Becoming the Gospel means becoming like Jesus, in whom by the Spirit we are transformed and conformed to the image of Christ, who is the express image of the Father. Reconciled to God, we become agents of change, ministers of reconciliation, peacable peacemakers co-opted into God's mission of setting the creation right.
In a nutshell that is Gorman's thesis in this book. This transformative existence is condensed into that astounding exchange Paul describes, "He who knew no sin, became sin, that we might become in him the righteousness of God." To open that exegetical bank vault of a verse requires that we, in James Denney's phrase, "hear the plunge of lead into fathomless depths." But not fathomless in the sense of meaningless; fathomless in that, no matter how deeply we go, there is that which is beyond our grasp, which exhausts our spiritual and intellectual capacity, and reduces us, or better, raises us, to resigned adoration.
George Herbert's poetry is often a commentary on Paul's theology:
Philosophers have measur’d mountains,
Fathom’d the depths of seas, of states, and kings,
Walk’d with a staffe to heav’n, and traced fountains:
But there are two vast, spacious things,
The which to measure it doth more behove:
Yet few there are that sound them; Sinne and Love.
Chapter 3 of Gorman's book examines what it means to become the Gospel, by looking through the lens of 1 Thessalonians, 1.2-3. Paul commends their "work of faith, and labour of love and steadfastness of hope in our Lord Jesus Christ." By the time Paul wrote to them, the Thessalonian Christians had been through a tough time of persecution arising from their embrace of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. They had turned from idols to the true Gods - so were no longer attending the places of worship, or the activities of the trade guilds which had religious obligations, and refusing to call Caesar Lord. Paul of course had moved on and is anxious to let the new Christians know he hasn't forgotten and abandoned them. The letter is laced with encouragement, positive guidance and further explanation of a Gospel of faithfulness, love and hope. That they are already well known for these characteristics is encouraging for Paul, and he reinforces that sense of being caught up into the life of God, Father Son and Spirit. Chapter 1.1-8 traces this Trinitarian life and places it deeply into the missional nature of the God who comes in Jesus Christ, to fulfill the purposes of the Father in the power of the Spirit. "For Paul, Christ's faith and love are onseparable, and on the cross Christ;s faithfulness to God and love for humanity simultaneously reached their quintessential expression." (p.83).
In the core chapters Gorman makes a very important move, from missional God, to missional Apostle, whose theology in turn gives the foundations and resources for missional churches, communities of faithfulness, love and hope. And this is where as I understand him, Gorman's project leads to a strategic re-thinking of what the mission of the church is, and the respources and energy that enable local communities of Christ to become the Gospel wherever they are.
What is faith, faithfulness? The Thessalonians were citizens of an important Greek city under Roman governance. Paul's concern was to support and strnegthen their resolve in staying faithful to Jesus in the public square. Witness is precisely speaking and acting a testimony to the Gospel, and therefore becoming the Gospel in belief, commitments, virtues and practices, all derived from life in the crucified and risen Christ, graced and strengthened by the Spirit, lived in obedience to the Father. Such acts and words, lifestyle choices and behaviour patterns would make these new Christians stand out, and attract hostility, resentment, bewilderment and at times opposition ranging from ridicule to violence, even death. Faith is hard work, costly and expensive in social capital. "They are living in ways, or should be living in ways, that get them into trouble." There's a thought, a new criteria for the end of year audit of the church;s missional effectiveness - how much trouble have we been in?
But Gorman means more than that Christians are called to be faithful. They are called, and enabled, by a faithful God. In 5.23-4 the closing benediction is quite explicit - "he who calls you is faithful, and he will do this." Do what? Sanctify completely and keep securely. And for Christians persecuted for their faithfulness that is the basis of hope and the lived reality of divine love. The living, life giving, and life sustaining God is the one who keeps faith and enables faithfulness, who loves and pours love into faithful hearts, who faces loving faithful hearts towards the future in hope, because God is a God who is future oriented towards the fulfilment of his redeeming purpose of setting creation right.
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