Author: Joel Edwards
Date: 20.07.2010
Category: Poverty & Wealth
Editor’s Note: This Cape Town 2010 Advance Paper has been written by Joel Edwards as an overview of the topic to be discussed at the Multiplex session on “Wealth, Poverty and Power: Effectively Responding through the Global and Local Church.” Responses to this paper through the Lausanne Global Conversation will be fed back to the author and others to help shape their final presentations at the Congress.
Contours of Poverty
Jesus’ striking statement that the poor will always be with us (1) is borne out by the facts. At present, 3 billion people live on less than $2 per day while 1.3 billion get by on less than $1 per day. Seventy percent of those living on less than $1 per day are women. In sub-Saharan Africa, twenty nations remain below their per capita incomes of two decades ago while among Latin American and Caribbean countries, eighteen are below their per capita incomes of ten years ago(2).
Figures from the United Nations and the World Bank in 2006 show that:
The persistence of poverty can have a debilitating effect which can all too easily lead to inertia. But this has not been the posture of Christian history. For 200 years Christian faith has been at the forefront of the struggle against poverty. According to Rodney Starke it was Christian love in action which largely accounted for its rapid growth from its inception. (3) And what is even more interesting for our study was the fact that this early response to the poor was regarded not merely as acts of Christian benevolence but more fundamentally as rooted in the concept of divine justice. (4)
Given the scope of the church’s historic response to poverty there is little wonder that the World Health Organisation estimates that a significant percentage of healthcare is provided by faith communities with the Christian church playing a substantial role in that effort.
Returning to our roots
It’s common knowledge that between the late 19th century and the mid 20th century evangelicalism lost faith in the efficacy of social action as an integral part of the Gospel, in the context of a liberal theology which substituted an orthodox view of the Atonement with social activism as a salvation supplement. Evangelical piety, which became nervous about the ‘social gospel’ and feared mistaken identity, developed an aversion to involvement with social or political action. The idea that the Gospel had any relationship with social activism became an evangelical contradiction. But as Alistair McGrath put it, “The social gospel got one thing right and everything else wrong: what God has joined together let no man put asunder!” (5)
Many evangelical voices emerged to challenge and redefine evangelicalism in relationship to Biblical justice. Not least was the powerful pronouncement of Lausanne 1974:
Christian Social Responsibility
We affirm that God is both the Creator and the Judge of all men. We therefore should share his concern for justice and reconciliation throughout human society and for the liberation of men and women from every kind of oppression. Because men and women are made in the image of God, every person, regardless of race, religion, colour, culture, class, sex or age, has an intrinsic dignity because of which he or she should be respected and served, not exploited. Here too we express penitence both for our neglect and for having sometimes regarded evangelism and social concern as mutually exclusive. Although reconciliation with other people is not reconciliation with God, nor is social action evangelism, nor is political liberation salvation, nevertheless we affirm that evangelism and socio-political involvement are both part of our Christian duty. (Acts 17:26,31; Gen. 18:25; Isa. 1:17; Psa. 45:7; Gen. 1:26,27; Jas. 3:9; Lev. 19:18; Luke 6:27,35; Jas. 2:14-26; John 3:3,5; Matt. 5:20; 6:33; II Cor 3:18; Jas. 2:20).
The 1970s and 80s witnessed a slow-burning passion for a return to a more holistic Gospel. As evangelicalism rediscovered its heritage of social transformation it also gave way to increasing levels of socio-political engagement. In South Africa, the Kairos Document published in September 1985 followed by Evangelical Witness in South Africa in 1986 inspired the birth of Evangelical Concern for Northern Ireland during the same period. More recent publications such as For the Health of the Nation – an Evangelical Call to Civic Responsibility 2004 (which reflected the ethos of a pre-Lausanne publication Evangelicalism and Social Responsibility) provided clear indication of the mood among American evangelicals to recover the social elements of the Gospel for evangelicals in the States.
In the 21st century the return from our social concussion has found its most formal and global expressions in two global evangelical movements. The Micah Network launched in Oxford in 2001 laid out its convictions in its founding statement:
Integral mission or holistic transformation is the proclamation and demonstration of the gospel. It is not simply that evangelism and social involvement are to be done alongside each other. Rather, in integral mission our proclamation has social consequences as we call people to love and repentance in all areas of life. And our social involvement has evangelistic consequences as we bear witness to the transforming grace of Jesus Christ. If we ignore the world we betray the word of God which sends us out to serve the world. If we ignore the word of God we have nothing to bring to the world. Justice and justification by faith, worship and political action, the spiritual and the material, personal change and structural change belong together. As in the life of Jesus, being, doing and saying are at the heart of our integral task.
In that same year the World Evangelical Fellowship’s General Assembly reached the following resolution:
As a global Christian community seeking to live in obedience to Scripture, we recognise the challenge of poverty across God’s world. We welcome the international initiative to halve world poverty by 2015, and pledge ourselves to do all we can, through our organisations and churches, to back this with prayerful, practical action in our nations and communities...
Emerging from these two movements Micah Challenge was birthed as a global Christian response to the Millennium Development Goals. (6)
The Gospel wells of well-being
Frankly we have a right to be concerned where there are clear signs that the church imbibes its values and political influences from the world. A gospel which ignores the stigma of the Cross as the price of acceptability or political pragmatism is always one generation away from apostasy. This was true of the church in Laodicea whose blindness and nakedness was due largely to the moral indulgence which came with an affluent society. (7)
But it has been far too easy for the church to adopt a theological posture of contextual abstinence as a result. Social and political indifference is not a biblical virtue. In fact we argue that the symbiotic relationship between the spiritual and cultural demands of our world is often God’s calling card to the church.
The twenty-first century calls Christians to remake the Christian hope by basing it anew in the new acts that God is doing in the world today. (8)
Arguably, the Reformation would have been inconceivable without the philosophical and political upheavals of the Renaissance. And for two millennia the church has demonstrated that the gospel is most effective when it speaks with the cultural vocabulary of its particular social setting. (9)
Political expedience should never be the impulse for transformational ministry. And neither should cultural relevance. As the saying goes, “He who is married to the culture today will wake up tomorrow to find himself a widower.” But there is a challenge for Christian ministry to develop what a colleague once helpfully described as “new competencies for the 21st century.”
Our competencies have little to do with contriving new gospels with which to pacify our culture. Rather we are to find the points of confluence between our message and the hunger of the human condition. And today that hunger is amply expressed in the desire for well-being. And this is timely because our gospel of well-being is not a modern invention to catch the prevailing mood. It sits at the centre of the good news about Jesus Christ.
Well-being has nothing to do with “touchy-feely” sentiments. It has become a key element in measuring whole-life experiences from poverty reduction to Human Rights.
The World Health Organization defines mental health as “a state of well-being in which the individual realizes his or her own abilities, can cope with the normal stresses of life, can work productively and fruitfully, and is able to make a contribution to his or her community.” It was previously stated that there was no one “official” definition of mental health. Cultural differences, subjective assessments, and competing professional theories all affect how “mental health” is defined. (10)
Evangelism which has nothing to do with well-being has nothing to do with the ministry of Jesus who was prepared to heal ten lepers and have only one return to worship;(11) to prescribe eternal life for a rich young ruler and still love him when he failed the test; (12) or to heal and feed the believing and unbelieving multitudes equally, (13) touch the lepers and have compassion on the vulnerable crowds who lacked effective leadership. (14)
Well-being frees us from the constraints of a narrow gospel which is only interested in counting private disciples on Sunday mornings. A gospel of well-being tells everyone that there is no other name under heaven by which we might be saved; but it will also offer an inclusive “act of kindness” in the exclusive name of Jesus. (15)
All four gospels are concerned with well-being: repentance, forgiveness, healing, liberty and freedom from oppression and poverty. And all of these articles on radical morality were present in the disturbing words of the Old Testament prophets. Luke the historian-physician summarised the gospel manifesto better than any other: good news for the poor, freedom to prisoners, sight to the blind, liberty from oppression and jubilee for the entire community. (16) And his record of Mary’s Song is perhaps the most sublime expression of a re-ordered society recorded anywhere in the New Testament. (17)
The righteousness of the gospel as understood by the prophets, Jesus and the apostles was inseparable from ideas about justice. Rightness and righteousness walk hand in hand. Consequently, as Ronald Sider is keen to tell us, Biblical justice is not just anti-poverty, it is pro-well-being and concerns itself with economic and redistributive justice. (18)
Care of the elderly, the dispossessed, the orphan and the poor were anticipated in the good news. Immigration and asylum were addressed. Even the controversial issues of women, bond labour and employment are addressed within their socio-political contexts.
Because the gospel begins with the idea that every person shares God’s image and is identifiable by the Spirit of God, human rights with responsibility was already endemic in the gospel of Jesus Christ.
A gospel of well-being is counter-cultural in that it puts up a bulwark of moral resistance to the cultural ego-centricity which sits at the centre of a secular humanism and which was articulated by some of its earlier apologists. “The only freedom which deserves the name,” said JS Mill, “is that of pursuing our own good in our own way so long as we do not attempt to deprive others of theirs,” (19) which always sounds like a sophisticated way of saying, “Mind your own business and leave me alone!” Tom Paine’s powerful treatise Rights of Man is of course premised on the very same idea. “Every age and generation must be free to act for itself in all cases as the age and generation which preceded it,” he insists.
As Paul demonstrated, our rights properly exercised find their very highest expression in a desire to use our freedom to spread the good news. (20)
Jesus truly understood well-being. This was best demonstrated in one of John’s most celebrated texts: (21)
On the last and greatest day of the Feast, Jesus stood and said in a loud voice, ‘If anyone is thirsty, let him come to me and drink. Whoever believes in me, as the Scripture has said, streams of living water will flow from within him.’ (John 7:37,38)
This is an audacious offer made not to Jerusalem’s down and outs but to a male-only national worship event where Jewish men met to reassert their identity and spiritual sovereignty under the shadow of Rome’s oppression. It was an event awash with energy, excitement and national affirmation. And if that was not enough, after seven days of merriment it is possible that some of these men struggled to walk in a straight line! This is an insight into the mood Jesus walked in on:
On each day of the feast there was a procession of priests to the pool of Siloam to draw water (m. Sukka 4:9). The priests returned to the temple, where the water was taken in procession once around the altar with the choir chanting Psalms 113-118, and then the water was poured out as a libation at the morning sacrifice. All-night revelry led up to this morning libation. This was a time of joy so great that it was said, ‘He that never has seen the joy of the Beth he-She’ubah [water-drawing] has never in his life seen joy.’ (22)
Jesus’ gospel of well-being was not directed simply to the lowest of the outcasts. It was a message of Shalom to which the poor flocked and from which the wealthy sometimes fled. But well-being does not begin with the lowest common denominator; it is a call to God’s highest ideals for everyone who has been made in his likeness. And it still has universal appeal because it elevates our humanity without diminishing the priority of the human soul.
Promise and the poor
A Christian gospel of well-being has no confidence in political agendas – even though it takes them seriously. God is the guarantor of our well-being which is bound up in his unassailable promises to humankind.
His Word is the promise of the constant between the past and the future, our hopelessness and redemption. A promise was what God made in the presence of Adam’s failure.(23) It was what he did after the great flood (24) and when he rewarded Abraham for his faith. (25)These were universal promises of well-being and there was no notion that this universality would in any way avoid the specific work of the Cross of Jesus. (26)
To quote Jurgen Moltmann:
No corner of this world should remain without God’s promise of a new creation through the power of the resurrection. This has nothing whatever to do with an extension of the claim to sovereignty on the part of the Church and its officials, or with an attempt to regain the old privileges accruing from the cult of the Absolute. (27)
If God is nothing else he is profoundly a God of promise. The sacredness of promise is one of the last remaining tokens of our likeness to God. Moltmann again:
Through the promises I give, I make myself in all my ambiguity unambiguous for others and for myself. In promising we commit ourselves and become dependable. We acquire a firm configuration or Gestalt, and make ourselves people who can be addressed. In faithfulness to our promise we acquire identity in time ... those who forget their promises forget themselves. (28)
It is so inherent that children are devastated by broken promises.
The sacred transaction of promise is the realm in which people meet each other and potentially meet with God. Promise is the confluence between truth and falsehood; light and darkness. And it is the place where the gospel of well-being makes sense to people who are trying to make sense of God.
At the dawn of the Millennium something of a political miracle happened. For the first time a meeting of world leaders took place in New York for what was described as an “unprecedented gathering” convened by the United Nations. The United Millennium Summit gave birth to a dream in which nations promised to slash extreme poverty by half by the year 2015. These promises contained eight wide but measurable goals by which the preventable indignity endured by over a billion people would be brought to an end.
This covenant with our extreme poor came to be known as the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). The MDGs were more than fiscal promises to the poor. This was an historic and moral contract to “spare no effort…freeing the entire human race from want.”
The MDGs
Christians who were already fully committed to the alleviation of poverty and who had stepped up to the plate as full partners in global movements such as Jubilee 2000 and Make Poverty History felt that these promises resonated with the spirit of the Old Testament prophets and the teachings of Jesus. And the growing impulse to respond to the poor which was growing steadily across many sections of the evangelical church felt a call to respond to the MDGs.
Micah Challenge is such a response.
Micah Challenge is a global coalition of Christians holding governments to account for their promise to halve extreme poverty by 2015. We are establishing a global movement to encourage deeper Christian commitment to the poor, and to speak out to leaders to act with justice.
And in our prayers and personal actions, our letters and lobbying we are governed by the penetrating question from the prophet Micah: “What does the Lord require of you? To do justice, love mercy and walk humbly with God.”
But nothing else gives us as comprehensive a yardstick by which to hold ourselves accountable, or provides the universal language with which to talk about maternal deaths or a global response to reducing and reversing HIV/AIDS. What we seek to bring to the global response to the MDGs is a prophetic perspective on these political promises. It is a matter of mission and as Vinay Samuel reminded us, the object of missions is to “enable God’s vision of society to be actualised in all relationships – social, economic, and spiritual.” (29)
Not everyone believes that Christians have a responsibility to lobby governments or hold them to account beyond our responsibility to vote. There are a number of reasons for this.
I have met activists and missionaries who believe that it is our responsibility to provide care and support rather than expect anything from government. Our task, they insist, is to do our bit and pray that God – and our activism – will prompt the political will. Others are driven to political apathy through cynicism and a total mistrust of politicians. Advocacy, they contend, is for the idealist. And perhaps others are reticent because any type of political action is likely to lead to political partisanship which distorts our prophetic role. This is probably particularly true of Christians in the USA who fear that political activism does nothing to avoid the political fault lines between Republicans and Democrats within the church. And others within the Latin American context are terribly nervous because the distinction between church and state has been confused by Christian leaders whose party political activities blurred the lines between their roles.
Others are concerned that the burden of poverty is so overwhelming that there is little hope of making a substantial difference. And in any case, Jesus has already warned us that we will always have the poor. Better to do our quiet service as we serve the poor and avoid political involvement. With all its demands on our time and resources biblical action rather than biblical advocacy turns out to be the easier option.
In the main these are credible concerns. But I also fear that for far too many of us they are helpful deterrents from doing what we know instinctively to be our biblical responsibility: to speak up for those who have no voice and to defend the oppressed and needy. (30)
But there is no other way of speaking up for the poor without speaking up to the powerful. And the Bible leaves us in no doubt that prophetic advocacy is central to our gospel of well-being. It is the very essence of knowing God (31) and ruling well. (32) Moses’ commitment and activism was in no doubt when he became so impassioned that he killed an Egyptian. (33) But it was quite another thing for him to appear before Pharaoh with God’s demand to let the people go free. (34) David Beckmann has summarised this well for us:
God did not send Moses to Pharaoh’s courts to take up a collection of canned goods, but rather to insist on political and economic change – the liberation of the slaves. (35)
Certainly, as with Moses our message will not always be heard, but biblical advocacy which calls us to our promises to the poor is at the heart of the mission of God in the world. As Rowan Williams says, the prophetic role of the church is “obstinately asking the state about its accountability and the justifications of its priorities.” (36)
The call to well-being should be our divine compulsion. For not only does it energise us to act and speak up in the face of adversity but it allows us to bring an eternal perspective and an element of angry hope to the intractable problems of our age. It urges that:
As long as there is one man who should be free, as long as slums and ghettos exist, as long as the color of a man’s skin is his prison, there must be divine discontent. (37)
Or in Walter Brueggemann’s words,
We are not summoned to be an echo of culture, either to administer its economics, to embrace its psychology or to certify its morality. To us is gifted an alternative way. (38)
In any event, prophetic persistence has its own reward. There are clear signs that our promise-keeping is bearing modest fruit. Those living in extreme poverty in the developing regions accounted for slightly more than a quarter of the developing world’s population in 2005, compared to almost half in 1990. Major accomplishments were also made in education. In the developing world as a whole, enrolment in primary education reached 88 per cent in 2007, up from 83 per cent in 2000. And most of the progress was in regions lagging the furthest behind. Deaths of children under five declined steadily worldwide — to around 9 million in 2007, down from 12.6 million in 1990. (39)
But we have many miles to go and many promises to keep.
Our task is not to assume a unilateral responsibility for the world’s poor or indeed for the fulfilment of the MDGs. But our task is to strip away the negotiated excuses and rediscover a gospel of well-being which is totally consistent with the mission of God in the world and which cares and speak up for the poor without muzzling our faith in Christ.
© The Lausanne Movement 2010
Keywords: Poverty, poor, well-being, social activism, social responsibility, promise, Millennium Development Goals, Micah Challenge, advocacy
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United States
Thank you for your thoughts. As a pastor, I agree that it is time for the church to return to the "forefront of the struggle against poverty." Christians, espeically those who live in the United States, have been blessed with finances and resources like no other group of Christians in history. Because of these blessings, we have the opportunity as followers of the Lord Jesus Christ to be an incredible blessing to the world. Just think about how the church could address the issues of poverty and injustice, while sharing the gospel, if all Christians would simply tithe their resources. If the majority of Christians would take seriously their calling to care for one another, how many of the eight goals of the MDGs could be quickly addressed?
13.10.2011
Jamaica
Excellent article with strong theological and biblical base. This papers describes well the tension between evangelism and social engagement. It articulates clearly the call to Christian social responsibility and uses the notion of gospel of well being in a sound way.
I struggle with how Christians in the devolping world can engage in prophetic advocacy. My observation is that we are more engaged in ’collecting canned foods at Pharoah’s court’ than in advocating for political and economic change. I understand clearly the call to prophetic persistence as we live out Jesus’ promise to the poor, my concern is that sometimes I am not sure how this works itself out practically.
I draw great hope from the improvements that are taking place in the world but would love for the paper to outline more practical ways in which we can steer away from the posture of ’contextual abstinence.’
10.10.2010
United States
@ Notice:
I agree with notice that it has come down to "canned foods". In our society today with all the disasters that are occuring. How can we reach them. They are starving especially the children. with today’s economy how can we do anything but "can food." we cannot feed our own childern.
17.04.2011
Nigeria
Thank you so much Joel for a very well researched and articulated paper. I trully wish part of the early section of the paper was devoted to make a call on global evangelical leaders to penitence for either neglecting or not doing enough to address injustice around the world. Injustice is perhaps one of the primary causes of the unfortunate statistics in the very first page of this paper: 1 billion on less than a dollar a day? That was four years back! And then 1.1 billion without a safe source of water to drink? How does this sound?... The leaders at Lausanne 74 showed petinence Captured in the Lausanne Covenant: "...Here too we express penitence both for our neglect and for having sometimes regarded evangelism and social concern as mutually exclusive"....I hope this paper and others on the same theme trully leads to penitence!
may i also encourage you by saying that the tranistion from an "evacaution gospel" to a "transformation gospel" may be difficult and "up hill", yet becoming trully holistic is highly possible. The development of Micah Challenge and Micah Network within the global evangelical community are a demonstration of significant committment to addressing poverty and pursuing biblical justice...this is real "Hope for Holism" as we struggle to become trully Integral!
The biblical illustration of Moses’ advocacy in Pharoah’s palace is quite provocative! Waoh!! Now we are not just being called to community development right? Are you reminding us that our mandate includes "Political Activism"? If so, it may have been good for this paper to include linkages for practical action in political advocacy by evangelical.
Once more, thank you for a good paper!
15.10.2010
Norway
I wonder about the meaning of "the Gospel of Wellbeing". You use the term in a positive sense, identifying it with the Gospel of the Bible. In my setting (Scandinavia) we use more and more this term to describe a search for wellbeing outside Christian boundaries, i.e. a human and self-centered search for wellbeing. I am not saying that your meaning is wrong, only letting you know of a completely different meaning. And this type of ’gospel’ is spreading and not seldom linking up with new spiritualities (e.g. New Age)
Knud Jørgensen, Oslo
14.10.2010
United Kingdom
@ Knud_Jorgensen:
Knud good to hear from you.
One of the things I love about the New Testament is its ability to colonise existing words and ideas such as ekklesia and logos and make them Christian. Do you think we might do the same with well-being?
15.10.2010
Norway
@ Joel_Nigel_Patrick_E:
It is probably possible, but do we want to put major efforts into such an endeavour? Because in Scandinavia it would require major efforts. When NT ’colonises’ a concept, it is a matter of key concepts like kyrios and logos - words filled with meaning. With regard to wellbeing I would rather look for another word. Something akin to shalom?
15.10.2010
Jamaica
Wow! I was blown away by this one. Joel Edwards has presented a compelling piece with a clear challenge to all. How can we change some of these realities? The principle in Israel is clear for us to emulate - everything was set up to preserve and protect; a brother was redeemed every 7 years and his fortune returned. The same principle with the land. How do we affect where we are (each of us across every continent) until it all mushrooms and we in fact end up with His kingdom in the earth?!! I would like us to look at some strategies to do this.
14.09.2010
United Kingdom
@ JudithJ:
Thanks Judith. Always good to hear from a fellow Jamaican!
15.10.2010
Belgium
Thank you Joel for your insightful article, which gave me language needed in a ministry which is often held hostage by the fears of a ’social Gospel’ over against the ’Gospel in which Jesus died for our sins’.
By defining well-being as something within the four gospels and containing: repentance and forgiveness, but also healing, liberty and freedom from oppression and poverty & by quoting V. Samuel who said that the object of mission is God’s vision actualised in all relationships, social, economic and spiritual, you’ve shown that putting these two on either side of the spectrum is a false dichotomy.
I’m glad you dare stress issues like politics and the Millennium Goals. In themselves they will not bring ’well being’, but if we proclaim Christ to be Lord of all, these things are important and relevant to take into consideration when we talk about Christ, the Gospel and poverty.
10.09.2010
United Kingdom
@ Tom_De_Craene:
MUch thanks for your encouraging response. If this gave you a language with which to encage with others then I feel I came close to what I was trying to achieve.
15.10.2010
United States
Fairly good paper, but there is too much emphasis on Millennium Development Goals of the UN (MDG’s).
Let me encourage you with the following, "Who is among you that fears the Lord, that obeys the voice of His servant, that walks in darkness and has no light? Let him TRUST in the name of the Lord and RELY on his God" (Isaiah 50:10, nasb).
Doug Nichols
13.10.2010
United Kingdom
@ Doug_Nichols:
Doug thanks for your encouragement and the Bible verse. Were you responding to my paper.
15.10.2010
Kenya
Thanks to Joel Edwards for this enlightening article. A few comments:
Joel mentions the ‘clash’ between benevolence and justice. I think these can be opposites. Benevolence can cover over injustice. For example – a man beats his child. Should a Christian take the child to hospital, or address the family situation? Treating the child may be perpetuating the beatings by preventing issues coming to a head, for example.
I suggest that before the modern era, social activism and the Gospel were really one, the former flowing naturally out of the latter. I wonder what changed that? … I think it is the thinking that put ‘development’ on a non-theological foundation? One HAS to agree with Joel that Christians need to be ‘socially active’, if the latter is an appropriate summing up of Jesus’ and the Old Testaments’ much teaching on morality etc.
I think this paper somewhat contradicts the emphasis put by folks who are seeking to discourage the prosperity gospel? The reason is NOT the seeking for justice, or wellbeing, but the means by which these are sought. That is MONEY. The MDGs want to do things with money. That is fundamentally, I suggest, not a Christian means. Unfortunately the West’s, including now the Christian West’s, identification with money, is bringing problems of racial identification, whereby in my experience Whites in much of Black Africa come across as little gods – as money is almost invariably near the top of their priority issues. Racial integration is rendered almost impossible by the West’s massive orientation to handouts, including those now made in the name of MDGs.
We need to unpack some of the English used in this field, such as ‘well-being’. To my knowledge, in many poor (certainly African) communities, wellbeing is seen as being a product of relationship with ancestors. It is achieved by following taboos. Unless or until people leave such beliefs, increased well-being can promote them, which is not Christian. This issue, as so many, is very vulnerable to inter-cultural skew!
Unfortunately, I perceive that the church’s emphasis on things like the MDGs act as a disincentive for young people to engage in mission. “If you want to draw people to your seminar advertise it as development and not as mission” I was told on one occasion at a theological college! Even theologians have gone off theology, and off mission, preferring the ‘hard’ science of ‘development’. By lifting up ‘social action’ as the ‘way forward’ to young believers (and old believers) are we not distracting those who could otherwise have had challenging holistic ministries, into endless fundraising?
10.08.2010
United Kingdom
@ Jim_Harries:
Jim it was so good to see you in Germany last month. Thanks again for the drink. And thank you so much for your response as well. I hope we have a chacne to catch up in CT
15.10.2010
Romania
Thanks for the article. You do a good job of sketching the global reality and the global response. I think the question is how we, as the Church, critically respond with and against the particular cultures in which we live.
08.10.2010
Netherlands
Thanks for the historical overview. it helps to see that things do no ’just happen’. I think there is more to be said about well-being and what Jesus had to do with it, but this is a great start for conversation with others.
07.10.2010
France
Contrarely to Non-Ruay (or maybe I misunderstood him, sorry if it is the case), I do not believe in a strict opposition between grace and justice. I think it is precisely the grace of God in Jesus-Christ that enables to increase justice in human relations. Now, of course, it is not the ’final justice’ of the day of judgement or of the new creation. It is an anticipation of the new creation. Grace of God fulfills justice and compassion, without opposing the terms. Now the size of the article leaves little opportunity to detail that point, and clarify the definition of grace and justice.
I fully approve the approach taken in Edward’s article, and, as evangelical, was stuck by my own lack of imagination, creatity, and maybe my inhibitions to see adequate ways to invest this field with the conscience of:
- The specificity of the Gospel of forgiveness in the treatment of the issue
- The ambiguities that characterize all ’good work’ because of the sin that infect individual and collective structures. We are always working in a world where we are bringing (or should do so!) the Gospel but knowing also that we are not immune for our own sin and for the structural sin. For example, entering in lobbying means also entering in power relation with the authorities and with the actors of socio-economic life. We must be humble and should avoid the naive thought that our endeavour to contribute to well-being is totally free from sin, and represents totally the justice of God. Anticipation of the Kingdom is not the kingdom itself! This line of thought leads to the question of the capacity of christians to question again and again their own motives, priorities, and hierarchies of values, in order not to get confused on the goal that is to be reached. The picture of the society is rarely ’black and white’. On the contrary, we are always walking in a variety of ’greys’ where we expect the Gospel to shine not from our perfection, but from Christ working in and through his children.
05.10.2010
Taiwan (ROC)
This is a challenging article for Evangelicals who “…became nervous about the ‘social gospel’…”. It is a noble attempt to “redefine evangelicalism in relationship to Biblical justice”.
However, one crucial fact has not been clarified; actually, it has been confused, in the article: that we are NOT vessels of God’s justice.
The Bible is emphatic on it, that Christ’s disciples are not to assume the role of a judge. We are vessels of His GRACE, not His justice. God alone is the Judge.
This by no means implies that we are not to be concerned about divine justice. But the means, or the ways, we show our concerns must be humble, gracious & above all, sacrificial. In humble self-denial, a disciple lives a sacrificial life in order to build up others. Social action is thus not an option but a mandate. That is the Way of the Cross.
Evangelicals “lost faith… in social action” because we stressed only the forgiveness side of the Cross, & ignored the consequence of the Cross on our lives: “Deny yourself, take up the Cross & follow Me.” We preached the cost Christ paid for us, & shunned the voice about OUR cost of discipleship.
The author succinctly points out, “A gospel which ignores the stigma of the Cross … is always one generation away from apostasy.” Unfortunately he did not follow it up with practical measures.
The novel ideas of “well-being” actually obscured the Cross’ focus of building up others. Advocacy is usually less costly than action, even minor action like feeding a hungry beggar. It may require no sacrifice on my part to hold others, government or society, accountable for promises: A billionaire or a mega-church pastor may manipulate his social influence in advocating, say, a moral initiative, while some others pay for the necessary cost. (Rather than paying his own cost, he may even reap a good reputation.)
But what has it to do with the gospel of the Cross, if I need not first give up my practice that may be exploiting the poor? Where is the “offense of the Cross”? If we can do the same without the Cross, why are we Christians at all?
The author, Joel Edwards, is actively involved in social & political arena for the gospel. Because of his stand on biblical Truth, he has been fiercely attacked by different groups. That is a good illustration of the Way of the Cross. I am puzzled why it is not reflected in this article.
22.09.2010
Sri Lanka
Thank you for the article. The effort taken in presenting the case of Gospel of well-being is commendable. The observations, recommendations and suggestions are good in principle.
But I do not think that all that is said in the article could be supported, defended and made relevant to believers in Christ Jesus in the light of what the scripture has to say. Furthermore I am disappointed by the fact that the article leads us too much into a global over view of things relating to eliminating poverty etc which may not necessarily help in improving the quality of spiritual life of disciples of the Lord Jesus or making us better soul winners.
It would have been better if we as Christian believers were to focus on “loving God with all our heart and loving our neighbour as ourselves” rather than trying to be champions of global concerns. Our Lord Jesus lived in an oppressed society, then by the Roman rule. But never do we find Him trying to move His disciples to make an impact on the political system present at that time. His teaching was different and greatly heavenly in nature. “You will have tribulation in the world but be of good cheer, for I have overcome the world.” His concern was the eternal well being of eternal souls who were around Him. He taught that the holiness of life was far more important than having all the members of the body in good shape so that you do not end up in hell fire.
The neighbour in the story of the Good Samaritan was the man who was willing to do something by himself with his own resources to help the man in need. That is a great example to follow. He was not going to raise funds to do good as we find people doing today. We are happy to promise to pay a salary to the inn keeper without first carrying the wounded man on our own beast. Yes, the Lord touching the leper should be the right example for every individual to follow. Let us look for “lepers” around us and touch them and get involved with their lives. It is very much an individual responsibility. This must be promoted and encouraged at every turn. To go beyond that to a global over view of things is largely a result of our access to information on a global scale and wishful thinking that the world could be a better place by our involvement or influence in political decisions of the world. This world has no better future if not for the promise of the coming of Christ to reign.
The promise of God for this world is not the reduction of child mortality rate or elimination of poverty by Christian involvement and influence, though they in themselves are good and worthwhile doing, but rather the salvation of eternal souls from eternal hell fire and the establishment of a just and a righteous world by the coming of His Son as the King of kings. These are the promises God has to offer to this world through the death and resurrection of His Son and His gospel.
13.09.2010
Argentina
Querido Joel, muchas gracias por esta excelente presentación.
El llamado a la justicia, misericordia y humildad forma parte del evangelio y trae un elemento de esperanza ante los problemas dificiles en este tiempo.
30.08.2010
Puerto Rico
Thanks for the article. The importance of its theme is great. However, sadly, little or nothing was included about the need for Christians to GIVE, and to assume simpler lifestyles in order to help the poor. What could be done if every occidental Christian gives $100.00 a year for this purpose? The problem, again, is in us, the Church. Maybe that is the place where our action needs to start.
17.08.2010
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