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Halloween 2008

Carving pumpkins the night before

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and Amy, Ryan as Scooby-do, Mr. Clean and Jacob as a Lion. 

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Karl Barth

Current debates on the Trinity

There is a lot of discussion going on about the Trinity these days. There was a debate at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School including Wayne Grudem and a related debate within Southern Baptist circles with Duke Divinity School's Curtis Freeman weighing in. This is related to views of women in ministry. Furthermore, there are theological blogs discussing perichoresis and Karl Barth's understanding of the Triune God unrelated to these other discussions.   I have posted links below.   

Here at Duke, Geoffrey Wainwright is teaching a course this semester on the Trinity.  In my time at Duke, the books I have read that have focused on the Trinity are: 

Links:

Anathemas All Around

…debate over Trinity.

Christianity Today Magazine – Oct 14, 2008 12:26 PM

Semi-Arianism Masquerading as Orthodoxy: A Baptist Scholar on the Trinity Weighs in On "Eternal Subordination"

…Curtis Freeman, Director of the Baptist House of Studies, Duke Divinity School, Durham, North Carolina. His words, profound and direct, need no commentary from me.October 8, 2008Dear Wade:Thank you for taking up this issue of the Trinity. Getting a Trinitarian conversation going among Baptists is more important than one might first expect given …

Wade Burleson – Grace and Truth to You – Oct 22, 2008 (6 days ago)

Trinitarian Debates at Trinity

…about the Trinity at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School. Central to the debate has been the subject of whether the Son eternally submits to the Father. Together Wayne Grudem and Bruce Ware argued that relations of authority and submission do indeed exist among the persons of the Godhead, while Tom McCall and Keith Yandell argued against this …

Michael Bird & Joel Willitts – Euangelion – Oct 13, 2008 3:13 PM

Trinity Debate Roundup

Collin Hansen has a CT article online about the debate last night.Andy Naselli live-blogged the whole thing.Phil Gons has an excellent post refuting one of the arguments against the Grudem-Ware position.

Justin Taylor – Between Two Worlds – Oct 10, 2008 2:14 PM

Resurrection as God's self-determination: a note on Adam Eitel, Bruce McCormack and Rowan Williams

…relation between Trinity and resurrection in Barth's thought. According to Eitel: "God's eternal triune act of being and Christ's resurrection from the dead are not peculiar or separate acts. Rather, Christ's resurrection was the historical continuation of God's eternal being-in-act…. Put another way, the resurrection was nothing less than the h…

Ben Myers – Faith and Theology – Oct 12, 2008 9:17 PM

Perichoresis and Hospitality

…that the Trinity can meaningfully be described as both one subject and three subjects. The earthly manifestation of the trinitarian perichoresis is seen most clearly in the radical deference and disposability of the divine persons towards one another. The Son does nothing on his own authority, but receives all things from the Father. The Father …

Halden Doerge – Inhabitatio Dei – Sep 27, 2008 4:43 PM

The Perichoretic Church

…to the Trinity, a communion in which personhood and sociality are equiprimal" (After Our Likeness, 213). What makes the church an image of the divine perichoresis of the Trinity is not that human beings qua human being interpenetrate one another in a way analogous to the trinitarian relations. Rather it is that the church, as the community indwe…

Halden Doerge – Inhabitatio Dei – Sep 25, 2008 9:53 PM

Revisiting Perichoresis

…reality as Trinity. We cannot simply "read" the divine dynamic of perichoretic unity from God onto created relationality. I think, however, that the criticisms of projects like Gunton's which use perichoresis as a sort of trancendental miss the mark. The problem is not that Gunton illegitimately extends a divine concept to human relationality. T…

Halden Doerge – Inhabitatio Dei – Sep 25, 2008 9:11 PM

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Books

Review of Coffeehouse Theology by Ed Cyzewski

Ed Cyzewski, Coffeehouse Theology: Reflecting on God in Everyday Life.  Colorado Springs, CO: NavPress, 2008.  233 pp. $10.19 (paper), ISBN: 978-1600062773. 

29-year old Ed Cyzewski explains how his theological perspective has deepened and strengthened in the process of his theological education.  Cyzewski is a teacher–wanting to put his discoveries in language college students or other people beginning to be interested in theology can understand.  He earnestly shares personal stories and contemporary examples to illustrate the theological concepts he is trying to explain.  In his famous/infamous book A New Kind of Christian, Brian McLaren provocatively presents conversations between fictional characters on a number of controversial theological topics.  Cyzewski addresses many of these questions but shows how he has resolved them in his own mind.  If you were confused by McLaren's questions, Cyzewski helps sketch how an evangelical Christian might move toward resolution.  Maybe McLaren's A New Kind of Christian and Cyzewski's Coffeehouse Theology should be given to all Christian college students–the former to get them intrigued about theology and the latter to nudge them toward further constructive reflection.  Cyzewski's book is ambitious–tackling a number of issues related to systematic theology.  Perhaps one might want to read a more distinguished theologian who addresses these issues–perhaps Lesslie Newbigin or Stan Grenz; but academic theologians rarely address so many contemporary questions in such a concise way and in language as accessible as Cyzewski's.  One of the great parts of Coffeehouse Theology is that Cyzewski recommends many other books as he moves through the book–purposefully trying to intrigue the reader to explore further. 

One minor critique of Cyzewski's book is his regular use of the term "contextual theology" to describe his approach.  He writes, "So we need to challenge ourselves to learn about God with an awareness of context–what we can call 'contextual theology'–while at the same time making sure we value different insights from different cultures where Christians are learning about God in their own particular situations.  In brief, that's where we are headed together in this book.  Coffeehouse Theology will help us understand who we are and by including perspectives outsider of our own in the midst of our study of Scripture" (20).  What Cyzewski actually means by the term "contexual theology" is "good theology" or just plain "theology."  Cyzewski does not intend to align himself with the "contextual theologies" that typically fall under that heading.  For example, Lesslie Newbigin characterizes "contexual theology" in a negative way as "a theology that gives primary attention to the issues that people are facing at that time and place and insists that the gospel cannot be communicated except in terms of these issues" (Lesslie Newbigin, The Open Secret: An Introduction to the Theology of Mission, rev. ed; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1995, 133-134).  Andrew Walls calls “contextualized” “appalling jargon” (Andrew F. Walls, The Missionary Movement in Christian History: Studies in the Transmission of Faith, Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 1996, 7, 84).  David Bosch writes, "It goes without saying that not every manifestation of contextual theology is guilty of any or all of the overreactions discussed above.  Still, they all remain a constant danger to every (legitimate!) attempt at allowing the context to determine the nature and content of theology for that context" (David J. Bosch, Transforming Mission: Paradigm Shifts in Theology of Mission (Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis Books, 1991), 432, Cf. 420-432.   Darrell Guder's Missional Church uses the term "contexualization" but not "contextual theology." "The church relates constantly and dynamically both to the gospel and to its contextual reality.  It is important, then for the church to study its context carefully and to understand it.  The technical term for this continuing discipline is contextualization" (Darrell Guder, ed. The Missional Church: A Vision for the Sending of the Church in North America, Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1998, 18).  Again, I do not think Cyzewski's approach has the weaknesses of the group of theologies under the heading "contextual theologies" but I do think it is unfortunate he repeatedly uses that term to describe his own approach.    

All in all, Cyzewski's Coffeehouse Theology is a fine introduction to a number of contemporary issues in theology in language college students or other beginning theological students will understand.  I hope it will serve as the on-ramp for many into rigorous theological reflection.   

Resources:

Sample Chapter

Post on Emergent Village blog: Why I wrote yet another book on contextual theology …

Ed Cyzewski's Blog: In a Mirror Dimly.

Ed Cyzewski's Website.

Note:

Ed Cyzewski is a Taylor University grad like I am. 

See my post:

Everything I needed to know about the church I learned at Taylor University.