Categories
Spirituality

Thomas a' Kempis on Truth

I think Thomas a’ Kempis overstates the matter a bit here, but nevertheless this warning in “The Imitation of Christ” is a helpful reminder for many of us:

HAPPY is he to whom truth manifests itself, not in signs and words that fade, but as it actually is. Our opinions, our senses often deceive us and we discern very little.

What good is much discussion of involved and obscure matters when our ignorance of them will not be held against us on Judgment Day? Neglect of things which are profitable and necessary and undue concern with those which are irrelevant and harmful, are great folly.

Categories
Photography and Music

Song Remix: Wind and Waves

This is a song I wrote at Long Beach Island a couple of years ago. I’ve remixed it a bit.

Categories
Books and Film Photography and Music

New Song: "Beautiful"

This is a song I’ve been working on for my wife — our 18th anniversary is next week!

Categories
Historical Theology Uncategorized

History of Orthodox Christianity Video

This is a fascinating video.  I think all Christians should have to  take church history course.  It fleshes so many things out and puts so many things into perspective.

Categories
Historical Theology

Anselm: Cur Deus Homo

Cur Deus Homo was written by St. Anselm of Canterbury, a philosopher and theologian who lived in the eleventh century. It is a rational defense of the necessity of Christ’s incarnation for human salvation.[1]This document is historically significant because it is one of the most complete early expositions of the “satisfaction / substitutionary” theory of the atonement, which has been the principal model of the atonement in the Western (both Roman Catholic and Reformed) theological tradition. This view of the atonement was regarded by Anselm, and by the Western Church, as superior to Patristic “ransom” theories that viewed Christ’s death as a payment to the Devil to free man from sin.

The text is structured as a fictional philosophical dialogue between Anselm and Boso, a monk in Normandy.[2] In Book One, Anselm explains why God could not have offered salvation to humanity other than through Christ. Boso notes that if God is all-powerful, God should have been able to save man simply by fiat.[3] Boso raises the further objection that the Divine, being transcendent and impassible, cannot become a finite human being.[4] In addition, Boso suggests, even if God could have a “son” it would be unjust for God to punish that individual for all the sins of humanity.[5] All of these were common pagan objections to the incarnation dating from the time of Augustine and earlier.[6]

Anselm responds to the problem of divine impassibility with reference to Chalcedonian Christology.Christ’s suffering was incurred “in the feebleness of the human constitution which he assumed,” not in the “majesty” of his divine nature.[7] On the charge of injustice, Anselm notes that Christ suffered of his own will, not under Divine compulsion.

In response, Boso questions the voluntariness of Christ’s suffering, given that Christ is portrayed in scripture as perfectly obedient to God’s will “even unto death.”[8] Anselm responds that true “obedience” is not compelled, but freely offered. Further, Anselm says, God did not specifically command Christ’s death.[9] Rather, Christ was put to death by an act of human will by people who could not tolerate Christ’s lifestyle of holy obedience to God’s moral commands.[10] Yet, God was willing to allow this terrible act – to allow the Son to choose obedience unto death – because through this obedience humanity could be saved.[11]

The discourse then moves to a discussion of the nature of sin and why Christ’s death was necessary to account for human sin.[12] Sin, Anselm asserts, is an assertion of autonomy from God that impinges on God’s honor. This creates a debt owed by the sinner: “everyone who sins ought to pay back the honor of which he has robbed God; and this is the satisfaction which every sinner owes to God.”[13]

Moreover, the dishonor to God resulting from sin creates an injustice that requires punishment. If God is just, He must punish sin. God’s justice, then, answers the earlier question why God cannot simply excuse sin by a mere act of will.[14] It is a question of God’s dignity and character, not of his power. In this way, Anselm brilliantly turns on its head the pagan Divine-dignity argument against the incarnation.

Anselm continues the thread of his argument to explain why satisfaction for human sin must be made only by a human.[15] Here, Anselm turns to a discussion of the creation and fall of angels and men.God planned to create a “reasonable and complete number” of rational beings who would enjoy eternal happiness in the contemplation of God.[16] Even if no angel had ever fallen, God left room for the creation of some number of men to perfect the number of those rational beings who would contemplate God forever.The original purpose of man was to multiply until the number was perfected. Thus, humanity was originally created in a holy state in which it was require to persevere until the number of rational beings was completed.[17] However, both angels and men sinned, and therefore the perfection God desired for creation cannot be attained without some remedy for sin.

But why is it that, if man sinned, man cannot remedy his own sin? Anselm argues that the duty of honor men owe to God is complete and continual.[18] The execution of an ongoing duty cannot constitute payment for a past failure to exercise that duty.[19] Moreover, the debt of sin is so great that man is not capable of making payment on top of the duties already owed to God. When Boso suggests otherwise, Anselm famously states, “[y]ou have not as yet estimated the great burden of sin.”[20]

Nevertheless, Anselm argues, God could not simply leave man to his punishment, because God made man for happiness in the contemplation of God, and therefore God’s purpose would have been frustrated by man’s sin.[21] Yet, human beings are not able to pay the penalty for their own sin. Thus, Anselm explains, God became incarnate in Christ, the God-man, to pay the penalty on man’s behalf.[22]

But why did God have to become man? Anselm shows why a man of “Adam’s race” must make atonement. Humanity fell in Adam and therefore must be reinstated by a man of Adam’s race.[23] At the same time, human limitations preclude a mere human from making atonement. A person who can make a perfect payment for sin must be perfect. Yet, how was Christ perfect if he took on human limitations, including the imperfection of death?

Anselm responds that death is not an essential attribute of human nature in its uncorrupted stated.[24] Whereas death is a punishment for sin for ordinary men, for the God-man death is merely a possibility, one which he chooses to endure.[25] Moreover, the virtue inherent in this sacrifice – a voluntary choice made on behalf of all of the race of men – is so powerful that it “is extended even to those far remote in place or time.”[26]

How is this virtue extended? Christ’s sacrifice merits the reward of the restoration of fellowship with God by providing the price of the dishonor done to God by man’s sin. Yet Christ himself, being the perfect God-man, “needs nothing . . . no gift or release.”[27] This reward would go to waste if Christ did not transfer it to someone else.[28] The Son is free to give this reward as a gift to whomever he wishes. It is graciously given by Christ to man.

Discussion

Anselm’s discussion of the incarnation and the atonement is rich, analytically sharp, and to me almost lyrical in some places. Contrary to the arguments of many contemporary critics of the satisfaction theory of the atonement, Anselm’s treatment does not make God appear bloodthirsty or vicious. Indeed, I think Anselm amply demonstrates why anything less than “satisfaction” of the grave dishonor done by the sinful assertion of human autonomy fails the test of justice.

Anselm’s argument is somewhat weakened for me, however, by his conceptual debt to Platonic thought-forms. I personally find aesthetic arguments attractive, but Anselm uses the Platonic notion of perfection to prove too much in regard to the need for the atonement to enable completion of the number of the elect. This is particularly so, I think, in his discussion of the number of fallen angels in relation to the number of elect humans. This is the kind of thing for which scholastic theology earned its “angels on the head of a pin” reputation.

I also am not sure what to make of Anselm’s views on the incarnation vis-a-vis Divine impassibility.I find some of Jurgen Moltmann’s views about God’s relationship to the creation and the purpose of the atonement interesting in this regard. Moltmann argues that God truly suffers along with the creation as it evolves, and that the atonement demonstrates the cruciform character of God’s relationship with the entire creation. In some ways, Moltmann’s approach offers a more compelling theodicy than Anselm’s, because our understanding of the natural world has moved far beyond the static categories of Plato and Aristotle. At the same time, Moltmann has been justly criticized for having views of the trinity and the incarnation that border on, if not transgress into, the territory of heresy in minimizing the unity of the Godhead and the transcendence of the Father. I also would repeat Anselm’s great dictum to Motlmann and his admirers: “[y]ou have not as yet estimated the great burden of sin.” However we decouple it from Plato, the substitutionary aspect of the atonement seems to me necessary and central.


[1] Anselm claims his work “proves, by absolute reasons” and “by plain reasoning” that no one can be saved without Christ and that the incarnation was necessary for human salvation. See Cur Deus Homo, Preface.

[2] Some people argue, somewhat tongue-in-cheek, that Anselm’s use of Boso as a rhetorical foil prefigures Bozo the Clown. See “The First Bozo Probably Wasn’t a Clown,” New York Times, August 16, 1991, available at http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D0CEFDE1339F935A2575BC0A967958260.

[3] Cur Deus Homo, Book One, Ch. VI.

[4] Id., Book One, Ch. VIII.

[5] Id.

[6] See, e.g., Augustine’s responses to similar objections in City of God and Justin Martyr’s Dialogue with Trypho.

[7] Cur Deus Homo, Book One, Ch. VI. As noted in my conclusion, one wonders whether Anselm would have done better to question the Platonic presupposition about Divine impassibility.

[8] Id., Chapter IX.

[9] Id.

[10] Anselm argues that “God did not, therefore, compel Christ to die; but he suffered death of his own will, not yielding up his life as an act of obedience, but on account of his obedience in maintaining holiness; for he held out so firmly in this obedience that he met death on account of it.” Id.

[11] Id., Chapter IX – X. Curiously, Anselm seems to depart in the course of this argument from his prior affirmation of Divine impassibility. See, e.g., Ch. X, stating “it is proper to say that [the Father] wished the Son to endure death so piously and for so great an object, though he was not pleased with [the Son’s] suffering.” If the Father is impassible, one wonders how he apparently felt compassion or empathy for the Son’s suffering.

[12] Id., Chapter XI – XII.

[13] Id., Chapter XI.

[14] Id. See also Chapter XV: “satisfaction or punishment must needs follow every sin.”

[15] Id., Chapter XVI.

[16] Id. This discussion, which seems quite strange to modern ears, draws on Platonic notions of perfection. For a discussion of Anselm’s reliance on Platonic thought forms, see “Anselm of Cantebury,” Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, available at http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/anselm/.

[17] Id., Chapter XVIII.

[18] Id., Chapter XX.

[19] Anselm says, “[w]hen you render anything to God which you owe him, irrespective of your past sin, you should not reckon this as the debt which you owe for sin.” Id.

[20] Id., Chapter XXI.

[21] Id., Chapter XXV.

[22] Anselm says “[if] it be necessary, therefore, as it appears, that the heavenly kingdom be made up of men, and this cannot be effected unless the aforesaid satisfaction be made, which not but God can make and none but man ought to make, it is necessary for the God-man to make it.” Cur Deus Homo, Book Two, Chapter VI.

[23] Id., Chapter VIII (stating “if the race of Adam be reinstated by any being not of the same race, it will not be restored to that dignity which it would have had, had not Adam sinned, and so will not be completely restored; and besides, God will seem to have failed of his purpose, both of which suppositions are incongruous. . . .”).

[24] Id., Chapter XI (stating “neither corruption nor incorruption belongs essentially to human nature, for neither makes nor destroys a man. . . .”).

[25] As Anselm notes, it was in a sense not possible for Christ to make a different choice, but this is because of his holy and loving character, not because of any external compulsion. See Id., Chapter XVIII(a).

[26] Id., Chapter XVI.

[27] Id., Chapter XIX.

[28] Id.

Categories
Ecclesiology Spirituality

Emerging Fractional Streams?

Interesting post by Mark Sayers about the growing distinctions between different versions of “emerging.”  I think I identify with aspects of all the different streams Sayers identifies, but mostly with the “Neo-Missiologists.”  The real desire behind all of these streams, though, I think, is for a fresh restatement of the real center of an evangelical faith in contexts that still had not gotten past the fundamentalist-modernist controersy.  Each of these streams Sayers identifies can be seen as somewhat different locations around this center.

Categories
Biblical Studies Interviews Science & Technology Theology

Nature's Witness: Conversation With Daniel Harrell

This continues my conversation with Daniel Harrell, author of “Nature’s Witness: How Evolution Can Inspire Faith.” Daniel is a long-time Pastor at Park Street Church in Boston, MA. Park Street is an historic evangelical church.

Dave: Concerning the image of God, you mention Wolfhart Pannenberg. I notice that in the book you make a few references to Jourgen Moltmann. Most evangelical readers will be unfamiliar with these names. I suspect that the few who have heard of them will associate them with theological liberalism, and worse, with panentheism and process theology. But anyone who serioiusly studies Christian faith and the natural sciences will need to grapple with Pannenberg and Moltmann. So:

Do you see any dangers in Pannenberg’s and/or Moltmann’s concepts of God and creation? How (if at all) would you distinguish your understanding of God and His relation to creation from their views? Or, maybe a better way to put this: do you think Pannenberg and Moltmann’s views of God and creation are consistent with Nicene orthodoxy, or is some version of patripassionism required for a Christian understanding of evolution?

Daniel: You might want to elucidate which views of Pannenberg and Moltmann you mean (they write pretty extensively on God and creation!). As for patripassionism, its rejection, I think, presumes too strong a categorical understanding of the Trinity than is demanded. In other words, that Jesus is God who dies on the cross while the Father is God who receives his prayer and expends his wrath is nevertheless both God who atones and God who satisfies. Moltmann, to my recollection, does not suggest that God the Father is crucified, but rather God the Son who is one with the Father is crucified. (If this isn’t Moltmann’s position then it is mine and one that squares with Nicene orthodoxy . “God was in Christ, reconciling the world to himself” (2 Corinthians 5.19). ). This is an important distinction as well as one of those Trinitarian realities that defy logic.

That this is necessary for embracing evolution entails recognizing that death has been part of organic life from the beginning (whether you believe in six-days or six billion years). And thus nature as characteristic of God entails a God for whom death is part of his character. I think Moltmann’s “crucified God” (albeit in the ways I interpret above) would provide for such a God.

Dave: Specifically on the image of God in humanity, Pannenberg says in his Systematic Theology that “[i]n the story of the human race, then, the image of God was not achieved fully at the outset. It was still in process. . . . If we think of the divine likeness as being already achieved in Adam’s first estate, we cannot view it as our final destiny in a process of history.” Can you explain a little more how you apply this sort of theory from Pannenberg to your theology of human nature?

Daniel: Not having Pannenberg in front of me, I nevertheless read the quotation as emphasizing that the image of God cannot be attained as a process of history because it is an act of God. “New creation” can never be a product of evolution. I assert that our ultimate “image of God” is attained by the redemptive work of Jesus, which was part of the original plan (Rev 13:8–KJV). Evolution points to a very good but incomplete creation that groans as it awaits its redemption, even from the beginning. God created a free process creation that resulted in free willed creatures who freely rejected God’s overtures and thus made redemption necessary. As a God who loves sacrificially, he always had redemption in mind, even at creation. (Just don’t ask me why. Although it does help explain how it is that Adam could have ever sinned in the first place.)

Categories
Biblical Seminary

Missional Theology I — Online

I’m looking forward to this, starting in a couple of weeks:

 

Categories
Uncategorized

Barth on the Center of Orthodoxy

There is no point in dogmatic thinking and speaking if in it all systematic clarity and certainty is not challenged by the fact that the content of the Word of God is God’s work and activity, and therefore God’s free grace, which as such escapes our comprehension and control, upon which, reckoning with it in faith, we can only meditate, and for which we can only hope. It is not from an external attack of doubt or criticism but from its own very concrete focal point and foundation, from the source of all Christian and therefore dogmatic certitude, that all its insights and first principles, the nexus of its axioms and inferences derive; and even these statements are constantly questioned both as a whole and in detail, and their temporariness and incompleteness exposed. The focal point and foundation themselves determine that in dogmatics strictly speaking there are no comprehensive views, no final conclusions and results. There is only the investigation and teaching which take place in the act of dogmatic work and which, strictly speaking, must continually begin again at the beginning in every point. The best and most significant thing that is done in this matter is that again and again we are directed to look back to the centre and foundation of it all.

–Karl Barth (Church Dogmatics 1/2, 868)

Categories
Biblical Studies Lamentations Spirituality Theology

Lamentations: Introduction

These are some materials I’m putting together for a study on Lamentations.

Introductory Questions:

What places, institutions, etc. might we think of as holding a symbolic place in our hearts and minds as did the city of Jerusalem to the Judahites?

Why do you think “the city” occupies such a central place in Lamentations? Can you think of other places in scripture where “city” is an important concept? Why do you think this might be so?

Have you ever felt “deserted,” “betrayed,” or “bitter”? Why? How did you express and deal with those feelings?

What do you think about the role of public lament in our culture? For example, what would a “service of lamentation” look like in one of our local churches? Why don’t we like to talk about or practice lament?

Some important background:

Lamentations is comprised of a group of poems concerning the destruction of Jerusalem in 586 B.C.E. by the Babylonians. It is unclear who wrote these poems, although most scholars agree that the writer or writers probably had been left behind in the area of Jerusalem after its destruction. It has traditionally been held that the writer is the prophet Jeremiah.

Jerusalem had been seen as the spiritual, political and economic center of the kingdom of Judah. It was the location of a magnificent temple to God built by King Solomon. The destruction of Jerusalem by the Babylonians was the devastating culmination of a long war. Those of Judahs’ “brightest and best” who had not been killed in the war were deported to Bablyon (we get a glimpse of this practice in the book of Daniel). Those who remained in Judah after this “Babylonian exile” had been stripped of everything — their incomes, their dignity, their loved ones, and symbol of their national faith, the Temple.

These events were particularly devastating because of the history that preceded them. The nation of Israel had been united under Kings Saul, David and Solomon. After Solomon’s death, his sons divided the nation into two kingdoms, the Northern (Israel) and the Southern (Judah). An immediate reason for this division was that the tribes in the North rejected the heavy taxes levied by Solomon’s son, Rehoboam. Scripture also tells us that the division of the kingdom was God’s judgment for Solomon’s failure to rid the nation of idol worship. (See 1 Kings 12:30-43.) The Northern Kingdom, comprising ten of the original tribes of Israel, regularly engaged in alliances with other nations in contradiction to God’s commands. It was conquered by Assyria in 722 B.C.E.

The Southern Kingdom was comprised of the tribes of Benjamin and Judah. King David was a Judahite. God had promised that David’s kingdom would endure forever. In 2 Samuel 7:11-16, God spoke through the prophet Samuel, and gave this promise:

“Now then, tell my servant David, ‘This is what the LORD Almighty says: I took you from the pasture and from following the flock to be ruler over my people Israel.  I have been with you wherever you have gone, and I have cut off all your enemies from before you. Now I will make your name great, like the names of the greatest men of the earth.  And I will provide a place for my people Israel and will plant them so that they can have a home of their own and no longer be disturbed. Wicked people will not oppress them anymore, as they did at the beginning and have done ever since the time I appointed leaders over my people Israel. I will also give you rest from all your enemies.
The LORD declares to you that the LORD himself will establish a house for you:  When your days are over and you rest with your fathers, I will raise up your offspring to succeed you, who will come from your own body, and I will establish his kingdom.  He is the one who will build a house for my Name, and I will establish the throne of his kingdom forever.  I will be his father, and he will be my son. When he does wrong, I will punish him with the rod of men, with floggings inflicted by men.  But my love will never be taken away from him, as I took it away from Saul, whom I removed from before you.  Your house and your kingdom will endure forever before me; your throne will be established forever.’

Judah’s national identity, therefore, was as the chosen remnant of God through whom the Davidic kingdom, and with it the blessing of God, would endure forever. In this light, the destruction of Jerusalem by the pagan nation of Babylon was an inconceivable calamity. It seemed that God himself had forsaken his promises to his people.

Some Helpful Resources

F.W. Dobbs-Allsopp, Lamentations, “Interpretation” Commentary Series (John Knox Press 1989)
J. Andrew Dearman, Lamentations, NIV Application Commentary (Zondervan 2002)
The Baker Atlas of Christian History (Baker 2005)