New Shack topic: Telling our Stories about God, or "What is truth?"

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Bct...@aol.com

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Mar 9, 2010, 8:22:08 AM3/9/10
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Dear Shack readers and others who have been participating in the recent dialogue about evangelism,
 
I have attached a document with a new topic in it.  This topic was inspired both by The Shack and by the recent flurry of postings in this Open Forum about evangelism.  Again, I figure I've put in the "soft" stuff, and now you all can jump in with the heavy duty stuff. 
 
I called this one "Telling Our Stories about God," but it could just as easily have been called "'What is truth?'" (John 18:38).  And I do believe with extra insights and inputs from many of you, we can develop the "what is truth?" angle further.
 
Also, I put some background about the book in this one, so that those of you who have jumped into the evangelism discussion can jump into this one, even if you have not been reading The Shack with us all along.  I did this because I think that this discussion can also be about the question of evangelism. 
 
Blessings,
Jane
 
____________________________________________________________________________________
 
 
 
In a message dated 3/8/2010 1:54:22 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, gfa...@comcast.net writes:

Jane (and Chris(t)?),

We have been moving topically inside the Shack (as in institutions,
doctrine of the church). Will we be doing soon a next section of
pages?
                               --Gabe



 
Shack-Belief.doc

Gabe

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Mar 9, 2010, 3:45:13 PM3/9/10
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Jane,

Thanks for getting us onto next steps.

Let me play the contrarian, a role usually self-assigned by Willis,
albeit with a tongue in cheek in order to raise some pertinent
questions.

"Story-telling" is in. Whether it's in the New York Times Book Review
section or in theological hermeneutics or church practice. Wonderful.
Long overdue because the Bible is a macrostory and its heart for
Christians is the microstory of Jesus. Of course, the popularity of
the Shack as such and the tales within in are testimony to the same.

What is the story we have to tell as believers? Hymnody often reminds
us. We've a story to tell to the nations. I love to tell the story,
Crown thine ancient church's story... OK. Then the question is how do
we do we relate to the context we live in (this a story-telling ethos)
and not capitulate to it. More than ethos, we have a "testimony"
tradition that has made, in evangelism, for instance, as well as the
prayer meeting of believers, central, as in some kinds of evangelical
piety. (As a one-time Baptist, I was immersed in it.) I hear you,
Jane, trying to do this when you speak about the experience of the
resurrection vis a vis our personal narratives. But the resurrection
story(so too the entire thread of the biblical story) is sui generis,
with no parallel to our "experiences." Here George Lindbeck is helpful
in not erasing the role of our experience but cautioning us about
"experiential-expressivism," and calling us to attend in the Big
Story, first and foremost.

How this plays out in a Guide, I'm not sure at the moment, except to
ask , ever and again, the reader to remember, to learn, to immerse
themselves in, to share, to testify, to the greatest Tale of all. Then
to connect to that the "pro me," our personal stories in the setting
of the Big One. And to evaluate what we are reading in the Shack in
the light of such.

Incidentally, the current issue of Christianity Today features
something parallel to (though not the same as) this with the cover
reading "Light for the Soul: Why a heady dose of doctrine is crucial
to spiritual formation." And, as I remember the current issue of The
Christian Ccentury has a piece in which Will Willimon makes a similar
point.

Oh well, grist for the mill.

--Gabe

On Mar 9, 8:22 am, Bctj...@aol.com wrote:
> Dear Shack readers and others who have been participating in  the recent
> dialogue about evangelism,
>
> I have attached a document with a new topic in it.  This  topic was

> inspired both byThe Shackand by the recent flurry  of postings in this Open Forum


> about evangelism.  Again, I figure I've put  in the "soft" stuff, and now
> you all can jump in with the heavy duty  stuff.  
>
> I called this one "Telling Our Stories about God," but it  could just as
> easily have been called "'What is truth?'" (John 18:38).  And  I do believe
> with extra insights and inputs from many of you, we can develop the  "what is
> truth?" angle further.
>
> Also, I put some background about the book  in this one, so that those of
> you who have jumped into the evangelism discussion  can jump into this one,

> even if you have not been readingThe Shack with us all along.  I did this


> because I think that this discussion  can also be about the question of
> evangelism.  
>
> Blessings,
> Jane
>
> ____________________________________________________________________________
> ________
>
> In a message dated 3/8/2010 1:54:22 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
>

> gfac...@comcast.net writes:
>
> Jane  (and Chris(t)?),
>

> We have been moving topically insidethe Shack(as in  institutions,


> doctrine of the church). Will we be doing soon a next section  of
> pages?
> --Gabe
>

>  Shack-Belief.doc
> 42KViewDownload

Jean Easland

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Mar 9, 2010, 5:00:44 PM3/9/10
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Gabe: Our son is teaching SS using Rob Bell's DVDs. Wic says Bell draws from
"Narrative" theology----------does he us your Narrative theology Gabe of his
own version??? Any one out there using his stuff in teaching settings???
Roger

herb.davis

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Mar 10, 2010, 8:36:16 AM3/10/10
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Dear Jane, I assume the basic question you are asking is "How do we know what we believe is true?"  Maybe that is the basic question and you seem to be saying we know what is true because we experience it, or God and we need to tell the story.  I will make a couple of comments:
1.  I assume this is a fictional story, nothing in the story really happened to Mack but I also assume that stories are the way we share the faith and fiction  conveys truth.  A year ago we read Robinson's, "Home" which was another story, which I felt in many ways was more powerful than The Shack, but it was less dramatic, no murders, no life threatening accidents, but the day to day normal actives of living out one's life in a clergy family.  I want to say that both stories are true in the sense that they are trying to open us to revelation, so that we see more clearly the glory of God.  I happen to like the Robinson style better than the Young style because I have never had an experience of God. God  never seems to be encountered in "Home" but the reality is there.  God is everywhere in The Shack but the reality for be is lessened. 
 
2.  The Shack is written from and to people who experience religion, either born again experience, life changing experience, but the experience here is not about life it is about some direct, miracle communication with the Other which in the shack is primarily Christian.  It helps to explain a basic Christian dogma, but is this what you mean by personal experience?
 
3.  We are Willie, we hear the story and we may want to believe it is true or we may not care if it is true.  I would simply say it is helpful story and powerful story but weather it really happened or not is not an interesting question.
 
4.  We all have experience but is the NT resurrection stories just experience for the disciples and us are they more than experience?  Does it fit the narrative of the OT?  Does it met the expectations of a people?  Is it more than "wishing it is true"?  Is revelation the same as our experience?  
 
5.  I never had an experience of God so I should has little to say. But I don't think I have any trouble witnessing.  How can that be?
 
I don't know if these ramblings are helpful.  But your questions got my mind rumbling.  Peace, Herb
 

John Cedarleaf

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Mar 10, 2010, 9:21:25 AM3/10/10
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Dear Herb,
Thanks for your comments. I've read the Shack, led a discussion group on it, heard William Paul Young speak to a gathering. According to what he said, he is Mack. You are right, it speaks to religious experience, or have born again experiences. Like you, I haven't had such an experience.There have been times when I've felt God closer than other times, but no mind blowing, gate crashing, light in the night experiences. I'm reminded of a neighbor pastor, now part of the church triumphant, who used to muse on the stories that some pastors always were telling. They would always have the perfect story for their sermons, because just that week, someone had walked into their study and told them about this or that experience,and it always connected with what they were going to preach on. He said: 'That never happens to me." It doesn't happen to me either. Maybe I'm not open to experiences, who knows? The other thing that gnaws at me is the feeling that a lot of  "new evangelical" literature is about me,my needs etc. I'm uncomfortable with it. Who knows,maybe I'm just not comfortable with all the individualism around me.

John

fcba%40comcast.net

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Mar 10, 2010, 9:36:28 AM3/10/10
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Dear Herb,

 

I have a few moments so I want to explore your consistant Barthian (?) theme of "I have never had an experience of God."

 

As you know I come from a very extensive and largely Christian background that includes Roman Catholicism, hippiedom, Jesus Movement, fundamentalism, various and sundry pentecostalisms (including AG, Italian, Puerto Rican, Black etc), the Catholic charismatic movement, other charismatic groups, pietistic groups, Finneyites, YWAM, house churches, the former UPC, CMA, Inter Varasity Fellowship etc until I got to GCTS where I joined the UCC and have been a member for  33 years!

 

I understand your worry and the dangers of having the Christian faith be 100% experienctially based. I saw pschyzophrenic people fit in really well (for a period of time) with some of the crazy groups that I joined because they always had great visions. I had my growth periods when I got a hold of ENTHUSIASM by Ronald Knox, PERFECTIONISM by Warfield and Schaff's great Volume 7 of The Hisotyr of the Christian Church on THE SWISS REFORMATION. These books (and others) helped me be critical of too much dependence on "experience" in the Christian faith.

 

BUT how can you say that you have "never had an experience with God?"

 

  • You share your faith in Christ here and that faith is a gift from God.
  • You share your testimony of about your being a sinner and that too is a gift from God.
  • You share your wonderful insights into the scriptures and they also come from God.

I hate to ruin your anti-pietistic rhetoric but all of these are experiences of God. I say that you have experienced God otherwise you would not have faith, not realize that you are a sinner and not have such a wonderful grasp on the word of God.

 

Chris Anderson

 

PS Barth had some great respect for various Pietists.



God Is Still Laughing
http://home.comcast.net/~fcba

Jean Easland

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Mar 10, 2010, 10:17:37 AM3/10/10
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Brother of Mine, Herb:  The best possible way to grow as human being into the image and like of their original creation is to start them out on Jesus Milk and Baptism. The love they know in Christ through their family and their Church family, community "saves" them from all manner of damage. As they emerge through good Christian education they cannot and should not see any alternate way to live, in fact the planting of the Lord grows so beautifully that they accept a call or do a vocation without need of question of it's goodness and God's presence in it and in all of life. It is those of us who have deep seated divisions in being loved as we grow up that MAY find ourselves "lost". There is terrible inertia necessary to overcome the fear and brokenness of childhood abuse and breakdown of what "should" happen in the Christian nurture of family and Church.
     For this very reason the Church looks to rescue those who are broken by life's fallen patterns and cycles of pain, sin and isolation. For those who have a "high" experience it is only "high" because it stands in stark contrast to the darkness in which they lived, perhaps by choice or by circumstance. The scar tissue, the embarrassment, the fear of God's retribution, the consuming guilt, of those who wake up knowing they have been seduced by the enemy can't be imagined by those who walked the Christian path more "naturally". Those that know a glimmer of faith and love of the Almighty's Grace and Life but just can't seem to gasp it fully or who have slipped into any manner of idolatry may "need" a supercharge of uncreated energy to move them forward. One of the fascinating and miraculous aspect of biblical literacy is to see ones own microcosm of rise and fall in the macrocosm of the rise and fall of Israel(I think Gabe alluded to this in a recent post on Shack). Of course there is mystery in all this but the process of sanctification/theosis or whatever you want to call it is an unstoppable progress on the journey to the final destiny of EACH Christian. I believe the Eastern Orthodox sacrament of Chrismation, their Pentecost is an "experience" part for those who grow up on Jesus Milk like most Christians do(and Hallelujah for this). WE SHOULD HAVE A SACRAMENT LIKE THIS THAT LEGITIMIZES CHRISTIAN EXPERIENCE AND PUTS IT INTO A PROPER LITURGICAL CONTEXT.
      No matter where one starts, and every one must have a start due to the fall, we all end up on the SAME path(Hallelujah again)! We find the revelation of particularity in Jesus Christ, we search of common doctrines, we seek a common witness, we seek to love each other and the god-forsakken world !!! !!! !!! !!!
    Those who did NOT have a "born again" experience are the most blessed in some ways and should(in my opinion) thank God they did not NEEW one!!! I can not describe the embarrassment of going to Seminary at 45 and the fear that you may fail just as you failed to HAVE FAITH when you should have. BUT GOD WILL finish the work he set in each one of his------ELECT-------(yes Chris). Enough already-------May God bless whoever stayed on this long e-mail without bailing out for something more interesting------------------------from the wonderful prairie where there is little to stop the wind of the Spirit from blowing and working HIS wonders--------Roger
----- Original Message -----
From: herb.davis
Sent: Wednesday, March 10, 2010 7:36 AM
Subject: RE: New Shack topic: Telling our Stories about God, or "What is truth?"

Jean Easland

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Mar 10, 2010, 10:20:11 AM3/10/10
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Brother Chris: AMEN would that I could be so organized in my response to wonderful Herb !!! roger

Wanda Lester

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Mar 10, 2010, 12:14:45 PM3/10/10
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  • You share your faith in Christ here and that faith is a gift from God.
  • You share your testimony of about your being a sinner and that too is a gift from God.
  • You share your wonderful insights into the scriptures and they also come from God.
 

Right on Chris! 
 
Herb, I too am uncomfortable with the individualistic experiences of God we hear so much of these days...probably because they too often seem to on "me" rather than God....a big element of "look at me...ain't I special." 
 
The litmus test on the validity of any experience is and must always be a coherence to the revelation of Scripture. As I tell the folks in my churches when they get on a "God is still speaking" kick...yes, he is and he is speaking the same word he has spoken for over two thousand years...Jesus Christ!  So yes, a firm and solid grounding in the text and in the witness of the Church throughout these two thousand plus years is essential.
 
That said, I definitely agree with Chris that God reveals himself and his will for all people to and through each of you...and maybe/hopefully even sometimes me....as he so chooses. (Scary thought if you think of it...who am I but a person of unclean lips, living amongst a people of unclean lips to speak the word of God?  Like you Jean I came to this later in life with a whole ton of doubts, fears, and a huge sense of inadequacy.) 
 
I would say we each have had some experience of God or we wouldn't be here doing what we are. (I can't imagine that any of us got into this seeking fame, glory or a hefty paycheck.)   At some point in our lives, we heard God's call and responded...maybe it was a full blown vision like Isaiah...or a knock us off our feet experience of Paul...but then again maybe it was just a gentle heart-felt invitation that pulled us away from our fishing nets and set us to follow...to serve and witness to not ourselves but the love of God revealed in Christ Jesus.  
 
Wanda

Wanda Lester

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Mar 10, 2010, 12:38:15 PM3/10/10
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Ah Jean... I remember well going off to seminary ... not having set foot in a classroom for ages and ages...full of doubts and fears ... alternating between trusting God and wanting to run away as far and as fast as I could before I made an idiot of myself.  For the first year I ran around like Amos... oh..I'm just a housewife...only here to learn a bit..not after a M.Div..I'm MAR..all the while knowing that God was calling me to Ordained Ministry....and here you are and here I am... you on the prairie and me in the mountains...riding the wind... Wonderful isn't it.
Wanda

herb.davis

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Mar 10, 2010, 1:27:23 PM3/10/10
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Dear Chris, Roger, Wanda and others,
 
I love pietist.  My grandmother and mother were pietist, if you mean by pietist,one who has a born again experience.  My father never did have an experience  and he couldn't be a Christian without one in our congregation.  I never doubt people's experience of the holy, why would anyone doubt my lack of experience or assume that everyone has an experience of the holy.  I had two concerns in my post, one was that from experience with the holy I have nothing to report.  But the other which I found  interesting was the contrast between Robinson and Young.  In Robinson there is no experience of God and yet it speaks truth to our cultural about a longing for the Holy.  In Young it is all experience of God and I enjoy it, I don't think we are to believe it as real, but it explores dogma in an interesting way and helpful way. What is the difference between Robinson's and Young's theological narrative?  Do they work better with different readers? How does this relate to Jane question about truth? Herb 
 

herb.davis

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Mar 10, 2010, 1:27:24 PM3/10/10
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Dear John,  I am always telling stories.  I think stories is the way we relate truth in a Biblical sense, but I am always worried about stories that make too much sense.  Stories that make the devil too easy to see or faithfulness to easy to do.  I am overcome at times by joy sometimes by a child or a funny person, but it's almost like we overhead the Gospel and never quite sure what we heard.  Anyway "it never happened to me" is what happened to me.  Herb

fcba%40comcast.net

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Mar 10, 2010, 2:41:25 PM3/10/10
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Herb,

 

As is often the case with me I got interested in your one comment (that you do not experience God) and did not take the time to state that your basic comparison between Young and Robinson was wonderful. I sometimes do not think that you realize what an amazing gift you are to the church. But even if you do not see it we do. Thanks.

 

Chris Anderson



God Is Still Laughing
http://home.comcast.net/~fcba

----- Original Message -----
From: "herb.davis" <herb....@mindspring.com>
To: confessi...@googlegroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, March 10, 2010 1:27:23 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: RE: New Shack topic: Telling our Stories about God, or "What is truth?"



Jean Easland

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Mar 10, 2010, 4:26:20 PM3/10/10
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Wanda: thanks for the soulmate talk--------Roger, Jeans husband

Willis E. Elliott

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Mar 10, 2010, 5:23:23 PM3/10/10
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Jane, your essay is highly perceptive of "The Shack" material & makes vigorous confrontational use of it.  Could be subtitled "An essay on personal evangelism."  Good!
1
On p3, you italicized what I here capitalize: Mack affected others positively "BECAUSE HE WAS WILLING TO SHARE HIS STORY about what he had experienced...."  Yes, where would we be if the witnesses of our Lord's resurrection had not had the courage to speak up?
2
Imagine the courage it took & takes for Mosab Hassan Yousef to speak up about his experience of conversion from Islam to Christianity & its consequences in his life (in & since the publication of his "Son of Hamas")!
3
Thrice in the Acts of the Apostles (9, 22, 26), Paul tells his conversion story.  It's told again in the same WSJournal issue (6-7 Mar 10) as contained the Yousef story: "A Transfiguring Moment: Caravaggio's potent, astonishing 'Conversion of Saul'" (W14, with color reproduction).  The painting's interpreter has a profound understanding of conversion.
4
But what have "unconverted" Christians to witness to?  There are none.  All who "turn" (Heb.*teshuvah* Lat. *conversio*) & believe the Jesus Story - that God came among us in & as Jesus, whose grace & resurrection power deliver us from sin & the powers of evil, who offers salvation to all who believe in him, & who will appear as the Lord in the full-come Kingdom of God - all who so turn have their turning story to tell (no matter its degree of dramatic intensity).  Herb rightly & often refers to this as publicly owning one's baptism.  But as my old schoolmate Clarence Jordan used to say, "Unhatched chickens don't lay eggs": The Christian witness assumes "turning" to the Jesus Story / getting hatched or born-again / owning one's baptism, or however else one may be self-identify as a Christian.  And the "turning" to must be continuous in mind as well as in life: "The Mind Under Grace: Why theology is an essential nutrient for spiritual growth" (as its put in the Mar/10 Christian Century [the cover article by Darren C. Marks, "Light for the Soul: Why a heady dose of doctrine is crucial to spiritual formation"]).
5
Theologically, Jane, the healthiest thing about "The Shack" is its assumption & dramatization of the Trinity as the Christian deity, what we Christians mean by "God."  In this, "The Shack" is evangelistic fiction face-to-face with the Trinity's two most powerful enemies today, viz. Islam & secular humanism.
6
Pp6-7 of the Mar-Apr/10 Books & Culture has a letter/response on "The Shack."  The letter accuses Katherine Jeffrey (whose review of "The Shack" we've considered) of marginalizing "The Shack" by overlaying it with literalist biblical interpretation.  KJ defends her review: "Young has chosen, self-consciously, to turn biblical (and subsequent Christian literary) precedent [on theophany & theodicy] on its head," torqued by his painful "legalistic and unworthily Christian upbringing...."  /  For a solidly biblical way to think, see (on pp9-10) "Rethinking Biblical Authority," a review of N.T.Wright's "The Last Word: Scripture and the Authority of God - Getting Beyond the Bible Wars."  He says a 4-legged stool is less stable than a 3-level, so authority should be based on "the Anglican stool," viz. "Scripture, tradition, and reason" not including "experience."  (Wesley, an Anglican priest, would not have accepted the so-called "Wesleyan quadrilateral," which includes experience.)  Says the reviewer, "Wright's ultimate model concerns relating Scripture to the drama of redemption, along the lines of a five-act play - creation, fall, Israel, Jesus, and the church."  "Wright's 'central claim' is that the phrase 'authority of Scripture' can make Christian sense only if it is a shorthand for 'the authority of the triune God, exercised somehow THROUGH Scripture'."
 
Grace and peace--
Willis

Gabe

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Mar 10, 2010, 10:30:18 PM3/10/10
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Roger,

I don't know the Rob Bell DVD, so can't say.

"Narrative theology" has had a variety of usages ( personal stories,
biblical stories, the over-arching narrative of Scripture and
Tradition....) The latter emerged as the dominant usage, largely due
to the "Yale school" (Frei, Lindbeck et al.) and others like N.T.
Wright. My treatment would also fall in the last type. If you can
track down (on the Internet?) the October 1983 issue of the journal,
INTERPRETATION, the whole issue is on "narrative theology" including
an important piece by Amos Wilder. I did the opener, "Narrative
Theology: An Overview," and, if I can find it, will be glad to e-mail
you an attachment with it.

--Gabe

On Mar 9, 5:00 pm, "Jean Easland" <jeasl...@pie.midco.net> wrote:
> Gabe: Our son is teaching SS using Rob Bell's DVDs. Wic says Bell draws from
> "Narrative" theology----------does he us your Narrative theology Gabe of his
> own version??? Any one out there using his stuff in teaching settings???
> Roger
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Gabe" <gfac...@comcast.net>
> To: "Confessing Christ Open Forum" <confessi...@googlegroups.com>
> Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2010 2:45 PM
> Subject: Re: New Shack topic: Telling our Stories about God, or "What is
> truth?"
>
> Jane,
>
> Thanks for getting us onto next steps.
>
> Let me play the contrarian, a role usually self-assigned by Willis,
> albeit with a tongue in cheek in order to raise some pertinent
> questions.
>
> "Story-telling" is in. Whether it's in the New York Times Book Review
> section or in theological hermeneutics or church practice. Wonderful.
> Long overdue because the Bible is a macrostory and its  heart for

> Christians is the microstory of Jesus. Of course, the popularity ofthe Shackas such and the tales within in are testimony to the same.

George Demetrion

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Mar 11, 2010, 7:29:34 AM3/11/10
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Thanks Gabe,
 
Both Gabe and Walter Brueggemann are narrative theologians; perhaps more precisely on WB a narrative Biblical exegete/expositor.  Both have been highly influenced by the Yale School as Gabe indicates on himself in his note, though have taken narrative theology in intriguingly different directions even as there are important similarities between the two.
 
Best,
 
George Demetrion
 
> Date: Wed, 10 Mar 2010 19:30:18 -0800

> Subject: Re: New Shack topic: Telling our Stories about God, or "What is truth?"

Matt

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Mar 11, 2010, 11:33:32 AM3/11/10
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For Young, Mack’s story is true: how else to explain his ability to
locate Missy’s body? On the other hand, Mack’s story doesn’t conform
to our understanding of space and time: what seemed to Mack like a
three-day experience occurred in a much shorter period of time
(perhaps instantaneously), and certain remembered, physical elements
of that experience (e.g., Missy’s burial) did not happen. So, Mack’s
account is “true” in one sense, but some details can’t be
reconciled.

I think the ambiguity of Mack’s story is an apt metaphor for biblical
faith. For instance, I confess the truth of the Resurrection, even as
I acknowledge the contradictory nature of the Gospel accounts and the
improbability of the story of Joseph of Arimathea. The nagging
details don’t weaken my faith in the core of the story. Perhaps Young
is saying something similar with the details of Mack’s experience (or
vision, or whatever you want to call it).

Jane asks good questions about our willingness to share our
experiences with God—particularly those that seem, for lack of a
better word, supernatural. I have shared my experiences here, but I
don’t readily tell people I encounter in daily life about those
experiences. Come to think of it, I’m not sure I told my wife about
them. On one level, these experiences are personal to me, and I don’t
want to open myself to ridicule if others will think I’m a fool for
believing in such things. On another level, however, these
experiences of closeness to God are gifts of the Spirit; as such, they
are meant to build up the Church (e.g., 1 Cor 14). Am I being selfish
by not sharing? Am I hiding my light under a bushel basket? Do I
prefer the so-called wisdom of the world to the so-called foolishness
of Christ? Lord, have mercy.

On the other hand, reading Willis’s last post, perhaps my experience
(and the experience of others) has little value. Maybe I do well to
keep my mouth shut. Maybe, but this seems incongruent with the story
of the early Church. From Paul’s writings, although worship in the
early Church centered on the Lord’s Supper, testimonies from the
faithful also played an important role. Paul recognized the potential
for testimonies to lead people astray, and so he established a litmus
test: testimonies (and all spiritual gifts) must be offered with the
motivation of love (1 Cor 13). Many testimonies are not so motivated,
but those that are build up the Church in unique ways, and deserve
their rightful place alongside Scripture, tradition and reason as
pillars of our Church.

Peace.

Willis E. Elliott

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Mar 11, 2010, 9:57:35 PM3/11/10
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Matt, your note shows Christian maturity.
A comment, not a correction:
Nothing I say or quote about "experience" should be read as a caution against personal witness.  We mainliners need so much more freedom & courage for it!
I mean it only as a caution against theological corruption (as N.T.Wright meant it in my reference to him).
 
Grace and peace--
Willis
 
----- Original Message -----
From: "Matt" <mau...@gmail.com>
To: "Confessing Christ Open Forum" <confessi...@googlegroups.com>

Willis E. Elliott

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Mar 23, 2010, 10:55:03 AM3/23/10
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Jane, this was in "Drafts," so I presume it wasn't "Sent."  /  Y'all please forgive if you've seen it before.
 
Grace and peace--
Willis
 
Jane, your essay is highly perceptive of "The Shack" material & makes vigorous confrontational use of it.  Could be subtitled "An essay on personal evangelism."  Good!
1
On p3, you italicized what I here capitalize: Mack affected others positively "BECAUSE HE WAS WILLING TO SHARE HIS STORY about what he had experienced...."  Yes, where would we be if the witnesses of our Lord's resurrection had not had the courage to speak up?
2
Imagine the courage it took & takes for Mosab Hassan Yousef to speak up about his experience of conversion from Islam to Christianity & its consequences in his life (in & since the publication of his "Son of Hamas")!
3
Thrice in the Acts of the Apostles (9, 22, 26), Paul tells his conversion story.  It's told again in the same WSJournal issue (6-7 Mar 10) as contained the Yousef story: "A Transfiguring Moment: Caravaggio's potent, astonishing 'Conversion of Saul'" (W14, with color reproduction).  The painting's interpreter has a profound understanding of conversion.
4
But what have "unconverted" Christians to witness to?  There are none.  All who "turn" (Heb.*teshuvah* Lat. *conversio*) & believe the Jesus Story - that God came among us in & as Jesus, whose grace & resurrection power deliver us from sin & the powers of evil, who offers salvation to all who believe in him, & who will appear as the Lord in the full-come Kingdom of God - all who so turn have their turning story to tell (no matter its degree of dramatic intensity).  Herb rightly & often refers to this as publicly owning one's baptism.  But as my old schoolmate Clarence Jordan used to say, "Unhatched chickens don't lay eggs": The Christian witness assumes "turning" to the Jesus Story / getting hatched or born-again / owning one's baptism, or however else one may be self-identify as a Christian.  And the "turning" to must be continuous in mind as well as in life: "The Mind Under Grace: Why theology is an essential nutrient for spiritual growth" (as its put in the Mar/10 Christian Century [the cover article by Darren C. Marks, "Light for the Soul: Why a heady dose of doctrine is crucial to spiritual formation"]).
5
Theologically, Jane, the healthiest thing about "The Shack" is its assumption & dramatization of the Trinity as the Christian deity, what we Christians mean by "God."  In this, "The Shack" is evangelistic fiction face-to-face with the Trinity's two most powerful enemies today, viz. Islam & secular humanism.
6
Pp6-7 of the Mar-Apr/10 Books & Culture has a letter/response on "The Shack."  The letter accuses Katherine Jeffrey (whose review of "The Shack" we've considered) of marginalizing "The Shack" by overlaying it with literalist biblical interpretation.  KJ defends her review: "Young has chosen, self-consciously, to turn biblical (and subsequent Christian literary) precedent [on theophany & theodicy] on its head," torqued by his painful "legalistic and unworthily Christian upbringing...."  /  For a solidly biblical way to think, see (on pp9-10) "Rethinking Biblical Authority," a review of N.T.Wright's "The Last Word: Scripture and the Authority of God - Getting Beyond the Bible Wars."  He says a 4-legged stool is less stable than a 3-level, so authority should be based on "the Anglican stool," viz. "Scripture, tradition, and reason" not including "experience."  (Wesley, an Anglican priest, would not have accepted the so-called "Wesleyan quadrilateral," which includes experience.)  Says the reviewer, "Wright's ultimate model concerns relating Scripture to the drama of redemption, along the lines of a five-act play - creation, fall, Israel, Jesus, and the church."  "Wright's 'central claim' is that the phrase 'authority of Scripture' can make Christian sense only if it is a shorthand for 'the authority of the triune God, exercised somehow THROUGH Scripture'."
 
Grace and peace--
Willis

Gabe

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Apr 2, 2010, 4:50:02 PM4/2/10
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Jane, Willis, Herb, John, Rick, Janet, Roger, Matt and Shack readers I
may have missed,

Check out current issue of Christianity Today cover story--"The Jesus
We Never Knew: Why scholarly attempts to discover the "real" Jesus
have failed and why that is as good thing"by North Park [John note]
University's Scot McKnight
with responses by N.T. Wright and Craig Keener. A series of telling
questions by McKnight: "We must be willing to ask, Whose Jesus will we
trust? Will it be the evangelists and the apostles? Will it be the
church's orthodox Jesus? Or will it be the latest proposal from a
brilliant historian?" (Crossan, Borg, , Sanders, N.T. Wright...) And
the author(s) of The Shack?
Interesting that McKnight puts Wright in this list, but as Willis
notes he works with the Anglican trilateral, and "reason" here
translates as a very big place for historical critical scholarship.
He makes his counter--points to McKnight in the response. I would
locate his reason as one of 3 forms of "'human experience/
world" (rational, moral, affective) in an authority structure, and be
wary of its moving to a normative location.

--Gabe

Richard Floyd

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Apr 2, 2010, 6:42:53 PM4/2/10
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Gabe,

I don't see the Century anymore, but I like McKnight's idea here; hardly a new one, that we should trust the canonical Christ rather than the Christ of scholarship.

Forsyth said a century ago that historical criticism “is a good servant, but a dangerous master.” And Brevard Child made a canonical approach his life's work.

As you know, I studied with Tom Wright way back in 1989, and to be fair, he should not be lumped in with the rest of this suspect crowd.

It is true that he is a historian, and has been at work for decades at a process of scholarly retrieval often lumped in with the “third questers.,” which I myself find very helpful. although often not entirely convincing.

Still, to be fair to Wright, when he climbs in a pulpit, it is the canonical Christ who is preached, although the historical material may appear in support of a point.

A guy not on the star circuit, but every bit as good, is another Anglican, Richard Bauckham, with whom I studied in 1995 in St Andrews. He, too, is a theologian with a historical bent.

He has retired from teaching, and moved back to Cambridge to write. I am eager to see what comes next, but if “God Crucified” and “Jesus and the Eyewitnesses” are any indication, we will be blessed with more of his rigor and insight.

Which is to say there are options to the Borgs and Crossans, who I think have become fringe figures to the church's basic theological enterprise, although they are still popular, especially in our latitudinarian UCC, which thinks that “chasing every wind of doctrine” is a virtue rather than a sin.

The revisers have given us little; they explain away so much there is hardly enough left to make one want to worship. How we long for new authorities, when the canon has all we need and then some.

Peace and Easter blessings,

Rick

> --
> To unsubscribe, reply using "remove me" as the subject.

Jean Easland

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Apr 2, 2010, 10:19:49 PM4/2/10
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Rick: Yes, plus the unending, unyielding, ever present, ever in the eternal
NOW work of the Hound of Heaven, God the Holy Spirit who does not wait
around for the next twist from the human heart and mind of any one, but
brings to full fruit that which he calls into being.
Blessings from the prairie where the culture of death is overwhelmed by
the force of life bursting into existence more each day as the sun and the
Son shines on what and who He loves! Easter; YES-----------Roger

----- Original Message -----
From: "Richard Floyd" <rfl...@berkshire.rr.com>
To: <confessi...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Friday, April 02, 2010 5:42 PM
Subject: Re: New Shack topic: Telling our Stories about God, or "What is
truth?"


Gabe,

I don't see the Century anymore, but I like McKnight's idea here; hardly a
new one, that we should trust the canonical Christ rather than the Christ of
scholarship.

Forsyth said a century ago that historical criticism �is a good servant, but
a dangerous master.� And Brevard Child made a canonical approach his life's
work.

As you know, I studied with Tom Wright way back in 1989, and to be fair, he
should not be lumped in with the rest of this suspect crowd.

It is true that he is a historian, and has been at work for decades at a

process of scholarly retrieval often lumped in with the �third questers.,�

which I myself find very helpful. although often not entirely convincing.

Still, to be fair to Wright, when he climbs in a pulpit, it is the canonical
Christ who is preached, although the historical material may appear in
support of a point.

A guy not on the star circuit, but every bit as good, is another Anglican,
Richard Bauckham, with whom I studied in 1995 in St Andrews. He, too, is a
theologian with a historical bent.

He has retired from teaching, and moved back to Cambridge to write. I am

eager to see what comes next, but if �God Crucified� and �Jesus and the
Eyewitnesses� are any indication, we will be blessed with more of his rigor
and insight.

Which is to say there are options to the Borgs and Crossans, who I think
have become fringe figures to the church's basic theological enterprise,
although they are still popular, especially in our latitudinarian UCC, which

thinks that �chasing every wind of doctrine� is a virtue rather than a sin.

Gabe

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Apr 3, 2010, 11:26:56 AM4/3/10
to Confessing Christ Open Forum
Rick,

Well said. Yes on Bauckham. You were privileged to study with him. The
magazine is Christianity Today not Christian Century. The former takes
new and interesting turns of late, more ecumenical than heretofore as
with this article and responses by Wright (who makes your point in an
interesting way, although I am almost, but not quite entirely
persuaded by this and also his take on justification. I sent him the
Lutheran-Roman Catholic Joint Agreement on the Doctrine of
Justification which is an ecclesial landmark, but a somewhat different
view of the matter) and Keener. I find the Century pretty good too
with David Heim at the functional helm these days.

Praise the Lord for Forsyth.

--Gabe

Richard Floyd

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Apr 3, 2010, 1:11:21 PM4/3/10
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Gabe,

I stand corrected.  I was wondering what the Century was doing by giving McKnight a platform.  Now that is  a stretch.

I read both the Century and CToday for years, but read neither now.  Now just mostly old books.

I have my quibbles with the joint declaration.  I think the most significant thing about it is that it even happened.

But I reluctantly agree with brother Olmsted that the Lutherans sold out on simul justus et peccator, among other things.  We'll have to talk about it sometime.

But I've been mostly reading Edwards lately, so I guess we can say we have come along way since the days when it was a commonplace in the Reformed family that the RC church was the Anti-Christ.

I just finished a  blogpost on “The Harrowing of Hell” for this Holy Saturday called “The Work of Christ between Good Friday and Easter:” http://richardlfloyd.blogspot.com/2010/04/he-descended-into-hell-ruminations-on.html

Incidentally, I have been invited back to First Church in Pittsfield to participate in the Easter service tomorrow.  It will be my first time there in a robe since I left five years ago, when you were with us at my service of thanksgiving.  The current pastor, my seminarian daughter, and I will give the call to worship together, and she will read the Gospel and help with the communion.  It will be her first liturgical participation in the church where she was baptized and nurtured.  I anticipate  a special day and many tears.

Easter Joy to You and Yours,

Rick

fcba%40comcast.net

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Apr 3, 2010, 1:41:14 PM4/3/10
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God Is Still Laughing
http://home.comcast.net/~fcba
I have my quibbles with the joint declaration.  I think the most significant thing about it is that it even happened.

"But I reluctantly agree with brother Olmsted that the Lutherans sold out on simul justus et peccator, among other things.  We'll have to talk about it sometime."  Rick
 
 
I realize that I have sinned on Holy Saturday in writing too many notes to the meeting but Rick brings up a subject that I would wish to further explore with Gabe at the helm. In my basic ignorance I would have to agree with Rick at this time. (That comment was not made to imply you were ignorant, Rick.) I realize that we are trying to do many things at the same time but I would like to have a declaration discussion on the issue of "simul justus et peccator" and whether or not the Lutherans gave in too much on it. Again I realize that we have many irons in the fire but this one is important to me. If RIck's one sermon is on the cross and Herb's one sermon is on the resurrection my one sermon is on "simul justus et peccator."

 

Chris Anderson

(And I will stop sending notes today no matter how hard it is to shut up!)


 

George Demetrion

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Apr 3, 2010, 4:50:22 PM4/3/10
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Agreed,
 
This is an important issue in light of a vast corpus of holiness literature grounded not only in the Puritans, but in a fair amount of Catholic and Eastern Orthodox literature.  Holiness is not my single sermon, but it's an important one even in the acknowledgement that it's an aspiration with very serious intent, rather than an attainment. 
 
Currently reading J.C. Ryle's classic book on Holiness.  There's a great deal here http://www.amazon.com/Holiness-Nature-Hindrances-Difficulties-Roots/dp/1598562223/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1270327315&sr=8-1. Check out the reviews.  21 5 stars out of 23 reviews.  The book includes an incisive discussion between the differences and correspondence between justification and sanctification.
 
Perhaps we're always justified and always sinful and always called to holiness, despite of and because of ourselves--thus, dialectical devotional theology.  There's just too much Scripture to the contrary, including the book Luther wanted to oust from the canon, James not to give a most serious aspiration to holiness (which was, I believe, Finney's intent) a serious place
 
Perhaps after Easter.  I'm more than certain this list can handle several threads.
 
Beautiful Easter to all,
 
George Demetrion
 
 

 


Date: Sat, 3 Apr 2010 17:41:14 +0000
From: fc...@comcast.net
To: confessi...@googlegroups.com
Subject: A Discussion on the Joint Declaration & "Simul justus et peccator"

Willis E. Elliott

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Apr 3, 2010, 5:41:39 PM4/3/10
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Gabe
 
Good thumbnail of the articles,  When I read them, I especially noted Wright's gentle rebuke of McKnight for exaggerating the limitation of historical methodology: twice he says, "I think Scott believes this too."
1
McKnight is in penitent revolt against the Jesus Seminar, in which he was so deep as to be offered (but refused) the chair (in the SBL).  Beware the convert!  He concludes that biographies of Jesus are NOTHING BUT their authors' autobiographies.  Reminds me of Schweitzer's use of the Narcissus myth: looking into the well, N. may falsely imagine that he sees more than himself.
2
McKnight's washout of the historical Jesuses reminds me of a book I read not long after it came out: GBShaw's "Adventures of the Black Girl in Her Search for God" (1932).  In the forest, she finds many altars to many gods, gets confused, comes into a "clearing" (both senses), where she's enLIGHTened by the alleged wisdom of realizing that all gods are illusions.  The book caused a public stir exceeding, recently, Dan Brown's books or "The Shack."
3
But Mack (McKnight, i.e.) comes into a sort of clearing when he arrives at James G.D. Dunn's the "remembered" Jesus (after the Jewish Jesus, the canonical Jesus, the orthodox Jesus, & the socalled "historical" Jesuses.  Dunn is close to Wright's own reversal of the "double dissimilarity" minimalist criterion of the Jesus Seminar (viz., something [in the Gospels] is really from Jesus if it's "dissimilar to both Judaism at the time of Jesus and to the beliefs of the earliest Christians"): Wright's maximalist "double similarity": "Jesus must have been recognizably (if crucifiably) Jewish, and recognizably (if uniquely) the starting point for what we now call 'the church'."  We need to continue historical studies for strengthening both these affirmations, else "Jesus" will be left to personal subjective imagination & public manipulation.  (Wriight: German scholars of the '20s left Jesus so vapid that "German Christians" could adapt him to Nazism.)
4
McKnight concluded that "There is an irreducible futility to the historical Jesus enterprise."  Wright rightly indicates that the futility was in the reductionist ("double dissimilarity") goal, not historical research in itself.
5
In the same Christian Today issue, a parallel article reports on a journalist's recent foot-trip around Galilee, asking "Jews, Muslims, and Arab Christians" their personal views of Jesus.
6
You note that I note that Wright works with "the Anglican trilateral" (Scripture, tradition, reason).  Yes, there's danger of overdoing his "reason"ing, which is his pro-history, anti-historicism/rationalism/relativism/mysticism sword (against, e.g., M.Borg's mystic-genius Jesus).  In non-combative mode, he's more appreciative of "ought" & "feel."  In Britain even more than we do in America, he faces the culture of what Princeton Sem.'s Kenda Dean calls "benign whatever-ism."
7
As for "The Shack" Jesus, what comes first to mind is what I've called Mack's BUDDY-BUDDY relationship with Jesus: it's progressively, for me uncomfortably, human-human.  On the other hand, it's the incarnation dramatized as conversation: I can't knock that.  What second comes to mind is a response of mine to Susan Thistletwaite when she was president of Hartford Seminary after have spent some two years demasculinizing the Bible (on the inclusive-language-Bible committee).  In an article, she'd written that Jesus is our "friend," & her proof-text was Jn.15.13-15.  In some publication, I used her proof-texting as an instance of neglecting context: Jesus did not say "you are my friends" but rather "you are my friends IF - IF you do what I command" (vs.14 NIV): the disciples' friendship with Jesus is within the sphere of his lordship (a role loathed in the inclusive-language Bible).  The divine-human friendship is never egalitarian, is always at the divine initiative (vs.16: "You did not choose me, but I chose you....").
7.1
But even though the Jesus/Mark relationship becomes buddy-buddy, it does not violate trinitarian orthodoxy.  Mack is always awesomely aware, from what the other Trinity members (Papa & Sarayu) have said about Jesus, that Jesus is God.  He is also aware that the members of the Trinity share one consciousness: each is always aware of the others' immediate mind.
7.2
Said friendship is not in contrast to lordship (as S.T. implied) but in contrast to the disciples' earlier less-affectionate status as slaves/servants.
7.3
Said friendship is in the context of the atonement (vs.13): laying down one's life for others is the no-greater-love that proves friendship.
7.4
A hermeneutics note: The complexity & uniqueness of the friendship idea in this Jn.15 passage demands the interpreter's rational/moral/affective/prayerful attention if the interpreter is to experience its historicity & authority.  "The Shack" conveys some of this both in the Jesus/Mack conversations & in the Papa/Mack//Sarayu/Mack conversations about Jesus.
7.5
"Friendly" characterizes almost all of Mack's conversation with members of the Trinity.  I must point to part of one with Papa: pp98-101 deal with transcendence / mystery / miracle  /  the fall ("Adam chose to go it on his own")  /  the incarnation  /  the atonement  /  the Trinity ("I am one God and I am three persons, and each of the three is fully and entirely the one.").  (These four pages are the book's greatest concentration of theological ideas.  This, on the next page, is the book's theme: "This weekend is [only] about relationship and love."  Yes, I added the "[only]": I've written extensively to the OpenForum as to what I've found wanting/lacking in "The Shack.")
 
Grace and peace--
Willis
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