December 2009 - Vol. 35 The Finality of Christ by Donald Bloesch, continued Struggle, growth,
and freedom versus faith, repentance, and service
The loss of transcendence is especially disconcerting when we consider the theological options today. There seems to be a confluence of various theological movements (liberationist, feminist, neo-mystical, process) toward a religion of radical immanence in which human experience and imagination preempt biblical revelation as the measuring rod for truth. Attempts to downgrade
the Old Testament
New Age symbols
supplanting worship practices
In November 1989 the Anglican Church in New Zealand introduced a prayer book that not only eliminated allegedly sexist language but also dropped most references to Zion and Israel. It was explained that a prayer manual was needed to offer texts more relevant to the Maoris and South Pacific Islanders. Wendy Ross, president of the New Zealand Jewish Council uttered this protest: “The only precedent for this was the German church during the Nazi era that wanted to de-judaize the Scriptures. . . . We regard the removal of the words Zion and Israel in most cases as profoundly anti-Jewish.”12 This calls to mind close parallels between the religious situation today and the situation of the church in Germany in the later 1920s and 1930s. The so-called German Christians were especially intent on combatting the idea that revelation was limited to biblical times: it continues, they said, throughout human history—in every culture and race. The religious intuitions of the German people were deemed equal (if not superior) in authority to the insights of the Bible. Scripture was reinterpreted through the lens of the Volkgeist (the spirit of the Germanic people). A concerted attempt was made to purge the Bible of Judaic expressions like Zion and hallelujah. Interestingly, in some radical circles God was conceived of androgynously and referred to as Father-Mother. And it should be noted that the German Christians enlisted in their support some of the leading theologians and biblical scholars of that day. [This
article was originally published in Touchstone:
A Journal of Mere Christianity, Summer 1991. Touchstone
is a monthly ecumenical journal which endeavors to promote doctrinal, moral,
and devotional orthodoxy among Roman Catholics, Protestants, and Orthodox.
Copyright
© 2004 the Fellowship of St. James. Used with permission.].
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