You’re Included:
Second interview
with Gerrit Dawson
Grace Communion International presents You’re
Included —
the good news of Jesus Christ. Our host is Dr. J. Michael
Feazell.
JMF: Thanks for joining us on another edition of
You’re Included – the unique interview series devoted to practical
implications of a Christ-centered Trinitarian theology in today’s complex world.
Our guest today is Gerrit Dawson, pastor of First Presbyterian Church of Baton
Rouge, Louisiana, and author of Jesus Ascended: The Meaning of Christ’s
Continuing Incarnation; An Introduction to Torrance’s Theology; and
Discovering Jesus, Awakening to God. Thanks for being with us
again.
GD: It’s wonderful to be here, Mike.
JMF: What are the biggest challenges facing Western
Christianity today?
GD: I think the challenges are huge, because the
church in the West has been on the decline for some time. Theologically
speaking, one of the challenges that we face is a kind of prevailing pluralism –
that [although] most people in America still believe in God, they figure that
there are many paths to get to that one God. And one of the biggest negatives
about Christianity [in their view] is our insistence that salvation is in Christ
alone, and that Jesus uniquely shows us who God is. People almost instinctively
see that as mean-spirited, exclusive, harsh and forbidding.
JMF: And yet, how do we balance that with the fact
of the wideness of the grace of God and his desire to include and bring to
himself every human being?
GD: That’s exactly the challenge – because we have
the most all-inclusive love story of any religion that’s ever been on the face
of the earth – the news of this wonderful world-reaching embrace of our God
coming to us in Jesus Christ, and yet we are saying that because God has shown
himself to be this way – this is who he is – so we have an exclusive
revelation that has an all-inclusive embrace. And as we face those
challenges, we’ve got to be sure that we communicate the love, even as we are
insisting on the truth.
JMF: Now, God loves everyone – he sent Christ
because he loves the world, and Christ says, if I’m lifted up, I’ll draw all men
to myself, and God does not let anybody slip through the cracks, and he’s fully
interested in every human being – and yet we have a role to play. How do we
balance the fact of our call to evangelism, to call people to faith in Christ,
and the fact that God’s better at that than we are and isn’t going to abandon
someone because we don’t get to them in our evangelistic efforts… How do we
balance that?
GD: That’s a wonderful question, and I think that
it has far-reaching implications for the mission of the church as a whole –
because the ministry is not my ministry or your ministry, it’s Christ’s
ministry. And the world is going not where I make it to go, but where the
Lord Jesus makes it to go. So on the one hand, we relax, in that we realize that
God is working his purposes out – that even if I can’t figure out a perfect
answer to the question of “what about the person in the farthest reaches of the
earth who’s never heard of Jesus – does he, or does he not make a profession of
faith?” – the impossible theological questions like that, we trust that God has
a plan for it. God who loved us enough to join us to himself forever to die for
us, as you said, is not going to let anyone slip through the cracks
accidentally. No one’s going to be left out by some kind of divine amnesia. At
the same time, we know that Christ sent the church into the world. He said, “all
authority has been given to me, now therefore go and make disciples of
the world.” We know that not everyone accepts this message, tragically. The
mystery of iniquity is that, faced with the most wonderful news in the universe,
we sometimes turn from it.
I guess that because of Christ’s sovereignty and
the reach of his grace, the burden is not on me to try to convince you to
believe. My task is to bear witness to say, “This is who I’ve seen Jesus to be,
and this is what he has done in me. This is who Christ is according to the
Scriptures; this is who he’s been in our lives. Now I hope the Holy Spirit is
creating faith in you. I hope that you want to embrace that.” And then I leave
it, with all prayer and sincerity, in the hands of the Holy Spirit to create
that faith in the listener – because that’s his work.
JMF: Now, sometimes our presentation of the gospel,
of who Christ is and what he’s done for us, is poor. Sometimes it’s very good,
other times it’s pretty poor. Some of our presentations are downright nasty and
leave a bad impression. Is it fair for us to think that a person who doesn’t
respond to the gospel, even though they’ve heard it, and perhaps sometimes very
badly and they’re put off by it because of the behavior, the approach of us
evangelicals sometimes… (For example, surveys have shown that people would
rather live next door to a used car salesman, or a drug dealer, let’s say, than
an evangelical Christian, simply because they’ll get less pain from the others.
That doesn’t speak well of the way evangelicals are perceived, in terms of
judgmentalism, pushiness, and so on. That really isn’t a correct, right picture
of Christ, it really isn’t a proper presentation of the gospel.) But are we
saying that God has a way, because his goal is to draw everyone to himself, of
overcoming our short-comings and weaknesses in evangelistic presentation?
GD: I think there’s a lot in that, and it ties back
to this difficulty that we have with an all-inclusive love of Christ who’s
revealed himself exclusively in Christ Jesus. And so much of that, I think,
depends on our realizing that our job is not salesmanship to religious
consumers. Our job is to love in Christ’s name, and to bear witness to what he
has done. That really changes the whole dynamic. There were times in my early
life as a Christian when I felt like, it was my burden to share a tract with
every person that I met, and then if I didn’t do that, they might be going to
hell and it would be my fault. That, I think, was a very young faith that didn’t
have much trust in the sovereignty of God.
Now maybe the sharing of those tracts played some
role in someone’s salvation. Maybe it became a roadblock for some that the Lord
had to overcome in different ways. The point is, I don’t have to try to convince
perfectly content pagans that they should buy my religious product. The reality
is, is that hurting and broken people – all of whom are facing mortality and
frailty, broken relationships, a sense of guilt, a sense of not being able to
measure up even by their own standards – to them I’m sent with marvelous healing
news that calls people out of darkness and into light. It’s so much different in
trying to sell a religious product.
JMF: Henri Nouwen wrote a fascinating book called
The Wounded Healer in which he helps pastors see past the need to
feel that they’re perfect, in presenting some kind of perfection to the people
they’re trying to help, but identifying with them on a level of realizing that
they are as broken as the people they’re trying to help – isn’t that true of the
church as well, in terms of evangelism?
GD: It certainly is… a pastor who used to pray to
the one who took his thorns and wore them as a crown – the idea that Jesus who
ascended gloriously, as we’ve been talking about, yet, as the hymn says, “has
rich wounds, yet visible above.” But Christ understood our humanity and he was
pierced for our iniquities and he is constant unto our suffering. He is a ready
friend to us as we recognize that we’re not perfect.
If you look at the ministry of Jesus, you know that
towards the Pharisees and the scribes, he was often very, very hard – that was
toward those who felt like they were sufficiently righteous, who would not
reveal their weaknesses, or admit their sins. But to the broken, to the outcast,
to the disgraced who were penitent and longing for his forgiveness, he came with
all grace and acceptance. And I think the Lord is ever enfolding our woundedness
into his healing.
Now, what that means for ministry is that, we
minister, as Dan Allender has said, as “those who lead with a limp,” we
don’t have to hide our faults because we’ve been taken up by the one who has
taken our humanity, embraced it and healed it. So we trust in that compassion of
Jesus Christ.
My friend Andrew Purvis, who was a student of Tom
Torrance’s there in Edinburgh, likes to talk with his ministerial students about
this very subject, and he’ll often get a student to stand in front of him with
his arms out as if he were preaching the gospel and he were conducting ministry.
And then Andrew comes up behind him (he usually takes a rather robust student),
grabs him by the shoulders and shoves him out of the way, and says, “Look,
buddy, it’s not your ministry, it’s Christ’s ministry. And if I’m representing
Christ, come here and I’ll put my arm around you and you can join me in what I’m
already doing.” I think that’s a very graphic, but apt illustration for how
ministry is done. As the church, we want to find out what Jesus is up to. How is
he working, and how do we participate in that? Not, “What great things can I
design for the Lord to tell him how to reach the world better than he can?”
JMF: So on the one side, we have an enthusiasm for
doing the work of ministry and for getting involved in what we perceive Christ
is doing, and yet on the other side, isn’t there a sort of a rest, or a peace –
in other words, not a sense of frantic busy-ness in order to get the job done,
but more of a peaceful entering into the work of Christ?
GD: That’s a good way to say it, Mike. It’s kind of
a peaceful engagement. The church is often been prone to a couple of errors. One
error is to withdraw from the world, to say, “Well, we have been saved and
called apart and we don’t want to be stained by the world and… we’re waiting for
Jesus to return, so we’ll just separate ourselves.” That takes us out of being
any good to anyone else, takes us out of sharing the love of Christ with others
and basically sidelines the church.
But another error that the church has made is, is
to try to say, “We will make the kingdom happen on God’s behalf, if the church
can triumph, then God triumphs.” And instead of serving, we start dominating.
Instead of giving, we start lording it over, and that really has only created
resentment for us.
Sadly, there’s a third error that the church has
made, which is just kind of a capitulation with the world. We have our religion
and we like it on Sundays but generally, we’re not very distinguished from the
world. Where the gospel sends us in this kind of peaceful engagement, is to a
place where we are for the world by being different from the world because we
belong to the Lord Jesus and have different values. We’re against the world, by
being for the world because we’re bringing the all-inclusive love of
Christ to them, even in their sin and rebellion.
Douglas Farrow, a wonderful professor at McGill
University, talks about how the church is in a wrestling match with the world…
Jesus hasn’t given up on the world, he hasn’t given up on humanity, because he
took our humanity in his ascension and bears it – so we as the church never give
up on the world. We can’t simply be dissolved into it, nor can we withdraw. We
have to engage the world with this servant love, this wounded love of Christ.
JMF: You’re the editor of a book called An
Introduction to Torrance Theology. How did you come to be associated with
that project?
GD: It was lots of fun, Mike. I’ve been a follower
of both Thomas and James Torrance for years, and it was their work that really
changed my life and re-ignited my ministry. When I moved to the church in Baton
Rouge, I came to a church that has a wonderful devotion to the incarnate Savior,
loves the Scriptures and always wants to go deeper into Christ. And since I was
new, they were willing to hear some new ideas, and I suggested that we have a
conference and that we call it Discovering the Incarnate Savior of the World
– a chance to bring in some scholars to talk about this kind of theology –
about the Father who loves us enough to send his Son in the power of the Holy
Spirit to redeem us and to save us. They went for it, and so we were able to
contact a number of scholars in the Torrance tradition from around the country
and even around the world, to come to Baton Rouge and talk about this theology.
It was so much fun because I think it was the largest assembling of scholars in
the Torrance tradition that had ever occurred all in one place. And so we spent
a couple of days with about 200 participants studying and discussing and
rejoicing in the incarnate Savior of the world.
JMF: And then how did that lead to the book?
GD: After the conference, we realized that we had
heard some really wonderful presentations, and the participants agreed to let us
publish those, if we could find a publisher. I was able to ask a couple of
others who weren’t at the symposium – Baxter Kruger, whom you had on this show
as well – if they would contribute essays to the project, and we submitted that
to T & T Clark, who had published most of Tom Torrance’s major work, and I’m
delighted to say they were eager to publish it. So we ended up with a pretty
good book that takes a look at Torrance’s Christology.
JMF: What are some of the major themes in the book
that you felt best about when you saw it finally published?
GD: The focus was on Christology, which is the
study of Jesus Christ and who he is. And so each of the participants from
different angles were looking at the bigness, the hugeness of what it means that
God came to us in the flesh in the person of Jesus Christ. Almost everyone took
a look at the atonement and the wonderful Torrance emphasis on the fact that the
atonement is not just an external transaction where God pays the tab for our
sins (and he certainly does that; he does legally take away the burden of our
sins, but it’s deeper than that as well) – that the atonement is the way in
which God reconciles us to himself by healing our humanity from the inside out.
We all emphasized that and rejoiced in it.
JMF: Speaking of the idea of payment for sins –
isn’t that where most people tend to stop?
GD: People do stop there, they figure that their
sins are kind of like a financial debt. They have accumulated this amount of
obligation to God and discover that their creditors are calling their hand and
they don’t have enough spiritual capital to pay the debt. They are in over their
head, and so on the cross Jesus has paid the bill, he’s picked up the tab, so to
speak.
And that’s wonderful in the sense that he brings us
back to neutral, the penalty is paid. But what that doesn’t deal with is the
fact that I’m a profligate spender. Pay my bills today and if I don’t change
from the inside out, I’ll be in debt again in a week. In the spiritual sense, it
means that Jesus just takes away the legal problem of my sins, it doesn’t
change my heart or my humanity that’s sinful, then I haven’t really been
touched. Then the curved-in self, the darkened heart, the clouded mind
[different ways of saying the same thing] – that is still there untouched. I’m
not really redeemed from the inside out.
JMF: So we keep working on the effects rather than
the cause when payment for sins is your primary focus?
GD: I keep trying to work harder so I don’t get
into more debt. And I find that I’m inevitably behind. If I have to be the one
that ultimately proves my worth to God and even if the external part of my sins
has been paid for, I still am lost.
JMF: I’ve worked with many people, as I’m sure you
have as a pastor, who find themselves in that spiral – it’s kind of a constant
focus on remembering what all your sins are in order to get them all repented
for, because there is this deep fear that if I don’t repent for every single
sin, if I leave one out, then God won’t forgive me for that particular one, and
therefore I’ve got to be continually be rehearsing my tracks, looking over my
shoulders, figuring out what to repent of… so the legal exchange becomes the
total focus of my relationship with God – just find a way to get this debt off
my back and…
GD: It’s terribly burdensome. It’s full of guilt
and it also tends to make a constant self-focus, “How am I doing? How am I
doing?” What we need is the news that all of your sins – past, present, and
future – have all been paid for in Jesus Christ. But even more, your humanity
has been re-made in him. In Christ you and I can become a new creation. In
Christ, he sets his own Spirit within me that causes me to want to live in
communion with him. He puts his life in me so that I begin to think and act and
live in wonderful communion with the Lord Jesus Christ – not by looking more and
more at myself and try to make myself better, but by looking to Jesus, trusting
in him to be a new creation, to participate in his new humanity, and thereby in
one sense, to live free from the burden of sin. Not that I stop doing good
things. No, he sends me on a mission to love and care for the world even to the
point of laying down my life. But not to justify myself. I’m already justified
in Christ. And not to try to fix my rotten heart which in itself is always
rotten, but simply then to receive the new heart, the new life that he’s given
me.
JMF: So then, what is the motivation – I’m often
asked, “If what you’re saying is true, that God really has made me a new
creation in Christ and my sins are forgiven (past, present, and future) and
there’s a new heart, then if that’s already true, then what’s my motivation for
wanting to go out of my way to live like a Christian, because after all, isn’t
it easier not to live like Christian than it is to live like a Christian?”
GD: It is difficult to live as a Christian and
difficult to live in that knowledge. But the motivation is, of course, love.
It’s the fact that you know different kinds of people that you meet in your life
– some who are critical and judgmental and quick to point out your faults and
others – you don’t tend to want to visit with them as much as when you know
there’s someone who wants to embrace you and welcome you, to host you and to
bless you – you tend to want to be with them. I think when we truly
understand that the Lord Jesus is blessing us with his forgiveness and his new
humanity, that’s where I want to be – I don’t want to live stuck in myself. And
of course, my sins are really my attempts to try to find a better life than the
one God has for me. Sin isn’t really fun in the long run—it’s destructive.
Living apart from the graciousness of my Father doesn’t really get me where I
want to go.
JMF: So it’s actually easier to live in
Christ, than it is not to live in Christ – is the truth of it.
GD: Well, it’s certainly more peaceful – there’s
always a struggle between my old self and the new self in Christ to try to get
my mind to look away from my inner self and look to Jesus. It’s not simple, but
it’s much more joyful.
JMF: Walking with Christ is, after all, walking
with Christ. If we’re a new creation and we belong to him, then the issue is a
relationship with him – a relationship of love. So it isn’t even a question
really, is it – of what is my motivation?, because when you are in a
relationship of love with someone, you’re in relationship of love with someone –
that is the motivation in itself.
GD: Love and communion is what I’m seeking – it’s
what I think all of us are seeking in our deepest hearts – we are seeking this
relationship of total acceptance and forgiveness, purpose, delight and
everlasting life.
JMF: So to ask the question is to misunderstand the
point.
GD: Exactly. You don’t really ask that question if
you’re experiencing the communion.
JMF: Well, we’re out of time, but we appreciate you
being with us again… (GD: It’s kind of pleasure.) and we hope we can get
together again soon. (GD: Thank you.)
We’ve been talking with Dr. Gerrit Dawson, pastor
of First Presbyterian Church of Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Thanks for being with
us, I’m Mike Feazell for You’re Included.
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