Friday, April 30, 2004

Pleased to bring you

Tim Gallant's blog. I've come across him in the WrightSaid list, and he's impressed me. His analysis is always sharp and cogent. He seems to be one of those people who're worth measuring yourself against and trusting as a good interlocutor.

What's more, he looks nothing like I imagined.

Thems fightin words, they is!

If there's one thing I like (among much) about Douglas Wilson, it's that he knows kingdoms aren't gained by the wimpy words of spineless limp-wristedness. But nor does he think mere words win wars. In this piece about the challange of Christian education to its statist imitation, the call is clearly based in real life: go build the kingdom, and expect opposition.

The adventurous boy in me, the dragon-slayer, loves this stuff.

Morning glory

Walking to work this morning and I thought I could detect salt on the air. The sea, of course, surrounds us. The temperatire was mild and the sun not yet up; as usual, night air has its own unique feel and smell.

"Ah," I thought, "it's good to be alive".

If there's one thing you can be sure of, it's that sensible people can take quite different views of a conversation just had - let alone of a 2000 year-old document from a society utterly different to our own.

Thursday, April 29, 2004

An anchorless text

Last night we did our study on the parable of the wheat & tares. However, although the reading we took of it was useful, it seemed disconnected from the historicity of the text.

For instance, we simply assumed that Jesus meant the mixed wheat and tares waiting for harvest to refer to our own church (or perhaps society) situation, with believers and unbelievers intermingled. But I have the greatest difficulty seeing how Jesus could have been speaking about anything resembling life today. How would his hearers, Jews all, have known what the global spread of Christianity would become, 2000 years later? How would they have known even what Christianity itself is? How would they, even before the gospel had moved outside Israel, have understood the movement called 'church' that sprang up as an alternative to Israel? I suggest they had difficulty enough knowing what 'following Jesus' meant for themselves as second-Temple Jews responding to their own national Messiah; far less would they have comprehended an established trans-national church comprised mostly of gentiles, amidst fully gentile nations!

In short, our reading seemed fraught with problems. Most of all, it lifted the text from the narrative context, leaving it without an ascertainable meaning that can be pinned down. If my words aren't understood in the context of my hearers and our society - the pool of meanings that we share and can reasonably be said to use - then they are wax noses, and can be shaped to whatever is desired.

By way of contrast, that which Jesus' hearers did know, in the wider context of Israel's national hopes and dreams, can be used to understand what he told them. They knew that Jesus was claiming to be bringing their long-hoped-for kingdom of YHWH, but that he was doing it in a most extraordinary way. Here, then, Jesus tells a story about that kingdom that is arriving in the midst of Israel. They also knew that when the kingdom came, their current age was supposed to end, with God's people (Israel) finally vindicated and established in favour in a new age, forever. That was what Israel kept telling herself; what she longed for. But Jesus had encouraged those who followed them to think of themselves as the true people of God, the true planting of YHWH. He was bringing the kingdom and they were its inhabitants, the seed. How then should they act? Should they uproot those outside the kingdom, but strangely found in its midst? This is a political question indistinguishable from religious commitments. Shall we rise with the sword and execute thy judgement, O Lord? Here, then, Jesus tells a cryptic story about the patience required during the arrival of this kingdom, until the end of the age, when YHWH Himself would bring judgment and vindication - exactly that which was looked-for at the coming of the kingdom. So here is this man, claiming to be the one to bring about Israel's destiny, now, telling old stories with new twists, re-orienting the kingdom around himself, describing what was going on right before the eyes of his hearers: Israel's destiny was arriving. No wonder Jesus' disciples asked for clarification!


I think it's indicative that orthodox Jews understand this point very well: and they deny that Jesus was the Messiah. They see the connection, and therefore think that the age of Moses is still with us. It is either Christ or Moses, and Moses' age - the one into which Jesus was born and in which his followers heard him tell his subversive kingdom-stories - ended with the burning of the tares in the fires of Jerusalem, making it a rubbish-heap in AD70.

And breakfast at the Leuven this morning was...

Spectacular. I ran all the way there and didn't die. Thanks to all the hot girls who turned up.

All you people out there should really make an effort to come to Wellington and join our happy bunch of friends.

Wednesday, April 28, 2004

From the darkest orifice of all

The single redeeming feature of anything dribbling from this man's pen is that he quotes those he criticises. At least then he includes something worth reading.

All things eco-centric

Doug Wilson points out that nature was cursed in Adam, and only in Christ does it find its new beginning, its recreation. He uses this to remind us that nature itself is not a cure-all, that it requires something beyond itself to bring healing. Man is not to be, therefore, a worshipper of nature.

Perhaps, if he bears God's image, he is to be its healer?

Tuesday, April 27, 2004

Written on the subway walls

"This is an exhortation both to the younger and to the older, more established, men of the congregation. To you younger men: Break out of your gang, and get to know the older men of the congregation, seek their counsel, learn adult responsibilities from them. And even more importantly, to those of you who have established callings and families: Make the effort to know the young men of the congregation. Introduce yourself at church; invite them into your homes; invite them out for a cup of coffee. And the same goes for the young women and older women of the congregation."

...and other pearls can be found in this post by Peter Leithart.

The Wandering Sister

Yes, she'll be back (by popular demand): Tuesday 4th May, and soon to be gracing Europe with husband Dave:

the one, the only, the incomparable....Vikster

catch her at the city Bible study (05 May) & join us for dinner on Thursday 06 May - time & location TBA

Monday, April 26, 2004

Breakfast, Leuven, Featherston St, Wellington, Thursday, 7.15. Lots of hot boys will be there: all welcome

The church militant

This post by John Barach deserves a read.

Yesterday afternoon at second service, we sang about the church militant. I like the imagery. Although we live in Christ's kingship, an age of unprecedented blessing, nonetheless the church still is, as Rev. Goris pointed out, the vanguard of the kingdom. At times, therefore, she must take up her knowledge of God, embody it in herself, and respond to those who would not kiss the Son (Psalm 2). She is the priest of God to the world.

This means that, at times, she must begin to actively identify and expel those who act as if Christ is not King, who deserve exile. She must, in other words, exercise the discipline that is hers to portray as the embodiment of Christ and of His kingdom. She must send to hell those who are making themselves rubbish in the midst of God's good re-creation.

The book John Barach reviews is about the Chilean Church's response to massive state-driven torture under General Pinochet. It reminds me that at times, the church must take up its identity in a clear and firm way - at times to die as God did in Christ, and at times to judge, as God did in Christ. Thus, she becomes the salt and light of the world.

Conversation & Status

It is good to be aware of where one stands. As I get older, I discover snippets of memory that - if they are to be believed - tell me that I have not always known this.

At 29, I am profoundly aware that I am a young man. Not wise, not old, not looked up to, not being depended upon to give direction. I am not married and (naturally) have no children. This gives me a certain freedom that I would not allow old men, and will myself give up should I ever earn the privilege of being called old.

That freedom is the ability to think out loud - which, as one of my friends once very perceptively (and perhaps wryly) pointed out, is mine in abundance. I am prepared to tolerate the disadvatages partly because I am deeply, deeply suspicious of attempts to package up the world in little definition-packages of objective truth, and only slightly less suspicious of most of the people who make the attempts. Given that this is what I used to do and admire (and perhaps be), I often feel a newness & freshness being revealed by my refusal to continue emulating it. Quite the existential discovery.

A wise old man is not, I think, hemmed in or tyrannised by philosophy, but is the master of it. He is someone who speaks graciously to the need of the moment, edifying those who hear. He speaks whatever will communicate the thing needing to be heard. He is a Nathan to David, or a Priscilla & Aquila to Apollos - a Solomon to his son. To this I aspire. Every time I feel that I have done less than this, as judged by the requirements of my current status, I feel shame.

So, by degrees, I am already giving up the freedom of youth. I do not permit myself to say all that I might, and am especially careful around those I know or suspect do look up to me in some way. Furthermore, I assume (and, to a large extent rely upon) a fencing in by those old men who are wiser, those who will speak the need of the moment and teach me. In that way, perhaps I know my station much better now than when the arrogance - or is it naivete? - of teenaged certainty held me. Yet I still err, and no doubt frequently. I expect to be taught.

Thank you to all those who are to me as wise old men.

Saturday, April 24, 2004

In the vernacular, "wanking". Self-rape, to be more precise.

Ah yes, that old chestnut. Introducing oneself to the 5 lovely daughters of Mrs. Hand is the illicit discovery and secret pleasure of most boys well before they are introduced to anything more...bi-directional. But really, what's the big deal? Well, the very health and unity of society is at stake, said the Enlightenment rationalists. Yes indeed. It may surprise you to know that the horror and loathing associated with masturbation in our parents' and grandparents' days was driven not by churchmen, not even Victorian churchmen, but by humanist medical doctors. That's right. You heard it first here. In the so-called Enlightenment 'freedom' of men rejecting God's rule, we discovered the vicious control of genuine puritanical tyranny (and that without bounds): the avowed public control of private life, even to its most secret moments, by those who came to worship other gods.

But you can read more about it here. And may I recommend you do so, because it is not only fascinating, but funny. What is more, I shall be having more to say about it shortly. Make no mistake: it is not whether we will be ruled by gods, but which ones that is the vital question.

(thanks to matt for the link)

...and for the record (albeit in fine print): I don't think that masturbation is a Good Thing.

Special Thanks

To DMcC, who at the drop of a hat went to the movies with me the other night. Truly truly, I say unto all you girls, he is a Genuinely Really Nice Guy. He deserves someone lovely to marry him. Get in quick.

that treacherous, ill-defined ambivalence - o, that wickedly thin veneer of ambiguity: why can't you just declare yourself??

Above this excerpt, thinly disguised by the original author as a comment on art :), Gideon Strauss slips in the old 'postmodernism is bad' headline.

Which reminds me: he may be right. I often find myself agreeing with insightful comment on why postmodernism (PM) is Evil. (But not always. A standard 10% disagreement rate prevents the label of 'vacillating reed' while keeping one's essentially agreeable nature intact.)

I suppose that this is most frustrating for people who like to have the world packaged up into nice neat formulas. They like to have a Theory About Everything, in which each Thing (a package of formulas) is dutifully understood as Good, Indifferent or Evil. If PM denies Truth, and Truth is the label on a Very Good Thing, then the law of non-contradiction (a formula under Truth) rules that PM must be Evil. Q.E.D, cogito ergo sum and inter alia (impressive-sounding but quite inappropriate Latin phrases) PM is Evil. Full stop.

Regrettably, though, systems of meaning and significance - and even worse, outcomes - are in large part irreducible, not only to formulas, but especially to the formulas of an alien system. And where one experiences rotten fruit, one tastes it on the tongue, but can't necessarily identify where, why or how it went bad. Not with formulaic precision, anyway. And so it is with those of us who want to say to various Christian traditions, "oi! Your fruit is rotten!". When they retort "And your so-called 'cure' is worse than the disease! You deny Truth!", we must reply, "errrr....righto. Let's put that aside for a moment. Oi! Your fruit is rotten!"

Both sides must understand that labels & their formulas are practically useless, both in defence and in attack. Thus, if reaction to rottenness is reduced to throwing labels around, the almost inevitable result is mutual entrenchment in opposing fortresses that neither side actually want to occupy.

So it's not 'Modernism' against 'Postmodernism', 'Truth' against 'Error', in any simplistic way. It is about trying to express, using the tools provided by one signifyer of meaning, what is deficient in the outcomes of another. This is why...

[work-in-progress, feel free to suggest revisions...]

The New City descends (and there shall be no more weeping):

gmail is come

and the leaves of her trees shall be for the healing of the nations

all things are made new

Amen

and in related news...

I am currently basking in the light of the gmail testing phase (aaron.stewart@gmail.com). Interesting. I can't imagine ever using it for anything commercially related, and having my own .co.nz domain with an email account means I'm unlikely to use it for anything much at all. Perhaps only when I register for porn site trials. (See my poker face.) However, if I was back in the bad old hotmail days, I would be declaring praise to the heavens for the arrival of the new kingdom. And yes, I would use the langauge of apocalyptic. (chide, chide, always making some theological point, aren't you aaron. do grow up.)

O wonders of heavenly delight...

quick-quick-quick-doug-wilson-has-a blog

I believe I may be getting giddy...

Thursday, April 22, 2004

NEWSFLASH

faith?: aligning oneself with YHWH's purposes (in the vernacular: being on God's side)

love God?: who images God loves Him

I declare: bad stuff is a not-image of YHWH and worship of a god; good stuff is the image of YHWH and worships Him

( of course I may be wrong, but I doubt it )
( and that may have been arrogant, but I doubt it )

Total Depravity, reprised

For those that don’t know, Total Depravity (TD) is the view in reformed theology that says man is corrupt in all his parts and faculties. It is not meant to say that man is as bad as he could be; merely that in everything that he actually is, he cannot please God.

What follows is the adaptation of a conversation in which I argued that TD unhelpfully twists the scriptural view of people onto an individualised ‘typical man’, whose inward state is revealed as being totally depraved. Over against this inward state, the gospel is construed as a call to be converted – the means thereof being the sovereign will of God moving through the Spirit.

Main Point

IMHO, TD places emphasis unhelpfully on the individual, making him isolated from the covenant in some way.

The story

(1) The way TD is expressed in scripture is in terms of exile, not the ‘isolated individual’. The story begins with humanity being exiled from God, because humanity’s king was unfaithful. Humanity in Adam was removed from the place of God’s presence, without the ability to restore itself. Then, even though God chose Israel to be restored to a new garden (Canaan), the gentiles remain the strangers & aliens to God. So, what we have is people seen either as part of God’s household or not. This is the language of Paul in Ephesians.
(2) Israel, of course, is undone because she repeats Adam’s unfaithfulness. As Adam’s kingship failed, so Israel’s line of kings fails. She cannot function as a new beginning for man; she cannot be the cause of man’s restoration to God. She is an unfaithful wife for God, or (in another image) a failed son.
(3) Christ, being true Israel, is the chosen son in whom all the families of earth find restoration. God showed His approval of Christ’s claim to effect a new beginning for man by resurrecting him, thus breaking the exile-mold that Adam had set for man. Christ, then, is the new and faithful king, the second Adam.
(4) Christ had represented himself to Israel in terms of the story she told about the expected restoration. Only YHWH could make this happen. Christ cast himself in the story as YHWH, doing what only YHWH was expected to do. While the Jews killed him for this blasphemy, the church followed the story, believed the testimony of the resurrection, and confessed Christ as the sent Son of God, bridging the previsouly unbridgeable divide.
(5) The creation of a new household, with Christ as elder brother, therefore began. To belong to this household was to have the exile removed, at least in principle. Christ was therefore proclaimed to Israel and presented to the world by the apostles as the means of restoration to God. To become a son of God’s household is to be ‘in Christ’, and to have one’s TD removed. Now, to understand what this looks like, we should look at where the language comes from.

The prototypes

(6) Scripture doesn't have a picture of a 'typical' man, with characteristics that are always true. Whie the state of both Jews and gentiles are discussed, for instance by Paul in Romans, these occur as a demonstration that a new begining was needed, and was not hitherto provided by either group. Paul's discussion does not function as a timeless analysis of an archtypical homo sapiens. Rather, the dominant scriptural image is of a person in relation to his or her group, and that group in relation to God. This relationship of the group to God is often summed up in, or determined by, the relationship of God to its leader – the one ‘in whom’ (or, because of whom) the group exists.
(7) Thus (for instance), all humanity was ‘in Adam’, and was exiled because its king was unfaithful. The primary grouping in the biblical story is therefore Adam’s people. It is against the destruction of this people that Noah, who pleased God, was saved in the ark. But Noah’s sons and their wives were also included, because they were ‘in Noah’. They were his group. Yet in that primary example of restoration (or salvation), there is no discussion of whether the sons or wives 'got to heaven' – nor even mention of whether they, too, pleased God. That sort of individualised view is never the point.
(8) Again, all the men and boys of Abram's household were circumcised and became part of God's new household – the beginnings of Israel. This is not presented as being because God had overcome a basic part of their character (TD) by 'converting' them, but simply because they were part of Abram's group, and were included in the new relationship that God made with Abram. Consider also Abram's argument with YHWH about Sodom. God said he would save the city because if 5 righteous might be found there. All those in the city would therefore experience this salvation - simply because they were in the group that belonged to the city, which YHWH was prepared to say belonged to the righteous. (This is a great example of how the righteous are meant to function as salt and light, as the agents of God's grace for others.)

Of course, it is perfectly possible to speak (and we should) of all these acts of God being of pure grace. But what grace works against is not an internal deficiency of the 'typical' human, but the exile of a people who have been estranged from God & from the place He dwells – the garden, later seen as ‘the land’ and ‘the city’.

The cautions

(9) Now of course, this doesn't mean that there is nothing 'internal' that happens to people. There is. The breath of God enters us, as it did to Adam when he was dust, and makes us new creatures. But this way of speaking is built straight upon native Scriptural imagery, and that imagery isn't concerned with the inward mechanics of individualised 'conversion' in the way that we have made it a central pillar of Calvinist theology.
(10) This shows some of the differences between themes in a theological system, and themes in a developing story. The two can be quite different. For us, scripture is the story, and theology is the system.
(11) We must be aware of the dangers in a system, which often perverts or twists the way the story works, because of the environment in which it was shaped and the particular questions it was trying to deal with. Thus, our inheritance from the reformation is a concern with how the isolated individual gets made right with God. Both Rome and Geneva agreed that the focus was individualised; they disagreed about how the mechanics worked: synergistic infused grace or imputation of alien righteousness? Here, TD came into play: if man in all his parts is dead in sin, then as an isolated individual, he must be acted on by God in sovereign grace in order to convert him. Thus, the gospel becomes salvation-by-grace-through-faith-alone: the mechanism of conversion.
(12) But this individualised TD picture doesn’t really get at the way the scripture sees man, which is relational rather than individualised, and visible rather than inward. The gospel is not a description of how we get converted, but the proclamation (in word and deed) that Christ is king. Although TD does have some important points to make (and we should affirm its basic thrust of grace), it makes them 'at an angle' to the way the scriptural story works. The pictures provided by the story have been taken up and placed behind funny-coloured lenses, so that they now work quite differently - and ironically enough, are held out as 'orthodox'.

Conclusion

In my view it's very important that we recognise the distinction between the story and the system. It would make us far more humble in our dealings with other Christians and far 'nicer' people when defending 'the truth'.

There is obviously much more that could be said. This is merely a taste and a suggestion of ideas.

Wednesday, April 21, 2004

sorry for deletion of TD post. an updated and improved version will be yours - for free! Send no money now! - soon.

Thursday, April 15, 2004

meta-jokes

A priest, a rabbi, and a minister walk into a bar. Bartender says, ‘What is this, a joke?’

A social history of jokes

The first time I've ever blogged about Wright (I think):

Bishop Tom Wright & the gods of modernity

Wednesday, April 14, 2004

A percolating thought, long overdue

In the Comment article Sphere Sovereignty 101, Ray Pennings and James Brink say this about Abraham Kuyper:

“To a large extent, his idea of sphere sovereignty was rooted in his theology. As a strong Calvinist, Kuyper could not attribute to any human institution an absolute authority -- not even an absolute temporal authority. To do so would be idolatrous. Thus, placing limitations on the power of government was a simple acknowledgement that only God has the right to absolute sovereign rule.”

I suggest Kuyper’s position ought to be rethought in terms of the image of God. YHWH gave man the task of doing what He does; acting like He does. YHWH's works is to bear dominion fruitfully, to husband, nurture, rule, beautify and love; thus, so is man's.

There are no limits on the extent to which we must image God. But when any institution or person coerces others away from their ability to image God, then they have acted idolatrously.

Why does this give a better grounding for Kuyper’s sphere sovereignty? I suggest there are three main reasons:

1. Because the justification for legitimate authority is ill-defined, and its application therefore problematic at best. The factors giving rise to authority are wholly mysterious, irreducible to formulas. We know when authority is present; we don't know how -- and much less, whether it is philosophically justified. Your grandmother, the traffic officer, the chairman of the school committee, your best friend, your wife, and your boss all have authority of a sort. But how and why? The mysteriousness of an authority that just is, that grows organically from a complex of myriad, unknown factors simply defies the formulaic delimiters we so enjoy. The endless arguments about how and to what extent authority may be granted, formed, held and exercised by all the various people-associations within a community are thus aimed at the wrong level of analysis.

2. Because the image of God is about doing with what you have. Thus, it is immediately applicable. If authority should for some reason be found in a person or persons, the right question is not whether it is properly located in them, but what they do with it; how they manage the deference others yield to them. Any authority had by ‘rights’ may not be given away without impugning dignity, and thus is liable to the abuse of jealous, prideful guardianship. However, an authority found as a gifted resource, as a tool or talent, may be given away in the service of love, if that should further the purpose of God.

3. Because the predominant prophetic theme of the split between God and man is not a double ontology, set in terms of abstract attributes like authority – much less of mysterious incommunicable ‘absolutes’, finding their answer only in our relative analogues (though these are there, to be sure). Rather, the distinction is often (for want of a better term) ethical, set in terms of purpose, goal, character –- from our end, obedience. Thus, Jesus prayed not that his disciples would remember their place as creatures, but that they would be one, as he and God were one –- they in him and he in they, as he was in God. Jesus spoke only God's words; did only what he heard from his Father. This is the point of being created in God’s image, and of the second commandment which preserves it: man, and man alone, must be the representatives of YHWH, but he must do that absolutely, without assignation of that image to any other creature.

So, any human institution must be guided and circumscribed not by the gradient of an abstraction, a mysterious degree of 'authority' to which it is entitled by right, but rather by the exercise of power in love, as such is needed in order to act as God would. Each association of persons must have its own unique authority. In their respective spheres of operation and influence, they exercise love and guardianship better than any other –- almost invariably because of better relationships & knowledge (in the Hebrew sense). Thus, it is idolatrous for any human institution to trample that image and arrogate its tools to their own self-service.

Tuesday, April 13, 2004

We are often killed in service to others. And I don't mean literally.

Such is the death we die in reflecting the love of Christ.

A fragrant offering to God; the incense of the Temple.

Monday, April 12, 2004

Kudos of the highest order

To Dave & Ange for hosting a marvellous Easter Sunday feast last night. Wonderful company, wonderful ambience, wonderful food, beer and good wine (including mead!), and a wonderful occasion.

He is, after all, risen. And breaking bread together is a fantastic response.

Saturday, April 10, 2004

3 days of vigil

For the first time I saw The Passion of the Christ yesterday, Good Friday. In it Christ dies under a lowering sun, before the early gloaming. I walked out of the theatre under a lowering sun; for me, he is dead.

The movie was a tremendously moving experience, and very well done. Easter is made very, very real to me this year.

It is the second day already. Sunset on Friday marks the beginning of Sabbath in the Jewish calander. In vigil, I will go to the assembly on Sunday morning and await the news of the third day, "He is risen!".

For DMcC: Lord of the Rings is "ham-fisted, shallow, bombastic and laughably overrated, but don't get me wrong.".... Special Effects v Storytelling

Wednesday, April 07, 2004

A Word about Tongues

Background Purpose

Crucial to understanding why tongues were used at all in the 1st century AD is the background drama of extraordinary covenant change that accompanied the gospel announcement, “Christ is King!”. This background is often missed by those who would debate about the use of tongues today.

Up until the time of Christ, as Paul writes in Ephesians, the gentiles (all non-Jews) were strangers to the household of God, aliens to the covenant. The throne of David (which Christ took) was an Israelite throne, not a throne over all creation. But Christ changed that. He became Lord of all, in effect replacing not only David, but Adam, who was the previous head over all the earth.

So, one mechanism to announce that all the families of earth were welcome in the covenant – subject to the new King – was using their own languages to tell them so. Suddenly, God was speaking to people in their own languages, making Himself known beyond the Hebrews. Tongues, then, were a sign of the expansion of the rule of God. They were, as Paul says, a sign to unbelievers, rather than to believers.

Thus, the effect and intent of the apostolic ministry became clear through the use of tongues as a major sign: the kingdom of God was opening, and was opening wider than ever before. This was in accordance with Jesus’ giving the apostles the keys to the kingdom, commissioning them to proclaim the great news that God had made Christ Lord of all.

And this opening of the kingdom was not a repeatable event. God’s kingdom does not expand from Israel to all the families of earth again and again, just as we do not crucify Christ again and again. It happened once. The keys of the kingdom were given to the apostles; they used them to open it, and so the kingdom now stands open.

It won’t do, then, to treat the arrival of tongues in an ahistorical (which means, ‘without history’) manner. The gift of tongues is not timeless – it had a particular purpose in covenant history.

Cessation

Furthermore, I suggest this purpose had an ending-point: the destruction of Jerusalem and its Temple in AD70. Why then?

Until that time, Israel was being invited to repent and follow the Messiah, her new King. During the 40 years between Jesus’ resurrection and the destruction of the Temple, the administrative form of the old Jewish covenant remained while God remained patient, not wishing any to perish. And thus the kingdom remained open for Israel to enter. As the writer of Hebrews says, this was the period of her desert wanderings, like her fathers of old out of Egypt. She was being called to a new exodus, and to entry of a new land.

But when God’s patience ran out, the central symbol of God’s presence with Israel (the Temple) was destroyed, and many, many Jews died in the siege of Jerusalem. At that point the new covenant (in which all the families of earth were welcome) completely replaced the old, exclusive-to-Israel administration, visibly and officially. Covenantally speaking, Israel had been cast on the rubbish heap and the gentiles welcomed. The kingdom had thus arrived, and was officially represented as belonging to Christ and the faithful, and not to the Jews. It had been opened, and the true members welcomed. And so it stands open today.

What need, then, for tongues now? Did something go wrong; did God’s king somehow lose the kingdom between AD70 and 2004? Shall we say (on whose authority?) that we are re-opening the kingdom, as newly appointed apostles? Who gave us that right? Who commissioned us; who gave us keys to a new kingdom?

Conclusion

We best honour the real apostles if we recognize that they did their job, and it’s done. Let us do ours. Let us show the world that it lives under a great and mighty King, and therefore how marvelous and loving is the work of God, to bless all the families of earth.

Tuesday, April 06, 2004

Defender of the Faith?

The most important figure today in the Anglican Communion, a worldwide federation of churches with some 75 million adherents, is probably a man few people in the West know anything about: Archbishop Peter Jasper Akinola, of Nigeria. An uncompromising traditionalist, Akinola presides over the most vibrant and almost certainly the largest Anglican community in the world—at a time when the Anglican world's true center of gravity has shifted to Africa...more

(From Joel W. on WrightSaid (requires membership))

Monday, April 05, 2004

random ruminations: children's work & play

Poppycock: The radical separation between work and play, which calls work evil and play good. On this view. ‘innocent’ children need to be kept from work for as long as possible. Bollix to that.

And bollix to: The idea that children are just another resource to add to the economic machine and be consumed in production. Such an idea is horrible and de-humanising – equally so when applied to adults.

Amen: Production in & nurture of creation is the great task of all families. Adults are shaped by their childhood. Children are therefore to share in the task of families, and so be shaped by it and grow into it, according to their capacities.

This does not exclude creativity, play, exploration, etc. Part of what it means to mature and grow is to do those things, firstly as a child, and then also as an adult. But such activities are not ‘anti-work’, they are an integrated part of what it means to be human – what it means to image God in combination with others.

So, in short, a child is a future adult, and, taking into account their capacities, should be treated as such.