Monday, February 28, 2011

The Wisdom of Jason Boyett

Earlier today, my good friend Steven Cates posted a tweet that linked to the following article by blogger Jason Boyett. I have never heard of this gentlemen until Steve posted. Boyett instantly captivated me with his insight into yet another demagogic denominational attack. I believe that this is a fellow "crusader" (I know probably not a good term in a blog about Christians) in the fight for Christian ecumenism, a cause that I hold dear to my heart. The article can be found at the link posted below, or you can just scroll down and read. Enjoy!

http://blog.beliefnet.com/omeoflittlefaith/2011/02/thoughts-rob-bell.html

---------------------

Thoughts About Rob Bell, John Piper, and Justin Taylor - O Me of Little Faith

I'm not sure what Rob Bell was doing on Saturday, but I wonder how long it took for him to realize that he had blown up the Internet. At least, the Christian twitterverse and blogosphere.

Bell, the pastor of Mars Hill Bible Church in Grand Rapids and the author of Velvet Elvis and Sex God, has a fascinating new book releasing in March -- at least, the title is fascinating. It's called Love Wins: A Book About Heaven, Hell, and the Fate of Every Person Who Ever Lived.

From the publisher's copy about the book:

In Love Wins: Heaven, Hell, and the Fate of Every Person Who Ever Lived, Bell addresses one of the most controversial issues of faith--the afterlife--arguing that a loving God would never sentence human souls to eternal suffering. With searing insight, Bell puts hell on trial, and his message is decidedly optimistic--eternal life doesn't start when we die; it starts right now. And ultimately, Love Wins.

Sound controversial? It is. It's supposed to be. And we're not supposed to judge a book by its cover, but on Saturday influential blogger Justin Taylor (who's also in the publishing business as vice president of editorial at Crossway) decided to judge the book based on its cover description. Citing that and a short video provided by the publisher, Taylor outed Bell as a universalist.

While he admitted that he hadn't read the book yet (!), he felt OK making this statement about Bell:

It is unspeakably sad when those called to be ministers of the Word distort the gospel and deceive the people of God with false doctrine.

And this one, too, in an explanatory follow-up statement:

If Bell is teaching that hell is empty and that you can reject Jesus and still be saved, he is opposing the gospel and the biblical teaching of Jesus Christ. You may think that's judgmental to say that; I think it's being faithful. I would encourage a careful study of 1 Timothy to see what Paul says about false teaching and teachers.

As of this morning, Taylor's post has more than 20,000 Facebook recommendations and 1,000 comments. But that's not all. Highly respected author and pastor John Piper read Taylor's post and recommended it to his Twitter followers with a link and this simple line:

Farewell, Rob Bell.

Piper's tweet got retweeted and passed along and pretty soon, #robbell was in Saturday's top 10 trending topics, which is usually reserved for Middle East unrest, dead celebrities, and Justin Biebers.

{Audible sigh.}

Thoughts:

1. This is why people hate us. There is no meaner, more hateful person on Earth than a Christian who suspects you have gotten your theology wrong. Labeling that mean-ness as "being faithful" to the Gospel doesn't make it less hateful. While Taylor's post was fairly calm, the response to it by his readers was not. Bell got skewered in the comments, on twitter, and in other blog posts.

2. Really, John Piper? Your Reformed followers can be obnoxious at times, but I've always hoped you were above that. Sometimes you say things that make me roll my eyes. Most of the time, though, you're way more gracious than your fans. But "farewell, Rob Bell"? What a disappointingly smug, arrogant tweet. It's worth pointing out what Scot McKnight told Christianity Today about the matter: "The way to disagree with someone of Rob Bell's influence is not a tweet of dismissal but a private letter or a phone call. Flippancy should have no part in judging a Christian leader's theology, character or status."

3. Unlike some, I'm not going to fault Taylor for pre-judging Bell's book. I've ranted about books I haven't read, too. In fact, publishers' copy and marketing materials are designed exactly for that purpose: they are supposed to give you an idea of a book's contents so that you'll be intrigued and buy it.

4. I kind of wish Justin Taylor had gotten a copy of my latest book and called me names in a blog post.

5. But here's where Taylor's and Piper's responses annoy and frustrate me: They are so absolutely certain that they are right. Because Rob Bell seems to be indicating that hell might not be a place of eternal suffering -- or might not exist at all in the way traditional Christianity thinks of it -- then they say he is flat-out wrong. Dangerously wrong. False-doctrine wrong. Opposing-the-Gospel wrong. But you know what? The Bible is really squishy on the subject of hell. The everlasting-torment hell of Dante and Jonathan Edwards doesn't exist at all in the Old Testament. In the New Testament, Jesus talks about hell a lot, but sometimes in ways that a reasonable person could interpret metaphorically (like when he calls it Gehenna, after a real-life burning trash heap outside Jerusalem). And for centuries, some Christians have tried to make the case that, when Paul says Christ died for all, he really meant it. Not some. All.

No, universalism isn't an orthodox Christian position. Hell is. But are we not willing to admit that, maybe, over the years, we could have gotten something wrong? Is it so wrong to maybe hope that everyone gets saved? That hell doesn't exist? Because I totally hope that to be the case.

The truth is this: In order to be an everyone-get-saved Universalist, as Taylor claims Bell to be, you have to elevate some biblical passages and ignore (or explain away) others. Because there are definitely some passages that seem to be about eternal punishment in hell.

But...

In order to be a predestination-style, God-saves-the-elect reformed Christian -- like Taylor and Piper -- you have to elevate some biblical passages and ignore (or explain away) others. Because there are definitely some passages that seem to contradict predestination.

But...

In order to be a free-will Arminian Christian, you have to elevate some biblical passages and ignore (or explain away) others. Because there are definitely some passages that seem to confirm predestination.

See where this is going?

In order to be an Evangelical Christian...

In order to be a Roman Catholic Christian...

In order to be a Pentecostal Christian, a cessationist, an End-Times date-setter, a female pastor, a pacifist Christian...

Reading and understanding the Bible involves lots and lots of interpretation. Not just in light of the world and culture around us, but in reference to other parts of the Bible. At best, there are things that are unclear and not easily harmonized from Genesis to Revelation. At worst, there are things that seem to be downright contradictory. That's why I have doubts. That's why theology can be so controversial.

And that's also why theology is best done with humility and a recognition that certainty is very hard to come by. When we become so certain that our theology is ironclad and right, that's when we become smug, arrogant, and dismissive of people who disagree with us. That's when we do things like tweet that a thoughtful, hopeful, influential Christian like Rob Bell is dead to us.

Because that's what "Farewell, Rob Bell" means, isn't it? You're dead to me. What I believe is right. If you oppose it, then I'm done with you.

At least that's how I read it. Please tell me I'm wrong.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

::sigh::
I would say the Bible is pretty clear on the fact that Hell exists and unfortunately, some people will end up there because Jesus is the only way.
Believe me, I hate that. I wish with my all heart that everyone could go to heaven. I wish hell didn't exist. I really do. And it's so hard to reconcile these beliefs. But that's why we need to evangelize all the more...and lovingly point others to Christ. That's why we need missions and church plants.

No, we shouldn't attack each other. But let's get real, we need to hold each other accountable. If my good Christian friend is spouting off ideas and beliefs that are clearly not in line with Scripture I'm going to say something about it. Because I care and I don't want them to stray.

And why would anyone have to privately go to Rob Bell to question his beliefs?? He made a PUBLIC statement, I think it's fair to make a public statement in return. No one said anything when people publicly criticized Pat Robertson for making his insane comments about the earthquake in Haiti. But now Rob Bell is making some pretty serious statements about hell not existing and we're supposed to be quiet about it??

I think Kevin DeYoung wrote a pretty fair blog post about this: http://thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/kevindeyoung/2011/02/28/bell-brouhaha/
You should read it and consider what he's saying.

And here's something Tim Keller wrote about hell (not related to Rob Bell): http://www.redeemer.com/news_and_events/articles/the_importance_of_hell.html

I'm all for ecumenical "crusades" (lol, you're right, that is a pretty terrible word to use in Christian circles), but we have to understand that some doctrines of the faith are of upmost importance: The Trinity, Jesus is the Son of God, etc etc. Some are of secondary importance...and some of tertiary importance. I'm not going to sit and argue about drinking alcohol or women in leadership roles in the church...I'm just not, it's silly and I think people who think differently from me on such issues are still Christians. But there are some doctrines that you simply must adhere to in order to truly consider yourself a Christian.

And I'm not saying we should attack Rob Bell or leave mean anonymous comments on blogs...but he has his opinion and he voiced it and the rest of us can voice our opinions too. Tolerance goes both ways.

Gabby said...

I agree with you in that I don't agree with Bell's theology on hell. If I were to categorize his beliefs, I would call him a Unitarian.

I also do not oppose Justin Taylor's response to the book's synopsis. If I were to disagree with something, though, it would be with John Piper's tweet.

I mean really? A pastor of his caliber decided to express his views in 140 characters or less? "Farewell, Rob Bell." That sort of forum does not allow for useful, constructive discussions to occur. A blog or a thoroughly written article would have been a little clearer and a little less demeaning.

I'm going to read the links you posted so that I could read a little more into it.

Also, I have a blog coming soon about Cafeteria Christianity. It has to do with this similar topic.

Gabby said...

Hey just read the articles. Good reads!

Thanks for those! :)