Authentic Holiness
The Church of the Nazarene, like many denominations, is the victim of their own success. The Nazarene denomination grew, and it grew generationally as families brought up their children inside the church. Like I said, this is a mark of success, but it had some unfortunate draw backs. The Church of the Nazarene over time has developed its own culture, a very “churched” culture. This combined with the fact that the church’s cultural heritage was founded on the false notion that “holiness” was about avoiding the “secular” has made the gap between churched culture and the culture of the world we live in even greater.
Jesus prayed concerning his disciples in John 17:15-19, “My prayer is not that you take them out of the world but that you protect them from the evil one. They are not of the world, even as I am not of it. Sanctify them by the truth; your word is truth. As you sent me into the world, I have sent them into the world. For them I sanctify myself, that they too may be truly sanctified.”
Yes, the concept of “sanctification” does carry with it the idea of “being set apart”. Unfortunately, many from a Nazarene heritage have interpreted this to mean that they should distinguish themselves by creating and living in their own sub culture rather than living in the culture around them. People in these churches make distinctions between what they consider "sacred" and what they consider "secular"; and they stay far away from anything they would consider “secular”.
This is not what Jesus meant by “sanctification” when he prayed this because he did not want his disciples to be removed from the world they lived in. What did Jesus want? Jesus wanted his disciples to be protected from the “evil one”. He wanted his disciples to be “sanctified” and set apart by the way they lived their lives and loved others in the context of culture, not by creating a separate culture of their own.
Authentic holiness actively engages culture while pursuing the kind of relationship with Christ that bears fruit of love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. The bible teaches us in Galatians that these things go beyond any legal description of do and don’ts. This is because true holiness is always culturally relevant and can be applied even in today’s post-modern context. It is the fruit of the Spirit in our lives that truly sets us apart as disciples as we strive to live as followers of Christ in the context of the world we live in rather than apart from it.
Holiness and Emergent Nazarenes
The doctrine of holiness is considered a “distinctive doctrine” of the Church of the Nazarene. I am a Nazarene because I believe in the life transformation Christ can make in our lives; and if you had to nail me down on a systematic theology I am a Wesleyan. However, I think it is arrogant of us to think “holiness” isn’t a part of the greater Kingdom of God around us. We do not hold the monopoly on holiness and God has been working “sanctification” in His people throughout all of history. I am a bit put off when we try to push our particular “brand of holiness” and our particular models of holiness, as though it is all about our brand and descriptions. I am beginning to understand that many of the systematic and theological models that were refined during the modern age are limited by the modern lens that was being used to examine it. As modern people we want to reduce everything to a system, method, or prescription, and we want to sum everything up with our models, graphs, and flow charts. Unfortunately there is a push from Nazarene church culture to try to draw lines of separation between us and the rest of God’s Kingdom based on these types of limited models; particularly our models of “holiness” and “sanctification.”
While I think our models have helped in some ways put handles on what we see God doing, allowing us to better talk about and explore our experience; we have lost something when we take it too far and reduce everything to a formula and system or think our models are the totality of God’s truth. Perhaps holiness is better described in a narrative, in the context of our stories and lives. Certainly the best example we have of holiness is found in the life of Christ that is given to us in the Bible in a narrative form rather than a systematic theology. Perhaps rather than trying to draw lines of distinction through our models and systematic theology with the rest of the Christian community we should look instead to how we might contribute to the greater conversation of the Kingdom.
The Emergent Church movement is partly about understanding the limitations of and getting past our mental models. We need to continue to try to understand that sometime we find more truth in the conversation and the journey than we do with what we think are the definitive answers. The problem with our models as definitive answers are that they no longer allow you to ask questions and they tell you that there is nothing more to seek. A conversation has more flexibility than that; it allows you to explore the possibilities, to clarify, and to even change your mind. It is not that God’s eternal truth ever changes, but that God’s truth is so big that it can not be reduced to a single model, system, formula, or even culture and language. This is why conversations and narratives are powerful, because they allow us to interact with God’s unchanging truth while not being boxed in by the trappings of limited models or context.
It is my hope that as Nazarenes that identify with the emergent church we will spur on conversations with all Christians across all groups and denominations, as we all together work to engage the world around us in conversations about God’s kingdom. This website and blog are geared to do just that, we hope that Nazarenes that participate here will see themselves also as part of God’s greater Kingdom. This site is not about creating our own “distinctive” emergent Nazarene brand, it about being a part of and contributing to the church as a whole and being effective and relevant in the world we all live in.
Jesus prayed concerning his disciples in John 17:15-19, “My prayer is not that you take them out of the world but that you protect them from the evil one. They are not of the world, even as I am not of it. Sanctify them by the truth; your word is truth. As you sent me into the world, I have sent them into the world. For them I sanctify myself, that they too may be truly sanctified.”
Yes, the concept of “sanctification” does carry with it the idea of “being set apart”. Unfortunately, many from a Nazarene heritage have interpreted this to mean that they should distinguish themselves by creating and living in their own sub culture rather than living in the culture around them. People in these churches make distinctions between what they consider "sacred" and what they consider "secular"; and they stay far away from anything they would consider “secular”.
This is not what Jesus meant by “sanctification” when he prayed this because he did not want his disciples to be removed from the world they lived in. What did Jesus want? Jesus wanted his disciples to be protected from the “evil one”. He wanted his disciples to be “sanctified” and set apart by the way they lived their lives and loved others in the context of culture, not by creating a separate culture of their own.
Authentic holiness actively engages culture while pursuing the kind of relationship with Christ that bears fruit of love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. The bible teaches us in Galatians that these things go beyond any legal description of do and don’ts. This is because true holiness is always culturally relevant and can be applied even in today’s post-modern context. It is the fruit of the Spirit in our lives that truly sets us apart as disciples as we strive to live as followers of Christ in the context of the world we live in rather than apart from it.
Holiness and Emergent Nazarenes
The doctrine of holiness is considered a “distinctive doctrine” of the Church of the Nazarene. I am a Nazarene because I believe in the life transformation Christ can make in our lives; and if you had to nail me down on a systematic theology I am a Wesleyan. However, I think it is arrogant of us to think “holiness” isn’t a part of the greater Kingdom of God around us. We do not hold the monopoly on holiness and God has been working “sanctification” in His people throughout all of history. I am a bit put off when we try to push our particular “brand of holiness” and our particular models of holiness, as though it is all about our brand and descriptions. I am beginning to understand that many of the systematic and theological models that were refined during the modern age are limited by the modern lens that was being used to examine it. As modern people we want to reduce everything to a system, method, or prescription, and we want to sum everything up with our models, graphs, and flow charts. Unfortunately there is a push from Nazarene church culture to try to draw lines of separation between us and the rest of God’s Kingdom based on these types of limited models; particularly our models of “holiness” and “sanctification.”
While I think our models have helped in some ways put handles on what we see God doing, allowing us to better talk about and explore our experience; we have lost something when we take it too far and reduce everything to a formula and system or think our models are the totality of God’s truth. Perhaps holiness is better described in a narrative, in the context of our stories and lives. Certainly the best example we have of holiness is found in the life of Christ that is given to us in the Bible in a narrative form rather than a systematic theology. Perhaps rather than trying to draw lines of distinction through our models and systematic theology with the rest of the Christian community we should look instead to how we might contribute to the greater conversation of the Kingdom.
The Emergent Church movement is partly about understanding the limitations of and getting past our mental models. We need to continue to try to understand that sometime we find more truth in the conversation and the journey than we do with what we think are the definitive answers. The problem with our models as definitive answers are that they no longer allow you to ask questions and they tell you that there is nothing more to seek. A conversation has more flexibility than that; it allows you to explore the possibilities, to clarify, and to even change your mind. It is not that God’s eternal truth ever changes, but that God’s truth is so big that it can not be reduced to a single model, system, formula, or even culture and language. This is why conversations and narratives are powerful, because they allow us to interact with God’s unchanging truth while not being boxed in by the trappings of limited models or context.
It is my hope that as Nazarenes that identify with the emergent church we will spur on conversations with all Christians across all groups and denominations, as we all together work to engage the world around us in conversations about God’s kingdom. This website and blog are geared to do just that, we hope that Nazarenes that participate here will see themselves also as part of God’s greater Kingdom. This site is not about creating our own “distinctive” emergent Nazarene brand, it about being a part of and contributing to the church as a whole and being effective and relevant in the world we all live in.
James Diggs



1 comments:
Hey Fellas,
I am really glad I found your site, I was checking to see if anyone had started one yet and if they hadn't I was going to. But no sense in recreating the wheel. My name is Greg and I am a Nazarene Pastor, currently serving in the Methodist Church, and very involved with Emergent. I am part of a cohort here in NC and I have been part of a number of the Emergent theological conversations over the past 3 years. I pastor a community called Evolution that is based from a Tuesday Night worship service at my church. I have a number of other Naz friends who are doing similar deals and will let them know about the site. I am also thinking about trying to host a get together sometime next year for anybody who might be intersted in getting together and hanging out, worshiping, and doing some theology together. In the mean time check out my blog which has a lot of my thoughts on these issues. I would love to contribute to this site in anyway that I can.
www.gregarthur.wordpress.com
Blessings-
Greg
Post a Comment