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40 Bicycles
1
It
seems to me that many of the debates over such movements as the Auburn
Avenue theology find their origin in the fact that there are some
radically different ways of approaching the concept of salvation. If
you try to interpret one paradigm within the frameworks provided by the
others you will often end up with something resembling a bizarre
heresy. Few people consciously adopt one particular paradigm over the
rest and so remain, for the most part, ignorant about the assumptions
that they import into their understanding of salvation. It is at this
stage that a hermeneutic of self-suspicion becomes extremely important.
I
will briefly try to outline what I see to be the two prominent ways of
viewing salvation that seem to me to underlie many of the debates about
such things as baptismal regeneration. Over the past two years I have
been undergoing a shift between these two paradigms.
2
Most
popular evangelical theologies of conversion are generally built around
an understanding of conversion as first of all a private and individual
decision, with incorporation into the Church seen as a secondary thing.
The important thing is the saving of ‘souls’. ‘Souls’ are non-corporeal
and abstracted from community. For many, salvation means little more
than that the soul will go to heaven when the body dies.
Within
such a theology ‘salvation’ becomes increasingly identified with that
which happens ‘inside’ a person. Many Christians talk about salvation
primarily as something we receive and possess. ‘Salvation’ is a
substance, object or a correct status relative to an abstract and
absolute legal standard that we are given.
3
Within
such a theology — where the individual is elevated above the corporate
— an abstract legal concept of God and salvation will generally take
precedence over other views of God and salvation. God is the god of the
contract, the god who operates in terms of systems of merit. The Law
provides the stipulations of this contract. The Law is an abstract and
absolute system of justice or code of ethics which we must obey
perfectly or be condemned eternally. God is characterized primarily as
the strict Judge, as one of unyielding justice who stands in detached
judgment over us. It is with the framework of the legal contract that
any individualistic theology or philosophy will generally frame forms
of relationship between different parties.
4
Such
a theology may have a place for intense ‘communion with God’ following
justification. It can place considerable stress on individual
subjective religious experience. Ironically, however, this focus on
experience often serves to eclipse the God who is to be experienced.
The focus of the Christian faith can become the individual’s
experiential response to God, rather than God Himself. Such a theology
throws us back upon our own response, and fails to draw attention to
the Response that God has already provided in Jesus Christ. A doctrine
of God is enshrined in every understanding of salvation; as James
Torrance observes, such an understanding has clear unitarian leanings.
5
Within
such a theology, the sacraments are subjectivized to fit in with the
conception of salvation. If salvation is fundamentally about something
that happens ‘inside’ us, the sacraments can be thought of in one of
two ways. Either they become magical rites that pump me full of
‘salvation stuff’ in some mystical manner or they become empty vessels
to be given content by my faith. It is my faith that gives Baptism its
meaning, or my subjective remembrance and pious meditation that gives
substance to the Supper.
As the
‘means of grace’ are
increasingly downplayed, the mediatorship of Christ will be downplayed
with them. The focus will be almost exclusively upon my possession of
new life in my soul. As the means of grace are gradually emptied of
their efficacy, I will be thrown back upon my own response to grace and
will find myself crippled by assurance problems. I will have focused
upon Christ in
me so
exclusively that there is no longer any
Christ to be found outside of myself (i.e. meeting me graciously in the
Word and sacraments). When the prospect in my heart looks bleak I will
have nowhere to turn. If my communion with God is understood as
fundamentally direct and unmediated by ‘externals’ such as the
sacraments, it will not be long before I find that my faith has nothing
sure left outside of itself to hold onto.
6
Within
such a theology there is an emphasis upon such things as ‘imputed’
righteousness, ‘imputed’ righteousness here being understood as
something which is ‘put to our account’ by means of some extrinsic
legal transaction. We should not be surprised to see extrinsic legal
transactions playing a prominent role in any individualistic
soteriology.
Within
such a theology ‘regeneration’ is seen as
essentially the change that takes place inside an individual’s heart by
means of the work of the Spirit of God. The Christian is one who has
been given new life in his ‘soul’. This new life is possessed and
comprehended by the soul. This theology also shapes the theology of the
atonement to a great degree, as I have argued in the past.
Salvation
is often regarded as distinct from the ‘relationship with God’ that
follows after it. As salvation is fundamentally something that takes
place ‘inside’ the individual, ‘joining a church’ becomes a mere
ethical or religious duty. With its individualistic bias, such a
theology thinks of the Church as that which exists for the chief
purpose of enabling individual Christians to fulfill their individual
vocations. When someone says ‘the will of God’, it is the will of God
for the individual that instantly springs to mind. Within such a
theology sola
Scriptura
naturally implies that only Scripture
can have authority over the individual and so Church tradition should
be treated with great suspicion when we come to interpret God’s Word.
Within
such a theology one’s personal Bible study, personal
quiet time, personal
relationship with God, etc. are all granted priority over the Church’s
engagement with Scripture, meditation and prayer and the communion with
God that is enjoyed in corporate worship.
7
Within
such a theology, redemptive history is downplayed because redemptive
history has few immediate implications for the salvation of
individuals. Redemptive history is treated as little more than a series
of stories that give us pictures of Jesus, a few good and bad moral
examples and some decontextualized texts that make for good
evangelistic sermons.
Within
such a theology regeneration,
justification, adoption, sanctification and glorification are, at their
foundation, events to be put in the correct order within an ordo
salutis.
Within such a theology such issues as the bringing of Jews
and Gentiles together in the Church is of relatively minor import.
8
In
contradistinction to this conception of salvation stands a view of
salvation that regards salvation as fundamentally relational. Salvation
is not something that should be regarded as the ‘property’ of an
individual (any more than a husband or wife is the ‘property’ of their
spouse), nor as something which is bounded by subjective experience.
Rather, salvation is situated in restored relationships.
It is
man’s life that needs to be saved and man’s life is not limited to a
part of his make-up labeled the ‘soul’. Man’s life is something
that is
forged by community. If man’s life is to be saved, it must be saved
within community. While many who follow the first model tend to see
man’s true existence as something that is fundamentally individual and
‘internal’, this way of thinking sees man as a being in relationship.
For man to be saved involves being reconstituted in a new matrix of
relationships.
As a human
being, my true identity is not found
by stripping away all my relationships; rather, my identity is found in
my relationships — both to God and my fellow human beings.
9
Within
the biblical teaching on salvation, the central focus is not upon some
amazing experience in my heart or upon blessings of Christ abstracted
from His Person and ‘put to my account’. In the biblical teaching on
salvation, the accent is placed upon the reality of belonging to
something that is far larger than anything that can be comprehended by
our own experience. The New Life of salvation is something that far
exceeds and transcends my mere ‘religious experience’ or the quickening
work of God in my soul.
10
The
biblical teaching on salvation, it seems to me, speaks far more about
the concept of our being ‘in Christ’ than it does upon Christ’s being
‘in us’. Whilst both certainly have expression, the biblical seemingly
places a far greater emphasis upon relational belonging when explaining
salvation than it does upon personal possession.
Even where
the
NT does teach about Christ being ‘in us’, it is worth recognizing that
the focus of the context is almost invariably primarily upon the Church
as a whole as the dwelling place of the Spirit of Christ rather than
merely upon Jesus living in the hearts of individuals (e.g. Romans 8:9;
2 Corinthians 13:5; Galatians 4:19). Christ certainly does dwell in us
as individuals by the Spirit, but this biblical teaching should never
be used to negate the fact that we are indwelt by the Spirit precisely
as members of the body of Christ, which is the Church.
In the
past, for example, I have argued against the intense internalizing of
the concept of the Spirit’s guidance. The Spirit leads us as the Church
and within the Church. Those who want to confine the Spirit’s guidance
by the walls of the human heart fail to follow the biblical teaching on
the subject.
11
As I have
already
suggested, I believe that the biblical teaching on conversion gives
greater emphasis to ‘belonging’ than it does to the individual’s
‘possession’ of saving blessings. Our new life is not fundamentally
found ‘inside’ us, but is found hidden in Christ in God; Christ is now
our true life (Colossians 3:3-4). Our status (chosen before the
foundation of the world, justified, sanctified, adopted, etc.) is not
something that we possess as abstract individuals; rather, our status
is that of being ‘in Christ’. As we are ‘in Christ’ — belonging to Him
— all that is true of Him becomes true of us.
The union
that I
here describe is no mere extrinsic and legal union. We are not elect
merely because we as particular individuals were placed in some sort of
forensic relationship with Christ in ‘eternity past’ (whatever that
means). Rather, we are elect because we have been brought into a living
relationship with the Elect One — the One chosen before the foundation
of the world — in history. Our relationship with Christ is primarily
personal and organic, rather than merely extrinsic and forensic.
12
It
should be clear that if we are to see Christ as the life of the saved
people of God, the life of salvation cannot be confined to the heart of
the human individual. Salvation is something far bigger that we are
called to participate in. The life of salvation certainly indwells us
in various ways (e.g. Galatians 2:20; Ephesians 3:17), but we also
dwell in it.
As the
Source of the new life of salvation is always found extra nos,
and we only share in His life by means of continually participation,
salvation involves our continual looking beyond ourselves. Our
salvation is never something that is ultimately inherent in ourselves,
but is always found in Another. Salvation, consequently, involves a
continual relationship of dependent faith in Jesus Christ, in whom our
true life is now found. Our new saved existence is not to be found by
navel-gazing, but by looking to Christ, who is seated at the right hand
of God.
Any
theology of salvation that does not see salvation as
something that transcends the mere forensic status and heart condition
of the individual will be prone to leave people with assurance
problems. If we understand our personal salvation in terms of
participation in a salvation that transcends our own experience we will
be less tempted to place faith in faith.
13
Within
this paradigm God is not seen merely as some detached Judge. God
created mankind in gracious covenant within Himself — we ought not
separate nature and grace.
God is the
God of the covenant. The
Law is not an abstract code of ethics; the Law is the covenant document
that binds God to His people and vice versa. The concept of justice,
judgment and righteousness that results from such a view of the
relationship that God bears with mankind is radically different from
that which results from the model I described earlier.
It is hard
to overemphasize the effect that such distinctions will have
upon your understanding of justification and salvation.
14
Salvation
should not be distinguished from new relationships with God and each
other. We are not first ‘saved’, to enjoy new relationships with God
and each other as something secondary. Salvation is new
restored relationships with God and each other.
Within
popular evangelicalism there are some who treat our lives as if they
were merely envelopes that required a change of address — to be
directed to a new (eternal) destination. Once the address has been
changed it doesn’t really matter what the envelope contains. Some seem
to think that it would be nice if the One who has changed our address
and sent us to His heaven would open the envelope to find something
nice inside. However, the contents of the envelope really have nothing
to do with its destination.
There is
some significant truth
contained in this analogy. Nevertheless, it seemingly ignores the fact
that salvation is a new relational matrix in which we are
reconstituted. There is a far closer connection between the way that we
must live and the new status that we enjoy than the ‘envelope’ analogy
seems to allow for. Both are relational.
15
When
Scripture talks about people being saved it sees salvation as being
established within a new community. Man’s ‘soul’/life is saved by its
being renewed in fellowship with its Creator and by being reestablished
in communion with fellow human beings. Salvation is not primarily
something that happens ‘in’ man. Rather, salvation involves our coming
out of ourselves and entering into a new matrix of restored
relationships. Salvation is all about belonging to Christ’s new
family/nation/man of the Church. Such belonging will certainly affect
us ‘inside’ (the internal/external distinction needs to be treated with
extreme suspicion, in my opinion); nevertheless, this interior effect
is a result of the relationship. The relational character of salvation
must always retain the priority.
The
greatest expression of
salvation on earth is found in the Church. The Church is central to
God’s relationship with His people. In the (visible!) Church we become
members of the body of Christ. We are built together as a dwelling
place for the Spirit. We are established as the new family under God
the Father.
16
If we want
salvation —
a new relationship with God — the Church is the place to be. The Church
is not the ‘salvation soup-kitchen’ doling out ‘salvation stuff’ to
needy souls. The Church is rather the shape that God’s salvation takes;
the place where God and His people are brought together in fellowship.
At its heart, my personal salvation is about my belonging as a living
member to the new realm of the Church. Being a member of the body of
Christ in the visible Church as part of the community in which the
Spirit of God dwells should never be reduced to the idea of salvation
as merely ‘asking Jesus into my heart.’ My belonging to the realm of
salvation that is present in the Church should take priority to any
merely individual accounts of salvation.
I believe
that we need
to recapture the sense of salvation as a relational belonging. Our
salvation is found in the fact that our lives are hid with Christ in
God (Colossians 3:3-4). The new man is essentially a corporate reality
(Colossians 3:9-11). The goal of evangelism should be to make people
part of the Church. Should it not be to get them to ask Jesus into
their hearts? Well, Jesus is known in the Church. As the apostle John
writes in 1 John 1:1-3:—
That
which was from the
beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which
we have looked upon, and our hands have handled, of the Word of life;
(For the life was manifested, and we have seen it, and bear witness,
and shew unto you that eternal life, which was with the Father, and was
manifested unto us;) That which we have seen and heard declare we unto
you, that ye also may have fellowship with us: and truly our fellowship
is with the Father, and with his Son Jesus Christ.
The
‘life’ which John proclaims is the life of Jesus Christ. This ‘life’ is
also the life of those who belong to Jesus Christ (Colossians 3:4;
Galatians 2:20). John’s goal is that people be brought into the
fellowship enjoyed by himself and other Christians in the Church,
because the Church is the place where fellowship with God is truly
known.
Becoming a
member of the Church is not to be seen as an
afterthought following salvation. Rather becoming a part of the Church
is central to salvation itself. Continuing in fellowship in the Church
should not, therefore, be perceived merely as some religious duty. It
is integral to our salvation — our belonging to Jesus. We need to
recover the centrality of the Church in our evangelism.
If we
downplay the importance of community we will fail to see why denying
table-fellowship to Gentiles in Galatians 2 struck at the very heart of
the gospel. We will fail to see why Paul’s focus on justification is
almost always in the context of speaking about Jews and Gentiles being
brought together. We will fail to see how Paul can so closely align
being in the Church with being in Christ. We will also fail to
understand the great significance given to Baptism in such passages as
Acts 2:38; 22:16; Romans 6:1ff, Galatians 3:27; Titus 3:5; 1 Peter
3:21, etc.
17
Salvation
is ultimately
about being transferred from one relational matrix — the world — to
another relational matrix that is most fully expressed in the Church.
I
think that there is a danger of too closely identifying the birth of
faith in the human soul with ‘salvation’. This seems to result from the
first paradigm that I have described. Whilst salvation should certainly
be worked out in us, I believe that faith is that which brings us to
Christ to seek salvation. Christ is primarily to be found within His
Church, in which He dwells by the Holy Spirit.
The
eschatological force of the word ‘salvation’ should also be taken into
account. I think that it is imperative that we conceive of salvation in
this eschatological sense. If we do not, salvation will tend to become
overly internalized and Gnostic, rather than being grounded in the
death, resurrection, ascension and coming return of our Lord Jesus
Christ.
I will
comment on this in a bit more detail shortly.
It
is within Baptism that we are translated from the one relational matrix
to the other. Our theology of conversion should, therefore, give a
central place to Baptism. Conversion is not primarily a change in the
individual human heart, but the movement from one relational matrix to
another that occurs in water Baptism.
It is
interesting to
observe the absence of any mention of the Church and the sacraments in
many of the traditional forms of the ordo salutis: if salvation
is something that takes place ‘inside’ man, ‘externals’ like the Church
and the sacraments will be radically relativized. If we believe,
however, that man’s identity is forged by relationships and is not
merely something inherent in each individual, Baptism becomes extremely
important and the internal/external distinction is called into question.
I
believe that a Trinitarian view of God leads us to believe in being as
communion. This will lead us to challenge the common notion that my
true identity is unchanged by the event of Baptism. If my true identity
is a relational identity, Baptism utterly transforms it. I may reject
God’s definition of my identity in Baptism. However, I can never
totally destroy it. Baptism has placed me in a new relational realm and
this realm still serves to define who I am, even if I am an apostate.
18
At this
stage it might be worthwhile making a few comments about infant
Baptism.
If
we give a primacy to ‘belonging’ to the new relational matrix of the
Church in our understanding of salvation, infant Baptism is nowhere
near as problematic as it is in the first paradigm I delineated. In the
first paradigm salvation is something that is fundamentally ‘internal’.
Consequently, Baptism is usually given its content, to some degree or
other, by the internal reality. In the absence of the internal reality,
Baptism almost becomes meaningless.
Repentance
and faith are
both, in some sense, necessary for proper Baptism. They do not give
Baptism its efficacy, but without repentance and faith the efficacy of
Baptism brings no benefit. How then can infants repent and show faith?
Well, just as salvation is primarily an external reality (fellowship
with God in the Church) that we need to enter into fully ourselves, so
faith is often something that is first more external and only gradually
‘internalized’.
The child
born into a household that gives its
allegiance to Jesus Christ does not have some sort of autonomous
existence. Rather, the child’s identity is constituted by those
relationships. Any child growing up needs to internalize the loyalties
that are at the outset external to them. The child is brought up in a
relational context and the child’s character as an individual develops
out of the matrix of these relationships. Before the child can ever
think in terms of his individual identity, his identity is formed by
belonging to others. It is through the attainment and internalization
of language from the linguistic context in which he is brought up that
the child becomes capable of thinking of himself as an individual.
Things
are much the same with regard to salvation. The baptized person is
baptized as an infant in the kingdom of God (irrespective of their
biological age). As a result of their participation in the life of the
Church, the spiritual infant gains the ability to ‘internalize’
communion with God to a greater degree and to internalize the faith
which characterizes the life of the Church. ‘Belonging’ precedes
‘possession’ in important respects. The baptized person is baptized as
someone who belongs to the people of faith (either by personal faith or
by belonging to a believing household). They are passive in Baptism.
Baptism isn’t primarily about our action, by about God’s claiming of
us, about our being made part of His household.
Faith and
repentance are in some sense presumed by Baptism. A person who is
coerced to be baptized is not truly baptized. Those who are truly
baptized submit to Baptism on some level or other. Baptism embodies a
rejection of the kingdom of Satan as part of being brought into the
eschatological kingdom of God. As the passive infant — whose identity
has already been constituted within a believing and penitent community
(human life is an altogether ‘social’ life) — is baptized they are
drawn further into the life of repentance and faith which they are
called to mature in and internalize over time.
If Baptism is
withheld the child is being constituted in a life
other than the life of repentance and faith.
They are being trained in a life of doubt and unbelief. Faith is
primarily something that is expressed in a particular way of living
together, a way of living together in which even infants can play a
role. One of the problems with Baptists is that they keep looking for
an adult faith from children and childlike faith from adults. Each
person is called to have faith appropriate to their years. The infant’s
faith is primarily a passive one of belonging to God within a believing
community (cf. Psalm 22:9-10; 71:5-6). However, this belonging and
being entrusted to Jesus Christ ought to deeply mould the character of
the infant, until the child begins to express more ‘active’ dimensions
of faith. Faith is, of course, multifaceted.
19
As
Peter Leithart and others have observed, in their own way, children
play an extremely active role within the Church. Children in the
Church, given their vulnerability and the length of time it takes for
them to grow to maturity, play the prophetic role of calling the rest
of the Church to self-sacrifice and other such virtues. It is in their
passivity that infants play their most active role in the Church. The
mere presence of a severely disabled child can edify the body of Christ
far more than many able and active pastors. Such a child prophetically
calls the Church to expressions of love and mutual support and draws
members into closer fellowship with one another.
All of
this is
just as relevant to the mentally disabled and the senile. If being an
‘active’ member of the Church is essential, what do we do with the
outcasts, the widows, the weak and the vulnerable? Are they somehow
‘lesser’ members than the strong? If this is the case, the Christian
faith will become a faith for the strong and self-sufficient. This
seems to be quite opposed to the biblical teaching that instructs us
that the weakest members of the body are the most necessary (1
Corinthians 12:22). God has put the weak, the vulnerable and the
passive in the Church for a reason. The members in the Church are all
differentiated from each other. We do not all have to fit into one
model. What I am arguing is that infants do have a place as members of
the body of Christ. How can the Church be the place where humanity is
restored if it excludes infants, the mentally disabled and the senile
from membership?
20
Alexander
Schmemann has observed that the faith that Baptism is founded upon is
not our faith, but the faith of Jesus Christ. In Baptism we are
initiated into the faith of Jesus Christ as we are baptized in His
faithful death. The focus in Baptism, consequently, is not upon our
response to God, but upon the one perfect Response that God has
provided for us in Jesus Christ. It is this Response that constitutes
the life of the Church. Our confidence in worship and assurance of
salvation are found in the fact that we are living out of the
faithfulness of Jesus Christ.
Faith here
is understood, not so
much as the response of each abstract individual to God, but as the
true response of humanity as a whole to God that has taken place in
Jesus Christ. Faith must be understood against this eschatological
backdrop if it is to be understood correctly (e.g. Galatians 3:23-25).
As
we live out of the faithfulness of Jesus Christ, having our lives
moulded by His self-giving, His faithfulness becomes increasingly
embodied in our lives as our new animating principle. Baptized infants
(whether biologically infants or not) are those who have been newly
planted within the realm of this animating principle, a principle
which, by God’s grace, will become increasingly realized and mature in
their own lives over time.
21
The
common evangelical emphasis upon the priority of individual internal
conversion will also lead to a downplaying of redemptive history. The
history of redemption in history is about God’s formation of a people
renewed in fellowship with Himself. The salvation of a people —
the Church — is the central theme of the NT and not the theme of the
salvation of individuals. The NT teaches us that in Christ the people
of God have been brought to full maturity (Galatians 4:1ff). The NT
teaches us again and again that the division between Jews and Gentiles
has been broken down. The Church has been established as a royal
priesthood and a holy nation. The Church is being established as the
dwelling place for God Himself (Ephesians 2:19-22). In the NT salvation
is all about belonging to this new community. Pentecost is the goal of
everything from Bethlehem to Calvary.
The
instinctive
evangelical response to all of this is: What does this have to do with
my personal salvation? What they forget is that their individual
salvation is subordinate to God’s greater purpose of forming a people
in relationship with Himself in Christ. This is the work that God has
been engaged in throughout Scripture. In Scripture God is seeking to
man in a filial relationship with Himself. In man’s infancy in the
‘kinder-garten’ he rebelled. God, in His grace, persisted and sought to
raise this son as Israel, the new humanity. Israel persisted in
disobedience as he grew up under the guardianship of the Law. In Christ
God decisively dealt with the rebellion of His son. Christ was Israel’s
Messiah and died as the representative Israelite so that Israel and the
nations might enter into the full blessings of filial maturity, being
given the house keys (the keys of the kingdom), full table rights (seen
at the Lord’s Supper) and full inheritance of authority and rule. This
is what NT salvation is all about. Salvation is the continuing event of
participation in this reality. This is why the Church and the
sacraments are so important.
Justification,
sanctification,
glorification, election, adoption and regeneration are all realities to
be understood against this bigger redemptive historical picture and
should not be confined to the ordo salutis as some timeless
mode of salvation. In the apocalyptic events of His death,
resurrection, ascension and in Pentecost, Christ has ushered in a new
era in redemptive history and established the new realm of the Church,
in which we experience the salvation He has accomplished in partially
realized form.
Much more
could be said, but in essence the
difference between these two paradigms is the difference between my
theology two years ago and my theology today. If I had to point to one
thing that prompted me to begin rethinking my theology, I would have to
say that it was John Barach's 2002 AAPC talk on 'Covenant and
Election'. It was after listening to that talk that my whole theology
gradually started to unravel. For the first time I caught a glimpse of
a different way of looking at many of the theological problems I had
wrestled with.
posted by Alastair @
9/29/2004 12:02:02 AM | The Voice of the
People
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