E-Book, Englisch, 160 Seiten
Moody Jonathan Edwards and Justification
1. Auflage 2012
ISBN: 978-1-4335-3296-2
Verlag: Crossway
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 0 - No protection
E-Book, Englisch, 160 Seiten
ISBN: 978-1-4335-3296-2
Verlag: Crossway
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 0 - No protection
Josh Moody (PhD, University of Cambridge) serves as the senior pastor of College Church in Wheaton, Illinois, and president of God Centered Life Ministries. He was previously a fellow at Yale University. Josh and his wife have four children.
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Josh Moody
You will find much of what I want to say specifically about justification, and Edwards’s view of it, in chapter 1, “Edwards and Justification Today.” The purpose then of this introductory chapter is twofold. First, I introduce you to the contributors in this volume, if they are not already familiar to you, and prepare the way for their chapters to shine on their own merits. Second, I wish to make it clear in the most general terms why Edwards must still be considered today by all who take the life of the contemporary church seriously, and why in particular we must grasp his view on justification as we preach the gospel, study it, and seek to live by it.
So because I aim to be a thorough nontraditionalist in this book, let me begin in reverse order and start by explaining why Edwards must still be studied today and why in particular his relation to justification is important.
There has been a fair glut of Edwards work recently, it must be acknowledged. In fact, not all works on Edwards are so recent, but because of the prominent ministries of well-known American Christian leaders who look to Edwards for inspiration, the exposure to Edwards at a popular level is more obvious recently. If you examine bibliographies of Edwards scholarship, you will see that ever since Perry Miller’s landmark biography at the middle of the last century there has been an upswing of interest in Edwards, as Miller rescued him from the caricature of the backwards bigot (though in so doing he also painted a picture of Edwards that may not have been entirely fair to his unashamed Puritan convictions). But while this Edwards resurgence has been going on at a scholarly level for some time, at a popular level it hit the headlines in 2006 with Christianity Today’s article “Young, Restless, Reformed” by Collin Hansen and the 2008 publication of Hansen’s book, Young, Restless, Reformed (with the accompanying image of a “Jonathan Edwards Is My Homeboy” T-shirt), and the ongoing young, restless, and reformed movement that is in play in various other avenues of ministry.
So the question must be asked, and answered in a way that does not feel like special pleading from someone who has a stake in a publication of a book on Edwards, do we really need another book on Edwards?
I think the answer is yes, and defensibly yes on almost any subject that Edwards addresses, because (1) it is always good to read great Christian forebears, such as Augustine or Edwards, and (2) because Edwards was writing in response to the secular Enlightenment, and the greatest need of the contemporary church today is to formulate a theological vision that effectively (also affectively, but that’s another story) answers the charge that Christianity is about as up-to-date as the bubonic plague. If we are to find the answer to that challenge, we will find it in Holy Scripture, not in Edwards, or at least that is my conviction as an unembarrassed holder to the doctrine espoused in 2 Timothy 3:16. But while we will find it in Scripture, we may also find that useful conversation partners, such as Edwards, will point us to parts of the Bible that we may have otherwise ignored. Edwards will no doubt be particularly good at this for he was dealing with the source of the Nile of secularization, and we are some way further down trying to work out what to do with it all.
Now to the specific matter of justification. While I think it is defensible that any amount of Edwards studies is a good thing, partly because he was a theological genius, partly because he was dealing with matters that are particularly pertinent today, I believe that we are especially rewarded by paying attention to what Edwards thought about justification.
If you are a theologian, scholar, pastor, preacher, or thinking and reading Christian, you would have had to be living under a rock somewhere, or in some blissful haven on a Pacific Island, not to be aware that there has been a bit of a controversy over justification in recent years. Edwards has been marshaled from time to time as someone who might give support to one idea or another along that controversy. Because of Edwards’s authority as a theologian, it is, of course, important that we understand carefully what he thinks about justification.
What the essays before us show is that Edwards’s view on justification was as thoroughly orthodox (or not, depending on your point of view) as Calvin’s or Luther’s. Yet, as ever, Edwards with his orthodoxy has more than a little dash of creativity, spice, and derring-do. That creativity can set you off in the wrong direction unless you consider carefully Edwards’s overall work and writing, and put him faithfully and properly into historical context. So it is important not only to consider Edwards, not only to think about what he said regarding justification, but also to do so responsibly and correctly, such as this book tries to achieve.
In addition, as the contributors to this volume make clear, it is important not to do away with Edwards’s creativity as a barnacle on an otherwise exemplary individual, as if we were saying, “Thanks Edwards for being orthodox; no thanks for being interesting.” Instead, we must not only take heart that creativity is not the foe of orthodoxy; we also need to look at some of the areas of exploration to which he points as models for us to develop a better view of justification, one that can stand the test of time and provide answers to some of the questions that have been raised contemporaneously.
In particular, Edwards’s view on justification explores the importance of what is normally called our “position” in Christ. That we are “in” him is surely the crucial area that has to be considered, the area that Paul clearly says was at stake when he wrote to the Galatians: “For through the law I died to the law, so that I might live to God. I have been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me. And the life I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me. I do not nullify the grace of God, for if righteousness were through the law, then Christ died for no purpose” (Gal. 2:19–21).
Unpacking that paragraph requires studying the rest of Galatians, or at the very least accepting the notion that by putting my faith in Christ I not only receive as something external the righteousness of God, but in doing that I become in him, and he in me, “Christ who lives in me.” This idea is very different from the traditional Roman Catholic idea that justification is gradually achieved, but it is also rather different from (probably the caricature of) the view that righteousness moves across to us like a gas moves across the room. Instead, righteousness, alien righteousness to use the technical term, is ours purely by faith, and with that, we are in Christ!
Now, I will give the game away if I explore too much more of what that means for Edwards, as the rest of the chapters in this book do that. But it is worth pausing and realizing that when Edwards talks about infusion and the like, what he is referring to is not the infusion of righteousness that the Westminster divines spoke against, but rather the experience of the new creation, the experience of having Christ in us, and us being in him. This supernatural event takes place when someone becomes a Christian—that is what Edwards is describing—and it is what rescues justification from the dusty tomes of the law court exegesis to the living entity that is in biblical thought, and in the experience of millions.
If I stay on this topic much longer, I will begin to turn this academic-level consideration into an altar call, because, of course, as we consider these things with our minds, it is impossible to not at the same time realize their considerable importance for every aspect of our being. In a book on Edwards I dare not use the jaded language of “head” and “heart,” for Edwards rightly assures us through his writings consistently that biblical epistemology is not so bifurcated. That is a theme for another book, and I have touched on it in a couple of my previous ones from time to time, but it is enough to say here that when I say that through faith in Christ I experience his righteousness, and this means that I am in him—well, the bells of the church should ring, the hair on the back of your neck stand on end, a shock of thrill run down your spine. There is simply no other subject that is more important for the winning of heaven and the avoiding of hell, and if you get no further in this book than this paragraph, and you take this paragraph to heart (pace Edwards), then you have more glory than, I am afraid, countless others who stand on their own religious merits and not on the merit of Christ and his death on the cross.
I want then to whet your appetite for what is to follow. First, my chapter explores the theme of how Edwards’s view of justification intersects with some contemporary debates. In doing so it overviews Edwards’s view on justification, corrects some common misapprehensions about that view erroneously drawn from his “Miscellanies,” and analyzes his better-known writings on the topic, before relating all this in some brevity, but hopefully fecundity, to various well-known more recent conundrums on the topic.
Then comes Kyle Strobel’s chapter on participation in justification. In some ways this is the heart of the matter on the technical side of understanding Edwards’s view on justification, and Strobel expertly...




