Monthly Archive for August, 2006

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Church and Postmodern Culture

Here’s an excerpt from John Caputo’s The Weakness of God, p. 44 (which has been a good read):

On the classical account of strong theology, Jesus was just holding back his divine power in order to let his human nature suffer. He freely chose to check his power because the Father had a plan to redeem the world with his blood. But, if the Father had changed his mind, those Roman soldiers would rue the day they were born, as they will certainly rue it in eternity. On my accounting, that is to misconstrue this scene solely in terms of power, mundane power pitted against celestial power. On my accounting, Jesus was being crucified, not holding backl he was nailed there and being executes very much against his will and the will of God. And he never heard of Christianity’s novel idea that he was redeeming the world with his blood. His approach to evil was forgiveness, not paying off a debt due the Father, or the devil, with suffering or with anything else. His suffering was not a coin of the realm in the economy of the kingdom. The kingdom is not an economy and God is not in attendance at this scene as an accountant of divine debts or as a higher power watching the whole thing from up there and freely holding in check his infinite power to intervene. That is more rouged thology, weakness fantasizing about an orgasm of power–if not power now, then power later, when we can really get even with those hateful Romans. That is not the weakness of God that I am here defending. God, the event harbored by the name of God, is present at the crucifixion, as the power of the powerlessness of Jesus, in and as the protest against the injustice that rises up from the cross, in and as the words of forgiveness, not a deferred power that will be visited upon one’s enemies at a later time. God is in attendance as the weak force of the call that cries out from Calvary and calls across the epochs, that cries out from every corpse created by every cruel and unjust power. The logos of the cross is a call to renounce violence, not to conceal and defer it and then, in a stunning act that takes the enemy by surprise, to lay them low with real power, which shows the enemy who really has the power. That is just what Nietzsche was criticizing under the name of ressentiment.

Also, i put up a new link on the side yesterday. It is to the Church and Postmodernism Culture conversation blog. i was invited by the organizer (Geoff Holsclaw) a few weeks ago. The way i believe it will work is that the conversation will begin with a look at James K.A. Smith’s latest book, Who’s Afraid of Postmodernism? It is a good book for an introduction to postmodern philosophy, much like Stanley Grenz’s A Primer on Postmodernism. From what i understand, the people starting the discussion will be coming from various viewpoints both within and without postmodern thought, including some Radical Orthodoxy guys (James K.A. Smith and Geoff). It looks like i’m kinda representing the Nietzschean perspective, so that’ll be some fun. We hope to investigate postmodernism as it relates to theology, as well as other related areas. It looks like fun.
churchandpomo.org

Update: It looks like Jason Clark (link) is also in on it.

No voting booth here

Greg Boyd (of Open Theism fame) calls for a separation of politics from the church (link).  Of the many responses, two are worth mentioning.  Chuck Colson thinks Boyd should “go back and refresh himself” on history as well as paints Boyd as a basher of conservative evangelicals (i.e. “he’s a liberal!”).  A better response, i think, is Jamie Smith‘s who seems to grasp what Boyd is pointing at.  The comments to Smith’s post are also worth reading through.
HT: Cooper

Transfer

i’m a geek. i now prefer to transfer files to my server using scp from the shell prompt instead of a graphical ftp program.

konsole

Actions and Attitudes

It is my belief that Christians today place an emphasis on actions. Something is wrong because the action itself is wrong. Killing is wrong because it is removing another’s life. i don’t think this is a Biblically acceptable notion. In fact, it is outright wrong. Christians focus on the Law and use that as their guide to determine how good or bad a person is. While i have some thoughts on this practice as well, i will not go into it now. i want to focus on actions.
Here is my premise: actions aren’t what make something “wrong.” It is the attitudes that cause those actions. In Mark 7:20-23, Jesus says, “What comes out of a person defiles him.
For from within, out of the human heart, come evil ideas, sexual immorality, theft, murder, adultery, greed, evil, deceit, debauchery, envy, slander, pride, and folly. All these evils come from within and defile a person.” Here, a typical Christian will interpret these as meaning that the actions come from the heart, and that is correct. But, they will also conclude that these actions in and of themselves are the wrong things. Yet this conclusion has a problem.
It conflicts with the parable of the “rich young man” in that we have an example of a person who has done everything commanded. Even if he did go and give all his money to the poor, he would have failed because it was not the action of giving that would have allowed him to enter the Kingdom. In the movie The Break-up, the female character tells her boyfriend that she wants him to want to do the dishes. That is, she wanted him to love her enough to do the dishes. She probably didn’t care whether or not he actually did the dishes, she cared that he wanted to do them as a way of showing his love for her. Jesus doesn’t want us to fulfill the Great Commission because he told us to; he wants us to want to do fulfill the Great Commission. This is why we see the widow’s offering (Mark 12) as being “worth” more than all of the rich people’s offerings: it was her attitude, not her action that was important.
This can be taken from what Jesus says in Matthew 5:28: “I say to you that everyone who looks at a woman with lust for her has already committed adultery with her in his heart.” Notice, it is not the act of adultery that is wrong, but the desire to commit adultery. Throughout this chapter of Matthew (which begins with the “beattitudes” incidentally), Jesus is trying to teach the people that it is not the actions outlawed in the Mosaic Law that is wrong, but the attitudes behind them. Today, many Christians believe drinking is wrong. As a result, being in a bar is considered wrong. Yet, we see Jesus hanging out in bars. It isn’t going to a bar that is wrong, but rather the desire to do wrong that is wrong. Additionally, it isn’t giving to a church that is right, but the desire to help that church grow that is right. There are many people who sit in church pews every Sunday morning who think that their giving $2500 will put them “on the good list” with God. Sorry, that is wrong. In fact, that may do absolutely nothing at all, because “God sees not as man sees, for man looks at the
outward appearance, but the LORD looks at the heart” (1 Samuel 16:7).
What is all of this coming to? Well, i will suggest that a certain group of people believe it is their duty to expose the evils creeping into the Church. Too often, these people attack others based on their actions without understanding anything. They seek to rip apart anything entering the Church that does not meet their own requirements of “orthodoxy.” This is my statement to them: when you begin to criticize your fellow critics, you have lost sight of the Kingdom. Please return.