You're Included:
Interview
with Paul Louis Metzger
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 Trinitarian theology in today's complex world. We're talking
with Dr. Paul Louis Metzger, professor Christian Theology and Theology of
Culture at Multnomah Biblical Seminary at Multnomah University in Portland,
Oregon. Dr. Metzger is founder and director of the Institute for the Theology of
Culture: New Wine, New Wineskins, and author of several books, including The
Word of Christ and the World of Culture: Sacred and Secular Through the Theology
of Karl Barth and Consuming Jesus: Beyond Race and Class Divisions in a
Consumer Church. He is editor of Trinitarian Soundings in Systematic
Theology and Cultural Encounters: A Journal for the Theology of Culture.
He also serves as the executive editor of a
forthcoming multi-volume series on the Scriptures for InterVarsity Press, for
which he is writing the volume on John's Gospel. His newest book is Exploring
Ecclesiology, co-authored with Dr. Brad Harper. Dr. Metzger's passion is
integrating theology and spirituality with cultural sensitivity. He is a member
of the Center of Theological Inquiry, Princeton, New Jersey, and has developed a
strategic ministry partnership with Dr. John M. Perkins called, "Drum Majors for
Love, Truth and Justice."
Thanks for joining us today.
PLM: Thanks, it's great to be here, Mike.
JMF: I'd like to begin by just finding out what led
you into the study of theology in the first place.
PLM: I was back in college, Northwestern College,
St. Paul, Minnesota, and in my junior or senior year I was interacting with a
couple of professors and one, Walter Dunit, really introduced me to the
discipline of systematic theology and just how it's all-encompassing. While
there's the descriptive element in talking about what the church has believed in
the past... and there's also that prescriptive element about what do we believe
and present today for the church and the society at large.
I always had a desire to bring theology into the
present context. So that was very intriguing to me in terms of that
all-encompassing enterprise that also has present-day import. So that's really
what led me into the discipline and the study of God, and I could think of
nothing greater than the study of God and especially the triune nature of God.
JMF: Well, somewhere along the path you moved into
Trinitarian theology. Specifically how did that go about?
PLM: I was a student at Trinity Evangelical
Divinity School and a couple of my professors there had encouraged me for my
doctoral studies to consider applying to King's College, London, to seek to work
with Professor Colin Gunton -- he was a leading Trinitarian
Theologian who died a few years ago and he was a major player in terms of the
renaissance in Trinitarian theology. Working at King's in London was
really a great introduction into Trinitarian thought forms and it was just great
to be able to work with him. And then, there were others, such as John Zizioulas,
who would come in and teach and lecture, and many others as well. So it
was a great place within which to study Trinitarian theology.
JMF: You're author of a book called Trinitarian
Soundings in Systematic Theology, in which you take a look at Colin Gunton
and his work through the eyes of a number of authors, maybe we could talk about
that a little later. Right now, as we introduced you, we mentioned that your
passion is the integration of theology and spirituality with cultural
sensitivity. What is an integration of theology and spirituality? What's the
difference and what do you mean by integration?
PLM: I think that theology by nature is a very
integrative discipline and very much concerned for various domains of thought
and life. As a Christian, I think everything we're about... should be about
spirituality, and while I'm not doing spiritual theology in that classic sense of
the discussion that Professor James Houston will be about, I have great respect
for his work, but the types of theological thought forms I'm working with within
Trinitarian theology -- participation in the life of God, union with Christ --
those are central motifs for me in my own writing and research, and then that
has import for cultural sensitivity dynamics in our postmodern, post-Christian
context of how we engage alternative spiritualities. We need a robust
understanding and awareness of the spiritual dimensions bound up with the holy
love of God, and Christ, in the power of the Spirit. So that's bound up with
what I'm thinking of here.
JMF: By "spirituality," you're not talking necessarily
about spirituality in the sense of mysticism... you're talking about
a holistic Christian life as theology informs it, particularly Trinitarian theology.
What is practical about Trinitarian theology then in the Christian
life?
PLM: The way I look at Trinitarian theology is that
when it's framed in light of the holy love of God in Christ and that we're
called to participate in this God's life and not simply to emulate (which is part
of our work), but actually to participate -- it gets us beyond a form of religion,
or rules, and legalism and "sin management" (as some will talk about it) of do's
and don'ts and Paul is very much against that in his book on Colossians where
there was this kind of faulty asceticism of "don't drink, don't chew, don't date
girls who do" type of thinking back in the ancient world and the Christians were
getting bound up with them and they thought that their identity with Christ was
really about sin management -- keeping the rules.
And Paul is saying that our life with Christ goes
far beyond sheer concern for moral rights -- it must be about union, communion
within the life of God. So he says in Colossians 2:9, 10 "All the fullness of
deity dwells in bodily form, and you have been given fullness in Christ." That's
the kind of union that Paul is concerned for. You said before that it's not
about mystical or mysticism per se, well to me there is a mystical component.
It's not the kind of Buddhist mysticism, a pantheism, it's not that at all, but
the Reformers were very much concerned for union with Christ in the spirit,
where our hearts are wed to his heart, and so there really is that
participation, and I would call that mystical, but it really is bound up with
the holistic frame of reference with practical import to such things as you
mentioned in getting beyond legalism toward a real relational model of
spirituality.
JMF: Now, by relational model -- you're talking
about how to get along with each other.
PLM: Yes, and that God communes with us heart-to-heart, not simply thought-to-thought, but really heart-to-heart,
because that's
where the best communion really does take place. And so our thoughts, our
actions, our moral initiatives really flow out of that heart-to-heart communion
with God. I like to pick up from Martin Luther and his side-kick Melanchthon,
when Melanchthonand Luther both in the 1500's talked about we don't change hearts
by changing behaviors. Our behaviors are changed by our hearts being changed.
That only occurs by way of the Holy Spirit being poured out, as Romans 5:5 says,
"The love of God is poured out into our hearts with the Holy Spirit." When our
hearts are transformed, then these other things flow from them. And that's what I
would call an affective spirituality that's bound up from Trinitarian
thought.
JMF: Now, cultural sensitivity then, flows right
out of that, in an authentic Christianity that's coming from the heart as opposed
to list of rules. Cultural sensitivity is going to be the natural
by-product... What are some of the ways that you focus on with regard to
bringing cultural sensitivity into that process?
PLM: Well, because God so loved the world that he
gave his one and only Son, that God did not seek to... I like to use the imagery
of he didn't come to take back Jerusalem or take back America from his enemies,
and so often in the evangelical Christian movement (of which I'm a part), we're so
often concerned for our rights, and taking back America from those who live very
differently from us. And while I want to follow the Bible through and through
and live according to God's desires for us as his people, nonetheless God is
calling us to love people where we're not seeking to shape them by way of
certain kinds of behavioral frames of reference but as we relate to people,
relationally, not behaviorally -- and they get to see that we really do care
about them, I think that's where there's the opportunity for people to actually
have a change of heart themselves and we've been known more, as it's been said
elsewhere and I agree with this, we're known more in the conservative Christian
movement for what we are against than what we're for.
And so as I'm engaging in cultural issues when I'm
working in Portland, Oregon, and it's not the Bible Belt, and when I'm working
with the Buddhists and others and they're very concerned about what they've seen
in evangelical America of seeking to take back America from them, there's a lot
of fear that they have of us, and I think that an imperfect love is driven out
by fear, but a perfect love casts out fear. And when they really come to
understand that we're concerned for their well-being and that we want to care
for them in the love of God in Christ, that changes the dynamics of how we deal
with people with different spiritualities and different moralities. And so I
think it's that relational context that really gives birth -- comes forth from
God's heart -- that gives birth to a kind of cultural engagement that is not
about enforcing Christianity on people, but it really comes from the inside out,
not the outside in.
JMF: In the Gospels, Jesus is described as a
friend of sinners and yet in our evangelical traditions, we tend to shy away
from being friends of sinners, the last thing we're going to be is a friend of
sinners. We want our children to go to private Christian schools, we want to
keep ourselves in kind of an enclave of our friends within the church, not
outside the church, and yet it sounds like you're talking about the need to be
friends of sinners, like Jesus was and for the same reasons as Jesus was,
because people are human beings created in the image of God and that it's the
heart of God that reaches out to all people. So often though, Christians are
told to make friends with non-believers with an ulterior motive
of getting the gospel to them (PLM: bait and switch) -- it's a
project where the real goal is to get the gospel to them, as opposed to them
being the goal as a person, worthy of friendship because the love of Christ is
in us and he's a friend of sinners (PLM: absolutely!).
PLM: With that whole frame of reference,
Trinitarian theology gives rise to a concern for people as people, and not as a means to an
end of something else. So I couldn't agree with you more, that we don't engage
nonbelievers and build relationships with them simply to get the gospel to
them, because there's a very problematic notion of the gospel if we
don't see the gospel itself in terms of its DNA as relational -- that's
the good news, is that God desires relationship with us. And if I'm only after
relationship for the sake of seeing people come to Christ, then relationship is
not the goal -- relationship is a means to an end of something else, and often
that's a behavioral rationalistic frame of reference -- understanding certain
things about God and doing certain things, rather than heart-to-heart communion.
And so when I talk about a desire to build
relationships with people, that goes beyond even whether they come to Christ or
not, because I think Jesus would want me to care for them, for the
oppressed, those who are in hunger and need, even if they don't come to Christ.
I think he would still feed them and would still care for them, and we should
too. But of course we always want to see people come to know Jesus personally as
Lord and Savior -- that's our desire because we know this communion with
him, we want others to. So it's an invitation rather than a negation.
JMF: It's a living out of the gospel, rather than a
formulaic presentation, by words, it's being the gospel.
PLM: It's a gospel of word and deed and especially in our context today, because we have created so much fear in the
broader community and so many contexts as conservative Christians with our kind
of "take back America" strategy, that I find that we have to create the space with
our lives for our views to be heard, and that's going to require a lot more
sacrificial living than we've been accustomed to. And so that we'll look a lot
more hopefully like the early church context. And I'm excited about that even
though there's some fear on my part of what that will entail, but I think for us
to move toward a more remnant mindset of being as a missional outpost in
our culture rather than some dominant super-structure, actually makes for our
depending on God and Christ more, not less. And so I'm excited about the
opportunities that the church will have in North America in days ahead.
JMF: Speaking then of cultural sensitivity, your
book Consuming Jesus: Beyond Race and Class Divisions in a Consumer Church,
you point out that race problems are not necessarily a thing of the past even
though overtly many of the structures are gone, that within the church, there
tends to still be race and class divisions, could you talk about the title, what
you mean by consuming Jesus and also what these race and class divisions
look like.
PLM: In terms of the title, Consuming
Jesus: Beyond Race and Class Divisions in a Consumer Church, I'm doing two
things with the words, Consuming Jesus. One, negatively, we have with
consumer culture these projections we place on Jesus. We make Jesus to be what
we want him to be. So consumerism consumes our perspectives on Jesus and I think
here of the movie Talladega Nights. There is this prayer by Ricky Bobby (Will
Ferrell) where he's praying to Jesus, eight pounds, six ounce baby Jesus to help
him win a race, and other people at the dinner table are talking about how they
like Jesus looking like this or Jesus looking like this, but it's all based on
their own preferences rather than on who he is in himself. So the negative
aspect is how consumerism impacts us and we distort the biblical perspective on
Jesus with our own cultural preferences.
The more positive notion, in terms of
how I use the words, is that I long for the church to be consumed by Jesus and a
more noble vision of our concern for the church being his people, his community,
where there are no divisions including divisions of race and class -- those are
torn and destroyed. And so that's the other aspect of how I'm using the words
"consuming Jesus."
To develop that further, the issue of how race is still with us
today (and race and class divisions tend to go together in American
culture historically and even in the present day), but there's a noted book
called Divided by Faith on evangelical religion in America where the authors
themselves, Emerson and Smith, talk about how we're not in the slavery era of
race problems, we're not in the Jim Crow era of separate drinking fountains,
sitting at the back of the bus, but in the post-Civil Rights era, people think
that because we don't have these legal structures in the same way that we may
have in the past, a lot of people think that racism is no longer with us.
And
so they develop this at length about how racism, racialization, how race impacts
everything from economics to where you live, to job placement, etc, etc. They
talk about how race is still with us. And then race is a variable, not a constant
-- it's always fluctuating -- racialization and how race impacts in our culture. So
with that as a backdrop, I would say and argue in the book that one of the ways
in which racism is still with us is by way of consumer preference. And we all
tend to flock with those or toward those who are like us, and a lot of churches
cater to that.
And there's been use of this missions principle, the
homogeneous unit principle, applied to church growth strategies in America to
help the church grow fastest, you work with people with same socio-economic
feather and if you target them, they will flock together and they will flock
quickly. And so it's very difficult for getting churches to move beyond these
kinds of principles because it's very pragmatic: it does grow churches quickly
when you're working with preferences of people, and people tend to choose (if you
listen to them) they would choose churches based on what they like rather than
where God is calling them.
Just listen to how people say, "I chose this church
because I like the worship, I like the way the pastor speaks." You don't hear
much about "God called my family to this church." And that might be hard to
configure at times, what's the call of God like, but nonetheless you don't have
people even wrestling with that. And so if a pastor's going to talk about race
divisions, people will be thinking, normal families will be thinking, "what this
have to do with my family? I just want to see my kids raised up morally and I
want them to have good Bible teaching. I'll just go to the church next door
where we don't have to listen to this stuff, and what does this have to do with the
gospel?"
And now I talk about how these things are related to the gospel
message because Paul says in Galatians 3: "There's no longer any division
between Jew and Gentile, male and female, slave and free." And while the
Jew-Gentile issue is different from black/white issues, for example today,
because you could become a Jew if you're a Gentile by circumcision and other
things -- but a black person can't become a white person, a white person can't become
a black person, but those same divisions between Jews and Gentiles have
pertinence and relevance to the divisions we have on racism and racialization
today.
JMF: And morality seems to be the thing that we're
so focused on with our children, maybe not so much with ourselves, but certainly
with our children, we want our children to be moral, it reminds me of The Music
Man, we want the children not to be playing pool, we want them to be
moral, so we get them into band. But through all that search for morality, or
that effort to focus on morality, we can actually get to the place where morality becomes so important that we look down on sinners,
we even despise them, we talk about them in negative ways of reflecting how we
feel about them, as opposed to being like Jesus who is a friend of sinners
to letting his love flow through us because these are the very people he came to
die for. We are all sinners before we come to Christ anyway (and
of course, we still sin afterward), and yet we focus on morality, but the gospel
focuses on relationality. And you've talked about the parable of the Good
Samaritan, how it relates to that.
PLM: In that context, you know, when Jesus is
talking about morality because he's being challenged in the context of the Good
Samaritan parable, he's being challenged by a religious leader, by asking what
must I do to inherit eternal life? And Jesus gets into that whole discussion of
caring for one's neighbor and Jesus frames morality relationally. Of course he's
concerned, as God, for morality, but how he shapes, or frames, morality is always
relational, and the religious leaders were often so concerned for a kind of
behavioral, individualistic morality, they missed the real essence of the law --
which was to love your God with all your heart, soul, mind and strength, and to
love your neighbor as yourself.
And so Jesus says, "this is what it means to care
for one's neighbor." And our neighbor is not the person I most like. As Henri Nouwen said,
"a true community is the place where the person you least like
always lives." And so who does Jesus use as the hero in the story of the good
Samaritan, the Samaritan who had extraordinary mercy, as one particular translation
frames it. And in that context, it's the religious leaders such as this man's
peer group, who don't care for the Jewish man (I'm assuming it's a Jewish man)
--
someone of their own who's been oppressed, who's been beaten, left for dead,
it's a Samaritan who comes to his aid, and in the issues of race and poverty
matters that I'm concerned for in Consuming Jesus, I'm not looking at
people of different ethnicities as bound up somehow with sin, but how we relate
to people or not relate to them, based on them being different from us. That's
the sin issue, that we don't care. And Jesus is concerned for mercy, and justice
and sacrifice and breaking down divisions, especially in the church, but also
beyond. And Jesus was very concerned; Paul was very concerned for these things
in the church.
JMF: I've always been intrigued by Peter's
statement to be ready always to give an answer for the hope that lies within
you. And it implies that you're not supposed to be alwaty going around blurting out the
hope that lies with you, but you're prepared, you're ready to, when the
opportunity and the circumstances call for it. Even Paul said something about,
in another context, about an individual that he said not to associate with
because of his behavior within the church and they were, in effect, putting him
out of the church for a season, and he have to correct them... about, look, when
I said that, I didn't mean not to associate with anyone who's a sinner, I was
talking about the individual who purports to be a member of the church who was
grievously and overtly sinning in public. But he said you've got to associate
with sinners and unbelievers, otherwise you have to come out of the world.
And it as though there's a recognition of the fact
that relational Christianity is going to and needs to engage people who are not
believers, that means it's right and appropriate to be friends of sinners, and
you can do that without taking up their behavior, and yet how can we reach out
to them showing them what the gospel is and what Christ is like in the world if
we don't engage them, if we keep them at arm's length, if we're just... see them
as a target of our condemnation and we're constantly trying to pass laws to put
them in jail?
PLM: Exactly, and with Christ, even with the leper,
even though you wouldn't say that was a sin issue that the person have leprosy,
maybe some people want to make the connection, he has this because he's a
sinner, but if you look at it from a legalistic sense of the law, looking at the letter not the spirit, Jesus, by touching the leper broke the law,
from that reading. But by touching and healing the leper, he fulfilled the law.
And so Jesus is about a relational engagement, a transformation of people, and
while I share the concern for being holy people and we're called to be holy
people, yet it's a dysfunctional spirituality, it's so fears engaging the world
that we don't have contact. We need to be so captured by God's holy love in
Christ that the real force of movement is from us to them in God's holy love,
not a fear of coming out from the world so that we're not tainted...
Again, where's the transformation coming from, are
we being conformed, are we being transforming agents" Jesus in John 17 prays,
"Father, I don't pray that you would take them out of the world, but that you
protect them in the world." Where did Jesus hang out, and where was Jesus'
greatest rebukes going? Who was the audience for his rebukes that were most
forthright? For the religious leaders. And I think that in terms of a concern
about myself, because it wasn't the tax collectors and the sinners, the
prostitutes that he attacked -- he called them to repent, but his attacks were
for those who consider themselves so righteous and they don't need him. That's
where his rebuke was, and it was a stinging rebuke, and my question to me, as a
religious leader, is, if I read this Gospel and I'm thinking he's attacking
mostly the nonbeliever person who is the "sinner," I'm missing the point. Am I
broken? Am I sensing my own need for him today? That's where I think all
Christian leaders should be going, and that we have that sense of desperation
for him to show up and transform us. Because then, we will be in a
position to speak to people in our midst.
JMF: Well, at this point, we've come to the end of
our time. We can get into this some more when you come back.
PLM: I look forward to that. Thanks, Mike.
JMF: We appreciate you being here.
PLM: It's great to be here.
JMF: Thanks. We've been talking with Dr. Paul
Metzger, professor of Christian Theology and Theology of Culture
at Multnomah Biblical Seminary of Multnomah University. I'm Mike Feazell for You're Included.
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