14 Favorite Ways to Twist the Gospel
http://howardsnyder.seedbed.com/2014/01/03/14-favorite-ways-to-twist-the-gospel/
1. Interpret the gospel
primarily through Romans.
Biblical writers, including Paul, tell us to study the whole of
Scripture and interpret it through that wholeness. But the persistent tendency
to see Romans as the key to all Scripture persists. So the church and the world
suffer. (See my Seedbed blog, “Misplacing Romans.”)
2. Focus solely on “personal
salvation.”
The Bible does not teach “personal salvation” in the private,
individualistic way that phrase has come to mean. Rather it teaches in multiple
ways and through many metaphors the reconciliation of all things (e.g., Eph. 1,
Col. 1)—though not without judgment.
3. Make heaven the goal.
The Bible and the early Christian creeds say nothing about
“going to heaven” Yet that phrase has become virtually synonymous with
salvation in many minds. The Bible focuses on God’s will being done on earth as
in heaven, and the ultimate redemption of all creation, not some cosmic eternal
split between earth and heaven.
4. The clergy/laity
split. This is
one of the earliest signs of the “mystery of iniquity” in the church. Once
Satan has convinced us that only a few (and mainly men of a certain
sort) are called into “the ministry,” he has reduced the church’s effectiveness
by ninety percent. The clergy/laity split is thus more debilitating than any
other prejudice in the church. It undermines the biblical doctrine of the
priesthood of believers, the gifts
of the Spirit, and the universal call to diakonia (ministry, service).
5. Thinking economics and
politics are not directly gospel concerns. Walling
off economics and politics from the gospel, placing them outside our
discipleship, is unbiblical dualism. The gospel is an economic and political
reality, so by definition the church is both economic and political. But
economics and politics are to be understood in light of the gospel, not the
other way round. The kingdom of God is the comprehensive framework.
6. De-prioritize
community.
New Testament writers focus much more on community—the body of
Christ, our membership in Jesus Christ and thus in one another—than any other
topic. The less genuine the community in the mutually-sharing biblical sense of
koinonia, the more doctrinal disputes become central and the church
focuses on everything else but community. This is why I deal so much with this
in Community of the King and other books.
7. Neglect the Old
Testament. The two
most common mistakes here: Neglecting the wholism of God’s salvific purposes as
revealed in the Old Testament, and buying the myth that all important truths in
the Old Testament get “spiritualized” in the New. So “promised land,” for
example, comes to mean “heaven” or some inner spiritual experience. When that
happens, preachers mine the Old Testament looking for “spiritual” nuggets that
often have little to do with the biblical historical context and meaning.
8. Limit justice to
personal righteousness.
The Old Testament—Psalms, Prophets, Law, Wisdom—constantly pair justice
and righteousness as two sides of the same comprehensive reality. Notice
for instance how frequently justice and righteousness are coupled and used
almost interchangeably in Hebrew poetry.
Yet the church often separates them in various
ways—for instance making righteousness mean personal morality and justice
something God takes care of by himself through the atonement and/or final
judgment. This is flatly unbiblical.
9. Neglect intercession.
The more I read of prayer in
the Bible—Moses, David, the Prophets, Job,
Jesus’ life and example, the Epistles—the more I am convinced that I and the
church generally have neglected the essential ministry of intercession. Through
the mystery of prayer and God’s Spirit, persistent intercession by God’s people
can (and often does) change the course of history and relations among nations
and peoples and religions—as well as meeting our more immediate and personal
needs.
Intercessory prayer is a primary means of
seeking first the kingdom of God.
10. “Believers” instead
of disciples.Jesus calls and forms disciples so that the body of Christ
becomes a community of kingdom-of-God disciples. The New Testament rarely uses
the word “believers.” Today this fact is distorted by the tendency in modern
translations to use “believers” in place of “brothers” (in order to be more
inclusive) or in place of pronouns such as “them.”
What counts is not the number of believers but
the number of disciples, and thus the ministry of disciple-making.
11. Substitute heaven for
the kingdom of God.
In the
Bible, the kingdom of God is as comprehensive as the reality, sovereignty, and
love of God. No spirit/matter dualism. Most people in Jesus’ days understood
this; they knew that “kingdom of heaven” in Matthew, for example, was just
another way of saying “kingdom of God.”
In the Bible we see the kingdom of God as both
now/future, heavenly/earthly, personal/social, sudden/gradual, inward/outward,
in a mysterious dialectic with the church which itself is neither the kingdom
of God nor divorceable from God’s kingdom.
12. Faith just a part of
life.
We compartmentalize. Our Christian walk gets reduced to just one
part of our lives, and that one part is often reduced to simply what we
believe.
But now abide faith, hope, and love—and the
Bible makes clear which is the “greatest” and most comprehensive. According to
the gospel, faith is not the ultimate reality; it is the means to the end of
loving God and others and all God’s creation with our whole being. And that
24/7, as the saying goes.
The biblical picture is faith working by love;
love enabled by faith and powered by hope—full confidence in God’s amazing
full-salvation-for-all-creation promises.
13. Disregard Genesis 9.
There is a huge literature on “covenant” or “federal” theology
(from the Latin for “covenant”). Yet oddly, such theology almost always begins
with God’s covenant with Abraham (perhaps with a passing reference to Genesis
3:15). Yet the first explicit biblical covenant is found in Genesis 9, where
God establishes his “covenant between me and the earth” (Gen. 3:13).
The emphasis is explicit and repeated: A
covenant with humans and all living creatures of every kind. If our
understanding of salvation skips from Genesis 3 to Genesis 12, we miss
essential biblical teachings about the created order and distort everything
else in the Bible.
14. Divorce discipleship
from creation care. When we
neglect or distort biblical revelation about the created order, we shrink the
gospel to something much less than the Bible promises. We do this to our own
loss; we impoverish the church; we over-spiritualize Christian experience and
reduce the dynamic of Christian mission.
When we see how discipleship and creation care
are inseparably connected in God’s plan, the church becomes patiently
and humbly powerful “to the pulling down of strongholds” (2 Cor. 10:4).
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