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Archive for September, 2011

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St. Francis & the Gospel – RePost

Friday, September 30th, 2011

Previous Post – Should We Follow The Sermon on the Mount?

This coming week marks my return to pastoring at Little Flowers Community after a brief time off to help Micah get adjusted to being home.  The timing as great, as the coming week is when we celebrate the Feast of St. Francis.  In honour of that, I will be doing a few Franciscan posts.  Here is a repost of my most popular St. Francis post ever, from June 2009.  Enjoy!

“Preach the Gospel at all times.  When necessary, use words.”

While this well known quote is almost always attributed to St. Francis of Assisi, most of us already know that it is very unlikely that he ever said those words.  However, they can still elicit powerful responses, both from those who embrace it as great wisdom and those who reject it as compromise.  A recent online article by Mark Galli at Christianity Today’s website (and some of the responses it has drawn) demonstrates this quite well.  And yet, after spending the last several years immersed in all things Francis, I think many are still missing the mark.

Though Francis never made this statement, it is in many ways a very Franciscan sentiment.  In fact, it was likely inspired by these other quotes from Francis:

“It is no use walking anywhere to preach unless our walking is our preaching.”

“…As for me, I desire this privilege from the Lord, that never may I have any privilege from man, except to do reverence to all, and to convert the world by obedience to the Holy Rule rather by example than by word.”

While the nature of hagiographic records makes it difficult to know if Francis truly said anything attributed to him, we can be assured that all three quotes are reflective of the example and tradition he left behind.  They demonstrate the Francis was deeply committed to both the proclamation and embodiment of the Gospel.  Mark Galli makes an important point when we notes how the quote can be too easily co-opted by the postmodern tendency to mistrust of words.  If this quote is used to diminish the importance of verbal preaching/proclamation, then it is a betrayal of the spirit of St. Francis.

Perhaps to better understand this quote and it’s underlying message we must better understand St. Francis himself.  First, it must be noted that Francis lived in a largely pre-literate society- that is, most of the population could not read or write.  Therefore the role of public preaching played an essential role in spiritual formation.  This does not diminish the importance of proclamation today, but we must acknowledge the elevated importance of verbal communication as a means passing on knowledge and information.  And those who heard the majority of his preaching were the nominal Christians of his era, already passingly familiar with the faith.

Knowing this, then, we can read this quote in a new light.  It is not spoken as a universal truth where words should always be of secondary in importance to actions.  Rather it is a context specific corrective to an age and culture that gave lip service, verbal allegiance to the faith, but whose actions betrayed entirely different beliefs and values.  In the same way, the church today is at risk of making the same mistake.  Again, acknowledging the risk of undervaluing preaching, the church in the West has lost much authority in its failure to live the Gospel it preaches.

Francis was given authority by the Roman Catholic Church to preach in churches, which he did often.  However, he was far better known for his extra-liturgical preaching, sermons given in the open air of piazzas and pastures.  He used styles and tactics borrowed from the troubadours of his day, both through romantic prose and foolish frolicking.  Without rejecting the traditional liturgies of the Church, he broke past the norms and conventions of both the church and the culture to preach in ways that caught peoples attention.  He was attractional at its very vest!

Even when he did preach in churches, he would use living examples and props to bring life to the message.  One of the most well known traditions popularized by St. Francis was the live nativity.  While we might see this as a creative and sentimental example, it was, in fact, a powerfully prophetic gesture.  He brought into the heart of the church and the Scriptures the messy reality of the nature of the incarnation (cow manure and all).  He saw the story of Scripture to be something to be lived and experience, not merely commemorated.  So, while we can defend preaching is central to Francis’s example, we cannot do so without recognizing that he preached in ways that were intentionally disruptive to nominal faith, pointing instead to active participation in the Communion of Christ as His Body.

St. Francis never sought to elevate action over speaking in the task of bringing the Gospel, but neither did he believe that Gospel was only a message to be communicated.  Francis recognized that the Gospel was all consuming, the work of God to restore all of Creation unto Himself for His glory.  He embraced the truth that the authority of the Gospel he proclaimed with his mouth was given authority by the Spirit-empowered life that reflected the reality of its transformation.  And in the same way, he knew that, even in the imperfect, clumsy and often sinful lives that we lead, the inherent authority of the Gospel message would still touch the hearts of those who needed to hear it and therefore must be preached.

Inevitably, out of the diversity of our giftings and experiences, out of the brokenness and strengths of our culture and understanding, each of us will find ourselves at different places of emphasis on this issue.  This should not be seen as disunity or division, but necessary dynamics in a Body with many parts, held together out of mutual submission and love and accountability.

Therefore, preach the Gospel at all times, in both word and deed.

Tags: Gospel, Missional, St. Francis
Posted in Gospel, Jesus, Missional, St. Francis, emerging church | 4 Comments »

Should We Live The Sermon On The Mount?

Wednesday, September 28th, 2011

Previous Post – Jesus & the Costly Kingdom

Recently I have been engaging in conversations about whether or not the Sermon on the Mount was ever intended to be followed today by Christians.  As my book, “The Cost of Community”, is entirely about doing just that, clearly I believe we are meant to.   Yet I am not unfamiliar with ideas to the contrary, having cropped up in teachings I heard as a teenager.  It was only when I heard my father question that thinking that I began to explore the idea that perhaps we are meant to follow the Sermon on the Mount.  While this space is inadequate to fully explore why, I wanted to give a basic response.

It is important that I note up front that, while many sources helped me come to this position, it was a paper by German theologian, Joachim Jeremias, whose expertise in Hebrew Scriptures and Rabbinic texts bring stunning insight into New Testament writings, especially with respect to the person and teaching of Jesus.

The most common response I hear from those who suggest that we should not seek to live the Sermon on the Mount is that it was an unattainable ideal, expressed intentionally so by Jesus to demonstrate our need for Him.  In fact, some suggest that the Sermon on the Mount is merely the Law on steroids, pushing us towards the despair in the face of the impossibility of the task, thus falling on our only hope- the grace of God that no person can hope to earn through obedience or good works.  To be sure, my convictions about how we are to live out the Sermon on the Mount do not deny that no works, no adherence to law can earn us salvation.

One of the strongest indicators for me that Jesus intended (and intends) for His followers to obey the teachings of the Sermon on the Mount lie in the fact that there is no indication in the text that this is His intention.  Some argue that the context- the people to whom He was speaking- makes that fact obvious.  If this were the case, then the Sermon on the Mount would in no way point to Jesus.  After all, if the point was to demonstrate that He was the only way to salvation through the despair of the impossible ideal, then you would either expect that Jesus would make no mention of salvation through Him alone, or if He did, that it would explicitly contrast with the surrounding “Law” texts.  Looking at the text, however, you will find neither evidence.

Further, if His teachings were for those of that time in history who were still under the Law, then much of Matthew 7 is baffling.  Jesus sums up the entirety of His teaching with the eschatological warning that, for those who hear what He is teaching, but do not do what He says, are fools who will not survive the final judgment before God- a judgment we all will face.  In truth, few Christians who embrace the “Sermon as Law” idea are consistent with this idea.  After all, which Christian does not look to the beauty and authority of the Lord’s Prayer; which Christians doesn’t teach the Golden Rule; which of us will shout to silence the children who sing about the man who builds his house on a rock?  In fairness, not seeking to live the Sermon does not mean it has not value, but it is still an inconsistency to read it in whole as a means of producing despair, yet embracing bits and pieces are truth to be embraced.

Most often, I find that people cite the writings of the Apostle Paul, with his emphasis on our salvation by grace, through faith in Christ alone.  However, as I suggested earlier, believing that we are to live the Sermon on the Mount in no way contradicts this truth.  Again, this space is inadequate to fully explore the nuances, but I see this as an example of people reading Jesus through the lens of Paul, rather than Paul through the lens of Jesus.  Doing the former wrongs both Jesus and Paul, muddying the waters of the truths they expressed and lived.

Finally, strongly supporting Jesus’ intention that we live His teachings in the Sermon is the fact that, from the very beginning of the life of the early Church, such an emphasis was explicit.  The Epistle of James is in many ways the Sermon on the Mount set forward as community spiritual formation in a specific context.  Throughout much of Paul’s writings, the themes of the Sermon are foundationally present- assumed practice.  His emphasis against those seeking to live under the Law is important, but never explicitly or implicitly argue against the Sermon.  Finally, the early Church explicitly practiced the teachings of the Sermon on the Mount, evidenced in their earliest writings, such as the Didache.  While not an explicit evidence, I am further convinced by the powerful impact made by people and groups throughout history who have practiced such a commitment- the Franciscans, the Anabaptists, Bonhoeffer, Tolstoy, Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr. and many more.

The best evidences that the Sermon on the Mount is meant to be lived out by Christians together are found in the text itself, something I do in much greater depth in my book.  In the book, I make it very clear that I am not setting up the Sermon on the Mount as another set of rules to be followed.  Rather, the Sermon on the Mount paints the picture of a people transformed by the work of Christ, united in His Spirit to build His kingdom for the glory of the Father.  As Stanley Hauerwas puts it:

“The Sermon on the Mount is not Jesus’ ethics; the Sermon on the Mount is Jesus.”

Tags: Bible, Jesus, Missional
Posted in Anabaptism, Bible, Community, Discipleship, Gospel, Jesus, Missional, St. Francis, church | 5 Comments »

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