Whitewater Faith for the 21st Century (Part 2)
The World in Which Theology Works
Theology
addresses the drives, dreams, dynamics, and dysfunctions of human life but it
does so in a shape bequeathed to them by a particular place and time. It cannot
speak about sin, grace, hope, salvation, justice and the like generically. It
must do so in inflections derived from the specific shape and location of those
drives, dreams, dynamics, and dysfunctions.
My argument
is that we live in world of spiritual powers created by God for good but which have
rebelled against God and hold creation in a death grip. Death is the chief of these
powers. Satan’s powerful right hand (Heb.2:14). These powers keep creature and creation
bound to futility and forever seeking their security and significance in the wrong
places and against one another. In America the lethal roux (Baxter Kruger) that
keep our cultural rapids boiling and roiling I call an I.C.E. Age – Individualism, Consumerism, and Experientialism.
Let’s see how this works out.
Principalities and Powers
The Apostle Paul
speaks of realities like our I.C.E. Age in the idiom of his time and culture.
In that world a multitude of spiritual forces inhabited the cosmos besides God
and humanity. Evil figures such as the devil, fallen angels, and good figures
such as faithful angels we are familiar with (even if we don’t quite know what
to make of them). But other figures exist as well that we are not so familiar
with. Among these are a group of beings Paul calls “the rulers, against the
authorities, against the cosmic powers
of this present darkness, against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly
places” (Eph.6:12). Often called simply “the principalities and powers,” they
are key to understanding the work of Christ and the church.
Walter Wink
argues that New Testament’s language about “principalities and powers” (and
other terms for the same ideas) refer to the realities of all human social
dynamics – our institutions, belief systems, traditions, and the like.
Each and all of them have what he calls an inner and outer aspect. “Every
Power tends to have a visible pole, an outer form – be it a church, a nation,
and economy – and an invisible pole, an inner spirit or driving force that
animates, legitimates, and regulates its physical manifestation in the
world. Neither pole is the cause of the other. Both come into
existence together and cease to exist together” (Naming the Powers, 5).
The key insight
about these realities is that they
-are part of God’s good
creation which provide the conditions of human social existence needed to make
and keep human life human
-are fallen with the
rest of creation and attempt to seize God’s place and twist God’s purposes for creation’s
well-being, and
-are also an object of
God’s redemptive intent as he seeks to heal and restore his creation to its
creational purposes.
Wink writes:
“To put the thesis of
these three volumes in its simplest form: The Powers are good. The Powers
are fallen. The Powers must be redeemed. These three statements
must be held together, for each, by itself, is not only untrue but downright
mischievous. We cannot affirm governments or universities or businesses
to be good unless at the same time we recognize that they are fallen. We
cannot face their malignant intractability and oppressiveness unless we
remember that they are simultaneously a part of God’s good creation. And
reflection on their creation and fall will appear only to legitimate these
Powers and blast hope for change unless we assert at the same time that these
Powers can and must be redeemed” (Engaging the Powers, 10).
What drives
these powers and gives them hold over us is the fear of death. In the beginning of his book Instead of Death William Stringfellow
writes,
“(This book) consists of
some essays about the specific reality of death in contemporary life: about the
vitality of the presence and power of death over human existence and, indeed,
over the whole creation. The suggestion here is that the power of death can be
identified in American society--as well as elsewhere for that matter--as that
which appears to be the decisive, reigning, ultimate power. Therefore, for an
individual's own little life--yours or mine or anybody's--death is the reality
that has the most immediate, personal. everyday significance. In this life, it
seems as if everyone and everything find meaning, when we really come down to
it, in death.”
Bill Wylie-Kellerman adds that for Stringfellow
"Death, with a capital D, is itself,
for Stringfellow, a living moral reality. He draws intuitively on St. Paul, for
whom death (along with law and sin) is in a matrix of enslaved existence.
Stringfellow sees it as the power behind the powers. Death is a kind of synonym
for the spirituality of idolatry, domination, and empire ... He regarded
death as a moral power within the nation and thereby as its 'social purpose.'
... He named the nation-state as the 'pre-eminent principality.'” (William Stringfellow: The Essential Writings
[Orbis, 2013], introduction)
Given over to
death in their rebellion against God the powers become death-dealing rather
life-giving. Driven by our legitimate need for
security and significance, we seek them within the ambit of the powers. And
thus become both victims and perpetrators of death. We serve the powers because
they seem to assuage our fears and anxieties about security and significance.
Serving them gives us a sense of freedom even from the power of death.
But
they play us false. Beholden to the power of death themselves, the powers offer
only bogus hope. Instead, our own personal fears about significance and
security become wound around the institutional and organizational fears of the
powers whose goal is to survive. When this happens we are sorely tempted to
cede or personal integrity to secure the well-being of the institution.
And
that, that is idolatry.
In two
places in Ephesians (his letter about the “big picture” of what God is doing in
the world) Paul identifies these “principalities and powers” as the objects of
the church’s ministry. In 3:10-11 he writes,
“so
that through the church the wisdom of God in its rich variety might now be made
known to the rulers and authorities in the heavenly places. This
was in accordance with the eternal purpose that he has carried out in Christ
Jesus our Lord.”
It is the church’s mission as a transnational, multiethnic,
reconciled and reconciling community that serves notice to the powers that
their reign is over, that Christ has routed them on the cross (Col.2:15) and
restored them to their original good purposes (Col.1:20).
In Eph.6:12 we learn that it is precisely these powers against
whom we struggle.
“For our struggle
is not against enemies of blood and flesh, but against the rulers, against the
authorities, against the cosmic powers of this present darkness, against the
spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly places.”
Human beings, even those willingly serving the powers malignant
and perverse purposes, are not those against we conduct our “struggle,” our
subversive, counter-revolutionary activity on God’s behalf. Those who side with
the powers need freedom and healing as much as those they have helped victimize
(albeit in different ways). We will return in some detail to both of these
matters through this study.
Individualism,
consumerism, and experientialism are the foci around which most American tell
their stories. Individualism reflects
our desire to live independently, avoiding community (though many of us think it is a good idea), accountability, and
liability for one another. We want to make our own way and life in this world
unencumbered by the constraints of tradition, commitments, and relationships.
As my three-year-old grandson says: “I can do it by myself!” We hope to be
self-made people. And self-made people always worship their makers!
“Freedom” has
become devalued in the West, diluted to mean only freedom “from” - freedom from
any non-legal constraints on our desires and decisions. This kind of freedom
creates inherent conflict with commitments, accountability, roots, traditions, community,
or relationships. This is a kind of “naked’ freedom, the sheer capacity to
chose.
Consumerism has so fully and
successfully snagged most of us in this part of the world that it is, in
effect, our default religion. This pseudo-Gospel offers a creed (“I shop
therefore I am”), a mission (“Whoever dies with the most toys wins!”), a set of
“spiritual” practices (the actual processes of acquiring and consuming), a
cathedral (the shopping mall), and a vision of the “end” (a life in which
acquisition and consumption have filled all our needs and wants, erased worry from
our minds, and set our lives in a land flowing with cash and comforts). Our way
of life starring ourselves as consumers is evident to all, easy to criticize,
and seemingly impossible to escape. When those outside (or sometimes even
inside!) the church claim that Christians do not live any differently than
non-churched people do, I suspect it is our consumeristic ways of life they
have in mind. Our priorities, patterns, and practices of consumption do not
differ from theirs in any significant ways.
Consumerism as a
way of life operates on the principle that consuming constitutes our identity,
our reality, and that our perceived “needs” take precedence over
everything else. Thus, the slogan, “I shop therefore I am.” This has the
individual “I” at the center. This “I” is active in establishing its own
existence. And that activity is acquisition and consumption, a centripetal
movement. Whoever or whatever sits at the center of our world, is our “ultimate
concern” as theologian Paul Tillich famously put it, that without which we
cannot conceive of being truly happy, or “God.”
Experientialism is the last element of
our new I.C.E. Age. We thirst for a never-ending series of experiences that
shuffle and re-shuffle our emotions, sending them to their boundaries and
beyond in search of a life well-lived. I call this the “Cat in Hat” syndrome.
You remember Dr. Seuss’ famous children’s story, don’t you? Two children sit at
home on a wet rainy day with nothing to do while their parents are at work.
Then the Cat in the Hat appears with all sorts of different and amazing
spectacles that keep pushing the entertainment envelope and leave a swath of
destruction in its wake. A cardinal sin in our I.C.E. Age is having nothing to
do, which easily and quickly morphs into boredom. And boredom is never to be
tolerated! And the explosion of new media technologies beat back every
threat of time with nothing to do.
Affluence
creates mobility which leaves fewer experiences or spectacles out of reach for
many of us. And accumulating such experiences is now touted as the way to the
good life. “Spend ever less of your time and money on stuff, and
ever more on experiences instead,” advises James Wallman, advocate for what he
calls the “experience revolution” (“Spend Less on Stuff, More on Experiences,” The Guardian, https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/feb/27/spend-less-on-stuff-experiences-materialism-experientialism). Mobility decreases the importance
and significance of locality, friendships, and commitment as we believe we can
find satisfying experiences with interesting people wherever we want. Each of
these experiences, however, raises our threshold of satisfaction, creating a
need not only for another experience but a better, greater, more spectacular
experience. And on it goes. Such a way of living, centered upon our search for
“life” by experiencing as wide an array of spectacles and wonders as possible, results
in living “a mile wide and an inch deep.”
This seems to be
the default mode of life in our time - breadth without depth, always deferring
the question of meaning through an ironic search for the next great
entertainment. This restless and relentless quest for the next and the new
fuels a situation in which, if we are not “amusing ourselves to
death,” we are condemning ourselves to life without depth, without roots
which ground us in place and relationships.
Each of these
three I.C.E. Age features are centered on or have us at the center of life.
Until we get the issue of who runs our lives sorted out, none of the rest
of that matters anyway. And a theology worthy of the name will continually face
us with this reality in every way possible.
Summary
The world we live in, then, is driven by ideologies, isms,
institutions, systems, and the like which, though created to do the work of
establishing and maintaining conditions for the flourishing of human life, have
betrayed that mandate and sought to wrest for control of creation for
themselves and their (cross) purposes. Driven by a fear of death both these
powers and human beings collude in trying to satisfy their desire for security
and significance in each other. The debris of this collusion is everywhere
evident within and around us.
Christ has defeated these unruly powers at the cross and begun the
process of pacifying and restoring them to their created purpose. The church is
the chief agent God uses in this pacification work (the church’s subversive,
counter-revolutionary service). Its existence, and way of life as a people who
can live free of the powers determined efforts to maintain their illicit power
over us as well as begin to develop patterns and practices of new life that
point to the kingdom of God which is coming and is our destiny.
Both the perpetrators and victims of the power’s malign rule are
enslaved to them and need liberation, healing, and reconciliation. In our age,
our I.C.E. Age, the chief manifestations of the powers’ rule we face in
America, individualism, consumerism, and experientialism form the witch’s brew
of confusion, corruption, conflict, and conceit that bedevil us. It is this
cluster of forces we must seek to subvert and provide alternatives to. This is,
according to Paul (Jesus too with his Kingdom of God movement), our vocation as
God’s people, following God in his work to reclaim and restore creatures and
creation for his good purposes.
And because these powers have both an inner and an outer reality,
“spiritual” means embodied, not something inward, inner, immaterial or the
like. Within us, among us, and around us the struggle we undertake will be intimate,
social, and cosmic, often at the same time.
This is our world. The world God loves and has acted in Christ to
save. The world his people do battle in against the powers of deformation and
destruction in the power of his saving victory over said powers. Defeated but
not yet banished, these powers continue to resist Christ’s will and push their
I.C.E. Age agenda. Herein lies the crux of our calling.
We can picture all this this way:
Death
Principalities & Powers
Individualism Consumerism Experientialism
(Part
2)
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