OK, I moved this blog over to http://occidentalmission.wordpress.com
I think it’s a more appropriate name for what this blog is becoming and also I want to do something different with the “Sarcarmony” name.
OK, I moved this blog over to http://occidentalmission.wordpress.com
I think it’s a more appropriate name for what this blog is becoming and also I want to do something different with the “Sarcarmony” name.
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The last example of Reflexivity I wanted to share was from the Jerusalem Council. It’s late and I’m old, so I’m just going to throw it up in this post and then I’ll try to sum it up in the next few days
Acts 15:1-20 – The Jerusalem Council
Through the incident with Cornelius, Peter is confronted on the basis of his diet, a central aspect of Jewish life to be sure. It would seem, though, that assaulting dietary practices was nothing compared to challenging the practice of circumcision. In much the same way as in Acts 10, the Jewish believers are confronted to reassess their very understanding of themselves as the people of God.
What makes them distinct if not their diet or circumcision? It becomes obvious that these outward practices must be subordinated to the Spirit. In Acts 10, Peter receives a vision from God and witnesses the Spirit descend upon Cornelius’ household in order to be convinced. In Acts 15, however, the believing Jews must weigh the witness of Paul and Barnabas.
David K. Strong argues that this passage addresses the crucial question: “Will the Jerusalem church sanction unhindered outreach to the Gentiles?” (Strong 2004:197) Although this is certainly a concern of the passage, I think the question carries with it a certain bias we must address. The question is not whether the Jerusalem church will allow it, but whether it will follow the path the Spirit has already laid out. Change comes from the margins, and those in the center often find themselves at a loss when the center moves. It is with this firmly in mind that we look at the words of Paul and James, respectively.
The Testimony of Paul and Barnabas
Paul’s speech communicates two important ideas regarding the reflexivity of mission. First, God had chosen to send Paul out from the community to witness to the Gentiles. Second, and more important for the matter at hand, Paul has seen God in the Gentile communities and now has a word for those in Jerusalem.
Newbigin observes that, “the gospel escapes domestication, retains its proper strangeness, its power to question us, only when we are faithful to its universal, supranational, supracultural nature” (Newbigin 1988:50).
The mission has become reflexive, aimed back at Jerusalem, the city from which the Jewish believers assumed it had originated. God’s plan is larger and more diverse, however, than we tend to give it credit for, and this passage is no exception. The hearts of the Gentiles have been cleansed by faith, and it is not for the people of God to be harsher than God himself.
James’ Judgment
James wisely appeals to the words of the prophets in seeking an answer to the question of circumcision. He is able to distinguish what is required from what is not regarding the practice. James also appeals to the testimony of Simeon, showing that Paul and Barnabas are certainly not the only ones with a heart for the Gentiles.
In his role as apostle and using his pastoral gifting, James sets limitations regarding idolatry, fornication, and diet. Much like Peter’s experience, the Jerusalem council is forced to address their self-identity. It seems, though, that the Gentiles have much to teach the Jewish believers regarding the life of faith. This passage brings to light the tendency of all “religious” people to define themselves by certain practices.
It takes exposure to other cultures, the witness of Paul and Barnabas, and the wisdom of James to discern the Spirit’s intention in this situation.
There are wider ramifications for the church at large, but we must not confuse the paternalistic tone taken by the Jerusalem Council with the subsequent actions of the Gentile believers. One certainly can assert that the decision against requiring circumcision was encouraging to the Gentile believers, but that they would have continued as normal without such encouragement. It is, in fact, their witness via the works of the Spirit which convert the Jewish believers into a broader understanding of the missio Dei.
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Here’s a thought I’m just going to throw out there and come back to later. What does it mean to be chosen?
I think this has become a “loaded” question with the introduction of calvinist/reformed theology and certainly before that as well. In a world where you are emerging from the one church – one world system of the medieval catholic church into the Reformation, where you can’t just count your neighbor as a “christian” anymore, you start to wonder just how you can tell who is part of the “elect”.
This was a question of life or death importance at that time, actually. If you were not following Jesus in a particularly prescribed manner, there could be severe consequences. Again, I’m just throwing this out here and don’t have the time or space or energy to be as detailed as I would like on this subject. Suffice it to say, it became very important to know who was whom.
This changed the nature of the question, though. Being “chosen” meant you were something that someone else was not. It became a way of deciphering who was in and who was out. So, when you heard someone say, “I am chosen.” or, “We are chosen.” the implication was “I/We am/are chosen, and you are not.” Certainly “outsiders” hear it this way, but I think we hear it that way ourselves. “I am chosen, so I need to start discerning who’s in and who’s out of my club.” It also carries this religious pride with the notion of being chosen, as in we are the prime choices and others are not.
There’s a Newbigin quote I have to dig up from somewhere, but I would like us to start thinking of being chosen as “being chosen to do something for God.” Your life has been given meaning and just like Abraham, God is calling you to do soemthing with your life.
You have a mission, you’ve been chosen to do that mission. Go do it, and don’t worry about who else is “chosen,” God’s taking care of that. Chosen does not mean “I’m better,” it means “I’ve to a job to do.”
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OK, still working on the consistent blogging thing. I blame the wonky keyboard of my laptop!
We’re moving on to the New Testament now for some further examples of God breaking down barriers and using the “outsiders” to share His message. Again, for lack of a better word I’m using “Reflexivity” to describe this phenomenon. As I see it, Mission/the Word of God/Revelation comes from God, but our previous concept has been that it comes from God, then channels through us, the “people of God” and moves on to the outside world.
There are times, however, when we need to hear something from God and have closed our ears or even our gates to what He is trying to say. I think one of the biggest reasons for this is that we continually narrow who we consider a “person of God” but we’ll go more into this later. As Jesus said, the message will come through, even the rocks will cry out. Here is the next part of the reflexivity paper regarding Acts 10:
This story illustrates the reflexivity of mission in a succinct and clear manner. Mission is flowing two ways, from Cornelius to Peter as well as from Peter to Cornelius. Who is the “person of God” in this passage? I contend that both men are men of God, with pieces of a larger puzzle. It takes their interaction to learn the truth about God showing no partiality to a specific people group (Acts 10:34-35).
The central notion to this passage is that God is doing a new thing and wishes to teach his people more about himself. This seems to be, however, a lesson that Jesus’ early followers were not getting on their own (and still struggled with vehemently after Peter and Cornelius’ meeting). It was not a part of their missionary practice or strategy, so God sends a missionary to the circumcised believers in the form of Cornelius.
Lesslie Newbigin relates that most of the advances he has seen during missionary experience mirror the Peter and Cornelius model rather than a strategic plan of sharing and witness. About this passage Newbigin states, “It was not part of any missionary ‘strategy’ devised by the church. It was the free and sovereign deed of God, who goes before his church” (Newbigin 1995:64). The people of God, if they are to truly be his people, must follow the Spirit wherever he leads, even (and especially) when he leads us where we do not want to go.
Charles Van Engen argues that the true conversion in this passage belongs to Peter and not to Cornelius. Much like Jesus’ reinstatement of Peter on the beach in John 21, Peter is told three times to rise and eat, not deeming unholy what God has made clean (Van Engen 2004:137-39). Likewise, the whole of the circumcised believing community are receiving the revelation that they may no longer remain a simple sect of contemporary Judaism (Glasser 2003:271). God is establishing a new understanding of and in his people, and the borders formerly drawn are no longer applicable. Indeed, one is led to wonder if these borders ever were.
Peter is given the extremely visceral illustration of the household of Cornelius being seized by the Spirit and speaking in tongues. The same Spirit has fallen on this Roman household, and there can be no doubt that what God has given to the Jewish believers is for the whole world. Helen Barrett Montgomery quotes Goethe in pointing out that the Bible is the Book of nations, not simply Israel, and Peter is given a first-hand lesson in this reality (Montgomery 2000:7).
It is important here also to note that Cornelius sent for Peter, and not vice versa. Both men are engaging in cross-cultural mission, but Cornelius, by the prompting of the angel, is the initiator of the two. This is not simply an example of centripetal mission. Cornelius, a God-fearing Roman, is responding to the prompting of God to send for Peter. It is not a matter of Peter living a certain life in public, which is in turn attractive to certain people.
God is seeking to lead his people into a new area of mission understanding and uses a surprising person in order to accomplish this task. The two servants and the soldier Cornelius sends to seek out Peter are later identified as sent by God himself (Acts 10:20). It would seem, then, that this group is the second set of cross-cultural missionaries in Acts (Phillip and the Ethiopian being the first example). Mission in this passage is revealed to be reflexive because there is no simple receiver of the message. The revelation is dynamic, not static, and both Peter and Cornelius are giving and receiving. Both men are converted in their way, and it is clear that God has torn down a cultural wall built by his people.
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Since I need to make up for lost posts and my slacker ways, I wanted to write a little bit about Jonah here, too. Although his story is a little different than what I’m focusing on lately, his story brings a very similar point for observation.
Through Jonah God redeems and stirs a revival in Ninevah, the most hated center of oppression and conquest at the time. God sweeps through the overbearing evil empire and Jonah cannot stand it. It’s UNFAIR! I’m sure I’ll come back to this over and over again, but it’s true: God’s actions are not “fair”. Those oppressors do not get what they deserve. God showers His grace on a wholly undeserving people (not to mention this is happening in the Old Testament, the one with the “mean” God, but that’s another story for another day).
God spares a nation deserving of destruction or at the very least “comeuppance” and Jonah is having none of it. What really surprises me is that Jonah is not surprised. He was so convinced of the overly loving goodness of God, that Jonah ran away at the first sign this scandalous God was going to share that love with his (and His) enemies. God even goes to the depths of the sea to get His point across. “See! I knew you would do this!” Jonah accuses (I’m paraphrasing here). He just knew God was itching to bless someone who obviously did not deserve it.
In writing down these thoughts for the blog, this story is pretty much my central thesis. God is working in the whole world, and “the whole world” even means “that guy/girl/nation/etc. I hate.” How crazy is this story in the midst of a collection of teachings about God dealing with His people? What does it say that one of our most beloved story to this day is all about God moving outside of the fences the Israelites (and even the Ninevites) put up?
We must work to assume a posture that is both receptive and active in this world. It’s that “Following God” workbook all over again: Our lives are filled with watching where God is working and following Him there. So simple, but I’ve spent the last decade and then some trying to understand what that means, and I know there so much more to learn.
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The story of Jethro coming to visit Moses and the people of Israel while still in the desert is one of my favorites. It’s a touchstone of the church growth movement, organizing what we usually call cell groups into “bite size” portions so that no one person is over-burdened.
There is another aspect of this story that I would like to focus on, though. Jethro is not a Jew. He’s not traveling to the Promised Land, and as far as we know he never makes it there, either. But this is what fascinates me about the story of God as laid out in the Bible. There are these hints that our God is working among the entire world, even as we follow this one group.
Now, again, I must be clear that I am talking about when Yahweh reveals himself, not Baal, or even Ra or Ganesh. There are many gods but only one Yahweh, only one creator as revealed to us through His son Jesus the Messiah. Jesus never said, I am one way among many to get to God. If we take his message seriously, then we take Jesus at his word.
With that said, however, none of us should be so bold as to assume we know or have captured all of what God is doing or every way that Jesus is drawing men and women to himself. It’s Jesus and only Jesus, but he is shockingly moving among the people of the world revealing God’s truth to those who would hear it.
With that said, here is the next excerpt from the paper:
Exodus 18:17-27 – Jethro
Jethro has already been identified as a priest of Midian, who has proclaimed the wonders of Yahweh (cf. Exodus 18:10-11, Kaiser 2000:40). His proclamation of the excellence of God and shared worship with Moses and Aaron is an indication of the work God has already been doing in Jethro’s life. It is his counsel to Moses, though, that shows a sharing of the good news with the Jewish people.
Good News and Fatherly Advice
It is more than simple church growth advice Jethro dispenses to Moses, it is words of life to a leader called to a task beyond his ability. Jethro, a God-fearing priest is able to serve two distinct roles in the life of Moses and by extension the whole community. Namely, he serves as outside consultant and substitute Father.
Outside Consultant
Mission happens in a very “earthy” and seemingly secular way in this passage. The advice given, however, is almost indisputably from God. God sends Jethro to the Hebrew community for several reasons. First, Jethro has grown up a free man and not as a slave. Facing an overwhelming amount of freedom for the first time in several generations, the people of God are paralyzed into inaction.
Jethro is able to help this group take its first steps into nationhood by dividing the situation into sizable pieces of engagement. The Hebrews have spent decades being told what to do at every step, and it takes a godly leader of people, this priest of Midian, to help lead them out of their self-imposed slavery. A Gentile must bring the solution from the outside, because the answer is not to be found within the boundaries of God’s people.
Father Figure
There is another role Jethro is playing in this passage that should not be overlooked. God has provided Moses the orphan with a father to look out for his needs. If only for a brief time, Jethro is able to take his son-in-law aside and give him advice that will last him the rest of his life. This role could have just as easily been played by a Hebrew, but the biblical record does not reveal this type of interaction. The Jewish community gives suggestions (at times too many) to Moses at every turn, but only Jethro offers godly advice.
Again, it is no coincidence that Jethro is a Midianite. He fulfills a specific call by God (I believe) to set the people of God on the right path. An orphaned people find a father for a time, but the lesson of the desert is reliance on God, and Jethro returns to his home, his mission fulfilled. Even as they are consciously trying to avoid contact, God sends a word to them, reaffirming his love for his children.
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So…. yeah, apparently I need to work on this whole “blogging with consistency thing” haha…
I’m continuing on with the last post about how we view the story of God as presented in the Bible. Last time I concentrated more on the thought that “the more personal the story, the more universal the application or emotion.” So, God chooses a man, and his tribe and we follow this group through the centuries. We hone in on this group so we can fully explore what God’s relationship with this people looks like. Not only are they God’s chosen people, but they become an example for us today so we get a feeling for how Yahweh interacts with those He calls His own.
So, to continue this theme and expand on it, I’m going to throw up some parts of a paper I wrote at school on something I’m calling the reflexivity of mission. Basically, “mission” is the spreading of God’s word to all the nations, but we can’t assume that the message flows simply from us outward. Many times it flows back to us as well. Several times in the Bible there are examples of “outsiders” having a message for God’s people. We can’t ever forget that the message is from God, not from us, and we have to always be attentive to what He is saying, no matter who brings the message to us.
Here’s the excerpt:
Mission in the Old Testament appears to be a rather new discovery in the life of the church. Although God’s concern for all nations has always been a prominent feature of the Old Testament, it is nevertheless seen as a “less” missionary text than the New Testament. It is important to note the cross-cultural existence of the early Jewish people, and to note that there are examples of non-Israelites giving insight to what we commonly refer to as the people of God.
Genesis 14:18-24 – Melchizedek
Melchizedek is certainly one of the most puzzled-over figures in the Old Testament. Where did he come from and how does he seem to know so much of God? It is obvious to even the casual observer that God has blessed Abram through Melchizedek, but there are two aspects of the King-Priest of Salem that deserve closer attention.
Melchizedek as a Believing Gentile
Walter Kaiser is quick to note the importance of even the existence of a person such as Melchizedek. To Kaiser, Melchizedek is a beneficiary of the “outreach of the grace of God,” and a person who was “coming to know the One who would later be called the Messiah, or Jesus” (Kaiser 2000:40). Arthur Glasser reiterates this theme by stating that all those on mission should be alert for “Melchizedek people” in their travels (Glasser 2003:63).
It is important to note that Melchizedek is also set in contrast to the King of Sodom in this passage as well. It is not every Gentile who should be welcomed as such, but the ones who are obviously consumed with the love and grace of God. The assessment should not be made on outward appearance, or ethnicity, but rather by what the Spirit reveals.
Trading Names of God
There is also a trading of names, where Abram and Melchizedek seem to commune in a way that is not seen before in the book of Genesis. Melchizedek is a priest of the God Most High (El Elyon), which is a name at times associated with Baal (Glasser 2003:115). It is obvious, however, that Melchizedek is worshipping the same God and hoping in the same Messiah as Abram. Melchizedek praises blesses Abram by God Most High, and Abram in turn shares God’s personal name, Yahweh, with Melchizedek.
There is a trading of blessings and Abram’s understanding of who God is is enlarged by Melchizedek’s presence. Here is a Gentile obviously following Yahweh, and Abram accepts him and his gifts. The name God Most High is ascribed to Yahweh, as opposed to Baal, and Abram reveals that God’s true name is Yahweh, who is the possessor of both heaven and earth.
Mission is reflexive here in the sharing of information and blessings between these two followers of God. One gets the impression that Melchizedek has been called just as Abram has been called, but one story has been preserved for posterity and one has not. We must not allow these small incidents to pass us by without the scrutiny they deserve.
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There’s a saying in the world of drama that the more personal the story, the more universal the emotion or the application. I’ve been thinking about this a lot in the past few years in relation to Israel and its place within the story of God’s actions and interactions with our world as presented in the Bible.
It’s always seemed a little unfair, of course. Why Israel? Why not some other nation? A common theme is that God is showing His might by choosing a small nation, a small tribe. Thus, His actions are even more miraculous by what He accomplishes through them. (Sort of like Elijah demanding multiple buckets of water so the fire is even more spectacular)
Well, first of all, if you’re looking for things to be fair, you may need to look towards a different religion. Our concept of grace pretty much negates things being fair. We don’t get what we deserve, any of us.
But let me throw this out for consideration: while it’s not a completely random choice, God choosing Abraham and building from his tribe a nation, and working through them to share Himself with this world is much more about God and much less about Israel.
How better to show how He works with all of us than to show how He works with one of us? By focusing on Abraham’s family and Israel, we immediately put ourselves in their place. I’ve never been so afraid of being killed and robbed that I claimed that my wife was my sister, or had to walk my son up a mountain to what may be his doom, but somehow the immediacy and reality of such a situation moves something inside of me.
So God starts with Abraham because it’s time to start. The story has to have a beginning. I’m not implying any sort of randomness in God’s choosing, but I think we get too narrow in our concept of what God is doing in the world. I don’t want to go too far in saying just any old person could have fit the bill, but I do want us to take a moment and consider that God is trying to get his message across to us.
Even the fact that Jesus came as a Jew who was a messiah to the Jewish people, and was indeed crucified by them as well, is an example of what God is doing. Jesus didn’t come with a charter to the first century United Nations, worrying about how he could tailor a message to the entire world. He came as a back woods prophet with a specific message to a specific people. He preaches a message centered on the traditions of a smallish country in the middle of an empire, and somehow this message has resonated throughout the world for two thousand years.
My second point is this: God is working through us today and through the church and our church, but we do not contain Him. He is always doing the unexpected. Too often we’re like Jonah, on board with God’s plans until He decides to redeem our enemies. But like I said, it’s unfair. Even those who wish to destroy us can be saved.
Jesus has a mission to this specific group, but he’s always pushing them. Not only pushing them to take care of their own societal outcasts, but also hinting at the fact that the relationship Israel holds so dear is not theirs to control. Jesus keeps speaking to Gentiles and Samaritans, infuriating all of his followers who are convinced that he is their messiah, and when he comes to power they’ll be like John and James, ready to sit at the right and left hand of the new King of Israel.
The stories that have led me to start thinking about this are of Melchizedek and Jethro in the Old Testament and of Cornelius and the Jerusalem Council in Acts. In these stories and elsewhere, people outside the fold seem to have insight into what God is doing and even have advice for the “people of God.” I’ll spend this week going into these four stories, but please jump in with comments/questions/arguments at any time.
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yes, it’s true. i’m back by popular neglect. i’ll try to blog monday – friday, so stay tuned.
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