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When God Disturbs the Peace

Our gospel may be small because we fail to believe that God animates many social movements.

If one calling of preachers is to afflict the comfortable and comfort the afflicted, then Fleming Rutledge is a master of preaching. Her sermons, collected in several popular books, including The Undoing of Death and, most recently, Not Ashamed of the Gospel (Eerdmans), combine vivid and searching readings of Scripture with acute observations of contemporary culture, international politics, and literature. In her preaching vocation, Rutledge often stands at the crossroads of mainline and evangelical contexts, at once guiding mainline audiences back to biblically orthodox roots and helping evangelicals grasp the utterly earth-shattering implications of the Good News. In this article, Rutledge responds to this year's CVP question, Is our gospel too small?, with fresh tellings of the ways God has animated some of the great social movements of the last century.

There are two competing ways of understanding and presenting the Christian gospel in America. They are equally valid and ideally should complement one another, but unfortunately, battle lines have been drawn on both sides. Some Christians emphasize the gospel as purely a matter of individual salvation; others see it essentially in terms of community and of social justice. This problem is partly cultural, but more significantly, it arises from insufficient knowledge of the Scriptures: "You are in error because you do not know the Scriptures or the power of God" (Matt. 22:29).

American Christians of both the Right and Left find it difficult to read Scripture from the perspective of communities other than our own. On one hand, teaching in the mainline churches is often detached from any foundational convictions about "the Scriptures or the power of God." A service may begin, "Let us worship God," but then go on to celebrate the possibilities inherent in human nature. Transcendent power is not in view; "inclusion" is the operative word.

On the other hand, worship in many American evangelical and Pentecostal churches, while appearing to extol the power of God, focuses attention on very specific and limited categories. Often the spotlight is on redemption from particular sins, like freedom from whatever one's addiction might be (very popular at the moment). Sometimes it is healing of a specific physical ailment, or it may be a version of the prosperity gospel.

Most of the participants in the civil rights movement were overwh elmingly convinced that in their resistance, God was on the move.

Often in these evangelical-Pentecostal settings, however, the power of God is proclaimed as deliverance from demonic forces. This is a perspective that liberals and evangelicals might be able to share. For some time now, the academic guilds have been moving away from a rationalistic mode of biblical interpretation. This development opens the way for a new appropriation of the conceptual world of the New Testament, in which the presence of the demonic is presupposed. This perspective shapes theo-ethical thinking in two crucial ways: First, it allows Christians to view opponents not as evil in themselves, but as those who are in the grip of external forces. This conviction empowered Martin Luther King in his consistent message that blacks and whites together were in need of deliverance. Second, the worldview that acknowledges the agency of an active Enemy in world events encourages Christians to look for the power of God not only in stories of individual deliverance, but also in the great social movements of our time.


From Issue:
June 2008, Vol. 52, No. 6
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Displaying 1–5 of 16 comments

Larry from Arkansas

June 02, 2008  8:39pm

This is a powerful article which has long been needed among us. The choice before us is not either the spiritual Gospel or the social Gospel. The Gospel deals with both spiritual and social issues because the two are connected. Thank God for the courage of this good writer and others of like mind.

Ephrem Hagos

June 02, 2008  2:44am

The gospel is small only to those who fail to obey and know who Jesus Christ is exclusively as mandated (Matt. 16: 13-280 and follow-up. Only in this way will there be room for the otherwise competing demands of individual salvation and community/social justice. The tragedy is for both demands to be disqualified because of our continued disobedience!

wickedness

June 01, 2008  4:47am

this article shows the hallmark of the social gospel which is denying the wickedness of the wicked. Judas was a prisoner of his own greed and his own wicked plans but he was still wicked and suffered the consequences. The whole world today is suffering poverty, war, natural disaster and hunger and high prices because God is calling everyone back to himself. God has had enough! And we have to face up to social and individual evil which has taken us away from proper heartfelt worship.

Jean

May 31, 2008  4:11pm

Outstanding!.....full of a wisdom that is rooted in biblical understanding, with a clarity in defining the issues, this truly sheds light on the social justice vs. personal salvation dilemna....

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so_free_me

May 31, 2008  11:43am

"These are the witnesses that truly bring us notice from the culture at large. " Here we go again--it is all about having the culture at large take note of us!! How pathetic is that?? Let's not deal with the truth, which is that no one has a clue if global warming is even occurring or if it is a problem if it is occurring, or if we can do one blessed thing to change it even if we all go back to horse and buggies, NO, lets accept the satanic (as she points out herself) views of the world held by the "culture at large" such as global warming, or that we all need universal health care etc etc and then lets address their pet peeves as if they are true in a way that the "culture at large" will approve of, i.e. socialism. And why do we care what the "culture at large" thinks of us? Because we have lost our souls, that is why.

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