Father of the Year Award?
Currents in Theology & Mission
April 2003, Volume 30, Number 2
I talked with a pastor recently whose son is contemplating
studying for the ministry. Though the son is only a senior
in high school, he is alreadyand appropriately--on
the seminarys mailing list of prospective students.
But what lingers in my memory from this conversation is
the deal the pastor has cooked up. Every summer he invites
his son to read a weighty and challenging theological bookand
pays him for it! After all, the pastor remarked sagely,
I pay him for carrying out the garbage. Why shouldnt
I pay him to do something constructive?
Having served many years in the office of fatherand
now grandfatherI have heard of much worse ideas. In
fact, I have published smaller ideas. Maybe the children
of light are finally catching up in our generation with
the children of this world. Since I give all my awards anonymously,
I invite and welcome other nominations for "parent
of the year."
James M. Brandt highlights the social witness of
the famed 19th century theologian and pastor Friedrich Schleiermacher.
Schleiermacher rejected the death penalty, violent revolution,
wars of aggression, forceful colonization, divorce, slavery,
dehumanization of workers, competitiveness in society, and
gambling. Schleiermachers mature theology gives significant
place to the active, ethical expression of the faith; his
greatest impact on his contemporaries, politically and in
other arenas, was from the pulpit (in addition to his professorial
duties, he was the senior pastor of a 12,000 member congregation.
Of course, faculty committees had not yet been invented,
but I digress). He inspired the church and the people to
political activism in the causes of the liberation of Prussia
and then its reform. Ironically, the activism eventually
adopted by the church moved in a much more conservative
direction than Schleiermacher advocated. Faithfulness does
not assure effectiveness.
Paul Rorem writes about contemporary discussions
of spirituality against the backdrop of Augustines
own views on the subject in his Confessions. The
problem with much spirituality is that it often starts with
our own "spiritualness" rather than with God.
The core issue is on who God is and what God does. Augustines
ministry depended on Gods faithfulness, not his own.
A recent academic emphasis on "negative theology"
is being used to de-stabilize all talk of God so that spirituality
becomes a matter of private preference based on "irrefutable
religious experience." But Luther argued that because
Gods transcendence is beyond us, we must look to God
as revealed in Christ and as revealed on the cross. The
essential emphasis is not on what we do or know or offer,
but on what God has done and offers us. What does this mean
for pastoral practice? Should we call communion the Lords
Supper or Eucharist? Should we say the "words of institution"
or the Eucharistic Prayer? Should we continue offertory
processions, or have processions after the Lords Supper
out the door into the world?
Mark Thomsen asserts that a theology molded by the
16th century context has the potential for constructing
a dynamic foundation for a contemporary vision of the mission
of God. Mission outreach should focus on lay persons as
they engage the world of home, work, and society in the
name of Jesus. God is not only transcendent creator but
is present "in, with, and under" creation. Only
a church with the capacity for cultural change and adaptability
has the potential for being an instrument of the mission
of God. An authentic theology of the cross affirms that
life and the transformation of life, not suffering and death,
are the ultimate purposes of God. A theology of the cross
for the 21st century will use the theme of dying and rising
to speak of dying to personal, ethnic, and nationalistic
dreams in order to participate in a mission rooted in Gods
vision of a new creation. Our love must be moved by the
pain of the other and enter into the suffering of the other
for the transformation of life. In the struggle against
evil, God limits Godself to the power of non-coercive, persevering
love. In relating to people of other faiths the church will
denounce every manifestation of imperialistic Christendom
and will be instead a serving and reconciling community.
Limiting salvation to those who encounter the Jesus of the
Gospels is placing Jesus in a very tiny theological package
addressed to a small fraction of the human family within
a small corner of the universe. We Christians may expect
to be blessed by people within every other religious family.
Kosuke Koyama also wrestles with a definition of
mission for our century. He affirms that the church exists
for the sake of the world, not the world for the church.
In the welfare of the world the church will find its welfare.
Any claim to exclusivity or religious triumphalism will
eventually run aground on the expansive vision of the biblical
God. The apostolic message is that healing space was created
through the Christ on the cross as Gods response to
human violence. Wherever there is violence, there is a false
god. It is the churchs task to imitate this extraordinary
divine model of the self-sacrificing cross for the welfare
of the world. There is no individualism in a global context;
we live only in the context of the human family and human
unity. How do I find a merciful God? By gratefully participating
in the creation of a Eucharistic space of peace for all
people. This is the focus of the reformation in a global
context today.
David Zersen tells the story of Mato Kosyk (1853-1940),
a Sorbian (Slavic) immigrant
to the United States, who is now regarded in his homeland
as its greatest poet. Sorbs in this country usually called
themselves Wends, but that term has acquired a pejorative
ring in Europe today. The development of Sorbian identity
and self-consciousness greatly influenced young Kosyk. Sorbian
language has been forbidden in many centuries, most recently
in Nazi Germany, where one could not write or sing in Sorbian.
Before Kosyk came to this country he had edited more than
200 Sorbian hymns for their hymnal and had written many
poems. He studied at the German Lutheran Theological Seminary
in Chicago Lawn, operated by the General Synod. After this
seminary merged with what was eventually to be called Central
Seminary in Nebraska, its legacy became part of LSTC in
1967. Kosyk served as pastor at a number of very small Lutheran
congregations until he retired to a farm he owned in Oklahoma
in 1913. Married in 1890, Kosyk had one son who drowned
at an early age. He married again, at 85, two years before
his death. He wrote poetry during three periods in the United
States, often filled with longing for his native Lusatia
and a desire to go home there, and also to heaven. His five
volumes of poetry have not been translated into English.
Unfortunately, during his lifetime, the diversity and idiosyncrasy
he represents were suppressed, not prized. Concordia University
at Austin has issued a call for papers to be presented at
a symposium on September 19, 2003, on "Mato Kosyk and
the Slavic Writer in the New World. For a brochure write
to dzersen@aol.com.
Somewhere along the line, I hope the young professional
reader of theology mentioned in the first paragraph above
will become a true amateur, reading purely for the love
of theology and for the love of the God unfolded in that
theology. By that time his father will probably be a grandfather
and can start recruiting the next generation and competing
for my grandfather-of-the-year award. Unless, of course,
I have already retired that trophy by then.
Ralph W. Klein, Editor |