.

Nor can we, by our actions and attitudes, force God’s hand.  Again, that is to strive for control.

You can probably see why “method” is an awkward word to apply here.  What method do you use for having fun with a friend, or to get to know a prospective friend better?  It’s more like that than physics or biology or geometry.  I can’t construct a satisfactory theology from first principles (after the manner of Euclid) or force God to open up so I can study him (as if He were an oyster).  All I can do is present myself and see what happens.  Sometimes I’m very disappointed with the results.  And then He puts before me a glass of water, or the color red, or a friend’s smile, and these non-proofs, this utter lack of philosophical evidence, convinces me again.

Friday, January 07, 2011

Can Non-believers Do Theology?

Let me turn that question around: Can non-believers not do theology? If Jesus is “before all things and by him all things consist” (Col. 1:17), then how can any act or statement avoid having its existence in relation, one way or another, to Jesus Christ? If “sin” as such is not just transgression of a moral code, but the acts and attitudes of rebellion against God, then how can they not also be theological statements about the nature of the world and one’s independence from and opposition to whatever “gods” might be out there?

Friday, August 27, 2010

Atonement in the Gospel according to John


Recently I looked through St. John's gospel and found some interesting patterns. In every chapter but the last I could find some description of Jesus as the one who removes the barrier between us and God, a description of that action, and something in the context that connects that action with atonement. Unfortunately I couldn't figure out how to paste it into the blog in a table, so I put it into a less handy format. Here are the results:


Ch. 1. Title: The Word of God
Atoning Action: became flesh
Connection with atonement: God takes on our flesh, becoming “at one” with us (v. 14)

Title: The Lamb of God
Atoning Action: who takes away the sin of the world
Connection with atonement: Reference to the use of lambs in the Levitical sacrificial system

Ch. 2. (no title; Jesus is a wedding guest)
Atoning Action: turns water of purification to wine
Connection with atonement: Purification (stone waterpots, v. 6) and giving life (wine, v. 10)

Title: Son of the Father
Atoning Action: cleanses the temple
Connection with atonement: "Temple" refers his own body and death (vv. 19-21)

Ch. 3. Title: Son of Man, Son of God
Atoning Action: sent to save the world & give eternal life
Connection with atonement: Eternal life (vv. 16-18, 36)

Ch. 4. Title: The Messiah
Atoning Action: who gives the water of life
Connection with atonement: Eternal life (vv. 14, 25,26)

Title: The Lord
Atoning Action: who gives life
Connection with atonement: Eternal life not mentioned, but giving life is the prerogative of God (vv. 49, 51)

Ch 5. Title: The Son
Atoning Action: who works to heal
Connection with atonement: His healing is part of his father’s work, which is the reconciliation of God and man(vv. 8-9, 17)

Title: The Son
Atoning Action: who obeys the Father and gives life instead of judgment (condemnation) to believers
Connection with atonement: Believers honor the Son and have passed from death to life (vv. 19-24, 27)

Title: The Son
Atoning Action: who bears witness
Connection with atonement: “That you may be saved” (v. 34)

Ch 6. Title: The Son, The bread of life, the bread of God
Atoning Action: who gives life to the world
Connection with atonement: Resurrection and eternal life (vv. 39-40)

Ch 7. Title: The prophet, Messiah
Atoning Action: who gives living water
Connection with atonement: Reference to life & the Holy Spirit (vv. 38-39)

Ch 8. Title: The light of the world
Atoning Action: who gives the light of life
Connection with atonement: Connection of light with life (v. 12)

Title: The Son
Atoning Action: who makes free
Connection with atonement: Freedom from the slavery of sin (vv. 31-36)

Ch 9. Title: The light of the world
Atoning Action: who gives sight
Connection with atonement: Judgment (v. 39) and the removal, or not, of sin (v. 41)

Ch 10. Title: The door of the sheep
Atoning Action: who gives salvation and pasture
Connection with atonement: Connection of pasture with salvation (v. 9)

Title: The good shepherd
Atoning Action: who lays down his life for the sheep
Connection with atonement: Gives life by dying (v. 11)

Title: The shepherd
Atoning Action: who knows &calls the sheep
Connection with atonement: Knowing (v. 15) & hearing (v. 16) express union & belonging, esp. with the comparison “even as the Father knows me and I know the Father” and the result, “and I lay down my life for the sheep,” both in v. 15.

Title: The shepherd
Atoning Action: who knows the sheep & they follow
Connection with atonement: Knowing and hearing related to eternal life (vv. 27-29)

Ch 11. Title: The Lord, Christ, Son of God
Atoning Action: who gives life
Connection with atonement: Reference to the resurrection (vv. 24-25, 43-44)

Ch 12. Title: The Son of Man
Atoning Action: who draws all men to himself
Connection with atonement: Connection with “if I be lifted up,” v. 32.

Title: Light
Atoning Action: who delivers believers from darkness
Connection with atonement: Light and belief connected with being converted and healed (v. 40)

Ch 13. Title: The Servant
Atoning Action: who washes us
Connection with atonement: Connection with the OT washings (implicit)

Ch 14. Title: The Son
Atoning Action: who prepares a place for us
Connection with atonement: in the Father’s house (v. 2, 3).

Title: The Son
Atoning Action: who gives the Spirit
Connection with atonement: to be with us forever (vv. 16-17).

Ch 15. Title: The true vine
Atoning Action: through whom the branches bear fruit
Connection with atonement: These are the branches that the Father prunes (v. 2) and keeps (v. 6).

Ch 16. Title: The Son
Atoning Action: who goes to the Father
Connection with atonement: Connection with giving the Holy Spirit (vv. 7 ff.) and the Father’s love for us (vv. 27-28)

Ch 17. Title: The Son
Atoning Action: who gives eternal life
Connection with atonement: Eternal life (v. 2)

Title: The Son
Atoning Action: who manifested God’s name to his disciples
Connection with atonement: and God gave them to him (v. 6).

Title: The Son
Atoning Action: who prays on our behalf
Connection with atonement: “Sanctified in truth” (v. 17) means belonging to & union with God (vv. 21, 23).

Ch 18. Title: King of the Jews
Atoning Action: who bears witness to the truth
Connection with atonement: “Hearing” is connected in previous passages with belonging to Jesus

Ch 19. Title: King of the Jews
Atoning Action: crucified
Connection with atonement: References to the Passover (vv. 14, 36) depict Jesus as our Passover lamb; reference to Zechariah 12:10 (v. 37) connects the crucifixion with the coming of "the Spirit of grace and supplication"

Ch 20. Title: The resurrected Son
Atoning Action: grants peace
Connection with atonement: Peace with God (v. 21)

Title: The resurrected Son
Atoning Action: gives the Holy Spirit
Connection with atonement: Union with God (v. 22)

Ch 21.