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November 09, 2009

Comments

It's a little awkward, but I like to speak of Jesus's Passion as it relates to the Passover as the "Pass-thru". Unlike in Egypt, when God passed over the Israelites so that they did not suffer, Jesus passed through the worst that sin and death can do, and came out. Since he did so as a human being, so can we.

As for Apocalyptic theology, this reminds me of my favorite prayer in the BCP: "Be present, be present, O Jesus, our great High Priest, as you were present with your disciples, and be know to us in the breaking of bread; who live and reign with the Father and the Holy Spirit, now and for ever. Amen." I pray that with the altar party before every Eucharist.

That prayer was first written for the Church of South India. And in their liturgy, it is said by the Priest and congregation before the Sursum Corda. I wish we Episcopalians could use that prayer as part of our public worship, rather than as a private devotion, which our Prayer Book limits it to.

What, the Incarnation isn't one of the great acts of God's reality busting forth into human experience?

Martyn's use of the term, of course, predates Rutledge and is itself highly dependent upon the work of Ernst Kasemann. His essays "The Beginnings of Christian Theology" and "On the Subject of Primitive Christian Apocalyptic" from the 1969 ET New Testament Questions of Today were hugely influential.

And yes, what you're talking about here is simply theology as I understand it. I could care less about what happened to some dude 200 years ago--no matter how nice of a guy he was--if it fails to have an impact on the present.

Some of our best liturgical moments, in fact, focus upon this. I like to point in particular to the Exultet because of its deliberate collapsing of categories of time. Not "an important thing happened a long time ago" but rather "*This is* the night..."

Well, in Rutlege's defense, she lists Kasemann as one of the progenitors of her "school". And Kasemann was influential on one of my favorite professors at Yale (Susan Garrett), so it's not surprising that I'm falling happily into such a circle.

I totally agree that this idea is totally contained within the liturgies of the 79 prayer book. Dix suggested the same sort of thing in his Eucharistic theology (didn't he?) and the prayer book revision architects from 79 that I've talked with drank deeply from that well. Plus it's a very Eastern Orthodox idea.

As to the Incarnation - I'm thinking at the moment that the Incarnation can only be understood teleologically in terms of the Triduum. The Incarnation in of itself is no longer enough for me.

When we focus on the Incarnation alone, we end up seeing a world that is not in need of transformation - and the older I get, the less I can countenance such an idea. I work with too many urban poor and despair of ever making the sorts of systematic changes we need to make to not believe it's going to take something outside of our Universe to drive the change we need to make in the Incarnate world we have.

(Which isn't a criticism of your post Derek, just a subsidiary rant of my own.)

Actually following up on my own post…

I'm leading a class for a group of folks in Phoenix who are ordained in other traditions who are seeking ordination in the Episcopal Church. I asked them last week to give me their "elevator presentation" of the gospel.

Mine would be, following what is above, "God definitively entered the world in the person of Jesus, was murdered by the religious and secular authorities with our complicity and died. God burst forth from death and is now radically transforming us and the whole world into something brand new, just and loving."

I would point to St Chrysostom's Nativity Sermon. Prayers in the Orthodox Church in the Nativity Season begin with "Today!":

http://www.orthodoxytoday.org/articles4/ChrysostomNativity.php

Thanks Christopher

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