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30 September 2007

Back from the future of Adventism

Xxxxxpixxxxxx_012_4 By Alexander Carpenter

Wow. That was a great Adventist Forums conference! From the evocative Redbooks performance (soon out on DVD) and Kendra Haloviak's sanctuary exploding homily, to Bull and Lockhart's crisp and provocative essays -- that was like a mash up of the best of university and camp meeting.

It was good to meet so many Spectrum Blog readers. I see all these lurker (non-commenting) IP addresses from places like Birmingham, Collegedale, Bend, Salt Lake City, Spokane, Riverside -- the UK and Australia. Now I know who you are. . . .  We had a nice little blogger contingent there thanks to some generous Forum members. Saw intersections (pastor Ryan Bell), Adventist Gender Justice (Trisha Famisaran), the Spectrum Blog 2.0's Daneen Akers and ProgressiveAdventism (Julius Nam).

Thanks to those who attended my Sabbath afternoon session on The Art of Expression. After seeing Redbooks and the Saturday night Adventist-made film screening -- it looks like we're moving onward and upward with the visual arts. If you attended, feel free to drop a comment about lingering thoughts from the weekend.

Xxxxxpixxxxxx_008_2 Your humble correspondent with Hollywood Seventh-day Adventist Church pastor Ryan Bell.












Xxxxxpixxxxxx_009_2 Saturday night banquet before listening to Rick Rice perform his now legendary Saturday night stand-up comedy routine.










Xxxxxpixxxxxx_005_2Loma Linda analogues in the middle of Spectrum dialogues.  These were the centerpieces on each table.










Xxxxxpixxxxxx_017_2
OMG! SHOCK! HORROR! Southern Adventist University history prof. (Lisa Clark Diller) talks to Roy Branson.










Xxxxxpixxxxxx_016_3 Loma Linda university profs. Julius Nam and Johnny Ramirez-Johnson.










Xxxxxpixxxxxx_007_2
Your proud correspondent with Spectrum editor Bonnie Dwyer.

28 September 2007

Heading out the Adventist Forums conference

By Alexander Carpenter

Tonight we'll be seeing a production of the Pacific Union College-supported original play, Redbooks. It is about the multi-meanings of Ellen White in contemporary Adventism. I saw it in the Spring and it will be interesting to see how the cast has gelled. With Malcolm Bull and Keith Lockhart, and several Adventist intellectuals in the audience, I'm looking forward to the discussion following this provocative performance.

And I'm off to Santa Rosa. . .


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20 September 2007

Conference president quashes Forum advertising

From an email by Adelaide Adventist Forum convener, Dr. Steve Parker:

Hi everyone
 
I'd like to invite you, if you are willing, to spread the word about our upcoming Apologia:

Apologia: Australian Eye

Our next Apologia will be held on Sabbath, 29 September, 3:00-4:30 at Morphett Vale Church. The topic: Australian Eye. In December 2001, Jane Elliot came to Australia to conduct The Australian Eye, an Australian version of her unique discrimination experiment, Blue Eyes, Brown Eyes, in which participants are labelled inferior or superior based purely on the colour of their eyes. Rated: M (it contains some coarse language). The Apologia will consist of a viewing of the documentary (50 minutes) followed by a discussion about racism in Australia and the church.


 
The need to advertise by word-of-mouth is because the Conference President, Garry Hodgkin, has banned me from advertising, in the Conference Newsletter, programs I am associated with (Apologia and Forum). The reason Garry has given is: 'I am very concerned that the path you are moving is taking you a long way from having confidence in anything.'
 
Garry has never attended an Apologia and Forum meeting (to my knowledge). Nor has he responded to my request to provide any examples of Apologia or Forum meetings that he has been concerned about. And he most certainly has not discussed my personal spiritual journey with me. Nor has he responded to my request that he explain this rather vague reason. I assume, at this stage, that he must be operating on hearsay (gossip) or misunderstanding, or some other evidence of which I am unaware. Nor am I able to understand what this has to do with the Apologia and Forum meetings. He has made this decision with no significant dialogue with me, no email or call to set up a time to meet. And yet, he has taken the serious step to ban me from advertising in the Conference Bulletin.
 
I do not question Garry's right, as Conference President, to decide what is included in the Conference Bulletin. My issue is related to the basis on which he seems to be making that decision.
 
I am pleased to inform you, though, that the upcoming Apologia is supported by my own Pastor at Morphett Vale, will be advertised in our local bulletin, and will go ahead.

I'm sure that Elder Hodgkin has good intentions -- but he may not be aware that it is actually a logical impossibility to lose confidence in everything. I've emailed him (you might too: ghodgkin@adventist.org.au) as I'd like to know his reasoning in limiting discussion of contemporary issues in Adventism and to remind him that sometimes censoring academic debate and employing slippery slope paternalism can actually lead -- not to confident minds -- but to empty heads.

16 September 2007

The Spectrum of opinion

By Alexander Carpenter

A Spectrum perspective, from Monty Python.

06 September 2007

Spectrum on Facebook!

Cover352By Alexander Carpenter

Thanks to Johnny's diligent work, Spectrum is now a cause on Facebook.

If you have an account, come join the fun and meet other hip and cool aficionados of fine Adventist thinking.

As of today, it looks like Kirsten Nixon is the most popular, having recruited five friends.

13 August 2007

Truth and errata

Obey By Alexander Carpenter

I've been caught up in moving my life-in-books deeper into the bowels (a new apt) of Berkeley; thus somewhat delayed, I hope that you'll excuse my Johnny-come-lately status while I tackle some ideas from the comment section. 

There are many reasons that fair-minded folks disagree. Sometimes it's over different life experiences -- from books read to influential mentors.  Most of the time, I believe, we disagree because our interpretative frameworks prioritize different aspects of our shared experience of authoritative evidence.  But sometimes people are just flat wrong.

As a service to my good readers, I did some actual research and found a commenter to be fundamentally incorrect. On July 2, following Jim Coffin's post, "If Women Had Written the Bible," a certain John wrote:

Nobody seems to have had a problem with a "male" God until the post-modern "revolution". However, what is worse is that many of these replies assume that the Bible is a creation of man as opposed to an inspiration of God. Lastly--with the prevalence of women in religion, this "male" thing seems to have worked out quite well after all. Adventism is the only Christian sect/denomination with more men than women.

As is common with this mindset, there are not sources, just apparently a synapse flash left on the screen for all to absorb. But John is wrong. I emailed three people, waited weeks, and finally got an answer. Yes, truth sometimes takes more than abstract deductions.

From [email, August 7, 2007] Heather-Dawn Small, Women's Ministries Director of the Seventh-day Adventist Church:

Based on the information we have from the divisions we have concluded that women are 70% of the world church. In a few countries it is less, very few however. In most our divisions, Africa, Inter America, South America, India, Philippines, areas where the church is the largest women are at least 70% of the membership and in many of those places the number is higher. So we have averaged based on this information that women make up 70% of the church.

John, wherever you are, feel free to bring your own evidence, or apologize for making information up. Maybe these numbers are too "postmodern" for some -- I love how this term is increasingly bandied around as a slur by people who clearly don't know their Deleuze from their Guattari. In fact, I derive no small bit of pleasure from providing a fact to someone who attempted what some might recognize as an redescription of reality peddled to provide greater epistemic certainty.

But this development leads me to dive farther into revolutionary pomo musings: how exactly does it advantage a community or organization to legislate that 70% of its participating, even paying members, should get less than 1% of the say in what happens?
_____________

Recently I wrote a Bloggin' the 28 post on the "God the Father" doctrine. Although most of the comments were supportive and engaged the strange idea that our doctrine not only genders the divine, but also gives God a specific role, not of husband, or mother, or Grand Father, but as father. I'd like to briefly address one critique and in so-doing, get at a larger problem that this critique is indicative of. To wit: good Bill Cork and good Wondering point out that Christians, but apparently not Jews before Jesus appeared, must use paternal language when referring to God, since Jesus did teach us to pray, Our Abba. And so that claim is that since Jesus used the VERY WORD we translate as Father that this describes God's relationship to us all: As our father.

Fundamentally, this is another example of when literalists don't go literal enough. Let us read Matt. 23:9.

"Call no man your father on earth, for you have one Father, who is in heaven."

So, do you, Bill and Wondering, also advocate against children recognizing their earthly dads? (Because I for one, stand up against this attempt to displace fathers from their named place in the American family.) In fact, perhaps Jesus is getting at something deeper here than gendered language. 

The Jews had a practice of not even speaking the name of God and now Jesus comes along and uses a familiar, familial (familia! -- you get my point) term to describe the divine. Tell believers that they could give God a name and address God as they would their person who fathered them was pretty radically open stuff. In fact, that claim of familiarity with the divine (this man claims God as his father) contributed to his eventual death -- I am the Son of God. Sometimes terms are just too hard for people to change. Now let's think about the larger literal meaning of what Jesus was doing with the grammar of God. Was he only saying that God is actually a father, or was Jesus teaching a bigger idea, that we can approach God as we would our own fathers. Consider Matthew 7: 9-12

Or which one of you, if his son asks him for bread, will give him a stone? Or if he asks for a fish, will give him a serpent? If you then, who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father who is in heaven give good things to those who ask him! So whatever you wish that others would do to you, do also to them, for this is the Law and the Prophets.

Here in the context of explaining the main point of the Law, the golden rule, Jesus uses the model of the loving father to help people who mostly knew God as the requirer of sacrifices and cursor of the Jewish nation to see God in a broader light. In that context, that was a pretty big deal. And so is thinking about God as a Mother, a Sister, a Brother.

To see those terms as acceptable continues the same Christ-like goal of broadening our idea of a relationship with God. It may seem too different, but think how people reacted to Jesus calling God his Father. Isn't it time that we recognize through our language that a relationship with God is more than masculine. One should no longer have to choose between Heavenly Father or Mother, God is both and so much more.

But this gets to the deeper issue which lies behind a lot of rhetoric for not re-applying theological understandings. Obedience! Wondering articulates it:

"Again, to me, all the debate is not necessary. . . .  All the wiggling and weaseling in the world...never mind. Obedience is really hard."

Or more recently here:

Very few adults realize this--too few. Feelings follow actions and not the other way around. All throughout the Bible, transformation (and great blessing) followed total obedience: Abraham, The Exodus, The Crucifixion. Our willingness to obey is the sign of loyalty that allows God to imbue us with His transforming power.

I love that: TOTAL OBEDIENCE. To some, it all boils down to an obedience problem. If everyone would just control themselves, then. . .really amazing double blessings would pour out. We need more discipline, more theological spankings, less fuzzy, accepting love. Because what does love really get you, just lots of gay people hanging around not disciplining anyone.

Ah yes, the tough-headed approach. Not like all the wondering Spectrum losers, asking questions, reinterpreting, trying to apply the principles of God's Word thousands of years later, negotiating time and space, trying to reduce conceptual contradictions between God first and second books. I see this in their confusion over sexuality. Just erect the barriers. Keep out a maternal conception of the divine. I ask you, if it could be shown that the verses that are used to excluded homosexuals from Christian communion don't apply, would you feel less secure in your faith?

Sometimes it seems that some care less about hermeneutical consistency than keeping a pure church, the old Donatist heresy. To set up a club-like test, saying: "if you are willing to stick with the group, even at the expense of your knowledge or reasoning ability than, and only than, can we really trust you and let you stick around. Don't try to expand on the idea that Love is the most pure definition of God, the distillation of the commandments, the reason Jesus died. Love for all. No, obey they say. This cinema, bicycle, necklace, card game, women's sub-ordination, discriminating against blacks, I mean gays is a test of fellowship." Oh wait, that's exactly what it's called. . .

Do we need standards? Absolutely! That's part of what this whole Bloggin' the 28 project is about -- actually turning these now mostly mental tests into contemporary moral action. Thus Jesus' truth about God roughly 1977 years ago, remains the same today, that God transcends our earthly attempts to box Her into our religio-cultural understanding. What might that be? Well, look at the power structure in our denomination -- the body of Christ divided most starkly by gender. What kind of witness is that?
________________

And now good Bob had referred to the infamous O'Hanlon/Pollack Times Op-Ed on how the Iraq surge is doing. If you care about this at all, I encourage you to go read Glenn Greenwald's investigative interview with O'Hanlon in which he reveals who set his agenda and what he left out of the 1400 word essay.

01 July 2007

If Women Had Written the Bible

Over on the main Spectrum site, Pastor James Coffin writes:

The other day, my wife, Leonie, tried on some clothing she’d just bought, inviting my appraisal. I said she looked "fine."                   

It wasn’t the right answer—especially since I’d continued glancing at the newspaper while replying.                   

"Good," "fine" and "OK" don’t cut it with Leonie at the best of clothes-modeling times. But when my head is in a newspaper, such terms seem to irritate her even more. Go figure. Anyway, she shared her feelings with me. The tone of her voice and the set of her jaw suggested that she believed what she was saying.                   

"Wait just a minute," I said in response to her suggestion that a more definitive word than fine might be in order—not to mention a lot less attention directed toward the newspaper. "Even God, when he’d finished creating each aspect of the world, just said it was ’good.’ He didn’t say it was ’fantastic,’ ’mind-boggling,’ or ’out-of-this-world’—which, you’ll have to admit, would have been an unusual expression to use right at that moment! He just said it was ’good.’"                   

"What would you expect him to say?" she shot back. "God is a man.

Read it here and feel free to drop a comment below.

09 June 2007

The cross and flush toilets?

By Ronald Osborn

In his Spectrum commentary on the Sabbath School Lesson for June 2-8, Robert Wieland writes that "The Lord wants the world to enjoy life, which means happiness."  He then proceeds to marvel at the benefits of modern technology, opining that "all of life's pleasures and conveniences" are "the purchase of the sacrifice of the Son of God on his cross".  Christ's call to "abundant life", in Wieland's formulation, equates to "happiness", which equates to "security" and "conveniences", which equate to... indoor plumbing!  Christ died, we learn, in order to advance a kingdom of "trains and planes" and "waterborne toilets"...and guilt-free enjoyment of the same "this side of that 'national ruin' we know is coming".

But did Jesus really die for our "happiness" so defined?  Is the blood of the martyrs now the (toilet) seat of the (air-conditioned) church? According to the New Testament witness, Jesus was a poor peasant who spoke and acted in the tradition of the Hebrew prophets, denouncing the violence and economic oppression of ruling elites and summoning his disciples to live lives of dangerous simplicity and nonconformity with power.  This Jesus radically subverted the priorities and values of much of Jewish culture as well as Greco-Roman "civilization", all of its scientific and technological marvels notwithstanding.  In the
end, this same Jesus--the Christ of first-century history as opposed to the insipid figurine of regnant Protestant atonement theology--was executed by the religious and political leaders of his day, acting in collusion with a foreign imperial power, on charges of blasphemy and sedition against the state.

We are therefore confronted in the Bible with a deeply unsettling question that Wieland never asks and that he seems to fail to even discern: What does it REALLY mean to share in Jesus' abundant life as opposed to the "abundant life" purveyed and aspired to by the rest of bourgeois America?

08 June 2007

Party!: The Spectrum Blog turns one year old

By Alexander Carpenter

Let's celebrate the people who make the Spectrum Blog an interesting conversation to follow. Now at a good soiree, you wander around and meet people and converse while trying to balance your petit fours and beverage. I've solicited a favorite Adventist image from contributers Sharon and Johnny and a favorite Adventist sentence from Nathan. And Bonnie handles the food. Also, since Tom and Elaine are our most loyal commenters, here's a photo and some biography. Treat this post like a Spectrum Blog party and meet some of the people who make thoughtful Adventism real.

Celebrating a Devilishly Fun Idea
By Bonnie Dwyer

Great ideas blossom around tables, and so it was with the Spectrum Blog. A year ago, four of us, Alex Carpenter, Leigh Johnsen, Sharon Fujimoto-Johnson and I, €”met at   a restaurant in Davis, California to discuss the idea of adding blogs to the web site. It was a beautiful June day. We chose an outside table, and the conversation began. An hour or so later, we left with a plan in place, and the Spectrum Blog was born.

This week we met again, via conference call. Johnny Ramirez joined us and the plan that we discussed was the next version of the web site. Not to get ahead of ourselves, because there is plenty to do to get us to web 2.0, but work has begun on an integrated site that is completely interactive and networked for great conversations.

During the conference call Alex reminded us of our anniversary this week and I volunteered to do the food for the celebration. Now food on a blog site is tricky. You don'€™t want to spill on your computer and gum up the works. Finger foods would seem to be best, but you don't want sticky fingers either.

Cookies come to mind. Chocolate cookies. Lillie, a friend from church, recently shared with me her double chocolate chip cookie recipe. They'€™re quick and easy, €”just the thing to make on Friday afternoon for Sabbath munchies. Plus, they have a major ingredient that is similar to any complicated project that can be described by saying, the devil's in the details.”Well, the devil'€™s (food cake mix) is in the cookies. Here's the recipe so you can join in the celebration by making a batch. Or, since this is a blog, share your favorite cookie recipe with the rest of us.

Double Chocolate Chip Cookies
Ingredients:
1 pkg. Devil'€™s food cake mix
½ cup butter or margarine
1 tsp.  vanilla
2 eggs
½ cup chopped nuts
1 cup chocolate chips
Instructions:
1. Beat half of the dry cake mix with the butter, vanilla, and eggs at medium speed in a food processor.

2. Stir in the rest of the mix, nuts, and chocolate chips.
3. Drop dough by teaspoon about 2" apart on an ungreased cookie sheet.
4. Bake 10-12 minutes at 350 degrees.

Meet Dr. Thomas J. Zwemer:

Zwemmertom Vice President for Academic Affairs, Emeritus of the Medical College of Georgia. His academic career covers 42 years starting at Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, following at Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, California, and the Medical College of Georgia, Augusta, GA. Tom served two terms on the Board of Trustees of Loma Linda University and three terms on the Board of Trustees of Southern Missionary College. Tom completed his pre-dental education at Emmanuel Missionary College and Atlantic Union College. Tom is an alumnus of The College of Dentistry, University of Illinois, Chicago and the School of Graduate Studies Northwestern University. Tom is a veteran of WWII serving as a medic attached to the 40th Infantry Division in the South Pacific. Tom is married to Betty L. Johnson Zwemer of Jamestown, N.Y. they have three children, three grandchildren, and one great grandchild

Meet Elaine Nelson:
Elaine Grew up in Bible Belt South as a Preacher's kid.  All education through first year college at SDA institutions.  After kids were grown I completed undergraduate degree in Organizational Behavior from University of San Francisco, graduating with my elder daughter who received her master's degree.  Nearly twenty years later decided to get M.A. in Liberal Studies online and completed before 82nd birthday.  As a retiree from medical ancillary work, I've enjoyed the gift of time, especially reading and contributing to the very provocative subjects presented on the Spectrum Forum. I've always been a questioner and unsatisfied with simplistic answers and depending on others, it's either a blessing or curse to be saddled with being Devil's Advocate. Probably came with the genes or the SDA indoctrination with "Truth" that should not be questioned.

Meet Johnny A. Ramirez:

Pathfinders When asked for my favorite Adventist image I thought of this picture.  It has two of my good friends growing up, Alf and Nathan, and we'€™re doing drill team stuff at a camporee as part of the S. Lancaster Pathfinders group.  It feels, to me, like an iconic picture of my youth.


Meet Sharon Fujimoto-Johnson:

Andersonhy_frnd_of_cldrn This may be predictable, but my search for a favorite Adventist image took me back to my childhood and an iconic Harry Anderson painting: "Jesus: Friend of Children." Like many other Adventist children, I grew up with Harry Anderson's illustrations gracing the pages of books I read over and over again. Prints of some of his artwork may also have hung in my family's home. In "Jesus: Friend of Children," Christ is strolling through a garden surrounded by children who are all looking up into his face and smiling. Pink flowers are blooming in the trees, and the grass is a luscious green. It's idyllic and harmonious in color, subject matter, and composition. I used to imagine myself in this painting, even though I looked nothing like any of the children depicted. I was drawn to the tranquility and the beautiful colors.

Back then, we lived on a hill in a midnight-blue house with a pumpkin-orange door. Six days a week, I chased butterflies with my brother, picked buttercups and dandelions, and read books in my bedroom where light filtered through a white birch tree and into my window. On the seventh day, we went to church in a college town where the children were much louder and rowdier than I cared for. I didn't like Sabbath School. I didn't have any friends there, and all of the rah-rah, rumble-tumble unnerved me. I would have much preferred walking with Jesus in a Harry Anderson garden. On some level, this is still true. Even now, the presence of God is most real to me in quiet places and in beauty. My belief system has evolved significantly over the years, but my fundamental belief in the gentle, joyful Jesus of my childhood remains unchanged.

Meet Nathan Brown:

Brown_book "But what is desperately needed are people who speak distinctively and movingly from within Adventism to the larger community; voices who, from the core of Adventist particularity, express a universal message for our time; people who allow the power of the gospel to challenge those who oppress the vulnerable." €”Charles Scriven   

I came across this sentence quoted in Zdravko Plantak's The Silent Church, but I believe it was originally published in Spectrum quite some years back. This sentence has become something of a mission statement in my writing. It is such a neat summary of what many of us are trying to do in different ways, so far as trying to encourage Adventism to see itself as a vital, relevant and necessary voice in the world and to be such a voice both within Adventism and beyond. So much of the much-needed renewing of Adventism comes down to finding new ways to think it and say it, to ourselves and to others, for our own sake and for the good of the world.

Thus far: 336 posts. 99,461 page view which means that today, one year after we started we'll hit one hundred thousand page views. But the most important statistic is this one: 3550 comments. Thank you dear readers for joining the Spectrum conversation. The best is yet to come. . .

07 June 2007

One

more day until we celebrate 1 year o' the Spectrum Blog. Featuring photos of Tom and Elaine. . .

06 April 2007

Science/faith: Determine what appears in the next issue of the journal

Vote By Alexander Carpenter

Friday greetings all. I've been tasked again to share some of the best commentary by you in the next issue of the Spectrum journal. Bonnie's been traveling around Africa interviewing interesting Adventists so the next couple of issues should be particularly enlightening.

I'd like to include a couple of the best posts from the origins discussion in which so many participated so fruitfully. But I'd like the ideas represented to be more than just my own. Therefore, in the comment section below, if you'd like to have a say about what appears in the next Spectrum on our blog community, feel free to copy and paste any number of 119(!) comment posts that stood out to you. (And, yes, you can vote for yourself.) Also, since we've played these science/faith notes before, you're welcome to nominate posts/comments even farther back in time. You can find some in the Science section of Categories on the sidebar.

It's easy to do, just click on the date at the bottom of each comment and you get the individual URL for that comment. Copy it and then just paste it in the comment section below this post.

And thank you. It's rare for folks online to have substantive and sourced discussions about anything worthwhile and I personally appreciate all the questions, good ideas, critique, and silent readers who made this happen. Happy Sabbath saints.

04 January 2007

The Bible and the Seminary

Cover344_2 Reprinted from the 2006 Fall issue of Spectrum (34:4). This essay continues the conversation between David Larson, Chuck Scriven, Richard Davidson, Roy Gane, and the Spectrum Blog community. Scriven one, Gane two, Scriven three.
____________________________________________

The Bible and the Seminary
By Charles Scriven

Exactly how should the Bible help me write the next chapter of my life? Exactly how should it help us write ours?

The question of biblical authority is the question of how to interpret Scripture for faithfulness in Christian life. If I grant the Bible authority—allow it to influence me, to be, in some sense, the author of my life—what exactly does that mean for how I apply what I read?

Judging from articles by two seminary teachers in the last issue of Spectrum, confusion about all this persists even where clarity matters most—at the Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary. Such confusion is by no means particular to Adventism, nor even, so far as I know, widespread at the Seminary. But it may show up wherever the Bible commands attention, and failure to correct it—especially in the training of Adventist ministers—puts at risk the Church’s unity and mission alike.

In the article by Richard Davidson (first published in 1990, in the inaugural issue of the Journal of the Adventist Theological Society), the author lays down his criticisms of the “historical-critical method.” This is the approach to Scripture associated with modernity and the procedures of secular historical science, and in substantial part Davidson’s criticisms ring true, especially now that the self-assurance of modernity has begun to seem like arrogance. Davidson’s re-publication of this essay is, in fact, a helpful beginning point for further conversation. Still, the alternative that he himself proposes is inadequate.

Davidson argues that no one true to the spirit of the Bible may read the book the way practitioners of the historical critical method read it. The historical critics pick and choose among the Bible’s parts for what has continuing validity. But human interpretation may not, Davidson insists, say that one “portion” is “authoritative” and another not: the whole Bible is inspired.

The trouble is that an adequate account of biblical authority requires a subtlety Davidson misses. And the danger in missing that subtlety is well-illustrated, just a few pages later, by Roy Gane’s reflections on genocide in the Bible.

Gane makes note of several stories that say God commanded Israel to carry out the total annihilation of an enemy. In Deuteronomy 20, for example, God asks the children of Israel to “completely destroy” six different nations of Canaan. Numbers 33 and 1 Samuel 15 show God’s readiness to punish those mandated to carry out wars of extermination. Why? For failing, as Gane says, to “shed the last drop of blood.”

From all this, Gane concludes that when you believe (as he does) that the “entire Bible” is God’s Word, you have no choice but to say that God “sometimes gives up on groups of people,” and commissions others to commit genocide against them. Gane takes it for granted that, as a “true theocracy,” Israel was acting for God—responding to “direct revelation from God”—when it engaged in genocidal violence. “When God tells you to do something, you do it,” he writes; you do it even if it is “unusual and unpleasant,” even if it “evokes revulsion and instant condemnation.”

A theory of biblical authority that permits these conclusions is worse than dubious: it is dangerous. To his credit, Gane himself seems uncomfortable with what he is saying, and as his essay ends, he alludes to the “truer religion” of Jesus with its ideal of “sacrificial love.” Unfortunately, however, he makes no explicit case for why Jesus should trump the theocrats. Under the right conditions, God asks the faithful to annihilate whole peoples—and despite his reservations, it is, for Gane, as simple as that.

What both Davidson and Gane overlook, or do not begin to say clearly, is this: In Christian Scripture, the internal evidence points unmistakably to a Christ-centered understanding of biblical authority.

The first Christians took Christ to be the criterion of their life and thought. Jesus—teacher and healer; the one crucified under Pilate and then resurrected—was God’s human face. He was the Word made flesh, the visible image of the invisible divine, the exact imprint of God’s very being (John 1, Col. 1, Heb. 1).

The resurrection made it so, or made it plain. Paul says the resurrection was God’s declaration that Jesus is both Son of God and Lord of life (Rom. 1). According to the first Gospel, the risen Christ declared: “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me” (Matt. 28; compare Matt. 5).

There is no room here, none at all, for an uncentered view of biblical authority. But even if Gane seems uncomfortable with what an uncentered view entails, he and Davidson both say that the Bible is all authoritative, including all the bits and pieces. No “portion” (Davidson) lacks authority. Even if God issues a command that “evokes revulsion and instant condemnation” (Gane), the believer obeys. Under the right (theocratic) conditions a mandate to genocide is binding—the very Word of God.

Saying we no longer live under a theocracy, as Gane does, is no true help. For one thing, warlords, “legitimate” or otherwise, still assume, all too easily, that they are as much God’s appointed agents as anyone else; for another, this still leaves God and the risen Christ at odds—capable, at least in principle, of disagreeing.
Christian Scripture provides the solution: the authority of the Bible is Christ-centered authority. Recognizing this, and saying it clearly, is crucial—for Christian life, as decisive as daylight. The uncentered account, after all, leaves us with a schizophrenic God—one way on the cross, another elsewhere—and leaves us, too, with followers adrift and confused. With Christ effectively dethroned, the Crusades may be a Christian mission; Nazis may sing carols on Christmas and carry out their grisly work the day after; churches may fly the flag and ask no questions.

And why not? God really does sanction war, and even genocide—you can read about it in the Bible.

The point is not, of course, that Davidson and Gane want such confusion to happen. They do not. The point is that the uncentered view of scriptural authority opens the door to such confusion.

On the Christ-centered view, all Scripture—the whole story—is inspired; all Scripture—the whole story—is a revelation. But now you read the story as a whole, and you see it as the record of a (fallen) people who, under God’s Spirit, move—slowly, and by fits and starts—in the direction of Christ. Surrounded at first by polytheistic violence, they do not really hear all that God hopes they will one day hear. Over time, however, adumbrations of an inclusive vision begin to appear; even nonviolence comes to be seen as potentially redemptive (Isa. 19, 53, and 56).

Then you come to Christ, whose resurrection provides, at last, the hermeneutical key to interpreting the inspired story. That key is not my authority, or some scholar’s authority, or some bureaucracy’s authority; it is Christ’s authority, and faithful Christian life becomes a matter, unmistakably, of following—Jesus.

Now genocidal references come under the judgment of Christ. Now the vision of Jesus, including the vision of the Sermon on the Mount, becomes the criterion. Now Christ simply is the Word of God. (At least until the Council of Nicaea, nearly three centuries after the resurrection, no leading theologian ever used the phrase “Word of God” for a book; it was always a reference, as in the Gospel of John, to Christ.1)

Professors at the seminary should be leading us, all of them, to see this. Otherwise, our ministers and congregations will bend under the sway of Christ-defying temptation, not least the temptation to violence, or mindless support of violence, that so routinely beguiles the wider world.

Skeptics say, usually with a sneer, that you can argue anything you want to from the Bible. It isn’t so, not when the authority of the book is seen through the eyes of Christ. These skeptics need to know that. It is even more important, no doubt, that we know it.

Notes and References

1. I rely on research by Daryll Ward who, besides making use of Henricus Kraft, Clavis Patrum Apostolicorum (München: Kösel Verlag, 1963); and Edgar J. Goodspeed, Index Patristicus (Naperville: Alec R. Allenson, 1960), read much in a three-volume collection of the writings of the Ante-Nicene Fathers.

25 October 2006

Discussing Spectrum

Cover343_3 Blogger Johnny Ramirez has summarized his thoughts on most of the articles in the latest issue of Spectrum.

If you read something and want see some other comments or express your opinion now, click here.

13 September 2006

Gane Replies to Scriven and Larson

Cover343_1 By Roy Gane

I agree with Charles Scriven that in the current issue of Spectrum (34/3, Summer 2006), “diverse perspectives on the interpretation of the Bible come across like tires screeching.” You can almost smell the rubber burning!

Scriven reacts against articles by Richard Davidson on the authority of Scripture (pp. 38-45) and myself (Roy Gane) on Israelite genocide (pp. 61-65). Scriven agrees, on the other hand, with articles in the same issue by Sigve Tonstad on Isaiah (pp. 46-53) and David Larson, who responds to my article on genocide (pp. 66-69). As Scriven acknowledges, “the issues are complex.”

Although Scriven's brief essay does not attempt to deal with the complexity, he briefly identifies what he sees as main issues at stake. I welcome this frank communication as helpful in opening up further dialogue. So, accepting the challenge, here are a few of my own observations in response to both Scriven and Larson. First I will list some areas in which we agree. Then I will point out some issues that Larson and Scriven have misrepresented. Finally, I will identify what I believe to be the source of our disagreement.

Areas of agreement

1. I agree with Larson and Scriven that the character of God is central to the message of Scripture. In my teaching, preaching, and in several of my books (Altar Call [Diadem, 1999]; Leviticus, Numbers [NIV Application Commentary; Zondervan, 2004]; Cult and Character: Purification Offerings, Day of Atonement, and Theodicy [Eisenbrauns, 2005]; Who's Afraid of the Judgment [Pacific Press, 2006]) I have repeatedly and emphatically emphasized that God's character of love (1 Jn 4:8) is the heart and basis of divinely revealed truth (cf. Matt 22:37-40).

2. I heartily agree that Christ is the paramount revelation of God's character (e.g., 2 Cor 3).

3. I agree that divine revelation is progressive. God is continually leading his people to a higher standard (e.g., Isaiah; Matt 5). Examples could fill several volumes. As I have written in my article, God no longer mandates genocide.

4. I agree with Larson that we need to trace the trajectory of Scripture in order to follow the direction it is leading, even when this means moving beyond (but never contrary to, I would add) explicit statements of Scripture. For example, in the Bible there are no explicit divine commands prohibiting everyone from practicing all forms of slavery or polygamy under all circumstances. However, we see in Scripture that God did not initiate these institutions and did not like them. He undermined them by teaching the value of each human being, and regulated them to mitigate their worst effects in an age when completely abolishing them would have resulted in starvation for debt-servants and for rejected women. We correctly deduce that in harmony with the biblical message, Christians must never practice slavery or polygamy.

5. Larson accepts events of corporate destruction by God, such as Noah's flood, incineration of Sodom and Gomorrah, and the ultimate annihilation of the wicked as compatible with God's character (pp. 68-69). I agree because God's love includes his justice as well as his mercy. While he doesn't want any to perish (2 Pet 3:9) and his retributive punishments are alien to his desires (cf. Isa 28:21-God's “strange act”), he ultimately does not allow individuals or groups who refuse to live in harmony with his law of love to continue disrupting the reign of love, which is the only principle on the basis of which intelligent beings with free choice can harmoniously co-exist and not ultimately destroy each other.

6. I agree with Larson that the story of Abraham and Isaac (Gen 22) was never intended to teach that God commands people to do evil (including human sacrifice).

Misrepresentations

1. Larson defines “genocide” narrowly as “the extermination of entire groups with no regard for the relative guilt or innocence of individual members and no opportunity for any of them to be spared” (p. 68). He reads this definition of genocide into my description of “genocide” carried out by ancient Israel, thereby making the question of theodicy more difficult than it really is. But I simply use genocide in the normal sense of the word: “the systematic killing or extermination of a whole people or nation” (Webster's New World Dictionary of the American Language). The “-cide” ending in “genocide” simply refers to killing (cf. “insecticide”), without regard for the relative guilt or innocence of those who are killed.

2. Larson's definition of “genocide” leads him to artificially and inaccurately distance what God did through the ancient Israelites from largely analogous events, such as Noah's flood, the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, and the ultimate extermination of the wicked. As evidence that the latter occurrences do not count as genocide, he cites the fact that God saved Noah and Lot and their families and delays the ultimate extermination of the wicked. If Larson were right, the divine-Israelite destruction of Jericho would not involve genocide because Rahab was saved from that city, and none of the destruction inflicted on the Canaanites by the Israelites would count as genocide because God delayed it for hundreds of years until the iniquity of the inhabitants of Canaan (earlier called “Amorites”) was complete (Gen 15:13-16).

3. Scriven writes: “Gane ends up, it is true, wishing people would embody the 'truer religion' that reflects Christ's sacrificial love, but he provides no argument, certainly no biblical argument, for privileging Jesus over genocide. His account of the Bible won't let him.” Give me a break, Chuck! Disagree if you like, but try to accurately represent what I say. You grossly distort my article, which shows that Israelite genocide was dependent on and limited to the Israelite theocracy, which no longer exists, and which cites biblical passages to the effect that we should leave vengeance to God and follow the Lord's command to love others as ourselves. If you don't get the clear message that I privilege Jesus over genocide, read my article again. I should also point out that this article deals with a narrow, difficult topic in the context of my NIV Application Commentary on Leviticus, Numbers. For a full exposition of my understanding of the Gospel and God's character in these biblical books, read the rest of this volume (806 pp. + indices).
      
Source of Disagreement

In his introduction, Larson clearly lays out the issue: “The question before us is whether we can think of God ordering ancient Israel to act so ruthlessly (Num. 21:1-35, 31:1-54; Deut 2:1-37, 3:1-29, and 20:1-20. He answers Yes and I say No” (p. 66). Later Larson explains: “The practice of genocide is not compatible with the character of God as embodied in Jesus Christ… As it is with slavery and some other issues, our position should be that our religious ancestors honestly believed that God commanded them to practice genocide but that now we see this differently” (p. 68).

Really?! Larson knows biblical passages clearly stating that the Lord (including through Moses) commanded the Israelites to wipe out groups of wicked people inhabiting the Promised Land. Nevertheless, he simply does not believe that aspect of this part of the Bible because it does not accord with his view of what the character of God/Christ allows the deity to do. C. S. Lewis would say that he is trying to tame Aslan. Larson's view is based on selective reading of another part of the Bible to arrive at a conclusion that he then imposes on the rest of Scripture. Rather than take 2 Tim 3:16 (“All Scripture is inspired by God…”) seriously to mean that the whole Bible is the Source of our knowledge of God and his character, Larson makes the biblical Source conform to his own thinking. This is called “circular reasoning,” and apart from any question of faith, use of this kind of reasoning logically invalidates conclusions derived through it. In the process of selective reading and circular reasoning that privileges part of the Bible as opposed to other parts deemed “primitive,” an approach that pervades critical so-called “exegesis,” Larson disregards Christ's statements regarding divine retribution and Mosaic authority. Davidson could have used this in his article as an example of imposing human reason on the Word of God.

Because I have a solid biblical canon rather than a loose canon, refusing to re-write part of the Bible in order to deny its explicit statements that back in history God commanded something that I do not feel comfortable with, Scriven negatively characterizes my approach (and Davidson's) of scriptural authority as “flat-line”: “It's not just the Bible as a whole that defines Christian life, it's all the bits and pieces. Every book and text has equal sway.” I reply: Did Christ or the apostles say that one part of the Bible is more important than another? If not, should we engage in this exercise, or would that be arrogant, or even blasphemous? I'm not interested in condemning anyone here. But I do wish to say: Wake up and see what you are doing!

Taking all of Scripture seriously as contributing to our understanding of God and his will for us by no means mandates knee-jerk, unthinking obedience to the letter of the law, which would call for re-instituting practices such as levirate marriage (Deut 25:5-10). Gulp. Rather, 2 Tim. 2:15 says: “Be diligent to present yourself approved to God as a workman who does not need to be ashamed, accurately handling the word of truth” (NAS95). This calls for careful exegesis that takes into account factors such as diverse genres and, within the genre of law, the difference between culturally-conditioned applications of law and the timeless principles underlying them (see in detail in my Leviticus, Numbers, 305-314). Yes, the “bits and pieces” matter in a variety of ways, and we have no right to sweep away their timeless elements, including factors regarded today as politically incorrect (e.g., in Leviticus God condemns the practice of homosexuality as a moral evil; see Leviticus, Numbers, 325-330).

Obviously we have only touched on a few complex matters that branch out in all directions. We have not even begun to dialogue regarding individual versus corporate responsibility, or another category that David Daube (Studies in Biblical Law) calls “ruler-punishment.” Nevertheless, our discussion thus far suffices to amply demonstrate Davidson's point: The source of disagreement boils down to two different views of the Bible and its authority.

Click here to read the first posting and comments. Click here to read the second.

Second Reaction to Davidson / Gane / Tonstad / Larson

Cover343_2 By Charles Scriven

    Perhaps the Koran can sharpen our awareness on these matters.

    From Gane’s account, remember, you’d think God was schizophrenic.  The Bible describes episodes of God-directed genocide, yet says that Jesus, the beloved Son in whom God was well-pleased, forgave his enemies and did no violence to them. 

    What to do?

    Well, with Gane’s (and Davidson’s) flat-line view of the Bible’s authority, every bit and piece is God’s very truth, so the tension cannot be resolved—Gane seems to say he cannot resolve it—and God ends up divided. 

    George Packer, in the September 11 New Yorker, writes about Mahmoud Muhammad Taha, a scholar of the Koran who in 1985 was executed in Sudan for sedition and apostasy. 

    Taha had argued that the parts of the Koran revealed to Muhammad in Mecca, at the beginning, were the “supreme expression” of Islamic religion: suffused with kindness, the sense of freedom and equality, the ideal of peaceful coexistence of all with all.   The later parts, revealed in Medina where Muhammad had established Islamic rule in a city full of Jews and pagans, were inferior: bristling with threats and the need for compulsion by the sword.

    Although Taha’s vision is alive today, it is little heeded.

    Is the problem exactly similar to the one that puzzles Gane? 

    Not if you pay attention to the…text.  To my (very limited) knowledge, nothing in the Koran permits you to argue, on the basis of evidence internal to that book, that the final Islamic truth is the truth of Mecca, not Medina.  But the internal evidence in scripture says that God’s final truth is Christ: if you have seen Jesus, says the New Testament in several ways and places, you have seen the Maker of heaven and earth.

    The Word of God in scripture thus points us, unmistakably, to God’s Ultimate Word in the life, death and resurrection of Jesus.  And God ceases to be divided.

    Why should this be hard to see?  And why should anyone who has faith in Christ resist seeing it? 

    Is anyone better able to advance this conversation than scholars and seminary professors?  Considering genocidal violence today, is any conversation more important?  We can all help, of course, but we need many of those who teach our children and our pastors to help, too.  Can we not at last embrace, on this matter, a true dialogue of those concerned?         

To read Roy Gane's response, click here.

06 September 2006

Charles Scriven: Reaction to Davidson / Gane / Tonstad / Larson

Cover343 By Charles Scriven

In the current issue of Spectrum, diverse perspectives on the interpretation of the Bible come across like tires screeching, and jerk you awake.

Richard Davidson and Roy Gane are of the same mind.  All scripture (Davidson) “transcends cultural backgrounds as timeless truth.”  The “entire Bible” (Gane) is the “Word of God.”  This is what I will call a “flat-line” account of scriptural authority.  It’s not just the Bible as a whole that defines Christian life, it’s all the bits and pieces.  Every book and text has equal sway. 

This account leaves Gane troubled by a God who (in some Bible passages) endorses—mandates—genocide.  The trouble comes because this claim about God must be seen as timeless truth.  Under the correct theocratic conditions (as with Israel of old) the command to commit genocide is the very Word of God.  So under the right conditions, genocide is God’s truth. 

Gane ends up, it is true, wishing people would embody the “truer religion” that reflects Christ’s sacrificial love, but he provides no argument, certainly no biblical argument, for privileging Jesus over genocide.  His account of the Bible won’t let him.

In the same Spectrum issue Sigve Tonstad contends that, with its vision of reconciliation among Israel and its enemies, Egypt and Assyria, the book of Isaiah, in chapter 19, announces a wholly startling prospect.  It is a “paradigm shift,” an anticipation of Jesus’ prayer on the cross for the forgiveness of his enemies (Luke 23:34). 

Tonstad’s view suggests an “ascending line” theory of Bible authority: understanding shifts to something different from, and sometimes better than, previous understanding.  David Larson makes this “ascending line” premise explicit in his response to Gane, and quotes Hebrews 1 to say that the final measure of Christian truth is Christ.  Thus, says Larson, genocide is never God’s truth.

Luke reports Peter’s saying that Jesus was raised up and “exalted at the right hand of God” (Acts 2:32, 33).  John the Evangelist tells us not just that the “Word” is God, but also that it “became flesh” (so we can see) in Jesus (John 1:1,14).  The author of Hebrews declares that Jesus Christ, by contrast with other prophets, is the “exact imprint” of God’s being; he declares further that Jesus Christ is the same “yesterday and today and forever” (Hebrews 1:3 and 13:8). 

I do not know how Davidson and Gane read these passages, but I myself see them as support for Tonstad and Larson.  What is more, my conclusion does not depend on the “historical-critical method” (which Davidson anathematizes and I myself substantially reject).  It depends only on an “ascending line,” as opposed to “flat-line,” theory of biblical authority.  It assumes that the Bible is a story tending in the direction of God’s ultimate revelation.  It assumes, in other words, what the first Christians assumed, what the Radical Reformers assumed, what Adventists like John Weidner in Nazi Europe and Ginn Fourie in violence-torn South Africa assumed:

Bible believers really can know God’s true will because God’s true will is the will of the resurrected Christ to whom the New Testament bears witness.

But the issues are complex, and I know it.  Let me just say that unless Adventism is a lifeless shell—too dead to hear screeching tires—this cluster of articles should get attention and comment.  That attention and comment should come from laypersons and scholars alike, and certainly from seminary professors.

Is the juxtaposition of the Davidson and Gane articles the death knell for the “flat-line” theory of the biblical authority?  Or does it prove that we don’t know—and cannot know—how to make a biblical argument against genocide?

If the latter is the case, what moral authority can our church possibly have?  And why would our neighbors want to join us, or our kids want to stay?