Thursday, March 21, 2013

The Hermeneutic of the Gospel


I am suggesting that the only answer, the only hermeneutic of the gospel, is a congregation of men and women who believe it and live by it. I am, of course, not denying the importance of the many activities by which we seek to challenge public life with the gospel– evangelistic campaigns, distribution of Bibles and Christian literature, conferences, and even books such as this one. But I am saying that these are all secondary, and that they have power to accomplish their purpose only as they are rooted in and lead back to a believing community.”

Lesslie Newbegin "The Gospel in a Pluralistic Culture" 

This is a key component to an effective witness in our culture today.   We need the church living in an authentic manner so the world can look and see where the Gospel is making a transforming difference in the lives of those who confess its truthfulness.    One of my favorite sections of this book.  





On Becoming A Church Critic


The Screwtape Letters, by C.S. Lewis
“Surely you know that if a man can’t be cured of churchgoing, the next best thing is to send him all over the neighborhood looking for the church that ‘suits’ him until he becomes a taster or connoisseur of churches…The search for a ‘suitable’ church makes the man a critic where the Enemy wants him to be a pupil.  What He wants of the layman in church is an attitude which may, indeed, be critical in the sense of rejecting what is false or unhelpful, but which is wholly uncritical in the sense that it does not appraise-does not waste time in thinking about what it rejects, but lays itself open in uncommenting, humble receptivity to any nourishment that is going.  (You see how groveling, how unspiritual, how irredeemably vulgar He is!)  This attitude, especially during sermons, creates the condition (most hostile to our whole policy) in which platitudes can become really audible to a human soul.  There is hardly any sermon, or any book, which may not be dangerous to us if it is received in this temper.  So pray bestir yourself and send this fool the round of the neighboring churches as soon as possible.”   (chapter 16)

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Popologetics: Popular Culture in Christian Perspective (P&R, 2012)
Ted Turnau
A book review by Todd D. Baucum
It was with eager delight that I read on the back cover endorsements by men who were noted commentators and cultural critics engaged in “discerning the signs of the times” with the truth of the Christian message.  This book is rightly touted a primer on doing apologetics in the context of popular media and is not a work of popular apologetics designed at the entry level.   That is not to say this book should not be read by all Christians interested in how our music, art, films and new technology are conveying alternate worldviews, but the reader should be armed with a background in the history of debates concerning Christian engagement in culture (and current ones too).   Ted Turnau, a teaching fellow at the International Institute for Christian Studies in Toronto, and a professor at Charles University in Prague, is coming at this debate with a decisive angle of full engagement and immersion in a host of various subcultures of our Western society.  
There is much about this book that is commendable and interesting.   One mark of a good book is the engagement of thought on various ideas, and Turnau takes the reader through careful reflection at the intersection of sociology, philosophy, and theology.   Years of teaching and dialogue on these issues come clearly through on each page.   The footnotes show careful scholarship and interaction with whom he disagrees.   It is evident that Turnau takes a much more positive attitude towards pop culture than most writers, giving his critique on many Reformed thinkers on cultural apologetics.
First, consider his ambitious agenda which is covered in three main parts in the book.   The first four chapters lay out the groundwork of a “theology of Popular culture”, where he defines key concepts such as “popular culture” and “world-view”, which the reader will find immensely helpful in knowing from what platform the author argues.   For Turnau, popular culture, “made up of cultural works whose media, genres, or venues tend to be widespread and widely received in our everyday world,” is the main conveyer of worldviews today.  Drawing in some part from James Sire’s seminal understanding of worldview, Turnau looks at what makes up a worldview from the roots of presuppositions, the trunk of a world-story and the branches of a life philosophy that gives fruit to beliefs and behaviors.    I thought this tree analogy very creative and instructive.  The teacher in Turnau is keen on keeping his readers on track as he progresses with his arguments.   So, while I found the metaphor a good one, the distinctions between presuppositions, culture and meta-narratives I thought to be at times unguarded.  
Culture is neither in itself good or bad, it is neutral, but as a feature of the byproduct of fallen creatures it is bound up in sin.  All culture this side of Eden, is to be judged by the true standard of God’s word and is found wanting.   The ability not just to see the lens of culture, but to turn it inward is extremely important.  Turnau want us to engage in the cultural conveyers of our postmodern world with understanding, but the temptation would be to lose sight that all culture needs the correction of the Gospel.    It is true that because of a Christian view of creation, art and culture making are part of the Christian calling in life.  The Dutch Reformers were especially good at laying hold on this particular truth, even to the more recent work of H.R. Rookmaaker, whose essays on art and Christianity laid down a robust Reformed theology of aesthetics that has yet to be improved.   One wonders why Turnau did not engage more with this work.  Turnau is also not as strong in the implication of sin in all its nature upon our world and culture.   On page 60, he seems to put more weight on the effects of sin in our human relationships and in the culture, rather than our relationship with God.   The consequences of this ontological shattering of the image of God, are indeed social and psychological, but they are primarily spiritual in scope.  For purposes of apologetics, a world-view lens is a way to make sense of where people are: it is diagnostic and descriptive.    Understanding a person’s worldview or a song, or a film is not simply however for our classification, so as to label things as “existentialist or nihilist”, but to help those lost in the darkness of manipulation to see the light of God’s truth in Jesus Christ.   Much of popular media and arts are aimed not at illumination but at manipulation.  
Over and over, Turnau seeks to hold on the value of propositional truth with the need to see truth as more complex, reflecting the exuberant contours of the human heart.   This is an admirable goal, but the reader is left at times with the impression that the new hermeneutics of narrative thinkers, like Paul Ricoeur, quoted six times in footnotes by Turnau would imply more than just a corrective balance to Enlightenment rationalism.   One wonders where this would lead, if not rooted in the objective reality of God’s truth.
In the second section, Turnau offers what he considers a better and more positive posture towards popular culture and critiques what seems to be the mainstream disdain among Reformed thinkers regarding pop culture.   Putting the likes of Ken Myers, Neil Postman and Doug Wilson together, he critiques their elitist approach to pop culture.  Myers and Wilson write along similar topics, such as the recovery of the good, the beautiful and the true in a declining Western culture.   Wilson writes to reclaim a “catholic” comprehensive view of the arts in a Christian culture, but one could argue he seems more Anabaptist in approach.   Myers sees much in pop culture that reveals its loss of beauty and truth rather than as a bridge to engage in the culture, a lament of our times, if you will.  Turnau makes the case that these negative approaches to pop culture tend towards elitism or “moralistic criticism” (borrowed from social critic Romanowski).   The arguments were engaging and thought provoking, but not persuasive.   High culture, if to use his phrase was always meant to be aimed at the masses, especially after the Renaissance and the Reformation.   Mozart wrote music for the common people to enjoy.  Handel, Bach and Beethoven were composers for the people to both enjoy the gift of music and to express praise to God.  They brought music out from the court (among the aristocracy) and into the concert halls and the churches to be enjoyed by workers, merchants and all fellow citizens of God’s kingdom.   Turnau would do well to remember Rookmacher’s caution to keep a “prophetic pessimism” towards culture for indeed culture making slips ever so easily into idol making.   Solomon’s temple was built with the help of pagan craftsmen, but the builders of the temple were clear about where culture influences stopped and obedience to God’s word began.   This is not to say that this book shows the pitfalls of both total engagement and the temptation to retreat to higher ground.   He just sees more danger of those who are on the cultural retreat side of things.  One keeps, or should keep, remembering that the great classical works, and books of Dostoevsky and the music of Handel were “popular” both in appeal and in consumption, but the culture in which such works prospered no longer holds sway on us in the West anymore.    
In Part Three, Turnau outlines a constructive strategy for engaging pop culture for Christians.    Most Christians today find themselves in a new world called Twitterverse, and a growing venue of cultural expressions.   There are very few wise guides out there to help believers navigate this new territory.  The value of this book is that it begins that engagement with some thought provoking challenges.   This is the important note that is sounded in the author’s appeal for answering the call for believers to take the Gospel into this fast paced realm of our society.  Let’s just do it with Gospel discernment.    

Monday, March 4, 2013

God’s Weekly Gift
In the Old Testament, violating the Sabbath day was a capital offense.  Evidently, God took honoring His day very seriously.  Aren’t we glad to be under grace and to know that Law has been satisfied by the offering of Christ’s righteousness for us sinners?  I know I am.  But, we also recognize that the “Big Ten” still apply to us.  The Ten Commandments reflect God’s unchanging moral character and still shape the heart and intention of those under grace in the new covenant.   It means God still takes his “Day” seriously.  The reason is because the people he bought at a price have been given a great gift.  The Lord’s Day is a gift and a welcome respite in a crazy world and the insane schedule many of us are oppressed by.   Missing it and neglecting it is in effect killing us.  Consider the following quote from a retired Presbyterian missionary in his book,  The Day God Made (in our library).
“No nation has been permanently blessed and prospered that has disregarded the Fourth Commandment.  In 1944 Prof. John Murray of Westminster Seminary preached a sermon, later judged one of the best preached that year, entitled ‘God and the War’.  His text was: ‘When thy judgments are in the earth, the inhabitants of the world will learn righteousness’ (Isa. 26:9b[KJV]).  Murray said that, evil as the Hitler regime was, the war was also a judgment on the Allied powers, America included.  He cited some of the sins for which America was being judged, among them the neglect of the Sabbath Day.  Then the preacher made the amazing statement, ‘One well-kept Sabbath would end this war.’ 
What can one person, one family, one church do? We can begin with the law of love and spare the Sabbath or the Lord’s Day for other people so that they may have the freedom to enjoy this gift of God.  If they do not make use of the Day as God intended, that is upon their own consciences, but if you or I take from them the precious privilege of meditating upon God and resting in His good providence on that Day, we shall answer for that to Him who is the Lord of the Sabbath.”    (The Day God Made, by Glen Knecht, pg. 57-58).
Our motivation now for worship under Christ’s gracious rule, is both love and gratitude.  It is these two pulses of the heart that drive us from the worldly propensity to feel that we know best in how to tend to our restless and spent spirits.   Love for God, who has given us redemption and yearns to give us more grace is the drive to want to worship Him.  Gratitude for the mercy and forgiveness that is never deserved drives us to embark on the happy labor of attending a structured design of gathered individuals into a single voice of praise in the glorious concert of biblical worship.   This once a week discipline, that regulates our hearts in a world of time wasting chaos, is the chief and paramount event that sets us apart as a redeemed community, of which outside of it, as our confession states, “is no ordinary possibility of salvation” (WC,Ch. 25:2).  No pious “I’ve got Jesus in my heart” religion that doesn’t square with the regular living and confessing the faith of Jesus in public worship is optional.   In the now 30 % of the American population that are regular church goers, our participation in the Lord’s day, as design of creation and a gift of redemption is indeed a counter cultural protest in our destruction bent world.   And you thought, I imagine, that going to church was just for traditional middle-class humdrums, which one could take or leave.  Think again.  Nothing like worship will cure the heart, give witness to the world and bring stability to your living.  I don’t know if honoring the Lord’s Day will bring an end to the war in Afghanistan, but it will bring an end to the war in your heart and grant peace in our life.   Why refuse the gift?   In heaven’s name, why?