Mystical Union: The Only Alternative to Legalism

23 January 2011

In conversation with a couple of friends this week on these things, I happened more or less by accident on a truth that surprised me, and sharpens the mysticism issue for me a great deal.

Here’s how it happened: in discussing the ongoing person/proposition controversy, we were considering how poorly the Saving Proposition/Content Of Saving Faith positions fare when faced with the burden of addressing a person’s present experience of death.  However well they might do at addressing truths regarding the second death (not well, actually, but that’s another discussion), these positions utterly fail to bring God’s saving power to bear on death right now. Jesus came to save His people from their sins — not just from the Lake of Fire, but from drunkenness, adultery, theft, lying, murder, addiction, and so on.

An eternally secure heroin addict who will certainly go to heaven when he dies has not yet been saved from his sin.  No proposition suggested in the Content of Saving Faith debate will help him.  He needs more than propositions; he needs rescue.

If you insist on sticking to the truth-is-a-proposition approach, then you find yourself stuck in a two-tiered view of the Christian life, in which one needs this proposition to guarantee passage to heaven, and then those propositions to experience life here and now.  In principle, this is the Galatian heresy all over again, and as long as you confine yourself to thinking of truth in terms of propositions, it’s absolutely unavoidable.

Which is why you ought to consider the living Christ instead of just propositions about Him, however true.  A propositional view of receiving eternal life not only fails to meet the real human need for life now, it can’t help lapsing into legalism.  You can refer to a person in a proposition, but you can’t contain a person in a proposition, or transmit a relationship with a person via a proposition.  All you can contain and transmit in a proposition is an idea.  Living by ideas — even the most noble of ideas — is living by Law.  We already know how well that works, and anyhow if Sinai had been all we needed, whence Jesus?

The solution?  Actual relationship with the living Christ, which is to say, mystical union.  Either you live in real relationship with God or you’re just another legalist, living by ideas in your head.


Gordon Clark Refuted in Three Sentences

22 January 2011

Faith is trust/reliance/persuasion/belief — frame it how you will — in something which one holds to be truth.  All faith is propositional only if all truth is propositional.  But John 14:6 has already shown us that this is not true.


Mystical Union

16 January 2011

I’ve had several recent conversations that converged on the same basic truth.  It’s at once the very core of the Christian faith, and a drastically under-acknowledged and under-emphasized point in conservative circles.  I don’t even know how to talk about it without setting off alarm bells among my colleagues.

But this is the truth that underlies the person/proposition discussion, and it’s something we need to discuss directly.

Here it is: the core of the Christian life, the very center of it all, is mystical union with Christ.

Paul talks of this in Romans 6: we are buried with Christ in baptism that we might be raised with Him to walk in a new life.  He talks of it in Galatians 2: “It is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me.”  It’s how unbelievers become converted, according to Romans 10: “How shall they believe in Him whom they have not heard?”  (Note, the Greek does not say “of whom” — Paul is asking how they can believe in Jesus if they haven’t heard Jesus.  Then he goes on to ask “How will they hear [Jesus] without a preacher?”  In the faithful preaching of the gospel, the unbeliever hears Christ.)

It’s not just Paul, either.  Jesus talks of it in John 17: “I do not pray for these [the 11 disciples] alone, but for all who will believe in Me through their word, that they may all be one, as You, Father, are in Me and I in You….And the glory that You have given Me I have given them, that they may be one just as We are one: I in them and You in Me….”

I could go on with the proof texts, but you get the idea.

I figure I might as well out myself now: It’s taken me a long time to get to this point in my Christian life, but I’m now an unabashed mystic.  Actual contact with the living Christ is the sine qua non of the Christian faith, and if you haven’t got it, you haven’t got anything.  If you have got it, you can still be wrong about various factual matters — just like a man can be married to a woman for years and still not know the color of her toothbrush — but you have the relationship, and that’s what matters most.

Most of us know this instinctively.  When a friend or loved one dies, or you lose your job and you can’t pay the bills, or your child is sick in the hospital, hovering between life and death — all your theological knowledge (in itself) isn’t worth ten cents right then. What you need is comfort, the personal comfort of a God who is really there.  Certainly this can come through Scripture, but it’s not the ideas in the Scriptures that comfort you, but the God behind them, the One who says them to you.  You hear His voice, and it is in trusting Him, in clinging to Him, that you make it through.  If your Bible knowledge doesn’t help you toward that, you might as well have memorized the manual for your DVD player.

I remember once reading the testimony of a seminary professor who came to this realization when his child was ill.  I thought it was an amazing, thought-provoking article, and recommended it to a friend.  He was underwhelmed: “If he really believed what he taught, his theology ought to have been enough for him.”  Sadly, many of us think that way, even under really trying circumstances.  These are people who have managed to build the theological house of cards in their heads to the point that they can escape into it for hours, days if necessary, the way some socially awkward teenagers used to escape into D&D or an addict escapes into getting high for as long as possible.  Sadly, their theology is enough for them.  It is enough for them to think of the idea of God’s presence; they don’t actually need Him to be present.  These same people tend to be a bit devoid of human feeling, and have stilted, awkward relationships as a result of their preoccupation with their own fantasies.  If you’re going to be preoccupied with fantasies, I suppose theological truth is better than D&D — but not by a whole lot.  Preoccupation with your own fantasy — any fantasy — still inhibits loving God and your neighbors, and the fantasy still becomes an idol.

Unfortunately, people mistake this fantasy-worship for faith, just because the theological house of cards has a great deal of propositional truth in it.  The Pharisees had just as much propositional truth in their theological fantasies.  What they lacked was actual relationship with God — and the problem is as real in the church today as it ever was in first-century Judaism.

I recognize that a lot of the things that have happened under the banner of mysticism are wrong.  Conservatives are suspicious of anything with the label “mystical,” and not without reason.  But we can’t allow the various abuses to stop us from seeing the truth.  There is no substitute for actually walking with God.

Besides, the fact remains that we do need some word to describe the thing that the various proof texts above are talking about, the experience of actual contact with the living Christ.  Jesus and Paul are not just building theological castles in the air.  They are describing something that really happens, the real experience of actual Christians.  How are we to describe this?  Our fathers used the phrase “mystical union with Christ,” and if there’s a better term, I haven’t yet heard it.


Father Hatred and the Loss of Beauty in Worship

9 January 2011

Beauty is hard work.  Being good enough to produce something like Handel’s Messiah requires years of training, apprenticeship, and dedication.  The actual creation of it requires a great deal of work.  And even all that is not enough — schooling and hard work can’t put in what God left out.  If the talent isn’t there, then there will be no great work of art, no matter how dedicated the artist might be.

Not everybody is a Handel.  Maybe one or two in a generation are so talented — and not all of them have access to good training, or work as hard as Handel did.  So it becomes very important, if we are to have beauty, that we attend to our history.  If you only get the combination of hard work and talent that produces a Handel every two or three generations, and you want to have a lot of beautiful music, then you have to hoard it from your past.  There won’t be enough to go around in this generation alone — or any other generation.  Which is to say that in aesthetics and art as in everything else, “a good man leaves an inheritance to his children’s children,” and we must honor our fathers and mothers.

Now, imagine what happens if a generation arises which does not honor its fathers and mothers.  The rationalizations vary; perhaps they are sweeping away the barnacles of accrued affectation and getting back to the primal essence of the art.  Perhaps they are forsaking superstition and ignorance and advancing forward into the light of a scientific new day.  Perhaps they are simply seeking things to which they feel an intuitive connection, and abandoning the past as irrelevant.  Perhaps they have pronounced all their fathers might gain of them Corban… (we’ll come back to that thought.)

Whatever the justification, the result is the same.  Failure to honor one’s fathers and mothers leads to being cut off from the benefits of their wisdom.  Forsaking the law of your father is not a good idea.  In the matter of beauty, the results are particularly bad.  The lessons of the past are forgotten and must be rediscovered, and the accumulated treasure of the past is ignored.  The result is inevitably a great deal of ugliness, and the loss of an ability to tell that it’s ugliness.  The best rock opera of the nineties may turn out to just be a trifle less terrible than a field of weak contenders.  Without the accumulated treasure of the past, there’s little basis for comparison.

This is what has happened in worship.  When we think of the “worship wars” today, we think of the battle that started in the 1970s and really didn’t go mainstream until the 80s and 90s — shall we sing praise choruses, or hymns?  The folks who argued for choruses, and against hymns, felt that they were casting off the dead hand of almost two millennia of orthodusty and revitalizing the church.  The folks who argued for preserving the hymns felt that they were guarding a great trove of wisdom and glorious worship, stretching back to the dawn of the church.  They were both wrong.

They were wrong because mostly, the hymns at issue were 19th-century revival songs that were, in their day, the music of a similar revolution.  Before that, most churches had a strong continuity in their worship and music with the preceding 1800 years of church history.  The great revivals of the 19th century, along with various good effects, also succumbed to the sin of contempt for the established church, and therefore for their fathers in the faith and the accumulated wisdom and beauty of the generations who went before them.

The result, as we’ve been discussing, was a good deal of ugliness.  In time, people noticed that it was ugly, shallow and unhelpful, and began to do something else — and the result was the present ‘worship wars,’ a revolution against the revolution.  (Not, please notice, a counter-revolution.  That would imply undoing the sins of the past, and what we got instead was more of the same.)

Which is to say that, having discovered that sin didn’t work, we decided to try compounding it rather than repenting of it.  We needed to admit that the first revolution was a sin, that we had forsaken the wisdom of our fathers.  We needed to begin to honor our fathers again.  This we did not do, and many of us still have not.

The result, predictably again, is much ugliness, and a goodly number of ridiculous spectacles.  A guy whose faith has been sustained by numerous Calvary Chapel messages about how the locust-scorpions of Revelation 9 are helicopters and the end is near — this guy is tormented by concern that his Lutheran friend is not being “fed” in his supposedly dry liturgical service.  The Lutheran fellow, for his part, visits his friend’s church once and is permanently put off Bible studies.  Jeepers.


The Sin of the Revolutionary Mind: A Sermon

2 January 2011

Below is the text of a sermon I preached on April 11, 2010.  I posted the charge here that week, but I never put the whole thing up.  Since it touches on some of the ecclesiological concerns I’ve been talking about here recently, I thought I’d revisit it.  The sermon was  delivered in a formal liturgical setting, so you’ll see a note where we stopped to observe communion, followed by the closing charge.

Scripture Reading

Pr. 1:8-9, 19:26-27, 20:20, 23:22-26, 30:11-17

Sermon

I got an email a few weeks ago which informed me in panicky tones that Janet Reno was going to use the FCC to shut down all religious broadcasting.  This seemed suspicious to me for a number of reasons, not least that Janet Reno doesn’t seem to be in a position to use the FCC to do anything.  With a few minutes of research, I found that this particular rumor has been circulating in one form or another since the seventies.  There is actually a kernel of truth to it: in 1974 someone did actually petition the FCC to prevent religious organizations from gaining licenses to broadcast on channels reserved for education.  Despite the fact that the petition would never have affected commercial radio stations, and that the petition was denied in 1975 in any case, the rumor has persisted for three and a half decades, and an alarming number of Christians, hearing it for the first time, believe it.  It continues to circulate through email to this day.

Now, there are a number of points I could make here, having to do with gossip, lack of discernment, loving your neighbor enough to check your facts before passing on the story, and so forth, and I did send an email making those very points to the credulous Christian brother who had originally sent me this panicky message.  But you’re all good Christians, and since I’ve said this much, you know what I’m going to say about those things, and hopefully you’ll take them to heart.  Today, though, I’d like to make a much more interesting, and hopefully much more helpful, point.

I got another email around the same time as the Janet Reno rumor, this one promising me a free laptop if I answered a brief online survey.  This message was not forwarded to me by a credulous Christian brother, and you all know why: very few of us believe that message; we just assume it’s a scam and delete it.

Which raises a question: why are we so ready to believe the one message and not the other?

We believe that our faith is under siege, and many of our fellow conservatives also believe that the Democrats are the party of all evil.  So a tale of a prominent Democrat trying to suppress our faith fits in with that story very nicely…maybe even a little too nicely.  On the other hand, we do not believe that people just go around giving away valuable goods in exchange for a few minutes of unskilled labor, and so we just ignore the offer of a free laptop.  In other words, we believe one message and not the other because one message fits with the way we think the world works, and the other one flies in the face of our picture of the world.

Last week we went over two competing stories of Western history.  In one, Christianity is a force for good, and it continues to shape the world.  Christianity conquered Rome, Europe was Christian for a thousand years, and became the missionary base from which God launched the presently ongoing conversions of South America, China, and Africa.  In the other story, Christianity was a corrosive influence.  The glories of classical Rome fell into the Dark Ages when the Christians took over, Europe only began to recover in the Renaissance (literally, “Rebirth”), when artists, philosophers and architects looked again to pagan Greece and Rome for inspiration, and recovery only really took hold in the “Enlightenment,” when the intelligentsia threw off Christianity entirely.

The question is, why did we, as Bible-believing Protestants, believe the second story automatically, without ever thinking that something might be wrong with it?  Why didn’t it sound like “Free laptop if you just answer this online survey”?  The gospels and Acts certainly didn’t set us up to believe it—so what did?  I would suggest two reasons.

The first is pessimistic eschatology, the idea that the world will get irretrievably worse and worse until Jesus finally shows up and rescues us from the madness.  I don’t have time to go into all this today, but that’s a highly suspect reading of Scripture.  Let me touch one passage: 2 Timothy 3.  Notice that Paul instructs Timothy in what to do with these people in the last days.  That’s because from the NT writers’ perspective, the Last Days were the days after Christ’s resurrection.  The Resurrection of the dead happens in the last days, Christ is the firstfruits – the harvest has begun to come in.  It’s the last days. So our reading of 2 Timothy 3 as a justification of unmitigated pessimism is just not exegetically responsible.

Nor is it historically sensible.   The things Paul talked about were, in some ways, more true of the Roman world than they are of our world today.  For example, Tiberias Caesar used to have prisoners tortured for his amusement while he ate dinner.  This was not an aberration in his society — the Coliseum provided similar spectacles for the masses to enjoy.  Compare this to the recent controversy over waterboarding.  Yes, the practice had its advocates, and there were some stupid, wicked things said and done in defense of what was clearly a method of torture — but even in defending it, no one said “We do it because it’s fun,” and nobody suggested that Saturday Night Live do a Waterboarding Marathon for everyone’s entertainment.  You know why?  Because as a society, we wouldn’t have found it entertaining, that’s why.  Which is to say that the gospel has changed our culture for the better since the days of Tiberias, and we are characterized by 2 Timothy 3 a little less than they were.

The second reason we bought the “Christianity as a corrosive influence” story is that we want to tell a similar story.  In this version, real Christianity was wonderful, but everything went to pot after the death of the apostles, darkness descended, and the Roman church reigned until the Reformers recovered the gospel.  At long last, after a millennium and a half of night, we again believe in the simple gospel and worship in spirit and in truth.  We locate the ‘good times’ in the first-century church instead of the glories of Greece and Rome, and instead of the Renaissance and Enlightenment being the new good times, it’s the Reformation and the modern evangelical church.  Or in other circles, the new good times don’t start until the Anabaptists.  Or Amy Semple MacPherson.  Or Chuck Smith.  Or…pick your poison.

This second issue is the one I want to go after today.  It is the manifestation of an ugly, wicked turn of mind that is at once as old as Lucifer and peculiarly modern.  For lack of better terms, I will call it the Revolutionary Mind.

The Revolutionary Mind wants to take a vision of how things could be and make that vision come true, right here, right now.  “Behold, I make all things new” is the motto of the revolutionary.  Because history and habit get in the way, the Revolutionary Mind despises history and habit—what Proverbs would call “The instruction of your father” and “the law of your mother.”  In America, the soul of the Revolutionary Mind is political, but it manifests itself in the church in liturgical ways.

Liturgical examples

To put this in more concrete terms, let me offer an example.  I read some time ago about a Baptist pastor who began his ministry in Arkansas in the early 1900s.  Being a practical man—a thing then fashionable—he set about to abolish all needless ceremonies and reduce the church service to the essentials only.  For example, the church had previously stood to hear the reading of Scripture; he abolished this practice on the grounds that the Bible never commanded it.

He gave no consideration to why the practice existed or whether it accorded with the whole picture of biblical worship; it was enough for him that the Bible never commanded it.  It was therefore impractical and unnecessary, and it had to go.  Of course, if he were consistent, he would have thrown out the church pews on the same grounds: the Bible never commands us to sit to hear teaching, either, and certainly not in pews.  But he didn’t, and this is because he was a creature of his age, and in his age, pews were considered practical.  This man was, in his time, a revolutionary, and a revolutionary of the sort that was fashionable in his time.

His revolution was displaced by another revolution in the seventies and early eighties, when Calvary Chapel-style music and informal worship practices began to crowd out the so-called ‘traditional’ worship (which was really nothing of the kind).  That revolution is now being replaced in turn by yet another, in which ritual is returning to the worship service because it’s retro.  I am not in favor of any of these revolutions, and I maintain that as Christians we are required to be at war with the revolutionary turn of mind that drove all of them.  We are called rather to a slow and steady obedience founded on Scripture, which turns out to be quite a different thing, even when it looks similar from outside, which it occasionally does.

As over against those examples, I would submit that we have done something different.  We have not forsaken our recent brothers and fathers – we look to Sons of Korah as well as to Martin Luther.  But we look further back as well.  We have not made all things new; we are in glorious communion with those who have gone before us.

Political outworkings

In America, we manifest the same revolutionary mind in a number of ways.  Our immigration philosophy, for example: If any man be in America, he is a new creation; old things are passed away, behold, all things are become new.  Because this is the case, in America we worship the state as the source of real, concrete salvation, and identification with America becomes our primary cultural identification, rather than identification with Christ.

American Christians also tend to think of the State as the source of salvation, and therefore work very hard to try to get control of it.  As a result, we keep making compromises because we are trying to get, and keep, the reins of political power.  This has been a problem for a very long time.  Speaking of American political conservatives, R. L. Dabney wrote:

This is a party which never conserves anything. Its history has been that it demurs to each aggression of the progressive party, and aims to save its credit by a respectable amount of growling, but always acquiesces at last in the innovation. What was the resisted novelty of yesterday is today one of the accepted principles of conservatism; it is now conservative only in affecting to resist the next innovation, which will tomorrow be forced upon its timidity and will be succeeded by some third revolution; to be denounced and then adopted in its turn. American conservatism is merely the shadow that follows Radicalism as it moves forward towards perdition. It remains behind it, but never retards it, and always advances near its leader. This pretended salt hath utterly lost its savor: wherewith shall it be seasoned? Its impotency is not hard, indeed, to explain. It is worthless because it is the conservatism of expediency only, and not of sturdy principle. It intends to risk nothing serious for the sake of the truth, and has no idea of being guilty of the folly of martyrdom. It always, when about to enter a protest, very blandly informs the wild beast whose path it essays to stop, that its “bark is worse than its bite,” and that it only means to save its manners by enacting its decent role of resistance. The only practical purpose which it now subserves in American politics is to give enough exercise to Radicalism to keep it “in wind,” and to prevent its becoming pursy [fat] and lazy from having nothing to whip.

That was in the mid-1800s, and how much has changed since then?

At the turn of the century, American liberalism was revolutionary; American fundamentalism recoiled into sola-doctrinal-correctness and moralizing.  Evangelicalism woke up from that sarcophagus and got politically involved—on the same principles as the liberals of 70 years earlier.  The political action of the Christian Right today is on these principles, and it will fail because the weapons of its warfare are carnal, the very same weapons used by Big Tobacco, Greenpeace and the NRA.  These are weapons that its enemies can also wield, and against which there are many defenses.

A Christian king should govern as God commands him; a Christian congressman should do the same; a Christian voter likewise.  But if we think getting out the vote will be enough to win the culture, we are sadly mistaken.  The history of Israel shows us repeatedly that you can’t reform the culture from the top down; several kings tried and failed.

But we have another weapon which is not carnal.  Worship is warfare; it is the weapon against which our enemies have no defense.  All they can do is get us to stop doing it, and in the American church, they have enjoyed remarkable success doing just that.  In order to win a culture war, it is necessary to first have a culture.  At the very center of a culture is a cultus: the sanctuary is the center of the world, and the culture is the overflow and externalization of the worship.  We begin by reforming our worship because that is the root of the matter.

In Eden, the river that flows from the sanctuary waters the world.

In the New Jerusalem, the river flows from under the throne of God, and the leaves of the trees beside it are for the healing of the nations.

In between, Jesus says “He who believes in Me, as the Scriptures have said, out of his belly will flow rivers of living water.”

Loyalty needs to flow appropriately, and that means, among other things, that loyalty to Christ and His people supersedes loyalty to America and her people.  This is not exactly a new idea: “Do good to all, but especially to those of the household of faith.”  As Christian Americans, we owe more to an Iraqi or Japanese or Palestinian Christian than we do to an American unbeliever, and this ought to be expressed in our attitudes about foreign policy.

For example, at 11:02 in the morning, August 9, 1945, the US dropped a bomb on Nagasaki.  It was aimed at the business and industrial district, but the wind blew it off course, and it actually exploded above the Urakami Catholic district of Nagasaki, where 12,000 Christians lived—the largest single population of Christians in the Orient.   The blast destroyed the largest Christian church in East Asia, killing the 32 people who were inside it at the time.  In all, 9600 Christians — well over three quarters of the city’s Christian population — were killed by the bomb.

For right now, let’s sidestep the whole debate over whether the bombing was morally justified, and just ask this question: how many of you even knew this part of the story? And if not, why not?  These are Our People; how could we just not know?  Do we believe in the unity of Christ’s body, or don’t we?

No, the story we tell is how many American lives were saved by dropping those two bombs.  Many of those American lives would also have been Christians, it’s true.  But let’s be honest: we’re not thinking about how many brother Christians we saved; we’re thinking about how many Americans we saved.  Telling, isn’t it?

Of course, where would we have heard this part of the story?  Who would have told us?  We can’t expect government-funded American schools to tell the story of Our People honestly.  But what about the churches? 

When the events of 1945 are discussed in the town square of the New Jerusalem, do you really think they’ll still tell the story the way we do?  Which will be more important: that America won the war with that bomb and saved countless American lives, or that America killed almost 10,000 Christians, blew up the biggest church in East Asia, and utterly destroyed the largest Christian community in the whole Orient?

MacArthur’s call for Christian missionaries after the war certainly takes on a peculiar irony, doesn’t it?

While the Nagasaki example is difficult for us to hear, there isn’t really anything we can do about it.  So let’s also look at another, more current, example.  However you might feel about the war in Iraq, one of the unintended consequences of the disorder has been a wave of violence against Iraqi Christians.  American officials have been largely unwilling to do anything about this, for fear of alienating the Muslim majority—one of the rare continuities in policy between the Bush and Obama administrations — and both these men consider themselves Christians.

Again, this is the sort of thing we ought to know about—and we don’t.  Why not?

If your instinctive response to this news is to think that you should call your congressman: isn’t there something else you want to do first?  Isn’t there another, more powerful Ruler to whom you should address your first appeal?  Let’s do that now:

Prayer

Lord God, we pray every week for our persecuted brothers around the world, but right now we would like to specifically lift up our Iraqi brothers and sisters before you.  They are suffering from persecution by Arabs and Kurds, Shi’ites and Sunnis alike.  They are suffering from neglect by America.  Many of them are actually worse off now than they were under Saddam Hussein.  We ask you to intervene on their behalf.  Give them shelter from their enemies; give them the hearts of their neighbors; give them wise government so that they might live a quiet and peaceable life; and above all, give them Iraq as a discipled Christian nation.  Finally Lord, we ask that for as long as America remains a presence in their country, our actions would work for these things rather than against them.

Communion

As we go into communion, remember that this is a celebration of our union with Christ and with all His people.  Those who eat and drink Christ at His table are Our People—wherever they may be in the world.

[Communion Observance]

Charge

We worship in heaven, and we are unified with those who join us there in worship—including those believers in other nations, and those who died long before us.  This unity surpasses any earthly tie, including ties of where you were born—or when.

The saints of every age and place are Our People, and we should hear the voices of those who have gone before us.  They are sinners, and they can be wrong.  But so can we, and so we listen to their wise counsel, and—as always—measure everything by Scripture.  We cannot be revolutionaries, because we belong to a long line of people from whom we cannot separate, even though we may want to.  “Behold, I make all things new” is not something that we are allowed to say—and it doesn’t work anyhow.

If we cannot remake our church, or our society, or our world at a stroke, through revolution, then what are we to do?

In Eden, the river that flows from the sanctuary waters the world.  In the New Jerusalem, the river flows from under the throne of God, and the leaves of the trees beside it are for the healing of the nations.  In between, Jesus says “He who believes in Me, as the Scriptures have said, out of his belly will flow rivers of living water.”

The life of the world flows from God through the sanctuary, through our worship; this is our first and most powerful agent of cultural change.  Worship is a weapon by which we may battle God’s enemies and serve the people of the World at the same time.  When we resort to carnal weapons, there is always collateral damage, but worship harms no one except those who insist on remaining enemies of God.

The charge therefore is this: Every change in your life, every difficulty, every new situation, should come first into your worship.  Praise God, thank Him, ask for what you need.  Situate your life in God-honoring heavenly worship before the throne of Grace.  Then, having done that, pray that God’s will be done on earth as it is in heaven—and watch as God answers your prayers.


Thanksgiving for the Day

26 December 2010

Assisted by a few valued partners in crime, I have been working on a prayer book for conservative, evangelical Protestants who don’t use prayer books.  Why I would bother with such an endeavor is a post for another time; today, I’d just like to share an excerpt from the evening prayers.

Thanksgiving for the Day’s Blessings*

For the heavens stretched out like a curtain, which do praise Thee,
For the earth which Thou didst found
For Thy deluge which clothed it like a garment
And Thy rebuke, at which the waters fled to their appointed place;

For the springs of the valleys, and the rains that fall on the just and the unjust,
For the plants that feed Thy cattle, that we may bring food from the earth,
For wine that gladdens the heart, for oil that makes our faces shine,
And for bread which strengthens our hearts;

For Thy mighty cedars, where the birds make their nests,
For the fir trees, the home of the storks,
For the high hills, where the mountain goats range,
And the cliffs where the rock badgers take refuge;

For sun and moon and appointed seasons,
For day to work, and night to rest,
For Thy wisdom, by which Thou didst found the earth,
For Thy possessions upon it
And Thy rule over it—

When Thou feedest them, they eat;
When Thou hidest Thy face, they are troubled
When Thou takest their breath, they return to dust,
When Thou sendest forth Thy Breath, they are created,
And the earth is renewed—

For Thy glory, which endures forever,
For Thy rejoicing in all Thy work,
For voice to sing Thee,
And for the perishing of the wicked from the earth;

For all these things and for Thy many graces which escaped my notice this day,
I thank Thee, O Ruler of Creation.

*If you should happen to feel that this prayer has some passing resemblance to Psalm 104, well, who am I to tell you that you are wrong?


Creeds: Description, Prescription, and the Role of Gratitude

12 December 2010

In a preceding post I mentioned gratitude as a factor in my use of the creeds, and in discussions with friends and colleagues it has become clear to me that this requires a little elaboration.

First of all, a couple of thoughts about the nature of gratitude in general.  Gratitude is not just about warm feelings in your chest.  Gratitude is about what you do.  If your parents raised you, fed you, clothed you, loved you, and you always felt warmly toward them for these things, but you treated them badly and never once gave any indication that you were aware of how much they’d done for you, are you grateful?  No, not really.  Suppose a friend rebukes you for your ingratitude, and you protest that of course you feel warmly about all your parents have done for you.  Wouldn’t your friend be perfectly right to say “So what?”

Of course he would.  That warm feeling is not an all-purpose moral solvent that cleanses whatever you decide to to.  If you take for granted all your parents have given you, and then protest that of course you’re grateful — by which you mean that you have warm feelings toward them — this is just to say that you are only grateful where it doesn’t matter.  Gratitude that is not meaningfully incarnated is not gratitude at all; it’s just cheap sentimentality.

With reference to the early creeds,  I am grateful to those men who went before me, for their many sacrifices and their great struggle.  Even more, I am grateful to Christ for giving such evangelists, pastors and teachers to His Church.  But if this is to be more than a sticky sentiment, a warm feeling in my chest when someone says “Nicea” or “Chalcedon,” then I need to incarnate this gratitude in a way that matters.

These creeds are the weapons our fathers used in their war against heresy.  This is simply a matter of history; it is as God Providentially arranged for it to be, and we must show gratitude for the way God actually preserved His church, not the way we wish He’d done it. So we must celebrate these key aspects of the faith which our fathers so ably defended, and do so in a manner respectful of God’s design in history — which is to say, respectful of what actually happened and what they actually said.  Therefore, an aspect of this celebration will inevitably be the public reading, or the corporate saying, of the creeds.  And so we find once again that “descriptive vs. prescriptive” fails us as a useful way of categorizing.  The creeds are not just descriptions of what the church believed at one point in her history; they are also — in the fashion just described — prescriptions that govern aspects of our present practice.

But how?  How will it work in practice?  We don’t have to say the Creeds weekly, but we can’t just ignore them, either.  Some churches may simply integrate the Creeds into their weekly worship.  Others may choose to do something quarterly, or integrate the Creeds into their doctrinal statements and new members’ classes.  Others still may designate one Sunday a year to celebrate these things.  After all, if we can manage to observe Memorial Day and Veteran’s Day to celebrate the warriors who have defended our country, why can’t we find room in the schedule for a day to celebrate the warriors of the Church, who defended our faith?  (And may I suggest the Feast of All Saints as a convenient time?)  There is no One Perfect Way to do this, but do it we must, somehow.

Now, am I saying that a man is in sin if he doesn’t say the Nicene Creed at least occasionally?  Not as such.  Saying the Creed is not directly required by Scripture, and so a man can walk with God and not say the Creed — at least in theory.  However, in actual practice, I find that among American evangelicals, our particular refusal to say the creed is the result of a sinful attitude on our part:  ingratitude, sectarianism and father-hatred that ill becomes Christians.

The wage of that particular sin is a particular sort of death.  If you insist on isolating yourself from other members of the Body in defiance of Eph. 4:3, God may give you your desire, but send leanness to your soul.  Cut off from the teaching ministry of the Holy Spirit in past generations, cut off from the wisdom of your fathers, you will be reduced to whatever formulations you can dream up yourself, and you get only the counsel of your living friends — which is to say that you will be low-hanging fruit for the fads of the age, and your churches, your schools, your daily practice will fall victim to a pervasive silliness.  (Oh, wait — I just described modern evangelicalism, didn’t I?)

We are ungrateful, and God has given us over to our folly.  You want to know why, when you walk into a Christian “bookstore,” you can’t hardly find a Greek New Testament or even a decent devotional book, but there are crucifix pencil toppers and “God’s Gym” t-shirts in every size you can think of, including a little onesie for your newborn Christian soldier?  This is why.  Could it be any clearer that we need to repent?


Creeds: What’s There And What’s Not

5 December 2010

When you read the Definition of Chalcedon, you will find a reference to Mary as the mother of God.  As I mentioned last week, that was not just pious boilerplate language; it was at the heart of the controversy, and a key part of the fathers’ success against the heresies of their day.

Now, “mother of God” could be taken to imply all the cult of Mary business — adoration of Mary, prayers to Mary, kissing statues or pictures of Mary, the whole nine yards.  Certainly parts of the present-day cult of Mary are later innovations, but even in 451, the cult of Mary was a going concern.  We can’t say that the fathers at Chalcedon simply didn’t have a clue that anyone would go that route.  They did, and at least some of them approved of it.

So I find myself facing objections on opposite fronts: many of my evangelical brethren object to my use of the Definition because they feel I am giving aid and comfort to the cult of Mary.  On the other hand, there are folks, say from the Eastern Church, who will object that I don’t really agree with the Definition of Chalcedon.  “You don’t pray to Mary,” they will say, “you don’t venerate her as the Mother of God; how can you say that you agree with Chalcedon?”

What these two objections have in common is an assumption that “mother of God” implies all the ‘cult of Mary’ baggage, that the two come as a set and can’t be separated.  But this is just silly.  What the Definition does say can certainly be separated from what it does not say.

I do, in fact, believe what the Definition says: that she is the mother of God.  I believe this because the Word was God, and the Word became flesh, and did so in the usual human way, by growing in the womb of a specific woman and passing through her birth canal.  Now, we have a perfectly good designation for the woman who takes that role in a person’s life, and the word is “mother.”  We don’t blink at saying that Jesus is God come in the flesh, born to the virgin Mary; why would we blink at saying, in the same breath, that God had a mother?  Didn’t he?  (Of course, this is God-the-second-person-of-the-Trinity.  The Father doesn’t have a mother, nor does the Spirit — but who is claiming that they do?  The Chalcedonian fathers would have been first to deny it.)

On the other hand, I note that “mother of God” is all the Definition says on this subject.  It does not affirm Mary as a fit recipient for prayer, for example, nor does it say anything about a Christian duty to venerate her.  It may well be that at least some of the Chalcedonian fathers did, in fact, pray to and venerate Mary.  They might even have found it baffling, unthinkable, that someone could affirm Mary as the mother of God and not pray to her.  Perhaps they would have thought the two ideas were inseparable.  But with the advantage of additional centuries to reflect, we can see that actually, they are separable, and in God’s Providence the Definition only speaks to one of them — the one that the Scriptures clearly support.

Since the Scriptures clearly support it, so should we.


A fun little chat…

3 December 2010

…can be found on Bobby’s blog here, in the comments thread. This is easily the best Bobby and I have ever done at communicating with each other, and I’m thoroughly enjoying it.


We take it by the case around here…

1 December 2010