Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Comment on 'Vocation', previous post...
Vocation
Saturday, June 26, 2010
James Davison Hunter in Christianity Today
"And the government's task is not limited to caring for and watching over the public domain
but extends also to upholding the sacred ministry, with a view to removing and destroying
all idolatry and false worship of the Antichrist; to promoting the kingdom of Jesus Christ; and
to furthering the preaching of the gospel everywhere; to the end that God may be honored
and served by everyone, as required in God's Word."
Proposition: this assignment of tasks is appropriate to the biblical nature of government.
Thoughts?
Near the start of the 20th century, an official meeting of the Christian Reformed Church claimed grounds from Scripture and revised this paragraph to a footnote. However, I haven't researched enough to find what actual Scripture they cited.
Friday, June 25, 2010
The Church and Culture
Byrthnoth, I see where you're going with this. I'm not sure I agree, and not sure if I disagree, but I think I know where you're going.
You're talking about that "Republic of Letters" that we talked about in IDS 300 with Dr. Birzer. You're describing a culture which understands and appreciates the Christian influence in Western Culture, whether or not it confesses Christ as Lord. That way Matthew Arnold, Joseph Wood Krutch, Jakob Burkhardt and other modern noble pagans could come play in our sandbox.
I agree with you when you say that this a good thing. A lesser good, obviously, than that which the Church administers. It is, in fact, the good which we all hope to attain in some part through studying the liberal arts -- the good of Christian culture, whose watering streams are knowledge and virtue. Yup, I'm going to call out Aristotle on this one and say that the servile is higher than the liberal. Jesus Christ, the foot-washing King, beats the Magnanimous Man six ways before Sunday, and on Sunday...man he REALLY beats him on Sunday...but I digress.
It seems to me that Christian culture, churchly culture, is an epiphenomena of the Church. A vigorous, thriving Church which confesses Christ and defends pure doctrine produces in and through its members the artifacts of culture that we know and love so well, that we pine for: beautiful architecture, stirring literature, honest politics, humane commerce. Who does not desire to live in a place where these things exist in abundance?
As much as this is true, mark well a truth of the human condition (I said it) that makes these cultural goods nothing more than withering grass and fading flowers. And I say this as one who likes flowers and grass just as much as the next guy. But, people...original sin. Byrthnoth, there's a section in the Apology you might want to review. The Church of Christ is comprised of men who are at once saints and sinners, and Her works are not always those befitting the bride of a righteous King. In the Old Testament, God tells Hosea to marry a prostitute in order to say, in effect, "see how YOU like it!" Because that's what He did. Christ wed himself to prostitute, forgiving her sins, which were as scarlet, making them white as snow. Yet like the woman whom He tells "go and sin no more," we, the Church, go, and sin more. As I have said before, the Church is an unfaithful bride. Yet Christ's love abounds, and His forgiveness abounds all the more. This is mystery which no philosophy can penetrate.
How important, then, is it that we have a nice monolithic Christian culture in which to dabble? Not as important as it is to take every thought captive to Christ, that in all things He might have the supremacy; to consider all things loss for His sake. The world is fallen, and the line through good and evil runs through every human heart. You want culture? Again, you will never find it separate from the Church. The Church is culture. The family is culture. These are the seats of religious life -- not the state; not the market. The latter are the seats of secular life. Never expect them to exhibit the consistency of character which even the Bride of Christ cannot attain to by her own merits.
The problem here is not that we don't have Christian culture. The problem is that we -- the participants of this conversation included -- seem to be begging the question of "How should we change the world?" and then having a discussion over ways and means, with the general assumption in place that of course we can and should. As if that's what our good works are supposed to do. No, your good works will probably not change the world. But they may serve your neighbor.
Christendome is and is not the Church catholic
Interjection: Broadening the Conversation
To Change the World comprises three essays. The first examines the common view of "culture as ideas," espoused by thinkers like Chuck Colson, and the corrective view of "culture as artifacts," as recently argued by Andy Crouch in Culture Making. Both views, argues Hunter, are characterized by idealism, individualism, and pietism.
Hunter develops an alternative view of culture, one that assigns roles not only to ideas and artifacts but also to "elites, networks, technology, and new institutions." American Christians—mainline Protestant, Catholic, and evangelical—will not and cannot change the world through evangelism, political action, and social reform because of the working theory that undergirds their strategies. This theory says that "the essence of culture is found in the hearts and minds of individuals—in what are typically called 'values.' " According to Hunter, social science and history prove that many popular ideas, such as "transformed people transform cultures" (Colson) and "in one generation, you change the whole culture" (James Dobson), are "deeply flawed."
Read more on Christianity Today and Hunter's personal website. Oh, can't resist one more teaser:
Hunter critiques the political theologies of the Christian Right, Christian Left, and neo-Anabaptists, showing that unlikely bedfellows—James Dobson, Jim Wallis, and Stanley Hauerwas—are all "functional Nietzscheans" insofar as their resentment fuels a will to power, which perpetuates rather than heals "the dark nihilisms of the modern age."
Thursday, June 24, 2010
Church = Christendom
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
1 Samuel contra Christendom
The people of God (in the Old Testament, Israel; in the New, the remnant of Israel [believing Jews] and those elect in Christ from all nations [believing Gentiles] who together comprise the Church) have a long history of being dissatisfied with the portion appointed them by their Lord and King. We have a long history of desiring to be like other nations. The temptations of temporality have always existed: we'd like a king and a kingdom, please; we'd like to make a scene, make a splash. A little territory would be nice. Some legroom. A little power, a little prestige. A little pomp. Some fanfare. We'll settle here and get comfortable.
Resist the temptation.
* * *
"Now it came to pass when Samuel was old that he made his sons judges over
“Then all the elders of
"But the thing displeased Samuel when they said, 'Give us a king to judge us.' So Samuel prayed to the LORD. And the LORD said to Samuel, 'Heed the voice of the people in all that they say to you; for they have not rejected you, but they have rejected Me, that I should not reign over them. According to all the works which they have done since the day that I brought them up out of
"So Samuel told all the words of the LORD to the people who asked him for a king. And he said, 'This will be the behavior of the king who will reign over you: He will take your sons and appoint them for his own chariots and to be his horsemen, and some will run before his chariots. He will appoint captains over his thousands and captains over his fifties, will set some to plow his ground and reap his harvest, and some to make his weapons of war and equipment for his chariots. He will take your daughters to be perfumers, cooks, and bakers. And he will take the best of your fields, your vineyards, and your olive groves, and give them to his servants. He will take a tenth of your grain and your vintage, and give it to his officers and servants. And he will take your male servants, your female servants, your finest young men, and your donkeys, and put them to his work. He will take a tenth of your sheep. And you will be his servants. And you will cry out in that day because of your king whom you have chosen for yourselves, and the LORD will not hear you in that day.'
"Nevertheless the people refused to obey the voice of Samuel; and they said, “No, but we will have a king over us, that we also may be like all the nations, and that our king may judge us and go out before us and fight our battles.”
"And Samuel heard all the words of the people, and he repeated them in the hearing of the LORD. So the LORD said to Samuel, 'Heed their voice, and make them a king.'"
"And Samuel said to the men of
1 Samuel 8
Monday, June 21, 2010
Too much history...
...says this history major. I'll be the first curmudgeon to say (and who knows? perhaps the first to think) that the historical meandering seems to be moving us into the dithyrambic. I'm not sure what the antidote to that might be, but I'm going to try to come up with one. I apologize in advance if I, too, end up with little more than a dithyramb.
What is the unique office of the
This, then – the Gospel – is the unique purview of the Church, of Christianity. It is distinct from every other religion, every other philosophy under the sun. It is so much more than “living in harmony with the Divine Order.” We are, each one of us, born in disharmony with that Divine Order, out of tune with the Music of the Spheres. We can’t follow the Law. We need the Gospel, or we will all perish. Without the God who justifies sinners in His flesh, we are lost.
What of the Law, then?
Well, the Law tells us how we ought to live while simultaneously showing us how we are not living. The law condemns and kills the old Adam in us. And there are so many ways in which the Law comes to us, not just Holy Writ: all of Nature testifies to this Law. The wise men and scholars of every age – Platonic, Aristotelian, Stoic, Cynic, Cartesian, Newtonian, etc. etc. – have born witness to it. C.S. Lewis called it “the Tao,” attesting its culturally transcendent nature. It is written on man’s heart. As Lewis wrote in the Abolition of Man, there is not really any such thing as a Christian morality (we can challenge this if we want to, but I use it here as a heuristic tool): there is morality, and there is immorality; the Law which is written on the hearts of even the most recalcitrant and unregenerate man has gone out to all the earth from before the foundations of the word so that men are without excuse! One need not be a Christian to know that one's sins are damnable; that is why it is just that the heathen are damned. With that said, we Christians do not go to Church simply to hear the Law; we go for the Gospel, which is Christ Jesus, the power of God for salvation to all who believe. This is something that the Law cannot do, "for by the works of the Law shall no flesh be justified in His sight." No, we go to the assembly of believers on the Lord's Day to receive the gracious and life-giving Word of God, in the preaching of the forgiveness of sins by pastors and in the distribution of the same in the Eucharist. This is the unique office of the
The state does not exist for such a blessed vocation, for such a blessed end; still, this is not to say that its vocation is profane. It is, however, secular. Mundane. I no more care that the leaders of state who pilot the bodies politic of the world are Christian than I do that my plumber is a Christian. And that's fine! If a man is a Christian and a statesman, then thanks be to God! He may therefore have a more sedate perspective on the limited nature of his office and be more circumspect on that account; that would be a blessing, indeed. But that would in no way change the nature of his office, which Holy Writ speaks of in the following fashion:
"Let every person be subject to the governing authorities. For there is no authority except from God, and those that exist have been instituted by God. 2Therefore whoever resists the authorities resists what God has appointed, and those who resist will incur judgment. 3For rulers are not a terror to good conduct, but to bad. Would you have no fear of the one who is in authority? Then do what is good, and you will receive his approval, 4for he is God’s servant for your good. But if you do wrong, be afraid, for he does not bear the sword in vain. For he is the servant of God, an avenger who carries out God’s wrath on the wrongdoer. 5Therefore one must be in subjection, not only to avoid God’s wrath but also for the sake of conscience. 6For because of this you also pay taxes, for the authorities are ministers of God, attending to this very thing. 7 Pay to all what is owed to them: taxes to whom taxes are owed, revenue to whom revenue is owed, respect to whom respect is owed, honor to whom honor is owed" (
The state can, through negative prohibition and positive injunction, move men to moral action, perhaps even at times create a penumbra of moral culture. But this cultivated thing is not the Church; an amalgam of moral men is not the church. Two or three gathered together in His name (Father, Son and + Holy Ghost) are more the Church (indeed, truly are the Church), than an alliance of Christian states, an alliance of do-gooders. What is to be gained from such a thing? What more needs to be gained? If this is what we mean by Christendom, then so be it. It will, however, be a sad misnomer, for none of us will be saved by our morality. None of us will be saved by our own righteousness. We are all saved by the righteousness of Christ, who being in His very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be grasped, but made himself nothing, emptied himself, taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men (cf. St. Paul's Epistle to the Philippians). Christ became sin for us, and won for us forgiveness, gave to the whole world his righteousness. He gave us Himself, for He is righteousness. Christ is the Gospel.
I deny, then, the possibility of a Christian state. I deny the possibility of applying the adjective Christian to anything, really, be it corporate or singular, that is not the
All this talk of Christendom has me thinking of the account of the Transfiguration of Our Lord in the Gospels of St. Matthew (ch. 17) and St. Luke (ch. 9). Peter, James and John accompany Jesus to the top of the mountain and are granted a foretaste of the beatific vision in a theophany. Moses and Elijah join them, and talk with Christ (what about? No one knows!) Peter, overcome as any would be in his situation, desperately tries to make the moment last forever; his words are apposite to our discussion:
“’Lord, it is good for us to be here; if You wish, let us make here three tabernacles: one for You, one for Moses, and one for Elijah.’”
Peter wants to make a more permanent dwelling there on the mountain. He wants the “mountaintop experience” to continue. So he proposes to build tabernacles, wherein Christ and the patriarchs might dwell. But poor Peter—great among the apostles if only on account of his great folly, the penitence he models, and the great forgiveness he receives—did not yet know that “the Most High does not dwell in temples made with hands” (cf. Acts of the Apostles 7.48); he seeks to build Christendom there on the mountain. But before he is even done with his proposal, the very voice of God the Father knocks them flat!
“While he was still speaking, behold, a bright cloud overshadowed them; and suddenly a voice came out of the cloud, saying, ‘This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased. Hear Him!’”
This reads almost as a rebuke to Peter: the Incarnate Word and the words which He preaches are sufficient for you! Do not desire anything more! Yes, the ecstatic experience atop the mountain is a free and spontaneous blessing; who, like Ransom on Perelandra, would not want to taste the fruit again? But life is not lived on the mountaintop. It is lived in the Valley of the Shadow of Seath, which we traverse as pilgrims. We have no
“[T]here is a preliminary taste of this fulfillment that occurs within history,” Mr. Taylor wrote in the first post, “when Christians of good faith and character live together in peace and justice. You might have felt yourself close to heaven in the home of a beautiful family, or in communal worship during a Sunday service.” Yes, I think we all have. But it was an unexpected blessing, and the blessing was not the feeling, but rather the reality. The objective truth of God’s grace may not always evoke the same feeling. We may not always feel like we’re on the set of the Fellowship of the Ring, replete with a soundtrack and lembas. But it is Truth, for God’s Word is Truth. And the blessing is not because we good Christians are living together in peace and justice in our meager tabernacles. The blessing is that Christ is among us when we gather together in His Name (Father, Son and + Holy Ghost) to hear His Word and receive His Sacraments. The Church is Christendom enough for me. In it God’s kingdom comes every moment, at right angles to this earthly plane, farther up, farther in. It’s always now, already, but not yet. We don’t need a five point plan to make it happen. No political schema will make it more what it already is. The Church lacks nothing, for she is bedecked in the robes of Christ’s righteousness. Even though she has been an unfaithful bride, Christ the Bridegroom is ever faithful, daily and richly forgiving her of her many sins, her covetousness, even her murders and adulteries, which have been many. All of these He has assumed as His own:
“In Him you were also circumcised with the circumcision made without hands, by putting off the body of the sins of the flesh, by the circumcision of Christ, 12 buried with Him in baptism, in which you also were raised with Him through faith in the working of God, who raised Him from the dead. 13 And you, being dead in your trespasses and the uncircumcision of your flesh, He has made alive together with Him, having forgiven you all trespasses, 14 having wiped out the handwriting of requirements that was against us, which was contrary to us. And He has taken it out of the way, having nailed it to the cross. 15 Having disarmed principalities and powers, He made a public spectacle of them, triumphing over them in it” (
Isn’t that enough? What we think we are going to achieve or accomplish with “Christendom”? Another
Sunday, June 20, 2010
Saturday, June 19, 2010
A Vague Disconcertion
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Defining This Down
Why? Because I see things similarly to Trent, in many ways, and think that, if Matthew or history or other commenters consider "Christendom" some unified church-state edifice, I'm completely outta here. I'm pretty sure that the American Revolution clarified how evil and mucked-up life is under state-sponsored religion, or religion-sanctioned states (see also: Islam, the Catholic Church right before and during the Reformation, the Spanish Inquisition, the early church's grab for power under Constantine). Not only that, in a post-American Revolution world, it seems absurd to spend time arguing about some earthly Christian State that will a) never exist and b) seriously screw religion AND politics if it does.
Which is why I'm really not sure why Matthew went through all that weird Augustinian support for killing heretics and such, because if such things are germane to this discussion, again, this is not a discussion I care to have. So perhaps he should explain that link briefly.
My opening statement: So if that's what I want this NOT to be about, what do I think a good and useful definition or opening for discussing "Christendom"?
I am very concerned that discussants avoid the attractive ideas of bringing "the Kingdom of Heaven to earth" so we can have "heaven on earth," et cetera. My evangelical background encouraged such nonsense profusely. Why is it bad? Because, ultimately, this world will perish. Adam and Eve, and now all of us, have sealed its fate. We can't redeem the earth, our communities, our schools, ourselves, anything. Thinking otherwise has us foolishly considering ourselves, literally, our own christs. Which, of course, is blasphemy, and why Trent is also right that we can't avoid talking theology here, because at this core issue different theologies will disagree; however, ultimately it seems we're about to discuss how humans can respond or participate in responding to our utter depravity. My own theology says that Jesus himself orchestrates and creates the redemption necessary to "fix" utter depravity; and any good that happens on earth results from his work.
Again, I'll take a step back here from all that danger (an area which would also reveal my hopeless lack of deep theological understanding) and propose an area safer to tread. And I think my thoughtful friend, Eric, opens that avenue for discussion brilliantly over on his personal blog just this morning.
It was recently pointed out to me by a professional mentor. He said, "When we die and stand before the throne of God to offer an account of our time on earth, there is only one answer that is sufficient, and it isn't, "well, you see LORD, I'm the product of the environment in which I was raised...'" When all is said and done, each of us is accountable for who we chose to be. Did we entrust our whole selves to God, relying on His grace made possible through Jesus, or not?I'm again a little worried theologically about humans deciding they're the influencing factor in helping people do good or enter communion with Christ, but definitely agree that, as a Christian, I am responsible to act like one, and as God's grace allows me to grow in it will as a matter of course increase the, let's say, "saltiness" of my behavior. Eric goes on to give several examples. Here's one short enough to quote:
If that's true, but it is also the case that we are in large measure influenced by the environments in which we our raised, then it seems the crucial question is, "How do we create communities that encourage individuals towards relationship with Christ?"
Dr. Morse spoke about the behavior-altering effects of her "mom stare." You know, that look that freezes a child in their steps, non-verbally communicating "STOP IT and BE-HAVE." Why is this such an effective tactic? The mom look forces children to cognitively process the reality that their behavior is not matching the expectations they understand their parents have of them. Over time, this process indwells in children the same expectation of themselves that their parents started with! Simply put, we learn self-governance from being governed by others.This is bite-size "Christendom," perhaps, that I can wholly endorse. I am primarily responsible for me, not for "saving the world" or "taking this city for Christ" (reference to Frank Peretti's brilliant The Visitation). Those things are Jesus' job. But he's let me have authority over myself, and my little home, and my little job, and how I manage them and my relationships. So if we view ourselves as mere bricks in the walls and pavement of a Christendom God himself is building, cool. That seems healthy. Not some large-scale political or any other movement or delirious attempt to conquer a world that, but for Christ, had already defeated us long ago.
In other words, I think the best step towards "Christendom" is first learning to manage ourselves, and hold ourselves accountable to God and others. Apologize for cursing, and stop. Clean up that freakin' messy desk. Give an extra $10 in offering. Put the alarm across the room to break that lazy snooze-button indiscipline. Because little things grow; we can water, but God gives the increase.
Initial Thoughts
Christendom. A noble ideal. An illusion. I would argue that it has never existed, in spite of the fact that it can be pointed out quite clearly in history. I would argue that “Christendom” was so named by the powerful elite as a way to justify their own, often very un-Christian behavior, and to hide behind the power of the church. By centralizing the government under Christ they were, in essence, provided with a carte blanche. Who can argue against the mouth piece of God or Divine Right? I would argue that there was nothing more “holy” or “Christian” about the culture during any particular historical period than there is today. Christendom, as a political aspiration, is nothing more than a Utopian dream.
Christian Culture, however, is another matter altogether and one worthy of a great deal of discussion. If by “Christendom” you mean a culture which is composed of Christian people who put hands and feet to the gospel, thereby preserving the culture at large, then, certainly, there is hope for it’s establishment. I would argue that true “Christendom” in this sense has been in continuous existence since the time of Christ and is not defined by borders or political movements. It is not, I think, something to be planned from the top down as a governmental structure, but, rather, something that grows quite organically from the bottom up. The smallest unit of Christendom is the man himself. He who follows Christ, quietly, in his own mind and directs his own steps according to the principles of Scripture. This man then finds his mate and the two together form a family and endeavor to impart this same love for God and reverence for his ways into whichever children may find their way, by birth or providence, into their home. Each little family is, in essence, it’s own little state; it’s own political unit of Christendom. The influence of these little units of Christendom is not to be underestimated. God has, more than once, changed history through the channel of one family.
It seems to me, that if one is truly interested in impacting the world for Christ, in “re-establishing Christendom” on earth then the best and most useful course of action would be to take a wife and set about the messy business of birthing babies, raising men and concerning oneself with the foundation rather than the lofty heights. With a firm undergirding, the ramparts tend to take care of themselves.
I don’t know any of the lovely minds invited to participate here besides my friend Matthew. Perhaps I am the old lady of the group. Perhaps not. Either way, it seems to me that the idealism of the young often gets tempered by the beatings endured in the gales of “real life,” and that is a shame. Dreaming big dreams is how one changes the world. There is, however, danger, I think, in becoming overly cerebral in one’s discussions of how to go about changing the world and achieving a Utopian dream without the needed balance of boots on the ground. It is one thing to sit in smoking jackets and talk of Christendom, where it has gone and how to recapture it for the modern era; it is quite another to do the hard work of sanding the rough edges, overcoming the selfishness, cultivating the generosity, exercising hospitality, and the many other aspects of “one anothering” that the gospel admonishes us to and which define Christendom apart from the secular culture. Then there is the business of inspiring the children to take up the cause for the next generation, which sounds simple enough until those children arrive in person, unique souls on their own paths before the Holy God.
Matthew, you and I have sat long and late around campfires and tables with wine in hand and talked. I know your heart to be a true one and I LOVE that you’ve opened this discussion. Thank you, sincerely, for including me.
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
Christian Culture in the Neighbourhood
I like Trent's new name for St. Augustine's two kingdoms. The divide is between two cultures, the one Christian, the other worldly, both extending across silly little national boundaries, each challenging the imaginative world of the other. If we set aside, for a moment, wondering how the two should ultimately coexist, Christians meanwhile are neighbours to one-another, they go to church together, they argue, they read each-other's poetry, they drink together, and they have culture, a Christian culture that's not alienated from the earth, but lives within it, and makes it beautiful. And neighbourhoods come in many guises. What is the culture of your neighbourhood? What does it do beautifully? What problems do you run into? How do you face them?