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Worship in All of Life
by William Edgar
[Taken from Give Praise to God: A Vision for Reforming
Worship: Celebrating the Legacy of James Montgomery Boice, ed. Philip
Graham Ryken, Derek
W. H. Thomas, and J. Ligon Duncan III (Phillipsburg, NJ: P & R Publishing,
2003), 339-357. Used by permission of P & R Publishing Company, copyright ©2003.
All rights reserved. Materials are not to be distributed to other web
locations for retrieval, published in other media, or mirrored at other
sites with permission of P & R Publishing Company.]
It has become a truism to speak of the globalization of world culture. McDonalds,
the world-wide web, the Visa card, rap music, cell phones, all these represent
icons of the network that has become our common experience around the world.
Inevitably, such globalization has affected the church. Jubilee 2000 saw
thousands of people from every corner of the globe coming to Rome. Recently
a group of Turkish Christians visited South Korea. They were so impressed
with the vibrant churches they saw, they decided to plant Presbyterian churches,
using Reformed theology and the synodical form of government, in Turkey.
In China, while the house church is illegal, hundreds of Chinese scholars
trained in Europe are free to teach the Christian worldview in official universities,
because it is respectable to hold that pragmatically, faith in Christ is
effective for the social good. In Harlem, various African believers have
formed churches, but have brought their tribal rivalries with them into the
new world.
In this setting there are enormous opportunities for the gospel. But there
are enormous challenges and threats as well. The growing interdependence of
people around the world means that churches are interdependent as well. On
one level this is no doubt a good thing, reflecting the injunction that we
work together until “we all reach the unity of the faith” (Eph.
4:13). Yet it also means the bad habits of the strong and powerful churches
will be shared with the more vulnerable churches. For example, the tendency
of American churches to believe that money is the main force in enabling ministries
to succeed is being imported to many different assemblies around the world,
even in the poorer places where wealth is not easily generated. The so-called “health
and wealth” gospel has made a substantial impact on the continent of
Africa, and is wreaking havoc in the churches.
But here, we want to concentrate on a particular problem. Another typically
Western tendency that is often exported around the world is impatience. Specifically,
we are impatient with the slow pace of change. We long for the gospel to make
an impact, to see change in the surrounding cultures, but it does not seem
to be happening, at least, at the rate we would like. Perhaps Americans are
the least patient of all peoples.
Three misguided strategies
These are frustrating times for evangelical
Christians in North America. Despite the enormous boost they received when Newsweek declared
1976 to be the “year
of the evangelical,” and the promise during the ensuing years of an
increasing evangelical presence in politics, the results, two and one half
decades later, are disappointing at best. Sociologist Dale McConkey recently
commented that evangelicals are, still, largely in the socioeconomic margins,
even adding that they will likely remain in their tribes: “All of these
[profiles mentioned] place evangelicals at arms length from the strongest
forces of modernity, making it more likely that evangelicals will be able
to barricade their traditionalist worldview away from the corrosive forces
of modernity.” [1] Why
so little impact? What should be done? What can be done, if evangelicals
are to be faithful to their calling?
Three deeply mistaken strategies are often used in a situation such as ours.
The first is rationalized aggression. Confounded by the lack of progress, and
stymied by the apparent inertia of many colleagues, some Christians have resorted
to baptized violence. From attempts to destroy abortion clinics, at one extreme,
to the practice of uncivil methods of discourse, a softer form of aggression,
a love that “endures all things” (1 Cor. 13:7) is pushed aside
in order to accomplish social goals more forcefully. Unfortunately, such tactics
are not only in violation of Jesus’ order to Peter, to put away the sword
(John 18:11), but they are usually counterproductive. Vaclav Havel, the visionary
leader of the Velvet Revolution faced serious criticism once he was established
as President of free Czechoslovakia (as it was then). After the heady years
of the overthrow of Communism, now the people longed to move faster into the
new freedom. Havel replied that he too was disappointed, yet in order to bring
more progress they dare not sink to using the same methods as their former
oppressors. It would be like the child trying to make the flower grow faster
by tugging at its stem. Instead, the flower is ripped up.
A second approach is quite different.
It is the way of resignation. Paul Weyrich, in his now famous Open Letter to
his constituency, went public, saying evangelicals had been operating on the
false premiss that a majority of Americans agreed
with their basically conservative values. Because they don’t, we should
all rethink our position on social and political involvement. With the oft-quoted
statement, “I believe we probably have lost the culture war,” Weyrich
called evangelicals to withdraw from public institutions, and instead, practice “holiness.” [2]
While understandable, this view is quite hopeless, literally, for it is based
on
two mistaken assumptions. The first is, as Weyrich puts it, that Christians
need to find agreement in the surrounding culture before they can truly act
as agents for its transformation. Is it biblical to strive for a consensus,
hoping that a minority can become the prevailing voice, so that our country
may be called “Christian America”? No, the Bible does not call
New Testament Christians to work for a consensus where there are winners over
losers. Rather, it calls believers to strive to live a godly life. This means
a public policy where leaders all seek a truly representative republic, one
where every religious group has the right to build its institutions without
penalty for what they may believe. This is not because all religions are somehow
true, or, even less, saying the same thing. This is because we are in the time
of God’s patience, not in the time of Joshua’s armies.
The second assumption is that there
are only two options, driving for dominance or fleeing for purity.[3] But
is this biblical? The Scriptures call believers
in every culture, no matter how apparently friendly or unfriendly to the gospel,
to live in the tension of operating within the system without succumbing to
it (John 17:13-19). Followers of Christ are called to strive for justice and
peace in every setting. There may be occasions when withdrawal is an acceptable
temporary move. But usually the opposite is the case. It is when we face temptation,
and take the risks that go with it, that we become authentic. Paul tells us
to “test all things” (1 Thess. 5:21). The author of Hebrews describes
the mature as those, “who by constant use have trained themselves to
distinguish good from evil” (Heb. 5:14). In fact, withdrawal is usually
a shameful accommodation to a social trend that represents the very essence
of worldliness [4]. Cultural analysts tell us America is “going
indoors.” We
don’t go to the bank teller or the ticket vendor anymore, but do it all
online, from the comfort of our home. Should we really be imitating this worldly
pattern of retreat into isolation?
A third stratagem is related, but different again. It is the approach of “evangelism
only.” By this is meant that while cultural activity is perhaps allowable,
it is beside the point. Winning souls is the most obedient endeavor in which
to engage during the days in the end times. Some would say that evangelism
is the highest Christian vocation. All other activity is in a support role.
A world-class evangelical musician likes to say, “I don’t give
away my strategy to the enemy.” He further explains that when he plays
in concerts, he is hoping the music will draw people in the audience to him
as a person. Then, in conversation with them afterwards, he can give them a
tape containing his testimony. But, again, while no one would deny the value
of evangelism, it is never a question of either/or in Scripture. The church
is called to make disciples of the nations, but also to teach them to “obey
everything I have commanded you” (Mt. 28:20). There is much in the Christian
life that does not directly relate to evangelism, and yet, like playing an
instrument well, does not need to be justified by the “real work” of
evangelism. Indeed, evangelism is rarely discussed as an individual calling
in the New Testament. Although every believer should “be prepared to
give an answer to everyone who asks” (1 Pet. 3:15), only a few are specifically
qualified as evangelists (Eph. 4:11).
A better way
If none of these tactics is appropriate, then what are evangelical Christians
to do? Romans 12 and following gives us the answer. The Letter to the Romans
is one of the greatest masterpieces of religious writing of all times. No
wonder it has been the dynamic for so many crucial turning points in the
history of the church. Augustine was brought to faith by reading Romans 13.
Martin Luther was delivered from his sense of guilt before a holy God when
he understood Romans 3:21-4, where Paul describes the free gift of “alien
righteousness.” John Wesley felt his “heart strangely warmed” at
the reading of Luther’s preface to his commentary on Romans at the
Aldersgate Street society meeting. Robert Haldane’s lectures on Romans
to the students of Geneva led to the great French revivals of the nineteenth
century. Karl Barth’s reading of Romans led him to proclaim the return
of God’s sovereignty in a way that, as he put it, was like a man climbing
a dark tower, and grasp a rope for guidance, only to find it rang a bell
and awakened the whole countryside. Francis Schaeffer’s lectures on
Romans from the Café in Lausanne established the fundamental doctrinal
foundation that led to the wider impact of l’Abri. The force of this
letter has no explanation other than the power of its primary author, the
one who inspired all of Scripture, but who spoke with particular impact here.
The twelfth chapter to the end of Romans contains invaluable truth in answer
to the question, how to effect the surrounding culture, without falling into
the three misguided approaches mentioned. As the word “therefore” indicates,
this chapter comes at a transition. Typical of Paul’s letters, the first
eleven chapters have been foundational. Now he turns to the application. Not
that the first part is without application. Nor that the second has no foundations.
But the first part lays the ground, carefully, for the universal guilt of mankind,
the free gift of God’s grace, and the way to live in God’s grace
until the end of history. Even chapters 9-11 are foundational, because they
explain how God is still faithful to his promise, despite the unbelief of his
chosen people, the Jews. How is it, he asks, can God call them and yet they
be unresponsive? He answers with the doctrine of election. They have not been
forgotten, but not all Jews are elect. Their unbelief opens a way for the Gentiles
to come to faith. But the Jews still may return, and thus both Jew and Gentile
can be saved. The plan is so marvelous, Paul ends with a doxology of wonder
and praise, for the depth and riches of God’s wise plan (11:33-36).
On the strength of all this, one could wonder, what is there left to say? But
there are five more chapters! And Paul is quite urgent about it: “I appeal
to you,” he tells them (RSV). What could possibly be so urgent, after
all that he has already affirmed?
Worship! Yes, what Paul has to tell his readers, after this matchless build-up,
is that they must worship God. This is the culmination of everything he has
set down. More precisely, he tells them to offer their bodies as “living
sacrifices” (12:1). The Old Testament flavor is apparent here. Like the
animal sacrifices of the old covenant, this one must be holy and pleasing to
God. No blemished lamb for the Lord God. But unlike the ancient sacrifices
there is no bloodshed in view. It is the human body, regenerate, redeemed from
sin, that we are to present, “as those who have been brought from death
to life” (6:13). Why this stress on the body? It has been argued that
Paul uses the body here as a symbol for the whole person. Our body is the vehicle
for the self. And, of course, there is no reason to limit what he is saying
to the physical self. But neither is there good reason to go beyond his words.
The body is to be sanctified. Paul often alludes to the physical body, both
in this letter and elsewhere (Rom. 6:6, 12; 8:10; 1 Cor. 5:3; 6:13; 2 Cor 5:6,
etc.). Unlike Plato, the biblical view is not embarrassed by the physical self.
It is part of God’s image. Though life in the body has become a curse
(Rom. 7:24) redemption is incomplete without the physical resurrection (8:23;
Phil 3:21).
Worship with the body is Paul’s first and foremost injunction. In view
of the many abuses of the body in the surrounding culture, one can well appreciate
his emphasis. In our own day we are rapidly slouching towards pure hedonism,
the degeneration of the self into permissive decadence. Holiness for the apostle
is not withdrawal, but it is sacrifice. We are told here to give up what we
want for our gratification, to say no to our appetites, and present ourselves
to God. Our entire lives should be an offering to the Lord. The decalogue tells
us to have “no other gods before my face” (Ex. 20:3). All of life
is to be a calling coram deo, a covenant walk with the Lord. So much would
change if we were to take this seriously and lift ourselves up to God in perpetual
sacrifice, for, “no one whose hope is in you will ever be put to shame” (Ps.
25:3). This is not “evangelism only,” far from it. Rather, Paul
is calling us to everything that is holy and pleasing to God. Soon in the text
he will spell out what this means, and set forth many areas of life in need
of obedience to God. But here he tells us the basic, most fundamental principle,
to worship God with our bodies.
He further qualifies this worship as spiritual. The Greek word he uses, logiken,
is unusual. It means spiritual in the sense of rational (the AV translates, “your
reasonable service”). This is no doubt, first, because our worship is
meant to be voluntary, conscious, intelligent, and not mechanical. The body
may be physical, but it is not autonomous, guided purely by instinct. Second,
however, the term probably means something like systematic. The word logiken contains the term logos, from which we derive argument, or account. The idea
is that worshiping God must be controlled by our worldview. There is no area
of life which falls outside of a rational, systematic understanding. While
we may not have all the elements of a biblical worldview firmly in hand, we
should nevertheless strive towards owning a full-orbed world and life view
which takes “every thought captive to make it obedient to Christ” (2
Cor. 10:5). This is not intellectualism, far from it. And it is the opposite
of pietism, or of a kind of quietist spirituality which “lets go and
lets God.” While God is the dynamic, and, indeed, the Holy Spirit is
the primary agent of sanctification, to the point that we cannot ever rationally
control or even understand the process, yet, still, there is a human agency
without which no progress can be made. “Work out your salvation,” Paul
tells his Philippian readers, though “with fear and trembling, for it
is God who works in you to will and to act according to his good purpose” (Phil.
2:12-13).
A wide-ranging prohibition
Two aspects coexist in this radical worship. The first is negative. “Do
not conform any longer to the pattern of this world,” is Paul’s
next injunction. Christian faith is world denying. It denies the flesh and
the devil as well. Why does the apostle begin with the negative? In his writings
he does not always begin with an interdiction, but he often does. To the Ephesians,
in chapters 4 and 5, he gives a series of requirements which begin with a prohibition: “you
must no longer live as the Gentiles” (4:17); “each of you must
put off falsehood” (4:25); “he who has been stealing must steal
no longer” (4:28); “do not let unwholesome talk come out of your
mouths” (4:29); “there must not even be a hint of sexual immorality” (5:3),
and so it goes. Each of these, to be sure, is immediately followed by the positive
command which represents the amends. To take but one example, after telling
the thief to stop stealing, he continues, “but [he] must work, doing
something useful with his own hands, that he may have something to share with
those in need” (4:28). But why not simply state the positive and let
the negative be assumed?
The reason is the way in which the
order of salvation (ordo
salutis) is built
upon the history of salvation (historia salutis). Jesus was humiliated,
suffered, died, and then was raised up to glory. He fulfilled the requirements
mankind
failed to enact. In our Christian lives, then, we show forth the virtues of
the one who brought us from darkness into God’s marvelous light. Again,
throughout the text of Ephesians, Paul reminds the readers they were once children
of darkness, living like the Gentiles, but now, they have been taught Christ
and have put off the old self, and put on the new. The Decalogue reflects the
same principle. Out of the ten, no fewer than eight of the commandments begin
with a negative. As children of darkness by nature, we need to be told what
not to do first, and then we may go on to the positive. This does not mean
law must always precede gospel. In fact, the gospel is always first, and any
meaningful application of the law cannot be made without respecting the entire
context of the work of salvation. The Decalogue begins with the premises that
God brought the people out of Egypt’s bondage and into a place where
they could worship God in freedom. Still, we need to rehearse the order: because
of who you are in Christ, by God’s mercy, desist from this practice,
and then begin another discipline.
In Romans 12:2 Paul prohibits conformity to worldly patterns. The phrase literally
says, “do not scheme together according to this age.” Just as worship
is systematic, so is worldliness. We are being delivered from our entire era’s
deep structures. A particular age has a shape, or a culture. Everything in
life comes in patterns, whether it be trends in the social world, political
structures, or personal habits of the heart. C. S. Lewis once said he could
tell what kind of person you are by whether you began the day reading the newspaper
or the Bible. Becoming disentangled with the world is more than following a
list of rules. It means radically changing one’s behavior patterns. Often
that means looking into the deep fabric in the surrounding culture. David Inge
famously remarked, “If you marry the spirit of the age you will soon
find yourself a widower.” Marriage is a good analogy, here. This present
evil age is not manifest simply with a few clearly perceived idols. Avoiding
the world’s seductions is not simply a matter of rejecting certain temptations
to sin. Rather, since the attachment is like a conjugal alliance, the remedy
is divorce! And following divorce, we must continue to avoid any compromise,
any ambiguous relational patterns.
J. B. Philips translated this verse, “Don’t let the world around
you squeeze you into its mould.” The world could squeeze us like a boa
constrictor, until we suffocate, unless we refuse to conform. Christians often
are not aware of the subtlety with which conformity beckons. A familiar parable
makes the point humorously, if forcefully. Petrov was a prisoner in a work
camp, a part of the Gulag system under the old Soviets. Each day, he went to
work in a designated area, and then returned through a check point to his barracks.
One evening he returned to his barracks with a wheelbarrow containing a large
sack. At the check point, the guard stopped him, and asked what he was stealing
from the work site in that sack. Petrov protested that he was not stealing
a thing, and that the bag contained only sawdust. The guard opened it up, and
sure enough, it contained only sawdust. The next evening, the procedure recommenced.
The guard stopped the inmate with his wheelbarrow and sack, but all he could
find was sawdust, again. This routine happened again several evenings in a
row, until finally the exasperated guard told Petrov he knew he was stealing
something, but couldn’t decide what it was, but he promised not to denounce
him if he would only confess. “Wheelbarrows, sir, I am stealing wheelbarrows,” the
clever prisoner admitted.
It is often the same in the Christian life. We think we are resisting the world
because we refuse to be taken in by the content of the world’s ways.
Yet we are nevertheless seduced by the form, the container which shapes that
content. We may reject a secular ideology, for example, or a secular philosophy.
But we accept the terms of secularization by privatizing our faith, and assuming
it has not incidence on government, the workplace, the school. We may reject
any attempt to embezzle church funds, but still, we run the church like a corporation.
We switch channels on the TV when there is foul language, but we keep the medium
itself alive, forgetting it often tends to reduce almost any program to entertainment.
We withdraw our children from the school system, only to seclude them in the
worldly atmosphere of our own subculture.
An intensive command
In the same sentence, though, Paul runs to the positive. “But,” he
says, “be transformed.” Notice the opposite of nonconformity is
not “be different,” or, worse, “be yourself.” Rather,
it is the constant process of renewal which characterizes the Christian life.
This age, and its patterns, are going to disappear. They are ephemeral, temporary.
In them we wither and stagnate. But Christian renewal is permanent, solid,
everlasting. In it we progress and grow. The word literally means metamorphosis.
It is the same concept as Paul elucidates in 2 Corinthians 3:18 when he describes
believers as those who gaze upon the face of Christ, and therefore “are
being transformed into his likeness with ever increasing glory” (3:18).
John Murray’s commentary on this verse is eloquent:
Sanctification is a process of revolutionary change
in that which is the center of consciousness. This sounds a fundamental
note in the biblical
ethic. It is the thought of progression that strikes at the stagnation,
complacency, pride of achievement so often characterizing Christians.
It is not the beggarly notion of second blessing that the apostle
propounds but that of constant renewal, of metamorphosis in the seat
of consciousness. [5]
The change is nothing less than radical. Again, the
notion of worldview expresses the radicalness. But we should take care
not to limit ourselves
to merely an outlook. The optic metaphor in the term worldview can be
misleading. It fails fully to carry the dynamic aspect of our vision.
We are not limited to having the right ideas, even the right doctrines,
in Paul’s command. We are told to change, to be converted.
We may sense a problem here. We are uncomfortable with being told to
be changed by the renewing of our minds, as though we could possibly
effect such a transformation
ourselves. On the surface, it sounds as though Paul were telling us to “get
it together,” to “pull up our bootstraps.” Surprisingly,
in a way, he is saying just that. He is telling us to be changed and to renew
our minds. This is no different from any command in Scripture. We are told
by Our Lord to “be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect” (Mt.
5:48). We can no more achieve this by our own merits than any of the commands.
Only God can effect such a change. And yet he does so, not by violating human
agency, but by engaging it. In the same way that our worship is rational, here
it is voluntary. The great difference between self-generated transformation
and biblical conversion is that God is the one ultimately at work to effect
the change. The underlying presupposition here in Paul’s text is that
we do all of this by faith. How can we know that? Simply because of the opening
words: in view of God’s mercy, he tells us. This is a world away from
the self-help pablum of the Oprah Winfrey Show or the New Age bromides of Deepak
Chopra. The only way we can be transformed is by operating, in all areas of
life, under the grace of God, who gives to all who believe in him unconditionally.
Again, J. B. Phillips puts it nicely: “Don’t let the world around
you squeeze you into its mould, but let God re-make you so that your whole
attitude of mind is changed.” Paul is gospel-driven. The gospel is God’s
mercy for undeserving sinners. But the gospel effects change. That change is
no less caused by the God of all mercies than initial salvation. And it is
comprehensive.
In telling us to have our minds renewed Paul is not courting intellectualism.
The Greek word for mind, (nous) is not a technical term for the logical self.
Rather, it includes all faculties of perception, the feelings, and the capacity
to make judgments. In Ephesians 4:23, Paul tells us we have been made new, “in
the attitude (spirit) of our minds.” From the context we can tell he
is being quite broad, since he likens this to having “put on the new
self” (4:24). Here, in Romans 12:2, he is no doubt telling us to be renewed
in our essential, spiritual selves. Our logic would certainly be a part of
this mind, but so would our acumen, our discernment, our understanding, in
short, our worldview.
In the second part of verse 2, Paul tells us what this is going to look like.
It is in order to test, or approve God’s will. We ought to be careful
here to discern exactly what he has in mind. He is not saying that we should
suddenly become the arbiters of God’s will. We are mere creatures, and
it is nothing short of sabotage to imagine we can in any sense become the judges
of the law. James compares this kind of attitude to slander. In his argument,
he puts it this way:
Brothers, do not slander one another. Anyone who speaks
against his brother or judges him speaks against the law and judges
it. When you
judge the law, you are not keeping it, but sitting in judgment
on it. There is only one Lawgiver and Judge, the one who is able
to save and
destroy. But you - who are you to judge your neighbor? (4:11-12)
What Paul means, rather, is that we should learn
by experience what God’s will might be. God’s will never
fails. It applies to every situation.
God’s will is the very definition of what is good, pleasing and perfect.
The good is the will of God. The pleasing is the will of God. The perfect is
the will of God. The will of God is nothing less than his character, shaped
into laws for our conduct. We can never change that. It is the summum bonum.
But we can discover his will in its marvelous breadth and beauty. His commands
are never burdensome (1 John 5:3). But they need to be practiced in order fully
to demonstrate their liberating character. It is interesting to note that the
word translated “approve” here is the same word used earlier in
Romans, in 1:28, when Paul is describing the human depravity that deserves
God’s displeasure: “Furthermore, since they did not think it worthwhile
to retain (to approve) the knowledge of God, he gave them over to a depraved
mind, to do what ought not to be done” he declares. The failure of humanity
to recognize the goodness and perfection of God’s will deserves God’s
judgment. And that judgment takes the form of relegating that humanity to desperate
life styles.
Upon the approval of God’s will or not: that is where everything is based,
and everything is determined. And so it is that only those who are under God’s
mercy, the beneficiaries of his alien righteousness, can effectively approve
God’s will. Another way of putting it is this: developing a fully biblical
worldview in which we are constantly showing forth the virtues of God’s
character, as revealed in his law, that is where all things are decided. Once
again, we have the clearest possible teaching that all of life is meant to
be worship. There is no area falling outside of the will of God. Now, of course,
this opens up the whole question of discerning God’s will. It is one
thing to affirm in theory that everything is included in God’s will,
it is quite another to demonstrate what this means. Reformed Christians have
rightly been criticized for waxing eloquent on the theory of worldviews but
coming up short on concrete examples. It may not always be easy to find out
what God’s will might be for certain questions. What does his law say
about stem cell research, about musical rhythms, about teaching mathematics?
The answer to these kinds of issues is not always evident. And yet in principle
there must be answers, or we could not be transformed and renewed. Is there
a biblical approach to science? To marketing, the arts, or politics? Where
should we begin?
An extensive command
What sorts of issues will be at the top of the agenda for the church in Rome
as it renews its mind? The subsequent lines tell us. Paul’s first concern
is for the life within the church community. He is anxious that no one in
the body assume that his gifts be considered higher or more important than
those of any one else (12:3-8). Yet he reminds his readers right away that
theirs is a global outlook. He wants them to be aware of the world-wide fellowship
of the saints, some in affliction and need, but all of them family (9-16).
Relations to outsiders are crucial as well. So he moves right to the question
of persecution. He is anxious that believers not take justice into their
own hands, but always defer to God’s judgment. He asks them to do everything
possible to ensure a peaceful coexistence with their neighbors. In fact,
he tells his readers, in a counter-intuitive way, that if they treat their
enemies with the kindness of the gospel, rather than the justice of vengeance,
they will accomplish great things for the advancement of the kingdom (17-21).
These are matters directly flowing
out of the worldview the apostle has been setting forth. Not that it is easy,
nor immediately apparent how the worldview
should apply. For example, how would a balanced, biblical doctrine of calling
be developed from the verses on the gifts (3-8)? Some things are obvious. The
fundamental equality, the equal worth of each gift, rather than a hierarchy,
can be derived directly from these verses. In chapter 14, Paul speaks further
about treatment of fellow believers whose conscience is more tender. Indeed,
he cares a great deal about the protection of those weaker brethren from self-betrayal.
That much is quite clearly established. But what about the larger issues surrounding
calling? Are there not governing offices in the church? What about the missionary
calling to evangelize the world? And what about the legitimate vocations in
the world, such as professions, citizenship, family life, and so many others?
And what about cultural transformation? Many would agree with H. Richard Niebuhr’s “Christ
the Transformer of Culture,” the fifth option (which happens to be that
of Augustine and Calvin) in his classic scheme?[6] But there
are many critics of this view. When Paul says, “Do not be overcome by
evil, but overcome evil by good” (21), how active is that overcoming
meant to be?
It is important to work through these texts and see how the apostle argues.
He is not presenting an abstract theory of calling. Many of us have benefitted
from Abraham Kuyper’s notion of sphere sovereignty. In it the church
is independent, but in dialectical relation to other domains, such as the school,
the state, the family. If this is Paul’s view, he does not arrive at
it by means of social theory. Yet, he does assume certain social structures
in which it is perfectly legitimate for Christians to participate. He assumes
them, because he tells his readers how to treat them, how to live in relation
to them. In this way his message is quite universal, for he does not presuppose
an ideal social order before a Christian vocation may be lived-out. But his
assumption sends an important message. Social change will occur in the present
régime, but within the existing structures. Paul never calls for a revolution
that would change the structures of society. This is partly because he respects
the propriety of the order God laid down at the creation of the world. But
even when those structures are not altogether good ones, or when we may not
live in the best of circumstances, Paul still does not encourage abrupt change.
He tells the Corinthians not to change jobs or to seek release from marriage
(1 Cor. 7:17 ff.). This is not for reasons of social conservatism, but because
of the greater priority of the kingdom of God. Indeed, change will occur when
the church is faithful to its calling in every realm of life. Thus, even within
these earthly structures, significant change may occur. For example, in a marriage
where only one spouse is a believer, the unbelieving spouse is sanctified and
the children are holy (14).
Indeed, the apostle clearly sets down kingdom injunctions for believers according
to their situation. Towards church neighbors he tells them to employ spiritual
gifts with zeal. The devotion of brotherly love is in an eschatological setting: “joyful
in hope, patient in affliction, faithful in prayer” (12:12). Hospitality,
living in harmony, refusing elitism, these characterize life in the body of
Christ. Towards outside neighbors Paul’s commands take a different shape.
With them we must learn the patience of a persecuted people. Resisting vigilante
justice, Christians should bless their enemies, and “overcome evil with
good” (21). Submitting to governing authorities is right, because they
have been established by God himself (13:1-5). This is counter-intuitive for
believers who will inherit the earth and even judge the world (Mt. 5:5; 1 Cor.
6:2), that is, until we realize that the creation structures are still in place.
Marriage, procreation, labor, worship, and, indeed, government, these are still
fundamental to the ordering of God’s world today. Magistrates are thus
God’s servants (13:6), and though they may not be brethren, they are
to be honored because their task includes “to do you [believers, citizens]
good,” and to punish evil. Paul could never say this of the church. He
would never say that the church is an agent of wrath, and “does not bear
the sword for nothing” (13:4).
Notice how positive Paul is about governing authorities. Though not the church,
they are established by God, and their task is to promote the social good as
well as to judge against evil. True, he tells the believers to obey not only
for fear of punishment but for conscience’s sake (6). But even here the
issue is not merely pragmatic, but based on the ultimate criterion of divine
institution (2). This approach gives comfort to the Reformed view of “Christ
the transformer of culture.” Many Christians today would disagree. Stanley
Hauerwas, for example, takes exception to the Reformed idea of transforming
society through social involvement. This is because he is opposed to a worldview
that seeks to secure a more just society by participating in politics. The
only political involvement we may have is “because we recognize that
our politics inherently involves compromise and accommodation.” Thus,
for him, the church is the primary sphere of activity. To be sure, in the church
we “gain the experience to negotiate and make positive contributions
to whatever society in which we find ourselves.”[7] But
any change in society must be indirect. Hauerwas is unable with enthusiasm
to invite Christians to
consider a life in politics as a fully valid calling. Furthermore, the church
for him becomes a sort of pilot plant which models the virtues and ethical
norms for the rest of society. The idea of each sphere carrying its own set
of norms, and being mutually complimentary, is foreign to him.
Based on our understanding of Paul’s argument in Romans 12 and 13, we
would have to disagree. To be sure, the church is called to holiness. Paul
can intersperse injunctions to obey governors with behavioral norms for the
body of Christ. The entire fourteenth chapter is devoted to discussing the
strong and the weak of conscience. In a way that would seem to comfort Hauerwas’ approach,
he relates the life of the church to missions. At verse 7 of chapter 15, Paul
makes the link between mutual toleration in the church and the plan of God
for the nations. He recalls the argument from chapters 9-11 about Jews and
Gentiles, and then appeals to the “priestly service” of his own
missionary work (15:16). But Paul is not so much saying that the church will
convert the world as he is saying God is extending his kingdom throughout the
world, of which the church and its life are a primary component.
Think globally
In his brilliant comments on Paul’s missionary theology, Herman Ridderbos
notes that the evangelistic consciousness of the church is expressed at several
levels. For example, the church is deeply involved in Paul’s own efforts.
Moreover the church is to be ready with the equipment of the gospel of peace
(Eph. 6:15). It is an essential part of the church’s nature that it give
testimony, directly and indirectly, to those on the outside. It’s inner
dynamic, however, is an understanding of God’s great work of redemption,
both extensively and intensively, now and until history comes to an end.
And the deepest motives for this, just as for the work
of the apostle himself, lie in the consciousness that the church
is included [emphasis
mine] in the great world-encompassing work of God in Jesus Christ.
It is not the church itself that is the ultimate object, not its
number
and prestige, but the revelation of the full eschatological salvation
in Christ, of whom the church is the pleroma, that is to say, the
bearer of the glory of Christ (Eph. 1:23; 4:13, 16). [8]
At this level, then, we are looking at questions
beyond evangelism and even missions. We are looking at the fullest
possible picture of God’s
work in the world. We are seeing an eschatologically comprehensive approach
to cosmic history.
This is why the apostle can so freely use language from the Old Testament,
even while he is profoundly aware of the special characteristics of the present
time. From his quotes of Job, the Psalms, the prophets, the Pentateuch, to
his use of the Decalogue, there seems to be no dichotomy in the instruction
given between the old and new administrations. That is because both are administrations
of grace, and both require obedience to the law of God. It is true that in
the New Testament era the configuration of spheres is different from Mosaic
times. But the fundamental principles are the same. The movement known as Theonomy errs in compressing the two administrations, and thus confusing the two different
contexts for the exercise of God’s law. But it correctly reminds us that
God’s law is very much in force even in the Christian dispensation.
So, is there a Christian view of the arts, a biblical approach to politics,
to education, commerce, entertainment, and so on? The answer must be affirmative,
or we will find ourselves claiming God’s law has gaps in it, and that
we cannot truly “test and approve what God’s will is” in
every situation. Making the connections requires patiently drawing implications
from God’s law and applying them in every sphere of life. There is far
more data to draw from than we might imagine. When we are free to navigate
in the Old and the New Testaments together, we will be surprised at how much
there is. Sometimes the information will be direct, clearly spelled-out. At
other times it will be indirect, requiring wisdom and insight. God gives his
wisdom freely and ungrudgingly to all who ask in faith (Jas. 1:5).
But there is one condition for success in developing a biblical worldview that
is truly comprehensive. And that is, to heed the fundamental call to worship.
This is truly worship for all of life. The great historian, Arnold Toynbee,
is said to have been struck by the fact that civilization can only survive
when it is undergirded by a strong religious drive. He noticed that in Western
civilization, more often than not, it was the presence of Christians that lay
behind the most remarkable developments, from the arts, to medicine, democracy,
a higher standard of living, and so forth. He wondered exactly what the connection
might be. In one of the volumes he describes a dream he had had years before
the book project. In it, he walked into Ampleforth in Yorkshire and looked
up at the altar. Above it he saw a cross, and he went and clung to it. Then
he heard a voice, saying, amplexus expecta [“embrace and hope”].
He suddenly understood the connection. Great change occurs in lives and in
cultures not when people prescribe elaborate programs for change. Rather, they
occur when believers humble themselves before the crucified, risen Christ,
and cling to him, expecting change. In his dream, Toynbee preached this message
to the congregation. The key is the attitude. Change will occur, but his way,
and in his time. Not that believers are passive. Quite the contrary. They are
fully engaged. But only as worshiping creatures, sacrificing all to the Savior
whom God did not spare, but gave up for us, giving us, along with him, all
things besides (Rom. 8:32).
Act locally
When we read that all of this is “in view of God’s mercy,” we
realize we have only begun to grasp where that can take us. But there are many
practical directions we can move in, building on the past, and looking to the
future. We said at the beginning that our world is increasingly globalized.
How, then, can we function as a church, rooted in the local setting, but yet
aware of our world-wide reach? One answer is never to neglect the local communitarian
character of the church. It is tempting for church leaders to move around,
following the trend towards increasing mobility. The average American family
moves every four years! Pastors should consider very careful the wisdom of
staying in one parish for many, many years. It is patent that Dr Boice’s
life-long commitment to Tenth Presbyterian Church, and to living right in the
city of Philadelphia, was a visible testimony to the stability of our relationship
to Jesus Christ in a chaotic world. Not only leaders, but families and singles
should ponder very carefully before they decide to move. What will the impact
be on the children? On the local church? Is a promotion always the only option?
This does not mean the church should be tribal. It always has the great responsibility
of connecting to the surrounding culture, and even to the surrounding world.
In the recent crisis of the destruction of the World Trade Center many churches
in New York became engaged in giving critical aid to victims. Some of it was
financial. And here churches around the world responded by sending love-gifts
to specific New York ministries. But it also consisted in providing counseling
for those who were traumatized. We had the sobering privilege of attending
the worship service at Redeemer Presbyterian Church on the Sunday following
the terrorist attacks. Of course, it was packed with people, and the church
had to multiply the number of services throughout the day, just to accommodate
the demand. The bulletins were pared down to a simple page. The music was a
mixture of lamentation and resolution. The sermon was a powerful application
of John 11, where Jesus faced the death of his friend Lazarus with grief and
anger. He neither blamed the victim nor indulged in a good-guy-bad-guy narrative.
He furiously conquered death by becoming its victim. Thus, the unspeakable
evil of this attack, and all other manifestation of depravity, would one day
vanish, as in a bad dream.
Local churches can do a great deal, despite globalization. They can instruct
their members on proper Christian involvement in politics, in science, the
arts, agriculture, family life, careers of all kinds, in short, every sphere
of life. One remarkable African-American church in a major city has endeavored
to focus strong on training men in leadership. This is not due to chauvinism,
but because of its conviction that in the history of black American people
significant loss of male involvement in family and local church has reached
crisis proportions. Going back to slavery, where so many families were simply
broken up, and then compounded by the false promise of prosperity in the Northern
cities, where men left their local setting to try and find work in places like
Chicago and Detroit, in the earlier part of the twentieth century, men were
often isolated from communities that could call them to account. This church
works especially with the younger African-American males, trying to reach them
early, before they fall into the same patterns of isolation as their forefathers.
They create ministries requiring male leaders to function as visionaries, they
visit families to encourage men to nurture their wives and children, they set
up mentoring programs where young men can be guided by older, more experienced
males.
None of this means that specialized groups, not identical with church bodies,
cannot also have significant roles to play in encouraging believers to participate
in every sphere. The Arts Center Group in London, and the Parvis des arts in
Marseille, are but two in the growing numbers of fellowships dedicated to promoting
a Christian aesthetic in the artistic realm. Part of their work is simply to
instruct Christians in a full-orbed, biblical worldview. Part of it is to put
various Christians in particular fields, be it visual art, poetry, theater,
etc., in contact with one another. Publications, shows, employment opportunities,
all of these form aspects of their ministry.
Christians around the world need to return to this Pauline balance of worship
for all of life. In this way, when they resist the American temptation to impatience,
they can begin to see true change, long term, no doubt, but substantial nevertheless.
We are blessed at the seminary where I teach to have a strong group of Chinese
students. Hearing their stories is both fascinating and revealing. One can
hardly find examples of more devoted believers, whose faith has been hammered-out
on the anvil of persecution. At the same time, many of them report that the
theology of the house church movement is often pietistic, unable to “test
and approve what God’s will is” in every sphere of life. Politicians
are simply enemies of the gospel. Culture is a distraction. Science is for
technicians, the arts for the sensuous. And so many of our students are studying
Reformed Theology with a few to developing a specifically biblical approach
to politics and culture, one which will enable them to return one day, in God’s
providence, to their homeland, and be the kind of salt and light in society
their Master calls them to be.
And so, if we are to recognize ourselves as worshiping creatures, sacrificing
all to the Savior whom God did not spare, but gave up for us, giving us, along
with him, all things besides, we may see great change. For truly, we have a
God who is anxious to give us, along with Christ, all things besides. If only
we could grasp this. What a difference it would make!
Endnotes

[1]
Dale McConkey: “Whither Hunter’s Culture
War? Shifts in Evangelical Morality, 1988-1998,” Sociology of
Religion 62/2, summer 2001, 168-9.
[2] Paul M. Weyrich: “A
Moral Minority?” Free Congress Foundation,
Feb. 16, 1999.
[3] This view is well described
in the Public Justice Report, vol. 22, no. 2,
1999,
11.
[4] This is contrary to the
received wisdom which identifies withdrawal as otherworldly.
See Dick Keyes: Chameleon Christianity: Moving Beyond Safety and Conformity,
Grand Rapids: Baker, 1999, 15-22.
[5] John Murray: The Epistle
to the Romans, New International Commentary on the
New Testament, Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1965, 114.
[6] H. Richard Niebuhr: Christ
and Culture, New York: Harper & Row, 1951,
190-229.
[7] Stanley Hauerwas: “The
Church and Liberal Democracy: The Moral Limits
of a Secular Polity,” A Community of Character: Toward a Constructive
Christian
Social Ethic, Notre Dame, University of Notre Dame Press, 1981, 73-4.
[8] Herman Ridderbos: Paul:
An Outline of His Theology, John R. De Witt, transl.,
Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1975, 435.
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