Monday, March 24, 2008

God, Authority, the Bible--all the big stuff



For Christianity, The Bible makes claims about God. The Bible is both human written and just as much, a book made by God. It is not that the claims are true just because the Bible says so, I think, but because they are true the Bible says them. The Bible is so powerful because it says so much about God, but it does so in a very objective way. Yes, we may see it through our experiences, and people may misinterpret it, but it has authority, not for what it is, but for who is in it and behind it. Without it and therefore God, as a backbone of our reality as we submit to a Creator God, Christianity is mainly reduced to something sort of trite. Maybe it is then more or less about culture, or being good, or experience, or tradition. These aren't very compelling forces for coming under Lordship, and they have little to do with what changed the world in the first century A.D. For believers in Jesus of the Bible, the message of Jesus, is a message of belief and reconciliation with God. It is a message of love, and devotion to God with heart, soul, mind, and strength. If we concede on these points, then the fuel is spent. We have something rather empty.

Sometimes we like to have our reference point be ourselves, like our choices, and authority begin through perspective, which is really an impossible starting point. The lure and promise of modernity (we are still living in the gasps of it after all) was really the autonomous human--apart from God--saved by reason. Life then is choices, human directed, not God directed. In large part, modernity won the day. Christianity tried to meet it on its terms, and forgot about starting with God as authority.

The beauty of Theology sometimes missed by point-by-point systematics (Christianity's attempt at heading off modernity) is the narrative type which the CREATION-FALL-REDEMPTION-CONSUMMATION story that runs through the scriptures, like a stream.

This is another glorious thing about the Bible--Theology... and YES--experience, as we take in God through the story he tells us through it.

1 comment:

Peter said...

Nice Lisa, good stuff. It's in the Bible because it's true, not the other way around.

Len Sweet's "Out of the Question..." got banned by the Southern Baptists for suggesting JESUS was a HIGHER authority than the Bible. "Heavens preserve us!" Sounds like the kind of Orthodoxy Chuck Colson would stand on ;)

Thanks for the visit to my site! As to your question, "Is Emerging/Emergent becoming too monolithic...?" I'll be responding on my blog in the next few weeks but my short answer is "no." I don't think the circles have tightened. I still find incredible diversity among the groups, thinkers and "friends" of emerging Christian thought and Emergent.

But I have found Emergent becoming increasingly defensive in the last few years. The comment sections on EmergentVillage.com looks frighteningly similar to the comment sections at EmergentNO, and I think that's a problem.

Diversity and neighborly love have a hard time flourishing in a culture of debate and antagonism. Moreover, it's not a welcoming environment for newcomers or "outsiders." If the EC is to continue being a transcendant spiritual movement/conversation of Christian love, it will have to stop shooting itself in the foot.

My two cents.

Keep up the good work Lisa,
Peter