You can do yourself a
great big favor by getting rid of three bad words:
"should-a", "could-a", and
"might-a-been." We cant say a reasonable
thing about life on the road not taken, though implied,
in these three "if only" day-dreams. Its
self-defeating nonsense to talk on and on about
make-believe roads we never trod.
But what if we try to protect
ourselves with this awareness of the inherent dangers of
"if only" thinking and, thus forewarned, go
ahead forearmed, speculating on how some things might
have been had some other things gone differently? We
cant be sure about how it would "go" with
us if things were to "go"
differently, but knowing that we cant, lets
play a little game of speculation. For example: What
about homosexuality in an "if only" church, an
"if only" church history?
Some people say wed have
been a lot better off "if only" the Apostle
Paul hadnt written so much, especially what they
call his "anti-gay" writings. But we cant
blame Paul for the ways were often mistreated by
people who run churches. Paul is not our problem;
hes their problem. Paul has always been a
problem for lots of people who try to run churches. And thats
our problem.
The really relevant "what
if" is this: What if Paul were not such a problem
for churches? What if the churches were more welcoming of
Pauls basic theology? Would the church then be more
welcoming of us?
Paul "is probably the most
vilified Christian since Pentecost." [Leander E.
Keck and Victor Paul Furnish] Says another biblical
scholar: "Paul in the 20th century has
been used and abused as much as in the first." [N.
T. Wright] Pauls message has always been too
radical for religionists. Pauls Law-free Gospel
wasnt easily welcomed by other Christians during
his own lifetime and its been problematic to
legalists ever since.
According to a Harvard Bible
scholar: "At least three hundred years after its
writing and distribution the basic insight of Pauls
theology justification by faith (alone), without
the works of the law seems to have been more or
less lost in the teaching and thinking of the
church." [Krister Stendahl] He reminds us that
"It was not until Augustine, more than three hundred
years after Paul, that a man was found who seemed to see,
so to say, what made Paul tick, and who
discerned the center of gravity in Pauline
theology." But even after this, Paul has not been
popular. Among the some 300 popes of history, only six
have been Pope Pauls. It took 100 popes to reach the time
of Pope Paul I (757) and almost 250 popes to get to
(homosexual) Pope Paul II (1464), in the generation of
Martin Luthers parents.
Once Christendom divided between
Roman Catholics and Protestants, Paul became, in a
Catholic scholars words, "intrinsically
alien, especially to Catholics."
[Wolfgang Trilling] But within Protestantism, too, rules
and regulations were imposed on Luthers sola
fide, legalisms grated against sola gratia,
and sola scriptura was turned into a bibliolatry
to be mined for more dos and donts.
"What Paul says as
clearly as he can," according to an evangelical
Bible scholar, "is that the Law
has been
eclipsed by the revelation of God in Jesus Christ and
must now be seen as obsolescent." [Ben Witherington
III] Paul has always been a problem for the church
because too many people who want to run churches want to
lay down the law. Instead, Paul simply laid the law down.
He set the Law aside.
Considering what a wild word it
was that Paul was preaching, it was to be expected that
those who came after Paul couldnt resist trying to
tame it. Human beings want to be in control; we want to
save ourselves. Were always tempted to try to put
others, including the gods and even the Most High
God in our debt.
The ecclesiastical rejection of
Paul and his outlaw Gospel is whats been the
problem and continues to be the problem for legalistic
religionists as well as for lesbians and gay men caught
in the trap of churchly legalism. And that rejection of
the true Good News in Jesus Christ is truly bad news for
a church that then, in turn, has nothing but bad news for
lesbians and gay men. The Foolish Galatians
Pauls outlaw Gospel of Gods
grace in Christ Jesus is nowhere more urgently proclaimed
than in his letter to Christians in Galatia. This letter
is "the least disputed of any of Pauls
epistles" so far as authenticity is
concerned. [Donald Guthrie] But its always been
hotly disputed so far as theology is concerned.
And its just as relevant to heresy in
Evangelicaland on the eve of the 21st century
as it was relevant to 1st century heresy in
Galatia.
The letter is heavy with
Pauls deep disappointment, disgust and distress
over the Galatians falling for legalistic codicils
to Gods covenant of grace. His indignation over
their having allowed themselves to be distracted away
from the true message of the freely-given grace of God to
something that they somehow also had to earn prompted the
Apostles addressing them in these now famous words:
"O foolish Galatians! Who has bewitched you?"
[Gal 3:1]
What was going on in Galatia
that deserved such a negative response the most
negative of all of Pauls letters? Briefly this:
Paul had preached the Good News of Gods free grace
and peace to these gentiles and, seemingly, they had
received it gladly. They became Christians. But then some
Jewish Christians came along to urge them to adopt what
the Jews claimed was the "full gospel"
the addition of Jewish Law on top of faith: for example,
requirements of circumcision, Sabbath-keeping and
the like. They insisted that without becoming Jewish,
these gentiles couldnt really be followers of the
Jewish Messiah.
That seemed to make sense to the
gentiles. It seemed, on second thought, to be more
recognizably "religious." It was
"genuinely" Jewish. It was not so altogether
shockingly new. But G. K. Chesterton hadnt yet come
along to advise them that "Unless the Gospel sounds
like a gun going off it has not been uttered at
all."
And yet as evangelical New
Testament scholar F. F. Bruce notes: "We can
appreciate how slender Pauls case for the gospel he
preached must have appeared if he was the only one who
preached it." Were they to try to believe that
everyone was out-of-step but Paul? Still, didnt
they know that even Socrates and their other sages had
been out-of-step with most of their ancient colleagues as
well as out-of-step with the masses? Were not Hebrew
prophets of old virtually minorities of one? Wasnt
Jesus himself out-of-step with the crowd? Wasnt he
left all alone in the end? How good a record did
"moral majority" tradition and convention
really have as such?
On hearing of the sad turn of
events in Galatia, Paul wrote to tell them that if they
were now to add qualifications to the Gospel, theyd
be rejecting the Gospel. He said, flat out, that grace
plus rules and regulations is no grace at all. He
urgently warned them not to fall for false
"gospels" even if they thought they had
been "touched by an angel" or even if he
himself came preaching something at odds with what
hed already preached. He repeatedly prays that the
preaching of perverted "gospels" be God-damned.
[Gal 1:8f]
The
Law was a Nanny
The Law "is shown [by Paul] to have
been intrusive, temporary, secondary and
preparatory" in the first place. [Bruce] To Paul,
"the law is a second-hand thing." [William
Barclay] Paul argued that the Law, after all, didnt
go all the way back to Abraham, Isaac or Jacob. It went
back only to Moses. Paul pictures the Law as a nanny.
[Gal 3:24f] Dont think Fran Drescher. The
Law-as-nanny was charged with attending to the minor
children until theyd grown up to maturity. That
maturity came with the coming of Christ.
That "the Mosaic law
was intended by God to be in effect for Gods people
only up until the coming of Christ" was not a new
concept. [Richard N. Longenecker] As a Reformed scholar
reminds us: "it was [Christ] to whom the promise
pointed and in whom it was materialized." [Herman N.
Ridderbos] A Jewish doctrine from antiquity had posited
three epochs of sacred history, each lasting 2,000 years:
an age of chaos, an age of Law and an age of Messiah. It
was understood that "if the Days of Messiah have
begun, those of Torah have ended. On the other hand, if
Law is still valid, Messiah has not come." [Bruce]
So what Paul was preaching was entirely consistent with
traditional Jewish thought, even if the Jewish Christians
from Jerusalem werent grasping this: If Jesus
Messiah has come, the Law is over!
Another New Testament scholar
puts it this way: "Paul envisages the role of the
law as at an end.
[F]or the Gentile Galatians now
to seek to emulate the traditionalist Jews would mean a
return to immature, restricted childhood." [James D.
G. Dunn] Paul goes so far as to define death to the law
(Rom 7:4-6) as the same experience as death to sin (Rom
6:2). Said Luther: "If the days of the law be not
shortened, no flesh should be saved." According to
another evangelical Bible scholar, "no longer could
it be argued that circumcision, Jewish dietary laws,
following distinctively Jewish ethical precepts, or any
other matter having to do with a Jewish lifestyle were
requisite for the life of faith. Certainly not for
Gentile Christians in any sense." [Longenecker] And,
as he points out, it wasnt just so-called ritual or
purity laws that Paul had in mind in teaching that the
Laws custody has ended. It was all the Law,
including the ethical and moral laws. In the words of yet
another biblical authority: "For Pauls
doctrine of the law it is fundamental that the law is
indivisible. Therefore, the curse of which he speaks also
applies to the moral law." [Gerhaard Ebeling]
Today the demand is
"ex-gay." Back then the demand was
"ex-goy." Its the same demand. And if we
buy into the demand of legalists today, were as
foolish as those foolish Galatians.
Says a New Testament scholar:
"So long as all the believers were already
circumcised there was no critical problem. It did not
even dawn on them all at once that Christianity involved
a totally different approach to the law." [Donald
Guthrie] We might paraphrase for todays
circumstances: So long as all the believers [assumed that
all fellow believers were likewise heterosexual] there
was no critical problem. It did not even dawn on them all
at once that Christianity involved a totally different
approach to the law.
These are not matters of merely
abstract systematic theology. They are practical matters
of pastoral care and concern. According to John
Calvins comments on the Galatian letter: "It
is no light evil to quench the brightness of the gospel,
lay a snare for consciences and remove the distinction
between the old and new covenants."
"Male and Female?"
One of the "traditional
values"-Christians favorite weapons against
gay men and lesbians is from Genesis (in the Law or
Torah!): God created humankind as "male and
female." They shout at us: "Male and female,
male and female! Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve!"
We must joyfully remind them: Messiah has come! The
theological distinctions of the Torah classifications are
ended!
Paul gets very specific about
this matter of the significance of "male and
female." In the Ga latian letter, he asserts that
over against the significance of the heterosexual pairing
of "male and female" in Torah, there is now
"in Christ, no male and female" thats
theologically significant. [Gal 3:28] Here he takes the
very words of the Greek translation of Genesis the
same Bible verse that traditionalists use against us
and states in no uncertain terms that for the
Christian, there is now no theological, ethical or
salvation significance to sexual distinctions and the
male/female pair.
Now notice that this verse,
Galatians 3:28, is often mistranslated and misquoted and
so the point thats relevant to the issue of
homosexuality today is missed. Its usually quoted
like this: "In Christ there is neither Jew nor
Greek, slave nor free, male nor female." Thats
not what Paul wrote. What he wrote was this: "In
Christ there is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, no
male and female." Paul deliberately changes the
"nor" of the first two examples to an
"and" in the third example. The "male and
female" alliance is pulled right out of the
Torahs "God created them male and female."
Bruce indicates that the "male and female"
reference is a quote from Genesis by placing quotation
marks around "male and female." But ignoring
Paul, legalistic Christians still shout at us: "Male
and female, male and female! Adam and Eve, not Adam and
Steve!" We can reply: "No male and
female!" Adam and Eve or Adam and Steve!
This particular set of examples
in Galatians 3:28 was illustrative of the entire range of
traditional distinctions that Paul was now proclaiming to
be resolved in Christ, so far as any continuing
theological significance was concerned. But Pauls
preaching along these lines was as threatening to the
tradition-bound of his day as our application of his
preaching to our circumstances is threatening to the
tradition-bound of our day. Bruce observes that these
racial, cultural and economic distinctions "had
considerable importance in Judaism [but in Pauls
gospel] in Christ they are all irrelevant." All
human distinctions are irrelevant in Christ.
Traditionalists have never found
the abolition of the theological significance of these
and other distinctions easy to take. Bruce notes that
"Pauls ban on discrimination on racial or
social grounds has been fairly widely accepted" in
our day. But even when it comes to racial reconciliation
in Christ, at least according to John Perkins, the black
founder of Voice of Calvary ministries in Mississippi,
there has been no significant progress among his fellow
evangelicals during his lifetime. He says that most
change on race issues among evangelical Christians has
been "forced upon them by society. They have not
seen it as a theological mandate." In the mid-1960s,
Jerry Falwell was typical of most white American
fundamentalists and evangelicals, calling the black civil
rights movement "a terrible violation of human and
property rights [that] should be considered civil wrongs
rather than civil rights." He boasted:
"Ive spoken against [integration] in the
pulpit and I will continue to do so." Referring to
his formative years, Falwell recalled that "all my
role models, including powerful church leaders, supported
segregation." Racial distinctions still matter theologically
to certain groups of fundamentalist and conservative
Christians, especially in the American South and in South
Africa.
Bruce is perhaps too optimistic
about social distinctions as well. After all, a
major principle of the "church growth" movement
is that churches are much more likely to grow if they are
socially homogenous. Besides these racial and social
issues, however, Bruce observes that "there has been
a tendency to restrict the degree to which there is
no "male and female." " And that
continuing unbiblical sexual restriction, whether in
application to women or to people who are gay or lesbian,
obstructs the clear preaching and living of the true
Gospel of Christ.
Paul says he has just one
question for these foolish Galatians. He asks: "Did
you receive the Spirit by keeping the law or by believing
the gospel?" [Gal 3:2] The obvious answer was that
they had received the Spirit by believing the Gospel. We
can paraphrase Pauls question to Christian goys by
asking Christian gays: Did you receive the Spirit by
being heterosexual, by becoming ex-gay, by
celibacy, by getting heterosexually-married, by having
kids, or by being gay, lesbian, bisexual, or
transgendered? Or did you receive the Spirit by
believing the Gospel? Its obvious. Receiving the
Spirit has nothing to do with sexual orientation or
gender.
Paul goes on to warn the
Galatian Christians that there are many other
so-called "gospels" to watch out for. He
insists that theyre really, of course, not gospels
at all. But theyre pawned off as
"gospels," as good news. And theyre
bought into as good news. So, watch out! The Galatians
had already been duped by the legalists from Jerusalem.
What else would be coming down the pike to distract them
from the pure Gospel? We dont know if they accepted
Pauls admonitions and took them seriously. But we
cant answer for the Galatians. We do, though, get
to answer for ourselves.
So what do you think? Do you
think wed be better off "if only" the
churches would take Paul more seriously? It would seem
so. But we cant really say how wed experience
the road that has not been taken.
What we can say, however, is
that we should take Paul more seriously.
Thats not easy for any of us to do. There are
always so many other "gospels" grabbing for our
attention and allegiance. Its to some of these
other "gospels" that we now turn our attention
in order that we not turn over our allegiance as well.
What is the Gospel?
Before looking into other
"gospels," lets make sure we have a good
idea of what the true Gospel is.
The Gospel is more than just a
category at Tower Records or HMV. Its not just
anything someone thinks is unquestionably true, as in
"the gospel truth." Our English word
"gospel" comes from the Old English
"god" (good) and "spell" (news)
"good news." "Good News"
translates the Latin evangelium and the Greek euongelion
(from which we get our word "evangelical").
So what is this Good News, this Gospel?
Contrary to popular notions, the
Gospel is not fundamentally about our salvation. As A. W.
Tozer so often said: "The gospel in its scriptural
context puts the glory of God first and the salvation of
man second." The Gospel is "the story of the
one who is himself the good news, the gospel of
God," said George MacDonald, "the Word is the
Lord; the Lord is the gospel." As a New Testament
commentator explains: "That Christ (Gal
1:16; cf. I Cor 1:23; 15:12; 2 Cor 1:19; 4:5; 11:4; Phil
1:15) can be interchanged with gospel [in the
New Testament] (Col 1:23; I Thess 2:9)
is a
reminder of the extent to which the infant Christian
movement focused its identity and message on Christ, his
life, death and resurrection." [Dunn]
Paul summed up the tradition of
the Gospel in the 1st-century church in these
words to the Corinthians: "In Christ, God was
reconciling the world to Himself, no longer holding
peoples sins against them." [II Cor 5:19] Paul
writes to the Colossians: "In [Christ] God chose to
dwell in all his fullness, and through him to reconcile
all things to Himself, making peace through the shedding
of his blood on the cross all things, whether on
earth or in heaven." [Col 1:19f] Therefore, as an
evangelical New Testament commentator explains, the
proclamation of the Gospel is not a call for people
"to make their peace with God, but to tell them that
God has made peace with the world.
When
Christs work was done, the reconciliation of the
world was accomplished." [Ralph Martin] What other
term but "Good News" could apply to such news?
What other even good news can compare with such Good News
as is the Gospel? The 16th century Bible
translator William Tyndale celebrated this Good News,
saying that the Gospel "signyfyth good, mery, glad
and joyfull tydings, that maketh a mannes hert glad, and
maketh hym syng, daunce and leepe for joye."
Sadly, we hear this Good News
disparaged and see it neglected by all sorts of
Christians these days not only by liberals and
those who are dominated by the rhetoric of secular
lesbigay and transgendered agendas but by many in
Evangelicaland as well, captivated by homphobic
heterosexism and legalism.
Other "gospels"
Other "gospels" are other "gospels"
because they pose, in effect if not by intent, as
substitutes for the true Gospel. They are other
"gospels" because they pose as objects of
ultimate concern. Either directly or indirectly, they
claim for themselves what only God may claim. They are
other "gospels" because they appear as
something around which we should finally organize our
lives, solve our basic problems and preserve ourselves.
The other "gospels" are self-serving,
theyre set against Christ and Christians, and
theyre superficial substitutions.
The other gospels" are
self-serving.
The other "gospels" are
consumer-oriented. Theyre market-driven. This is
true of both secular and spiritual substitute
"gospels." Their self-serving bottom line
question is this: "Whats in it for me?"
The very same question can be asked in other words:
"Whats in it for my group?" The
focus is on me or on me-writ-large. These days, other
"gospels" can be rationalized as identity
politics.
One of todays most popular
other "gospels" is self-servingly arrogant,
do-it-yourself spirituality. A New Yorker cartoon
shows a bookstore customer seeking assistance from a
clerk whos standing at his computer saying:
"The Bible that would be under
self-help."
A Union Theological Seminary
graduate student recently wrote an Op-Ed piece for The
New York Times in which he attacked the popes
critique of New Age ideas. He advised John Paul II to
"reinvigorate" Christianity by throwing away
the idea of Jesus as the Son of God who was crucified for
our sins and raised from the dead. Accordingly, he says,
"It doesnt matter what people turn to in their
spiritual search, be it Christian mysticism or spiritual
traditions like Buddhism, Hinduism and Native American
spirituality. What matters is the search itself because
that if charted according to ones deepest
psychic needs is what will eventually give life
meaning." [James Kullander] People, he declared,
need to have "Christianity on their own terms."
But Smith College religion professor Philip Zaleski,
writing in The New York Times Book Review,
observes that "Above all,
great spiritual
writing springs from struggling against oneself and
against ones times." And as Princeton
sociologist Robert Wuthnow expresses it, a
"compelling [spirituality] must be rooted in
authoritative traditions that transcend the person and
point to larger realities in which the person is
embedded.
rather than [in] fragmented,
self-indulgent experiences."
Unfortunately, contemporary
individualism puts faith primarily in its "own
stories" and so-called "indigenous
stories" from non-Christian traditions instead of
putting it in the indigenous stories of the saints of the
church, Bible stories and the Lord and Savior of
"The Greatest Story Ever Told."
This self-centered, self-serving
orientation of the other "gospels" runs counter
to the true Gospels orientation: Reconciled for the
ministry of reconciliation. [II Cor 5:18f]
In his book, Habits of the
Heart, sociologist Robert Bellah describes the
approach of a woman named Sheila. Shes typical of
many contemporary Americans when it comes to todays
ubiquitous "spirituality." Sheila says:
"My faith [is] Sheilaism. Just my own little voice.
Its just try to love yourself and be gentle
with yourself." Her religion is a warm-fuzzy version
of "The Reflective God" by Goth rocker Marilyn
Manson. Mansons lyrics: "I went to god just to
see / And I was looking at me / Saw heaven and hell were
lies / When Im god everyone dies."
Self-centered Sheilaism can be just as careless of others
as Mansonism is. Each is a narcissism that can ill-afford
to address the needs of others.
The other "gospels"
dont really concern themselves with
Jesus summary of what old Nanny Law meant:
"Love God, the One Lord, with all your heart, soul,
mind, and strength and love your neighbor as you love
yourself. Nothing," said Jesus, "is more
important." [cf. Mark 12:30ff pars; Matt 5:43;
19:19; Rom 13:9; James 2:8; cf. Deut 6:4; Lev 19:18]
Notice how both the Law and Jesus assume ones love
of self. Neither Sheila nor anyone else needs to command
herself to love herself.
Paul was echoing Jesus
summary of the Laws essence when he summed up the
whole law in the single commandment: "Love your
neighbor as yourself." [Gal 5:14] The Apostle was
saying that if the Galatians were guided by the Spirit,
they are not subject to an ever-expanding legalism full
of loopholes. [Gal 5:18] Instead, theyd be looking
for all the ways they could keep up with the
Spirits love for their neighbors.
The other "gospels" are set
against Christ and Christians. Now, obviously, Jesus
was and is about more than prescribed love. Others have
prescribed love. And, obviously, following Jesus was and
is about more than prescribed love. And whats not
to like about "love"? Yet all four New
Testament gospels record Jesus own warning that all
sorts of people will hate those who follow him. [Matt
10:22; Mark 13:13; Luke 21:17; John 15:18] After all,
they hated him. Why should they not hate those who follow
him? But its more than a matter of hating
Jesus followers. As people took offense at Jesus
himself, and at the early Christians, there is an
inherent "offense" in the Gospel. Said Oswald
Chambers: "The Gospel of Jesus Christ awakens an
intense craving and an equally intense resentment."
The Village Voice
recently ran a large photo of a man wearing a T-shirt
emblazoned with the words: "JESUS IS A CUNT." A
reader objected in writing. His gentle letter was printed
under the Voices crude headline:
"CHRIST ALMIGHTY." A New Yorker cartoon
depicted a smiling dog sitting on a front porch and
holding up a sign that reads: "Jesus Loves
You." Theres a sign in the front yard that
reads: "Beware of Dog!"
In a New York Times review
of a book about Jesus, written by a biographer of Marilyn
Monroe, the reviewer says the authors
"religious devotion is valid because he thoughtfully
challenges
the plausibility of [Jesus]
miracles" and because he concludes that Jesus lives
on [merely] in "our yearning to be loved
[and
in] human dignity." [Alexandra Hall] Apparently
heresy validates religious devotion. In another New
York Times review, this one of Alec Guinness
autobiography, movie critic John Simon belittles the
actors simple Christian orthodoxy as
"religiosity a converts overzealous
Roman Catholicism."
Its reported in The New
York Times that "among the members of the
American press in Cannes, the reception [to the world
premiere of the new Bob and Harvey Weinstein film,
"Dogma"] was ecstatic." And why
wouldnt it be ecstatic? God is played by a rock
singer known for her nude videos, the film features an
abortion clinic worker who is a descendant of Jesus, the
Mass is compared to lousy sex, and a thirteenth apostle
says hes been overlooked because hes black.
The director, Kevin Smith, claims that this politically
correct slam against orthodox Christian "dogma"
is a "love letter" to faith and God.
All this smug anti-Christian
bias again exemplifies what historian Arthur Schlesinger,
Jr. once called "the anti-Semitism of the
liberals." As Flannery OConnor and Walker
Percy observed, the secular elite are not receptive to
orthodox Christian interpretation. Annie Dillard says
that its a death knell for an author to be
classified as a Christian in secular society these days.
A Princeton political science professor, reviewing
William F. Buckleys autobiography of faith, notes
that "no matter how eloquent, moving, or
intellectually sophisticated the presentation, and
regardless of the status, credentials, or political
ideology of the presenter, nothing raises secular elite
hackles, suspicions, and whispers quite like a
well-educated, well-positioned person expressing deep
religious faith without temporizing or apologizing for
it." [John J. DiIulio, Jr.]
Whether from the so-called
counter culture or the cultural elite, secularists are
set against Christ and Christians.
The other "gospels" are
superficial. The other "gospels" are prone
to quick fixes, short-cuts of instant gratification and
surface solutions.
Popular other
"gospels" of contemporary spirituality tend to
be intellectually lazy. They offer "an inspirational
buzz that has no intellectual toll" says a critic
writing in The New Republic. [Ruth Shalit] She
says theyre "not really speaking the language
of spirituality. They are speaking the language of
television." Zaleski, in The New York Times, evaluates
the flood of "spirituality" books as
"marked by reckless scholarship, flamboyant
theorizing, and a penchant for goofy New Age formulations
and watered-down or sexed-up presentations of traditional
faith."
The other "gospels"
are superficial on sin! They therefore not only
misdiagnose the deepest spiritual problem that a person
has but are in no position to prescribe an effective
remedy. "Im o.k., youre o.k." is a
cheap bromide for all the ways in which were not
o.k. at all. And thats unfair to people in real
need.
Plenty of other
"gospels" are "into sex," as they
say. But the sex theyre into is skin deep. It
isnt core sexuality. Its Monica
Lewinskys silly philosophy: "Sex is like
eating. Sometimes you have fast food and sometimes you
eat a gourmet meal." Can we really do no better than
the rantings of Religious Right-wingers and Queer Theory
pimps who push promiscuity as what it means to be gay?
When it comes to truly safer sex, dare we define
"harm reduction" as narrowly as we do? Might we
not also need cognitive condoms for our largest sex
organs our brains?
A letter-writer to the
gay/lesbian newsmagazine, The Advocate, decries
the "images of 20-something men with no body hair,
no body fat, and bulging muscles [as] the only visuals
of gay life." Another Advocate reader
confirms: "Yes, all this fitness and body building
is about getting laid. Duh!" So a writer for the
gay/lesbian New York Blade News well asks:
"With images like this influencing our
self-perceptions and desires we have of men, how are we
to create real relationships with others, relationships
that are emotional and honest and longer lasting than one
night?" He laments that "Today, being gay seems
more about being big and ripped and beefed and buffed and
shredded and juiced and chiseled. How sad, for all of us.
For none of this epidemic self-indulgence works to create
meaningful lasting bonds." [Lorne Opler] And though
many heterosexuals are not doing it any better, they at
least have the option of society-supported marriage.
The latest culture fashion is
hip hop. Its proponents proclaim it to be "a way of
life." Nothing expresses the hip hop "way of
life" quite so well as materialism. But new as hip
hop culture is, its materialism is as old as human
culture. Calvin College president Gaylen Byker reminds us
that "consumerism
has always been a major
problem just read the Old Testament prophets or
Jesus parables." However, now along comes
James Twitchells heralding shopping as
Americas religion. He enthusiastically boasts of
"redemption
through [the] purchase" of stuff:
"Salvation through consumption is not a
contradiction, but a necessity." Puh-leeze!
Our needs run deep, but
solutions are offered in superficial spirituality, sex,
status and stuff. And people wonder why theyre
angry, anxious, empty!
Contrary to their ads, Starbucks
is really not "more than a coffee."
Starbucks cant really be "a Way of Life."
No "lifestyle label" can support real life.
No matter how strong you order it up, a cup of Starbucks
is just never that strong. None of the other
"gospels" is.
The other "gospels" of
Postmodernism
Self-serving, anti-Christian superficial
short-cuts, sex, status and stuff are age-old other
"gospels." These days, were up against
some newer alternative "gospels." These are the
other "gospels" of whats known
collectively as postmodernism.
Postmodernism is a reactionary
movement. It rails against the excesses and failures of
now old-fashioned modernism. But it also rails against
fundamental assumptions of the whole of Western
civilization. It doesnt intend to be merely postmodern;
it intends to be post-all-other-eras.
Now a critique of Western
philosophy had been due for a long time. But what was
needed was a far more radical critique than
postmodernists ever dreamed of, far deeper than they ever
proposed to go. And a truly more radical approach was
already being developed in the 1920s by Dutch Calvinists
at the Free University of Amsterdam. Theirs was a
radical critique of all theoretical thought. It
was built on what they called the "discovery of the
religious root of thought [thats] rooted in faith
in the [presumed] self-sufficiency of human reason."
[cf. Herman Dooyeweerd]
Postmodernism is the post
traumatic stress disorder of modernisms unfounded
faith in rationalism. Under the disillusioning loss of
such faith, postmodernists throw out the baby of
rationality with the bath water of rationalism.
Postmodernism is the hangover of manic modernism.
Its the morning after soused scientism. Its
the cynical aftermath of the overdrawn optimism of the
Enlightenment. Now the Enlightenment produced John Wesley
and Jonathan Edwards as well as Voltaire and Tom Paine
but it degenerated into the Wests cultural
arrogance, even while overcoming a lordly Christendom
that had strayed from following the Lord.
Postmodernisms
close-minded intolerance of the past is what C. S. Lewis
used to call a "chronological snobbery," the
silly notion that only the up-to-date is worth knowing.
Over against the arrogance of such time-bound insularity,
Chesterton spoke of his believing in "the democracy
of the dead." Thats what writer P. J.
ORourke calls "giving a vote to the dead"
and what theologian L. Gregory Jones calls being
"apprentices to those who have gone before us."
What Chesterton said about
modernism can be said about postmodernism as well:
"A man who seriously describes his faith as
Modernism might just as well invent a creed called
Mondayism, meaning that he puts special fiath in the
fancies that occurred to him on Monday; or a creed called
Morningism, meaning that he believes in the thoughts that
occurred to him in the morning and not in the
afternoon."
All thats best really did
not show up just since we got up this morning! Those who
were thinking long before we came along were perhaps also
capable of thinking things through. Do we all really need
to reinvent the wheel whenever a spoke is broken or a
tire goes flat? Perhaps not. But Lewis once wrote that
"The process of living seems to consist in coming to
realize truths so ancient and simple that, if stated,
they sound like barren platitudes. They cannot sound
otherwise to those who have not had the relevant
experience." Lewis says that "that is why there
is no real teaching of such truths possible and every
generation starts from scratch."
Sadly, far too many gay and
lesbian Christians are all too willing to give up
learning afresh from the best wisdom of the past. In
exchange for todays ecclesiastical endorsement of
trendy GLBT theology, theres an uncritical
swallowing of pretentious prescriptions such as John
Shelby Spongs call for the abandonmnent of the
"premodern claims" of Christian theism
(!) and an adoption of the late 20th
centurys provincial postmodernism. Marooned in
ones own age, theres a failure to see what
was choice in the metaphors and worldview revealed
and proclaimed "in the fullness of time," 2,000
years ago.
Postmodernist contempt for
earlier eras is also contempt for any grand context or
what postmodernists call "metanarrative." All
thats left are supposedly
emotionally-authenticating self-sufficient stories
individuals tell about themselves. There is no Great
Story. Theres certainly no Gods Story. Yet
Jean Francois Lyotards assertion that the
postmodern is defined as "incredulity toward
metanarratives" is, itself, postmodernisms own
metanarrative! There is no escape in self.
So now, lets take a look
at just four interlocking dogmas of postmodernism that
are so prevalent these days in pop culture, New Age and
even liberal Christian spiritualities, pop psych and
Queer Theory. Theyre of the Zeitgeist we
have to push against as Flannery OConnor
always urged as much as the Zeitgeist pushes
against us.
Dogmas of Postmodernism
The Denial of Certainty and Objective
Truth. In February, I was invited to attend as
an auditor (i.e., without comment) an all-day
seminar at the New York headquarters of the American
Bible Society. The seminar was entitled "Futuring
the Scriptures: The Bible for Tomorrows
Publics." As it turned out, it was the Bible
conference from postmodernist hell. Well, Im no
longer muzzled.
There in the board room of the
Society that, since 1816, has been sending forth the
Bible, and under what seemed to me to be the disgusted
gaze of the Societys founders portraits, some
seventeen seminary and cultural academics steeped in the
jargon of postmodernism ridiculed what they called the
"arrogance" of spreading the Bible and its
Christ-centered Gospel. The only panelist from an
evangelical seminary was too polite or too out-numbered
to challenge any of it.
Bruce Birch, a Wesley
Theological Seminary professor, kept insisting
triumphantly that were all at "the end of
settled certitudes!" Conversing during the first
coffee break, I said to one of my fellow auditors, Asbury
Seminary president Maxie Dunnam: "I wanted to ask
Birch: Are you sure? "
Now it didnt take
postmodernism to tell us that absolute intellectual
certainty about anything thats really important is
not what we should be expecting. There was nothing more
important to St. Augustine than knowing God. But he
expressed impatience with silly insistence on absolute
certainty in knowledge about God: "We are
speaking of God is it surprising if you dont
understand?" After all, were called to walk
with God by faith, not by sight. And for everything else?
Were always learning how little weve learned.
But without some objective truth we cant even know
how little we know.
And it didnt take
postmodernism to tell us that everyone has his or her own
take on things. But everyones having an opinion
doesnt mean that everythings only a matter of
opinion. What someone believes to be true is not the same
as truths being what someone believes.
And it didnt take
postmodernism to teach us that there are no theory-free
facts. Twentieth-century Calvinists built their whole new
critique of theoretical thought on the cornerstone of a
heart-rooted, faithing-oriented presuppositionalism. As
Cornelius Van Til said over and over to his apologetics
students at Westminster Seminary: "There are no
brute facts; only interpreted facts."
And it didnt take
postmodernism to teach us that all our knowing and
believing takes place within our particular place and
time. What we know and believe we know and
believe. But the old Christian doctrine of Gods
revelation from outside space-time, mediated subjectively
by Gods Spirit both to writer and reader of
Scripture, has long ago taken this into consideration.
Indeed, throughout Scripture, eyes see, ears hear, and
hearts understand only as gifted by God. Our knowing is
in part, but it is in truth. "The secret things
belong to the Lord our God, but the things revealed
belong to us and to our children forever, that we may
follow all the words of Gods revealed will."
(Deut 29:29)
And it didnt take
postmodernism to teach us a "hermeneutics of
suspicion." Pre-modern Calvanists explicated a
doctrine of total depravity that didnt
exclude human reasoning from the corruption.
Postmodernisms polemic,
however, is not simply descriptive; its
prescriptive, its ideology. Postmodernism
isnt pushing subjectivity; its pushing
subjectivism the dogma that the only valid
standard for truth is an individuals take on it.
Its revealing though, how subjectivists who say
that we should not be under the moral authority of the
Bible, churches or preachers, for example, try ever so
hard to put us under their moral authority and
convert us to their subjectivism!
Today, subjectivism confuses
truth with whats "true for me."
Whats said to be true is what one feels, and
these feelings must not be questioned. Failing to
understand that feelings are the emotional results of
what were thinking which may or may not be
true feelings are elevated to the status of truth
with all its old clout but without its old basis.
Theyre truly feelings, of course. But do they
source in truth or falsehood? And it isnt only a
matter of the inevitability of feelings following our
take on truth. Were told we have a
"right" to those feelings which gets translated
as: Dont you dare challenge my take on anything.
For example, pop-psych says that we have a
"right" to our anger as proof weve been
wronged. Woe to anyone who suggests that its our
interpretation thats wrong. So sadly, even unwanted
feelings get the last word because the notions that fuel
the feelings are not allowed to be challenged and
changed.
Back at the Bible conference
from hell, panelists spoke out of their own individual,
subjective experience as though that established
some sort of truth or authority over against the
collective experience and communal authority of 2,000
years of Christianity and even the revealed truth of the
Bible itself. A Union Theological Seminary professor said
that "starting with [outside] authority
has not been good for me
authority is
not something that is useful to me.
authority does violence to my self."
[Vincent Wimbush] It was by their own authority that they
were "deconstructing" the Bible as they did
violence to the text in terms that invalidated even the
basis on which they tried to say what they thought was
true. And they didnt "get it."
Peter Gay, Director of the
Center for Scholars and Writers at the New York Public
Library, says he "pitch[es] my tent among
late-nineteenth-century atheists like Freud." But he
argues for truth the way all Christian seminary
professors should and some dont. "Surely it is
worth saying once again," Gay reasons, "that we
must judge religion, not on its possible social utility
but on the truth value if any of the
propositions it asserts."
University of Miami philosopher
Susan Haack points out that "everyone who believes
anything, or who asks any question, implicitly
acknowledges even if he explicitly denies
that there is such a think as truth. Truth," she
says, "is not relative to perspective." Haack
goes on to explain that "although what is true is
not relative to perspective, what is accepted as true
is." She warns that "a dreadful argument
ubiquitous in the Higher Dismissiveness [her term for
postmodernist posturing] confuses what is accepted as
true, what passes for truth, with what is true." She
says: "When it is stated plainly, the Passes-for
Fallacy is not only obviously invalid, but also in
obvious danger of undermining itself; for if, as the
conclusion says, the concepts of truth, evidence and
honest inquiry are ideological humbug, then the premiss
couldnt be really-and-truly true, nor could we have
objectively good evidence, obtained by honest inquiry,
that it is so." Haacks caution in conclusion
is that "if you dont distinguish what is true
from what is taken for true, it will seem that truth must
be subjective or relative."
Theres plenty of
ideologically-driven short-changing of truth on the Right
as well as on the Left, of course. Take, for example, the
Right-wings Internet jockey, Matt Drudge. According
to him, its more important to be the first to post
a story thats "interesting" than to worry
about what he disdains as "high-falutin
rules" about whether the storys all that
accurate. In the immediate aftermath of the tragedy at
Columbine High School, Drudge put two stories on his Web
site based on a posting from a so-called "gay
biker" who hailed the killers as "a bunch of
our fellow homosexuals [who] decided that they had taken
enough." The politically incorrect wording itself
should have clued him to the fact that this posting was
an antigay hoax. Jerry Falwell picked it up from there,
pushing the notion on Geraldo Live that the
Christian kids at Columbine were killed by homosexuals.
Fred Phelps and his followers then went to Littleton to
picket the memorial services. They carried signs that
claimed "Fags Killed Them."
So postmodernism
isnt the only "-ism" that trims truth to
its taste. But it is the first to try to proudly patent
the process.
The Reductionism to Power Politics.
Much depends upon ones political agenda. But do
political dimensions explain all that the postmodernists
claim they do? Must objectivity always be
"patriarchal" and "oppressive?" Is
everything to be viewed in terms of the politics of
gender, race, class and sex? When high PC payoffs are at
stake, the answer is yes.
A literary critic acknowledges
that "we have all learned in the last decades to be
more attuned to politics and to inscribed political
agendas. But," he points out, for postmodernists to
say that there can be only one" lens through which
something must be viewed, "smacks of the dogmatic
essentialism" postmodernists themselves say they
deplore. [Miola] Their heavy politicization is reductionist
when everything is to be viewed in terms of the politics
of gender, race, class and sex. For example,
theres the new "Queer" art film genre.
Reviewing "Get Real" from screenwriter Patrick
Wilde and director Simon Shore, one film critic faults
the "idealizing [of] youthful experimentation and
wonder along the lines of presumably progressive sexual
politics." [Armond White] He finds "its
sappiness is doctrinaire" and says that "Wilde
and Shore (in blissful ignorance) misconstrue adolescent
gay male attraction as a political imperative."
In the words of a sage
social critic writing in the Atlantic Monthly:
"It is a simple logical error to start from the indisputable
fact that everything has a political dimension and arrive
at the proposition that politics is always the most
important dimension." [Frank Kermode] He goes on to
reason that "The acceptance of [postmodernist]
reduction of history to a conflict of powers, so that the
purpose of [postmodernist] critics is merely to seek
evidence of oppression, also depends on a logical error.
It is held to be axiomatic that all knowledge, being
socially constructed, has no objective validity
though the knowledge on which this belief is founded is
silently excluded from censure." Postmodernists
approach everything in terms of "the one thing that
interests them, a political content of which the
significance is predetermined," says Kermode. This
is committing what John M. Ellis, in his book, Literature
Lost: Social Agendas and the Corruption of the
Humanities, calls "the fallacy of the single
factor." Kermode sees that these people simply
"take away from the object of study what they bring
to it."
Moral Relativism. It didnt take
postmodernism to tell us that people have different
opinions about whats moral and whats not,
whats right and whats wrong. But what is new
is the widespread adoption of the rationalizing dogma:
Theres no objective moral standard; theres no
right and wrong. Morality is said to be a matter of mere
opinion or feelings. The new moral imperative is this:
Everythings relative! Including that rule?
Everywhere we turn we run into
the new rules. Theyre quintessentially
postmodernist: category-busting, transgressive,
destabilizing. Their marketers are Springer, Stern and
South Park. According to an NYU media studies professor,
"Tastelessness is the new orthodoxy." [Mark
Crispin Miller] A Fox TV promotion promises: "We ran
the censors off, and boy, does it show!"
The new rules are supposed to
bubble up from inside. Actually, they come from outside
from the "tastemakers" who have done
their market research on what people will buy into. From
Neiman-Marcus: "No rules here." (Except, we may
assume, rules about paying for merchandise.) From Crunch
Gyms: "No Judgements." (But, of course,
judgments are what drive the body culture that sustains
Crunch Gyms!) From Johnnie Walker Scotch: "Its
not trespassing when you cross your own boundaries."
From Don Q Rum: "Break all the rules." Ads for
"Detroit Rock City" say "Kiss the rules
goodbye." The Isuzu ad depicts the vehicle ripping
right through a huge sign that reads: "Rules."
An NFL video game promises "no refs, no rules, no
mercy."
These items illustrate "the
unquestioned cultural belief" in a mistaken autonomy
that John F. Kavanaugh, writing in the Jesuit journal, America,
calls "the key to the ethos of America." He
sees that it has "come to reign almost
supreme," noting that "as individuals, we seem
to think that self-rule is at the bottom of our beings
that autonomy gives us both our dignity and our
personhood."
Contrary to all the wishful
thinking, moral relativism cannot escape rules. Even
"no rules" is a rule. And in "no
rules"-morality, no rule rules more than "Thou
Shalt Not Judge!" One sociologist calls it
Americas 11th commandment. [Alan Wolfe]
Anti-judgmentalism is the cornerstone of moral
relativism.
A gay press review of Andrew
Sullivans book, Love Undetectable, objects
to Sullivans calling "promiscuity as a
collective way of life
[a] tragic lie." As
the reviewer judges Sullivan: his "hyperbole seems
to come from a small-minded gadfly
[whose] views
are informed by his own religious and moral beliefs"
and so, the reviewer judges, Sullivans judgments
are "irrelevant" to other people. [Otto Coca]
On the basis of the reviewers own philosophy on
judgment, his own review becomes just as
"irrelevant" to other people. But the
fine-print loop-hole in his rule is: When I judge
others Im venting my feelings; when others judge me
theyre being judgmental! Neat trick.
But these convolutions and
contradictions are commonplace these days. Those who
style themselves as tolerant, open-minded advocates of
moral relativism and inclusivism are as judgmental,
exclusivist, and close-minded as they judge the others to
be. But they cannot help it. "Absolute tolerance is
altogether impossible," as political theorist Leo
Strauss explains. "The allegedly absolute tolerance
turns into ferocious hatred of those who have stated
clearly and most forcefully that there are unchangeable
standards" of right and wrong.
Among moral relativists, the
"11th commandment" is broken
repeatedly. But politically correct judgmentalism is
presented as though its not judgmental. This
requires a sloppy use of language. The Planned Parenthood
Web-based e-zine for teens 13 years old and up is one
example. Teen-agers are promised "uncensored,
unbiased" information on sex. This is what is pushed
in terms of moral authority: "Frankly, a Web page
cant decide for you if youre ready [for sex]
or not." Having satisfied the legal department,
Planned Parenthoods Web site goes ahead and tries
to do what is supposedly not being done. "Neither
can your best friend, boyfriend, girlfriend, parent,
brother, teacher, minister, counselor, rabbi well,
you get the idea." Certainly do. Having put each of
these very different relationships for authority on
exactly the same disqualified level, Planned Parenthood
now lights up the screen with its own advice: "The
only person who can know when the times right is
you." Cool but not quite true. On what basis
of authority does the teen-ager decide? On the basis of
what Planned Parenthood says, of course. So the teen-ager
isnt really left to himself or herself. Planned
Parenthood injects its own authority as a substitute for
parental authority and pastoral authority. And proving
that moral relativists are not above playing fast and
loose with conventional vocabulary, heres what is
pushed on the question of sexual abstinence:
"To make it simple, lets say that there are
two kinds of abstinence. In the first kind, partners have
only very limited sex play maybe you kiss, but
theres no nakedness, no groping, no orgasms,
nothing. This is the type encouraged by your parents,
probably." Really? "The second kind [of sexual
abstinence] includes lots of sex play and is more open to
possibilities
how about a little mutual
masturbation that ends with orgasm?" This is
sexual abstinence?
Heres another example of
the meaningless use of terms in the moral relativism of
the contemporary urban sex scene. This is from the Village
Voice classified ads under "Multiples." The
ad reads: "Seeking Bi-[bisexual] Curious Male.
Monogamous MW [man/woman] couple 40s. Seeking well
in dowed [sic] non-promiscuous, clean, BI-curious WM
[white man] 30-50s for LTR [long-term relationship]
and sensual times." Go figure!
Pluralism, Inclusiveness, Diversity. The
denial of certainty, the reducing of everything to
political deprivileging, and the moral relativism in
contemporary society wind up pushing the politics of
hard-line pluralism, inclusiveness and diversity. These
three mantras of postmodernism constitute a new canonical
trinity. Now there is much to recommend in
concerns against unnecessary divisiveness. At their best,
such concerns are overdue correctives to some of the
gross wrongs of the past. But on closer examination,
postmodernisms pluralism isnt really
pluralistic, its diversity is not really all that
diverse, and its inclusiveness excludes with a
vengeance anyone who disagrees.
Back at the Bible conference
from postmodernist hell, a New Testament professor from
Vanderbilt Divinity School asked rhetorically: "Why
spread the Bible? Is it because those who dont have
it are missing something? Thats tremendously
condescending.
Pluralism," he intoned,
"is the defining myth" of our postmodern world
and "I rejoice in it!" He said he was
"speaking as a Christian" in asserting that
"the Bible does not have an answer in the 21st
century" and is, instead, "harmful."
[Fernando Segovia] Since the mandate for politically
correct conformity is, in the words of one secularist, as
"inflexible as any holy writ," [Jane Dark] this
Vanderbilt Bible professor was not challenged on that.
His New Testament colleague at the seminary from a
Jewish viewpoint weighed in with sarcasm about the
notion of Jesus being God incarnate:
"Whats the relevance to the 21st
century? Whats the pay-off?" [Amy-Jill Levine]
Again, none of the panelists dared to object.
This provincial postmodernist
bowing and scraping to a triumphalist pluralism seems to
have no awareness of history. As Oxford University
theologian Alister McGrath points out: "The
Christian proclamation has always taken place in a
pluralistic world, in competition with rival religious
and intellectual convictions." He notes the
"emergence of the gospel within the matrix of
Judaism, the expansion of the gospel in a Hellenistic
milieu, the early Christian expansion in pagan Rome, the
establishment of the Mar Thoma church in southeastern
India in all these situations Christian apologists
and theologians, not to mention ordinary Christian
believers, have been aware that there are alternatives to
Christianity on offer. And that has not stopped them from
preaching the good news!" Not only in the early
church, but also at the churchs mid-point, and
"for more than three centuries [1066-1460], the
British Isles [for example] were, with the exception of
the Norman kingdom of Sicily, the most significantly
multilingual and multicultural territory in Western
Europe." [Susan Crane] Anglo-Canadian evangelist
Michael Green says: "I find it ironic that people
object to the proclamation of the Christian gospel these
days because so many other faiths jostle on the doorstep
of our global village. Whats new? The variety of
faiths in antiquity was even greater than it is today.
And the early Christians, making as they did ultimate
claims for Jesus, met the problem of other faiths head-on
from the very outset." So, in the words of Duke
University chaplain William Willimon: "Demetrius was
right in his charge that Christians want to deprive
Artemis of her majesty." Sadly, thats not as
true of postmodernist Christians.
A collection of eighty-six
extracts from the works of contemporary feminist
academics is entitled Feminisms. According to the
editors: "The plural of our title reflects both the
contemporary diversity of motivation, method, and
experience among feminist academics, and feminisms
political commitment to diversity." But a reviewer
for The Times Literary Supplement observes that
"it would take a connoisseur of the postmodern to
find any diversity here." [Louise M. Antony]
GLBT leaders push the
postmodernist ideology of a pinched pluralism,
inclusivism and diversity while rejecting groups and
ideas that demonstrate the wide plurality and diversity
of people who are just as gay or lesbian. Where is the
"inclusivity," "diversity" or
"pluralism" when it comes to the repeated
efforts at exclusion of gay and lesbian pro-life
activists and gay and lesbian Log Cabin Republicans from
the GLBT table by those who have put themselves in charge
of the table?
Most self-proclaimed
inclusivists dont seem to mind some types of
exclusivity. For example, there is an accepted and even
celebrated appeal to exclusivity in everything influenced
by Madison Avenue: designer labels, "exclusive"
gym memberships and credit cards, celebrities, the
"A-crowd," the "in" clubs, trendy
neighborhoods location, location, location. There
is an acceptance of the idea of organizations open only
to people of color, exclusively leather bars (with very
strict dress codes), gatherings of lesbians where men are
not welcome, and so on. Those who decry the exclusion of
openly gay/lesbian organizations from St. Patricks
Day parades exclude "ex-gay" organizations and
gay/lesbian pro-life groups from Gay Pride parades.
Whatever reasons may or may not be used to explain these
exclusivities and exclusions, one argument that cannot be
used is the notion that exclusiveness is bad per se, inclusiveness
good per se. Inclusivity is meaningless if it
includes everything and excludes nothing.
The Prism of the Gospel
Having now looked at some of the issues
involved in false "gospels," can we find these
same issues addressed in the true Gospel: the Good News
that in Christ, God was reconciling the world to Himself?
Since the Light of God that shines through the Gospel
spreads an ever-expanding spectrum of radiant Love,
enlivening beyond imagination all that it enlightens,
wed expect that these concerns are, indeed, within
its bright embrace. Lets see.
The Gospels Individuality. The
concern with self-preservation that prompts the
self-serving agendas of the other "gospels" is
addressed in the true Gospels loving concern for
"whosoever," "the least of these,"
and "every sparrow that falls." But in the
Gospel, it is in losing ones self-centered life
that a person finds real Life; its in
self-denial that one finds his or her true self.
The Gospels Law. The
self-righteous efforts of the other "gospels"
to earn Gods love by putting God in our debt
resulted in our entanglement in endless lists of
dos and donts and endless feelings of guilt.
These legalisms were never really effective. They
addressed symptoms. Only the Gospel reaches the heart of
the matter: God in Christ, loving us into loving Him in
loving each other. Paul wrote to the Galatians and
Philippians saying that Christians fulfill Christs
law when we bear each others burdens. [Gal 6:2;
Phil 2:4] Gospel law is Love.
The Gospels Truth. The
Gospels Truth is a Person before it is our
personal, propositional or practical truth. Responding to
an inquirer about "truth," George MacDonald
professed "only to have caught glimpses of her white
garments those, I mean, of the abstract truth of
which you speak. But I have seen that which is eternally
beyond her: the ideal in the real, the living truth, not
the truth that I can think, but the truth that
thinks itself, that thinks me, that God has thought, yea,
that God is, the truth being true to itself and to
God and to man Christ Jesus, my Lord, who knows,
and feels, and does the truth. I have seen him, and I am
both content and unsatisfied. For in him are hid all the
treasures of wisdom and knowledge."
Nonetheless, Christians believe
that a sufficiently true sense of whos who and
whats what is provided as general and special
revelation sourced from outside the contingencies of
created reality. Such truth is Truths gift
to be discovered, received and worked, but neither
devised nor exhausted.
We dont construct the
Gospels Truth; we cant conjure it up. The
Gospels Truth reveals Himself. Thats why, as
Chesterton said, "Truth
must of necessity be
stranger than fiction, for we have made fiction to suit
ourselves."
The Gospels Certainty. There
can be no self-confirming certainty within all the
limitations of derived reality. But that doesnt
mean there can be no certainty at all. The heart can
faithe from, through, and to Gods revelation
instead of putting its faith in its own delimited and
disoriented assumptions. Said Wittgenstein: "If I am
to be REALLY saved, what I need is certainty
not wisdom, dreams or speculation and this
certainty is faith. And faith is faith in what is needed
by my heart, my soul,
. So this can
come about only if you no longer rest your weight on the
earth but suspend yourself from heaven."
A Gospel word of caution:
"The faintest suggestion that Christian language
dispenses infallibility would be the earliest symptom of
its morbidity [in a postmodernist world]. Here we
[Christians] make no tactical retreat before
postmodernisms reduction of all knowledge into
irony (which can be just as smug as positivism at its
worst). The roots of real humility lie deep in the
Scriptures, and we premoderns should
continually recall that patent biblical fact. Not only
are we supposed to remember our knowledge is limited and
limiting, but even what little we do have will soon pass
away (I Cor 13:8-10). Epistemic humility derives from
acknowledging not only our created nature but also the
noetic effects of sin, our own dissolution of
Edenic order. These two sobering facts have us by the
epistemic scruff of the neck." [Jonathan Tucker
Boyd]
The Gospels Power. Jesus
promised his disciples that they would receive the power
of the Holy Spirit of God in order to be his witnesses
from Jerusalem to "all Judea, Samaria, and
the uttermost parts of the earth." [Acts 1:8] But
the occasion for the fulfilled witness-bearing turned out
to be religious persecution in Jerusalem and the
witnesses had to skip town and in doing so, they
did go out to "all Judea, Samaria, and the uttermost
parts of the earth." [Acts 6ff] The power of the
Gospel achieved its purpose in and in spite of
persecution and even martyrdom.
The power of the Gospel is, as
Paul states, "the power of God." [I Cor 1:18]
This Gospels power doesnt look like what
merely passes for power whether personal,
socio-economic, military, or whatever. Rather, God chose
what is weak and lowly. [I Cor 1:27] God is not beholden
to this worlds system of values and ways of doing
things. God has humiliated the hubris of the powers of
this world through the humility of the Power of His Word.
The Gospels Relativity. Albert
Einstein was appalled when he heard that some people were
arguing from his theories of relativity in physics to
their own special pleading for relativism in ethics and
morality.
A Gospel relativity nonetheless
does inform Christian morality. How more mature
Christians exercise their freedom in Christ in their
relations with more conservative Christians must take
into loving consideration the effect on these weaker
Christians, as Paul argues. [Rom 14:14; cf. Mark 7:15,
19] Christians who agree with Paul (following Jesus) that
nothing is unclean in itself, must yet be mindful that
many other Christians have a hard time with such freedom.
So "only when liberty is liberty to deny oneself and
not just liberty to enjoy all that God the creator has
provided is it the liberty of the Spirit of Christ."
[Dunn]
The Gospels Tolerance. From the
days of the Jerusalem Councils compromise over
gentile inclusion, some Christians have seen the need to
be tolerant of those who dont see eye-to-eye with
them about what Paul called indifferent matters.
They agreed to disagree. In the second century, Justin
Martyr explained to Trypho the Jew that "I and many
others are of this opinion [on millennial expectations]
but, on the other hand, many who belong to the pure and
pious faith and are true Christians, think
otherwise." In A Catholic Spirit, John Wesley
asked other Christians: "Though we cannot think
alike, may we not love alike?"
Though Paul allowed no
compromise on the crucial issue of Gods free grace
in Christ, free grace itself brings freedom from the
necessity of any allegedly required add-on. This man who
has been called "the most liberal and emancipated of
first-century Christians" [Bruce] told the Galatians
that "it is for freedom that Christ has set us
free." [5:1] But he warned that this freedom is not
to be used for self-indulgence which would only
re-enslave.
The Gospels Diversity. Paul
said he had become "all things to all people
so that by all possible means [he] might save
some." (I Cor 9:22) And that was all for the
sake of the Gospel. (I Cor 9:23) The Gospels
diversity is "all things to all people
by all
possible means" for one end.
Os Guinness, a scholar with the
evangelical Trinity Forum, notes that one of the
"two requirements of thinking Christianly that
oppose all uniformity [is] the importance of
diversity." He states: "We must all think
Christianly, but for that reason we must not all think
the same way.
Diversity rather than uniformity is a
direct consequence of Christian freedom as well as
Christian fallibility.
Gospel diversity is displayed in
the Body of Christ. [I Cor 12:4-12] Here we find a wide
diversity of backgrounds, needs, interests, styles, gifts
and abilities.
In their introduction to a book
on "the Evangelical Tradition," two very
conservative evangelicals state flatly: "No single
evangelical tradition exists." [D. G. Hart and
Albert Mohler, Jr.] This Orthodox Presbyterian and
Southern Baptist explain that "evangelicals are
heirs to a variety of ethnic and confessional
traditions." According to another evangelical
theologian: "There are many types of evangelical:
some still marked deeply by Enlightenment qualities; some
more in a confessional Reformational, or historic
Puritan, or Romantic style; some expressing the
historical consciousness of nineteenth century movements;
and still others articulating the gospel in a bewildering
range of twentieth-century modes, whether process,
liberation, feminist, or charismatic not to
mention increasing varieties of theology arising beyond
the developed West." [John G. Stackhouse, Jr.]
Church historian Timothy George
notes that at a conference in Manila ten years ago,
"4,000 evangelical delegates gathered
from 173
nations." He points out that this number represents
more countries than does the United Nations. "We
[evangelicals] do not claim to be the only true
Christians," George says, "but we recognize in
one another a living, personal trust in Jesus the Lord,
and this is the basis of our fellowship across so many
ethnic, cultural, national, and denominational
divides."
The diversity of evangelicals
results from the fact that the Gospel is not bound to any
one society, culture, gender, personality, temperament,
socio-economic or educational level, style or sexual
orientation. The Gospel transcends everything.
The Gospels Inclusivity.
"God so loved the world" is the Gospels
inclusivity. [John 3:16]
The 18th century English
Calvinist who wrote the hymn, "Rock of Ages,"
also wrote: "The purpose of God is not restrained to
[people] either of particular country, or age of time, or
religious denomination. Undoubtedly, there are elect
Jews, elect Mohametans, and elect Pagans. In a word,
countless millions of persons, whom Christ hath redeemed
unto God, by his blood, out of every kindred, and tongue,
and people, and nation." [Augustus Montague Toplady]
Toplady believed that even animals would be saved!
His fellow Anglican evangelical,
the poet William Cowper, wrote many hymns for John
Newtons Olney Hymnal, including "There
is a Fountain Filled with Blood." He also penned
these lines: "Is virtue then, unless of Christian
growth, / Mere fallacy, or foolishness, or both? / Ten
thousand sages lost in endless woe, / For ignorance of
what they could not know? / That speech betrays at once a
bigots tongue, / Charge not a God with such
outrageous wrong." Cowper then concluded with the
basis of his faithful hope: "But still in virtue of
a Saviours plea, / Not blind by chance, but
destined not to see, / Their fortitude and wisdom were a
flame / Celestial, though they knew not whence it came, /
Derived from the same source of light and grace, / That
guides the Christian in his swifter race; / Their judge
was conscience, and her rule their law; / Led them,
however faltering, faint, and slow, / From what they knew
to what they wished to know."
As John Wesley, a contemporary
of Toplady and Cowper, rode along in his coach one day,
he was contemplating the Apostle Peters
divinely-inspired insight on Gospel inclusivity. Wesley
recorded these words in his Journal for that day:
"Is it not high time for us
to return to the
plain word [of Acts 10:35], He that feareth God,
and worketh righteousness, is accepted with
Him.?"
When the outstanding 19th
century American evangelist D. L. Moody was asked about
the eternal destiny of the most infamous agnostic of the
day, Moody replied: "I dont know. We are not
judges. It is for God alone to judge." Moodys
colleagues went even further. C. I Scofield, the compiler
of the popular Scofield Reference Bible, was asked about
the eternal destiny of those who die without ever hearing
the Gospel. He answered that if they follow whatever
light God gives them, "they will find their way to
God."
The first editor of the Scofield
Bible was A. T. Pierson, Charles H. Spurgeons
successor at Metropolitan Tabernacle in London. Pierson
contributed to The Fundamentals, the doctrinal
series that gave Fundamentalism its name. Heres
what Pierson wrote in The Crisis of Mission in
1886: "If there be anywhere a soul feeling after
God, following the light of nature and of conscience, in
hope and faith that the Great Unknown will somehow give
more light, and lead to life and blessedness, we may
safely leave such to His fatherly care."
Sir Norman Anderson, a scholar
of Islamic law and a longtime evangelical leader in the
InterVarsity Christian Fellowship, wrote a book on
Christianity and world religions in our own day. He
argued that, just as in the Old Testament times, people
are saved today by Gods inclusive grace even apart
from any Christian confession.
With all of this history of
evangelical and even fundamentalist support for a broad
inclusiveness in the Christian doctrine of salvation, how
is it that so many people, both within and outside
Christian circles, continue to think of the Gospels
lacking this wideness of Gods mercy?
Theres another inclusivity
thats germane to the Gospel. Its expressed in
these stunning words of the theologian who was once the
prime minister of The Netherlands: "There is not a
square inch in the whole domain of our human experience
over which Christ, who is Sovereign over all, does not
cry, Mine! " [Abraham Kuyper] A Gospel
lifestyle involves a persons whole life. After all,
hadnt the Gospel lifestyle been summed up in loving
God with all we are and have? As Christians, Paul urged
us to "make every aim captive to Christ." [II
Cor 10:5] Even Hitler knew that the Gospel of Christ
demands our all. Hitler asserted that one is either a
Nazi or a Christian but that one cannot be both. Each
demands all.
Yet another inclusivity of the
Gospel is that of the church as an assembly, a family
and a dysfunctional family at that. The church is
not merely me. The church is not merely me-writ-large.
Theres an old evangelistic line that says that
Christ would have gone to the cross for you even if you
were the only sinner in the world. Yes. Butcha
arent, Blanche, ya arent! Youre
not the only sinner and youre not the only saved
sinner. The descendents of faith are, as God promised
Abraham, as "numerous as the stars in the sky and
the sands on the seashore!" [Gen 22:17]
Theres a Gospel
inclusivity that exceeds even this. Its not merely
that the children of the Covenant will be as
"numerous as the stars in the sky and the sands on
the seashore." Its that the stars and skies,
the sands and seashores themselves are included in
Redemption. Paul wrote that "all the creation groans
together and travails together with us,
in eager
expectation of redemption." [Rom 8:22] I think of
this when I see that ITT television commercial with all
the fish and other creatures of the sea singing
Handels "Hallelujah Chorus." If they can
sing like that over ITTs cleaning up the lakes and
rivers, what will they do when, in the words of Charles
Spurgeon, "the redeemed will be all the world!"
The Gospels Judgment. Gospel
inclusivity requires the corrective of discernment.
Pauls term for this is the "testing of the
spirits" to see if they are or are not from God.
Therefore, there is no Good News of inclusivity that does
not come to terms with the Good News of judgment. But the
Gospels judgment is never merely a negative note,
as is the harping of self-serving judges who dont
know or who forget the deep mercy God shows them. When
Gospel judgment must sound a negative note it is a
necessary note on the way to a crescendo of mercy.
The Gospels Plurality. John
Paul II grieves that "a legitimate plurality of
positions has yielded to an undifferentiated pluralism,
based upon the assumption that all positions are equally
valid."
There is a plurality of
personnel and a plurality of approaches in the ministry
of the Gospel. Ever since Jesus reasoned with his
disciples that "anyone who is not against [Jesus] is
on our side," [Mark 9"40] Jesus followers
should not think that all the other followers of Jesus
are ipso facto illegitimate. The
"outsiders" can be in Christ.
One of my John Wesley autograph
letters was written to a friend, Nancy Ford, in 1769. In
her confusion over some of the preaching of a Calvinist
Anglican priest, William Romaine, she had contacted
Wesley, an Arminean Anglican priest. She wanted some
clarification on matters raised by Romaine. In his
response, Wesley goes on at some length to point out that
Romaine doesnt know what hes talking about on
the subject in question. He says Romaines reading
things into the Hebrew that just arent there. Then,
towards the end of the letter, Wesley says: "I have
not time" to say more, except to add that "I
have no right to prescribe. Please yourself and you will
please, My Dear Nancy, Your affectionate Brother, J.
Wesley." Thats in the good tradition of
evangelical pluralism. In old words repeated by English
historian and Methodist, Sir Herbert Butterfield:
"Hold to Christ, and for the rest be totally
uncommitted."
The Gospels Story. In contrast
to our superficial, short-sighted and self-serving
stories as individuals and identity groups, the Gospel
Story is Gods own Story of us all and Him. It comes
from deep within the Heart of God to dwell deep within
our own hearts. It transcends and transforms all our
scribbling. The Gospel Story is Gods Word against
ours for our sakes in Christ. Its
from Gods "Complete Works," a rewriting
of all our sound-bites of despair into true stories of
real Redemption.
Postmodernists reject all
over-arching stories or metanarratives as merely power
games except, of course, this metanarrative of
their own. But as Oxbridge New Testament scholar N. T.
Wright explains: "The biblical metanarrative offers
itself as the one story which resists
deconstruction." He reminds us that "it speaks
from first to last of a God who did not need to create,
but who did so out of overflowing and generous love. It
speaks of a God who did not need to redeem and recreate,
but did so as the greatest possible act of self-giving
love. The problem," says Wright, is "that the
way we have reshaped this story has turned it into a
power-ploy of our own. But the biblical metanarrative
itself is not a controlling narrative: it is a
self-giving narrative. It is not a power-play; it is a
love ploy." The Gospels Story, as he points
out, "challenges all other large-scale stories of
God, the cosmos and the human race. But it challenges
them not as one power-play to another, but as the
subversion of all power plays by the self-giving love of
the creator God." And, yes, the Gospels Story
does the same with all our individual stories.
Which Foolishness will it be?
As gay and lesbian evangelical Christians,
we have no option but to be or appear to be foolish. The
question is: Which foolishness will it be?
Is our foolishness like that of
the foolish Galatians? Do we, too, add other
"gospels" so that, in effect, we repudiate the
true Gospel? Do we define ourselves by the Gospel of
Gods grace and peace in Christ Jesus or by the
anti-Christian "gospels" of self-serving,
superficial legalisms whether of Evangelicaland or
Queer Theory? Does our identity rest in our Savior or in
our sex? Are we called to self-denial or to denial that
were sexual selves? Do we know, with Phillip, Paul
and Peter and the Law-free Gospel, that nobody is
"unclean" or out-of-bounds merely because of
his or her given social, racial, gender, or sexual
status? To us, is the rainbow more a symbol of lesbigay
and transgendered agendas than its a reminder of
the promise of mercy from our Covenant-keeping God? Is
the triangle more important to us as a pink symbol of
lesbigay and transgendered identity or as a symbol of our
Triune God? Are we more interested in sharing our stories
than in sharing "The Greatest Story Ever Told?"
In other words, is our foolishness like that of the
foolish Galatians?
Or is our
foolishness like Pauls "foolishness" of
faith in the "foolishness" of God? Paul granted
that he was taken to be a fool by the Corinthians whom he
sarcastically called "wise." [II Cor 11:17] He
went along with their caricature that he wasnt up
to snuff. [cf. II Cor 11:21ff] Of course he wasnt
up to snuff. His Gospel wasnt the result of market
research to see what theyd be comfortable hearing.
It wasnt a projection of wishful thinking. It
wasnt a construction of the religious
establishment. It wasnt a baptizing of the popular
themes of first-century pluralism. It was the
unconventional proclamation of a crucified Christ raised
from the dead a stumbling block to religionists
and nonsense to secularists.
As he had once written to these
Corinthians: "Has not God made foolish the wisdom of
this world [by sovereignly choosing] to save those who
believe by the foolishness of the preaching" of the
Gospel? [cf. I Cor 1:20f] Paul recognized that "the
message of the cross is foolishness to those who
identify with this perishing worlds values."
[I Cor 1:18] He realized that "his preaching of the
crucified Christ [was] a stumbling block to Jews and
foolishness to gentiles, but to those whom God called,
both Jews and Greeks, Christ [was] the power of God and
the wisdom of God." [I Cor 1:21ff] He knew full well
that this "foolishness of God is wiser than human
wisdom, and the weakness of God is stronger than human
strength." [I Cor 1:25] He even goes so far as to
call true disciples "fools for Christs
sake." [I Cor 4:10] Hes being sarcastic, of
course a "fool for Christs sake"
is no fool!
How do we understand who we are?
Are we evangelical Christians who happen to be lesbian
and gay or are we lesbians and gay men who happen
to be Christians? Is Evangelicals Concerned a group of
evangelical Christians who happen to be gay and lesbian
or a group of gays and lesbians who happen to come from
Evangelicaland? Do our meetings, speakers, publications,
resources, and Web sites merely repeat and link lesbigay
and transgendered agendas or do they proclaim the
foolishness of the Gospel: God was in Christ reconciling
the world to Himself? Thats not a popular theme in
either Lesbigayland or Evangelicaland. So Christian gay
men and lesbians are not popular in either place.
Henri Nouwen cautions that
"the basis of the Christian community is not the
family tie, or social or economic equality, or shared
oppression or complaint, or mutual attraction." In
Bonhoeffers words: "We have one another only
through Christ, but through Christ we really do have one
another. We have one another completely and for all
eternity." We do not choose each other. We
dont even choose God. But God chose us all in
Christ before the foundation of the world.
In those rare moments when
were caught up in a hint of Who it is that so loves
us all the God of all universes, Creator of all
time and space, our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ
then we surely know that "in our hands no price we
bring / Simply to the cross we cling." [Toplady] We
can claim nothing but one foolishness or another. We
can posture the deadening foolishness of ecclesiastical
identity, political identity, ideological identity,
racial identity, sexual identity, cultural identity, GLBT
identity, or we can plead the liberating
"foolishness" of a crucified Christ, the Wisdom
and Power of God, and the One in whom all other
identities are brought into submission and sanctified.
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