Text. christianity transformed and transforming

Similar documents
witness and withness

Why do we need this conference?

storytelling, spiritual formation, and social action: in search of a seventh story

but made Himself of no reputation, taking the form of a bondservant, and coming in the likeness of men. And being found in appearance as a man, He

Introduction THREE LEVELS OF THEOLOGICAL REFLECTION

A Journey Toward Knowing, Loving and Serving God and Others

Borg Chapters 7 and Jesus s Death on the Cross Matters But Not Because He Paid for Our Sins

VIOLENCE AND THE SACRED: INTERPRETATIONS OF RENÉ GIRARD IN CHRISTIAN PHILOSOPHY AND PEACE STUDIES

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS WEEK 1 THEHILLS.ORG

The Historical Plan of God

Romans 10 : 5-15 Luke 4 : 1-13 Sermon

Lesson 6: Christology, "Who is Jesus Christ?"

Re-thinking the Trinity Project Hebrews and Orthodox Trinitarianism: An Examination of Angelos in Part One Appendix #2 A

THE CHALLENGE OF RELIGIOUS EXTREMISM: SETTING THE SCENE DOUGLAS PRATT

Priesthood and the Sequence of Atonement: A Response to David Moffitt

Advent Sermon Transcript December 18, The Amen of Christmas Jesus: The Truth of God John 8:31-59

Going Deeper. Thomas Trevethan, The Beauty of God s. Holiness, 13

What Do We Value? Dr. Robert F. Browning, Pastor. First Baptist Church. Frankfort, Kentucky. June 20, 2018

Our Heavenly Father. A sermon by Rev. Michael Gladish Mitchellville, MD, February 21 st, 2016

IS JESUS GOD? - SESSION 10

When you were a child, what did you imagine that you would be doing at your present age? How different is your present experience from that vision?

This Message In Christ Alone We Take Our Stand

Introduction to the Bible: Week Two

A Promise Isaiah 11: 1-10 December 8, Today s passage from Isaiah tells us that peace, a transformed world, depends on two

THE EASTER GOSPEL AND MISSION Luke 24:36-48 Third Sunday of Easter, April 26, 2009

Eschatology: Study of God Developing People in His Image Dr. Leon L. Sanders

Reflection Questions for Personal Use or in a Group Context (please consider the teaching notes prior to consideration of the reflection questions)

Table of Contents. Coming soon Planting seeds Here it comes! Bringing Heaven to Earth The main thing Barking dogs and big pictures

[MJTM 15 ( )] BOOK REVIEW

The Third Way The Tripod of the Gospel: Part I Kevin Haah September 20, 2015

What do we believe? Statement of Purpose: The Bible: God. God the Father

ADVENT ABF STUDY John 1:1-18 November 28 December 19

On Being Conscious of What We Choose to Worship. Mrinalini Sebastian

DEREK FLOOD. Trinity Institute, The Good News Now Evolving with the Gospel of Jesus

The Christian Vision of the Person and Society

Sermon: The Word Became Flesh

Lecture 4. Simone de Beauvoir ( )

Sacrifice and Atonement

Survey of the Doctrines of the Bible

Chris Gousmett

Basic Christianity. Week One. Introduction

OCF Bible Overview 2018 (Handout)

The Spirit Speaks. By The Rt Revd Kenneth Fernando

Adult Sunday School Lesson Summary for March 6, 2011 Released on Wednesday, March 2, Instructions About Worship

Jesus Christ and the Life of the Mind. By Mark A. Noll. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2011, xii+

THEOLOGY IN THE FLESH

The Attributes of God Part 2 Josh McDowell

ARTICLE IV - DOCTRINE

In Spirit and Truth John 4:16-26 Sermon Pastor Joe Davis Union Baptist Church July 22, 2018

Feast of the Holy Family Cycle A

At the end of the sixth day, the Creation had been completed

Introduction to the Bible Week 3: The Law & the Prophets

THE DOCTRINE OF CHRIST Chapter 9 Dr. Danny Forshee. See Systematic Theology, p , and Christian Beliefs, p

Names are pretty important

Discussion notes: The Ordinary Christian s Creed Weeks 3-4 John A. Jack Crabtree October 30, 2011

Humanities 2 Lecture 6. The Origins of Christianity and the Earliest Gospels

Canon: Which Books Belong? Lesson Two: Revelation The Need and the Process

Session 12: The Old Testament Creation Stories

Seventh Sunday of Easter Year C

What does the Bible really say? (A sermon, with period for questions & discussion, at Carrs Lane URC church, Birmingham, July 2005)

AM I TRULY FOLLOWING JESUS? Bible Study

v o i c e A Document for Dialogue and Study Report of the Task Force on Human Sexuality The Alliance of Baptists

Aquinas and Alison on Reconciliation with God

Immanuel Baptist Church Membership Covenant

Christmas is a wonderful time because it reminds us of God s great love for humanity, so great that He sent His Son into the world.

THE SEVENTH DAY IN GENESIS

Fearless Q: What Does the Bible Say About Gender & Sexuality? John 8

Notes on Postmodernism and the Emerging Church (accompanying slides)

Are You A Good Person Really? Romans 7:14-25 Introduction

by Wayne Northey discovery for me was when I began to see the uniqueness of the Bible, especially the Christian text, from the standpoint 1

A Study of The Mosaic of Christian Belief

Pannenberg s Theology of Religions

THE TRINITY GOD THE FATHER, GOD THE SON, GOD THE HOLY SPIRIT

John 1:19-34: Now this was John s testimony when the Jews of Jerusalem sent priests and Levites to ask him who he was. 20

THE FRUITLESS FIG TREE Mark 11:12-33 March 26, Dr. Howard Batson First Baptist Church Amarillo, Texas

Statement of Doctrine

Evidence of the Cross You will know that I Am Messiah, speaking things My Father taught Me

In the Beginning A study of Genesis Chapters Christian Life Assembly Jim Hoffman The Journey 2018

The Ancient Path Adam and Eve are driven from the Garden of Eden (Genesis 3:22-24)

Genesis 14:18 20 Priest of the Order of Melchizedek

AFFIRMATIONS OF FAITH

See This Thing. The Word Became Flesh. John 1: Mark Vroegop

Guide Christian Beliefs. Prof. I. Howard Marshall

12/16/2018 Various Scriptures

ATTRIBUTE OF ETERNALITY Exodus 3:14; Deut. 33:27

The Book of Worship And you shal be holy to Me, for I the Lord am Holy and have separated you from the people that you should be Mine Leviticus 20:26

Prayers of the People with Confession

It is with deep respect that the author of Hebrews compares and contrasts the Old Covenant practices with the final work of Jesus Christ.

Note: Where a Scripture text is underlined in the body of this discussion, it is recommended that the reader look up and read that passage.

COMPASS CHURCH PRIMARY STATEMENTS OF FAITH The Following are adapted from The Baptist Faith and Message 2000.

Seeing God in the Completed Story by Tim King, Jan 20, 2005

Gnosticism: Yesterday and Today

Spiritual Direction Led by. Kenneth Swanson, Ph.D.

Daily Bible Study Questions. FIRST DAY: Introduction to the Book of Genesis (Introduction Notes)

2. As an eschatalogical sign of the Kingdom, MP points to and deepens God s presence among us.

Golden Text: Also I heard the voice of the Lord, saying, Whom shall I send, and who will go for us? Then said I, Here am I; send me. (Isaiah 6:8).

Telling the Christmas Story with No Shepherds and Angels (John 1:1 14)

Matthew 2: Stanly Community Church

PRESENT TRUTH. A Teaching Newsletter of Lifestream Teaching Ministries

Difficult Questions, Certain Answers

Transcription:

Text christianity transformed and transforming

Caught between something real... and something wrong.

Formed christianity/ christianities Transformed Reformed

Reframed Formed Framed Malformed christianity/ christianities Transformed Deformed Reformed

My quest... the church on the other side a new kind of christian a generous orthodoxy adventures in missing the point the story we find ourselves in the secret message of Jesus everything must change finding our way again a new kind of christianity naked spirituality

Some theological problems are modular

Some theological problems are systemic

rene girard insights and contributions

rene girard insights and contributions - nonviolent theme in the Bible - a narrative of evolution, emergence - deconstruction of atonement theory - uniqueness and universality of Christ - proper apocalypticism - a sense of what has gone wrong and why - a sense of what is real and good, and why

A non-violent deity can only signal his existence to mankind by having himself driven out by violence - by demonstrating that he is not able to establish himself in the Kingdom of Violence. But this very demonstration is bound to remain ambiguous for a very long time, and it is not capable of achieving a decisive result, since it looks like total impotence to those who live under the regime of violence. That is why at first it can only have some effect under a guise, deceptive through the admixture of some sacrificial elements, through the surreptitious re-insertion of some violence into the conception of the divine. (219-220)

Behaving in a truly divine manner, on an earth still in the clutches of violence, means not dominating humans, not overwhelming them with supernatural power; it means not terrifying and astonishing them in turn, through the sufferings and blessings on can confer; it means not creating difference between doubles and not taking part in their disputes. God is no respecter of persons. He makes no distinction between Greeks and Jews, men and women, etc. This can look like complete indifference and can lead to the conclusion that the all-powerful does not exist, so long as his transcendence keeps him infinitely far from us and our violent undertakings. But the same characteristics are revealed as a heroic and perfect love once this transcendence becomes incarnate in a human being and walks among men, to teach them about the true God and to draw them closer to Him. (234)

There is no privileged stance from which absolute truth can be discovered... That is why the Word that states itself to be absolutely true never speaks except from the position of a victim in the process of being expelled... [F]or two thousand years this Word has been misunderstood, despite the enormous amount of publicity it has received. (435)

... this sacrificial concept of divinity must die, and with it the whole apparatus of historical Christianity, for the Gospels to be able to rise again in our midst, not looking like a corpse that we have exhumed, but revealed as the newest, finest, liveliest and truest thing that we have ever set eyes upon. (235-236)

Historical Christianity covers the texts with a veil of sacrifice. Or, to change the metaphor, it immolates them in the (albeit splendid) tomb of Western culture. (249) But the process requires an almost limitless patience: many centuries must elapse before the subversive and shattering truth contained in the Gospels can be understood world-wide. (252)

The disciples came to him and asked, Why do you speak to the people in parables? He replied, The knowledge of the secrets of the kingdom of heaven has been given to you, but not to them... This is why I speak to them in parables:

Though seeing, they do not see. Though hearing, they do not hear or understand. (Matthew 13:10 ff)

Something is on the way out and something else is painfully being born. It is as if something were crumbling, decaying, and exhausting itself, while something else, still indistinct, were arising from the rubble... We are in a phase when one age is succeeding another, when everything is possible. Vaclav Havel, The New Measure of Man

a new kind of christianity: ten questions that are transforming the faith

What are the questions? 1. The narrative question: What is the shape of the biblical narrative? Storyline, plotline? 2. The authority question: What is the Bible, and what is it for? How does it have authority? 3. The God question: Is God violent? Why does God seem so violent and genocidal in so many bible passages?

4. The Jesus Question: Who is Jesus, and why does he matter? 5. The Gospel Question: What is the gospel - a message of evacuation or transformation? Exclusion or inclusion?

6. The church question: What do we do about the church? 7. The sex question: Can we deal with issues of sexuality without fighting and dividing? 8. The future question: Can we find a more hopeful vision of the future?

9. The pluralism question: How should we relate to people of other faiths? 10. The next step question: How can we pursue this quest in humility, love, and peace?

a new kind of christianity

Question 1: What is the shape of the biblical narrative? (A pre-critical question)

Eden Heaven Fall Salvation History/ The world Hell

Platonic Ideal Platonic Ideal Fall Into Aristotelian Real Aristotelian Real Atonement, purification Hades

Pax Romana Rebellion into barbarism Barbarian/ pagan world Pax Romana Civilization, development, colonialism assimilation Destruction, defeat

If love and violence are incompatible, the definition of the Logos must take this into account. The difference between the Greek Logos and the Johannine Logos must be an obvious one, which gets concealed only in the tortuous complications of a type of thought that never succeeds in ridding itself of its own violence. (270)

Heidegger is absolutely right to state that there has never been any thought in the West but Greek thought, even when the labels were Christian. Christianity has no special existence in the domain of thought. Continuity with the Greek Logos has never been interrupted... everything is Greek and nothing is Christian. (273)

By cultural Platonism we mean the unexamined conviction that human institutions have been and are what they are for all eternity, that they have little need to evolve and none whatsoever to be engendered.... It is quite evident how a universal Platonism manages to obscure any phenomena that contradict it. (TH 59)

To what degree is orthodoxy the version of the faith that has proved most useful in supporting the apparatus of western civilization: empire/colonialism tyranny/domination rule by elites mystification and co-option environmental exploitation?

How have our cherished doctrines been (ab)used in the cause of violence?

Is there an alternative/ subversive understanding of the biblical narrative?

sdrawkcab gnidaer Rick Warren, Billy Graham, Charles Finney, John Wesley (or Calvin), Luther, Aquinas, Augustine, Paul, Jesus reading forwards Adam, Abraham, Moses, David, Isaiah, John the Baptist, Jesus

Exodus: Liberation & Formation

Exodus: Liberation & Formation Genesis: Creation and Reconciliation

Isaiah: Peaceable Kingdom - Justice and Mercy Exodus: Liberation & Formation Genesis: Creation and Reconciliation

Isaiah: Peaceable Kingdom - Justice and Mercy Exodus: Liberation & Formation Genesis: Creation and Reconciliation Not a totalizing metanarrative - an us-them story that legitimates domination and purification (scapegoating). But a multi-narrative that creates a story-space (not a storyline) in which a million good stories can emerge.

G e n e s i s c r e a t i o n Isaiah: Peaceable Kingdom - Justice and Mercy Exodus: Liberation & Formation

G e n e s i s c r e a t i o n DESTRUCTION (by competitive desire) Isaiah: Peaceable Kingdom - Justice and Mercy VIOLENCE (by mimetic rivalry) DOMINATION (by ritual and prohibition) Exodus: Liberation & Formation

G e n e s i s c r e a t i o n Salvation (by creative desire - your will be done) Isaiah: Peaceable Kingdom - Justice and Mercy Reconciliation (by positive mimesis - the way) Liberation (by service and self-giving) Exodus: Liberation & Formation

Salvation...

Salvation... from God?

Salvation... from God? Salvation... from our sins? (our cycles of violence - as victims or perpetrators)

Jesus died for our sins.

Jesus died for our sins. As a payment? As a substitute?

Jesus died for our sins. As a payment? As a substitute? I took an aspirin for my headache. I exercise for my heart.

The Gospels only speak of sacrifices in order to reject them and deny them any validity. Jesus counters the ritualism of the Pharisees with an anti-sacrificial quotation from Hosea: Go and learn what this means, I desire mercy, and not sacrifice (Matthew 9:13). There is nothing in the Gospels to suggest that the death of Jesus is a sacrifice, whatever definition (expiation, substitution, etc.) we may give for sacrifice. At no point in the Gospels is the death of Jesus dfined as a sacrifice... Certainly the Passion is presented to us in the Gospels as an act that brings salvation to humanity. But it is in no way presented as a sacrifice. (181)

Our great need: A better version of the biblical story... Good news of the commonwealth, new society, new economy, new family, sacred ecosystem of God

Ivan Illich (Austrian former priest, philosopher, social critic, 1926-2002)

Neither revolution nor reformation can ultimately change a society, rather you must tell a new powerful tale, one so persuasive that it sweeps away the old myths and becomes the preferred story

one so inclusive that it gathers all the bits of our past and our present into a coherent whole, one that even shines some light into the future so that we can take the next step. If you want to change a society, then you have to tell an alternative story. - attributed to Ivan Illich (Austrian former priest, philosopher, social critic, 1926-2002)

How can that story be... articulated in sermons and books celebrated in creeds and confessions rooted in songs and prayers embodied in mission and prophetic action explored in art and research shared with everyone everywhere? This is our task.

a new kind of christianity

What are the questions? 1. The narrative question: What is the shape of the biblical narrative? Storyline, plotline? 2. The authority question: What is the Bible, and what is it for? How does it have authority? 3. The God question: Is God violent? Why does God seem so violent and genocidal in so many bible passages?

4. The Jesus Question: Who is Jesus, and why does he matter? 5. The Gospel Question: What is the gospel - a message of evacuation or transformation? Exclusion or inclusion?

6. The church question: What do we do about the church? 7. The sex question: Can we deal with issues of sexuality without fighting and dividing? 8. The future question: Can we find a more hopeful vision of the future?

9. The pluralism question: How should we relate to people of other faiths? 10. The next step question: How can we pursue this quest in humility, love, and peace?

Caught between something real... and something wrong.

A space with four centers

Order-Preserving Center Order-Uncovering Center Soul-(Trans)forming Center Order-Subverting Center

Order-Preserving Center: Priests Order-Uncovering Center: Sages/Scholars Order-Subverting Center: Prophets Soul-(Trans)forming Center: Poets, Mystics, Monastics

Priestly Scholarly Prophetic Mystical/Monastic

Order-Uncovering Center Order-Preserving Center Sacrifice Scapegoating Rituals & Prohibitions Soul-(Trans)forming Center Order-Subverting Center

Priestly/Pastoral Scholarly/Sagely Prophetic Mystical/Contemplative/Monastic

Priestly/Pastoral Scholarly/Sagely Prophetic Mystical/Contemplative/Monastic

Priestly/Pastoral Scholarly/Sagely Prophetic Mystical/Contemplative/Monastic Not a ritual of sacrifice - but a meal of reconciliation

Priestly/Pastoral Scholarly/Sagely Prophetic Mystical/Contemplative/Monastic Not rivals - but companions

Priestly/Pastoral Scholarly/Sagely Prophetic Mystical/Contemplative/Monastic Not hostility/exclusion - but hospitality/welcome

Priestly/Pastoral Scholarly/Sagely Prophetic Mystical/Contemplative/Monastic Not substitutionary atonement - but self-giving for at-one-ment

Priestly/Pastoral Scholarly/Sagely Prophetic Mystical/Contemplative/Monastic

... the Gospels [must] rise again in our midst, not looking like a corpse that we have exhumed, but revealed as the newest, finest, liveliest and truest thing that we have ever set eyes upon. (235-236)

St. Paul When I was a child, I spoke and thought and reasoned like a child, But when I became an adult, I gave up childish ways. For now we see in a mirror dimly, But then face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall understand fully, Even as I have been fully understood.

So faith, hope, and love abide, these three; But the greatest of these is love. I will show you the most excellent way. Follow the way of love. Amen.

Text christianity transformed and transforming