Sunday, March 6, 2011

doing theology

I was spending time with a gospel text this past week, in the way I spend time with stories. I sit on my thinking chair beside a good light and I have open my bible, my journal, some books of spiritual poetry and scattered around me are papers, bits of ideas scratched onto napkins, other journals open - general flotsam of the mind. Steve commented that he has never seen anyone who approached scripture with less connection to biblical resources - commentaries in particular. I want to talk about this.

First, I am convinced of the reality of the Holy Spirit as teacher, guide and one who whispers the words of God. The Holy Spirit is my companion in these mediative times. My confidence is not an excuse away from serious study, it is the beginning of study. I sit with the Word for extended periods of meditation and discipline and live in the story, with the people, in the experience, and I listen.

Second, I travel in a general direction against the flow of some traditional interpretation of the gospel story I am living in. That doesn't mean I am unteachable and seeking the novel, but rather I try to live into the story as a human before I let the story become just a defense of a particular theological position. Most texts seem to have been un-storied, it seems to me. When stories lose their visceral human connection with our lives and become simply a support of a theological position we are distanced from them and the people involved. And thus, we are distanced from the Word itself.

My fear is that my kind of approach (a human storied approach) to scripture renders my work (apparently) theologically insignificant. But in the world of formation - that is, the world of human experience of God - nothing could be further from the truth. We are not so much changed by rhetoric - talking about changing - as by encountering experiences, relationships and episodes of life. While there is a place for a theological rendering of gospel stories, we suffer loss when we lose a rich life orientation to what is written as a witness to life.

Some years ago I moved quite far from any connection with a local church (relatively speaking of course). My reasons are not important for this discussion, but my journey removed me from the experience of being with other believers. I lived this way for some time and listened to the discourse about 'faith' outside the church. I listened to the media, to rhetoric of other faiths, to the average conversation in the marketplace, and came to a settled conclusion: thinking about faith must be done from within the faith community. No outside voice can carry on my faith conversation. I became convinced that I must keep a strong connection with the church - the real and local church with all its flaws - because I cannot understand my faith except from the inside. Theology is the work of the inside - within the biblical tradition and within the house of faith. As ragged as that is, and as seemingly 'sectarian', this inner witness is the fertile soil of faith life for me.

All this said, I do finally visit the voices of thinkers and saints who have gone before me. This is my community, my great cloud of witnesses. But as one who is familiar with the great biblical texts and stories, I take the posture of one invited in freshly, finding life and surprise in the story of how the human race has encountered God.

6 comments:

Unknown said...
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John David Walt said...

nice work marilyn. i think you preach and teach in the tradition of a spiritual theologian rather than as an exegete. I don't think these two things need be mutually exclusive though.

my question in preparing to preach or teach is this one: How can I participate with Revelation in such a fashion that epiphany can happen. It is a fragile process and yet the most solid place in the world.

I still haven't figured it out-- and I suppose that's my problem-- trying to figure it out. ;0)

jdw

Marilyn said...

I like that - so that epiphany can happen. That is what we need...the fresh aha. You do go for that, JD. I see it.

Tom Fuerst said...

I think your approach is right on. These texts cannot be understood until they are first embodied. Otherwise we end up intellectualizing the text, assuming the gospel is primarily a dis-embodied set of propositions instead of a story that must be lived into with heart, mind, soul, and body.

This is a good word for all of us.

Leanne said...

This reminds me of Dr. Dongell's class. He had an illustration with downed power lines and what not. But the gist of his illustration was until we let the power of the Scripture flow through us, we cannot truly teach the revelation of the Scripture. We must wrestle with the Word, we must experience it and let it sink deep within us.

Unknown said...

I love how you come at the scriptures. I've noticed that it is different from how many at the Asbury pulpit do. You remind us that the people in the Bible are real people and that their lives, not just their words, have something remarkable to show us about our own lives. You remind us that the Bible is approachable.