Recently I’ve read a lot of great books, but I haven’t done a very good job responding to what I’m reading through this blog. I’m going to try to start writing short (or not so short) summaries of the stuff I am reading…
Chris Wright has quickly become one of my favorite authors/teachers. A few days ago I finished his newest book, Salvation Belongs to Our God: Celebrating the Bible’s Central Story. It’s basically an overview of all the different ways the Bible speaks about salvation. I think it’s easy when we come from a certain tradition to only speak about salvation in a certain way and avoid the rest of the way the Bible approaches the subject. So, I think this is a much needed, balanced approach toward it.
The first chapter is called “Salvation and Human Need.” In the first few pages he says, “We human beings need a lot of saving. And God does a lot of saving in the Bible.” The implication is that we are messed up, we are broken, and we need to be fixed. We are fallen and we need to be made whole. And, the truth is that only God can do anything substantial toward solving the problem. He begins with the Old Testament, laying out different passages that speak of God delivering people from their oppressors or enemies, God giving victory in battle, God healing sickness, and God giving judicial vindication. Then, in the New Testament, he talks about Jesus rescuing people from drowning, Jesus healing people of sickness, disease or disability, and Jesus rescuing people from death, spiritual or physical dangers.
But, he goes on to say that all these types of “saving” are part of a much bigger problem, a “far deeper disorder” - sin. He says that “human rebellion and disobedience against God have injected their dismal effects into every dimension of the human person, into every dimension of human society and into the ongoing sad story of human history, escalating with every generation.” If we want to know what’s wrong with the world, the answer can only be somehow related to the sin problem. If there were no sin, we would have no need to be saved from anything. Wright speaks of salvation from sin in the Old and New Testaments, with the climax mounting in “this newborn Jesus [who is] above all else, the salvation of God arrived on earth.”
(To think deeply about the “holistic mess” that necessitates “holistic salvation,” I definitely recommend Plantinga’s fascinating book Not the Way It’s Supposed to Be.)
He does address a very important point in this whole discussion. This came out the other day when I was teaching my boys about “what we need to be saved from.” I talked about sin and death and Satan. And then I got to the hardest part of it all, that we need to be saved from God. They didn’t really understand at first, but then I tried to explain God’s wrath to them (a topic that should literally scare the hell out of us). I’ve posted about this before, but really I think Romans Chapter 1 lays it out pretty well. God’s wrath is his personal “letting go” of humans who refuse to fall under His righteous reign. Wright says, “God’s judgment is the inescapably bad news without which the good news has no real meaning, or even reason for existence.” Judgment is used both positively and negatively in the Bible, like the word “discernment.” God’s judgment is his “exposing” someone’s heart, the true motivation for their life - finding out who someone truly is.
But, I think we need to back track to really feel the weight of wrath or righteous judgment. If we believe that people are basically “good” or that we are born “good” then God’s wrath makes no sense. But, if we believe that people are inherently wicked, that people are born “hating God” and running from Him, then for God to simply ignore this would make Him an unjust God. We might not want to think this way, but if we are trying to be faithful to what Scripture says, then we must accept that, because of the sinful nature inherited by all humanity through Adam and Eve’s sin AND the sin we all commit ourselves on a daily basis, we are sinners. We’re not sinners simply because we sin, but rather we sin because we are sinners. If there were no fall, there would be no need of rescue - the world would’ve remained in a state of shalom, of universal flourishing.
As humans, we shouldn’t simply “let sin go” but rather we are to confront it, in love, and work to restore relationships when they have been damaged. We can’t ignore it, and we shouldn’t expect that God can either. Either Jesus suffers the wrath of (separation from) God in our place, or we personally experience separation from God - in the present and for eternity. This, to me, is the essence of hell. Hell is a present reality of declaring yourself in no need of God, which continues into eternity as you simply live out the implications of your own narcissism. If you want to be autonomous, God will let you.
(This is where I hit auto-pilot and suggest you all listen to Tim Keller’s talk on hell - http://download.redeemer.com/sermons/Hell_Isnt_the_God_of_Christianity.mp3)
The next chapter goes into how salvation is “God’s property.” It isn’t our way of earning a right-standing with God, but rather salvation is: “initiated by God’s grace; achieved by God’s power; offered on God’s terms; accomplished by God’s Son; secured by God’s promises; and guaranteed by God’s sovereignty.”
One of the most interesting parts of this book is his answer to the question, “Is there salvation in other religions?” He says this is the wrong kind of question to ask, because salvation isn’t the result of religion. Salvation is what God does. Christianity itself is a response to God’s saving. We are not saved by our Christianity, but because God has saved us, we want to be like Christ (”Christian”). Of course God is sovereign and can do whatever God wants to do, but in the Bible the only way to be saved is by Jesus.
This gets into three dominant views about salvation:
1. exclusivism - This takes into account all the verses that speak of salvation only being available in Christ, but says that God cannot save people in any other way.
2. inclusivism - This view says that salvation is only through Christ, but God can and does save people who may have never heard the name of Christ (most notably before Christ in the Old Testament).
3. pluralism - This view says that religion is our effort to connect with an “ultimate being,” and that there are multiple “ways” to satisfy that being and therefore be “saved.”
If we accept that Jesus is the only one who saves, then we obviously can’t accept the third view. But, I think the first view puts God in a tight box rather than letting God be God. But, there’s another good point to be made. We are not condemned based on whether we have heard the gospel of Jesus. We are “born condemned” (as Jesus said) because of our sin. But, we are not the ultimate judge of anyone’s eternal fate - that’s God’s job. And He is known for “turning enemies into friends.” We follow Jesus who said that “the first will be last.”
He also brings up a good point in relation to the “proto-evangelion” - the first “good news” promise of Genesis 3:15. I think it’s easy to skip right over the role of Israel in God’s history, but as Wright points out, “It is with the call of Abraham and God’s promise to him that we see the beginning of the implementation of that initial promise… This will be the route by which God’s redemptive blessing will come to the nations.” The mission of Israel was to fulfill the promise, but ultimately they failed. Jesus came into the picture of perfectly fulfilled the promise, but part of His mission was to judge Israel because of their failure. God’s way of rescuing His creation is through humanity - which was ultimately accomplished by the human Jesus. “God’s work of redemption will take place within and for the created order.”
He also points out that salvation cannot be individualistic: “Biblical salvation is not something I enjoy all by myself; it makes me part of the community of God’s people. And biblical salvation is not something I can keep all to myself; it demands that I share its blessing with others.” This is our mission, to make known the gospel of Jesus through our words and deeds. Selfish salvation is an oxymoron.
He brings out the reality that salvation is past, present, and future: “Salvation is what God has done already in the past, as a result of which certain outcomes are assured in the future, and because of which we live changed lives in the present.” This is a holistic understanding of salvation, and if we miss one part we’ve missed the whole.
The final chapter is about the cross. It’s short, but deep: “Ultimately all that will be there in the new and redeemed creation will be there because of the cross. And conversely, all that will not be there (suffering, tears, sin, corruption, decay and death) will not be there because they will have been destroyed by the cross.” This is very good news. The cross is the center of everything.
There’s a lot of great stuff in this book, but it would take hours for me to go into much more detail. I highly recommend it.