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You are here: Home / thinking / books / Tony Jones, A Better Atonement, and the Future of Emergent Church Theology

Tony Jones, A Better Atonement, and the Future of Emergent Church Theology

March 27, 2012 by Deacon Bill 11 Comments

There’s been a heavy slew of blog posts and books lately on why young adults are leaving the church (see Frank Schaeffer, Christian Piatt, Dianna Butler Bass, etc.).  And Bass is awesome in her interview by the way!  This is a good conversation to have, and I think the practical issues definitely need to be addressed.  We should talk about aesthetics, music, liturgy, ethics, programs, etc.  But two of the biggest factors at hand, I would want to say, are still identity and purpose; and surely we get these from our theology, and perhaps more precisely, our christology.  Without this, it’s hard for me to see how the church won’t just eventually morph into something else.

As has frequently been noted, a major problem in many evangelical contexts continues to be the degree to which “the gospel” is equated with the penal substitutionary theory of atonement (PSA).  I’m becoming increasingly convinced that the future of the emergent church depends on its ability to articulately refute, and concisely recast, this reductive tendency amongst our more conservative friends.  No matter what kind of social justice projects (KONY 2012, etc.)  get tacked onto this message, and regardless of how much Relevant Magazine calls for “rejecting apathy,” so long as PSA is depicted as the full picture or main event of the good news, the church will always fall short of expressing Jesus’ vision for it.  (By the way, I’m talking to people who still care about preserving something like the Christian church that isn’t just Mainline version 2.0… if this isn’t you, that’s fine!).  An adequate response, however, might take more than just ignoring or only deconstructing the components of Bebbington’s evangelical quadrilateral (conversionism, Biblicism, crucicentrism and evangelism).

Because even if you’re convinced that PSA is the devil, and even if you revise it, the language is in the Bible, so it’s probably not going away.  Tony Jones knows this, and he also knows better than to flatly dismiss it.  Instead, as others have tried to do (e.g., Scot McKnight), he’s merely attempting to dethrone it, and I would like to join him.  I’m very appreciative of the various feminist criticisms of traditional atonement readings (especially that of Kathryn Tanner), but unless “emergent” is to become forever irrelevant even to the most open-minded evangelicals (does this matter?), then you can’t just throw out PSA.

At the same time, Tony is also careful to point out that, generally speaking, atonement theory (not christology) has never really been a dividing debate in church history and shouldn’t be now.  Compared to the Trinity and the divinity of Christ, atonement is secondary.  I’m not as sure about this, but he could be right.  I’m simply saying that, just as mainliners might need to meet emergents halfway, so too maybe emergents can be generous enough to “go to the middle” for evangelicals so to speak.  Or at least for those of us who are recovering, as I’ve heard Tripp say, it’s a good idea to be gracious to every version of our old selves.

Here are some things from the book:

  • The first thing Jones does is to (convincingly, in my view, and biblically!) debunk original sin without neglecting the seriousness of sin as such.  Again, this is not new, but sin must be understood structurally and socially (war, violence, oppression, inequality, environmental degradation, etc) without forgetting about it individually.  This is crucial for an emergent church theological project.
  • Secondly, in a respectful and fair way, Jones directly challenges Driscoll and Piper on this issue for their hyper and irresponsible, Calvinist PSA.  I am so glad he’s not ignoring them.  They are way too powerful and influential to ignore if we care about the North American church.  And they are way too wrong for us to be silent about it.  And here’s what we have to see: a lot of people who go to their churches aren’t even like them, because they don’t know any better!  The response: offer an alternative that isn’t reactionary and that doesn’t poison its own roots.
  • Thirdly, after outlining the major theories of atonement throughout history and testifying to both their necessity and finitude, Jones turns to a better theory for our time, despite its shared limitation (see below).

Anyone who has studied 20th century theology already knows what Jones is saying here.  Jon Sobrino and the liberation theologians said it.  Jurgen Moltmann and other political theologians have said it.  Andrew Sung Park has been on the podcast and is certainly influenced by Sobrino and Moltmann.  Scholars like Theodore Jennings, Miroslav Volf, and Joel Green have made cases along the same lines as Tony.  People who like the Girardian “Last Scapegoat” take will obviously appreciate Mark Heim or someone like Ingolf Dalferth.  This is one of the positions that Jones defends.  Most emphatically though, Jones follows Moltmann’s notion of atonement as solidarity through the Philippians 2 hymn and The Crucified God.  To be fair, the best proponents of PSA (e.g., von Balthasar) can say this too, but think substitution without the penal, or what Volf calls inclusive substitution, in which Christ is not a third party inserted between God and humanity, but the very God who was wronged:

“Jesus’s life, and particularly his death, show God’s ultimate solidarity with the marginalized and the poor,” Jones explains, “with those who most acutely experience godforsakenness . . . in his death, we are united with his suffering.  And in identifying with his resurrection, we are raised to new life.”

My interpretation of A Better Atonement goes something like this: The real hole in the gospel for conservatives is the failure to proclaim the saving significance that Jesus and therefore God participates fully in and understands human suffering, while for liberals it is that Jesus does this as Christ.  This means three things: we affirm incarnation, we affirm resurrection, and we declare the prophetic meaning of the crucifixion loud and clear.  Yes, we’ve read and written about this, and it might even be old news for some, but surprisingly enough, most people sitting in the pew as it were still haven’t really heard it preached or seen it in action, either because we’re too distracted as ministers with preaching salvation as a legal transaction on the one hand or using it as mere exemplary inspiration on the other.  The justice of God gets sidelined in both cases, as the parables about the reign of God are either overly eschatologized or mystically internalized.  The cross and the kingdom must be reconnected, and it can’t just be social.  It has to be soteriological.  This is what Jones is saying, I think.  Is this what emergents can and should claim? (for a better Scriptural understanding of how one could do this, I recommend N.T. Wright’s most recent book, How God Became King).

The book reads like a blog – very informal and straightforward, but still free from simplistic caricatures, which is a difficult balance to find.  This is reliable, timely, and bold theological leadership for the emergent church that is desperately needed.  I must confess that I wish it had come sooner, as I feel too many people have already moved away from the conversation before listening to what might be a tenable alternative to the monolithic PSA gospel.    Nonetheless, this should be a welcomed and appreciated little book for easy reference and for prompting discussion in an intelligent and accessible fashion.  What could be more appropriate as we approach Easter?  In my view, Jones highlights a most compelling theory of atonement for our situation, especially in light of the crises we face as a North American church that comes in the midst of what Walter Brueggemann has perceptively called a culture of therapeutic, technological consumer militarism.  I’m looking forward to the interview!

Other things I’m wondering:

  1. Does talking about emergent “theology” even make sense?
  2. I’m not saying that we have to have one “right” theology (or does it sound like I am? if so, call me out!), but can this kind of atonement be unifying for the mainline-evangelical divide?
  3. Maybe it’s a worn out question, but is the word “emergent” still useful? (i.e., is it too insular, sub-cultured, taboo for evangelicals, etc.)
  4. Finally, for those who will have listened to the Bass interview, I’m curious if anyone notices a relationship or contrast between what she’s talking about and what Tony is doing here…

(I wrote a more extended introduction to this topic that can be seen here).

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Filed Under: books, emergent, latest, thinking
8 comments
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Stephen P. Hale
Stephen P. Hale 5pts

Bill: Much thanks! I'm familiar with many of those ideas, but hadn't thought of them as a prophetic message. I've actually been picking up Brueggemann's book that you refer to a few times, and have always become distracted by other books, unable to quite get to that one. On the other hand, I find his work so helpful! Thanks for the thoughts; loved the review and your other thoughts, -Stephen

Stephen P. Hale
Stephen P. Hale 5pts

Hi Deacon Bill: I wonder if you could expound on the phrase "the prophetic meaning of the crucifixion" as used here? I know it came in the middle of a paragraph, but it was lost on me! "This means three things: we affirm incarnation, we affirm resurrection, and we declare the prophetic meaning of the crucifixion loud and clear." -Stephen

Deacon Bill
Deacon Bill 5pts

Stephen - by "prophetic meaning of the crucifixion," I'm referring to what many people have said to be the implicit but very strong critique by God through Jesus, in his submission to and suffering of this grotesque and horrific punishment, of all oppressive superstructures in society. Rome was one of them. The Jewish Temple at the time might have been another. And this can then apply today or to any time in history, as God is seen to be taking sides with the victims of domination and therefore also to be directly undermining all human constructs of worldly security for the sake of power, control, prosperity, etc. Does that help? And of course the term "prophetic" is also a general reference to the whole prophetic tradition of the Hebrew Bible, which makes sense especially in light of Jesus's comment in Luke 13:34. Walter Brueggemann, for example, says it well, only he calls the cross a criticism of "royal consciousness." I made a post about this on my own blog not long ago here: http://billwalker.wordpress.com/2012/03/20/remembering-the-prophetic-imagination/

Deacon Bill
Deacon Bill 5pts

Adam - your comment is deeply appreciated, and particularly encouraging - both for your affirmation in general, but also for your statement that you too are interested in a actual dialogue with evangelicalism. Since I know some of your own story, I also know how generous you are being when you say these things. It's also impressive to me that despite your totally justifiable distaste for defending orthodoxy, you nonetheless recognize this as a problem. Yeah, for some reason there really seems to have been this kind of retreat or implicit settlement among emergent folks recently to either get dissolved into the mainline or quit church altogether. Reform in the mainline will be important, as you say, but change happens too slow there, and denominational bureaucracy is inimical to the emergent spirit. I've often heard it said that every new development - if it is to last - has to institutionalize. But has this become an excuse not to try more new things? I'm guilty so far... And it's so true about the young people. I mean, for example, there are at least three hipster evangelical mega-churches in Hollywood that are just booming! Another big impediment maybe worth mentioning that you're familiar with is the career risk that often comes along with really committing to many emergent ventures... The security provided by bigger evangelical churches and the guarantees/retirement/health insurance etc. that comes with the ordination process in mainline churches is very attractive when push comes to shove. Two conferences coming up are attempting to address this I think: Funding the Missional Church and the Church Planters Academy (the week/end of May 3rd). I'm wanting to hear more about what is going on in movements like this, and it looks like emergent people will be in attendance. This has a lot to do with the failure of denominational seminaries to encourage bi-vocational ministry. But it looks like this might be changing in some cases. Actually though, the fact that to bridge the evangelical-mainline divide might require some real counter-careerism could be the very hinge upon which a movement swings. Because by nature it requires a breakdown of the clergy-laity divide and greater participatory, egalitarian church polity, the values of emergent are already latent in such a turn. And yet, as we have talked about before, it's not just the house church. It's more public than that. I don't think the emphasis on orthopraxis is running out steam per se... I guess what has interested me most though is an attempt to discover an orthodoxy OF orthopraxis - rather than an orthopraxis that comes as a result of a shift away from orthdoxy. Maybe that's not much of a distinction, but I see the combination of a more inclusivist and progressive christology that is prophetic and solidarity-centered, expressed with the more hopeful eschatology of evangelicalism, as a kind of synthesis that nuances both sides and provides a possible theological compromise. Again - not talking about a strict formulation here, but more so a trajectory, which is why I'm grateful that Tony has signaled in this direction. There can still be a generous orthodoxy, with real inclusion of people leaning to one side or another, but a center would remain and maybe hold it together. Is there a sense in which this is kind of pragmatist/postliberal? Ugh. I haven't read Bass's book yet either, but I want to pursue that question further. It can be the next topic:) I'll come to Waco if I have to! Thanks again for continuing the discussion.

Adam Moore
Adam Moore 5pts

Bill - I'm going to kind of reply to elements in both of your posts here. I think what you're saying is important. I haven't read Tony's book, but I think the importance of your posts go beyond what you have to say specifically about his book (I do look forward to reading his book now). First off, I think your post is important because you are interested in bringing about real change, and you think we can play a role in shaping the future of North American faith. I'm still interested in the whole emerging church conversation, but if there is something that discourages me about it, it's that I see much less enthusiasm for bringing about real change than I did 4-5 years ago. Of course, I'm as guilty in this area as anyone else. I appreciate that you are looking at this strategically regarding how to organize as a movement. Particularly, you seem to be asking "how do we make a difference in the evangelical world?" I don't think you're just wanting to convince evangelicals to be like you, but I think you see a need/desire among many in the evangelical world for an alternative. Your posts here are trying to get at how we create alternatives (both for theology and practice -- and you rightly point out that both are important if we hope to bring real change). As you know, I definitely lean toward the emphasis on orthopraxis. There are few things in the Christian world that bother me as much as self-appointed defenders of orthodoxy. Part of me wants nothing to do with discussion of doctrines and orthodoxy, etc (especially regarding atonement). But you are right-on here. If we completely ignore these matters, or simply refuse to meet them half-way, then we will have no influence on the evangelical world, or to put it another way, we will not create any viable alternatives. I don't know if I agree with you that emphasizing orthopraxy is running out of steam, but I think we do need to find new ways of communicating this, and ways that don't ignore the importance of what we believe. And when it comes to beliefs, I think you're right that the matter of atonement, and specifically the articulation of alternatives to PSA, is essential. Thanks for your posts--I'm encouraged to read someone thinking of the bigger picture. I understand that some people have no desire to influence the evangelical world--and that's completely fine. Personally, I am interested in this, and I think you are too. I think any hope for a future Christianity in America has to seriously consider the evangelical world--this is where the young people are. I hope the mainline world plays a role as well, but it can't be the focus. I'm interested in how you see this connect with Diana Butler Bass. I'm reading her new book right now, but haven't gotten too far. I imagine it does relate, but would love to hear more of your thoughts. I wish I could sit down and have a conversation with you about all this!

Travis Mamone
Travis Mamone 5pts

I love "A Better Atonement!" My only complaint is that I wish it was longer. I haven't listened to the Bass interview yet, but I'm downloading it now so I can listen to it at work. Nothing like theological discussions to motivate you at the office!

Cameron
Cameron 5pts

I finished Jones' book yesterday and I spent the next couple of hours scouring Amazon for related books that were 1) available on Kindle; and 2) within my virtually non-existent budget. I wanted more. The book does read like a blog* and I sort of hope there will be a much expanded edition released down the track. Still, it had a surprising amount of content for a book of its size. I might actually get around to rereading it one day. I think the thing I like about the suite of atonement theories we have available is that we can't really choose between them. Look at what happens when you settle for one---it becomes something of a shibboleth and the doctrine becomes more important than communion with the crucified (and resurrected) Christ. I linked these thoughts in a sermon I preached a couple of weeks ago on 1 Corinthians 1:18. I don't think the atonement is supposed to make sense. If we think we've got a handle on it, we've obviously misunderstood something! Learning to deal with a range of thoughts on this matter is good practice for living in community. If we can cope with tension and disagreement on one of the fundamental points of our faith, and we can admit that we don't fully understand something so central to our theological systems, there may be hope for our community yet. In other words, I suspect that coming up with a really satisfying account of the atonement might be bad for whatever branch of the Church figures it out. It's not just a stumbling block for Jews and Greeks! (This might just be a face-saving way of admitting I don't yet grok the Girardian account. I reserve the right to change my mind about this!) For what it's worth, I'm not sure how useful the 'emergent' label is. I don't like to use it because most any of the listeners I have either associate it with heresy or don't care much for labels. Using the label about oneself here is akin to calling oneself hip. If you've got to use it about yourself, it clearly ain't true! That could just be an Australian thing though. Hasn't Tony Jones eschewed the label? *The fact that he keeps saying things like 'In my last post I said...' sort of hints as to why! My biggest beef with the book was the lack of proofreading. The price I paid more than made up for it!

Deacon Bill
Deacon Bill 5pts

Great thoughts, Cameron. I think you are right... but, couldn't each atonement theory still have its "moment" for a particular age without being held too tightly. I kind of have to believe that the idea of God's suffering with us isn't going out of style anytime soon... Yeah, I used the word "emergent" probably a little too much here, which is what prompted me to ask the question about its traction in the first place - maybe it has indeed run its course, and the limits of labels is a good point too, but don't we always have to have labels for a while? (i.e., Protestant, Baptist, missional, progressive, etc.) Maybe we just need a new one already. I tend to think "missional" and "progressive" still works, but they might be too broad to describe what we're getting at with "emergent"...

Trackbacks

  1. Evangelicals sing to You says:
    April 3, 2012 at 7:50 am

    [...] release of Tony Jones’ e-book on Atonement [ you can find Bill Walker’s excellent review here and our TNT conversation with Tony here] has again called into question supposed evangelical [...]

  2. Tony Jones, A Better Atonement, and the Future of Emergent Church Theology « Bill Walker | Blog says:
    April 4, 2012 at 9:47 am

    [...] A shorter and slightly different version of this post can be found at homebrewedchristianity.com. [...]

  3. Charismatics, Evangelicals, Singing & the unamed ‘You’ « navigating between the everyday and theology says:
    April 12, 2012 at 11:32 am

    [...] release of Tony Jones’ e-book on Atonement [ you can find Bill Walker’s excellent review here and our TNT conversation with Tony here] has again called into question supposed evangelical [...]

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