The second part of the morning focused on Richard’s book Imitating Jesus and looked at the issue of being Biblical in exploring ethical dilemas. Much of this material was used extensively at the Lambeth Conference in 2008 and it was good to hear some of his insights and reflections on that experience.
Richard began by looking at two websites Anglican Mainstream and InclusiveChurch.Net to show how both, taking very different positions on ethical issues, nevertheless claimed to be Biblical in their approach. He then went on to consider two historical examples, slavery and apartheid, to show how opposing sides claimed positions grounded in the scriptures. The apartheid example was particularly interesting as both the Dutch Reform Church and those opposing apartheid used the same scriptures, the Exodus narrative, as a basis for their theological positions.
Unfortunately our speaker began to run out of time so the final part of the study was rather rushed. In this section Richard shared the basic thesis of Imitating Jesus. I’ll blog on the book at another time, but the key point is that though Jesus’ ethical teaching was rigorous his practice was an open acceptance and inclusiveness of those considered morally questionable by society.
Some key thoughts from the session:
- Being Biblical is to hold words and deeds together.
- Opposing views can be genuinely seeking to be Biblical.
- We are called to be imitators of Jesus’ words and deeds.
- We need an open and inclusive community of interpretation.
- We must give attention to those who are most affected by our interpretation.
I’ve still to read Tom Wright’s Virtue Reborn and I understand he takes quite a different position to Richard Burridge; I look forward to comparing the two.
Update: a version of Richard's second presentation can be downloaded and is titled: Being Biblical: slavery, sexuality and the inclusive community.
1 comment:
Well done Philip - first and only blog on this so far!! There should be a prize. I too felt that questions were not just impossible due to lack of time, but avoided but haing some brief questions at the beginning of the session...which is a shame. I wonder whether questions were avoided because of the nature of the topic - sexuality and women in the Church. For external processors like me, it was a nightmare to be left with all those thoughts and nowhere to go with them! Nice to have a brief and tasty lunch with you tho! and thanks for your comments on the Holy Spirit conference too.
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