Friday, April 6, 2007

Exodus and Action

I've been making my way through Bruce Birch's Let Justice Roll Down: The Old Testament, Ethics, and Christian Life (WJK, 1991). On pp. 127-28, Birch writes: "God does not liberate without also calling us to the vocation of liberation."

WOW! Well said, Bruce!

It seems that in Evangelical and Pentecostal Christianity (the communities of faith I call home) we spend so much time talking about people's souls, that we spend too little time talking about their lives--real, lived life. It is true that many, and perhaps most, of the problems people have in the physical world are related to spiritual issues (unforgiveness, anger, compulsiveness, etc.). And, thus, there is a distinct need to address the interior issues that cause us to behave badly. However, that does not obviate the need to work toward the relief of the oppressed. Truly, biblical salvation endeavors to alleviate the pain of both kinds of suffering.

The constant challenge, it seems to me, is to find the means to do both with the limited time we have. I wonder if doing both is simply a matter of getting out our calendars and scheduling time for "the vocation of liberation."

Monday, April 2, 2007

They shook my hand and called me Doctor.

Did not mean to sign off with four days to go and write nothing else. Oh well.

The defense went really well. The committee was generally convinced of the worthiness of the argument, so they did not spend a lot of time questioning me about that. Rather, they were more interested in getting the manuscript ready for publication and in getting at the trajectory of my argument. Where do I want to go from here? That approach made for a kind of celebratory atmosphere.

I'll write more after I recover a bit more and get back into the swing of things here at work.