The document discusses envisioning a new kind of Christian faith through asking new questions rather than making statements. It presents 10 questions that are transforming the Christian faith, including questions about the biblical narrative, God's nature, Jesus, the gospel message, the church, sexuality, the future, and pluralism. The final question asks how this quest for a new understanding can be pursued with humility, love, and peace to avoid fighting and division. It suggests new questions can create conversations and launch new quests, rather than debates that result in a new static understanding.
2. From the place where But doubts and loves
we are right
Dig up the world
Flowers will never
grow Like a mole, a plow.
In the spring.
And a whisper will be
The place where we heard in the place
are right Where the ruined
Is hard and trampled House once stood.
Like a yard. Israeli poet Yehuda Amichai
3. a new kind of
christianity:
ten questions that
are transforming the
faith
4. Something is on the way out and something
else is painfully being born.
It is as if something were crumbling,
decaying, and exhausting itself,
while something else, still indistinct, were
arising from the rubble....
We are in a phase when one age is
succeeding another, when everything is
possible.
Vaclav Havel, “The New Measure of Man”
5. Fr. Vincent Donovan:
Do not leave them where they are.
Do not bring them to where you are, as
beautiful as that place might be.
Instead, go with them to a new place
neither of you has ever been before.
6. 500 years ago: Luther’s 95 theses.
Theses are statements intended for
debate, to bring us to a new state.
Needed today: not statements, debate,
or a new state (static location)
Rather ...
9. Statements (or theses) create
debates that bring us to new a
state (or status).
! ?
Questions create conversations
that launch us on new quests.
10. What are the questions?
1. The narrative question: What is the shape of the
biblical narrative? Storyline, plotline?
2. The authority question: What is the Bible, and
what is it for? How does it have authority?
3. The God question: Is God violent? Why does
God seem so violent and genocidal in so many
bible passages?
11. 4. The Jesus Question: Who is Jesus, and
why does he matter?
5. The Gospel Question: What is the gospel
- a message of evacuation or
transformation? Exclusion or inclusion?
12. 6. The church question: What do we
do about the church?
7. The sex question: Can we deal
with issues of sexuality without
fighting and dividing?
8. The future question: Can we find a
more hopeful vision of the future?
13. 9. The pluralism question: How
should we relate to people of other
faiths?
10. The next step question: How can
we pursue this quest in humility,
love, and peace?
22. sdrawkcab gnidaer
Rick Warren, Billy Graham, Charles Finney, John Wesley (or Calvin), Luther,
Aquinas, Augustine, Paul, Jesus
reading forwards
Adam, Abraham, Moses, David, Isaiah, John the Baptist, Jesus
34. Neither revolution nor reformation
can ultimately change a society,
rather you must tell a new powerful
tale, one so persuasive that it sweeps
away the old myths and becomes the
preferred story …
35. … one so inclusive that it gathers all the
bits of our past and our present into a
coherent whole, one that even shines
some light into the future so that we can
take the next step…. If you want to
change a society, then you have to tell an
alternative story.
- attributed to Ivan Illich (Austrian former priest,
philosopher, social critic, 1926-2002)
38. Barna Group: New Research Explores How Different Generations View and Use the Bible
... However, despite these similarities, the Barna studies show that the youngest generations are charting
a new, unique course related to the Bible. Here are the types of changes being forged by young adults:
• Less Sacred – While most Americans of all ages identify the Bible as sacred, the drop-off among
the youngest adults is striking: 9 out of 10 Boomers and Elders described the Bible as sacred,
which compares to 8 out of 10 Busters (81%) and just 2 out of 3 Mosaics (67%).
• Less Accurate – Young adults are significantly less likely than older adults to strongly agree that the
Bible is totally accurate in all of the principles it teaches. Just 30% of Mosaics and 39% of Busters
firmly embraced this view, compared with 46% of Boomers and 58% of Elders.
• More Universalism – Among Mosaics, a majority (56%) believes the Bible teaches the same
spiritual truths as other sacred texts, which compares with 4 out of 10 Busters and Boomers, and
one-third of Elders.
• Skepticism of Origins – Another generational difference is that young adults are more likely to
express skepticism about the original manuscripts of the Bible than is true of older adults.
• Less Engagement – While many young adults are active users of the Bible, the pattern shows a
clear generational drop-off – the younger the person, the less likely then are to read the Bible. In
particular, Busters and Mosaics are less likely than average to have spent time alone in the last
week praying and reading the Bible for at least 15 minutes. Interestingly, none of the four
generations were particularly likely to say they aspired to read the Bible more as a means of
improving their spiritual lives.
• Bible Appetite – Despite the generational decline in many Bible metrics, one departure from the
typical pattern is the fact that younger adults, especially Mosaics (19%), express a slightly above-
average interest in gaining additional Bible knowledge. This compares with 12% of Boomers and
9% of Elders. ...
39. What do we mean
when we say the Bible
is authoritative?
What do we mean by
authority?
40. The Bible as
Constitution
• What purposes do constitutions (or social
contracts) fulfill?
• What problems arise with this approach?
41. Bible as Conversation
• The Bible as a cultural library
• Artifacts from stories within stories
42. LEGAL CONSTITUTION COMMUNITY LIBRARY
Uniformity Diversity
Preserve order Preserve diversity
agreement argument
enforcement encouragement
43. LEGAL CONSTITUTION COMMUNITY LIBRARY
Rules to live by Stories to live by
Conformity Creativity
Analyze, interpret, argue Enter, inhabit, practice
amendments? new acquisitions
44. Inspiration
• what would an inspired constitution look
like?
• what would an inspired community library
look like?
45.
46. What are the questions?
1. The narrative question: What is the shape of the
biblical narrative? Storyline, plotline?
2. The authority question: What is the Bible, and
what is it for? How does it have authority?
3. The God question: Is God violent? Why does
God seem so violent and genocidal in so many
bible passages?
47. 4. The Jesus Question: Who is Jesus, and
why does he matter?
5. The Gospel Question: What is the gospel
- a message of evacuation or
transformation? Exclusion or inclusion?
48. 6. The church question: What do we
do about the church?
7. The sex question: Can we deal
with issues of sexuality without
fighting and dividing?
8. The future question: Can we find a
more hopeful vision of the future?
49. 9. The pluralism question: How
should we relate to people of other
faiths?
10. The next step question: How can
we pursue this quest in humility,
love, and peace?
50. Question 10: How
can we engage
with these
questions without
fighting and
dividing?
51. A way of thinking
about
organizational
change:
insights from
macrohistorians
52. Coral: holy people
__________
Ultraviolet: compassionate communities
Violet: globally-networked individuals
__________
Indigo: “citizens of the world”
Blue: nation-states/democracies
Green: kingdoms/empires
Yellow: warlords
Orange: agricultural chiefdoms
Red: hunter/gatherer band
54. Coral: Quest for theosis
__________
Ultraviolet: Quest for sacredness
Violet: Quest for ubuntu (otherliness)
__________
Indigo: Quest for honesty
Blue: Quest for Individuality
Green: Quest for Independence
Yellow: Quest for power
Orange: Quest for security
Red: Quest for survival
55. Coral: Quest for theosis
__________
Ultraviolet: Quest for sacredness
Violet: Quest for ubuntu (otherliness)
__________
Indigo: Quest for honesty
Blue: Quest for Individuality
Green: Quest for Independence
Yellow: Quest for power
Orange: Quest for security
Red: Quest for survival
56.
57. Cultures may include two
or more zones, but will
have a center of gravity in
one.
They may regress.
59. If we don’t differentiate or
transcend, we experience
stagnation, fixation and
stuckness.
If we don’t integrate and include,
we experience disassociation
and a backward attack-focus.
60. Coral: Quest for theosis
__________
Ultraviolet: Quest for sacredness
Violet: Quest for ubuntu (otherliness)
__________
Indigo: Quest for honesty
Blue: Quest for Individuality
Green: Quest for Independence
Yellow: Quest for power
Orange: Quest for security
Red: Quest for survival
61. First tier zones think in terms
of right/wrong and good/evil.
Other zones are evil/wrong:
our zone is good/right.
62. Second tier zones think in terms of
appropriate and adequate.
Other zones are adequate for
their times and situations; we seek
the zone that is appropriate for us
here and now.
63. Think of climbing a ladder.
You gain a new and wider view from each
rung.
Your earlier view was not wrong - only
partial.
Early zones truly describe the way the
world looks to people at that vantage point.
You couldn’t get to the higher rungs if it
weren’t for the lower rungs.
64. This approach is not absolutist.
It doesn’t claim one view is right and
previous (or later) ones are wrong.
Nor is it relativist.
It doesn’t say that no views are truly
right, but only think they are.
It says all views are partial and that
greater wholeness is better than lesser
wholeness.
65. St. Paul seems to agree:
When I was a child, I spoke and thought
and reasoned like a child,
But when I became an adult,
I gave up childish ways.
For now we see in a mirror dimly,
But then face to face.
Now I know in part; then I shall
understand fully,
Even as I have been fully
understood.
66. So faith, hope, and love abide, these
three;
But the greatest of these is
love.
I will show you the most excellent
way.
Follow the way of love.
Amen.
67. Exercise:
Consider the following in light of the spiral
dynamics schema: Coral: one with God
__________
Your life Ultraviolet: holistic, unifying
Violet: integral, systemic, otherly
Your church __________
Indigo: pluralist, relativist, globalist
Your denomination Blue: individualist, rationalist, ideologue
Green: nationalist, rules, codes
Your nation Yellow: feudal, power-oriented
Orange: tribal, magical, animist
The world Red: survival, instinctual, “reptilian”
Where is the center of gravity?
Where are the points of tension?
Where are breakthroughs happening?
68.
69. How can we help our communities move
forward?
What will cause people to entrench?
What cost will we pay for stimulating
forward movement?
How can we make our churches safe for
people at each zone?
How can we not get stuck?