Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Back to Share the "Big Story"

I've noticed that this blog continues to get hits despite the fact that I haven't written for some time now.  I had come to believe that it simply wasn't worth my time to keep this blog up, that no one wanted to jump into the conversation.  On the hope that perhaps this will change, I am again taking up my digital 'pen'. 

Originally, I wanted this blog to simply be a place where I could share what I am learning (I am currently a second year graduate student of Biblical Studies at Olivet Nazarene University), and offer a forum for my friends and family (and others!) to dialogue with me.  I want to continue toward that goal, and I feel I have some fresh insights to share.  One other brief note, just to establish some credentials: I am not only a student any longer.  I have actually been a teaching assistant at ONU for over a year now, but a few weeks ago I accepted an offer to teach, full time, Old Testament at ONU come next fall after I have finished my masters thesis.  Such a privilege has caused me to think ever more seriously about how to most effectively present the Scriptures to a world (even a church!) that today is so biblically illiterate. 

To that end, I offer here some of the insights that have refreshed me in my own study of the Scriptures recently.

Lately, I have found myself more and more compelled to ask myself, What is the "big story" that is to be found in the Scriptures?  This question has been planted in my mind specifically by a prominent and prolific (yet very accessible!) scholar that I've had the opportunity to study at length during the past semester: N. T. Wright.  After reading through his entire Christian Origins and the Question of God series this past semester--in addition to a few other smaller works--I have been convinced by him that there is to be found in the Scriptures a "big story." 

Perhaps this doesn't seem like a very novel idea, but I think that it is.  In fact, I think that one of the reasons why we Christians today fail to feel the full "umphf" of the Scriptures is because we are unfamiliar with this "big story."  It occurs to me that 90% of the exposure that most Christians get to the Scriptures is either in daily devotional literature, Sunday worship services, or independent Bible studies.  In each of these forums, it also occurs to me that the Scriptures are read in very small sections: perhaps a chapter, or a few verses, or even just one verse at a time.  Moreover, we are encouraged to ask questions like, "What does this tell me about God today?"  or "What does this mean for my life now?"  These kinds of encounters with the Scriptures (in devotions, Bible study, and worship services) and these types of questions that we pose to the texts of the Bible are not bad.  They do not, however, it seems to me, encourage us to see the "BIG STORY."  Rather, they encourage us to find "principles", "teachings", "timeless truths" and the like--the same sort of thing that people seek out when they watch Oprah, for instance.  The result is that often we are left trying to divorce the ethics of the Christian life from the story of the Christian faith.  We try to extract the truth from the history of our faith.  The result of that is that we try to be good people (good Christians, followers of Jesus) without any real momentum, and even often without any real knowledge of Jesus and what he came to accomplish.  The proper momentum for living the Christian life, however, comes from knowing our story, and because so many of us do not know that story, we fail to recognize why we do what we know we ought to do.

So what is that "big story"?  I believe it is all to be found in Scripture, but that we each need a guide (or rather several guides!) to help us to weed through our various mis-readings of Scripture to find out what Scripture truly says.  As such a guide, I want to sketch one possible telling of that story, and argue that all of the Scriptures--from Genesis, through Isaiah, Haggai, and 2 Thessalonians, to the Revelation of John--can be understood within this story.  The Christian story (which is history as we understand it) could be told something like this . . . .

     There is one God, not many, but one.  This one God has revealed himself to us as the Creator.  He has created all that is--earth, sky, stars, space, us.  And this God has revealed himself as a good God.  He created all things good.  (Gen 1-2)  But humans were not content with the goodness of this God's creation; so we rebelled.  We turned our backs on our own creator, and thus brought down a curse on ourselves and the rest of creation.  (Gen 3-11)  But God was not content to let us live in such a rebellious state.  He purposed to restore his creation--ALL OF IT, including we human beings. 
     So this good God called out a man by the name of Abram, whose name he later changed to Abraham.  (Gen 12, 15, 17, etc.) Abraham was to be the beginning of God's single plan to bring about the restoration of creation, to deal with the problem of evil thoroughly and completely.  Abraham's calling was the beginning of God's answer to Adam's sin.  This good God promised Abraham that he would have a great big family, and that through his family all of the other families of the world would be blessed.  The fulfillment of this promise did not depend on Abraham's faithfulness, but on the faithfulness of this good God alone.  No one would thwart this good plan of God.  So Abraham did become a great family, which was given the name "Israel."  God gave Abraham's family a way to live--Torah/Law (Exodus 20+)--and promised them that they would live in harmony with God, man, and all of creation if they lived in this way.  Once again, this was all part of God's single plan to restore all of creation through Abraham and his family.  Israel was to live in the "Torah" as a sign to all the other nations of the way God intended for humans to live.
     But time and time again, Israel failed.  She was faithless to this good and faithful God.  Her long history (Deuteronomy--2 Chronicles) attests to the basic rebelliousness/sinfulness of humanity.  God gave her every opportunity to live as mankind should live.  He forgave her, restored her, sheltered her again and again; yet she continued to fail.  This is the constant theme of the prophets of Israel (cf. esp. Hosea): despite the faithfulness of God, Israel is faithless
     So what about God's plan to restore all of creation through Abraham's family?  God had promised that this would be the way the restoration would take place.  God was faithful to his part of this "covenant", but Israel was faithless.  Israel's failure under the Torah seemed to stall out the plan of God: how could the restoration of all creation ever come to pass when Israel was unfaithful to the plan?  In order for the plan to go forward to all the other nations--in order for the full restoration of all of creation to take place--the plan demanded a faithful Israel.  But Israel was not faithful, and the hundreds of years of her history suggested that she never would be without some sort of gracious intervention on God's part.  The family of Abraham had failed to bless all the other families of the world, as God had promised they would.  What was needed was a faithful Israel.  In order for the plan to move forward and for God to keep his promises to Abraham, a faithful Israel was what was needed.
     Enter Jesus.  Jesus, as a Jew and as the Son of God, was faithful to God in every way that Israel was faithless.  He steps in before God as a faithful representative of Israel, takes the curse that Israel deserved upon himself, and in so doing offers to status of "family of Abraham" to all nations (cf. Paul and esp. Gal 3-4 where pistis Christou ought to be translated "faithfulness of the Christ/Messiah" instead of "faith in the Christ/Messiah").  The one plan of God to redeem and restore all of creation through Abraham's family--which was stalled out by the faithlessness of Abraham's initial family, Israel--is renewed and expanded by the one faithful Israelite, who represents Israel before God.  God himself gracious intervenes to renew the plan that he promised could not be thwarted. 
     The result of all of this is the offer of what Paul refers to as "justification" or "righteousness", which basically means "acceptance into the family of Abraham on the basis of the faithfulness of the Messiah, Jesus."  All who believe in this Messiah are incorporated into this one family ("you are Abraham's descendants and heirs according to the promise!" Gal 3:29), which is empowered by the very Spirit of Jesus to carry forth the one plan of God--the restoration of all of creation--into the future.  (This is basically what it means to live in the "Kingdom of God.")  This one family now lives in a certain way (the ethics of the New Testament--i.e. the Sermon on the Mount and Romans 12-15) as a faithful witness to the rest of the world that God's plan of restoration is in fact going forth!  Some day all of this will culminate in the full restoration of all things. (Rev 19-21)  Christians will not "go to heaven" at the end of this process, leaving the world behind; rather, heaven will come to earth, and the entire creation ("heavens and earth") will be restored, reunited, redeemed.  (1 Cor 15)  We who call ourselves "Christians" are witnesses of this story, and embodiments of it.  (We already are "new creations.")  This is the reason we act the way we do.


So how about it?  Do you know the story?  If you do, are there parts of my telling of it that you would tweak?  Do you know why we do what we do as Christians?  Do you recognize that you are, if you are "in Christ"--that is "justified"/"righteous"--a part of something MUCH BIGGER than just getting individual souls to heaven when they die (whatever that means)?  It seems to me that most of us have forgotten our story--largely from a neglect of the study of Scripture in general, or from a mis-reading of Scripture that sees as its central aim the extraction of certain "principles" or "truths" from the story of the Scriptures.  But all that we are and do as Christians only makes sense in light of this story.  The Scriptures present us with a story (truly history) that we can live forth from.  Are you living this story, or are you living another story?

4 comments:

  1. Hey Ian - a beautiful retelling of the whole narrative of the Bible. So excited to hear you're going to be teaching full time at ONU! I especially like how you put the Sermon on the Mount in the context of the big story...I've been disheartened to hear a number of prominent church leaders and theologians dismissing these teachings of Jesus, and how that mindset results in a huge lack of discipleship in the local church.
    I do have a question: you say that Christians do not "Go to heaven" when they die...While I most certainly agree that the biblical emphasis is a new heaven and earth, it seems to me that there are clear implications that we would dwell with God before the new heavens and earth are established. I think of the Martyrs crying out to God in Revelation,and Paul commenting on how he aches for the local church, but how it would be better for him to go and be with the Lord. I also think that without an intermediate heaven, this presents some philosophical questions about man: can men's souls cease to exist for a time? Is this God's plan for mankind?
    Just some thoughts. I don't know if you know, but I just inquired via theradicaljourney when you were going to post again. That was either a really quick response, or we have great minds.
    Nick

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  2. We have great minds; that seems to be the only logical conclusion. :-)
    As to your question about an "intermediate heaven", I would say that I can definitely get behind THAT reading of Paul. It is precisely "being with the Lord" in an "intermediate" heaven that Paul speaks of (i.e. in 2 Cor 5, 12, and Philip 1)--a real state in which believers are "with the Lord", though WAITING FOR THEIR FINAL REWARD: resurrection and new creation. It is the comprehensive tendency in American Evangelicalism to speak of "heaven after death" as if it were the believer's ULTIMATE reward that causes me to speak strongly against what I've summarized here as the hope of "going to heaven when you die." A mature Christian eschatology (like Paul's, for instance) always speaks of our ultimate hope as believers as "resurrection" and "new creation", but may also occasionally mention the fact that we WILL be with the Lord between death and the resurrection (though there is VERY little real indication in the New Testament about what this looks like). The so-called "after-life" in Christian thought, then, is really a TWO-STAGE PROCESS: we will be in an "intermediate heaven" or "with the Lord" upon death (something the NT scant speaks of); then, at the culmination of all things, resurrection, judgment, and an eternal new creation of the heavens and earth (which are absolutely central to every page of the NT).

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  3. Love it.
    Once again, great minds.

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  4. Ian, have you read, or are planning to read this book?

    The Mission of God: Unlocking the Bible's Grand Narrative- Christopher J. H. Wright

    It reminded me of your post. If you want it, you can get that book, plus 4 others by joining IVP's book club.

    http://www.ivpress.com/bookclub/18179/index.php

    -Hank

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