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WEEKLY REFLECTIONS
~ A Personal Relationship with Jesus? ~
by John Suk
(Note: This article is reprinted here with permission of Perspectives,
A Journal of Reformed Thought. Views and opinions expressed in Perspectives
are those of the author alone and do not necessarily reflect the official
position of the Reformed Church in America or of Spiritual Resource Services
@ Prayergear.com. We thank Perspectives for the gracious reprint
permission since we found the essay provocative and interesting.)
Evangelicals generally insist that "the meaning and purpose of life is to
have a personal relationship with Jesus." That's how a Methodist pastor I
was listening to a few months ago put it. Philip Yancey says it another way
in his Reaching for the Invisible God (Zondervan, 2000): "getting to know
God" is a lot like getting to know a person. You spend time together, whether
happy or sad. You laugh together. You weep together. You fight and argue,
then reconcile (108).
But as Evangelicals, we also confess that Jesus is not physically present
on earth. So how does one have a personal relationship with someone you can't
talk to, share a glass of wine with, or even email? Yancey is sensitive to
such objections. So he backtracks a bit from his first assertion. He says
that with God we shouldn't expect a relationship between equals. The problem,
he says, is that we want God to be like us--tangible, material, perceptible,
audible--while God "shows little interest in corresponding on our level"
(110). But if God "shows little interest in corresponding on our level,"
how do you spend time together, laugh together, weep together, fight and
argue and reconcile together? Why would you call such a relationship a personal
relationship?
Yancey feels the weight of these awkward questions. He tries to resolve the
problem through indirection. A relationship with God, he says, is like a
relationship with a spouse you love but are not with. You miss your spouse;
your heart grows fonder--so much so that the absence of the spouse is felt
as a sort of presence. I know what Yancey means, since as I write this, my
spouse is 7500 miles, a continent and an ocean, away from me!
But again, the absence of someone you love becoming a mysterious presence
sounds more like postmodern rhetorical criticism, like a search for something
hidden in the traces, than the sort of "personal relationship" Yancey began
with.
So finally, as if exasperated by his objections, Yancey resorts to a brief
summary of Alvin Plantinga's notion that belief in God is "properly basic."
Now, Plantinga's work is persuasive. Even so, a dense, closely argued, erudite
justification for the rightness of belief in God seems a poor substitute
for a personal relationship with that God the way Yancey first described
it, don't you think?
We need to do some fundamental reflection on the whole notion of having or
pursuing a "personal relationship" with Jesus Christ. While, on the one hand,
I respect the longing for intimacy with God that these words reflect, they
also concern me because they betray a creeping sort of secularization of
our language about God. I'll lay out the reasons for my objections and then
conclude with some suggestions for an alternative way we should speak of
our relationship with God.
The Bible on Personal Relationship
Scripture speaks powerfully about the providential nearness of God. God is
David's shepherd (Ps. 23). God promises Israel that when she passes through
waters or fire, he will be with her (Isa. 43:1-5). Jesus promises that where
two or three come together in his name, he will also be there (Matt. 18:19).
Jesus said, "Blessed are those who have not seen, and yet believe." That’s
me Jesus is speaking about.
Of course, such passages are somewhat ambivalent too. God's presence to David
was not so personal that God was able to advise him about Bathsheba, or counting
soldiers, or how to deal with Absalom. And the prophets insist on God's providential
presence in Israel in part because the Israelites themselves cannot sense
it as they stumble from one disaster to another. And God's presence to the
apostles, after his ascension, comes (as Moses promised in Num. 12:6-8) only
via visions like Peter's in Joppa or John's on Patmos. In one such vision,
while Paul is in prison in Corinth (Acts 18), Jesus assures Paul that he
is watching over him--something, one supposes, that needed to be said because
otherwise Paul might not sense Jesus' presence.
The gospel of John actually wrestles with what the personal absence of Jesus
will mean for his followers. "I am with you for only a short time," says
Jesus, "and then I go to the one who sent me. You will look for me, but you
will not find me; and where I am, you cannot come" (John 7:33, 34; John 8:21).
Jesus shows himself personally to Thomas, but you can almost hear the ache
in Jesus' voice when he speaks of us who have not had the sort of personal
encounter Thomas did. "You believe because you have seen"--because, we might
say, you have a personal relationship with me. But Jesus goes on to say,
"Blessed are those who have not seen, and yet believe." That's me Jesus is
speaking about.
In Jesus, God came to humans in the flesh--so ambiguous a presence that while
Jesus walked on earth, few recognized him. Even the disciples--who had the
closest of personal relationships with Jesus--barely understood him until
after the resurrection. Even then, Jesus was recognizable as God only intermittently,
as in the breaking of the bread in Emmaus, or to Thomas in the upper room.
Paul notes that before his ascension, Jesus appeared to just over five hundred
people, and finally after his ascension, to him "as to one abnormally born"
(1 Cor. 15:7).
We do have something else, of course--the presence of the Holy Spirit, which
was made known to us at Pentecost. "I will not leave you as orphans; I will
come to you," he says. A chapter later, Jesus explains, "When the Counselor
comes, whom I will send to you from the Father, the Spirit of truth who goes
out from the Father, he will testify about me" (John 15:26). The Reformed
doctrine of the testimony of the Spirit turns on such texts, insisting that
God is most present to us through the illuminating work of the Spirit as
we search God's word, scripture.
But as a spirit, the Holy Spirit's interaction with us is also mysterious
and ephemeral. "The wind blows where it chooses, and you hear the sound of
it, but you do not know where it comes from or where it goes. So it is with
everyone who is born of the Spirit" (John 3:8). All of which is both wonderful
but also achingly leaves us wishing for more. So, when I read in Luke 9 that
Peter was afraid of Jesus, I wish I knew what Peter felt, and what Jesus'
words, "do not be afraid," cured.
Pastoral Issues
Ultimately, the phrase "a personal relationship with Jesus," is not found
in the Bible. Thus, there is no sustained systematic theological reflection
on what the phrase must or most likely means. In fact, people experience
the personal presence of God--if that is what they are really experiencing--in
a wide variety of idiosyncratic and highly personal ways. Publicly, however,
when people say they have a personal relationship with Jesus, it sounds like
they are saying they have a relationship characterized by face-time, by talk-time,
by touching, by all the things--and especially the intimacy--we usually associate
with having a personal relationship with another human being.
As a result, using the language of personal relationship is bound to lead
to all sorts of confusion. As a pastor I met more than a few people who experienced
doubt, or perhaps anger, because they didn't experience Jesus the way their
Christian friends claimed to. Not having felt his presence, or listened to
his voice, or done any of the things that Philip Yancey starts off saying
a personal relationship entails, they begin to feel like they don't have
what others have. If they continue going to church they may even begin to
feel like frauds, because the very frequency and off-hand familiarity with
which so many Evangelicals speak of such a relationship creates social pressure
to conform, to nod, "yes, I know what you mean," and to act as if such a
relationship is their reality too.
This sort of talk is sure to be misunderstood by many non-Christians too.
They know Jesus hasn't walked on the earth for nearly two thousand years.
Even if they were to grant the possibility of what we confess, namely that
Jesus is now in heaven sitting at the right hand of God the Father, unbelievers
also know that there isn't any mail or phone service between God's throne
and our homes. For most such people, talk of a personal relationship with
Jesus must seem as unlikely and strange as New Age talk of channeling spirits
from other planets or dimensions--unless you are one of those people into
such things!
On the other hand, if you Google "personal relationship with God," you will
discover that people from many religions use this same, or similar, language.
Muslims, Baha'i, Hindus, and Mormons all claim personal relationships with
their gods. So, for example, a recent Newsweek article quoted Megan Wyatt,
a blond Ohioan who converted to Islam, as saying, "There are many ways to
be spiritual. People find it in yoga. For me, becoming a Muslim gave me the
ultimate connection to God." (www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9024914/site/newsweek/)
Popular Secularization
So where does this fascination with the language of personal relationship
come from? Robert Bellah dates it to the nineteenth century, when "science
seemed to have dominated the explanatory schemas of the external world, [so
that] morality and religion took refuge in human subjectivity, in feeling
and sentiment" (Habits of the Heart, University of California, 1985, 46).
By this account, the triumph of science meant that faith had to make a strategic
retreat to private experience or morality.
More recently, the language of personal relationship with God has become
popular due to the pervasive influence of the language of secularity. So
Marsha Witten cogently argues in her book, All is Forgiven: The Secular Message
in American Protestantism (Princeton, 1993), a close textual analysis of
fifty-eight sermons on the parable of the prodigal son as found in Luke 15:11-32.
Twenty-seven of the sermons were preached in mainline Presbyterian churches,
and the rest to conservative Southern Baptists.
When I read in Luke 9 that Peter was afraid of Jesus, I wish I knew what
Peter felt, and what Jesus’ words, "do not be afraid," cured.
In both traditions, Witten discovers, preachers respond to secularity in
part by accommodating their language to it. Biblical language that emphasizes
God's transcendence is replaced by language that emphasizes God's immanence.
Jesus is not in heaven, at the right hand of God; he lives in our hearts.
God is primarily seen as a "daddy," as sufferer on our behalf, and as extravagant
lover. In these sermons the traditional language for God is accommodated
to the human desire for connection and intimacy.
Likewise the stress on practical rationality. Witten's preachers are mostly
concerned with giving the audience some everyday cash value for their religion.
"Spirituality may take a back seat to pragmatism" in these churches, and
"the language of technical proceduralism replaces that of poetic evocation"
(134). In this connection Witten points not only to the raft of self-help
titles available at religious bookstores but to the way sermons are structured
"in a series of steps, or items on a list" (24). Thus is "modern culture...elbowing
religious tenets and pronouncements into increasing conformity with the norms
of the secular world" (6).
Furthermore, these sermons lack much sense that Christianity has anything
to say beyond one's personal relationship to God. "Only in a tiny minority
of sermons is the world a place of social concerns and interactions, in which
choices made about behavior have to do with social issues such as justice
or equality" (57). Ultimately, Witten argues, the language of religious conversion,
the language of sin, repentance, of principalities and powers has been traded
in for something else. Now in both conservative and liberal denominations,
the language of conversion has been replaced by the language of personal
relationship. The language of personal relationship fits with secularity;
the traditional language of conversion, of trading faiths through a dying
to self, does not.
One cannot fail but recall David Wells' warning:
There is an irony in all of this that appears to be entirely lost on those
at the heart of it. They labor under the illusion that the God they make
in the image of the self becomes more real as he more nearly comes to resemble
the self, to accommodate its needs and desires. The truth is quite the opposite.
It is ridiculous to assert that God could become more real by abandoning
his own character in an effort to identify more completely with ours. And
yet the illusion has proved compelling to a whole generation. (God in the
Wasteland, Eerdmans, 1994, 100-101)
Is this possible? Do many Christians have a personal relationship not so
much with Jesus, or God, but with something in their heads, with something
that they're comfortable with, a social construction driven by their need
to go easy on themselves? I'm sure this is not the intention. I'm sure that
the presence of the Spirit that testifies to the truth prevents many Christians
who use the language of personal relationship from falling prey to its worst
temptations. Still, given the repeated and serious warnings against idolatry
all through the Bible, we ought to be very, very careful when it comes to
imagining the God we say we're in a personal relationship with.
Antidotes
What sorts of language should we use instead? First, we can take a hint from
the Psalmist: no matter how comfortable the language of personal relationship
is, the more pressing need today is to come to grips with God's seeming absence.
I've tried to pastor parents who just gave birth to a child with Down's syndrome.
After a car accident, once, I buried a man's wife and only child. I've seen
hundreds of rotting bodies in a little church in Nterama, in Rwanda--victims
of genocide. I have a foster daughter who gets calls from her real parents
in Zimbabwe saying that their whole neighborhood has just been bulldozed
by Mugabe's henchmen. Everyday I go to work, here in Manila, I see malnourished
street children begging for coins.
In such a world I think that rather than focusing on "personal relationships,"
we need to recover the Psalmist's language of lament because it fairly represents
how we ought to feel about Jesus' absence until he comes again to make all
things new.
Second, in thinking about how we actually do relate to God, we need to revisit
scripture's assertion that we are "in Christ." In this regard, we would do
well to re-read Lewis Smedes' book, Union with Christ (Eerdmans, 1983), one
of the great overlooked classics of popular theology.
In both conservative and liberal denominations, the language of conversion
has been replaced by the language of personal relationship.
Part of what Smedes argues there is that being in Christ--even if it isn't
a personal relationship--is a wonderful and cosmic reality that is most real
to us in that we do all we do as participants in the new history begun in
Christ. This new reality can--and should--become most tangible and comforting
in the church.
But a further consequence of being in Christ, Smedes argues, is that it makes
us "part of a program as broad as the universe," as opposed to a narrow,
pragmatic, and personal program of the type described by Witten. Smedes writes
that:
The design of Christ's new creation is far too grand, too inclusive to be
restricted to what happens inside my soul. No nook or cranny of history is
too small for its purpose, no cultural potential too large for its embrace.
Being in Christ, we are part of a new movement by His grace, a movement rolling
on toward the new heaven and the new earth where all things are made right
and where He is all in all. (92)
This sort of language is fit for Christians who want Jesus to claim more
than the limited real estate of the heart, but want Jesus to inspire them
to take on principalities and powers.
I'm not suggesting here that Reformational activism is a wiser and happier
alternative to Calvinistic pietism. And I admit that those of us in the doctrinalist
or Kuyperian camps of Reformed thinking have sometimes messed up here, short-changing
the call to root ourselves ever more deeply in prayer, in spiritual disciplines,
in worship and Bible study. But it is also undeniable that when we are busy
with a project--especially a project as exciting as being ambassadors of
reconciliation for the King of the Universe to earth--it is then that faith
becomes sight. For as Paul said, "the righteous will live by faith."
This mention of faith brings us to the most important point. Rather than
saying, "I have a personal relationship with Jesus," why don't we say instead,
"I have faith in Jesus," or "I believe in Jesus." Where the language of personal
relationship has a very questionable pedigree in secular pressures, amidst
a therapeutic culture, to cut God down to a manageable size, the language
of faith is deeply rooted in scripture. Where the language of personal relationship
is always ambiguous and inexact, meaning whatever the speaker happens to
privately mean, the language of faith has been deeply examined for more than
two thousand years. Where the language of personal relationship sounds implausible
or perhaps even impossible, at least as far as the plain sense of such language
goes, the language of faith serves as an invitation to ponder mystery and
overcome unbelief. The apostle John put it this way: "This is [God's] command:
to believe in the name of his Son, Jesus Christ, and to love one another
as he commanded us" (1 John 3:23). That seems, to me, the real meaning and
purpose of life.
John Suk teaches homiletics and theology at Asian Theological Seminary
in Manila, The Philippines. This article is adapted from a lecture delivered
in his capacity as President-elect of the Institute for Christian Studies,
Toronto.
As always, we welcome your responses to this essay and any of the Weekly
Reflections and articles posted on this web site.
John S. Hilkevich, Ph.D.
Spiritual Resource Services
~ Education, Research and Advocacy
in the Christian Faith
~
Prayergear.com
Spiritual Resource Services © May 11, 2006
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