The ‘Gospel’ Of Judas?

The highly publicised airing by National Geographic Channel about the so-called Gospel of Judas is the usual stuff Christians have come to expect around Easter. There’s always easy publicity for someone claiming scholarly debunking of traditional beliefs.

We don’t have digital or cable TV, so I cannot see the programme. But there is at least a partial translation of the document here. Reading it makes it equally easy to see why the document would have been rejected by early church leaders. It is contradictory not simply to basic Christian claims, but to the Jewish roots of the Christian faith. Like any Gnostic text it assumes that matter is evil – far from the Jewish belief in a good creation, so robustly celebrated in the festivals. Where it is at odds with conventional Christianity is in another classic Gnostic trait – that salvation is by secret knowledge revealed to an elite.  In contrast the Christian faith is that God has made salvation what Lesslie Newbigin called ‘the open secret’ – it is available to all and sundry, the poor as much (if not more than) the rich. Elitism feeds the ego and is in direct opposition to a message based on undeserved grace.

So far, so easy to debunk. But we must look deeper. I have two observations in particular. The first is that while as Christians we are right to take apart a Gnostic document like this we should also confess just how Gnostic our behaviour has been in practice. We have elevated the soul and denigrated the body – just listen to the way people at the time of a death say that the body was just a shell for the true person. Yet it is not only the doctrine of creation that reminds us of God’s positive interest in the material world, it is also the doctrine of the bodily resurrection. At Easter many of us make a cogent apologetic case for the resurrection being bodily – that there is strong historical evidence for it and that when Paul speaks of the ‘spiritual body’ he means a body animated by the Spirit.

We are also probably guilty of something akin to the Gnostic elitism of secret knowledge. We keep the Gospel to ourselves (for various reasons). We come across with a terrible smug, superior tone, forgetting the words of Daniel T Niles that ‘evangelism is one beggar telling another beggar where to find bread’. To listen to many of us is to think that we have forgotten our utter dependence upon grace.

My second concern is this: debunking this pseudo-scholarly nonsense is important but insufficient on its own. Somehow it doesn’t seem to achieve the apologetic goal of convincing people about the truth of Christ, as we believe him to be. Take current Christian responses to Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code: we have publications such as The Books The Church Suppressed by Michael Green, Cracking The Da Vinci Code by Mark Stibbe (complete with scratchcard) and Exploring The Da Vinci Code by Lee Strobel and Gary Poole. All are no doubt cogent arguments, given the undoubted pedigree of the authors. But we are used to opposing parties in arguments issuing rebuttals: look at the way political parties having instant rebuttal units operating during General Election campaigns. Worthy historical arguments run the risk of just getting the ‘Whatever’ response.

I was more encouraged to read about Steve Hollinghurst’s recent Grove book Coded Messages: Evangelism and the Da Vinci Code. The following quote from the publicity blurb makes a lot of sense:

Why another book on the Da Vinci Code? Other books analyse the
historical or geographical inaccuracies and theological errors, but
these are not arguments which will sway most of those influenced by the
book.

This study looks instead at how the book taps into a conspiracy culture
which distrusts authority and organised religion. It explores how
discussion about the book can best be used to build bridges, and how to
set up an effective event to which to invite people.

And there’s the task, and it’s a much bigger one than the conventional apologetic: it’s one that requires our apologetic to be flesh and blood. In their book The Responsive Church Nick Spencer and Graham Tomlin provide some analysis and proposals for Christian responses to non-Christian thoughts and perceptions about Christians and Christianity. They note there is a widespread hostility to an abstract picture of what Christians are: ‘patronizing, desperate for support, colourless, begging for money, misfits, goody two-shoes, [and] holier than thou’ (p 89). But to their surprise it all changes when they meet real-life Christians. One says:

We’ve got neighbours like that. I don’t know what religion they follow, but they live for it, and the children, literally … they are really, really nice people and, actually, thinking back when she had a baby recently, the gifts and the food, you know, visitors they had, unbelievable. Unbelievable, they were queueing at the door. (ibid.)

Another speaks of receiving unconditional love and support from a local Baptist church when his wife was ill (p 90).

Our apologetic still requires our brains. But our brains must be in partnership with our hands and our feet.

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The ‘Gospel’ Of Judas?

The highly publicised airing by National Geographic Channel about the so-called Gospel of Judas is the usual stuff Christians have come to expect around Easter. There’s always easy publicity for someone claiming scholarly debunking of traditional beliefs.

We don’t have digital or cable TV, so I cannot see the programme. But there is at least a partial translation of the document here. Reading it makes it equally easy to see why the document would have been rejected by early church leaders. It is contradictory not simply to basic Christian claims, but to the Jewish roots of the Christian faith. Like any Gnostic text it assumes that matter is evil – far from the Jewish belief in a good creation, so robustly celebrated in the festivals. Where it is at odds with conventional Christianity is in another classic Gnostic trait – that salvation is by secret knowledge revealed to an elite.  In contrast the Christian faith is that God has made salvation what Lesslie Newbigin called ‘the open secret’ – it is available to all and sundry, the poor as much (if not more than) the rich. Elitism feeds the ego and is in direct opposition to a message based on undeserved grace.

So far, so easy to debunk. But we must look deeper. I have two observations in particular. The first is that while as Christians we are right to take apart a Gnostic document like this we should also confess just how Gnostic our behaviour has been in practice. We have elevated the soul and denigrated the body – just listen to the way people at the time of a death say that the body was just a shell for the true person. Yet it is not only the doctrine of creation that reminds us of God’s positive interest in the material world, it is also the doctrine of the bodily resurrection. At Easter many of us make a cogent apologetic case for the resurrection being bodily – that there is strong historical evidence for it and that when Paul speaks of the ‘spiritual body’ he means a body animated by the Spirit.

We are also probably guilty of something akin to the Gnostic elitism of secret knowledge. We keep the Gospel to ourselves (for various reasons). We come across with a terrible smug, superior tone, forgetting the words of Daniel T Niles that ‘evangelism is one beggar telling another beggar where to find bread’. To listen to many of us is to think that we have forgotten our utter dependence upon grace.

My second concern is this: debunking this pseudo-scholarly nonsense is important but insufficient on its own. Somehow it doesn’t seem to achieve the apologetic goal of convincing people about the truth of Christ, as we believe him to be. Take current Christian responses to Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code: we have publications such as The Books The Church Suppressed by Michael Green, Cracking The Da Vinci Code by Mark Stibbe (complete with scratchcard) and Exploring The Da Vinci Code by Lee Strobel and Gary Poole. All are no doubt cogent arguments, given the undoubted pedigree of the authors. But we are used to opposing parties in arguments issuing rebuttals: look at the way political parties having instant rebuttal units operating during General Election campaigns. Worthy historical arguments run the risk of just getting the ‘Whatever’ response.

I was more encouraged to read about Steve Hollinghurst’s recent Grove book Coded Messages: Evangelism and the Da Vinci Code. The following quote from the publicity blurb makes a lot of sense:

Why another book on the Da Vinci Code? Other books analyse the
historical or geographical inaccuracies and theological errors, but
these are not arguments which will sway most of those influenced by the
book.

This study looks instead at how the book taps into a conspiracy culture
which distrusts authority and organised religion. It explores how
discussion about the book can best be used to build bridges, and how to
set up an effective event to which to invite people.

And there’s the task, and it’s a much bigger one than the conventional apologetic: it’s one that requires our apologetic to be flesh and blood. In their book The Responsive Church Nick Spencer and Graham Tomlin provide some analysis and proposals for Christian responses to non-Christian thoughts and perceptions about Christians and Christianity. They note there is a widespread hostility to an abstract picture of what Christians are: ‘patronizing, desperate for support, colourless, begging for money, misfits, goody two-shoes, [and] holier than thou’ (p 89). But to their surprise it all changes when they meet real-life Christians. One says:

We’ve got neighbours like that. I don’t know what religion they follow, but they live for it, and the children, literally … they are really, really nice people and, actually, thinking back when she had a baby recently, the gifts and the food, you know, visitors they had, unbelievable. Unbelievable, they were queueing at the door. (ibid.)

Another speaks of receiving unconditional love and support from a local Baptist church when his wife was ill (p 90).

Our apologetic still requires our brains. But our brains must be in partnership with our hands and our feet.

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Quote Of The Day: Oswald Chambers

From Valuing the ordinary – an extract from Vicky Calver’s book Illusions Of Grandeur comes this quote from Oswald Chambers’ My Utmost For His Highest (October 21st reading):

We do not need the grace of God to withstand crises – human nature and pride are sufficient for us to face the stress and strain magnificently. But it does require the grace of God to live twenty-four hours of every day as a saint, going through drudgery, and living an ordinary, unnoticed, and ignored existence as a disciple of Jesus.

It is ingrained in us that we have to do exceptional things for God – but we do not. We have to be exceptional in the ordinary things of life, and holy on the ordinary streets, among ordinary people – and this is not learned in five minutes.

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Quote Of The Day: Oswald Chambers

From Valuing the ordinary – an extract from Vicky Calver’s book Illusions Of Grandeur comes this quote from Oswald Chambers’ My Utmost For His Highest (October 21st reading):

We do not need the grace of God to withstand crises – human nature and pride are sufficient for us to face the stress and strain magnificently. But it does require the grace of God to live twenty-four hours of every day as a saint, going through drudgery, and living an ordinary, unnoticed, and ignored existence as a disciple of Jesus.

It is ingrained in us that we have to do exceptional things for God – but we do not. We have to be exceptional in the ordinary things of life, and holy on the ordinary streets, among ordinary people – and this is not learned in five minutes.

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Miroslav Volf, Free Of Charge, chapter 4

Continuing my weekly reflections from my Lent groups that are studying this book:

I think the common feeling from last night’s discussion is, he could have said it so much more simply. Due to the late arrival of our book order, yesterday evening was the first session where the group had been able to read the chapter ahead of the meeting. Although how many completed the chapter is a debatable point. It certainly seemed to them and to me that this is not written at as popular a level as you might expect for an Archbishop’s official Lent Book. Even I had to re-read one or two sections to grasp what Volf was saying, and I have two theology degrees.

Essentially the message was an orthodox Christian view of forgiveness via atonement, holding onto substitutionary atonement and satisfaction while not divorcing the Father from the Son. But the use of technical theological language didn’t help. The good thing fo me was I had to be on my mettle to find easy ways to explain substition, satisfaction, untion with Christ and imputation. I think people understood my explanations. My concern is how daunted or discouraged the group will be for the final two weeks.

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Miroslav Volf, Free Of Charge, chapter 3

Tonight was full of ‘aha’ moments. Two in particular: firstly Volf’s treatment of the forbidden fruit from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil in Genesis 2 and 3. His idea that the withholding of the fruit is actually a sacrament of giving, because it reminds us that all things are from God was felt to be like switching a light on a difficult text.

And when he discussed the sins behind the reluctance to give, selfishness and pride came as no surprise. Indeed they came up in our discussion before I introduced his teaching. But sloth – that one hit us. And it made perfect sense. We wondered why we hadn’t seen it before. It was terrific also to connect the work of the Spirit in several ways with the conquest of sloth.

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Miroslav Volf, Free Of Charge, chapter 1: God The Giver

Hopefully in the next few days I’ll grab some time to blog about the funeral and the church rededication (see recent posts on both). In the meantime, I hope this post becomes the first of a weekly series, as I’m using Volf’s book as the basis for Lent courses at two churches.

Tonight we discussed chapter 1 at a home group. Two things have stayed with me from my preparation and the discussion.

Firstly, Volf has a section in the chapter where he discusses the way recipients of gifts are under an obligation to respond – both by giving and by demonstrating gratitude. One group member said he was uneasy about applying this directly to God. God is love, and love does not put people under obligation. Love may yearn for a response but it does not require. Comments, anyone?

Secondly, from my own preparation, I loved the way Volf ended the chapter. We respond to God’s giving in four ways. Firstly, faith, which is not something offered as a good work but is empty hands held out to received. Secondly, gratitude, which is receiving God’s good gifts well. Thirdly, we make ourselves available to be used as instruments of his purposes. Fourthly, this becomes reality in terms of divine participation – the indwelling Christ. But our experience of God’s love then flowing through us is not merely in the sacred places where we have come to expect spiritual experiences, it is also in the world. He writes,

We may pray in the eucharistic prayer, “Deliver us from the presumption of comung to this table for solace only and not for strength; for pardon only, and not for renewal.” But if we don’t turn from facing God, so to speak, to fce our neighbors, the flow of God’s gifts will be arrested with us … God’s gifts flow to others above all when the community scatters, having been nourished in God’s presence … [p54]

For me this approach has important echoes of some disparate streams that have influenced my missiological ecclesiology in recent years. First there was the late John Wimber, who stressed how most of Jesus’ signs and wonders didn’t happen in the synagogue but in everyday life. Second there was James Thwaites’ book ‘The Church Beyond The Congregation’ with its stress on the church dispersed as much as the church gathered. Third there is much Emerging Church thinking that purposely reorientates the church as a missiological community. The writings of Fred Peatross and his Abductive Columns email come particularly to mind.

I’m looking forward to the rest of Lent now.

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Why Do Heathens Make The Best Christian Films?

Just found this article. It has lots of applications for people in all sorts of artistic and cultural fields. It’s not a perfect article (surprise – and read one or two of the comments posted) but it’s outstanding. It emphasises the importance of metaphor (Show, don’t tell) and makes a good case for why film directors with a Catholic background are better suited to movie-making (they understand iconography, whereas evangelical Protestants are so into the ‘word’ that their work risks degenerating into propaganda).

Here’s the link:

Why Do Heathens Make the Best Christian Films?, by Thom Parham

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Selwyn Hughes

Author and preacher Selwyn Hughes died on Monday. His is a sad loss to the Christian community. When I left my last appointment I was given his autobiography as a leaving present by two dear friends. For a man who has achieved as much as him, it could have been an autohagiography (I’ll invent that word if it doesn’t exist). But it is far from that. It is one of the most humble autobiographies I have ever read. Full of sel-examination and frank admission where mistakes were made or pride got in the way, the tone of his writing says as much as the content.

Rest in peace, Selwyn: while you know of many lives you touched, there are thousands and millions you haven’t a clue you affected.

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