Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Christianity’

Why I’m Reading This Book

John Howard Yoder is a name I’ve seen a lot in the past eight years as I’ve waded into theological waters from the shores of more than a few theological islands.  And I’ve read a little of his work, but not his most famous book The Politics of Jesus.  I’ve always appreciated the Anabaptist approach to both biblical interpretation and ethics so I guess it seems fitting to finally read the preeminent Anabaptist study on these two disciplines.

While I do not plan to agree, or for that matter understand, everything Yoder says I will approach this read through intent on learning.  And, of course, I am really reading this book because it supports my preexisting biases and I hope to sharpen them.   If you read my chapter reviews and wish to challenge ideas, thoughts, or beliefs please feel free to do so respectively.  I plan to read through this book at whatever rate suites me so if there are long breaks between posts don’t be surprised.  In the end, I am writing here hoping that the process will help me better understand this important theological work.

Chapter 1: The Possibility of a Messianic Ethic

Yoder begins his work begging for critique as he explains that what he is trying to do is best done through an amateur approach to two disciplines: biblical exegesis and ethics.  He reasons that because such a large chasm exists between these two disciplines getting bogged down in either would do a disservice to the thrust of his argument.

And the thrust of his argument is this:  Jesus’ life and work has significant implications on social ethics and that when understood He is, “not only relevant but also normative for a contemporary Christian social ethic.”  In other words, although Jesus came for reasons that have spiritual significance, He also came to show us what a standard Christian life should look like in regards to politics and society.  So far this seems to be a book written against Protestantism’s tendency to understand Jesus’ teaching and actions as only having spiritual significance rather than concrete human significance.  This, he argues, is to emphasize the divinity of Jesus while ignoring His humanity.

Yoder contends that in mainstream Christian ethics, Jesus is not the norm and gives six explanations that are used to excuse Jesus from being our ethical standard.  They are as follows:

1.  Jesus was not concerned with the “survival of the structures of a solid society” because he thought the world would end soon and as a result only a spiritual purpose and teaching had any pressing significance.

2. Jesus’ ethic was one that had only a rural village sociology and therefore had nothing to say about, “the problems of complex organization, of institutions and offices, cliques and power and crowds.”

3. “Jesus and his early followers lived in a world over which they had no control.”  As a result, the focus was on being a faithful minority whereas Christians today face questions that were inconceivable to Jesus so his teaching has nothing to say about our complex modern context.

4. Jesus was not interested in social change but in “a new self-understanding” and all of His ethical teachings were “the symbolic or mythical clothing of his spiritual message.”

5. Jesus pointed people away from finite values towards God’s infinite and sovereign values making anything here and now of little to no importance.

6. Jesus came only to give his life for the sins of the world, so how he died, what he did, and what he said before the crucifixion is “ethically immaterial.”  Only the dying for sins to bring eternal life matters.

As a result of these six reasons, says Yoder, any ethic we create is founded on common sense, responsibility, and reason.  If this is true then the way in which Christ followers live in the world today is determined more by culture and by preference than by a Jesus shaped ethic, provided that a focus on the eternal/spiritual significance of the crucifixion remains.  It is only the spiritual message of Jesus that matters.

Yoder explains that, in this line of reasoning, to create a social ethic one must cross a narrow bridge from Jesus’ context to our own:

“A certain very moderate amount of freight can be carried across this bridge: perhaps a concept of absolute love or humility or faith or freedom. But the substance of ethics must be reconstructed on our side of the bridge.”

In other words, we can take samples of Jesus’ ethic and apply them to our context but Jesus life and teachings are not the standard by which we form our own ethic.

This leads to a conundrum – mainly that Matthew wrote his gospel, it seems, intent on communicating a “simple kind of ethical catechism.”  For Matthew, Jesus was teaching a way to live.  If the line of reasoning is followed one must assume that Matthew misunderstood Jesus.  But for those who seem to think that he did, Paul comes to the rescue.  Paul, Yoder quips, “corrected the tendency to neo-Judaism or to early catholicism by an emphasis upon the priority of grace and the secondary significance of works, so that ethical matters could never be taken too seriously.”  Jesus did not come, as Matthew seems to suggest, in order to give us a social ethic, but to teach that works, and therefor ethics, are secondary at best to God’s grace.  Paul goes further by clarifying that Jesus actually has “positive respect for the institutions of society, even the subordination of woman and slavery; acceptance of the divinely sanctioned legitimacy of the Roman government…”  Once Paul is understood Matthew is then read and interpreted through a Pauline lens, rather than the other way around.

Yoder admits that the above rejection of Jesus as normative for our social ethic is “hastily sketched” but contends that this the common approach to Christian ethics.

He ends with the contention that Jesus can, in fact, be normative for a social ethic meaning that he came not only to save us from our sins, to die on the cross, but to be in the world in a particular way that has significance even today.

Because of the arduous task before him Yoder, admittedly, builds some arguments from generalizations and assumptions.  These might be worth identifying but that they are generalizations and assumptions probably does little to take away from his central argument.

Next, chapter two….

Read Full Post »

A group of young seminarians had come to the end of their ropes.  Time and time again they were challenged in public to defend the faith from heroes of the secular world but could not come out on top.   They had tried every trick ever taught them and every method at their disposal yet their atheist adversaries made far better arguments and won over crowds with ease.

But the seminarians had heard tales of an apologist from days past; rumors of a man who could take down the mightiest of opponent with his wit and intellect.  He was a man whom had fought the good fight through every secular idea his generation could throw at him: communism, evolution, and philosophy.  But they also knew that this man had not practiced his craft for years.  They weren’t even sure how to find him but they knew that it was only he who could defeat the secularism of their day and therefore spread the gospel of Jesus to those who were not yet convinced.

When a professor, who was once acquainted with the old man, told the seminarians how they could find him they jumped into action.  They approached the sage, explained their situation and asked if he would publicly defend the faith once more against a famous atheist whose work was gaining much ground.  After seeing the enthusiasm and hope of the young men the old apologist acquiesced and told them that he would do as they asked.

The event was scheduled.  In a public forum the atheist and the apologist would have a showdown.  Knowing the reputation of the old man, the atheist brought every weapon he had.  He was going to tear down the evangelical faith once and for all.  The old man was also ready.

The atheist stood before the crowd and with supreme eloquence he presented irrefutable evidence that evolution is true and that the Biblical account of creation in Genesis is archaic and erroneous.  The audience was mesmerized by his wit and charm.  When it was clear that everybody in the room was thoroughly convinced the atheist stepped aside and invited his opponent to respond.

The old apologist slowly rose from his seat, smiled at the atheist and nodded in thanks while walking to the podium.  He approached the microphone and with humble sincerity said, “I suppose you’re right, my dear friend.  Thank you for teaching us.”  He then turned and walked back to his seat.

Not quite sure what to do, the atheist hesitated but stood again to give his second exposition.  Again, with charisma and zeal, he tore apart the Christian faith.  In a matter of minutes he convinced the whole of the room that the Christian religion was philosophically untenable.  When he was satisfied he had done an adequate job he sat down.

The old apologist slowly rose from his seat, smiled at the atheist and nodded in thanks while walking to the podium.  He approached the microphone and with humble sincerity said, “That seems to make a lot of sense.  Perhaps you’re right.”  He turned again and walked back to his seat, smiling the whole way.

The atheist didn’t understand.  What could this old man be thinking?  What would make him give up his faith so easily?  He rose and asked, “Why won’t you defend the faith you’ve so ardently defended in the past?”

The young seminarians rose to listen, eager to hear the answer.

The old man smiled.  He stood up and said, “I searched for Christ in politics and I could not find him.  I searched for Christ in philosophy and theology but I could not find him.  I searched for Christ in the Christian religion but could not find him.  I determined that he must not be there.  But I found him.  He was on a cross letting the accusations of other’s destroy his reputation, his work, even his religion.  And because they destroyed all of these things, and because there was nothing left to take from him, folks were able to see what God gave us in their place.”

“And what was that?” inquired the atheist.

“A man who is for others,”[1] Said the apologist, “It seems the only real way to defend that is to emulate.”

So moved by his humility and unsure of how to respond the atheist took his seat.  But one of the young seminarians, disappointed in the exchange, marched to the stage and told the audience that they would continue the debate.  Taking things into his own hands he began to refute the atheist’s claims.  He pulled no punches and left no stone unturned.  He did a precise and flawless critique of the atheist’s logic rising to the occasion like the apologists of old.  He deconstructed every word, phrase, and thought the atheist had put forth with depth and insight.  Having thoroughly demonstrated the superiority of the Christian faith he turned to the atheist and said, “Now that you have something to respond to let’s see what you’ve got.”

With a look of uncertainty on his face he cautiously approached the podium.  He looked at the old man, who was sitting contended in his chair, and he looked at the young seminarian who had proudly stepped aside.  He shrugged his shoulders and with sincerity replied, “I suppose you’re right, my friend.  Thank you for sharing your thoughts with me.”  With that he turned and walked off stage never to be heard from again in the public arena.


[1] Bonhoeffer, Dietrich.  Christ the Center and Papers and Letters From Prison.

Read Full Post »

I wonder if a man handing another man an extremely sharp, polished, two-edged instrument would hand it over with the air, gestures, and expression of one delivering a bouquet of flowers?  Would not this be madness?  What does one do, then?  Convinced of the excellence of the dangerous instrument, one recommends it unreservedly, to be sure, but in such a way that in a certain sense one warns against it.  So it is with Christianity.  If what is needed is to be done, we should not hesitate, aware of the highest responsibility, to preach in Christian sermons – yes, precisely in Christian sermons – AGAINST Christianity.”

-Soren Kierkegaard, Works of Love, p.191-

I’ve read this a good number of times and each time I think I understand it a bit more.  What do you think?

Read Full Post »

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.