Bonhoeffer – Act and Being

The entire situation raises the question whether the formalisticactualistic understanding of the freedom and contingency of God in revelation is to be made the foundation of theological thought. In revelation it is not so much a question of the freedom of God—eternally remaining within the divine self, aseity—on the other side of revelation, as it is of God’s coming out of God’s own self in revelation. It is a matter of God’s given Word, the covenant in which God is bound by God’s own action. It is a question of the freedom of God, which finds its strongest evidence precisely in that God freely chose to be bound to historical human beings and to be placed at the disposal of human beings. God is free not from human beings but for them. Christ is the word of God’s freedom. God is present, that is, not in eternal nonobjectivity but—to put it quite provisionally for now—’haveable’, graspable in the Word within the church.

“THE PROBLEM: B. THE PROBLEM OF ACT AND BEING IN THE INTERPRETATION OF REVELATION AND THE CHURCH AS THE SOLUTION TO THE PROBLEM.” In Act and Being, edited by Wayne Whitson Floyd, 95-149. Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 1931. https://search.alexanderstreet.com/view/work/bibliographic_entity%7Cdocument%7C4747484. 

 

Ben Campbell Johnson, Andrew Dreitcer on discernment

In discernment we seek to uncover our truest and most profound longings, which, we trust, touch God’s longings for us. In the place where our yearning meets God’s yearning, we begin to experience true rest in God, a sense of profound rest and freedom, and a sacred stillness at the centre of our lives. From that place of stillness we can work through the difficulties and challenges that life presents us…. We must continually remind ourselves that discernment has more to do with deepening our relationship with Christ than it does with making right decisions.

Ben Campbell Johnson, Andrew Dreitcer
[Source unknown]

Cynthia Bourgeault – On responding

In any situation in life, confronted by an outer threat or opportunity, you can notice yourself responding inwardly in one of two ways. Either you will brace, harden and resist, or you will soften, open, and yield… Whether it’s a matter of holding your ground in a dispute with your boss, handling a rebellious teenager with tough love, or putting your life on the line for an ideal you believe in… Action flows better when it flows from nonviolence, that is, when it flows from that place of relaxed, inner opening.

Cynthia Bourgeault [Source Unknown]

Gregory Beale on The language of prophecy

Prophecy portrays the future with language that is understandable to the prophet’s contemporary readership; the prophetic language of Isaiah employs imagery corresponding to the earthly social and cultural realities of his own day, which he could understand to describe realities of the new creation that were to be fulfilled in way he probably could not have imagined.
p1098

Beale, G. K. The Book of Revelation: A Commentary on the Greek Text. New International Greek Testament Commentary (Grand Rapids, Mich.). Grand Rapids, Mich., Carlisle: W.B. Eerdmans, Paternoster Press, 1999.

Quotes – Post-modern Pilgrims – Leonard Sweet

Monsignor Romano Guardini: “‘Today the modern age is essentially over.’ The church was on the right track, he argued, but riding the wrong train”. xiii

John R. W. Stott on ‘double listening’: “the faculty of listening to two voices at the same time, the voice of God through Scripture and the voices of men and women around us. These voices will often contradict one another, but our purpose in listening to theme both is to discover how they relate to each other. DOuble listening is indispensable to Christian discipleship and Christian mission” p. xvi

“The history of civilizations is the history of the human imagination.” p. xix

“There is a difference between trailblazing and trendsetting. There is a difference between the spirit of newness and the spirt of nowness. The Geist in our Zeit must be the Heilige Geist. The spirit of our times must be the Holy Spirit.” p48

“If you remember nothing else in this book, remember this call for the church to recover tradition. We can become a “traditional” church by nurturing a culture that is identifiably Christian and postmodern at the same time, not one that looks like postmodern culture itself.” p48

(Definition of zeitgeist – https://www.thefreedictionary.com/Zeit+Geist

“The postmodern church seems to have lost the plot to the “stories of Jesus.” Could it be because the redemption story was told in the modern era more by “creeds” and “laws” than by “parables” – narrative-wrapped images?” p88

“Metaphors generate a spirit that quickly captures and charges space. That is why the Jesus method of communication was not the exegesis of words but the exegesis of images: “the kingdom of heaven is like…”” p95

Sweet, Leonard I. Post-Modern Pilgrims : First Century Passion for the 21st Century World. Nashville, TN: Broadman & Holman, 2000.

Quote – N.T. Wright on the definition word Justification

[Justification] has regularly been made to do duty for the entire picture of God’s reconciling action towards the human race, covering everything from God’s free love and grace, through the sending of the son to die and rise again for sinners, through the preaching of the gospel, the work of the spirit, the arousal of faith in human hearts and minds, the development of Christian character and conduct, the assurance of ultimate salvation, and the safe passage through final judgment to that destination. p65

Wright, N. T. Justification : God’s Plan and Paul’s Vision. Downers Grove, Ill.: IVP Academic, 2009.

Quote – Don Miller on regrets

“The real Voice is stiller and smaller and seems to know, without confusion, the difference between right and wrong and the subtle delineation between the beautiful and profane. It’s not an agitated Voice, but ever patient as though it approves a million false starts. The Voice I am talking about is a deep water of calming wisdom that says, Hold your tongue; don’t talk about that person that way; forgive the friend you haven’t talked to; don’t look at that woman as a possession; I want to show you the sunset; look and see how short life is and how your troubles are not worth worrying about; buy that bottle of wine and call your friend and see if he can get together, because, remember, he was supposed to have that conversation with his daughter, and you should ask him about it.” from
“A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life” by Donald Miller

Quote – Don Millar on Listening to that voice

“So I started listening to the Voice, or rather, I started calling it the Voice and admitting there was a Writer. I admitted something other than me was showing a better way. And when I did this, I realized the Voice, the Writer who was not me, was trying to make a better story, a more meaningful series of experiences I could live through.” from “A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life” by Donald Miller

Quotes – Emerging Worship – Dan Kimball

“The buildings in which various churches gathered changed to reflect new cultural influences. Cathedrals, stained glass windows, and hymnals were all forms of emerging worship at one time….We shouldn’t be threatened by it [different expressions of worship], nor should we condemn forms of worship that don’t feel comfortable to us. It doesn’t mean previous forms of worship are invalid; just that new expressions are emerging – and will continue to emerge.” p9

“The emerging church desires new wineskins for worship. These new wineskins are needed in response to our new postmodern culture. It is a terrible mistake to ignore this, and a somewhat arrogant one if we still believe that how we currently worship is the one and only way to worship God.” p9

Quote from Bill Hybels:
“What I keep coming back to is that the alternative [of not starting a new worship service and minsitry] is unthinkable. For anybody to sit idly by and watch one-third or 40 percent of the congregation disappear, it is unconscionable… You can’t do nothing. Whatever it is that you try, at least you will be able to stand before Christ one day and say we gave it our best shot…We never quite figured it out, but we certainly did try!” p17

“As we experiment with creating worship gatherings, we need to always remember it isn’t about us and our dreams – it is about Jesus and his Church. It isn’t about being creative – it is about Jesus and his Church. It isn’t about rethinking our churches – it is about Jesus and his Church. With that in mind, our hearts and attitudes should reflect this truth whether things get rough or things go well!” p21

Quotes from Graced Vulnerability – a theology of childhood

[These quotes probably don’t make sense outside of the context of the chapter they are found within]

Thomas remarks: “So long as he has not the use of reason he is like a non-rational animal.” Though this comparison may strike the modern reader as unduly harsh and dismissive of children, it was meant to underscore the urgency and importance of caring for children. Because they do not have the capacity of reason, children are entrusted to parental and ecclesial care to guide them into fuller humanity.
…Thomas’s account values children not so much for who they are but for who they will become. Children are on the way to personhood, and childhood is rapidly discarded along the way. Such an account runs the risk of ignoring the nature of childhood and the children in our midst.

The contrast with the Thomistic model here is obvious. Children are valued not for who they will become, but for who they are and whose they are. Yet we can romanticize these images of Jesus of children in the New Testament quite easily. His invitation to become like children can evoke nostalgia for a childhood devoid of responsibilities.

“For the vast majority of the world’s children, childhood itself – as the space and time in which we claim God’s choice of us, pay attention, imagine, and play – exists in name only.”

[Speaking of Hagar and Ishmael in Genesis 16] “The wail of the child in the bushes is the very voice that God hears….God hears the cries of abandonment and responds, empowering mother and child to keep on living.”

“For an increasing number of children worldwide, hunger remains the abiding reality. Every three seconds, a child somewhere on the planet dies of malnutrition: that equates to approximately one thousand children every hour, thirty thousand every day, ten million every year who die because of lack of food.”

“When we allow children to thrive, the unmistakable sounds of their playfulness will be heard in the streets and across the countryside. Their play infects our own, inviting us to play with them, intimating God’s delight in creation.”

“Sometimes, too, the parent, having a hearty interest in the plays of his children, will drop out for the time in the sense of his years, and go into the frolic of their mood with them.”

“Play, as Bushnell notes, “wants no motive but play.” Its joy is found not in reaching some kind of goal, but in the delight of the others with whom we play. We can see this if we watch the faces of children at play: this delight in the moment, this sense of connectedness to their playmates….To play with others is to reconnect to the vulnerabilities and otherness that make each one of us a child of God. Perhaps by playing with children, we recognize again our undeniable need for each other.”

“Perhaps this kind of attending is also critical to the life of prayer; perhaps it is the component of prayer that allows us to see attention to the world and attention to God as one and the same turn. To pray as children pray is not to lose oneself in God, but to involve oneself in God, or better said, to open one’s eyes to the God who is already passionately involved in us.”

Jensen, David Hadley. Graced Vulnerability : A Theology of Childhood. Cleveland: Pilgrim Press, 2005.