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Resurrection: cosmic, communal; Hopkins, Karr

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For Easter, here are two poems, inspired again by the Christian Wiman interview. The first, Gerard Manley Hopkins’s “That Nature is a Heraclitean Fire and of the comfort of the Resurrection,” is, I would argue, neither primarily about Incarnation or about Crucifixion but instead about the cosmic relevance of the Resurrection. It also reminds me of the theology of Maximus the Confessor. The second, Mary Karr’s “Descending Theology: The Resurrection,” was one that Wiman himself mentioned in the interview as a poem about the Resurrection. Karr’s poem reminds me of the communal relevance of the Resurrection. And thus, it reminds me of the theology of Augustine of Hippo. Both, of course, are deeply Pauline (cf. Rom. 8 and 1 Cor. 12, among many others, of course)

Be sure to check out Karr’s poem “The Devil’s Delusion” and Wiman’s  poem “Witness” in the latest print issue of Commonweal.


Why Homosexuality Is Not Like Other Sins

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Why Homosexuality Is Not Like Other Sins

Homosexuality is not the only sin mentioned in 1 Corinthians 6:9–10.

Or do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived: neither the sexually immoral, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor men who practice homosexuality, nor thieves, nor the greedy, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor swindlers will inherit the kingdom of God.

It’s not the only sin mentioned, but it is different from all the rest, at least right now. At this moment in history, contrary to the other sins listed here, homosexuality is celebrated by our larger society with pioneering excitement. It’s seen as a good thing, as the new hallmark of progress.

To be sure, the masses increasingly make no bones about sin in general. Innumerable people are idolaters, not to mention those who are sexually immoral, or who commit adultery, or who steal and are greedy and get wasted and revile neighbors and swindle others. It happens all the time. And each of these unrepentant sins are the same in the sense of God’s judgment. They all deserve his wrath. And we’re constantly reminded that “such were some of you” (1 Corinthians 6:11).

Concerning Popular Opinion

But as far as I know, none of those sins are applauded so aggressively by whole groups of people who advocate for their normalcy. Sexual immorality is no longer the tip of the spear for the progressive push. Adultery is still frowned upon by many. Accusations of greed will still smear a candidate’s political campaign. Thievery is still not openly embraced, and there are no official initiatives saying it’s okay to go steal things that don’t belong to you. There’s no such thing as a drunk agenda yet. Most aren’t proud to choose a beverage over stability, and there aren’t any petitions that the government should abolish the driving restrictions of inebriated individuals. Reviling others still isn’t seen as the best way to win friends and influence people. Swindling, especially on a corporate level, usually gets someone thrown into jail. In fact, the infrastructure of the American economy depends upon, in some measure, our shared disdain for conniving scammers.

Perhaps excepting fornication, these sins are still seen in a pretty negative light. But not homosexual practice, not by those who are now speaking loudest and holding positions of prominence. According to the emerging consensus, homosexuality is different.

What to Be Against

As Christians, we believe with deepest sincerity that the embrace of homosexual practice, along with other sins, keeps people out of the kingdom of God. And if our society celebrates it, we can’t both be caring and not say anything. Too much is at stake. This means it is an oversimplification to say that Christians — or conservative evangelicals — are simply against homosexuality. We are against any sin that restrains people from everlasting joy in God, and homosexual practice just gets all the press because, at this cultural moment, it’s the main sin that is so freshly endorsed in our context by the powers that be. Let’s hope that if there’s some new cultural agenda promoting thievery — one that says it’s now our right to take whatever we want from others by whatever means — that Christians will speak out against it. The issue is sin. That’s what we’re against. And that’s what should make our voice so unique when we speak into this debate.

Some would like to see this whole issue of homosexuality divided into two camps: those who celebrate it and those who hate it. Both of these groups exist in our society. There are the growing numbers, under great societal pressure, who praise homosexuality. We might call them the left. And there are people who hate homosexuality, with the most bigoted rationale and apart from any Christian concern. We might call them the right.

Those Glorious Words

The current debate is plagued by this binary lens. Those on the left try to lump everyone who disagrees with them into that right side. If you don’t support, you hate. Meanwhile, those on the right see compromise and spinelessness in anyone who doesn’t get red-faced and militant. If you don’t hate, you support.

But true followers of Christ will walk neither path. We have something to say that no one else is saying, or can say.

Distancing ourselves from both the left and the right, we don’t celebrate homosexual practice, we acknowledge God’s clear revealed word that it is sin; and we don’t hate those who embrace homosexuality, we love them enough to not just collapse under the societal pressure. We speak the truth in love into this confusion, saying, simultaneously, “That’s wrong” and “I love you.” We’re not the left; we say, this is wrong. And we’re not the right; we say, you’re loved. We speak good news, with those sweetest, deepest, most glorious words of the cross — the same words that God spoke us — “You’re wrong, and you’re loved.”

God tells us we’re wrong, that the wages of sin is death, that unrepentant rebellion means judgment, that our rescue required the cursed death of his Son (Romans 3:23; John 3:36; Galatians 3:13). And God tells us we’re loved, that even while we were sinners, Jesus died for us, that while we were unrighteous, Jesus suffered in our place, that though we were destined for wrath, Jesus welcomes us into glory (Romans 5:8; 1 Peter 3:18; Ephesians 2:1–7).

Where the Gospel Shines

You’re wrong and you’re loved — that’s the unique voice of the Christian. That’s what we say, speaking from our own experience, as Tim Keller so well puts it, “we’re far worse than we ever imagined, and far more loved than we could ever dream.”

That’s our message in this debate, when society’s elites despise us, when pop songs vilify us, when no one else has the resources to say anything outside of two extremes, we have this incomparable opportunity to let the gospel shine, to reach out in grace: you’re wrong and you’re loved. We get to say this.

That’s why homosexuality is not like other sins.


Recent posts from Jonathan Parnell:

Laughter is worthwhile (A-Z Blogging Challenge)

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"The human race has one really effective weapon, and that is laughter."  Mark Twain I remember laughing a lot in college.  Looking back there aren't many things I specifically remember laughing about, but one particular moment comes to mind. Dorm checks were on Thursday evenings.  It was relatively informal.  Every (or almost every) Thursday, an RA would check your room and make sure

Proverbs 9: Productive Conversations

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Proverbs 9 provides some very good advice for those of us who are interested in apologetics. Obviously, our interests often times bring us into deeper discussions with people who we might not see eye to eye with. These discussions can be frustrating to say the least. I was involved in a conversation with a few […]

Let’s Not Get the Hell Out of Here

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Easter Sunday is a hard act to follow. “The strife is o’er, the battle done/Now is the Victor’s triumph won/He closed the gates of yawning hell/The bars from heaven’s high portals fell.” And, this hymn by Charles Wesley, “Christ the Lord is risen today. Alleluia!” Or this one, by William Chatterton Dix, sung to the melody of Hyfrydol: “Alleluia! Sing to Jesus!/His the scepter, His the throne;/Alleluia! His the triumph, His the victory alone.” What could possibly trump that? And so it is not surprising that the day after the Feast of the Resurrection, Easter Monday, is a liturgical letdown, a prosaic return to the quotidian.

Still, there is something in the human spirit that wants the party to go on, at least for a while. This sentiment finds expression in the various traditions of Easter Monday, all of which have religious connotations despite their secularized form. In this country, the most famous of these is the Easter Monday Egg Roll on the South Lawn of the White House. It is a day of laughter and fun for Washington’s children, with a chance to meet the official White House Easter Bunny and perhaps even the President and the First Lady. In the Czech Republic, this is the day of the famous Prague Easter Market at Wenceslas Square, with puppets, dolls, and many tasty pastries on offer. In Poland, the day after Easter is Wet Monday, so called from the medieval custom of village boys going from house to house to switch the girls with twigs and to drench them with water (shades of Lenten penitence and baptism). In good egalitarian style, it is said that of late the girls too have become switchers and dousers. The day is often rounded out with a good serving of leftover kielbasa and sauerkraut from Easter dinner.

The fact that some of these rituals, like our decorated trees at Christmas, are rooted in a pagan past doesn’t bother me—it simply shows the deep reach of redemption. It also shows something else, I think: the collective need for a good sanctified belly laugh at the beginning of Eastertide, a counterpart to Mardi Gras just prior to the rigors of Lent. Within the framework of redemptive history, it is also a chance to tweak the beard of the Evil One and remind him that his kingdom has been rattled: He is un roi prétendu. Despite the devil’s worst doings, God still reigns, Christ is risen, love conquers, and hilarity happens. The drama of Easter weekend includes a depiction of the victory of Christ that enables us to celebrate the day of resurrection, and all that follows from it, with all the gusto we have. This is the historic doctrine of the descent of Jesus Christ into hell.

Several weeks ago, the Reverend Luke Powery, the dean of Duke University Chapel, announced to his congregation that the traditional version of the Apostles’ Creed, including the statement that Jesus “descended into hell,” was being restored to their worship. Whatever prompted the dean’s decision, I applaud it. Among many Protestants and evangelicals, the confession of Christ’s descent into hell—or his “descent to the dead,” as the Latin descendit ad inferna is often rendered—has been attacked from both ends of the spectrum.

On the one hand, many contemporary Christians shy away from anything that cannot be explained in purely naturalistic terms. What are folks like this to make of the descent into hell when they stumble over the virgin birth, the miracles of Jesus, or the resurrection itself? Superstitions all, they snort. On the other hand, there are some conservative evangelicals who want to remove the descent from the creed entirely, not because it is too biblical but because the biblical evidence for it, they say, is too thin.

In my view, the accommodationists are worse than the biblicists, but both are missing the point. On the biblical evidence, 1 Peter 3:18–20, the famous New Testament text which declares that Christ “went and preached to the spirits in prison,” is only one of several passages referring to Christ’s mission between Good Friday and Easter Sunday. This teaching must be understood in light of both Jewish apocalyptic traditions, of which it is a part, and many other New Testament passages which prompted its (admittedly late) inclusion in the Apostles’ Creed. These include: Colossians 2:9–15, a proto-Apostles’ Creed in nuce; 1 Peter 4:5–6; Romans 10:6–9; 14:8–9; Philippians 2:5–11; Acts 2:24–36; Matthew 12:29, 40; 27:51–54; Luke 23:43; and Revelation 1:18.

Another crucial text is Ephesians 4:8–10, with its quotation of Psalm 68:18, in which Christ’s descent “into the lower parts of the earth” is connected to his triumphal ascent into heaven. God’s Anointed One returns to glory carrying in his train the ransomed booty of Satan and distributing Spirit-endowed gifts to the church. In presenting Hans Urs von Balthasar’s interpretation of the descent, Edward T. Oakes described this event as a mighty, reverberating “thud” so powerful that it shook everything up, including the devil’s bourgeois kingdom. Like a depth charge exploding near the ocean floor, Jesus landed “at the bottom so heavily” that he continues to radiate outward in all directions “so that his ripple effects will never fade.”

If this did really happen—and the church since the time of Peter, Paul, and Polycarp has confessed that it did—what does it mean? The answer is: many things and various, with differing nuances between East and West, Lutherans and Calvinists, Barth and Balthasar. Even Calvin, who interpreted the descent less literally than most others in the tradition before him, still declared that it was “a matter of no small moment in bringing about redemption.” In the approaching death and spiritual sufferings of Christ on the cross, Calvin taught, Jesus had to “grapple hand to hand with the armies of hell and the dread of everlasting death.”

In explaining why he had decided to incorporate the descent article into the Apostles’ Creed at Duke Chapel, Dean Powery gave a good pastoral answer. This affirmation of the Church’s historic faith, he said, forcefully reminds the Church that “Christ’s presence goes with Christians, even to the darkest and most tortured parts of their lives. Even hell is not beyond the bounds of Christ’s presence, graces, and redemption.” That’s a good word for those who are in the grips of hell already, both the hell within and the hell around. Jesus the Victor has given the unspeakable gift of his presence to all who believe in him. As Joseph Ratzinger has put it: “This article thus asserts that Christ strode through the gate of our final loneliness, that in his passion he went down into the abyss of our abandonment. Where no voice can reach us any longer, there is he.” And because this is true, “death is no longer the path into icy solitude, the gates of sheol have been opened.”

I think we need to connect Holy Saturday more closely to Easter Monday. If the former is rightly observed as a day of silence and contemplation, anticipating the sunrise at the end of Easter Vigil, then let the day after Easter Sunday be one of jubilation and holy hilarity for, as the gospel song declares, “Our God Reigns.”

The descent, like the cross and the ascension, was a one-time event. It happened like a sudden lightning flash, “once for all” (Greek hapax), as the New Testament says. But the harrowing of hell has changed things forever, with consequences both cosmic and personal. With Martin Luther we can rejoice and sing:

What might of ours can naught be done,
Soon were our loss effected;
But for us fights the Valiant One,
Whom God Himself elected.
Ask ye, Who is this?
Jesus Christ it is,
Of Sabaoth Lord,
And there’s none other God;
He holds the field forever.

Timothy George is dean of Beeson Divinity School of Samford University and general editor of the Reformation Commentary on Scripture. His email address is tfgeorge@samford.edu.

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PRAYER: THE PEACE OF GOD

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Jehovah Nissi, The Lord My Banner, we worship you, we praise and glorify you. You are worthy, oh so worthy, Lord. Exalted Creator in Heaven, You are faithful, oh so faithful. You are righteous and none can compare to you. Thank you Jesus for washing away our sins, and bringing us in union with Your Awesome Glory!

Read more on PRAYER: THE PEACE OF GOD…

Monday Monkery – Day after Easter Sunday Edition

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Pastor Dan, who does our weekly iMonk Saturday Ramblings, got Holy Saturday off this past weekend so that he could focus on all the special services he was participating in. I remember those marathon occasions from when I was a pastor and I’ll be very surprised if Dan’s not sleeping in today. And tomorrow. But […]

Praying for Boys, Session Four: Honor, Integrity, Obedience, Oh My!


Silencing My Ignorance

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We live in such a noisy world.   It’s hard to grasp pure silence anymore.                 Yet, don’t we all long for it from time to time? … I know that I do.                 Hmmm.                 Yeah, I’m known as a […]

The other disciples in the scene

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Caravaggio painted his The Incredulity of St. Thomas sometime around the turn of the seventeenth century. Jesus (in white linen) stands to the left, Thomas is next to him (in a thread-bare red shirt), and Jesus is guiding Thomas’s hand as Thomas places his finger in the wound just under Jesus’ right breast. Two other disciples, also in red, hover in the scene

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This is why . . .

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First, you get a question. “What is God's will for my life?” or “Are my parents really in purgatory” or “What about babies who die before they are baptized?” or “What about all those people who lived before Jesus was born?” or any one of a number of questions you get when you wear the funny shirt with the little white tab in the middle.

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TULIPs for the tolerant

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So, the Internets are not friendly to Calvinists. And I get it. There are some in my Reformed tradition who would hardly want to acknowledge me as part of their theological tree.

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What do you think the marks of a true Christian are?

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Based on being or not being a Christian, I really believe this is a judgement that you need to do on yourself.  Judging others is not for the Christian or non Christian.  Let’s leave this up to God… Love in Action Love must be sincere. Hate what is evil; cling to what is good.  Be […]

The Glory of Kings

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Video:  Bill Johnson explains that God conceals things for us Proverbs 25:2 (Amp) 2It is the glory of God to conceal a thing, but the glory of kings is to search out a thing. “There is depth to revelation to the Word of God.  You know an atheist can read the bible and get a Word […]

Apr 21, Prayer for my dying Mother

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Please pray to our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, The Master Physician, if He is willing to heal my very sick Mother, She suffers from Anemia and her care

Apr 21, Prayer for Help and Guidance

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Jesus,thank you for waking up me once again.Lord,pls.bless my child in her activities.May you will beside her helping,guiding,guarding,protecting and loving

Love & Marriage (and a Book Giveaway!)

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Anne Lamott once said, “A good marriage is where both people feel like they’re getting the better end of the deal.” There’s a lot of wisdom in that. Because that […]

The Birthing Place of Beauty

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On our early morning flight, the attendant offered me a drink, and with every intense ounce of me I asked for coffee. I may have grunted it, because she and […]

Apr 21, A Prayer to Save My Marriage

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Heavenly Father, please help me I have made a mess of my marriage by not being the loving and caring man that I set out to be and that my wife expected

Apr 21, Prayer for immediate employment of my brother

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Dear Lord Jesus Christ please help my brother Macnell Alcorcon for an immediate employment now in Singapore. I hope Lord his previous employer in Singapore
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