2011/04/03

is Love Winning?

Love Wins: At the Heart of Life's Big Questions
This is the space where I might have reviewed Rob Bell's new book, Love Wins.  But it has lit up the blogosphere so successfully (who'd have thought a book on heaven and hell would be a trending topic on twitter?!) that there doesn't seem to be a need.  Countless reviews will tell you whatever you want to hear - that Bell is a heretic, a theological lightweight, a wise pastor, an opportunist self-publicist, or a fresh interpreter of sometimes-lost truth.  Instead, these are my incoherent rambling comments on the brouhaha that has followed.

If you want to be outraged, the book will oblige.  But being outraged at a refreshing look at God's grace seems inappropriate. Some purple passages have been widely quoted (and misquoted), such as:
A staggering number of people have been taught that a select few Christians will spend forever in a peaceful, joyous place called heaven, while the rest of humanity spends forever in torment and punishment in hell with no chance for anything better. It’s been clearly communicated to many that this belief is a central truth of the Christian faith and that to reject it is, in essence, to reject Jesus. This is misguided and toxic and ultimately subverts the contagious spread of Jesus’ message of love, peace, forgiveness, and joy that our world desperately needs to hear.
But Rob always loves to be a little enigmatic, so people don't get to pin him down on "what he really believes": of course the result is that you can read it as "really" saying he's a heretic, or "really" saying he's presenting the historic Christian message in a a fresher way.  But that dichotomy misses the point.  I don't think he's interested in playing that game.  His style is questioning: some love it, and some find it destructive.  Many have an inherent distrust of a fresh hermeneutic approach.  I have to say that the way that some have rushed in to defend their favourite doctrines makes them sound more like the dogmas of a faith community they would want to distance themselves from.

I think this is really quite an important book.  Bell has an immense following.  People know he's not entirely "safe" but he is a great communicator, and most would have said that his heart was in the right place.  But writing as he has done here, he does move people forward towards a point of decision.  Not because he wants to create division,  I think, but because it is time to tell the Jesus story in a new way.

The theme of  the book, of course, is that Love Wins: that God's way of dealing with us is radical and full of grace.  What's very noticeable is that Love isn't the word that springs to mind when you look at the way Bell's critics would wish to deal with him.  John Piper's by-now infamous tweet is a mark of something very much awry - perhaps it was just a rash off-the-cuff remark, but a wise many said we should be slow to speak.  "Conversation ...full of grace, seasoned with salt" doesn't seem to cover it, for me.

Doubtless those who want to disagree with Bell - and with Brian McLaren, Tony Jones, and all the rest - would say that what they are doing is calling out false teachers.  Does that relieve them of an obligation to grace?  If you want a hint of the stress that the last few weeks have caused the man and those close to him, listen to the first few minutes of his sermon from Mars Hill last Sunday.
Thank you for continuing to remember that the gospel is known by its fruit, and that we can get all of the words right and we can have all the best doctrines and dogmas and we can actually be a clanging cymbal, and that love is what Jesus said is the greatest commandment.
If the media storm was not foreseen - as he implies - perhaps that was naive.  But it's more generous to think of that than to suggest there was a cynical sales drive going on.

God is love.  Love is the strongest thing imaginable.  Of course love wins.





6 comments:

americanRuth said...

I've been out of that loop of the blogosphere, so missed all the brouhaha until your post. *blush*

But I love your last line :)

Andrew said...

Hi @AmericanRuth. Bell's "Christian Celebrity" status is, I fear, an inevitable set-up in today's world of instant messages. 'Downs' get magnified along with 'ups'. I'd have hoped for better from the followers of the one who spoke about motes and beams ... but I know that I do the same myself.

Melissa Walton said...

I haven't read Rob Bell's book - maybe I should.
But ... define 'Winning', it certainly seems Love loses or sacrifices a lot on the way.
But maybe it's a bit like the Tortoise and the Hare having a race; it's just looks like Love is lagging behind.

Andrew said...

Hi @Melissa. That's a good point - love is not self-seeking or proud, so it's not so interested in winning.

Seen from that perspective, Rob Bell's assertion that "God always gets what he wants" grates a little with "God is love".

This is the kind of thinking that underlies Peter Rollins' book "The Fidelity of Betrayal". But I find it really hard work to understand!

Dylan Morrison Author said...

Hi Andrew

I think a much better book on the topic of God's Grace and its limits (If any?) is 'The Evangelical Universalist' by gregory McDonald.

It does come down on one side of the debate and rings true with all that I've experienced of Divine Love.

Blessings Dylan:)

Andrew said...

Hi Dylan, thanks for stopping by. I'll add the book you mention onto my rather long list of books I should read. Though we must discuss and hone our understandings, I am bothered by there being a "debate" with "sides". It seems altogether too dichotomous as a way to understand something inherently paradoxical.