The central message of this book and all four canonical Gospels is that the creator God is reclaiming the whole world through the wisdom of Jesus. This book calls us to wise up, grow up, and take responsibility. All said, this book does well to illuminate this great message.
Epicureanism
One broad theme in this book is that the proliferation of Epicureanism is plaguing American society. Epicureanism is a worldview in which God may exist, but if he does he is far away and uninvolved in the world.
Epicurus (341-270 BC) was an ancient Greek philosopher who believed that death meant complete dissolution of the human being. This British author sees Epicurus as the catalyst that has taken American society too far in the division between religion and science. Wright almost jokingly, asks us to draw a line straight from Epicurus to John Lennon who asked us in his song to “imagine there’s no heaven or hell.”
Wright sees Enlightenment philosophers, like Machiavelli and Hobbes, as Epicurean and suggests that America’s embracement of these thinkers has been a mistake. I’m troubled by the extent that Wright demonizes the Enlightenment, which was instrumental in lifting the world from the quagmire of much superstitious nonsense. I lament that Wright doesn’t address the adversities of the early church, the Inquisition, and the squelching of science by primitive Catholicism.
Personally, I have only thanks to offer Martin Luther for leading us beyond the narrow-minded doctrines of the early church. But this author sees it differently, pointing out that: “the movement that gave us penicillin also gave us Hiroshima.”
The Enlightenment and Democracy
Not only did the Enlightenment help Americans dispense with much superstitious nonsense promulgated by the early church, it also helped us to reject ridiculous monarchies. Certainly, the rise of democracy could never have been accelerated without the catalyst of the Enlightenment. However, Wright correctly reminds us that the rise of democracies has been accompanied by some troubling tyrannies. Nonetheless, we must recognize democracy as an essential step in our social evolution towards merit over birthright.
The idea of meritocracy in America is stronger than in other parts of the world and clearly something that I, as an American, highly embrace. However, this book seems an attempt to disparage it. I’m certain Wright would cite my objections as proof of the obstinacy of Americans but, after all, we Americans are the products of political and religious revolutionaries. It’s in our blood!
Wright sees this as a problem because Americans believe so strongly in their democracy and its ability to solve problems. Wright laments that Americans have declared God “unconstitutional” by extinguishing Him from public places and resigning itself to social Darwinism. The author rightly thinks that many Americans oppose health-care proposals under the pretense of Darwin’s premise of “survival of the fittest”. The author purports, correctly I think, that many Americans are of the opinion that those who don’t get up and go earn their own way should be left out, at least to a degree sufficient to extend punitively to their slothfulness. Or, similarly, that if American’s don’t like a regime somewhere else in the world they feel perfectly justified in bombing it to smithereens.
In fact, I brought up the subject of arbitrary U.S. murders abroad with drones at a Wednesday night dinner in the American church that I attend. I was quite stunned by the affirmations of drone killing under full acknowledgement that such death sentences are carried out without due process, trial, or explanation at all beyond the purview of some dark, undisclosed decision-maker high up in the intelligence bureaucracy. This author sees these characteristics of our society as symptomatic of the divorce between faith and science.
God’s Image
Wright correctly points out that the whole Bible is about God establishing his kingdom on earth. God’s kingdom is to be ushered in through an obedient humanity that is motivated by love for God and each other. This is the process by which God transforms humans into kingdom-workers. The point of Jesus’ humanity is to demonstrate how humans are to take up their God-given vocation. Jesus showed us what it looks like to harbor obedience, even to the point of martyrdom.
Wright calls us “to be an angled mirror, reflecting God’s wise order into the world”. That is what it means to be made in God’s image! This image becomes manifest when God is present within us and it is through this image that others see God. By wielding God’s image, we are able to extend sacred space into the earth. By abdicating God’s image, we succumb to the elements of distortion, falsity, and chaos.
Jesus is the beginning, the first fruits. Early Christians believed that the resurrection had begun with Jesus and would continue until the last day, with all the living called to work with Jesus in the power of the Spirit for transformation of the earth, until they themselves are called to their own bodily transformation in death. This is the sort of eschatology that makes Jesus a higher Lord than Caesar, Obama, Putin, or any other authoritarian.
Once transformed by the resurrection, Jesus exhibited a physical body, insomuch as it encompassed space, but also a body that could go through locked doors, appear, disappear, and re-appear. It was a body that was no longer corruptible or subject to decay. Similarly, it will be for us a new self; a self that we actually begin to formulate in this life.
Thy Kingdom Come – Celebrate Change
The “eureka” for doubting Thomas was the realization that the resurrected Jesus was indeed a new creation, transformed, and different. Indeed, the Bible relates that many who encountered the resurrected Jesus did not, at first recognize Him. We are called to be stewards of this new creation, to work for its promulgation in the earth, to serve It, and to facilitate it’s blossoming. We are now wandering the earth as Jesus wandered the earth.
We must recognize that we are in the “penultimate”, the time before, the time of the synthesizing between the “old” and the “new”. We are in a place where change is happening to us and to those around us and we should celebrate it and encourage it forward. Our time is yet to come.
Our hope is not wishful thinking or blind optimism, but rather knowing anticipation. It is a discernment that allows us to see world history trekking inexorably toward its destiny. Our knowing is confirmed in us when we witness and experience agape sufficiently to bathe in its bliss and power. We may then, without doubt, praise It as that most worthy and we may enthusiastically pursue Its profuse dispersion across the earth and into the universe.
Agape is the deepest mode of knowing. Possessing agape is a prerequisite for entry into the newness to come. It is not about promoting any particular denomination, but rather, quite simply, about gaining agape into the self. Agape is personified in Jesus. In the beginning was the Word. The author alerts us that the Word is ”the speech, the self-expression, the creative power, and the personal presence, of the transcendent creator. The author calls us to “open our curtains to the rising Son”.
The audacity that a mere human would contend that God’s creation isn’t right is beyond me. How could anyone believe that God somehow screwed up the creation? This fundamental error by theologians in explaining evil implies that God is not omnipotent but fallible. Evil exists because God purposefully allows it to exist. God knew perfectly well that eventually men would eat of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. In fact, that’s exactly why He placed the tree in the garden in the first place. Evil has a role of fertilizing our spiritual growth, just like shit fertilizes plants. We can’t truly understand compassion until we see greed. We can’t appreciate health without sickness, wealth without poverty, or peace without conflict. We can’t truly appreciate life until we see and experience death. God is highlighted for us against a backdrop of what God is not.
Sacred Space
Heaven is another dimension of sacred space but we are called to make sacred space in THIS dimension and we do that by resisting evil. Resisting evil and creating sacred space is our purpose and our God-given vocation. What sort of space are you busy creating? Is it sacred space, hellish space, or some sort of insignificant space? Our creation of sacred space in this dimension is the way in which the invisible God becomes present in this world - through us - manifest in our humanity - present in the human form. Creation, like clay, paint or canvas, is the medium within which we are challenged to cast forth the sacred.
We are like children who first entertain themselves with building mud pies before they get about considering the construction of sacred space. We progress to building elaborate temples but still we don’t understand that sacred space is constructed not solely with sticks and bricks, but with love, peace, sacrifice, compassion, and togetherness. We must mature into being less concerned with our personal edifice and more concerned with an edifice of love that harbors many in communities, towns, & cities. Let us build a gleaming, sacred city shining on a hill, with inhabitants that share God’s love for one another and for God’s creation. This is what creation is for. For us to truly learn and experience what really makes us flourish in life.
The Role of the Modern Church
Our role is not that of the detached observer, but that of the involved participant. We are called to be actors, not spectators. It is time for us to get on with those works of justice, mercy, beauty, and relationship-building that we know in our bones ought to be flourishing around us.
We urgently need to develop ways of holding our governments to account. Our methods of exegesis must become more practical, invoke people to action, and not confuse people into a quagmire of superstitious nonsense. It is, quite simply, about the path of self-giving love, of agape. It is about allowing His kingdom to work through us and in us. The church is nothing more than people who bear witness to Him by their very existence and unity.
The church needs to become manifest in the world. The church must invite those whose hearts have shriveled with sorrowful disbelief to come and see what love has done and what love is doing. Let us explore God’s truth with reverence and delight. Let His teachings about poverty, human dignity, and peace be honored, studied, taught, and practiced.
We vitally need to generate and sustain wholesome communities. We vitally need to embody the practical love of God and gain the wisdom to approve what is excellent and call to account what isn’t. Medicine, education, and basic sustenance are for everyone and denying these things to some makes for a sordid, shabby world of lies and death. We must cease always favoring the rich, the proliferation of exorbitant compound interest, wars, the bailing out of corrupt companies, and the careless incarcerations of the abused, while forgetting the cry of the poor and needy. We must speak up for justice. We must feed the sheep. We must harbor an implacable refusal to collude with violence, prejudice or greed.
Ancient & Modern Demons
Many worship demons unconsciously. Three of the most popular demons that are subconsciously worshiped in modernity are Mars, the god of war, Mammon, the god of money, and Aphrodite, the goddess of erotic love. These ancient and well-known demons are present and powerful today. Those who worship demons as their gods devote sacrifices to them.
Mars routinely acquires human sacrifices in body bags along with the misery and hate that erupts from our constant wars. Not to mention the outright murder inflicted by our drones, which destroy at the whim of some dark unidentified decider that looms in the catacombs of our government. We have a thousand machines for making war but none for making peace.
People prostitute themselves daily to Mammon, constantly expending their energies and vitality on behalf of it, and enslaving themselves to debt. We have computers that can conduct trades, run stock markets, and make millions out of tiny moves in exchange rates, but none that can rescue the poorest countries from abject poverty.
Aphrodite addicts her subjects to pornography, cosmetic surgery, stalking, rape, divorce, adultery, and other unhealthy allurements. We know how to make pornography but not how to repair our marriages. Aphrodite lures us to the creation of fantasy graphics that promote unattainable, un-human, mirages of perfection, which her worshippers pursue relentlessly.
Only disasters come from worshipping Mars, Mammon, and Aphrodite. Instead of worshipping demons, we should be reflecting the creators wisdom and care into the world. This requires much more than just being a detached observer. The world we have is reflective of what we worship. We must become wiser! We must allow wisdom to become human in us.
Conclusion
The larger reality of agape, as demonstrated by Jesus, is a new mode of being in which the power of love defeats the love of power. In which the beauty of creation wins out over death. In which the wisdom of God becomes present in people of every shape and type, offering healing and reconciliation.