Peter Schmiechen is a theologian and former President of Lancaster Theological Seminary. He has published extensively on the subjects of Grace and the Church

Month: February 2025

Lent: The Power of the Story of Jesus

      When I was a kid, Lent was a very special time.  This is the church season that lasts for forty days leading up to Palm Sunday, the beginning of Holy Week and ending in Easter.  Back then, we did not practice Anointing with Ashes on Ash Wednesday, that was something Catholics did.  But we had to go to church every Wednesday evening for six weeks.  As I remember, it was a communal celebration of the story of Jesus.  He was always at the center doing things like healing the sick, teaching, telling stories and getting into trouble.  Around him were his disciples and lots of people who wanted to follow him, but kept doing the wrong things.  Then there were people who did not like what Jesus was doing and last but not least there were Romans who were in charge with lots of soldiers.  A great cast of characters.

       So every Sunday and Wednesday my Dad, the preacher, would present some episode of Jesus interacting with one or more of these people.  Some of them, like the disciples, seemed to want to follow him but could never get things straight and did the wrong things.  James and John wanted to do the right thing, but then asked to rule over people and Jesus really scolded them.  Late in the story Peter denied knowing Jesus and Judas betrayed Jesus, who was eventually arrested and crucified.  As a congregation of listeners, we were asked to see ourselves in this story and learn something about good and bad, but especially see the contrast between Jesus and all these characters.  So in one case we might learn about the selfish son who asked for his inheritance and went away only to lose it all and end up tending pigs.  That’s quite graphic.  Or, as already mentioned, James and John had trouble getting the message.  When they thought Jesus might come to worldly power, they wanted authority to rule over others.  And of course there were bright spots where Jesus taught us how to pray, or told us what we needed to do to be blessed; like the merciful, or the pure in heart, or the peacemakers.  The challenges were great, as in the story about the guy who had lots of money but loved it more than following Jesus.  Then Jesus surprises us by saying it will be easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the Kingdom of God.  As kids we were not sure what that meant, other than it sounded like our day-dreaming about being rich didn’t fit in with following Jesus.  That became all the more clear as it became apparent that Jesus was faithful to God, even to the point of suffering and dying.

      As communal theatre, we were brought into the story, identified with all sorts of characters, whether they were good or bad, loyal or disloyal. Each week we saw another form of virtue or human failing and we were put in the shoes of one of these figures.  Sometimes it was about how things will work in the Kingdom of God. The parable of the laborers in the vineyard always provoked outrage.  You may recall that this is the parable where workers start at different times of the day, but at day’s end, they all get the same pay. At Sunday dinner we argued about that because it wasn’t fair. I think Dad was glad we were arguing about something important but he had to tell us to stop fighting.  Lost in all the yelling was the idea that in the Kingdom we are not treated as the world treats us according to very limited views of what a person deserves. What happened was that we learned by seeing ourselves in all the characters, wondering what we would have done and, if we were listening, what we would do now: will we be merciful, peacemakers and faithful. 

      I often think of those days—it wasn’t just the services but the time between them as well since the images were impressed on our minds.  I think it all represented a different form of piety. As I mentioned, it was a very communal process.  Being Christian meant being members of the congregation and that meant showing up for Lenten services.  Faith meant being faithful to God in terms of following Jesus.  Such faithfulness was always seen in the context of my family, consisting of a brother and sister, parents, grandmother and great aunt, structured around the life of a Protestant minister and the seasons of the church.  But I also lived in another world which presented other kinds of challenges.  Five days a week I went to a large grade school on the north side of Chicago, where the students were split between Catholics, Protestants and Jews. None of my friends at school or on the block where we lived belonged to our church.   I walked the commercial streets and saw the bright lights of movie shows and commercial shops. When my friends and I walked past bars and looked through the open doors we wondered what it was like in there.   I would take the L—the elevated train system—which ran through the backyards of very poor neighborhoods, I saw such crowded conditions which I could not comprehend. One summer I ventured farther from our neighborhood to a park on my bike, where I was knocked down by an older boy who then rode off with my bike.  My Father was very upset and took me to the police station where it was duly recorded but I never saw the bike again. When he mentioned this at church I was surprised to find I was some kind of hero. The event heightened the difference between the larger world and our church life, especially the intense practice of Lent.  There, portrayed for all to see, was the fidelity of Jesus suffering on the cross.  It was fairly clear to an impressionable schoolboy that there was a difference between this message of the faithful Jesus and the messages received from the public world around me.  At the time I had no idea how to resolve the tensions, but I knew they existed.  Jesus made it clear that I was living in two worlds and that I could not serve two masters.  What was not clear was how to resolve that and I guess I am still working on it

      That world has changed in important ways.  We all know about the decline of organized religion, the closing of churches and loss of members.  But consider some major changes in the way we think about religion.  One is that for many people, the practice of religion is an individual matter, involving a single person and God.  Or as is often said: “I’m interested in spirituality.”  What this can mean is that individuals use worship and the resources of organized religion to support and strengthen their personal life.  It is not a matter of building up the church and its mission, even if one goes to church now and then.  Religion is to support my personal journey and, as a result, one selects those things that will benefit my spiritual development.  So I hear a lot of journey talk: we are all on a journey, seldom together, and church is there to help you make your way.  Why is this a problem?  Well, for one thing, when the focus shifts to the individual’s journey, then participating in a congregation struggling to exist in a crazy world becomes less important.  For another, the person on the journey is in charge.  He/she is no longer called to be a follower and take up the way of Jesus, but to select from a market place of religious practices what he or she needs and wants.

      Images of being on a journey are very common and appear across the religious spectrum.  Some of them are good: they allow us to connect with people by respecting differences between people and where they are at.  People find themselves at different places along the journey of life.  And of course the most famous devotional book in Protestantism is Pilgrim’s Progress, which conceives the life of faith as, guess what: a journey.  My concern about the term is that it isolates believers from one another. You have your journey and I have mine. Most important, I fear it tends to view Jesus as the teacher/guide along the way who provides aid and points to the way.   When this happens, it minimizes the broad affirmation that Jesus is more than a travel guide, but the one who transforms us and joins us into a new spiritual life that is best described as new life in him.  This explains the preference for talking about rebirth and how Jesus is living water or the bread of life.  If you want some backup for this, consider the work of E. P. Sanders, who concludes that the most distinctive theme in Paul’s writings in the New Testament is that of participation in Christ.  In other words, Christian faith is about being part of the life of Christ and that means participating in the community of Christ.  Another helpful reference would be William Evans’ study of the Reformed tradition (i.e., Protestants influenced by John Calvin rather than Martin Luther).  He concludes that the distinctive thing about this tradition is being united with Christ, and that union involves the community of Christ.  Now, I don’t want to overdo this.  There is a place for each believer to ask about the state of his/her soul, to consider ways in which the gifts of Christ change, support and elevate the individual. In the gospels, Jesus does and says things that speak to that all the time.  But it is always in the context of taking up one’s cross and following Jesus. 

      Let me put it this way: for several decades, books on purpose have been very popular in prompting people to bust out of confinement to narrow or negative goals.  But whose purpose and what purpose are we talking about.  Is purpose just a psychological concept to help people expand their vision or improve their lives according to our cultural standards—some of which are the source of our problems? Our culture associates happiness with acquiring more things, making more money and moving up the social ladder, with little regard for whether this leaves lots of people with little access to such goals.  So when we talk about purposes or goals, which goals do we have in mind?  Those of the Kingdom or those of a consumer driven world? By contrast, I understand the gospel to be a call to be transformed by the grace of God, not a self-help strategy.

      In an article in the New York Times, David Brooks discussed how people use personal stories to define themselves.  He then asked “Yet if the quality of our self-stories is so important, where do we go to learn the craft of self-narration?  Shouldn’t there be some institution that teaches us to revise our stories through life, so we don’t have to suffer for years and wind up in therapy?” (3)  Is not the answer to the question, for Jews and Christians, the synagogue and the church?  Let’s unpack that.  First, by this I mean that our self-stories reflect interests, values and commitments we inherit and create by ourselves.  They may embody what is good about our culture and our lives, but they also embody some of the bias, self-interest and corruptions of a broken world.  If this is so, the question then becomes: by what norms and standards are we going to evaluate our self-stories?  What is needed is a new point of departure to enable us to move beyond our culture wars and social-political alignments.  Unless this happens, the craft of evaluating our self-stories does not produce much change because we are confined to private bubbles, claiming innocence and repeating the same old stories without a new point of departure.

      Lent offers something quite different.  By hearing the story of Jesus we are confronted with the fact that we still have not resolved the tensions between the Rule of God and the ways of the world, with all its brokenness, violence and warfare.  What Lent declares is that Christianity is not a three step program or a process we manage.  It is a crisis. And it is created by Jesus when he tells us we can’t serve two masters.  We must choose.  The choice is between repentance and trust in God in contrast to some combination of our values and the powers of the world.  Now here’s the hard part: Repentance as turning to God and trusting the Rule of God are not a work that earns us salvation.  Salvation is a gift.  That’s why the story of Jesus is a call to lose your old life and be born again, or to center your life not in the world’s ways but in Christ. In the end, the choice is to receive life by grace.   

(1)Cf. E.P. Sanders, The Historial Figure of Jesus, (London: Penguin, 1993).

(2)Cf. William B. Evans, Imputation and Impartation: Union with Christ in American Reformed Theology, (Eugene, OR., Wipf and Stock, 2008).

(3) Cf. David Brooks, “Self-Awareness May Be Just a Mirage,” New York Times, September 16, 2021, A23.  

On Holiness

      In about four weeks we begin Lent, leading to Holy Week.  In preparation for that I want to consider the subject of Holiness, which is crucial to all these events.  And you may be surprised by what we find.

      Let’s begin by recognizing that Holy is a basic name for God, as in the phrase “The Holy One of Israel” or the words in the Lord’s Prayer: “…hallowed be thy name.”  But it’s hard to talk about holiness without reference to other basic names like just, righteous, merciful, faithful and love.  Here’s one problem: Since we believe in One God, all these names must be united in some way or else we would end up with a God divided into different components.  But we would not use all these names unless each one suggested something a bit different.  So what’s distinct about holiness and how does it relate to the other names of God?

      Holiness, like justice and righteous, move in the direction of the moral majesty and perfection of God.  And these words have associations with judgment and punishment.  By contrast, mercy, goodness, and love move in the direction of union or reunion with God in kindness, forgiveness and salvation.   Many people first encounter this distinction when they discover that each parent assumes one but not both roles and the children had to figure out how to protect themselves from the Holy parent and appeal to the loving parent.  When the parents confused things by changing roles depending on the issue, the kids had to adjust their strategy.  But when you have one God, it is hard to know what to do if somehow God is holiness and love.  (Yes, I am aware that Roman Catholics might find comfort in praying to Mary or Protestants might rush to pray to Jesus rather than our Holy Father.  But in general, it would be good not to have God, the Holy Family, or the saints divided according to preferences regarding judgment or forgiveness. As you can see, there is a lot at stake in this discussion.  Unless holiness and love can be related in a positive way, we are not sure how to approach God, nor are we sure what it might mean to be a holy or loving people.  It won’t work to claim holiness belongs to the Old Testament and love belongs to the New Testament, since a careful reading shows that each Testament is about both. And I am not in favor of preaching on holiness one Sunday and Love on the next, leaving everyone wondering what will come next week.   

      The standard strategy for dealing with this issue is to find texts which show the unity of holiness and love.  A simple example of that is Psalm 23.   It consists of a comprehensive list of the way God protects, cares for, restores the faithful, provides goodness and mercy for ever in the house of the Lord. Here indeed is a strong affirmation of love and goodness directed toward us.  At the same time and from the first verse, we are reminded that the one doing all these things is the Lord, i.e., the Almighty God.  Holiness is not mentioned but implied, as we may have no fear in the face of the shadow of death, evil or our enemies.  There is no question that the loving, caring God is the Holy One of Israel, there is not a hint that holiness and love might not be united in God.         

      A somewhat different strategy would be to look at what holiness means when it appears by itself.  If the only way we can affirm holiness is to let love come to the rescue, that only paints us into a corner.  The question then is: What can we learn about holiness in both Testaments.

      Let’s begin with call of the prophet Isaiah in Is. 6.  When Isaiah comes into the presence of the Holy God, he declares: “Woe is me! For I am lost; for I am a man of unclean lips and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips; for my eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts.”  Nothing more may happen without a divine act of healing.  So, a burning coal touches his lips and he is made clean: “…your guilt is taken away and your sin is forgiven.”   Only then can the call of Isaiah be accepted.  Seminary students rush to have this read at their ordination, so they too may see themselves as called and sent by God.  What are usually not read are the next few verses: When Isaiah asks what he shall say to the people of Israel, the answer is to tell them God will destroy nearly everything because of their faithlessness and sins. 

      There are two themes in this story.  The first is that holiness differentiates God from humans, who deserve judgment, and it could take terrible form.  Note that this is expressed in two ways: a) the language of moral perfection, sin and guilt. b) the language of pure and impure, clean and unclean, and the resulting shame.  Standing before God, Isaiah needs to be cleansed outwardly as well as spiritually since he is an unclean person amid an unclean people.  This sets up a parallelism that occurs repeatedly in the Bible.  From a moral perspective, sinners need to be forgiven and reconciled to God; from the perspective of purification, they need to be cleansed.  If sin generates guilt which must be taken away, the shame of impurity needs to be washed away, or as in this case, burnt way. The second major theme, quite the opposite of separating us from God, is that holiness can be the means for healing/reconciliation.  It is the Holy God who commands that Isaiah shall be cleansed by the hot coal, allowing him to speak for the Holy God.   

      We have here an interesting development: The two forms of holiness move in different directions: one separates sinners from God and announces judgment, the other overcomes separation and makes whole. Note that the tension is not expressed in terms of holiness versus love but now appears to be two forms of holiness.  Also note that Isaiah is not made clean by his own actions, nor does he offer gifts or deeds to appease an angry God. Rather, it is God who initiates the means to overcome the separation and take away judgment.  This is true of every saving event in the Bible, such as the liberation of Israel from Egypt, the Mosaic Covenant, the renewal the covenant after the idolatry of the Golden Calf or the means of forgiveness on the Day of Atonement.  In the case of Jesus, the call to believe in the coming Rule of God begins with a call to repent. While Jesus does not practice the ritual washing associated with John the Baptist, his call for repentance makes clear that the Holy God requires change due to our separation from God. In the end, the change required is faith in the coming Rule of God and the call to participate in the New Covenant of Jesus.

      We don’t always think of Holiness as the will to redeem.  But consider the origin of the word holy.  It has ties to the words whole and heal. Holiness also has strong ties to goodness.   For example, in the creation story in Genesis 1, things are declared to be good, which can also be expressed by saying that they are whole and are united in harmony.  They have integrity because they are not divided by conflicting impulses.   By contrast, in Genesis 3, where the sin of disobedience appears, the result is fear and mistrust of one another and of God.  Instead of wholeness, Adam and Eve are divided.  And each is divided from their true self until wholeness can be restored.  Thus we can say that in its original form in creation, holiness contains the creative drive to create outside of God that which is also holy.  Then we discover in later events how holiness appears in the theme of God’s will to restore the creation, as for example in the covenant of Sinai.   God creates a people and calls them to be holy.  When sin enters the story in the idolatry of the Golden Calf, the harmony of the covenant is broken.  But the story does not end in absolute judgment, but the will of the Holy God to heal and restore the covenant.        

      One last example: Paul’s view of the righteousness of God. This is a well know example and, through Luther, became foundational for the Protestant movement.  Like Holiness, righteousness names God and also God’s opposition to sin and evil.  Sin is a break in our relation to God and incurs God’s judgment.  In this sense, to invoke the righteousness of God when talking about sin can strike terror in the hearts of listeners.  Paul, however, uses this most terrifying term to interpret the salvation appearing in the death and resurrection of Jesus.  Here the righteousness of God is at work as God’s will to restore and heal rather than condemn and destroy.  So Paul can say that “…while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.”  (This is parallel to the declaration in John’s gospel that Christ came not to condemn the world but to save it.)   For Paul, this requires re-thinking who God is and what God intends for the world.  The holy and righteous God wills to save and redeem.  In this sense, the tension between holiness as separation/judgment and holiness as restoration/healing is resolved.  There will always be judgment against sin and evil but judgment is not the last word.  So Paul can say that the righteousness of God is revealed in Jesus as the restoration of the brokenness of the world. Such a conclusion has enumerable consequences for the way we think and believe, as well as the way we worship.  If at every point the Holy God initiates restoration, forgiveness of sins and liberation from shame, then we must never think of our salvation as something we initiate, generate, earn or claim.  It is always an act of God—the very Holy God who opposes sin and evil.

      So what have we discovered?  It is clear that holiness means two things: God’s opposition to sin and evil and God’s will to heal and restore.  This is quite amazing, since this tension, which is usually expressed in terms of the tension between holiness and love, is now within holiness itself.  It is not just love which pushes for healing and restoration, but holiness as well.   If this is the case, the ground for the popular interpretation of the cross known as penal substitution is taken away.  Let me explain.  As a way of interpreting the cross, penal substitution argues that Jesus must die in order to satisfy the demands of the law.   Sin has broken the Law and the Holy God cannot forgive until satisfaction has been achieved.   The solution is for God to send the Son to offer his life as settlement for sin.  To be sure, this act by God can be interpreted as a gracious will to save, but it is compromised by the idea that God cannot act until the demands of the Law are met. Holiness can only distance God from sin and evil and demand punishment to appease God by Jesus’ death. The whole argument rests on this view of holiness.  But this is not consistent with the way holiness functions in the history of salvation.  Holiness is both God’s opposition to sin and evil but also God’s will to restore and heal.  In Exodus 34 in the face of Israel’s idolatry of the Golden Calf, it is the Holy God who renews the broken covenant.  In Paul’s view, it is the righteousness of God which wills the salvation of sinners. 

      We have, then, a view of holiness which too often has been ignored in favor of the demanding and judgmental view of the Holy God.  This changes the way we view God and interpret the cross of Jesus.  And it even changes the way we think about fulfilling the mandate that the people of God should be holy as God is holy.  That would mean not claiming innocence because there is indeed a difference between God’s holiness and our attempts to be holy.  It would also mean that the practice of holiness would include the will to heal and restore rather than judge and condemn.

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