Wednesday, January 31, 2007

A bit of Dutch clarity

ImageHerman Bavinck, the Dutchman whose works are just being translated into English, gives a strong account of the clarity of scripture as a Protestant sine qua non:

'The teaching of the perspicuity of Scripture is one of the strongest bulwarks of the Reformation'.

It was true in the 16th century; it is true now. As Bavinck reads the history of theology, the clarity of scripture was upheld from the earliest times and even as late as Gregory 1 and beyond. In fact, it is not until the 12th century that the obscurity of scripture becomes a teaching of Rome. Of course, the corollory of scripture's obscurity is an infallible magisterium, who alone can interpret. Which, in effect, means that authority as both norm and judge belongs to the hierarchy of the church alone.

It is funny how contemporary this problem is. Intepretation is a necessary activity of course; but interpretational activity can be carried out with ceding all the authority to the interpreter. However, as in Rome, so in modern liberal Prostantism (which is like Rome without all the good bits): it is just that the interpreter in whom authority is thought to reside is an individual not a church hierarchy...

Individual readers and churches do have responsibility to judge what they read, says Bavinck; but neither the conscience nor the magisterium are infallible. They are not the highest court... They may err. Indeed, do!

Four lessons from Anthony Giddens for preachers

ImageGiddens has a good deal to say about the late-modern soul, though he mightn't call it that. I reckon awareness of this analysis might really help magnify the existential impact of a few sermons...

He identifies four 'tribulations of the self':

1. Unification versus fragmentation By this he means that constructing our identity involes a myriad of contexts and experiences, though which a coherent course must be chartered.

2. Powerlessness versus appropriation We live in a culture surrounded by opportunities and options made available to us by modernity and its technologies. But this also has the effect of generating feelings of powerlessness, even amongst people who are wealthy and educated. It's the system...what can we do about it?

3. Authority versus uncertainty Giddens points out that late modern people experience a radical mistrust of all authorities such that none are final. As a self, therefore, we must steer a way between commitment (possibly without full trust) and uncertainty.

4. Personalised versus commodified experience You have to tell your own story or construct your own self-identity in the midst of circumstances in which the economy of consumption standardises everything. So, because of this one-size-fits-most experience we have in the marketplace, we must find other ways to individualise ourselves...

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Lindbeck's The Nature of Doctrine

I have been slowly making my way through George Lindbeck's landmark book The Nature of Doctrine. In short, he argues that Christian doctrines are in fact regulative rather than propositional: that is, they are not chiefly first-order propositions with ontological reference but rather second-order rules of speech. They are agreements to speak in a certain way. They are paradigms for thinking and talking, mostly. He says of the creeds:

Rule theory...allows (though it does not require) giving these creeds the status that the major Christian traditions have attributed to them, but with the understanding that they are permanently authoritative paradigms, nor formulas to be slavishly repeated.

Fair enough.

It is striking that the beginning of his discussion is a concern to mediate between different types of Christian theologies. He begins in the ecumenical setting - so his whole purpose is to find a way of classifying statements made in that setting. It is, it seems to me, a Study of Religions kind of work. So I am puzzled about its influence on theological work, somewhat. He has relativised the doctrinal differences between Christian traditions...because different statements might fit authentically within different traditions and not others...

I blame you and I forgive you

'To forgive is to blame, not to punish'.

I don't know if Byron has already commented on this thought from Volf's book Free of Charge, but it struck me afresh this morning. Forgiveness is actually an act of judgement rather than a lack of judgement.

As Volf goes on, he sees judicial punishment as now shorn of its retributive force (this sounds like Girard) because Christ is the end of retribution. He heralds a new way of blaming: forgiveness, which may of course be coupled with discipline and so one, but not retribution.

As Volf goes on:

Standing as I do in the tradition of Martin Luther, I think Christ took all the punishment upon himself. None of it can be justly doled out to anyone anymore. Expiation on the part of an offender replaces forgiveness and removes the reason for it. It cannot supplement forgiveness. The heart of forgiveness is relinquinshing retribution... . p. 171

Monday, January 29, 2007

Six theses on Temptation and Providence

My task is here to draw together some of the themes of our discussion of temptation and providence, as they related to martyrdom as the pattern of the Christian life. We have proceeded by establishing that temptation – or more rightly, peirasmos, which includes temptation and also trial– is genuinely a part of the narrative logic of martyrdom. But what does this observation itself in turn reveal?

1. Peirasmos as temptation is a given of human existence: it is Adamic. It is a feature of the primal human story; and also part of the redeemer’s experience in identifying with hapless human beings. Human identity is not ever constructed aside from this inner battle with sarx and diaboloj. We do not know of a time when human subjects did not have to face these opponents.

2. Peirasmos is a test of the free human response and obedience to the divine call. As such, it tests our awareness of our own identity as his creatures – our recognition of our maker’s voice and our responsiveness to him. It describes not the moment of that call, but our memory of the call at the moment when it appears to be gainsaid in our experience: ‘did God really say…?’ The trial or temptation comes to us as a contradiction of the Word of God: it came as temptation in the garden, and in the post-lapsarian era has been intensified through the unyielding nature of the world itself.

3. The peirasmos threatens the individual with her own disintegration as a person. It leads to the captivity of the self to the world of sin, the flesh and the devil (to use New Testament language). The biblical history is a history of the human subject’s utter capriciousness; of the human individual’s unwilling inability to be truly herself, even to herself. That is to say, trial and temptation throw into question – a question not readily answered – what the ingredients of an authentic human life might be. For Gregersen, under the pressure of trial and temptation ‘both the objective arena of the world and the subjective arena of the self are seen as unreliable. Only God is reliable.’ We see something of this disintegrating human subjectivity under the power of sin famously expressed by Paul in Romans 7:7-24: ‘O wretched man that I am!...’

4. It was necessary for Jesus Christ to undergo peirasmos to demonstrate his total solidarity with humankind and to defeat the evil one. The trials and temptations of Jesus in the wilderness and in Gethsemane are shown so that it might be known that there was one who passed through the peirasmo,j known to us all and emerged victorious over Satan. These episodes reveal not only Satan’s impotence against the Son of god, but also the fittingness of Christ to become High Priest and sacrifice. The cross of Christ itself is the sign of his ultimate defeat. (This is a theme in Pauline theology: ‘He disarmed the rulers and authorities and made a public example of them, triumphing over them in it.’ Col 2:15 )


5. In answer to the peirasmos of human experience, Christ re-invites trust in the providence of a covenanting God – whose providential care of the world is revealed most completely in him. We learn much from the manner of his victory: he reaches down into the Word of God and rests on it; he submits his will to God as he prays, for the good of others. Further, he himself carries out the divine providential action in his death and resurrection, by these actions enabling the world ‘to become itself by action within, and over against, its fallen structures’.This is inclusive of human beings; who rightly respond when they cry out to the Lord for deliverance.I have in mind in particular Romans 8:19ff, where the redemption-action of Christ has its effect in terms of the adoption of human beings into the family of God and also the future liberation of the creation itself, which elicits much groaning under the present conditions of trial. The Lord’s prayer – the prayer taught by the Son of God to his disciples – gives voice to this felt disparity in human experience.

6. Christ’s disciples are thrust anew into an experience of peirasmos: the weakness of the flesh, the hostility of the world, and the attacks of the Evil One. As they seek to imitate Christ, peirasmos naturally features as part of that mimetic action; as it was part of the narrative logic of his life, so it is now of theirs. Satan renews his efforts against those whose determination is to defy him; though it is not by their strength in this battle that he is defeated. The victory belongs already to God himself. The peirasmos may result in bloody martyrdom: as such it is entirely unsurprising, because it is the outworking of battle already fought.

BB Warfield by Ben Myers

Ben has an intriguing set of propositions to offer about BB Warfield, a much-maligned figure in American evangelical theology.

Sunday, January 28, 2007

Standing in the tradition of the Reformation?

I have raised in an earlier post the tension I see and personally experience between on the one hand seeking to give an account of the Scriptural revelation and the adherence as a Protestant and confessional theologian to the doctrines of that period.

In Barth's exposition of the doctrine of election, he has to tangle with the fact that as a Reformed theologian he is going to offer a serious departure from Calvin's teaching, and from the teaching of those that followed him: yet, he wants to stand in the Reformed tradition. He makes as a result several quite salutary points about his theological method.

First, the doctrine is not adequately grounded if it merely traditional to Calvinism:
...we shall be doing Calvin the most fitting honour if we go the way that he went and start where he started. And according to his most earnest protestations, he did not start with himself, nor with his system, but with Holy Scripture as interpreted in his system. (II.ii.36)

Second, it is not the pastoral usefulness of the doctrine that is its foundation or its basis. That predestination is a comfortable doctrine of assurance may be true, but it is not sufficient to assert it.

Third, neither is the datum of experience a worthy candidate. In this Barth is particularly critical of Calvin (fairly?) for introducing his observations of people in his ministry as they accept and reject the gospel in his description of the doctrine.

Fourth, the doctrine of election must not begin with the abstract God of the omnipotent Will, with God as a concept of philosophy, in other words. As he puts it:

If we allow God's self-revelation and the testimony of Scripture to prescribe our concept, then the Subject of election, the electing God, is not at all the absolute World-ruler as such and in general. (II.ii.49)

So: an authentic reception of the Reformation is to listen afresh and anew to the Scriptures, come what may...

Friday, January 26, 2007

Girard and distinctives

Rene Girard, whose book Violence and the Sacred I have been reading with a group that meets over warm beer, claims that it is not differentiation between people but its end that causes violence and upheaval. Loss of distinctiveness is disastrous. At least, that is how the Greek tragedians saw things.

He says: 'Order, peace, and fecundity depend on cultural distinctions; it is not these distinctions but the loss of them that gives birth to fierce rivalries and sets members of the same family or social group at one another's throats.' p. 52

This is emphasised by the presence in mythology and in classical literature (and biblical literature) of the phenomenon of warring brothers, and especially twins. Think Cain and Abel, Jacob and Esau: they are two similar to ever live in peace with one another.

Modern society's aspiration to equality among its citizens prevents us from perhaps getting how dangerous an idea it can be! As Shakespeare puts it in Troilus and Cressida:

How could communities,
Degrees in schools, and brotherhoods in cities,
Peaceful commerce from dividable shores,
The primogenitive and due of birth,
Prerogative of age, crowns, sceptres, laurels
But by degree, stand in authentic place?
Take but degree away, untune that string,

And, hark, what discord follows!

Do we see this rationale also in Paul's description of the organic order of the Christian community in 1 Corinthians? Differences for him in that epistle are not the cause of disorder but in fact the fount of a unique kind of peace and order; an order that is both 'natural', and also 'spiritual'...

Hmm. (scratches non-existent beard.)

Thursday, January 25, 2007

The clarity of scripture

It has long been the passion of my colleague Dr Mark D Thompson to defend the doctrine of the clarity of scripture.

I shoulda known it all along, but he is absolutely right, and timely.

In the name of 'hermeneutics' all sorts of crimes are being committed, frankly; and the trend even amongst Protestants is to exalt the clarity and authority of the church and its traditions over the scriptures (which are held to be dark, mysterious and indeterminate). Disagreement is taken as evidence that there is no clarity to be had.

For his part, John Webster says 'very simply, the church alone is not competent to confer authority on Holy Scripture, any more than it is competent to be a speaking churc before it is a hearing church, or competent to give itself the mandate to be apostolic.'

Webster then brilliantly restates the clarity of scripture, reminding us that 'reading scripture is inescapably bound to regeneration'. If there is dispute, or lack of clarity, it lies in the unwillingness we have to submit to the scriptures. This is not a philosophical matter, so much as an ethical and spiritual one.

It is worth noting that the clarity of scripture is not a Reformation innovation. Irenaeus addressed the Gnostics with their fanciful interpretational practices by asserting the plain meaning of the text of scripture. This doctrine has a very long tradition indeed.

BTW, Webster offers a convincing critique of JAK Smith's defence of hermeneutics, too!

Hart again

I added this paragraph to my 'power of scripture' essay (parts of which I have already posted here and here and here and here. Oh, and here ...)


"My argument in certain respects resembles that of David Bentley Hart in his monumental The Beauty of the Infinite. Hart mounts a defence of the ‘beauty to whose persuasive power the Christian rhetoric of evangelism appeals’ (p.1) against the same charge from contemporary philosophy that concerns us here: that this Christian rhetoric of peace is in fact inescapably violent. As Hart writes: ‘Christ is a persuasion, a form of evoking desire, and the whole force of the gospel depends upon the assumption that this persuasion is also peace: that the desire awakened by the shape of Christ and his church is one truly reborn as agape, rather than merely the way in which a lesser force succumbs to a great, as an episode in the endless epic of power’ (p. 3). This is our question too: though where Hart more generally speaks of the Christian evangel and the life of the church (which looms large for him as an Eastern Orthodox theologian) our focus is the Scriptures as the source and guarantor of Christian rhetoric. If the scriptures are merely an iron fist, even if placed in a velvet glove, then the Nietzchean/postmodern charge is sustained..."

[note please: self-quotation is definitely allowed within the rules!]

You and Gender

Over at my YOU project I have been sketching my way towards a chapter on gender. Love to have your input.

the great disintegration
help
fit
a gentle ribbing
shameless
of frogs and snails
'this is my lover...'

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

Calvin on leaving a church

No doubt in Calvin's time they didn't have the phenomena of church-hopping. However, lest we think he has a merely functional view of the visible church, he says:

...However it may be, where the preaching of the gospel is reverently heard and the sacraments are not neglected there for the time being no deceitful or ambiguous form of the church is seen; and no one is permitted to spurn its authority, flout its warnings, resist its counsels, or make light of its chastisements - much less to desert it and break its unity. For the Lord esteems the communion of his church so highly that he counts as a traitor and apostate from Christianity anyone who arrogantly leaves any Christian society, provided it cherishes the true ministry of Word and sacraments. He so esteems the authority of the church that when it is violated he believes his own diminished. (Institutes IV.1.10)

Arrogantly is the key adverb (ok I admit it, I wrote adjective the first time!), isn't it?

Is Calvin guilty of individualism?

I have begun attending a Systematic Theology Reading Group at the university chaired by Dr Philip Endean SJ on Calvin's Ecclesiology. Fascinating to dialogue with a Rahner scholar about Calvin! The accusation against Calvin was aired last week that he was an individualist: on the basis that his ecclesiology is the end of his system rather than the beginning of it, and that he calls the church the 'external means or aims by which God invites us into the society of Christ and holds us therein'.

I think this accusation misses a crucial distinction in Calvin's thought between the visible and the invisible Church. The visible church granted he treats as a means to an end, and it does not loom large in his system. The emphasis on inward faith rather than outward formal church attendance or membership or ritual does lead to an emphasis on the individual believer. However, the people of God united with Christ most certainly do feature in Calvin. Calvin's believer is by faith called into membership of the invisible and eschatological family of God in Christ Jesus. The true church itself belongs to the realm of faith: 'just as we must believe therefore that the former church is invisible to us [ie, the heavenly church] is visible to the eyes of God alone, so we are commanded to revere and keep communion with the latter [ie the visible earthly church], which is called 'church' in respect to men'...

The visible church, though, has still a role: Calvin is not docetic about this. The visible church is aptly entitled 'mother'. He says: '...there is no othr way to enter into life unless this mother conceive us in her womb, give us birth, nourish us at her breats, and lastly unless she keep us under her care and guidance until, putting off mortal flesh, we become like the angels...Our weakness does not allow us to be dismissed from he school until we have been pupils all our lives.'

The squares of course with the utter seriousness with which Calvin took the business - the discipline and ceremonies and government and teaching - of the earthly church.

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

The words of Jesus - in red

As Prophet, Priest and King, Jesus Christ exercised the authority of God on earth.It is of course from this enfleshed Word that we learn not about what God is capable of doing but what he wills to do and does do.

First, the life of Jesus was marked of course by dynamic activity – a virgin birth, and many miracles and healings. Yet, though his ministry had the character of a challenge he refrained from taking up arms against the rulers of the world. His consummate ‘act’ was becoming subject to the power of those who killed him.

Secondly, he spoke, powerful, life-giving words – ‘Talitha koumi’; ‘Lazurus, come out!’; ‘Peace! Be still!’ – and yet also spent his days in patiently teaching his disciples from the Scriptures about the cross-shaped pattern of their discipleship.

Thirdly, he also demonstrated in his life and death the utter covenant faithfulness of God; he was the proof that God had remembered his people, and that their consolation was near – as the aged Simeon and Anna recognized when they met the child Jesus at the Temple. In this cruciform way Christ was indeed ‘the power of God and the wisdom of God’ (1 Cor 1:24).

Monday, January 22, 2007

David Bentley Hart and Postmodernity

Sorry, Byron: I couldn't wait, and I have to confess to having dipped into The Beauty of the Infinite. It is one of those books with strong opinions - which have their own allure. His shredding of Tillich - whose theology is, in my opinion, best seen as a curious mid-century cul-de-sac - had me cheering in the stands.

Hart, like many theologians I like, is not unsympathetic to postmodernity; or rather, he sees postmodernity as moment of some opportunity for theology - 'an auroral astonishment following upon a nocturnal oblivion' (p. 5) at the moment when we discover that Enlightenment reason's attempt at universalising has failed. Having said that, he has a real go at the postmoderns too, bless him, for not being postmodern enough.

Here he finds a point of convergence:

'...if indeed God became a man, then Truth condescended to become a truth, from whose historical contigency one cannot simply pass to categories of universal rationality; and this means that whatever Christians mean when they speak of truth, it cannot involve simply the dialectical wresting of abstract principles from intractable facts..' (p.5)

Some aphorisms about blogging

I have been blogging for a while now, and I feel quite the seasoned blogger. What have I learnt? Here are, I believe, some of the deep truths of blogging:

1. Typing out a quote without commenting doesn't count as blogging: it is just typing. [You know who you are...;-) ]

2. Writing an inflammatory blog in order to get a bit of discussion going can backfire, because people will think you are a grumpy person in general.

3. The state of one's blog is likely to be similar to the state of one's desk. Well, mine is...

4. The ideal blog entry is 200-350 words. Ask me to scroll down? You gotta be kidding.

5. In the blogosphere, the one principle that is a constant is vanity.

6. Lists work really well on blogs. So do series. I can't really do either.

7. It is possible to be really really obsessed about blogging.

8. The kids don't blog: blogging is a middle-aged (ie, over 21) thing. The kids do facebook and myspace, where they can post lots of pictures of themselves at drunken parties and type swears.

9. Sometimes it is sooo much easier to blog than it is to write a thesis; so much easier that I can end writer's block by tricking myself into blogging what I want to write. Copy-paste-done!

Saturday, January 20, 2007

Martyr Stephen and the beauty of baby Moses

Why did matter that Moses was such a beautiful baby? In Acts 7:20 we read:

"At this time Moses was born; and he was beautiful in God's sight." (the wooden-ultra-conservative ESV)

or

"At that time Moses was born, and he was no ordinary child." (the taking-liberties-fluffy NIV)

or

"At this time Moses was born, and he was beautiful before God." (done-by-pack-of-liberal feminists NRSV)

The Greek word can mean 'handsome' or 'well-bred'. He is probably picking up Ex 2:2 which mentions that Moses was a 'fine child'.

But: an odd thing to pass on?

Friday, January 19, 2007

The Lord's Prayer

The disciple of Jesus has to refrain from worry, and pursue as a priority the kingdom of God. In other words, as Bonhoeffer puts it:

The Christian lives from the times of God, and not from his own idea of life.

This was the lesson of Abraham too. And it is the same attitude that Jesus himself taught his disciples, in the Lord’s Prayer. The prayer itself is an articulation of a subjectivity experienced in media res but also in the hope of eschatological deliverance. It is distinguished from the verbose Gentile prayers who try to demand divine notice by sheer volume of words (6:7). This prayer is a very different kind of speech-act. First, it addresses the one in heaven (6:9); which is to say, it addresses the ruler of all things as he sits on his throne. This is a prayer from one who has a limited view of things to a being who has a superior vantage point indeed. It is a prayer to a known rather than to an unknown divinity, it should be noted: this prayer proceeds on the basis of the prior revelation of God’s identity, on the basis of promises he has already spoken. He is can be addressed by his name because he is known. Second, the primary request of the prayer is that the Father would hallow his own name, and carry out his will ‘as in heaven also on earth’ ( 6:10). Clearly the (earthly) perspective of the prayer is one which observes that the divine will is not yet fulfilled, and the divine name not yet hallowed. The experience of the pray-er is that of not being able to see that God’s rule is everywhere enforced; but yet, there is a drilling down into the character of God as he has revealed himself that can only be named ‘faith’.

Rowan Williams on the early martyrs

'The martyr stories often try...to make this holy power somehow visible or tangible: swords are blunted, animals are cowed, executioners bungle their work, there is an effusion of blood that quenches the fire (as in Polycarp's case); the divine presence does not rescue the martyr but makes itself felt. Legendary as this may be, it simply underlines what is thought to be happening. The relating of the stories of the martrs in this early literature, up to the mid third century, is an essential part of the Church's self-identification, part of the definition of the vocabulary of being an ekklesia of aliens, the citizens' assembly of the non-citizens, a people whose political legitimacy and loyalty lay outside the imperial system.' Why Study the Past? p. 36

I was just caught by his use of identity here, and in the collective sense. For the early church, this identification was as he says essential... On p.111 he comments that martyrdom was the way in which testimony was given to the fact that our lives are not our own to submit to some tyranny.

Thursday, January 18, 2007

Ricoeur recurrs

We had quite a deal of fun chewing over a Paul Ricoeur quote about history and fiction.

In his article he argues that the history and fiction intersect in the way they refer to the 'real' world.

Our ultimate interest when we do history is to enlarge our sphere of communication: that is, to encounter that which is different to us. But this requires an imaginative act, which is, to suspend your own conditions and desires and assumptions, in order to be communicated to.

'My contention...is that it is in this exchange between history and fiction and between their opposite referential claims that our historicity is brough to language.'

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Abraham's Test and the Providence of Yhwh

Genesis 22:1-19 tells the story to which Israel looked back for the revelation of Yhwh Yireh - ‘Yhwh the provider’. It was the story of Yhwh’s trial (nissah) of Abraham, too. At the outset, a word comes from God that makes Abraham’s experience of God to this point baffling (22:1). He cannot see the pattern of the divine plan. He cannot make sense of this command according to some rational scheme; or according to some morality to which he imagines that God is subject like everyone else; or, by dint of some hermeneutic strategy lately learned, hear something other than what he has heard. He does not even begin to doubt his own sanity. There is the semblance of cruelty in the request, even: God reminds him that he, Abraham, loves his son (22:2).

With what attitude does Abraham set out on his journey? In the other pieces we have of his story, we have presented to us a fearful doubter. In Egypt he presents his wife as his sister; in the disastrous begetting of Ishmael, he is seen (with Sarai) as attempting to foreshorten the gap between the divine promise and its realization in his life. In those tests he stumbled; here now, he silently presses on towards the mountain. He cannot see what is ahead, but rather only possesses the promises of the God who called him. As he says to Isaac, ‘God himself will provide the sacrifice’. That is the perspective that to which he clings.

At the climax of the story, the angel stays Abraham’s hand; and the ram – a superior sacrifice? – is found caught in the thicket. This provision of God of course is not merely a result of his action as a supreme being – if it were, then this whole episode would certainly be an exercise in divine sadism of the hapless human subject. However: this is not the God that Abraham encounters here; he proceeds on the basis of the God who has previously revealed himself to him, and meets at his journey’s end the Yhwh Yireh. Abraham receives the provision of a ram as a demonstration of God’s determination to be the Lord of the covenant with his people in its concrete history.

The Temptations of Allberry...

Sam Allberry, maker of Oxford's finest Thai curries, considers temptation in James here and here.

Jesus on providence

Jesus’s own teaching on providence in the Sermon on the Mount (Mt 6:25-34) is not a statement about the order of things as they are, but a bold declaration about coming of the kingdom of God.

He urges his hearers against anxiety about material provisions, but to be comforted. He asks them not worry about their ‘lives’. The birds are well-fed; the lilies are finely dressed. In both cases this happens without the labour of those who benefit. Yet: ‘[A]re you not much more valuable than they?’ (6:26) Jesus here highlights what has traditionally been called God’s ‘general’ providence in upholding even the smallest parts of the natural world. The fact of this provision for the natural world should prompt a reassurance of the ‘special’ providence of God for his people, and an end to running like the pagans after material securities.

And yet, the Sermon itself begins with recognition of the fraught conditions of lived experience for the people of God: mourning, persecution, being slandered and insulted, and so on (5:11-12). Whatever the providence of God means here it is not merely that his people will be well fed and beautifully clothed. There is no promise that consists in an earthly prosperity or security, which would be temporary in any case (Mt 6:19-21). The promise in which this faith in providence rests is a promise that the kingdom of God will bring vindication – that is the implication of the blesseds (Mt 5:1-12).

There is an inescapable future-sense in this view of providence. He recognizes that the experience of life as it is – and especially for the people of God – is not of itself reassuring without reference to the future fulfillment of the divine promises. The disciple of Jesus has to refrain from worry, and pursue as a priority the kingdom of God. In other words, as Bonhoeffer puts it:
The Christian lives from the times of God, and not from his own idea of life

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

The Beauty of the Infinite: and Christian rhetoric

I received my copy of David Bentley Hart's dazzling The Beauty of the Infinite yesterday... It begins by setting the question:

'Is the beauty to whose persuasive power the Christian rhetoric of evangelism inevitably appeals, and upon which it depends, theologically defensible?'

That is a great question, and it coincides with some of my interest in describing and defending the power of scripture . It's a good question especially given the eschewal of power rhetorics by Paul in 1 Corinthians 1-3.

Hart closes his book with a chapter entitled 'The Gift of Martyrs', and has this to say:

'...theology has no choice but to cling to its own peculiar practice of persuasion, in order to resist the temptations of power (and in a history governed by sin, these temptations inhabit every moment); Christianity can only return to its understanding of peace, its unique style of rhetoirc, as the sole source of accord; it must always obey the form of Christ, its persuasion must always assume the shape of the gift he is, it must practice its rhetoric under the only aspect it may wear if it is indeed Christian at all: martyrdom'. (p. 441)

This is salutary for evangelists and apologists, isn't it?

Calvin and God's anger

Calvin in the Institutes:-

...whenever we hear that God is angered, we ought not to imagine any emotion in him, but rather to consider that this expression has been taken from our own human experience; because God, whenever he is exercising judgment, exhibits the appearance of one kindled and angered. (I.xvii.13)

Huge hermeneutical implications here... I know what he is trying to protect, but does he make Scripture almost deceitful? Of course, when we speak of God we need to qualify the application of human language to him... but is this accomodation gone too far?

Monday, January 15, 2007

Foucault and pastoral power

A friend and I were having one of those late night discussions - this was about the use of power by pastors in a manipulative way to have control over people. We weren't talking about a context of any actual abuse or sexual seduction - though these things happen too. Rather, for some of us pastors, just the thrill of having the keys to someone's life is extremely hard to let go of. Noticeably, people without strong father figures are extremely vulnerable to this kind of relationship - they tend to hand over control of themselves to a strong male figure, and a pastor often fits the bill..


It struck me that, of all people, Michel Foucault had been most insightful at this point. Foucault invented the term “pastoral power” to describe what he saw as an extremely influential view of government which it inherited from Christianity. This very special form of power is a concern for the salvation of the individual, and seeks to care for the individual; it is not merely a form of power that commands, but is also prepared to sacrifice itself (as opposed to, say, royal power); and it demands that people reveal their innermost secrets and so is therefore is linked with the production of truth – the truth of the individual.[1] In its transferral to use outside ecclesiastical institutions, the concern for salvation has become this worldly and therefore taken up in terms of (to list some examples) health, well-being, security, wealth and sanity. The function of truth-production led to the proliferation of the human sciences, whether as a population or as an individual.

Why do we demand that people confess to us? Or, press them to tell us the details of their inner lives? Is it not because it is exhilarating to have that kind of power over someone? At least, that was my temptation in pastoral ministry...

Reflections anyone?


[1] Foucault, “The Subject and Power.” p.333-4

Saturday, January 13, 2007

O'Donovan on the gay issue: a daring hope?

Oliver O'Donovan has caused some huffiness amongst conservatives because of this paragraph:

The old-style liberalism that used to preside over the church’s dilemmas in a confident spirit of practical compromise began from the assumption that everyone was divided from everyone else by recalcitrant disagreements. The Lord, the liberals prophets announced, had sent a perpetual famine of his word. We should stop asking questions of one another and hoping for answers, and eat the dry bread of commonsense compromises. Those who remember Pentecost may reasonably doubt that this was ever the wisest counsel for the church. But at the very least we cannot know whether and how much of a famine of the word there is in any disagreement until we submit it to the disciplines of patient common enquiry. No disagreement refuses to be analysed, and its constituent elements sorted out according to size and shape. No disagreement does not lure us on with the hope, however distant, of a genuine resolution. Can we promise ourselves, then, that if the churches would only discuss homosexuality long and fully and widely enough, they would end up agreeing? Well, we are not entitled to rule out that possibility. But suppose it were not true; suppose that after careful exploration and a search for common ground, there was an agreement-resistant core at the centre of the issue – a problem about how modernity is viewed, for example, or about the ontological status of self-consciousness - it might still be possible to set the residual disagreement in what the ecumenists like to call “a new context”, and (who knows?) learn how to live with it. We have a parallel in the difference between indissolubilist and non-indissolubilist views of marriage, a traditional point of tension between Catholic and Protestant. That disagreement has not gone away; but if today it bulks less threateningly than it once did, that is because we are so much more clear about the extent of the agreed ground all around it – God’s intentions for marriage, the pastoral desiderata in dealing with broken marriage etc etc. It no longer evokes threatening resonances. It is a problem reduced to its true shape and size.

Is it possible to imagine this? I don't think that O'Donovan is himself making the gay issue a second-order issue as is claimed by the Anglican Mainstream commentator. O'Donovan is rather standing against the liberal belief in the famine of God's word, which means that true reconcilation is impossible...

Ricoeur

"Could we not say that by opening us to the different, history opens us to the possible, while fiction, by opening us to the unreal, brings us back to the essential?"

What could he mean?

Friday, January 12, 2007

Narrative Logic: sequence vs pattern

Temptation is part of the ‘narrative logic’ of martyrdom.

What do I mean by 'narrative logic'? ‘Narrative logic’ indicates the ‘patterns of order which are proper to story rather than to discursive reasoning’ Richard B. Hays, "The Faith of Jesus Christ: An Investigation of the Narrative Substructure of Galatians 3:1-4:11" (Thesis (Ph. D.), Scholars Press, Emory University, 1981., 1983), p. 223

Stories are composed of actions and events order to one another by reference to time. To view the story as a unity, each subsequent event must be intelligible in relation to what preceded it. It can be surprising; or the intelligibility may not be obvious immediately; but the events must show some kind of fitness. Ricoeur’s way of putting this is to say that narrative conclusions must be, rather than deducible, acceptable. The follow a ‘particular directedness’ that propels them forward to a conclusion – though of course we need to follow it to the conclusion because it is only from that point of view that we can ultimately judge the acceptability of the sequence. Paul Ricoeur, "The Narrative Function," Semeia no 13 1978 (1978): p. 182

That is not to say that there isn’t a ‘logic’ to the way stories proceed, of course. Rather, it is almost a truism to say that successful narratives do possess an explanatory power that resonates – profoundly so – with the human experience of events.

Ricoeur goes on to develop his analysis of the logic of narratives by claiming that all narratives combine two aspects, one of which is chronological and one of which is non-chronological. The first he calls the ‘episodic dimension’, by which he means to indicate the way in which narratives throw up the question of ‘and then’? – that is, ‘what happened next’? Simultaneously, however, telling a story is also about construing ‘significant wholes out of scattered events’, attempting to grasp the series of events as a unity – its ‘configurational dimension’, as Ricoeur labels it. Ricoeur, "The Narrative Function," p. 183-4 Ricoeur observes then that narratives combine both sequence and pattern – though, it must be said that these two elements exist somewhat in tension with one another:

‘this structure is so paradoxical that every narrative may be seen as a competition between its episodic and its configurational dimensions, between its sequence and its pattern.’

The Joy of Providence

'Belief in God's providence is the practical recognition that things are as we have said. [Barth has just been describing providence as God's caring co-existence with his creatures] It is the joy of the confidence and the willingness of the obedience grounded in this reality and its perception. In the belief in providence the creature understands the Creator as the One who has associated Himself with it in faithfulness and constancy as this sovereign and living Lord, to precede, accompany and follow it, preserving, co-operating and overruling, in all that it does and all that happens to it. And in the belief in providence the creature understands itself as what it is in relation to its Creator, namely, as upheld, determined and govened in its whole existence in the world by the fact that Creator precedes it every step of the way in living sovereignty, so that it has only to follow...' Church Dogmatics, III.3.14

But what of the uncertainty of our experience? Our feeling of God-forsakeness (check the Psalms sometime!). Ultimately, as Barth will argue, the Christian belief in providence is belief in Christ. That makes all the difference...

Sermon online

Listen to my sermon on Jesus and the devil here

Thursday, January 11, 2007

The Book of YOU

Over and my other blog, my 'book' has been bubbling away. It has been a very interesting journey - I feel torn a little between letting the segments sit for a while and accumulate comments, or keeping the posts coming (which keeps it fresh)... Happy for your feedback of course. I'd love to know what other topics might be worth posting on. I have just started posting on GENDER, and I am planning one on talking and one on friendship. I also wondered about time. And I should finish with an essay about Jesus's humanity.

Here is a list of the chapters entered here so far. Please feel free to go back and reopen some discussions: I don't consider them closed.

dreams
possessions
death
life
parents
evil
touch
body
where to?

The possibility of not submitting

As Eliot shows in his drama, the renunciation of temptation leading to martyrdom is the fruit of a particular response to divine providence. Temptation occurs within an apparently dualistic framework in which the tempters (and, what’s more, the Tempter) may be seen to have an unrestricted power to attack. The doctrine of providentia dei is a reminder of the overarching monotheistic structure of Christian belief: that nothing, not even the temptation, falls outside the sovereignty of God. But, to be distinctively Christian, belief in providence must be allowed to be articulated in Trinitarian terms. So, amidst the dualism of experience with all of its peirasmoi, the martyr rests on the singularity of the Father's providence, expressed in the supreme and effective example of the Son's renunciation of temptation and his strength under trial to the point of death, and in the comforting presence of the Spirit.

The providence of the God who was in Christ reconciling the world to himself is implemented in this act of reconciliation. The self-emptying of the Son was to the extent (and further) of subjecting himself to the trails and temptations of life in the world, under the auspices of the devil, in the likeness of sinful flesh. Thus, the testimony of the martyr is not merely to a remote understanding of the divine mastery of events from outside, but in fact to the loving providential action of God in Christ from within the sphere of the human. As Colin Gunton writes:

A Christological structuring of divine providential action understands it in the light of the one who became human, identifying with the world’s structures in order to reshape them to their eschatological destiny. Incarnationally conceived action – action understood through the focus provided by the true humanity and self-giving to death of Jesus – indicates contingency but not ‘pure’ chance as the heart of the matter.

The divine being whose sovereignty is unchallengeable lives for a while ‘a little lower than the angels’; he submits himself to the possibility of not submitting.

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

The Execution - a poem

The Execution

"It's always trickier
in execution"

said

Saddam -

past tense -

past limp:

just...

passed.

With thanks (or, blame?) to Tim Pfennigwerth...

Key Posts from the Past

Here is I hope a useful selection of past posts. I have chosen according to those that most sparked discussion, rather than those I think that most reflect my interests or emphases in this blog.


imitating christ
sacraments
enhypostasis/anhypostasis
the Bible, and Theology
Stanley Hauerwas
Bernd Wannenwetsch on sex and the trinity
mission and theology
rethinking the term 'propositional'
doctrine - a rationale
the great evangelical bible swindle
kataangelism
if christian schools were really christian...?
von balthasar and impassability
at the crossroads
the famous smacking discussion!
was bonhoeffer a martyr?
gurus and growing up
violence: what is it?
straining at gnats
david hicks: does this bother you?
power of scripture

Oliver O'Donovan on 'Good News for Gay Christians'

Here is Oliver O'Donovan's last in his series on contemporary issues.

It asks a great question: in what sense is the gospel good news for gay christians?

Tuesday, January 09, 2007

An anthropology of temptation?

A couple of posts ago I buried in a piece of verbosity a suggestion that I thought might interest some people: namely, that temptation is part of being human in a very fundamental way. Jesus needed to undergo temptation in order to identify with us, to be like us in every regard. Which sends back to thinking about the garden...

There is but one restriction: the notorious tree. The restriction stands as a reminder to the creature of his creatureliness – for man of all creatures was most likely to forget this about himself and to believe in his own independence from God and his Word. And yet, as Bonhoeffer writes ‘innocence means clinging to the Word of God with pure undivided hearts’.[1] That is why the Tempter, when he comes, comes armed with the Word of God; and concealing his true nature.[2] The beauty of the lie he told the woman and the man was that it was not completely a lie. In fact, it was close to the truth. ‘Did God really say’ he whispered, ‘You shall not eat from any tree in the garden’? (Gen 3:1)

There had been a command, true, and it had been about trees and eating. But the woman is able to put aside this first suggestion: God in fact had said ‘You shall not eat of the fruit of the tree that is in the middle of the garden, nor shall you touch it, or you shall die’ (Gen 2:16-17); only one tree was off limits. Far greater was their freedom than their restriction. But the serpent said to the woman, ‘You will not die; for God knows that when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil’ (Gen 3:4-5). God really doesn't have your best interests at heart, but is only protecting himself; God doesn't want you to have a power that you deserve but that only he has; God has lied about what will happen if you disobey him; without God you can be your own moral arbiter: these were profoundly attractive – indeed, tempting – lies. They are an attack on the Word of God itself: on the very God-ness of God. Adam’s ingratitude at the extraordinary liberty in the task offered to him and his failure to imagine his task as sufficient for his needs are part of his deafness to the voice of God, his lack of response to his call.

The temptation has three aspects: first, one that relates to the flesh and its lusts – the allure of the fruit is matched by the hunger of the man and woman. Then, secondly, there is their sheer disbelief – their lack of faith in the Word of God about himself and about them. There is also, thirdly, a challenge to the power and authority of God involved: that his rule is not as absolute as it appears: the scent of revolution is in the air. Adam is tempted in his flesh, his faith and his allegiance to God.[3]

[1] Bonhoeffer, Temptation, p. 15
[2] ‘The voice of the tempter does not come out of an abyss only recognized as ‘Hell’. It completely conceals its origin. It is suddenly near me and speaks to me…Indeed there is no sign of the origin of the tempter in fire and brimstone. The denial of the origin belongs to the essence of the seducer.’ Ibid.
[3] Bonhoeffer applies this triad to Jesus, but doesn’t read it back into Adam’s (and Israel’s) temptation as I have here. Ibid., p. 18-21

Friday, January 05, 2007

God is beauty

"God is beauty; to be God is to be enjoyable... God's beauty is the actual living exchange between Father, Son and Spirit as this exchange is perfect simply as exchange, as it sings." Robert Jenson, Systematic Theology I.235

Jonathan Edwards privileged beauty in his doctrine of God: God is truth and goodness because he is beauty, 'beauty of the sort music has'. This is his glory.

In a discussion of feminine beauty elsewhere, people were quick to raise the passage in 1 Peter about the prominence of character as the truly beautiful adornment of a woman's life (as opposed to bling bling...). Edwards would agree, pointing out that beauty and virtue are in close connection. But it is still an aesthetic quality, regardless. To talk of God's beauty is to talk of how God is sensed, for example.

Wednesday, January 03, 2007

The temptation of man

The author of Hebrews describes in a very elaborate way the process by which Jesus became qualified to the sacrifice of purification. The mere process of incarnation was not sufficient to demonstrate or achieve his perfection: he had to undergo the trials and sufferings of human life and overcome them with obedient submission to the Father.

The word 'peirasmos' can mean either 'trial' or 'temptation'. A trial is an external and public thing; a temptation is more internal and personal. The word retains its ambiguity in the Hebrews letter somewhat, such that it is hard to see which part of the narrative of Jesus' life the author is referring to. See, for example, Hebrews 2:17-18

17 Therefore he had to be made like his brothers in every respect, so that he might become a merciful and faithful high priest in the service of God, to make propitiation for the sins of the people. 18 For because he himself has suffered when tempted, he is able to help those who are being tempted.

Linking suffering to temptation/testing here is probably evidence that he is talking about the 'test' of Gethsemane and the Passion, the suffering that comes from an external source or threat. But, interestingly, it is this suffering test that Jesus needed to endure to complete the incarnation, to complete his identification with his brethren - 'in every respect' - in order that he could function properly as the high priest. The effectiveness of his priestliness is dependent on his complete identification with the people he represents in making the sacrifice - the peirasmos is, while not the whole of this identification, the significant last part of it.

From here the author moves on to a typological discussion of the wilderness period and the temptation at Massah, using the unforgettable Psalm 95 as his verbal map. The recipients of his letter are warned not to give in to the temptation of unbelief (3:19) and deafness to God's voice. Of course, the one being tested at Massah was Yhwh himself: the people's testing of him was evidence of their hard-heartedness and resulted in their inability to enter the Rest of God.

The recipients of Hebrews however have a significant advantage in their resistance against hardness of heart: they have not merely Moses, but a high priest who is the Son of God but who is also one who has 'in every respect' been tempted as we are - so he is able to sympathize (literally, 'suffer along with') with us. So Hebrews 4:14-15:

14 Since then we have a great high priest who has passed through the heavens, Jesus, the Son of God, let us hold fast our confession. 15 For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but one who in every respect has been tempted as we are, yet without sin.

Peirasmos, it seems, is so closely bound up with human experience, is so universally a feature of what we undergo in this life, that we are not truly represented by a saviour who has not undergone them. Who is Adam after all if he is not the one who was tempted, even before he fell?

What exactly is the reason that temptation/testing is such a feature of the human story? It has to do with the nature and reality of human creature-freedom: the presence of the peirasmos, which offers or prompts an alternative to the obedient response that the Word of God demands, shows that the obedient response is a free submission of the creature. It is therefore a real, genuine and not fraudulent submission to that Word in real personal relationship with it.

The Legitimate Power of Scripture, in promise

The Scriptures are promissory and prophetic in nature, as diverse critics have noted. They have at their core the great promises of God to Abraham, to Israel at Sinai and, later, to David: and signal God’s declaration of his commitment to his people. In Jesus of Nazareth all God’s promises coalesce; and yet in him there is a magnification, an intensification, as well as a fulfillment, of the ancient promises. The promise of his return and the recapitulation of all things in him is the abiding hope of the New Testament. The Holy Spirit, whose work as inspirer, illuminator and counsellor so closely intertwines with the words of Scripture, is given to believers as an arrabon or guarantee of the return of the Lord Jesus (2 Cor 1:22).

The legitimate power of Scripture is rooted in the God who says and it is, as we have seen. But it is a power now played out gradually, over the sweep of human history, within and across human culture and language. The word of the creator God HAS the power of absolute force, but the Bible’s power is not like this. It is a power appropriate to human nature, too.

With that in mind, we may observe that scripture is primarily and not incidentally a narrative. The various parts of the Bible cohere around the story that is its central theme. This narrative shape is not merely the casing for a set of propositions or timeless truths. It is quite deliberately immanent, as humans are. The Scriptures chart a revelation that has taken time to come to its fullness. For men and women to see the righteousness and trustworthiness of God necessitates the passage of time: for it is only over time that promises are to be declared, believed, tested and fulfilled.

We might here adopt Calvin’s language of accommodation to describe what we here find in the nature of the Scriptures. In speaking to us in Scripture, “God is wont in a measure to “lisp” in speaking to us” as a nurse does with a baby:

Thus such forms of speaking do not so much express clearly what God is like as accommodate the knowledge of him to our slight capacity. To do this he must descend far beneath his loftiness.[1]

The drawing out of God’s speaking over time as portrayed in the Scriptures is a feature of his stooping to us – what we may call his gentleness. This gentle accommodation is not an act or a façade: rather, it is entirely true to the character of the God the Bible describes, a characteristic seen in its full flourishing in the obedience and humility of the Son.[2]

[1] John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, trans. Ford Lewis Battles, ed. John T. McNeill, 2 vols. (Atlanta: John Knox Press, 1975) I.XIII.1. Where Calvin’s analogy is problematic is that it could suggest that in revelation God comes to us as other than what he is.
[2] The Occamist distinction between potentia absoluta dei and potentia ordinata dei is suggestive here as well. God’s omnipotence and his absolute freedom are conditioned by his self-limitation, in the making of promises and even in the choice to use human texts in which to reveal himself.

Monday, January 01, 2007

The authority of scripture (or, of God IN scripture)

The Lord to whom the Bible testifies is described as wielding words of mighty power; but he is also of such righteous character that his power is not compromised or tainted. The authority of the God of the Bible rests on three supports: his capacity to act, his knowledge, and his utter trustworthiness.

First, Scripture testifies from its opening sentences to a Lord who says and it is. His word corresponds exactly to reality: in fact, it is what reality is: “And it was so”. The absolute sovereignty of this deity is not met by any challenge. He is not tapping into some primal force or casting a spell, but exercising his free creative power and his absolute mastery of things. These words were the kind of speaking that wizards attempt to emulate: except that here, of course, the being that is speaking is of an entirely different order. And his act of creative will establishes his worthiness to receive the adulation of all creatures (Rev 4:11).

Second, God speaks true words because of his knowledge of all things. He has the “view from nowhere”, although it is better rebadged as the “view from heaven”; and so may properly speak powerful words. It is not that he is objective; rather he is authoritatively subjective. This difference in knowledge is what Yhwh wields against Job in Job 38-41: it is Job’s ignorance, rather than his strength, that contrasts with Yhwh’s knowledge of the origin of things. It is a war of words, not an arm-wrestle.

Third, the character of the God of Scripture is not dissembling or unreliable but utterly trustworthy. Words that he speaks do not distort or pervert reality. In speaking, this God speaks truly of the world but also speaks truly of himself. He does not construct an identity for himself like a participant in an Internet chat room. (This is always the problem with Calvin's doctrine of accomodation...)

So: if the God who is mighty, knowledgeable and reliable speaks, ought we not expect powerfully authoritative words? Does he not have a moral right as well as the capacity to utter words of power? Once again, Job 38-41 is instructive: after all, what right do human beings have to dispute with God? And yet, from the whirlwind the Lord deigns to converse playfully and beautifully with Job in such a way that it restores him to his original dignity.

(for my Barthian readers - yes, you can cast all this in a christological mode of course!)