Kingdom Seeking

Entries from February 2009

The Barbarian Way

February 24, 2009 · 6 Comments

You may or may not have read The Barbarian Way: Unleash the Untamed Faith Within by Erwin Raphael McManus.  If you have not, let me suggest that you pick up a copy and read it.  The book is only 148 pages, so depending on how much time you have and how fast you read, it can be read in a couple of hours in one setting if you so choose.

 

I like the book because I find it both very prophetic and yet very encouraging.  It serves a great purpose if you consider the book (its author) as a conversation partner on what it means to be a disciple of Jesus.  It would even serve well as a conversation partner in a small group or bible class discussion.

 

I especially love the second chapter “The Barbarian Call.”  Here are a couple of quotes from this chapter to give you an idea of why I enjoy the book, what I mean when I say the book is both prophetic and encouraging, and why you might consider picking up a copy for yourself. 

 

When speaking about our desire for safety vs. walking with Christ regardless of its perilous outcomes in this world, McManus writes:

We have somehow perverted this more primal understanding [walking with Christ regardless...] to a far more civilized one.  Instead of finding confidence to live as we should regardless of our circumstances, we have used it as justification to choose the path of least resistance, least difficulty, least sacrifice.  Instead of concluding it is best to be wherever God wants us to be, we have decided that wherever it is best for us to be is where God wants us.  Actually, God’s will for us is less about our comfort that it is about contribution.  (p. 44)

And just a few pages later, McManus stresses how the call of following Jesus has really been distorted as history progressed forward:

Jesus calls us?  Somewhere along the way the movement of Jesus Christ became civilized as Christianity.  We created a religion using the name of Jesus Christ and convinced ourselves that God’s optimal desire for our lives was to insulate us in a spiritual bubble where we risk nothing, sacrifice nothing, lose nothing, worry about nothing.  Yet Jesus’ death wasn’t to free us from dying, but to free us from the fear of death.  Jesus came to liberate us so that we could die up front and then live.  Jesus wants to take us to places where only dead men and women can go.

 

How do we live out the call to follow Jesus?  That is not an easy answer.  However, I hope we are reminded never to become complacent in our call to be followers of the One who first carried his own cross and then demanded that his followers do the same.  “…Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me”(Mk 8.34, TNIV).

Categories: Faith · Kingdom of God · Missions and Ministry

Acts 2.36-47: Imagining Christian Community

February 14, 2009 · 63 Comments

Therefore let all Israel be assured of this: God has made this Jesus, whom you crucified, both Lord and Messiah.  When the people heard this, they were cut to the heart and said to Peter and the other apostles, “Brother, what shall we do?”  Peter replied, “Repent and be baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins.  And you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit.  The promise is for you and your children and for all who are far off – for all whom the Lord our God will call.”  With many other words he warned them; and he pleaded with them, “Save yourselves from this corrupt generation.”  Those who accepted his message were baptized, and about three thousand were added to their number that day.  They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer.  Everyone was filled with awe at the many wonders and signs performed by the apostles.  All the believers were together and had everything in common.  They sold property and possessions to give to anyone who had need.  Every day they continued to meet together in the temple courts.  They broke bread in their homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts, praising God and enjoying the favor of all the people.  And the Lord added to their number daily those who were being saved.

– Acts 2.36-47, TNIV

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            This description of the earliest disciples of Jesus life together (v. 42-47) following the Apostle Peter’s most famous sermon has always intrigued me.  The description is the outcome of the response to Peter’s challenge in v. 36 to accept Jesus of Nazareth as both Lord and Messiah[1]  The response to the challenge from Peter was to accept the call to repentance and baptism which came with the promise of forgiveness and the gift of the Holy Spirit.  The life of these disciples is a direct result of what happens when the gospel is truly understood, when both grace and the powerful presence of God through the Spirit are truly received. 

            One of my big theological interests is how Christian eschatology (present and future hope, salvation, redemption, etc…) shapes our ecclesiology (formation of the life and practice of church).  This week as I was preparing a sermon from the above passage, I ran across a great statement by George E. Ladd who discusses this very interest.  Ladd suggests that what Luke is summarizing for us is what a Christian community looks like that has been shaped by Christian eschatology (the realization that their future victory in Christ is already a present reality that now shapes the formation of Christian life).  Ladd writes:

The early Christians were conscious of being bound together because they were together bound in Christ.  They were an eschatological people not only because they were called to inherit the eschatological Kingdom but because they had already experienced the blessings of the messianic era.  In a sense, their fellowship was a foretaste of the fellowship of the eschatological Kingdom, displayed in history in the midst of Judaism.  It was inconceivable that a believer should be such in isolation.  To be a believer meant to share with other believers the life of the coming age, to be a believer in fellowship, to be in the ekklēsia.[2]

The connection between the abstract theology into practical theology may not be easily apparent in most contemporary English translations where there is usually a division existing between verses 41 and 42 which may subconsciously allow us to read v. 42-47 apart from its proceeding verses.  Ladd helps us to see the eschatological dynamics taking place here that give shape to the life and practice of this early Christian community.  It is also important to remember that such a community cannot exist without the acceptance of Jesus as Lord and Messiah which assumes a call to repentance and baptism.

The question we face today is what do we do with a passage such as this?  The challenge to accept Jesus as Lord and Messiah and the call to repentance and baptism has always been accepted as normative for the formation of church.  However, the rest of the practices have been a challenge.  Do we practice the contents of v. 42-47 with literal precision?  Or do we seek the intent of the passage but recognize that such practice will vary from culture to culture?  Rather than reading this passage as a formulaic set of rules on how to do church, Hays suggest we need to read this passage as it is given to us – as story.  In reading the passage as a story, we are asked to “consider how in our own communities we might live analogously, how our own economic practices might bear witness to the resurrection so that those who later write out story might say, ‘And great grace was upon them all.’”[3] 

I offered the quote from Hays because I happen to agree with him (that’s a real surprise☺).  For those of us from the Stone-Campbell Restoration Movement, we have always struggled with how literal our practices must be to live as faithful recipients of the grace we have received.  I would suggest our call is not necessarily to restore the same form in Acts 2 but instead, as a community that has accepted Jesus as Lord and Messiah and has embraced the call to repentance and baptism, to be vigilant in allowing the victory we have received in Christ to form our community.  When this occurs, I suggest that we will be a community that has restored the intent of v. 42-47 even if the form would not be an exact replica of the first century description.  In the meantime, as Hays suggest, let’s read and re-read this story and allow that story to stir our imaginations as to what it might look like in our own culture if we allow our victory in Christ to shape the life and practice of our Christian community.


[1] Luke Timothy Johnson, The Acts of the Apostles, Sacra Pagina (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 1992), 60.

[2] George Eldon Ladd, A Theology of the New Testament, rev. ed. (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1993), 388.

[3] Richard B. Hays, The Moral Vision of the New Testament: Community, Cross, New Creation; A Contemporary Introduction to New Testament Ethics (New York, NY: Harper Collins, 1996), 302.

Categories: Churches of Christ · Hope · Kingdom of God · Missions and Ministry · Scripture · Theology

Educational Decisions

February 5, 2009 · 12 Comments

I learned earlier this week that I have been accepted into the Master of Theology program at Luther Seminary in St. Paul, Minnesota.  My admittance into the program is for part-time study which would allow me to continue to serve in ministry full-time (which is primary purpose).  The emphasis of my study would be in the broad field of systematic theology, focusing for my thesis on the question of how Christian eschatology shapes and informs the life and practice of the church. 

For those who are unfamiliar with a Master of Theology degree (M.Th), it is typically a 24-credit graduate research program for those who have earned a Master of Divinity degree.  For some, the degree is the next step in fulfilling the eventual goal of earning a Ph.D in religious/theological studies.  I am not sure at this point in my life whether I would ever want to commit the time necessary to earning a Ph.D.  However, the question that my research would focus on does interest me as I try and help North American churches regain their missional calling.

Now I must decide whether I want to go through with this degree or look beyond this and consider a Doctor of Ministry program (D.Min), which is aimed more at the practical aspects of practicing ministry (and there are more and more D.Min programs that are addressing the concerns of the missional church).  If I proceed with this degree, I would be looking at a 4-5 year plan since I would be doing it on a part-time basis.  Decisions…

Categories: Missions and Ministry