Monday, September 08, 2008

The Knowability of God

Okay folks, sorry that I've been away for a while. The new job was eating up a lot of my time. I am not dead. I am not disgusted with blogging.

Everything is fine. More than fine.....more than bent on getting by.....more than fine....more than just okay.

So, I started a book review a number of months ago, and there is still more to finish. It's taken me awhile, simply because I'm really passionate about the topic. I've actually had this essay on my cell phone for 5 months, and am just getting around to posting it. I do a lot of my blog writing on my cell phone. (AT&T Tilt....full keyboard....) So, back to the review....

DeYoung and Kluck (I have difficulty with who wrote what chapters….so I choose to make them both guilty by association…it seems to be “the way it should be done”) claim that “Emerging leaders equate uncertainty with humility.” Wow, that’s a big accusation. Uncertainty is something you can get over. Humility is something you are. I pray that I NEVER get over my humility. In fact, I pray that my humility will increase!!! AND, AND, AND, I will be proud of that day, when I’m more humble than I am today!!!! Wait, scratch that last statement.

They quote from Steve Chalke about a young man who said to him, “If you academics in your ivory towers have lost Jesus, that’s your problem. I’ve not lost him. I know him. I love him. I don’t need to search for him.” Chalke’s comments on the story are telling.

However, as appealing as this kind of certainty might at first sound, it is in fact rather like the presumed familiarity of which Dallas Willard spoke. To assume that we have got Jesus “pinned down” or “summed up” is not simply arrogant but stupid, and in the end inhibits our ability to communicate his unchanging message to an ever-changing world.

Now, I'm not one to personally say that anyone's views are stupid. They are their views. HOWEVER, I have to agree with the arrogance statement.

I understand their concerns, and share them to a point. Certainty is a valiant goal. I think, however, that when I read the Bible and gain a new insight into a passage of scripture, thanks to an analysis of the context of the times….whether location, political situation, cultural situation, or just a study of the original language itself….I cannot arrogantly say, “Now, I understand what this truly means.” My uncertainty of the Scripture makes it come alive for me. My ability to gain new insight, and even to anticipate what God will teach me, excites me. I hope I never get over looking at scripture with the brilliant eyes of a child! DeYoung and Kluck point to a handful of other quotes from Brian McLaren arguing against clarity, and how reality is “fuzzy and mysterious; not in black and white, but in living color.” That living color is what I’m seeking.

Let me give a brief example. We have a group that meets on Wednesday nights and we were looking at one of Jesus' parables last week. (Wed Sept 3rd...yeah, okay, so I didn't edit all of this on my cell phone) Specifically, the parable of the unrighteous steward in Luke 16. Talk about confusing. Let me paint the picture for you...A steward is reported to the master as "squandering his possessions", to which the master nails him to the wall. The steward realizes he's about to lose his job, so he calls in customers who owe the master, and has them all tweak their bills so they owe less. Are you confused yet? Just wait...it gets better....The master then praises the unrighteous stewared for his shrewdness. To which Jesus says (NIV) "And I say to you, make friends for yourselves by means of the wealth of unrighteousness, so that when it fails, they will receive you into the eternal dwellings. He who is faithful in a very little thing is faithful also in much, and he who is unrighteous in a very little thing is unrighteous also in much. Therefore, if you have not been faithful in the use of unrighteous wealth, who will entrust the true riches to you?" WHAT? It took 4 people sitting around a table, all looking at multiple versions, translations, and even an inter-linear Bible to try and figure out what that means. We finally landed on Eugene Petersen's "The Message" (which I generally don't like) where Jesus says something to the effect that we are to be shrewd like the unrighteous steward but in ways that are "right". Okay, I'm good with that...but the NIV, RSV, NASB don't make that abundantly clear!!!!! Uncertainty...uncertainty...uncertainty....

There is so much talk about “Mystery” in emergent documentation. And critics treat that as thought it’s a bad thing. It’s not. If we truly seek to understand, we will be given understanding. We may not like it, but we will understand it. (Isn’t that kind of what the scientific method is all about?....oooh…don’t go there, Brad.)

Mysteries can be solved. Someday, we will know what causes cancer. Someday, we will know where socks in the dryer go. (Sock heaven, according to Steve Taylor) If a murder mystery novel told us who the killer was at the very beginning of the book, why would we have any reason to read the rest? Why would we have any desire to put together the clues? Now, before anyone thinks that Brad has gone all Gnostic on us. The knowability of God is not some secret knowledge. God reveals his light to us as we are ready. Did you catch that? As we are ready.

I humbly bow to the one true God of the universe who created all, is in all, above all, who gives me new insight. In humility, I accept Jesus’ words that he has many more things to tell me, but I’m not ready for them. My insights will grow and change. Will I misunderstand things? Absolutely. But, the Holy Spirit is leading me into all truth. All I can do is follow.

8 comments:

Erin said...

Dude. Where've you been? Glad to see you back around.

Anonymous said...

I've been slammed with work, and just a general sense of not wanting to touch a computer after I get home.

All is well.

Went to Atlanta on business in July. Went to the South of France on business the week before last. Wow, want to talk about "prosperity crises"...the Mega-Yachts in Antibes were phenomenal! HUGE!!!

Brad

Erin said...

Ooh I'm jealous now. The South of France? How'd you land that gig?

Anonymous said...

Hey, I was supposed to be in Washington D.C. this week, but my boss ended up having to take the trip. So, I switched and went to Nice/Cannes/Antibes in his stead.

I was taking one for the team. You know, someone had to go the French Riviera at the end of August. It's just the kind of guy I am.

Anonymous said...

I kind of get the nervous giggles when theologians start talking about the clarity of the bible. Even the translation isn't an exact science- more of an art, if you ask me, and like all art it is heavily influenced by the presuppositions, assumptions and worldview of the artist. Reading a text critical commentary on Proverbs I am reminded afresh that there is considerable debate on what Hebrew words are in the text- and that isn't even talking about how to translate the words into English or how to interpret the meaning!

(In case you don't know, ancient Hebrew had no vowels or spaces. So translators have to figure out how to break the letters up to make words, which is complicated by the fact that the spelling of many verbs is radically changed in different tenses and declensions. To make it even more fun, this ancient Hebrew text doesn't even exist! We have to guess at what it said based on translations into Greek, Syriac, and the 7th century AD Masoretic text. So VERY VERY exact and crystal clear.)

Anonymous said...

So, jbalogna, I, in fact, DO know all that about the Hebrew texts. It is funny how it seems people turn their brains off, sometimes.

So, I know about the "later" OT books being in the Masoretic texts, but don't we have semi-ancient Torah scrolls?

Brad

Anonymous said...

We have semi-ancient texts. What we have are scrolls from Qumran dating from around 150 BCE at the oldest. Septuagint is actually earlier. What we're missing is the "vorlage"- the texts from which the Septuagint was translated and the Qumran texts were copied.

Please don't be insulted for my explanation of Hebrew- I don't know what people know.

Anonymous said...

HA. Not offended. Frankly, it's an obscure topic. I always learn things from you.