| AGAINST THE THEOLOGY OF GLORY
© 2001 R. S. Clark. All Rights Reserved.
Introduction
Many Christians today take it as an article of faith
that God must deliver Christians from trials and
tribulations. This is an age in which Benny Hinn's
ridiculous books have sold millions and he is but the
latest charlatan selling health and wealth to gullible
Christians. Why is such a view, that God wants us to be
healthy and wealthy and not to suffer so plausible to so
many? There are a variety of answers.
The first answer is that this is nothing new. There
have always been competitors to the Christian teaching
on suffering. Martin Luther railed against what he
called "the theology of glory," i.e., a theology which
replaces Christ with something else or seeks to get to
God without Christ the Mediator. The theology of glory I
have in mind is the reigning American triumphalism of
revivalist (and Reformed) evangelicalism. Almost weekly
some well-meaning evangelical announces that there is a
coming revival. Bill Bright has been announcing a
revival for years. Meanwhile real, weekly, church
attendance rests at 10% (weekly) and rather less who
attend to the means of grace in two services.
If there is precious little empirical evidence for
this alleged revival, why the apparent excitement?
Another partial answer is the powerful influence of
Modernity upon American Christians. One of the chief
doctrines of Modernity has been the doctrine of
progress, that things are getting better every day in
every way. As a schoolboy I remember teachers reciting
this as a mantra. Such an idea of progress, whether
personal or corporate (social or ecclesial) is not
Biblical. Its founded in the doctrines of the universal
Fatherhood of God and the universal brotherhood of man.
Its founded in the notion that God has left the world to
us, and we must make of it what we will. Its founded in
a denial of the doctrine of original sin.
The Modern doctrine of progress has fit hand-in-glove
with inherent flesh- and world-denying tendencies of
American fundamentalism. Fundamentalists are famous, of
course, for what they are (or used to be) against. In
days past, they were against movies, cards and liquor.
Now they make movies and produce cards with Jesus'
picture on them. I guess liquor is still mostly taboo,
but they have often identified the "world" not as an
ethical category, but an ontological category, so that
they have identified the "world" with creation so that
it is their very flesh they must overcome. This is, of
course, a mild sort of gnosticism and it is not hard to
find Gnostic strains through fundamentalism in the
modern period to this very day.
Some years ago, in Chicago, I heard on one radio
station, a fundamentalist offering secret knowledge (gnosis)
about how to speak in tongues, for $29.95, "send now
before midnight." On the other end of the dial, at the
same time, I heard a hyper-dispensationalist explaining
how the Pauline epistles are "not for today." He too
would give me the secret insights for a sum. It was
dueling mystery religions and, ironically, the
combatants would deny they had anything in common at
all.
Both, however, are children of the "higher life"
movement. Both were offering, in their own ways, the
secret to overcoming my humanity. Like the old monks
(whom they would repudiate) both were calling me not to
trust in Christ and his righteousness imputed to me, but
to take that next step toward the blessing, whatever it
might be.
So it is that both are also the children of
Modernity, both are more or less Pelagian, both really
believe in Progress (personally, morally, if not
socially) but both are also selling world-flight.
Doubtless both of them also hold the sort of
premillennial eschatology which features deliverance
from the tribulation through the rapture, followed by a
seven-year tribulation, a sort of purgatory/second
chance for those who missed the first bus, followed by
the earthly millennium -- during which Jesus, the Lamb
of God, offered once for all, is said to reign on an
earthly throne, in Jerusalem, watching Jewish priests
offer sacrificial memorial lambs. The golden age is said
to be followed by Armageddon and then, eventually the
judgment. The point here is that, the view that God
ought to deliver his people from rather than
through tribulation has been fed and made plausible
by the Modern American desire to conquer nature through
the use of technology.
Part of the attraction of Hal Lindsey's Late Great
Planet Earth is that it is a form of esoteric
knowledge. The other part of the attraction is that the
rapture is said to come before suffering and in
order to deliver Christians from suffering. It is not
surprising that this view has gained such immense
popularity at the same time as the rise of Modernity.
One of the most obnoxious forms of triumphalism to
afflict the American church is reconstructionist
postmillennialism. It is most ironic that
reconstructionist postmillennialism, is actually quite
like dispensational premillennialism in significant
ways. Like the hyper-dispensationalist and the
Pentecostal, they are more closely related than they
might like to acknowledge.
The other side of world-denying premillennialism is
the rise of a new version of postmillennialism which,
though somewhat more world affirming, also features a
golden-age, in their view, brought about by the
preaching of the gospel. Though some versions, at least,
teach a great apostasy in the church before golden-age,
postmillennialism has similar attractions as
premillennialism, secret, esoteric knowledge, a future
earthly golden-age and progress. The influence of the
Modern doctrine of progress is even more obvious in the
case of contemporary postmillennialism.
In recent decades, however, under the formulations of
David Chilton, R.J. Rushdoony, G. Bahnsen and others, a
"world-flight" of another sort has become more
prominent. These reconstructionist postmillennialists
(in distinction from the more traditional
Postmillennialism of C. Hodge and B.B. Warfield) are
deny the necessity of suffering for the Christian.
Instead they argue that the suffering described for the
church was actually completed prior to A.D. 70. This new
postmillennial school is now advocating a version of
what appears to be triumphalism.
By triumphalism I mean the attitude which tends to
think of the church as "irresistibly conquering
throughout the centuries...seemingly more interested in
upholding its own rights and privileges than in
promoting the salvation of all." (P.F. Chirco, s.v., in
The New Catholic Encyclopedia vol. 14, 1967,
Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press)
There is evidence that Scripture itself addresses and
rejects triumphalism. One writer describes Paul's
opponents at Philippi as having the following positions,
"...the attaching of little significance to the Cross, a
confident triumphalist theology, a strongly realized
eschatology, and religious and moral perfectionism
through obedience to Torah, especially circumcision. (C.
Mearns, New Testament Student, vol.3,
1987,194-204.)
It is the contention of this essay that both versions
of triumphalism/world-flight are mistakes. Rather, the
Christian ethic and eschatology entails that we affirm
this world as essentially good, if fallen, and that we
are called not to flee (or be secretly raptured from)
suffering for Christ between the first and second
advents. Suffering for Christ is not an exception, it is
the rule for Christians, it is a mark of this
inter-adventual age. Our model is the incarnation
itself. All true Christians affirm that Jesus was true
man and true God. The Apostle John says that anyone who
denies the humanity of Christ is anti-Christ. Jesus, the
God-Man, the true man, the Second Adam, actively obeyed
his Father and suffered through his entire life, and
especially in his passion and death. This is the pattern
for the Christian life.
Amillennialists, who hold that there is no earthly
golden-age, that we are now in the millennium (i.e.,
Rev. 20 symbolically describes the inter-adventual
period) predictably, find themselves between these two
poles. There is a great deal which has been fulfilled by
the first advent of Jesus. Thus Paul says all the
promises of God have their yea and amen in Christ. Yet
there is a great amount of tension between what has been
fulfilled in principle and what is yet to be
consummated. A. Hoekema, an amillennialist, finds a
great deal of incentive for godly living in the tension
produced by the amillennial stress both on the "already"
aspect and the "impending" (consummation) aspect of
eschatology.
For instance, this tension implies that the struggle
against sin continues throughout this present life. Yet
the struggle is to be engaged in, not in defeat, but in
the confidence of victory. We know that Christ has dealt
a death blow to Satan's kingdom, and that Satan's doom
is certain. (The Bible and the Future, 71)
This is true not only on an individual level, but a
cosmic level as well. The relationship between the
already and the not yet is not one of absolute
antithesis, but rather one of continuity. The former is
a foretaste of the latter. The New Testament teaches
that there is a close connection between the quality of
our present life and the quality of the life beyond the
grave. To indicate the way in which the present life is
related to the life to come the New Testament uses such
figures as that of the prize, the crown, the fruit, the
harvest, the grain, and the ear, sowing and reaping,
(see. Gal.6.8) Concepts of this sort teach us that we
have a responsibility to live for God's praise to the
best of our ability even while we continue to fall short
of perfection. (The Bible and the
Future, 71)
It is in response to popular trend of
reconstructionist triumphalism that I offer a brief
examination of the role of suffering in the New
Testament as a mark of the progress of Redemption and
the impact eschatology upon the ethics of the New
Testament. The purpose of this study is not to be
exhaustive, but suggestive of a third way of viewing our
relationship to this world and the question of
"world-flight."
Far from being a mere adjunct to the Christian life,
suffering is, in the New Testament, an almost essential
mark of the Christian life. Contrary to triumphalism, it
is suffering which more often than not is a sign of
blessing, not wealth or power. The relation of suffering
to the personal eschatological questions has not been
totally ignored by the church. The eschatological
necessity of suffering is implied in the doctrine of the
perseverance of the saints. We are first to persevere
through sin and temptation. Secondarily we are to
persevere through persecution. This is a reflection of
the Biblical doctrine of suffering.
Suffering is a pervasive theme in the NT. Several
factors figure prominently in this theme of the
suffering of Christians in the NT. A brief look at a few
passages should be enough to establish the thesis that
in the New Testament that suffering is eschatologically
necessary. That is, Christian suffering is a mark of the
New Covenant.
It is a commonplace among NT writers that when those
who are opposed to Christ lash out at us, it is,
actually Christ who they seek to hurt. It was understood
in the NT that the same rejection of Christ which led to
his crucifixion would continue. So expected was it among
the church that Paul tells the Thessalonians in 3.4 that
he foretold that "we are about to suffer, just as also
it occurred and you know." (Barker Lane and Micheals,
The New Testament Speaks, 153)
Such a common notion lies behind such passages as
Phil 1.13,20 and esp. vs.29; Romans 5.1-11; 8.35-38; 2
Cor 1.3-11 and especially vs.5 where he makes the
striking statement that the "sufferings of Christ
overflow unto us".
I. Key Terms
The key verbs are Anechomai, Pascho,
Adikeo, and their derivatives. Anecho has
reference to relieving words (Heb. 13.22) and other
objects. It often has reference to receiving things from
men, or in the case of 2 Timothy 4.3 not receiving or
bearing with sound doctrine. Though the word is middle
in form and thus we would expect it to be deponent in
meaning, it is used as a passive exclusively in the N.T.
Anechomai is not used often in the NT to refer
directly to suffering. It is worth noting where it does,
because of the passive force of the word. In 1
Corinthians 4.12 It has the sense of "enduring or
receiving" sufferings. In 2 Thessalonians 1.4 the word
is used to describe the Thlipsin which the
Thessalonians endured.
Adikeo generally is used to designate "hurting"
"injuring" someone. In Acts 25.10, Paul declares that he
has not injured (Edikesa) the Jews. The first
text using this verb which tends toward the idea of
enduring hurt is 1 Corinthians 6.7 where, using the
passive form, Paul exhorts them to be willing to be
wronged, (Adikeisthe). In 2 Corinthians 7.12 he
uses the verb to describe a "wronged" party in a
dispute.
This term also occurs in the Apocalypse. In 2.11 the
Lord promises that the second death will not harm (Adikethe)
the overcomer. In 6.6 it refers to "damaging" the oil
and the wine. 7.3 uses it of doing "harm" to the earth.
The only deviation from this pattern is in 22.11 where
John characterizes some one who acts unjustly with this
verb.
Pascho of course is the NT verb associated
most often with our Lord's vicarious suffering. Of the
three this word occurs most frequently in the NT. In
Matthew 16.21, 17.12, (see. parallels Mark 8.31, 9.12),
Luke 22.15, 24.26,46, Acts 1.3, 3.18, 17.3, Hebrews
2.18, 5.8, 9.26, 13.12, Pascho refers to the
suffering of Christ on the cross. Thus, in these
contexts, given the centrality of the cross in the
gospels, the message of the cross provides the core
meaning for this word in the NT.
This verb, however, is not applied just to Christ. In
Acts 9.16 Luke records the words of the ascended Lord
which Ananias is to carry to Paul, "I will show him how
much it is necessary (Dei ) to suffer for my
name." Applied to us, the word has a derivative meaning.
We suffer not the outpouring of God's wrath, for Christ
has suffered eschatologically once for all, but in the
NT epistles especially we suffer the outpouring of the
wrath of the world, Satan, and the powers of this age.
The verb Dei, is the term most often used to
communicate necessity. It is also central to the thesis
of this paper. It is relatively easy to demonstrate the
force of Dei in the N.T. The clearest example is
John 3.14: "And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the
desert, so also it is necessary for the Son of Man to be
lifted up." It is necessary in that it is the requisite
for salvation. (v.15) It has this sort of force in many
places throughout the New Testament. It with passages
like John 3.14,15 in mind that we are speaking of
"eschatological necessity".
Theologically we speak of consequent necessity. It
was not necessary for God to save man, but having willed
to save some, the cross became a necessity to the
accomplishment of the Divine will. Our suffering does
not have the same necessity. But it does have a derived
necessity. It is derived from our union with Christ. I
hope to show that union with Christ, in the NT,
necessarily entails suffering. We suffer because of our
union with Christ. We suffered and died in Him. So also
do we now suffer subsequent to His suffering.
II. Exposition
Nowhere in the gospels, perhaps nowhere in the NT is
the union between Christ and believers and its
implications taught so clearly than in John 15.1-17
Jesus outlines the fact that He is the vine and those
who are united to Him by the Holy Spirit, true faith,
bear fruit. Jesus says he will consummate this union by
laying down his own life for his friends, those whom he
has chosen.
Beginning with v.18 he outlines the implications
which union with Christ has for believers. "If the
Kosmos hates you, keep in mind that the Kosmos
hated me first." The world does not hate those who are
"united" ethically to it. The servant is not greater
than the master. The master suffered, so the servant
should not expect to escape a similar fate. Jesus is
describing a normal part of the Christian life. That
Christians in any era should be free of suffering is, as
we will see, an aberration.
In Rom 5:1-11, (especially vs.4) where Paul takes it
as a given that identification with the death of Christ
entails suffering. It is the almost casual way he goes
about describing the relationship of suffering to the
glories of the Gospel that it is striking. (see.
Galatians 3.4)
Paul says in v.3 that because of our relation to
Jesus, we boast in suffering. Robert Schuller is wrong.
Paul is not saying that "when things get tough, the
tough get tougher." Rather he is saying that our
sufferings (Thlipsis), demonstrate the
eschatological (and consequently) ethical antithesis
between the Christian and the World. Suffering is an
affirmation of our union with Christ. This is the
prelude to the locus classicus for the doctrine
of imputation, which is another aspect of our union with
Christ.
Romans 8.18ff. Paul compares the sufferings (Pathemata)
of the present age semi-eschatological with the glory to
be revealed in us. For this revelation creation itself
is anxious. What is the object of the anxiety? The
redemption of our bodies. (v.24) He is looking for the
resurrection. Because of our weakness and groanings
(because of suffering?) the Spirit intercedes for us.
Vs.35: Who will separate us from the love of Christ?
Thlipsis or distress, or persecution, or famine, or
nakedness, or peril, or sword?"
These are not just random selections of difficult
things used in contrast with Christ's love. These are
real life experiences shared by the Roman Christians
before and after the reception of the letter. The
references are unmistakable. This is part of the reason
Paul turns their attention for comfort to the
unbreakable golden chain of God's decrees in 8.28-30.
In 1 Cor 13.3 Paul lists things with which perhaps
the Corinthians are familiar. Among them is giving one's
body over to be burned. Clearly there is a reference
here to martyrdom. It was apparently common enough in
the first century, that Paul could casually mention it
as an example, without having to explain that Christians
sometimes were martyred for the faith.
In 2 Corinthians 1.3ff, Paul's doxology to the
Father, one of the things for which Paul is grateful is
deliverance from Thlipsis (vv.4ff.). We are
familiar with the benefits of suffering from this
passage, namely patience, but this is not the only
reason Paul mentions it.
In vv.4,5 he is contrasting the comfort God gives to
his saints through the Holy Spirit, with the sufferings
which are ours of a course. He even speaks of Christ's
Pathemata abounding, or overflowing to us. Paul
even identifies his (and our) sufferings with Christ's.
What does he mean?
We saw in the gospels with reference to Christ,
Pascho has a technical meaning. This is proof of the
derivative meaning I posited earlier. Paul is arguing
that identification and mystical union with Christ
necessarily means that we endure persecution at the
hands of those who still hate Jesus. Because of that
identification and union our sufferings become, in one
sense, part of a continuum with Christ's. The
discontinuity is that his are perfect and propitiatory
and ours derivative. (see. W. Michealis, TDNT
vol.5, s.v. Pascho )
The comfort we relieve comes from Jesus. A reciprocal
relationship is envisioned. In v.7 Paul says that his
hope for the Corinthians is firm because he knows they
are experiencing this reciprocal relationship.
Phil 1.29. This passage establishes unshakably that
in the mind of Paul, there was a necessary correlation
between election in Christ and suffering. Let me quote
the passage beginning with vs.27
Only this, conduct yourselves worthily of the
gospel of Christ, then whether coming, I see you or
being absent hear about you, I will know that you
stand firm in one spirit (in the One Spirit?)
working as one man for the faith of the gospel, and
not being frightened in any way by the ones opposing
you, which opposition is proof of their destruction,
and of your salvation, and this salvation is from
God. Because it has been granted to you not only to
believe but to suffer on behalf of Christ, having
the same struggle which you saw regarding me and now
hear regarding me.
Several things become abundantly clear in this
passage. First, Paul correlates opposition to the gospel
and adherence to the gospel. Both are proofs. Opposition
is proof that one is reprobate. Adherence and
"co-working", Sunerchomai is proof of salvation.
This destruction is proleptic. The opponents are still
opposing.
So also the salvation is proleptic, since we are
still struggling (Agona) In v.29 he argues that
the cause of this antagonistic relationship is that
being in union with Christ necessarily entails
suffering.
We cannot fail to notice the second correlation, that
of the grant to believe and also to suffer. Just as
there exists a corollary between belief and unbelief, so
also there is a corollary between election and
suffering. We can no more escape suffering than
election. For Paul both are sovereign donations of God.
Neither can suffering be limited to the first century by
some artificial construction, since in that case we
would have to restrict election to the first century.
The force of 2 Thessalonians 1:5 is equally clear.
Paul praises God for their faith and he boasts in their
perseverance. Notice that he does not boast in their
dominion but in their perseverance. The notion of
"eschatological necessity" explains why Paul uses the
phrase "counted worthy of the Kingdom of God, for which
you are suffering."
The kingdom here is both present and future. The
present suffering indicates membership in the present
kingdom and inheritance of the future kingdom. If there
are three marks of the true church, then perhaps this is
a mark of the true Christian, suffering.
Paul is not the only writer in the NT to make use of
this notion. In 1 Peter 2.19-23 Peter contrasts two
kinds of suffering, that which is incurred justly and
that which is incurred unjustly. The former is
commendable, the latter is not. What is important to
notice here is that first suffering is commendable, and
second, (v.21) he says "you were called to this", i.e.
suffering. Why? Because Christ is our
eschatological-ethical example, and because of our union
with Him we are to follow in his footsteps. Peter places
suffering in the category of Christian duty. (see 1
Peter 3.14-18.) It is clearer nowhere else than in 1
Peter 4.12ff. that suffering is the normal lot of the
Christian, because of our Spiritual connection to the
ascended Christ.
With all this common NT background it should not
surprise us to see it reappear in the Apocalypse. If for
the sake of argument the recapitulation reading of
chapter 12 is allowed, then the relationship of the
Dragon to the Woman is colorful allegory of the didactic
truth which we have clearly seen elsewhere. Indeed, the
entire Apocalypse is a series of progressive parallels
intended to explain to suffering Christians (Rev. ch's
1-3) in the cities of Asia Minor, why it was, Jesus
having ascended to his royal glory, they continued to
suffer at the hands of opponents and authorities. Jesus'
explanation, through the visions given to John, is that
it is, in effect, a mark of this age. This is the age of
the tribulation, the slaying of the prophets, the
wasting of God's people, so that only a remnant will
remain at the coming of the Lamb in wrath.
Conclusion
The doctrine which I have tried briefly to establish
in this paper is the eschatological necessity of
suffering. Suffering, because of our union with Christ,
is consistently represented in the NT as a fruit and
proof that we are united with him. Because we are
Christ's body, and the antithesis between Christ and the
World continues, the world pours out its hatred for
Christ upon us. We in turn receive assurance of faith,
and the comfort of the Holy Spirit as we fill up and
share in Christ's sufferings.
Christian suffering, which the Apostle Peter
distinguishes sharply from suffering for the sake of
wrongdoing, is part and parcel of being a Christian. It
is to be expected. Inasmuch as it is a mark of this age,
for the Christian, it is necessary. Therefore we ought
to expect it. We ought not be surprised when "fiery
trials" come upon us.
This view is in stark contrast with both
premillennialists who find that Christ's teachings in
Matt 5-7 do not apply today (for whatever bizarre
reason) and those postmillennialists (e.g., Gary North)
who regard Jesus' sermon as applicable only for those
who are oppressed so that they will not apply in the
coming golden age. The view advocated in this essay
rejects both these approaches as, at once too other
worldly and not heavenly minded enough. Just as Christ
our Savior suffered in his flesh, so shall we. Just as
he was raised, if he tarries, so shall we be raised.
Just as he has been glorified, so shall we be glorified,
where glory belongs, in heaven, with the Savior. |