Monday, August 10, 2009

A culturally diverse community of believers serves to ensure we don't make God in our own image


I think you will agree with me that it is a real danger for us to start thinking we have the not only the truest understanding of who Jesus is, but also that our understanding is complete. Though we are justified and counted as righteous as Christ in the Father's eyes, we are fallible. So, how is our understanding of who Christ is to be protected from leading us off down the wrong path? I think God provides at least three graces to keep us (or move us back) on the right path: 1) the Holy Spirit speaks to us through the Scripture; 2) people of long past cultures speak to us through their writings; and 3) people of contemporary cultures for community with us, so that we and they alike can be mutually edified in our pursuit of faithful living.

It is this third means that Lesslie Newbigin addresses as follows:

The way in which any Christian perceives God's revelation in Christ and in the whole biblical story will be shaped tby the culture through which that individual was formed. It is a simple fact that Jesus has been and is portrayed in an amazing variety of portraits from the Byzantine Pantocrator through the medieval crucifix and the Jesus of the sacred heart to the blue-eyed blond of American protestantism and the Che Guevara freedom fighter of liberation theology. For some writers it seems obvious that Jesus can be portrayed in any guise that is (as they would say) "meaningful" for them and their contemporaries. But "Jesus" is not a name to which we can attach any character we like to imagine. Jesus is the name of a man of whom we have information in the books of New Testament interpreted (as they must be) in the light of the books which were Jesus' own scriptures. The Jesus of whom the New Testament writers bear witness is not an inaccessible figure. Our varying perceptions of him - and of course they will vary because we are culturally different people - have to be checked in some way that all our claims to perceive reality have to be checked. we have to share them with others who perceive Jesus with the different lenses furnished by their different cultures. [Lesslie Newbigin, The Gospel in a Pluralist Society, pg. 192-193].

So, a culturally diverse community of believers serves to ensure we don't make God in our own image.

How diverse is your community? Mine isn't great, but I will say that it is getting more diverse. God's mission is aimed at a VERY diverse world, and as we become more missional, our community is likely to become more diverse. Lord, help us be a part of transforming everything within our reach - ourselves, our church, our CITY, and the WORLD!

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