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Ask a Theologian: Why History

Dear Theologian,

I often find the Bible readings at the Sunday Eucharist hard to understand, especially those from the Old Testament. There seems to be an awful lot of specialized historical knowledge needed in order to make sense out of these ancient texts. My question is this: Why is there so much complicated history involved in our religion? Can’t we just worship God in the here and now, without having to learn so much about the past?

Don’t Know Much About History

Dear Don’t Know Much,

Your question touches upon an area of crucial importance for the life of the Church. We read aloud from the Sacred Scriptures of the Hebrew Bible and the Christian New Testament at every Sunday celebration. But what effect upon the spiritual life of our people does this have?

The fact is that many (or even most) of the people in our congregations really do not know very much about the origin, context, and nature of the readings that are proclaimed in the liturgy. Since most of the time no introduction to these texts is given before they are read aloud, the readings can “go by” almost meaninglessly. On the other hand, if there is a proper introduction before a reading that does give the information needed to understand the text, it can sometimes seem like a history lesson.

Then why do we keep reading and trying to understand these texts from the past? To answer this question, we have to consider the fundamental, paradoxical nature of Christian faith. This way of being religious is oriented permanently to certain unique events of the past, and particularly to the life, death, and resurrection of one particular human being, Jesus of Nazareth. Historical reality is intrinsic to Christian faith.

Jesus is not a myth, nor is he a merely legendary figure. He really lived in the region now called “Palestine” at a period about which a great deal is known. The oral traditions about his life found a permanent written form not more than about forty years after his death (Mark). Scholars today are agreed that Mark is the earliest of the four “gospels.” Other accounts were written some twenty to thirty years later (Luke, Matthew, John). It is from these gospels that we read every Sunday because we need always to orient ourselves toward Jesus’ unique human reality.

But Jesus did not appear out of a vacuum, nor did he come from some other world. He was born into a people with a long history, and we cannot begin to understand him without viewing him in the context of his people Israel. This is why we always take as our first reading each Sunday a selection from the sacred writings of the Hebrew Bible. We reverence these writings as the inspired record of God’s action in history, creating and choosing a people to bear witness to God throughout the centuries. We attend not only to the original meaning of these texts for Israel but also to the ways in which they point forward toward Christ.

In addition to the four gospels, the New Testament also contains a number of letters written by St. Paul and others to the early Christian communities around the eastern Mediterranean and to Rome. We take as our second reading each Sunday a selection from this material. Paul’s letters, written earlier than the gospels, are a precious witness to the essential themes of Christian faith and contain valuable teaching on how to live the Christian life.

As you point out, many if not all of these biblical readings are very hard to understand without some specialized historical knowledge. This is why serious study of the Bible is needed, as a major part of Christian formation. But it is sadly lacking in the lives of many of our people.

We do, of course, often use the term “Bible Study” to refer to any kind of gathering to read and talk about biblical passages, with a view to discovering their relevance for the people gathered. But this kind of sharing, valuable as it may be, is really not true “study” of the Bible unless it is guided by some serious intellectual effort of the participants.

As Peter Gomes observes,

“Bible study actually involves the study of the Bible. That involves a certain amount of work, a certain exchange of informed intelligence, a certain amount of discipline. Bible study is certainly not just the response of the uninformed reader to the uninterpreted text, but Bible study in most of the Churches has become just that—the blind leading the blind...” [1]

Attention to the past is inescapable for Christian believers, especially in their efforts to understand and live by the Sacred Scriptures. But it would be a mistake to think that Christian faith is oriented merely to the past.

In attending to the past, Christians are looking at the earlier stages of a great process of creation and redemption that still continues in the present. It began unimaginably long ago, took shape in the history of Israel, and culminated in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus. Now it goes forward into the future. Each new generation is touched and enlivened by the Holy Spirit, in order to participate in the further unfolding of God’s purposes (the coming of the Kingdom of God).

When we gather for worship we read from the ancient Scriptures in order to learn about the great “salvation history” that is continuing in our own lives of faith. We study the Scriptures that bear witness to what God has done, so that we can be conscious participants in what God is doing now. Remembering what has been enables us to be attentive to the grace of God in our own “here and now.”


Faithfully,
The Theologian

[1] Peter J. Gomes, The Good Book: Reading the Bible with Mind and Heart (New York: William Morrow & Company, 1996), pp. 11-12.)


The Rev. Wayne L. Fehr writes a monthly column for the diocesan newsletter called "Ask a Theologian," answering questions from ordinary Christians trying to make sense of their faith. You can find and purchase his book "Tracing the Contours of Faith: Christian Theology for Questioners" here

Ask a Theologian: Putting On Christ

Dear Theologian,

I have a question about a verse of Scripture that was read in Church recently: “Put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh, to gratify its desires.” (Rom 13:14) What does it mean to “put on” the Lord Jesus Christ? And how can one attempt to do that?

Mystified Disciple


Dear Disciple,

St. Paul understands the Christian life in terms of the most intimate possible identification with the crucified and risen Jesus. The metaphor of “putting on Christ,” as one might put on a garment, seems to express the deliberate choice to identify with him. But this is, at the same time, a “putting off” of one’s sinful behaviors. The verse you quote is preceded by these words:

“Let us then lay aside the works of darkness and put on the armor of light; let us live honorably as in the day, not in reveling and drunkenness, not in debauchery and licentiousness, not in quarreling and jealousy.” (Rom 13:12b-13)

Putting on Christ is closely linked, in St. Paul’s writings, with the mystery of Baptism. “As many of you as were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ.” (Gal 3:27) But this means being identified with Christ’s death and resurrection.

“Do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? Therefore we have been buried with him by baptism into death, so that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, so we too might walk in newness of life. For if we have been united with him in a death like his, we will certainly be united with him in a resurrection like his.” (Rom 6:3-5)

Baptism is the beginning of a life that is “clothed with Christ,” but this identification with him is to increase in depth and intensity throughout the believer’s life. On the one hand, of course, all this is totally the work of God. On the other hand, it involves the ever-renewed free choice of the believer to be thus transformed. Hence St. Paul often urges and exhorts his people to make that choice (as in the verse you are asking about).

Perhaps we can get some insight into the “how” of putting on Christ if we look at another text of St. Paul. In Philippians 2, he is urging his people to be of one mind and heart, and to relate to one another with humility, rather than selfish ambition or conceit. Then he writes:

“Let the same mind be in you that was in Christ Jesus, who, though he was in the form of God, did not regard equality with God as something to be exploited, but emptied himself, taking the form of a slave, being born in human likeness. And being found in human form, he humbled himself and became obedient to the point of death—even death on a cross.” (Phil 2:5-8)

We are urged to have “the mind of Christ.” And in another context, Paul even says that we do already have it: “... who has known the mind of the Lord so as to instruct him? But we have the mind of Christ.” (1 Corinthians 2:9-11,16)

What is “the mind of Christ”? Only those who love him can begin to know, as they share ever more fully in his risen life. But we might get some understanding if we ponder the mystery of his being Son. At his baptism, the voice of God says: “You are my Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased.” (Mk 1:11)

We ourselves share in this dimension of the Lord’s being. When we accept Jesus as the Christ and are baptized “into” him, each of us becomes, in a profound way, “son” or “daughter” and we experience the divine acceptance. It is as if the Father says also to each of us: “You are my beloved son/daughter, in whom I am well pleased.”

As this awareness grows in us, we can begin to live increasingly “from” the Father, as Jesus himself did. We can become more and more aware of our utter, absolute dependence upon God for all things. Attitudes that accompany this awareness are wonder, praise, gratitude, confident dependence and trust. To live this way is to be set free from undue anxiety.

As we try consciously to live the new Christ-life, we come also to recognize that we desire to do God’s will, to let God’s Kingdom come and be realized in us and in our world. The attitude is well expressed in what Jesus says to his disciples when they want him to eat the food they have brought: “I have food to eat that you do not know about.... My food is to do the will of him who sent me and to complete his work.” (Jn 4:32,34)

As the Holy Spirit works in our lives, we also understand better the teachings of Christ and find that we desire increasingly to live by them. The way of being human that is revealed in Jesus, in his parables and in his actions, becomes the pattern for our own efforts to live with integrity and compassion.

“Putting on Christ” in this way, we too, like God’s holy ones in all generations, may come to reveal in our lives something of God’s peace and joy, God’s justice and God’s mercy. We can learn to be simply present and available to our fellow human beings—to love and serve them in practical ways. We can learn to be peacemakers who do not return evil for evil but rather overcome evil with good and repay hatred with love. When we suffer, we can learn to go through our ordeal in union with the suffering Christ, not giving way to bitterness or despair.

Faithfully,
The Theologian


The Rev. Wayne L. Fehr writes a monthly column for the diocesan newsletter called "Ask a Theologian," answering questions from ordinary Christians trying to make sense of their faith. You can find and purchase his book "Tracing the Contours of Faith: Christian Theology for Questioners" here

Ask a Theologian: Forgiveness

image: Liz Valente, https://www.instagram.com/donalizvalente/


Dear Theologian,

I grew up in the Catholic Church, where we were told to “go to confession” to a priest fairly often, to have our sins forgiven. Do we have anything similar in the Episcopal Church? How are we to find forgiveness for our sins?

A Penitent


Dear Penitent, 

Your first question can be answered simply. Yes, the Episcopal Church does have something very similar to the Roman Catholic Sacrament of Penance, now usually referred to as Reconciliation. You can find it in the Book of Common Prayer at page 447, under the heading “The Reconciliation of a Penitent.”

Like many other practices in the Anglican form of Christianity, this rite is available to all who request it from a priest, but is not required of anyone. The decision to request it is left up to the discernment of the individual believer. A familiar saying applies here: “All may, none must, some should.”

Your second question, though, demands a fuller response. How, indeed, are we sinful human beings to find forgiveness for our sins? The question becomes intensely personal for each one of us at certain times, when we become aware of how little we have responded to the infinite Love that is at the heart of things.

The way into finding forgiveness begins when we take the time to enter humbly into the presence of the One who loves us absolutely. There are no preliminaries necessary. It is not as if we had first to get our house in order, through moral conversion and change, before God would be willing to love us and come to us.

We need, however, first to learn to be quiet enough to hear the voice of God affirming and accepting us as we are. The discipline of silence is required. But we must also read Sacred Scripture and believe in the Word of God, especially as it reveals the infinite mercy that attends us.

Only after we have allowed God to love us for a while, should we then direct our attention to that self which is so dear to us and at the same time so wounded and unloving. We can dare to look at ourselves as we are, if we are illuminated by the light of God’s love directed to us seemingly unlovable ones.

The self-knowledge that we then gain can, however, lead us to want to hide ourselves from God, because we are actually so unworthy to be in relationship to that furnace of love. How can we dare to turn towards the Light? What gives us the hope that we will be healed and renewed in that Light, rather than destroyed by it?

Here it is important to remember that we stand in a great fellowship of forgiveness. The gracious, forgiving Love that God is, has brought into being a community of forgiven people which extends through all times and places and even includes the dead. And each of us is a member of that fellowship.

It is in and through the liturgical and sacramental life of the Church community that we receive the revelation of God given to us in the Sacred Scriptures of Israel and of the Church. The place in which we hear the Word of divine forgiveness, and are able to believe in it and allow ourselves to be forgiven, is the fellowship of forgiven sinners who belong to God through the reconciling death of Christ.

This happens again and again, whenever we gather with fellow believers to celebrate the Holy Eucharist. The Word that is read and proclaimed prepares us to be forgiven and reconciled with Christ in the Sacrament. It is true to say that the primary Sacrament of forgiveness, after the once-and-for-all event of Baptism, is the Eucharist.

Why, then, does the Church provide a separate and distinct rite for the Reconciliation of a Penitent? And when is it appropriate?

Persons who have been guilty of serious moral failure have a special need for an individual, personal, extended rite of reconciliationin order to experience their own sorrow and to experience the overwhelming goodness and mercy which surrounds them and allows a new beginning (in spite of everything).

Why is this valuable? Because it takes the whole process of forgiveness out of the seemingly merely private and inward sphere, and places it in the public, social context of the community of faith to which the person belongs. There is an objectivity about celebrating the Sacrament of forgiveness which greatly strengthens a person’s faith and allows him or her to feel in a bodily, interpersonal way the reality of being forgiven.

What does the Sacrament involve?

It is an act of faith, an expression of worship, entered into with a fellow believer who, by virtue of ordination, represents the entire fellowship of forgiven sinners. In a setting of simple faith and honest prayer, the two listen to the Word of God and put their absolute trust in the divine forgiveness.

Then the penitent confesses in specific terms the nature and shape of his or her sins. Why this? Because, as the famous 5th Step of Alcoholics Anonymous has demonstrated for millions, to admit to another human being the exact nature of one’s failures allows one to admit it fully both to one’s self and to God. And without that full and honest admission, no one can ever change or be healed.

The priest may then respond with some words of counsel and encouragement, and ordinarily also imposes some small but significant action to be carried out later as an expression of one’s sincere repentance and desire for amendment of life.

Finally, the priest solemnly utters the words of forgiveness and release, of pardon and peace.  He absolves the penitent in the name of the Church and therefore in the name of Christ from whom the Church lives. This is a word of authority, to be accepted gladly by the one who has entrusted himself or herself so completely to the mercy of God:

“Our Lord Jesus Christ, who has left power to his Church to absolve all sinners who truly repent and believe in him, of his great mercy forgive you all your offenses; and by his authority committed to me, I absolve you from all your sins: In the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.”

The words of forgiveness are accompanied by a gesture—the priest extends a hand over the penitent and may lay a hand on the person’s head or shoulder.

The final words of the priest sum up the significance of what has occurred:

“Now there is rejoicing in heaven; for you were lost, and are found; you were dead, and are now alive in Christ Jesus our Lord. Go in peace. The Lord has put away all your sins.” [1]

Faithfully,
The Theologian

[1] BCP, p. 451.


The Rev. Wayne L. Fehr writes a monthly column for the diocesan newsletter called "Ask a Theologian," answering questions from ordinary Christians trying to make sense of their faith. You can find and purchase his book "Tracing the Contours of Faith: Christian Theology for Questioners" here

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