Showing posts with label Newbigin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Newbigin. Show all posts

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Why spiritual growth might be harder in the West

For the last few weeks I've been meeting with a group of up and coming leaders in our church. They are leading a study around John Piper's When I Don't Desire God. In other centuries and on other continents, spiritual growth and multiplication is assumed and visible from the earliest days of Christian life.

We were puzzling over why that is not the case in the West. One brother, from the East who was converted in the West, mused that it was because we were ignorant and unaware of the nature of Biblical Christianity - - struggle, warfare, and growth go together. He really hit the nail on the head when he essentially stated that a call to discipleship and not just to belief is viewd as an addition to the Gospel, only because we have been proclaiming a Gospel that has subtracted all of the hard elements of the Christian life. I responded with the thought that "the Christian life" lived by Christ is normally viewed under the rubric "obedience", when in our Catechism and the Scriptures it is viewed under the rubric "humiliation" and "suffering service." One brother pointed to Job as the model and we chuckled how a PR campaign for the Christian life would look like with Job as the poster child!!

I had a feeling Newbigin would have some helpful insights, and lo and behold, he did:

The most famous and influential statement of the rights of man, however, defines them as the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. there is reason to think that what was originally intended was 'public happiness,' that is to saythe happiness that comes from participating as free men and women in the management of public affairs. in practice, however, the pursuit of happiness without this definition came to be seen as the right of all people. Happiness is, of course, a word with multiple meanings. The question, 'what is true happiness?' can only be finally answered on the basis of the answer to another question: What is the chief end of man? But the age of reason had banished teleology from its way of understanding the world, and so 'happiness' had no definition except what each autonomous individual might give it. Moreover, there is a further element of pathos in this idea of the right to the pursuit of happiness. Medieval people believed with great seriousness that final happiness lay on the other side of death. They did not expect it in its fulness on this earth. But the methods of modern science provide no grounds for belief that there is anything beyond death. Hence, the whole freight of human happiness has to be carried in the few short and uncertain years that are allowed to us before death ends it all. The quest for happiness becomes that much more hectic, more fraught with anxiety that it was to the people of the Middle Ages. Lesslie Newbigin, Foolishness to the Greeks, pp. 26-27


Abraham, Job, David, Daniel, Jeremiah, Jesus, and medieval saints had a strong teleology operating. They could look past (e.g. Jesus Heb. 12.2-3) temporary pain/angst/uncertainty because certain things were certain. Perhaps now, we are certain of our entitlement to present victory/joy/satisfaction and uncertain of "the weight of glory." The weight of sufferings is ever near and the weight of glory doesn't register on our scale. The Western scale has been calibrated on the pursuit of happiness rather than a pursuit of persevering, enduring, and saving faith. Maybe that is why we have an anemic and whiney faith.

Hi, my name is Shawn and I'm addicted to the pursuit of happiness.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Before missional was trendy - Intro to Weekly Newbigin quotes

Before missional was the buzzword that followed pomo which followed "doing life" there was a man named Lesslie. He was pushing missional by being missional. As a missionary pastor to India he was engaging the Hindu culture around as well as engaging the assumptions that he brought to the endeavour. Every experience of the Gospel's message comes through language and with that language comes culture. Incidentally, that is why pastors are urged to go to seminary because they have to be a tour-guide, or match-maker, "between two worlds" (Stott), the biblical and the postmodern one, translating and allowing for both language and culture. When we pastor and preach in the west we are preaching to "our culture." But now in the West we are preaching to the toughest kind of culture: one that has received, rejected, and forgotten a vital Christian witness.

And now for the quote of the week (or if you're nice you might get more than one a week):

"[W.E. Gladstone said] 'Should the Christian faith ever become but one among many co-equal pensioners of a government, it will be a proof that subjective religion has again lost its God-given hold upon objective reality, or when under the thin shelter of its name, a multitude of discordant schemes shall have been put upon a footing of essential parity, and shall together receive the bounty of the legistlature, this will prove that we are once more in a transition state- that we are travelling back again from the region to which the Gospel brought us, towards that in which it found us.'

What Gladstone foretold is essentially what has been happening during the 140 years since he wrote those words. The result is not, as we once imagined, a secular society. It is a pagan society, and its paganism, having been borne out of the rejection of Christianity, is far more resistant to the gospel than the Pre-Christian paganism with which cross-cultural missions have been familiar. Here, surely, is the most challenging missionary frontier of our time." Foolishness to the Greeks, p. 20