Come Let us Use the Grace Divine
Labels: Book Review, Methodism, Sacraments, Theology and Ministry
Labels: Book Review, Methodism, Sacraments, Theology and Ministry
Labels: Book Review, Theology and Ministry
Labels: life and bio-ethics
I found this video at the "Out of Ur" blog connected with Christianity Today. This is N.T. Wright's intersting take on 'hell' - which he gets into a little bit in his marvelous book Surprised by Hope . What he says reminds me a good deal of the ideas about the nature of hell tossed around by C.S. Lewis in his own marvelous book The Great Divorce and elsewhere.
Many Christians in the historic Protestant churches seem to have lost a language for talking about hell. It may be, as some have suggested, this is because we don't really believe in hell or don't really believe anyone will actually experience hell. If that is so, we should look more closely at the spiritual condition of the world around us. I also wonder if we've given much thought to the matter, or considered that hell might be a necessary corollary to some of our other beliefs - such as the freedom (by God's grace) to accept or reject the offer of salvation given us in Jesus Christ. Presumably a free choice - if it genuinely is that - must make us liable to actual consequences.
I personally don't much like the English word 'hell' - owing to its associations with torture in Medieval theology and also to its origin in Norse mythology that has no clear connection to any Greek or Hebrew concept deployed in the Bible (like Hades/Sheol, Gehenna/Tartarus, and so on). Yet I think it is important for us to learn a compelling way to speak about the state of those who have forsaken God, as indeed Jesus Christ and his apostles certainly do in the New Testament. I applaud N.T. Wright for attempting to do just that.
Of all the biblical images of hell, the one that makes the most sense to me is that of "outer darkeness" (see Matt. 8:12; Matt. 22:13; Matt. 25:30), since by our sin we seperate ourselves from the God who is Light and Life (see Is. 59:2), and so we will continue on in that state of darkness and death unless we experience the redemption of Christ Jesus.
I think the old word "damnation" may also be instructive here. The Latin means "finding guilty" or "condemn", but the root of this word was also used to mean something along the lines of "to suffer a loss" Perhaps we should think of the sufferings of damnation as the loss of God.
"In the long run the answer to all those who object to the doctrine of hell is itself a question: 'What are you asking God to do?' To wipe out their past sins and, at all costs, to give them a fresh start, smoothing every difficulty and offering every miraculous help? But he has already done so, on Calvary. To forgive them? They [do not will to] be forgiven. To leave them alone? Alas, I am afraid that is what he does.
-C.S. Lewis, The Problem of Pain, chp 8 (p. 130)
Labels: C.S. Lewis, N.T. Wright, Theology and Ministry, video
The Archbishop of York, Dr. John Sentamu, recently addressed the House of Lords of the British Parliament with regards to an Equality Bill being debated. The bill addresses employment discrimination but many Christian leaders have worried that it does not contain enough protections for religious groups.
If passed it might have created great difficulties for Christian Churches. The Roman Catholic Church, for example, might have been prosecuted for employment discrimination owing to their refusal to hire women as priests; other Churches might have been prosecuted where their doctrinal or behavioral standards for clergy and staff might prevent non-Christians or homosexuals from being hired.
This is one area where a societal commitment to "inclusivism" in the abstract as a value, even a "right," may well come into conflict with the particulars of Christian faith and ecclesial practice. If the governing authorities do not make allowances for religious exemptions, then certain pieces of the Christian faith will have become criminalized, despite our Western societies' supposed commitment to religious freedom.
This is actually very worriesome to me because it could happen that non-Christian magistrates, who may not fully grasp the nature and coherence of the various aspects of Christian faith and ecclesial practice, may nevertheless be called upon to pass judgement on us and would do so from their own ideological commitments, creating in essence a clash of faiths within the legal system.
Anyways, here is an exerpt from the Archbishop's prepared remarks to the house of Lords:
The Archbishop [said]: "There are, I know, those who struggle with the concept of allowing any exemptions provision for religious organisations in relation to discrimination in the field of employment. But the argument is a very simple one: religious organisations, like all organisations, need to be able to impose genuine occupational requirements in relation to those who serve them.
"Successive legislation over the past 35 years has always recognised the principle that religious organisations need the freedom to impose requirements in relation to belief and conduct which go beyond what a secular employer should be able to require.
"Noble Lords may believe that the Roman Catholic Church should allow priests to be married, they may think that the Church of England should hurry up with allowing women to become bishops. They may feel that many Churches and other religious organisations are wrong on matters of sexual ethics. But, if religious freedom means anything it must mean that those are matters for the churches and other religious organisations to determine for themselves in accordance with their own convictions. They are not matters for the law to impose. Start down that road and you will put law and conscience into inevitable collision. That way lies ruin. "
As Edmund Burke said: 'Bad laws are the worst sort of tyranny.' The onus is on Her Majesty's Government to demonstrate why any narrowing of the provisions in existing legislation under the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 and the Sexual Orientation Regulations 2003 needs to be made.
Update: this bill failed to pass.
Labels: Christ and Culture, Cultural issues, Europe, Political Philosophy