The
Wonder Springs Chronicle
Redux
Christianity
19
May 2010
Volume
12, Issue 20
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Beginning
with the Absolute that there is a God and at specific times and places, working
primarily through human personalities created in His image, stupendous changes
are created in both nature and human civilizations to redux the past into the
future.
Absolutes
are defined as truth residing outside the auspices of human understanding.
Another way to describe an Absolute is that it is a natural law in which we
humans can only apprehend, but cannot change in the sense of its universal
application. The reason we must resort to the use of the term Absolute is that
the old term of truth has been so distorted and made politically correct that
it no longer really defines anything but a spin of a faux reality.
The
term Absolute, as a modern philosophical construct, became popular through the
ministry and the writings of Francis Schaeffer. While produced in the turmoil
of the 1970s, SchaefferÕs most
famous work, ÒHow
Should We Then LiveÓ is a video series that essentially dramatizes the
cultural changes we now are having a very difficult time believing.
In
our enlightened world, the reality of Absolutes causes all sorts of angst. How
can we be continually evolving onward and upward when there already exists a
standard that makes our matchless efforts seem moronic in their best spin?
So
we see a contrast between the things of God and the things of man. As we have
pointed out in previous weeks, Godly change works from the Universal to the
individual. Human change begins with the individual to form a collective, to be
administered by the more highly evolved above us.
In
ÒThe
Christian DiasporaÓ we theorized that todayÕs Christianity has really
become an in situ diaspora, because the evolving world could not really
understand a difference between their worldly religion and Christianity, both
were bigots of a similar cloth of personal peace through individual affluence.
Last
week in ÒThe
Christian ReduxÓ we proposed that it was essentially GodÕs problem to redux
human culture and we have been given the grand opportunity to be living in
these days. Before we wander into that cultural wilderness however, it seems
important to do a little speculation on how the new Redux Christianity might
look in comparison to todayÕs Diaspora.
The
Protestant Christianity of the United States, and of the world for that matter,
is essentially a religion of revivalism and personal holiness. Even though it
seeds were imported from eighteenth century England, revivalism is really an
American phenomena birthed just prior to the American Revolution, but became
the growth mechanism of evangelical Christianity up to this day.
The
revival essence proceeds through the preacher preaching, as individuals are
converted to Christianity and then expected to put away the things of the world
to live the victorious Christian life. The assumption behind the works is that
once you ÒAsk Jesus into your heart,Ó the work of the preacher (and by
extension his church) is completed. When you die God will welcome you into
heaven and give you the keys to your mansion in Glory. Conversions are the
focus, discipleship, as a catechesis concept, is a distant and often ignored
addendum.
In
that general theme, if I look seriously at the churches I have been affiliated
with in my life, they must be considered essentially the best man has to offer.
But if you enlarge those churches to the concept of what God would like to
offer, then things donÕt look all that rosy. Putting this on the Absolute scale
of good thru bad, my actual experiences were on the positive side of mediocre,
and generally what I have seen, there is a few very good, a few very bad, and a
small number of just plain ugly.
What
I am really saying is what may have been acceptable church teaching and
preaching in the late twentieth century will not be sufficient as we move
forward. So how are we going to pull that off?
We
canÕt, it can only be something that God will make happen, and the church, to
and through individual Christians, will either be part of those God induced
changes, or it will be left behind, and I am not talking about The Rapture.
In
some sort of historical context, we are generally familiar with revivalism, we
understand a lot less about the Reformation, even less about the split between
the Roman Catholics and the Orthodox. When it comes to the fall of Rome and the time of Augustine, it must
be irrelevant. Then when we reach back to the church of the Apostles, that
changed the known world in a century, we speculate that we would like to be
part of that, but without the commitment.
In
November 2007 we used the Biblical context from Ezekiel 37 of the Dry
Bones Valley to describe what this coming move of God might look like.
Combining the dry bones as our speculative contribution to the church of the
Apostles, we can see, in theological terms, that our imperative desire should
convict us to be the best dry bones we can be. Just as with the prophet, all we
can say is, ÒO Lord GOD, You know.Ó if or how we can come to life.
Moving
beyond speculation into the unknown, the vision must start in a valley of dry
bones. Those dry bones surely do not represent Òyour best life now.Ó In fact we
might question the very essence of our individual lives themselves. Scary huh?
But it doesnÕt seem as far-fetched as it would have a couple of years ago, or
even earlier this year, or even last week.
Absolute
historic Christianity is based upon the propitiatory sacrifice of Jesus Christ
to satisfy the holiness Absolutes of God, by dying on a cross in Israel two
thousand years ago. He was raised from the dead as the first fruit of that
sacrifice as the witness of our justification. That is the essence of the
historic Christian Gospel, the Good News.
Definitions:
propitiate |prəˈpi
sh ēˌāt| verb [ trans. ] win or regain
the favor of (a god, spirit, or person) by doing something that pleases them
justify |ˈjəstəˌfī|
verb ( -fies, -fied) [ trans. ] 1 show or prove to be right or reasonable : the
person appointed has fully justified our confidence. ¥ be a good reason for :
the situation was grave enough to justify further investigation.
2 Theology declare or make righteous in the sight of God.
When
is the last time you have heard, or have you ever heard a sermon in church that
used both of the above terms?
If
you canÕt recall that sermon, or have never heard that sermon, welcome to your
place in the Dry Bones Valley. Praise the Lord; you are about to become part of
a miracle. If propitiation and justification are terms you generally
understand, Praise the Lord with joy!
Now
it really gets odd, because that miracle will be performed by God through
ordinary or common means, or the Absolutes of natural law if you will. The real
scary thing is the most common instrument to bring this all about will be the
preacher-pastor who not all that long ago spent most of his time explaining how
to live the victorious Christian life.
To
make it even more amazing, church will not be something where you spend a
couple of hours a week, sitting on your duff trying to stay awake. Sunday will
become a time for you to get a vision of what you are to do with all those
other hours of your busy week, as you get a glimpse of the reality that you are
not called to be a round peg in a square hole. Perhaps you begin to understand
that God doesnÕt create junk, and you are one of GodÕs unique creations.
Not
all buildings or gatherings that claim to be a church will proclaim this
historic — now redux gospel, just as they do not do so today. However the
difference between the dry bones, that will remain such, and the living souls
will become apparent for the world to clearly see. Dead bones represent a
gospel based upon a twenthieth century defined concept of Protestant
Liberalism. Even though it goes under terms such as the social gospel,
reformation theology, social justice, or some other evolving term, it will
basically proclaim the Babylonian worldview that if we all work together there
is nothing we cannot accomplish.
We
donÕt — canÕt live the gospel as these people would say. God says, ÒThe
gospel makes you alive, for the true gospel is based upon the external Absolute
authority to empower you through GodÕs grace of the Holy Spirit to do good
works. The contrast is essentially between the mundane and the transcendent.
Rather
than based upon the understanding of the collective elite, communities of redux
Christianity are based upon the Absolute of teamwork. In that light churches
are communities of teams. Since no two individuals are alike and each finds
their worth and their work as an individual there is really no need for
jealousy. Thereby they can change the broader world in ways we canÕt begin to
fathom today.
Next
week we will expand that teamwork concept into the secular community. However based upon the concept of
natural law as an Absolute, GodÕs creation will play an important role as a
visual, secular and ordinary representation of the specific revelation of the
Bible, which includes both law and gospel. As we become more visual in our
communications rather than literal, those pictures, Òworth a thousand words,Ó
can become the mechanism by which the redux of the broader human community can
rapidly take place.
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