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A Child of His Time (Phil. 4:8) by Ronald Goetz Dr. Goetz, a Century editor at large, holds the Niebuhr distinguished chair of theology and ethics at Elmhurst College in Elmhurst, Illinois. This article appeared in the Christian Century December 5, 1984, p. 1143. Copyright by the Christian Century Foundation and used by permission. Current articles and subscription information can be found at www.christiancentury.org. This material was prepared for Religion Online by Ted & Winnie Brock. Finally, brethren,
whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure,
whatever is lovely, whatever is gracious, if there is any excellence, if there
is anything worthy of praise, think on these thin [Phil. 4:8]
If we are honest in confronting our text, the
words of Paul seem curiously foreign to the ideals we set for ourselves in
20th-century America. It is not that we oppose what he says; who but an
extremely perverse person can be against truth, purity and graciousness? It is
rather that our center of values tends to dislocate that of the apostle. Paul
thought of ultimate reality in transcendental and eschatological terms. The existence
and providence of God were not even a question for him. On the other hand, much modern thought tends to
see all reality as immanent, with the eschaton and God himself so much in doubt
that even Christians tend to hedge their bets. We try to be virtuous enough to
eke our way into the Kingdom -- should there prove to be one -- but our
righteousness is lived so as not to squander this life’s pleasure potential in
case there is no Kingdom. We have found a way around Pascal’s wager. Our lives
illustrate the hedonistic belief that luxury and creature comforts provide
meaning. I state this not as some sort of seering denunciation of sin in modern
America, but merely as an acknowledgment of what is obvious. We are all in
thrall to consumer values not altogether unlike the way the first century was
in thrall to Platonism. We find that such things as good clothes, a
comfortable home, a status-filled career, good food, cars, TV with a video
recorder, and a stereo in home and car are worth working for and very fulfilling
to own. We can barely fathom Jesus’ statement, “Blessed are the poor.” Poverty is not only our secular version of hell,
but its very presence makes us feel guilty. In the name of Christ, modern
Christian social ethics points to an eradication of the very poverty that Jesus
blessed. It isn’t that we wish to defy our Lord; it’s simply that we cannot see
how loving our neighbors is consistent with blessing their poverty, and so we
love our neighbors the way that any materialist might do: we try to find ways
that the blessings of plenty might be showered on all. Were we to try honestly to restate Paul’s
exhortation to the Philippians from our own perspective, we would finally
substitute our terms of value fir his. Where Paul would say, “Whatever is honorable,”
we would better understand, “realistic.” Where Paul would say, “whatever is
just,” we would settle for “acceptable.” Where Paul would say, “whatever is
pure,” we would rather be “experienced.” Where Paul would say, “whatever is
lovely,” we would say “functional.” Where Paul would say, “whatever is
gracious,” we would be satisfied with “adaptable.” What Paul commends as
“excellence,” we would translate as “cost-efficient.” And for us, what are the
things most “worthwhile of praise”? Is not our praise most inspired by
popularity and fame? In many ways the differences in fundamental values between
the Moral Majority and those of us of a more liberal persuasion are fewer than
we think. A neutral outside observer, seeing the similarities in our comfortable
lifestyles, might well conclude that we are so alike in our praxis that our
differences in theological theory are rendered trivial. This country’s liberals
and fundamentalists alike are, after all is said and done, 20th-century American
Christians.
The One whose advent we await was a child of his
time, conditioned by the relativities of his age. Yet there was in him a light
that compels us to seek the transcendent for its source, a light in which all
our relativities are themselves relativized. In the brilliance of Immanuel new
possibilities are revealed, and even our all-too-human values are recast and
given their rightful validations. What do we demand in our pragmatism but to see
the ‘‘true” actualized? Jesus is not an abstract ideal; he is truth in
action. By his very example he concretizes the goal of all truth. Jesus makes
the “honorable” and realism one and the same. He bore the cross out of his terrible
recognition of the fact that God’s honor as well as ours has been stained by
evil and sin. And that atonement can be brought about only on Calvary, where
simultaneously God and humankind bear the burden of honor’s onus. Jesus in his gracious self-giving demonstrated
that which is truly “just.” True justice cannot be imposed from above; it is
achieved only when the fairness of the judgment finally becomes apparent to
all. Thus justice that is not full of grace is not justice. Jesus is the
gracious justice of the God who is love. Who knows what the “pure” is but the
one who experienced the degradation of the tax collectors and sinners and
became one with them, yet remained wholly uncorrupted by cynicism and coldness
of heart? As “form follows function,” so Jesus, “who had no beauty that we
should desire him” (Isa. 53:2), is made lovely in our sight by what he
does for us. Jesus was never in doubt as to the cost of the truly “excellent,”
but he did not count the cost. In Jesus’ budgeting -- in matters of love -- if
you have to ask the price, you can’t afford it. And does this One who is all honor, grace,
justice, purity and beauty have the audience appeal to make him manifestly
“worthy of praise”? Even those who have not yet come to trust in him and love
him will this Christmas hear the clamor at the stable and will in their heart
of hearts long for the truth of that which they cannot yet believe. In his
still hiddenness, his manifest fame portends. |