- Activist Feedback
- Essay: Job and the Theodicy Problem,
part 6 – The Faith of Christ
- This Week’s Sermon from Rev. Frank and
Mary Hoffman
1. Activist Feedback
CVA
coordinator Paris Harvey, who leafleted with 3 friends at a Joyce
Meyers Conference in San Jose on October 13, writes:
We had a
successful and efficient leafleting, distributing 700 booklets in 45
minutes. We had some good responses but also a few un-Christian-like
responses. Some took the Spanish versions and lots of people asked for
extra copies. I tried using the phrase "Would Jesus Eat Meat Today?” –
that seemed to really catch attention.
Upcoming Outreach
Opportunities
11/1 NM
Albuquerque Unashamed Tour 2012
11/2-3
OH Cleveland Acquire the Fire
Youth Conference
11/2-3 MO Kansas City
Women of Faith Conference
11/2-3 CT Hartford
Women of Faith Conference
11/3 FL
Port Charlotte Kutless Christian
Rock Concert
11/8-10 TX Houston
Joyce Meyers Conference
11/9-10 CA Anaheim
Acquire the Fire Christian Youth Conference
11/10
MT Bozeman
Leeland Christian Rock Concert
11/16-17 MT Billings
Acquire the Fire Christian Youth Conference
11/17
NY Albany
TABLE NY's Capital Region Vegetarian Expo
11/29
MN Duluth
Kutless Christian Rock Concert
11/30
MN St. Paul
Kutless Christian Rock Concert
11/30
TX Plano
Women of Faith Christmas!
12/1 MN
Brainerd
Kutless Christian Rock Concert
Contact Paris at
christian_vegetarian@yahoo.com if you can help. To find out about
all upcoming leafleting and tabling opportunities in your area, join
the CVA Calendar Group at
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/christian_vegetarian/.
2. Essay: Job and the Theodicy Problem,
part 6 – The Faith of Christ
The ancient Hebrew
Scriptures were written at a certain time for a certain audience, and
I think it is important to avoid imposing Christian thinking on that
text. With that in mind, I think it is possible to offer a Christian
response to the text, even if that response might not exactly reflect
the original intentions of the text.
Jesus’ story has
important parallels with that of Job. Jesus was innocent and
righteous, yet God allowed (or perhaps even desired) him to suffer.
Many Christians believe that “faith in Christ” is central to Christian
belief. This believe often includes notions that Jesus’ death was
ordained and necessary in order to “take away the sin of the world.”
While I am not arguing that this view is incorrect, I do find it
problematic, in part because it portrays Jesus as a scapegoat victim
for the sin of humanity. Indeed, in my book Guided by the Faith of
Christ, I argue that the “sin of the world” was scapegoating.
Whatever it means to have faith in Christ, I think Paul encouraged
followers to adopt the faith of Christ. In the undisputed authentic
letters of Paul (scholars generally agree that some letters were
clearly written by Paul, some were written by followers of Paul, and
the authorship of others is in dispute), Paul uses the Greek phrase
pisteos Christou, a genitive construction which could be translated as
either “faith in Christ” or “faith of Christ” (Romans 3:22 and 3:26,
Galatians 2:16
and 3:22, and Philippians 3:9). In Romans 4:16, Paul
used the same genitive construction to describe the faith of Abraham.
Obviously, he meant the faith of Abraham rather than faith in Abraham,
because neither the Hebrews nor anyone else regarded Abraham as
divine. When Paul clearly wished to communicate “in,” he used the
Greek word en. In Ephesians 1:15 and Colossians 1:4, en is used for
faith in Christ, but neither passage states that faith in Christ is
essential for justification. Further, scholars have doubts about
Paul’s authorship of these two epistles. Therefore, even though many
English Bibles have pisteos Christou translated as faith in Christ, in
Paul’s undisputedly authentic letters, faith of Christ seems more
appropriate. A difficulty is that translators, in trying to determine
what particular passages mean, invariably impose their own theology
and beliefs onto the text. There is no way for translators to know
with any certainty what the original writers meant to convey.
Translators who have been convinced that the New Testament aims to
equate Jesus with God might have been prompted, perhaps mistakenly, to
translate pisteos Christou as “faith in Christ.”
What was the
“faith of Christ”? I’ll discuss this next week.
Stephen R.
Kaufman, M.D.
3. This Week’s Sermon from Rev. Frank and
Mary Hoffman
Are Cows More Godly Than Humans?