Friday, May 4, 2012

GGM is back...

...well almost. Now that Mrs. Moogly and I have settled back in here in beautiful Denver, Colorado, I plan on getting back to writing soon. I've been reading through the book of Colossians for the past few weeks and plan on sharing some of my thoughts, but while meditating on this letter my mind kept coming back to my one of my favorite themes: Shalom.

Here is a re-post, with minor revisions, of one of my posts concerning Shalom.

When we think of Shalom, we usually think of Peace; and when we think of Peace, we usually think of the absence of conflict, both within our own mind (“peace of mind”) and between two parties. While Shalom is certainly the "absence of conflict", the Peace that Shalom speaks of, at least Biblically, is so much more. Biblically, Shalom speaks of completeness or fullness, or as Cornelius Plantinga says, "The webbing together of God, humans and all creation in equity, fulfillment and delight". Shalom is "universal flourishing" within the entire created order! Shalom speaks of an experiential reality not only for human beings, but for the entire Cosmos! The whole of Creation is in view when we consider the Biblical concept of Shalom.

One of my all-time favorite series of sermons at SGCC was called "God With Us". I always refer to this series as the Sacred Space sermons, or more specifically, the Recovery of Sacred Space in Jesus Christ. We defined Sacred Space in this way:

Sacred Space is the habitation or dwelling place of God. It’s the realm in which God is present in relation to His creation. It’s not where God is, as if “heaven” were a geographical location; but it’s how God is with respect to His creation. We can say that it’s the “place” of relationship, of intimacy between God and His creation, focused primarily in Man as Image-Bearer, but flowing out from Man to the entire created order.

In this series, we saw that the Bible focuses on a singular, grand purpose of God: the “summing up of all things in Christ”, as Paul says in Ephesians. This “summing up…” is the restoration of the entire created order in what I think of as a Shalomic Paradise--which is to say, more specifically, the Kingdom of God! This is the Kingdom of the New Creation that Eden only typified. God’s purpose in redemptive history is the consummation of all things in His Son, the lord Jesus Christ! The Bible, from beginning to end, is the record of the progress of the purpose of God to fulfill His promise in the Garden; that the Seed of the Woman would crush the serpent’s head, overthrow the curse and restore Creation (all of creation) back to God. I’m not talking about a universal redemption for mankind; I’m saying that the Bible speaks of a universal, or Cosmic Redemption in Christ that has the entire Created Order in view. The Bible speaks of a return to Eden, so-to-speak, only in the fullness of what Eden typified—a Cosmic renewal with the New Heavens and New Earth in a perpetual state of Shalom!

I mention our series on Sacred Space to give some foundation for how we have defined the Biblical principle of Shalom throughout the study. Taking our cue from  Cornelius Plantinga, this is how we defined Shalom:

That state of harmony within the created order in which every created thing finds itself in perfect conformity to itself and its created function, and therefore relates with integrity, in truth to every other created thing and to God Himself.

This is the goal of redemptive history: The recovery of Sacred Space consummating with the restoration of the state of Shalom in the perpetual Shabbat of God’s rest—all accomplished in the Person and Work of Christ!

We must remember that the purpose and goal of God in redemptive history is not simply the “salvation” of (some) men through the forgiveness of sins; this is too small a goal! The purpose of God is nothing less than the Recovery of Sacred Space—the “redemption” of the Cosmos. The goal of God, to borrow again from Plantinga, is Shalom—“The Way Things Ought to Be”.

4 comments:

Dr. Russell Norman Murray said...

'Here is a re-post, with minor revisions, of one of my posts concerning Shalom.'

That's it, a re-post and you use the ex-cu...reason I use that you have more readers, pageviews and followers now and you do some revisions.:)

Dr. Russell Norman Murray said...

‘When we think of Shalom, we usually think of Peace; and when we think of Peace, we usually think of the absence of conflict,’

Well...we also think of the sixties...man. Although I just know about it from books and t.v. and the internet of course.

Dr. Russell Norman Murray said...

‘I’m not talking about a universal redemption for mankind; I’m saying that the Bible speaks of a universal, or Cosmic Redemption in Christ that has the entire Created Order in view. The Bible speaks of a return to Eden, so-to-speak, only in the fullness of what Eden typified—a Cosmic renewal with the New Heavens and New Earth in a perpetual state of Shalom!’

’This is the goal of redemptive history: The recovery of Sacred Space consummating with the restoration of the state of Shalom in the perpetual Shabbat of God’s rest—all accomplished in the Person and Work of Christ!

We must remember that the purpose and goal of God in redemptive history is not simply the “salvation” of (some) men through the forgiveness of sins; this is too small a goal! The purpose of God is nothing less than the Recovery of Sacred Space—the “redemption” of the Cosmos.’

Yes, this is in agreement with the figurative literal language of Revelation 21-22. Mounce states in his Revelation commentary there is fulfilment of the promise of a New Heaven and New Earth (p. 368). The earth shall be renewed (p.368) with of course resurrected persons in Christ. As we have discussed previously on this blog and I have noted on Dr. RNM, evangelicals largely misunderstand heaven and do not properly teach on it.

Good work, Saint GGM of Colorocko.

Great Googly Moogly! said...

Thanks Russ,

I'm all for "peace" and "love"...but the tie-dye shirts and bell-bottoms are bit much!

Shalom my friend! :-)