22 - Rethinking Incarceration with Dominique DuBois Gilliard / Transcript

Note: Can I Say This at Church is produced for audio listening. If able, I strongly encourage you to listen to the audio, which has inflection, emotion, sarcasm where applicable, and emphasis for points that may not come across well in written word. This transcript is generated using a combination of my ears and software, and may contain errors. Please check the episode for clarity before quoting in print.

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Seth Intro 0:58

Hey, there, welcome to another episode of the Can I Say This At Church podcast, I am your host, Seth, to the handful of you that have gone on and rated the show on iTunes. Thank you so much, that helps more than you know, the Apple overlords have an algorithm and it likes ratings and reviews. So for those of you listening right now, just hit pause, take 20 seconds, go review this show, I will be forever grateful. I would also ask the same thing for those of you and thank those of you that have gone on to Patreon, the we are slowly but surely gaining steam there. And that will only ensure that the show is able to maintain the status quo and hopefully grow in the future. And I am grateful. For those of you that have taken the time to do that. I think you're going to like today's episode. So our presence and the system that we use to get people to prison. I think we can all agree needs to be reformed. And so there was a new book recently released. It's an Amazon bestseller, titled Rethinking Incarceration by Dominique Gilliard, and it is well worth your time it is well written, it is well researched. And so that's the topic of today's episode, I think that you will greatly enjoy it a look a bit about what the church's role is in incarceration and how we should be involved in that.

Seth 2:39

Dominique, thank you so much for coming on the Can I Say This At Church podcast, I am excited to talk to you today about the topic because it's not going away. And before we plug the book, I would like it, for those that are listening that are unfamiliar with you, if you could just bring us up to speed on what you would have us know about yourself, and then dovetail that in with how you got into writing your book. And the just the ministry that you're doing, how did you start getting on that path? And where's that taking you?

Dominique 3:10

Yeah, thank you for having me on the podcast. I'm super excited to join you today. And so my name is Dominique DuBois Gilliard. I am from the metro Atlanta area, I grew up in a family where my father worked for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, which is an organization that Dr. King founded during the Civil Rights Movement. So I grew up in a household where we have photos of my father with Rosa Parks and civil rights leaders like Hosea Williams, and that was just a part of the culture in which I grew up in.

Growing up in Atlanta, I really grew up in the shadows of Dr. King, and this theology ended up being very influential for me and my life trajectory. My mom is a pastor, and I grew up as a “PK”, and really wrestling with these two, these two parts of my identity that were really passed down to me through my parents, this real passion for racial justice, and this passion for God. And my life, in a lot of respects was this way of discerning how God always intended those things to be mutually edifying passions, as opposed to isolated a rival passions existing in my life. And so I didn't really learn how to harness that until I was 25, really, after I finished my first master's degree, which was in US history with a focus on race, gender and class; studying and 18 to 21st century.

But that's kind of what kind of led me into the work that I do. But more specifically to writing the book. There was a case that happened that I opened Chapter one of the book with in 2006, I was a senior in undergrad at Georgia State University. And there was a case that happened 10 miles away from my college campus, where there was a community that was jurisdictively zoned as a “no knock warrant community”. And in no knock warrant communities, officers can invade the premise of the home without having to display a warrant or announce their presence as officers in a way that they will have to do literally in any other community does not dissolved as a no knock warrant communities. No knock warrant communities are disproportionately in impoverished communities of color that are stigmatized as drug trafficking communities.

And so the logic behind them is that an officer needs to be able to invade the premise so quickly, because people can flush drugs down the toilet and get rid of the paraphernalia as well. So in this case, one of the officers said that they had been staking out a house for three months (and) knew that it was epicenter for drug trafficking. The night of the invasion that officer and two other officers invaded a home with a 92 year old grandmother by the name of Katherine Johnston. They kicked in the doors without wearing uniforms and a shotgun is drawn ultimately ended up deploying 39 bullets and fatally struck Katherine Johnston five times in her living room.

After they killed her, they searched the house and found no drugs, no drug paraphernalia, they freaked out, figured out how do they cover up their transgressions, they decided to conspire and plant drugs throughout her house to make it look like she was actually involved in drug trafficking. The officers stuck to that story all the way throughout the trial until it was found out that they were caught red handed and they could do nothing. And then they confessed everything they had done.

Seth 6:57

Yeah.

Dominique 6:59

And when they were sentenced, they literally only got a fraction of the time that Katherine Johnston would have gotten if she actually was apprehended and was involved in drug trafficking. And so at that point, my African American Studies professors really implored me, and my fellow students, to get involved. They said we had an ethical and moral responsibility as concerned citizens to advocate for vulnerable people in communities like Katherine Johnston, and I was like…Yes, this is right, this is true, this is good.

But then I've had to take a step back, because my faith community wasn't calling me to the same level of engagement. And I said, if anything should be compelling me to stand up for the rights to the least of these into the pain and the humanity of vulnerable people. It should be my relationship with Jesus Christ, not my academic institution. And so that that really was the seed that ultimately prospered and sprouted into this book.

Seth 7:52

Yeah. I have a copy of your book. I very much enjoyed reading it. And I'm not the only one, correct me if I'm wrong, but it is currently a best seller on Amazon. Yes?

Dominique 8:06

Correct.

Seth 8:07

And so to sell four or five more copies, people go by the book, it's called Rethinking Incarceration: Advocating for Justice that Restores. And so I didn't want to get too far in without mentioning the actual title, but and there'll be links to that in the show notes. I am curious. So do you find it hard growing up in the community and the faith, the training that you had, you know, being so involved from a young age the way that your parents were; do you find it hard when you speak to people that have, unknowingly…I know so many people that don't know what they don't know, until they're old enough to do something about it, and then they're usually in a position that it is going to affect their friendships or their family relationships or their job, and so they refuse to do anything about it? They're just frozen there. So do you find it hard knowing what you know, being in your ministry and telling people this? Is it hard?

Dominique 8:59

Yes, and no.

I'll say no, because the reality is that, because I grew up in this particular community, these kind of conversations were normative to me. But there are other conversations about our faith, in my faith maturation, that were not normal to me; that I didn't learn about until I was older. And I had to expect people to have grace and understanding and patience with me, as I learned and matured and developed in my faith in ways that they grew up in, where conversations were normal. And they're just like, how can they not get this? How does this not make sense? So I very much understand that process. And so I sympathize with people who this conversation is not a normative one, this was not part of their faith formation, or even their academic education.

And one of the things that really gives me patience with people is the fact that I understand that most people don't know these realities, because of systemic racism that is manifested within our educational system, particularly through history. Most people go to school, believing that the what they learn in history classes is actually the totality of US history. When we know that history that is disseminated in K-12, in particular, is not a history that is reflective of the contributions of women or people of color. And that continues to reperpetuate itself into graduate and undergraduate education as well. And so I think there is this way in which you can't fault people who actually go to school, truly try, and invest themselves in the education that is assigned to them. And then they walk away with these huge glaring blind spots, because it's not their fault is the system that is actually failed them.

And so one of the things I talked about when I talk about systemic racism, definitely, you know, systems and institutional those things can become buzzwords. But one of the most tangible ways is if you actually trace US history with what’s actually taught. Then once you get into a fuller understanding of what US history actually entails, you can see that there's clear decisions being made by people in the school boards about what's going to be included in textbooks and what's going to be excluded from textbooks. And given that reality, it's literally setting up people to have these blind spots. And so I have sympathy, because I understand why they exist.

Seth 11:32

Yeah, I spoke with some I spoke with Mark Charles, not so many weeks ago about that. And the more that I learn things that I should have already known, just the more angry I get, and it reminds me of…I bought an album not long ago, hopefully you're familiar with him as an artist called Propaganda, I can't see how he's everywhere. He's got a song, Andrew Mandela, where he says, you know, “they say you're a hero, and they run the schools” so basically making that same correlation of when I run the school, and I get to write the textbooks, the history is what I say it is. And you don't know any different because there aren’t any other books, these are the books that I wrote, and that's what it is. So exactly, how is that the role of the school to fix? Is that is that my job to fix as a parent? How do we fix that?

Dominique 12:21

I'd say 3 different entities have responsibilities. In this one, I say, it is the role of concerned parents to actually advocate for new curricula within our school boards that get disseminated through our educational system, our textbooks have to be more reflective of the totality of what encompasses US history. There's no way, for example, that something as prevalent as lynchings should not be mentioned within our school books. Where we know they're from 1877 to 1952, approximately 5500 African Americans were lynched in our nation, there is no way that something that was so prevalent, should be overlooked within our textbooks.
Another example for me was, I didn't learn about the Japanese internment camps until my master's program in US history, that is a shame for there to literally to be federal legislation that was passed down, that led to racial targeting, then the you know, basically blatant this injustice that ultimately the US White House ultimately had to apologize for and distribute reparations for, there's no way that that kind of thing should be excluded from textbooks.

Seth 13:43

I learned that just the other day, I was talking with a friend he was he's a black friend of mine. And he's like, we should do reparations. I was like, I don't understand how we can afford to do that. But fine.
He's like, well, “we did it for the Japanese”. And I was like, “No, we didn't”. And he's like, “Yeah”, and I researched. I'm like, man, why? Why do I keep not knowing these things? Some of these people are still alive?

Dominique 14:07

Well, I want to finish answering your question. I think it's a critical question.

So I think parents politically must mobilize and advocate for reform within our school system. Two: as a parent, you do have a responsibility, particularly as somebody like yourself, who's coming into a revelation of these things, to actually say, in the midst of us advocating, we still have to work with the system that we have. And so I have to speak truth into the blind spots that the system is reperpetuating, for my children and other children in this community.

And then lastly, I'll say the church has a moral and ethical responsibility. And so I think about the passage, that talks about how we are called to give sight to the blind. And I think literally a lot of people have it translated that by saying, you know, we're supposed to be going and, you know, laying hands on people and physically giving them fight like we see Jesus doing the text. And I'm not saying that that's not true. But I think another way that that passage is actually speaking to us is when we take a sober look at our society, and we see the ways in which is re perpetuating blindness. The church has a moral and ethical responsibility to actually start to speak truth into those sections of society, and actually bear witness to the truth in a way that allows us to actually exist and function in the world as more faithful ambassadors of reconciliation, and truth and justice.
And so in the midst of us knowing that our school systems are inherently racist, and what they're producing, as US history, and is actually not the full narrative, the church has an ethical and moral responsibility to actually educate our members on a more faithful telling of history. So they will we actually participate in the world we can participate as informed citizens who actually literally leveraging our access our social capital, and our platforms for justice in a way that makes racial reconciliation a much more tangible reality, as opposed to this abstract notion that we kind of leave up in the air and say, Well, you know, God will take care of it.

Seth 16:18

Right. Well, that's the easy answer. That's the answer you hear on “thoughts and prayers” for whatever the problem is. So why should the church care about incarceration? Why should the church be involved in worrying about how people are in jail? Why should that matter?

Dominique 16:37

Yeah, there's a number of answers to that question.
I think, first that many Christians need to understand how inherently connected the Scriptures are to incarceration. Most people really have failed to grapple with the fact that four the books of our Bible were written in the midst of incarceration. And literally, we only have the book of Colosisans because one of Paul's disciples came back and forth and actually visited him while he's in prison consistently, where Paul was actually pastoring the church in Colossians into faithfulness. And because they were backsliding, and in the midst of their backsliding, Paul is actually writing letters back and forth to them pastoring the pastor's of the church, back into faithfulness back into orthodox understanding of who God was, and what it meant to bear witness to our faith in the world. So that's one reason.

But I think the other reason is that, if we take Scripture seriously, Matthew 25, is very blind, about the fact that Christians have an ethical and moral responsibility to be present behind bars. It says that we are supposed to visit the prisoner. And Jesus cares so much about that, that he says that when you do that you didn't just do it to the least of these, but you did it to me. And so I think, oftentimes, part of the reason why the church doesn't care and doesn't know some of the horrifying realities of mass incarceration is, we don't know because we don't go, we fail to go be present with Jesus behind bars. And because of that, our faith is impoverished. But it's not just Matthew 25. When you actually look at a text like Hebrews 13:3, he says that we are supposed to remember the incarcerated as if we ourselves were incarcerated. And so if we were to take Scripture more seriously, then I think we will understand the urgency of this call to be present behind bars and to care about the systemic injustice that's happening with mass incarceration.

But the very last point I'll close on is, the blunt reality is literally, if it were not for criminals, we would not have a Bible. There literally would be no Gospel to possess and to pass on. I mean, literally, if you take everybody in Scripture who is a criminal out of the text, there is no Bible. So you know, Jesus the author and perfecter of our faith. John the Baptist, Paul, who wrote the majority of the New Testament, Samson, Joseph, Malachi, Stephen Jeremiah, Peter, Shadrack, Meshach, Abednego, Silas (etc.) like there literally is no Bible without criminals.
And so I think if we were to press into this reality, and understand the inherent connections between incarceration and Scripture, then I think we would understand in deeper ways why we are called to care about this. But then lastly, you know, Scripture consistently tells us to care about the least of these, societies most vulnerable, and when you actually drill down and ask hard questions about who is incarcerated, you see that today who is incarcerated in our nation is society's most vulnerable.

Seth 19:55

What do you mean? So when you say that, and I've read that often in your book, and so you and everyone throws around the word or you'll see it on CNN or Fox or anywhere else. So when you say mass incarceration and and that those that are being affected? What specifically do you mean by mass incarceration? And then what do you mean by the people that are being targeted, are the most vulnerable? Specifically where are you getting that?

Dominique 20:20

I'll use partially Michelle Alexander's definition for this. She says

Mmass incarceration is a massive system of racial and social control. It is the process by which people are swept into the criminal justice system, branded criminals and felons, locked up for longer periods of time than most other countries in the world who incarcerate people, who have been convicted of crimes; and then released into the permanent second class. That is, in which they are stripped of basic civil and human rights like the right to vote, the right to serve on juries and the right to be free of legal discrimination and employment, housing and access to public benefits.”

But I would also add on to that mass incarceration has evolved into a lucrative industry, where people who are incarcerated are being exploited for their labor due to the loophole in the 13th Amendment, which abolish slavery except for as a punishment for crime. And in that loophole, we are seeing people being exploited for their labor in ways that are becoming extremely lucrative for companies, industries and investors. Most people don't realize that private prisons are one of the most bought and sold stocks on Wall Street. And after the new administration was appointed, one of the executive leaders of Southern Trust Bank said that “without question, private prisons will be one of the top five most lucrative investments that people can make on Wall Street within the next four years”.

And so what Michelle Alexander says plus the exploitative nature of commerce that happens and transpires behind bars is what I am talking about when I talk about mass incarceration. And to give you a very quick example of this, a lot of people are familiar with the California wildfires, that happen basically every summer. And when the wildfires take place, to actually pay a trained professional, who has been trained to put out wildfires, it costs $27 an hour for their labor. What most people don't know is that there are thousands of incarcerated people who are taken out of prison and actually forced to fight wildfires, and they get a total of $2 a day for their labor. And so people are cutting corners to actually generate massive economic benefits for the ways that they're using and exploiting prisoners for their labor.

Seth 22:55

We will add that to the things that I'm now angry about that I didn't know about 20 minutes ago. A lot of the pushback I get on this show is if people don't like what's being said, I hear that I don't…I don't provide concrete examples. And so if I was to Google that-that would be something that I can that I can easily find or is it shelved? Is it something you have to know where to look to find stories like that?

Dominique 23:19

If you Google prison labor, it's easily Google(able). Google that particular story, if you Google, California wildfires, prisoners fighting California wildfires, it'll pop up.

Seth 23:36

Man, I'm gonna…I'm gonna do that. And, and as soon as we're done recording this, so because I, I need to know more about that. Just because I feel like I do. So you're saying then that, that America's prison system may as well be the S&P 500. But people are the commodities as opposed to Coca Cola, or I don't know, bread.

Dominique 23:58

Yeah. And it says part of what really distinguishes my book from Michelle Alexander’s and even Bryan Stevenson’s, which is a great book Just Mercy, is that they really talked about mass incarceration being funneled and sustained through the war on drugs. And yes, the war on drugs is a major conduit that is pumping people into our system. But I actually say that there are four other candidates that are pumping people into incarceration.

So the four other ones are:

The school to prison pipeline, which number of people are a little bit of familiar with, but I really talk about the school to prison pipeline, as something that traces the well worn path to predominantly impoverished urban youth of color from decrepit, underfunded, antiquated schools to luxurious earmark state of the art prisons.

The school to prison pipeline, illuminates the detrimental impact of “zero tolerance policies” and highlights how these policies are exacerbated by a disproportionate way in which they're enforced based off racial and economic lines. And so within the school to prison pipeline, we see that disproportionately students of color and students who have endured trauma, or students who are impoverished like homeless youth, youth who come out of the foster care system, disproportionately get caught up in a system where historically juvenile mischief that happens in school would have been handled in-house through in-house suspension or in school discipline. Those disciplines have been increasingly outsourced, and are now being controlled by law enforcement officers who function as school resource officers. And they're leading to a disproportionate number of students getting caught up in the system. And disproportionately, we see that black, brown and Native American students are receiving the harshest disciplines.

The three other pipelines I talked about are the most overlooked ones.
We have the the institutionalization of mental health facilities that is lead to mental health being a fundamental pipeline, that it's funneling people into incarceration. To the point that right now, we have 44 states plus the District of Columbia, who have more people with severely diagnosed mental illnesses who are incarcerated, then who are receiving treatment in the State’s largest facility. To the point that, right now we have 90,000 people every single year who are legally designated as incompetent to stand trial, which means they literally can't comprehend why they're being arrested. But yet, they're still being arrested. This has become such a problem within our nation. The medical professionals in this field have bluntly said that prisons are the new asylum in our nation. So literally, this is where we're warehousing people with severely diagnosed mental illnesses.

The other pipeline, is the privatization of prisons. Most people understand that private prisons are really just a new reality that came on the scene in 1984. And they literally only exist because we ran out of space within our state and federal facilities to incarcerate people, we came into an awareness around 1980, that this was going to be a problem. And at that point, we had the chance to embrace diversion programs, or look at re sentencing, and particularly look at how we can minimize some of the exacerbated sentences for drug crimes, nonviolent drug crimes, but instead of doing that, we decided to outsource the building of prisons to a third party entity. And since then, we seen the growth of private prisons to the point that right now in our nation, we have more prisons, jails, and detention centers in our nation that we do degree granting institutions.

Seth 28:07

And there's a lot of colleges!

Dominique 28:10

And because of that, in many states, there are more people who are living behind bars than are living on college campuses.

And then the final pipeline is the pipeline that I say really parallel the war on drugs. And it is the war on immigration, we’ve just yet to coin that phrase. We don't call it a war yet. But we know this from 1998 to 2011, there was 145% increase in the number of immigration arrests. And so we see that this is evolved into this pipeline, and that pipeline is directly connected to the private prison pipeline, because 90% of people who are arrested on immigration offenses are detained within private facilities.
Most people will be shocked to realize that in 2010, there was an immigration bed mandate that was introduced by a Democrat, and I think that's important because sometimes we can fall into these partisan politics. And say, “Oh, the Republicans are the problems for this”.

Mass incarceration is a bipartisan agenda.

It is something that both parties have used for political expediency. And both parties have used “get tough on crime” law and order rhetoric to really further their own personal agendas. But in this, we see that Robert Byrd, a Democrat in 2010, introduced the bed mandate that said, ICE must keep on average of 34,000 people detained every night for immigration offenses.

Seth 29:47

And so if I don't have 34,000, what happens I just gotta go find somebody?

Dominique 29:52

That's what it would lead you to believe in that way. But I think more specifically than that national, what the way that what you just said plays out is on the local level. So when private prisons come into the community, most people don't understand how private prisons function. Private prisons really function like hotels.
So if you own a hotel, literally every night that you have a room open, you lose money for that room. Private prisons function the same way, in the every night, that there is a cell open, they actually lose money as a business. And so what private prisons do is when they come into a community, which are usually sparsely populated rural communities that are socially economically deprived, and they need jobs, they come in promising job security and economic investment.

But within that promise, they make the community sign up for a 10 year contract. And within that contract, there's a bed occupancy rate that is required every night. And so the rate for contracts and private prison ranges from 70% occupancy to 100% occupancy. So the state of Arizona is the most grievous offender in this regard. They have three private prisons in the state of Arizona, that require 100% bed occupancy rates every single night. So if every single night, those beds are not 100% full the private prison can literally sue the community. And I my book actually talks about an instance where private prisons sued the community and the community, because they didn't keep the bed occupancy rates at what they signed up for, had to pay the private prison.

Seth 32:31

Alright, so I have a friend that is prosecutor. And so I asked him a few questions. And I don't want to say his name just because you never know who's listening. So I called him actually yesterday, I was like, “Hey, I'm going to talk to a gentleman that is well educated as a minister, and the history of incarceration and everything else. So as a Christian, what do you struggle with?” And so these are some of his questions. He said, every time he goes to a prison, there is no shortage of Christians trying to get into the prison to minister and I imagine that's because it sounds like that's where the people are if they're full, and they're having to be full to make money.
So what am I trying to do when I get in there? Because from what I understand from him, racism is quasi I talked about, quote, unquote, you know, in the workplace, at school, in our communities, but he's like, when you get on the inside, “you don't hang out with black people if you're not black, or you're going to have a problem”. And if you're integrating in a different way, then you were looked at as the as the female or you know, the outcast of that group. And so, when Christians go into a prison, and they want to minister to those that are there, for whatever reason, they're there, they just have the wrong amount of weed. And now we're here for 15 years. What should be our role? What are we trying to achieve when we're there?

Dominique 33:52

So I would say that, that his experience is true in certain prisons, but there are other prisons/jails, where there are not Christians beating down the doors to get in. There are definitely and I've worked in…ministered in some of these prisons, where there are actually some organizations that have actually documented that there are a number of facilities that have absolutely no Christian presence in them, particularly our juvenile justice facilities. And so there are some organizations actually, literally mapping out where those facilities are, and they're actually trying to recruit Christians to come and bear witness in those spaces. So that would be the first thing I'd say.

The second thing I would say, is that when we are there, what we're actually trying to do is we're trying to do holistic ministry. And so as an evangelical, I would say one of the historic failures for evangelical prison ministry is that we've gone in and what we've been trying to do is make conversions. And after a person converts, we literally move on to the next person, and try to get another convert. And so we actually have seen jails and prisons as evangelistic opportunities for us to just increase the number of people who proclaim Christ, but we have not done discipleship with those people. And so I can't tell you the number of people who I have encountered who talked about all Christians were so eager to come here and actually share about Jesus. And as soon as I gave my life to Christ, I barely saw them anymore, because they were so busy going on to the next heathen who needed to come to know God.
And then they say, the other thing that happens is, even if they did continue to come and see me, they said, as soon as I was released from jail, they were nowhere to be found. And he said, you had all these people were so eager, they’d come every Wednesday night, they'd be faithful people. But as soon as you're released, there's no one who's willing to walk alongside of you take you in and actually do life with you and love you authentic ways, and not just try to love you from a distance.

And so part of what I think has been the problem is that for far too many Christians, we see prisons and jails as the spaces where God is not, and that we're coming to bring that to those places. But the reality is the God is already present behind the prisons and behind jail walls, and we're just joining with what God is already doing. But I think that's critical, because it changes our entire posture of how we go in and what we are intending to achieve when we go in.

But I think the other thing I just say is going back to the holistic ministry, if we're really trying to learn how to do discipleship with people who are incarcerated, it requires us actually understanding some of the systemic institutional things that lead them into incarceration, and also some of the scarring, the trauma, that people would have endured both before they were incarcerated, and in the midst of their frustration. So we're going to be faithful witnesses but we're also going to learn about the circumstances about what's going on behind bars so we can come out in the world and actually bear witness to it, to help our brothers and sisters who are present behind bars that understand the dehumanization, that is happening on an everyday basis behind bars. And so for example of that, I like to talk about solitary confinement, most people don't understand, within solitary confinement, people are oftentimes locked in a cell, that can be either a 5X7 or 7X12 and they're literally locked into a cell in darkness for 23 of the 24 hours of the day. Given access to human contact and satellite for one hour a day. And that is not incarceration, that is torture, particularly when solitary confinement can last anywhere from a week to some people are in there for years. And when you're in there for more than three months, neuroscientists that have actually said that that starts to literally dehumanize you in a way cognitively, that has irreversible impacts. But we continue to practice that as a form of incarceration and our nation. We need more Christians who knows that who sees who can come and actually raise awareness around those kind of civil rights violations that are happening behind bars, so that the church can understand its role in his witness in this critical moment of mass incarceration today.

Seth 38:32

Yeah. Well that is actually my next question. So how do we honor the law, the rules that we all are supposed to follow, but at the same time as a church, or as Christians challenge injustice in sentencing, you know, be that mandatory minimums or solitary confinement? Or my friend said that basically, a lot of people that go to jail, do it because they don't think about their decisions five minutes past right now. That I just needed that. I don't know, why did it, it was a momentary lapse, but now I've got to pay this punishment. And so how should the church stand against injustice, but at the same time, live under the law?

Dominique 39:13

Yeah. So I think, first, we have to understand the depth of the injustice that is present within our prison system. So for example, most Christians will be shocked to find out that one in 25, people who are sentenced to the death penalty in our nation are actually innocent. And in spite of knowing that we continue to cling to the death penalty is this archaic manifestation of justice, when in particular as Christians, you would think that as people who stay for revolves around the person of Jesus Christ, who himself was incarcerated and put to death by the state, that we think differently about capital punishment than we do but the statistics actually show that we don't.

But that's one thing. But I think also understanding things like the historic discrepancy between sentencing for crack and powder cocaine. And so before 2010, for the exact same amount of powder and the exact same amount of crack. The person who had crack cocaine will receive 100 times more severe punishment and sentencing than the person who had powder.

Historically, we know that crack cocaine is used by black and brown people and powder cocaine is disproportionately used by Caucasians in so in 2010, they finally said, Okay, this is a gross injustice, we're actually going to systemically change the law. And so they they said they changed the law and did justice, quote, unquote, by reducing this discrepancy from 101 to 18 to one, but it's still a huge disparity, even though crack and powder have the exact same impacts on us. So it just leads to these racial disparities that we see in our system. So right now, we know that black men represent 6.5% of the US population, but they represent 40.2% of our incarcerated population.

Seth 41:11

There's a part of me, the banker, part of me that thinks why even bother and we just make the math easy. So if I as using powder, get one year, and my brother as using the rocks, gets 100 years, what does it matter? If he instead gets 18 years? And I still just get one you like, if you're not going to actually fix it…Why even exactly why even do it? 18 or 100, either way, my kids have gotten married, and I missed it, or my parents have died or, you know, there's been four presidents or there's so much that changes, but I don't know what the difference when 18 to 100 years is I mean, that's still a long time.

Dominique 41:48

Yeah and I think we just have to also listen to medical professionals. And for medical professionals, and a number of police chiefs have come out and blatantly said that the war on drugs was a massive failure. And we cannot incarcerate ourselves at this problem. We are incarcerating people who have chemical dependencies who need medical interventions and not incarceration. And so one of the ways, one of the most tangible ways, that the church can actually advocate for reform within the system, while abiding by the law, is actually taking a sober look at who's incarcerated and what they're incarcerated for. Whenever we hear a lot of the law and order rhetoric, and we hear get tough on crime. And we hear policies like three strikes, you're out and zero tolerance. The politicians are really propagating this fear about the incarcerated, but they're doing it in connection to violent crimes. But disproportionately the vast majority of people who are incarcerated in our nation are incarcerated for nonviolent offenses.

And so I think we need that force our politicians to have a more honest conversation about who is actually incarcerated and what that rhetoric of fear is actually leading us to support legislatively. And as Christians in particular, I think we have to ask real questions about what is justice? Because right now, our criminal justice system says that justice has been manifested once the punishment has been distributed. But when we actually look at Scripture, that's not how justice is defined. Justice is not about the distribution of punishment. And so we need to ask better questions about what justice is from Biblical perspective. And I think the Bible constantly reveals that restoration, not punitiveness is at the heart of God's justice. Divine Justice is restorative and reconciling not retributive and isolating. The restorative nature of God's justice is woven woven throughout Scripture. And biblically we see the guide works amid brokenness, restoring victims, communities and defenders.

And so a big part of what I'm advocating for is a divorce from punitive understandings of justice and actually rerooting ourselves on the Biblical text, where we will see that restorative justice is actually a more accurate manifestation of justice that we see throughout the Scriptures. And we see that inherent within God's justice is a plan for the reconciliation of the victim and the offender, and ultimately, relationships looked at through accountability, those who've gone astray-who violated the confines of Covenant community, or actually walk through a plan of accountability where they ultimately reoriented into society. And so instead of supporting the system, they merely punishes Christians and some must pursue a justice system that rebuilds community affirms human dignity and seeks God’s shalom.

The church has the power to help transform our criminal justice system but if reconciled communities are ever to become the true aim of our justice system, the Church must lead the way in advocating for system that gives opportunities for authentic rehabilitation, lasting transformation and healthy reintegration. I always say that we are not all called to the same thing, but we are all called to something-every congregation has a role to play.

Seth 45:18

Yeah. And is that what you're getting at in your book when you talk about reparative justice?

Dominique 45:23

Yeah, well, the whole reparative justice, I'm trying to help people understand that there are the different ways in which we need to nuance this conversation about justice. And ultimately, breaking it down into reparative justice helps us to understand Biblically how restorative justice is such a consistent theme throughout the Scriptures. And I actually walk people through about four different cases where we actually see Christians have opportunity are followers of Christ, because somebody tried to critique me for using the word Christian—because they say, Christian is not in the Bible, for followers of Christ

Seth 46:04

they will critique you with semantics that those always that always goes well.

Dominique 46:09

Yeah, exactly. So followers of Christ throughout Scripture, we see that there's opportunities where the Scriptures actually depict a situation where they can embrace a punitive notion of justice, or they can follow Christ and embrace a restorative manifestation of justice. And so a perfect example of this I like to talk about is in the Scriptures where we see Jesus brought in in the situation with the adulterous woman. And in that passage, literally, the law requires bloodshed, the law required her to be stoned to death. That's what the law says. But in the face of that law, when Jesus is brough in, Jesus actually offers her grace where the law said that it was required. Jesus says that anybody who is sinless should actually cast the first battle, I think, would be Jesus, who's getting at here is this deeper question of as Christians, we must understand that we are only Christians through grace.

Scripture tells us that while we were yet sinners, Jesus died on the cross for us. And that while we were enemies of God, Jesus died for us. And so Jesus didn't wait for us to get our act together for us to get personal responsibility, right? Jesus intervened for us, in the midst of our sinfulness, in the midst of us actually violating God's law. And so I make the argument that as Christians, when we don't extend that grace to others that was first extended to us we forget who we are and whose we are. And when we do that, we are more likely to embrace punitive responses to justice, law and order, get tough on crime rhetoric. It moves us politically to support policies, they've really become a hindrance for people who have gone to jail, who served their time who've learned their lessons that we're trying to come out and actually have a second chance at life, the policies that we support and embrace actually become stumbling blocks for our brothers and sisters who come to know God behind bars.

Seth 48:18

And I want to end on this question, but it is a tough question, or at least it seems tough to me. It may be it may be an easy question, we'll find out. So I firmly believe that that evil obviously does exist. And then I'll read you a little bit from your book. And then I'll dovetail the question off that. So you say towards the tail end that

God's justice is not soft on crime, but it's also not marginalizing, dehumanizing, or retaliatory.

And so how do we deal then thinking of God's justice that way, and the way our penal system is set up with people that are just inherently bad, and I don't have any people outside of like, you know, the Jeffrey Dahmer’s-people that just do bad things and seem to relish in it. And I've talked with attorneys who say, you know, you can smell it in the air, like they are excited that they did it, and they have no remorse, don't even care that they did it. It's like that's what they were born to do. So how do we deal with that kind of evil as a Christian? And hope for justice? Like how do we how do we deal with it? And when we when we do sentencing? How? I don't even know? I don't? It's just a big question.

Dominique 49:27

Yeah. Well, I think circumstances like that, which are more of the rarity than the norm. I think that's important to note. I think, questions like that, and instances like that really press us as Christians to really wrestle with what we truly believe. So every week at church, we sing songs, pray prayers, and read Scriptures that bear witness to the fact that we say we believe that no one is beyond redemption. That no one is so far away from God that they can't actually be reconciled to God. And so I think it really presses us to believe…do we really believe that no crime actually separates people so far from God, that they can't be reconciled? That no person is actually irredeemable. And if we do in fact, believe that, then I think it forces us to even have a humane way in which we respond to the most grotesque violations.

And so one of the things I say is, I think we need to have a real, honest conversation about the fact that we need to start having nuanced conversations about offenses, to the point that we talk about non violent offenses and violent offenses in very different ways. But I think in the midst of separating them in those ways restorative justice still provides an avenue and a framework to think about incarceration in more humane ways.

So restorative justice says that a crime and never a violation that just against just an individual crime always has communal impacts. And so because of that, right now, our prison, our criminal justice system, literally mutes the victim. So the victim has no say, in what punishment should look like about what reintegration or restoration or reconciliation should look like. So restorative justice says that that system in and of itself is incapable of producing justice or reconciliation. And because of that, restorative justice says that any real accounting for, or any real engagement of, justice in our world where there is a situation where there is a victim and offender, there must be a safe enough space that's created where the victim, ultimately gets to help in this place where they are willing and desire to confront the offender, and they actually get to speak directly to the offender and actually help them understand the magnitude of their sin, and the magnitude of their debt.

And in that we've actually seen that restorative justice is not just some philosophy, but it's been tried and true internationally, and been proven to actually manifest reconciliation in a more appropriate way and more likely way than our prison system does.

And so restorative justice was used in South Africa after the genocide. And it was played a huge part in the Truth and Reconciliation series restorative justice has been tried and true, and these kind of grotesque situations that you're talking about where there have been grievous harms. And in those instances, the ability for the victim to actually speak directly to the vendor and help the defender to understand the depth of their crime and how it has impacted not only their lives, but the lives that the community has been proven to have some kind of transformative power that is unique to this philosophy and this kind of way of responding to injustice.

And so is it going to save everybody know, there are certain people who are just lost certain people who don't find their way back from the darkness. But restorative justice and disability for the victim to speak directly to the offender has been proven to be a way to soften hearts in a way that people that we thought were irredeemable, actually, were able to hear something that resonated that pierced their soul and softened their hearts and open them up to transformation. And if our criminal justice system really is about healthy reintegration, and rehabilitation, we have to do everything that we can to provide a true opportunity for regular radiation to take place.

Seth 54:02

I agree. So we…I have more any more questions, and we have no more time. And so I want to give you the final word. So where would you point people to get engaged, to support this kind of ministry and to honestly wrestle with our own pride and our own fear of things that disgust us, or that we hold contemptuous, a lot of what you said resonates with a book that I read earlier in the year with Richard Beck called Stranger God where you just have to wrestle with things that make you uncomfortable. But it goes with Matthew 25 quite well.

So what would be a final, a final word for those that are listening that hear this and they they feel like they want to try to do something as opposed to sitting there doing exactly the same thing they did yesterday?

Dominique 54:51

Yeah, I would say that one of the things that we really have to wrestle with this notion of meritocracy, this worldview that we are really brought into in this nation, that you get what you deserve. As Christians, if anybody should understand the flaws in that worldview, it should be us. Because we all know that we're sinners who have fallen short of the glory of God. And if we were really to get what we deserve, it will be eternal separation from God because of our sinfulness. And so if we can't embrace a meritocratic worldview, then what are we to embrace. And I have a whole chapter that really breaks this down. But I think one of the things that we need to understand is meritocracy really leads us into this, this very, very unhealthy way of seeing the world in “us and them” circumstances in regards to this conversation. And so we start to think of criminals as people that we must over there quarantined away from us and our community, these are children to keep them safe.

And in that, it starts to lead us into embracing things that would always be okay for them, but never be okay for us. And it is this real, unbiblical way of interacting in the world that leads us astray. And so what I would first say, the last chapter of my book is all about places and organizations and entities that are doing it the right way. And so I don't want people to think that I just leave you hopeless. I point out a lot of places that are doing it, right, and I'll end with one that I'm a part of.

And so there are a number of seminaries who are actually realizing the grotesque injustices that are happening and behind bars, and they're actually looking at and embracing higher education as a form of reparations for people who have been wronged and dehumanised and stripped of civil liberties behind bars, and who, in oftentimes, particularly, who've been charged with felonies, will have to bear The Scarlet Letter of incarceration for the rest of their lives, which will forever prohibit them from receiving any kind of governmental aid and subsidies.

So they can't get scholarships to go to college. They can't get on food stamps, they can't live in governmentally subsidized housing, any of those kinds of things. And so there's a number of seminaries who actually decided that they're going to go behind bars, and they're going to actually offer seminary level education for the incarcerated. And what they found is that this kind of education has been very transformative for these men, mostly men, but sometimes men and women. But most of these programs are in male facilities, particularly the one I'm a part of through North Park Theological Seminary.

So we go into seminary called Stateville Prison, and we actually cultivate classrooms were half of the classroom is incarcerated men who have life sentences, and half a classroom are seminarians, and we do life together. And through doing life together and doing education together, people are forced to acknowledge and confront some of their presuppositions about the other. And they're forced to ask themselves really hard questions about “how did I start to think about the incarcerated in this way“? “How have I suddenly but surely dehumanize them, and actually seen them as these people who are irredeemable, these people who are so other than me”, and they really come to learn that most of these people are just like you and me. Most of these people are people who just had a bad break in life, were subjected to trauma or some kind of violent situation where they believe lead them to make bad choices. And they just weren't raised in a loving atmosphere that helped them realize that there were other options.

And I think one of the most restorative pieces about it is that it's also helped a lot of people realize that, if we want to be honest, most of us have broken the law at some point in our lifetime. Even if, as adults, through traffic violations, or be or whatever, when we're younger, in our youth, a lot of people experimented with drugs, a lot of people did all these other things. And it was just by the grace of God that we weren't caught. And we weren't caught up in this system and incarcerated. And so I think it's been really humbling to actually have a lot of these people, these seminarians hear, face to face from the men and why they were incarcerated, and then be able to look back on their lives and the sober way and say, You know what, I actually did the exact same thing. I just wasn’t caught. I just wasn't living in a community that was targeted in the same way as yours was. And so I was more likely to get away with my law breaking than you are. And so those kind of things.

And so I think one of the cool things about our program is anybody who's interested in they can apply. And this is a certificate program, is a two year program, where you can come and you take one course of semester over the course of two years and you can come and you can be transformed by doing life together and communing with scandalize people. People that you're taught to never want to be with. But I think it's so powerful that throughout the Scriptures, we actually see that form of illicit communion that's the form of scandalize communion is oftentimes the communion the God uses to help us to have a deeper revelation of what the gospel is actually about.

It helps us to have a fuller understanding of how God is at work in the world and then place it spaces that we would never think that the gospel is exploding and flourishing and bearing fruit we would actually see how God is at work in that way. And so to close with this story, one of the things that close in the final chapter is I talked about how often we think of the incarcerated as these people were so far away from God, but the actual opposite is so true. In so many instances, I actually talked about how there are so many people who are behind bars who are actually come to know Christ, and they're actively people behind bars, who are disciples who are making other disciples, people who are bringing people to Christ behind bars, people who are actually serving as prison chap, prison ministers, and pastors to the point that some of them are growing so steadfast in their faith, that they're literally being transported from one prison to another prison, as a prison missionary, to do church plants and other prisons that don't have churches. And you know, most Christians would lie would like I've never, I couldn't even fathom something like that, because I just think it just bears witness to how good God is how true God is, and how often God is flourishing is showing up in spaces that we would never expect God to be at work in.

Seth 1:02:19

Yeah, yeah. For those listening, go, go and buy the book. It's not an accident that it's a best seller. It's a good book and I will say this, I've never had someone come on and tell me about the last chapter. I almost never try to talk about it on purpose. So I will say the last chapter, there is quite a few places that you can get involved in. And my hope is that after you hear this, and after you wrestle with this, and I will tell you it it personally is a struggle to wrestle with this as a middle class American that believes that I have to be right. Part of that, just because I want to be did to deal with this. And so I Dominique, I appreciate what you're doing. And I am very much appreciate you coming on the show today to talk about it. I look forward to speaking with you another time on a and just as an important topic, but hopefully not one as a sad.

Dominique 1:03:10

Well, thanks for having me. And they are very tangible ways that people can get involved in their local communities. Look up people who are doing this work. There are organizations like Pico people, improving communities through organizing their local organizations like the Ella Baker foundation out in the Bay Area. There are orgs all across the board who are working to over turn this grievous injustice in our nation, and the church has to become part of the freedom caravan.

Seth 1:03:46

Amen. Well, thank you again, Dominique. I appreciate it.

Dominique 1:03:48

Yeah, thank you.

Seth Outro 1:04:13

Man that was a lot. If you're like me, you hear that you see so many things that we could do better. So much education that we could do with our kids, so much of a responsibility that is transferred from the schools to us as parents to us as ministers, and to us as citizens of America. I am challenged hearing Dominic speak in ways that I can be more involved and in ways that I can get out of my comfort zone to quite literally do the work of reconciliation and what better work could we do? I mean, if if we're being honest with each other. Thank you so much for listening today. If you didn't at the beginning, please go now rate the show on iTunes, become a supporter on Patreon. More importantly, to continue to grow the show, share this with your friends and family put it on Facebook. I think the conversations that we are all involved in matter more than we know. And that the way that we approach our faith matters more for the world and for us than we could ever know. The music that you heard today is from a new liturgy. A new liturgy is a project from Aaron Niequist and his friends that is designed to create a movable and Sonic sanctuary. I can't tell you how much I have enjoyed listening to their music, especially recently. It is it is spoken to my soul and to me music has a way to do that. And their albums have done that you'll find links to the songs in the show notes. And as always, all the songs used in today's episode will be on the Can I Say This At Church Spotify playlist. Thank you again for listening. We'll talk to you next week.

21 - Atonement with Brad Jersak / Transcript

Note: Can I Say This at Church is produced for audio listening. If able, I strongly encourage you to listen to the audio, which has inflection, emotion, sarcasm where applicable, and emphasis for points that may not come across well in written word. This transcript is generated using a combination of my ears, software, a volunteer, and may contain errors. Please check the episode for clarity before quoting in print.

Back to the Audio


Brad 0:00

Aside from the problem of the word atonement, there's a confusion. The Gospel I grew up with was an atonement theory. That means we were mistaking The Gospel for an atonement theory. The Gospel is that Jesus came, died, and rose again to save us from Satan's sin and death, and to renew us to relationship with God. But these atonement theories are just about, “How did that work?” Do you need an atonement theory to preach The Gospel? Well, you do if you think your atonement theory is The Gospel. But if we go to the book of Acts and read every single evangelistic sermon, to Jews or Gentiles, by any apostle or by the proto-martyr Stephen, not one of them includes an atonement theory. And by the way, not one of them includes the threat of hell either.

Seth 1:06

Hey there, everyone, welcome back to the Can I Say This At Church podcast? I am Seth, your host. Today's topic is going to be large, and I'll tell you why. I got to sit down with Brad Jersak, and we spoke a bit about the cross, its purpose, atonement theories, payment for sin, death To summize it, we talked about why Jesus had to do what He did, and I can't think of a better question than that. Brad Jersak is an author. He's the Editor in Chief of CWR Magazine. He currently is a teacher based in Abbotsford, BC, where he serves as a monastery preacher at the All Saints of North America Monastery. With that out of the way, let's not belabor the point anymore. I hope you enjoyed this, a very brief discussion about atonement.

Seth 2:15

Brad, thank you so much for making the time this morning to come on to the Can I Say This At Church podcast. I am very excited to talk about the conversation at hand, specifically around a bit of your history, your journey through faith, I think it mirrors a lot of what some people experience. And I think it is what some people also wish they could do but never have the guts to do, just work through the meaty things of the the faith that we all, well hopefully, we all profess in. Then we'll finish that up with some atonement, and then if there's any time left, we'll have other topics as well. If I said who is Brad Jersak, and I'm meeting you in the bar, and I say, “All right, give me you. What's your story? How did you get from where you were, so I guess where was that, to where you're at now?

Brad 3:00

Well, being that I'm 53, this could take a while. But I will do my best to give you the Reader's Digest version. I was born in a wonderful Christian family With parents who love Jesus, introduced me to Jesus, taught me how to pray taught me to love the scriptures. We were Baptists in central Canada, fairly conservative Baptist, but I'd say my parents were open to the Holy Spirit and committed to telling others about the good news of Christ. I became a Christian, that’s what we call it in the Baptist Church, I became a Christian when I was maybe six. Then I convinced my pastor to baptize me. I immediately dove into the scriptures, and somehow my whole life was revolved around Jesus.

However, I would say by the time I was eight, we were also seeing a lot of revivalists come through town who are really into end-times stuff, and they got me into it, so the whole old dispensationalism and Armageddon stuff, second coming is next weekend. I believe it. I was on board. When you start introducing that stuff, and especially evangelistic preaching focused on the fear of hell and an ultimatum, your faith shifts. I started to move from love for Jesus to fear. For the next 10 years, my faith was in fire insurance, basically; it was fear-based. That was a lot of my first 20 years.

Then I went to Bible college and seminary at an interdenominational conservative college, and there I met my wife, Eden. After graduating, her Mennonite Church on the west coast of Canada called me to be an associate pastor for youth ministries, young adults, and outreach. I was with the Mennonites for 10 years. What I noticed from that era was that they preached a lot more from The Gospels than Baptists do. We were spending a lot of time as Baptists in Paul's theology describing what Jesus had done for us. The Mennonites, you can see really see it over the course of a decade, they just immersed us in the life and teachings of Jesus. Every youth meeting I ran, we talked about the life and teachings of Jesus, most of the sermons on Sunday morning we would look at the call to take up our cross and follow the way of Jesus that looked like something in this world, namely, the Sermon on the Mount, for example.

Seth 5:36

Was that hard to do, being that your upbringing was not that? You were, I'd call it the ‘canon within the canon,’ we only talked about Paul, at least the churches from where I’m around. Was that hard to do that, to lead a church in that way, with your upbringing?

Brad 5:54

No, it was wonderful, because we got even more Jesus focused, and I want it to be Jesus focused, and the love was coming back for me. It’s something about The Gospel itself, when you think about The Gospel, not as an atonement theory, or as four steps or five laws or three hoops or whatever, but as Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. The life, teachings, death and resurrection of Christ, that's The Gospel. And so when you're focused on that, it's like you just see how He takes care of people and talks to people and loves on people and heals people week after week after week. Rather than then simply thinking about this, “I'm saved from hell by believing the right thing about what Jesus did on the cross,” now we're just seeing Jesus in action over and over. You fall in love again, and I did, and including had shifts towards a more non-violence, non-retaliation, radical forgiveness of Jesus, as well, eventually hooked me.

After 10 years there, we felt a call to church plant. So my wife and I and another couple, we went to plant a church. During my time as a Mennonite, I also really discovered the whole world of inner healing, and we discovered the Holy Spirit in a fresh way. We had sort of a charismatic renewal in our Mennonite Church. With those things as foundations, listening to God, the pursuit for inner healing, we were going to plant this church. Called it Fresh Wind Christian Fellowship. I suppose not all of your listeners would recognize who the Vineyard movement is, but we were a little bit like them. It would be a very casual service, charismatic but not pentecostally In that sense. It's sort of the blue jeans thing.

Seth 7:43

Yeah. I think maybe some of my age group would because predominately still what we sing is Vineyard worship music, but I don't think people know the church that comes out of, what that springs forth from. I know even just this past Sunday, if you look down at the CCLI stuff it says Vineyard Worship, but it's all late 90s usually. I think they're familiar with some of their songs, but probably not familiar at all with that movement.

Brad 8:10

Well, the songs really helped, because that's what was informing our theology. Even though it's a charismatic movement, in a sense, the songs primarily focus on the Father's love, the Father's heart, the Father's invitation to the Father's house, all of that, especially Brian Doerksen’s stuff; he lives in town here where I live in Abbotsford, BC. That radically impacted us.That church ended up drawing, then, are those being called to the Father's house.

For the next 10 years, I was pastoring in this church where one-third of the people had disabilities and were in full-time care., one-third. On top of that, we had children who were disruptive, too disruptive for other churches, but we wanted them in. We had, then, addicts start showing up and saying, “Wow, I won't be the loudest person here, and I'm not going to get judged here.” So suddenly, we had a lot of alcoholics, drug addicts, sex addicts, you name it, who were in 12-step recovery, in recovery houses, and so on. We would do inner healing work with them. Then the poor started coming in; sometimes that was the working poor, at other times it was the homeless. We worked with those on the margins and just saw a consistent orientation of God's love towards them whenever we would minister and zero condemnation, always the good news invitation to the Father's love.

I stepped down in 2008. My wife became the lead pastor there for the next five years while I did my PhD work in Political Theology and Theology of the Cross at Bangor University in Wales; but it was distance learning, so I could do it from home. During that time, I was being mentored by a fellow named Archbishop Lazar Puhalo in the Orthodox Church. We really bought into the theology of the Eastern Church at that point, it’s 350-million Christians. The West knows very little bit about what they believe, and yet these are the stewards of the early church fathers’ material, who've never departed from it because it's embedded in their weekly liturgy.

Five years ago now, I formally was chrismated; that means they didn't rebaptize me, but they anointed me with oil, and I affirmed the Nicene creed and joined the East Orthodox Church. Now I'm a monastery preacher in a little monastery where probably 60 or 70 congregants show up on Sundays for the service. Vocationally I've moved out of pastoring now. I write, and I'm an editor for Christianity Without the Religion Magazine, CWRM. You can find that online for free at ptm.org. I write books. My last one was A More Christlike God. Oh, and I did a children's version called Jesus Showed Us. Then I also teach. I'm just in the midst of exiting Westminster Theological Center as a teacher in England and focusing now on another school, it's called St. Stephen's University in New Brunswick on the east coast. I'm teaching there, and I'm going to have a role as a dean in their Master’s of Ministries program.

Seth 11:24

What is political theology? Because those two words, in my brain, shouldn't belong together.

Brad 11:31

Oh, very good. So [in] political theology we’re exploring how our faith impacts our politics or our political approach. For example, we might study the history of how theological debate has informed political debate. This isn't to do with the separation of church and state or the combination of church and state. You almost have to erase the word ‘political’ from your mind for a moment. What I mean is, “How do we make our personal faith public? How do we live out our faith, not only privately, but in community and in our city? And how does working out our faith publicly impact a just society?” That may not happen whatsoever through government processes.

We often think political means government. No, political means public. It’s a public working out, and it can have an effect on the government. Let’s just say, for example, how do we deal with the poor in our city? Well, we should have a theological opinion about that. I don't mean systematic theology. I mean, we go to The Gospels, we look at Jesus, and how He treated the poor, how He treated the stranger, which in Greek and Hebrew means “immigrant” and “refugees.” We see how He treated the sick and what that means for health care and so on. So we look to The Gospels for now, does this have political implications? Well, certainly, the last judgment in Matthew 25 is all about how our faith becomes public for the service of a greater good than ourselves. So that's what I mean by political theology.

Seth 13:22

I'm not gonna lie. I kind of just want to talk about that now but I won't, because I didn't prepare for that. Maybe we can do that a different time. [we did that here]

Brad 13:30

I'd love to, sure.

Seth 13:31

The reason I say that is, for some reason, I've noticed through everything that I've been reading recently, everything keeps coming back to Matthew 25. I talked with Richard Beck about it. I talked with Sean Palmer about it. I didn't expect everybody to go there, but for some reason 2018 is the year of Matthew 25. Then I think that through the lens of [growing]up with the moral majority, I went to Liberty, which is extremely charged with what it is charged with; but I don't want to digress. But yeah, I definitely want to discuss that with you further at a different date. That tickles all my….I don't know, I can't even voice it correctly.

Something that I have come to realize about myself and I told some friends yesterday, I no longer can hold to a view of Scripture that endorses penal substitution. But I have many struggles with explaining why that is the case. I wanted to talk a bit about atonement theory with you. I'd like to start with, “What are we trying to say, when we say this is what atonement is? What are we defining? What are we, as Christians, trying to wrap our heads around?”

Brad 14:52

Yeah, that's a very important and good question, because the question itself introduces problems, it introduces assumptions. For example, what is the question of atonement? So here's the wrong answer, but it's the one that so often assumed. We thought the question of atonement was, “How does the cross save us?” And sometimes we even think, “How does the cross save us from hell or something like this?” So already, that's too narrow, because a better question around the atonement is, “How does Jesus save us?” I say that because Jesus’ saving work didn't all happen one on Friday afternoon of Good Friday.

It begins in the heart of God with His incarnation into the world, where God assumes human nature in order to heal human nature, and it begins at His conception and prior to that, if you're thinking about the plans of God. I mean, just the fact that Jesus saves us, that process begins from day one through what we call the hypostatic union. That means when God and humanity are united in this one person. In fact, you could say, the Creator and all of creation, are united in this one person, because Jesus Christ is both creator and created. When happens when God and humanity and creation are united in this one person at birth, it begins this salvation process whereby all the life of the Creator begins pouring into the life of humanity and the into the life of creation in a healing, redeeming way.

That then works out all through Jesus’ life. Jesus’ whole life, and especially His ministry, when He launches it in Luke 4, and He describes the new covenant, He doesn't say the new covenant will happen when I die. He says, “The Spirit of the Sovereign Lord is upon me to preach good news to the poor, recovery of sight to the blind, cleansing to the leper, freedom to the captives to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord.” That's all new covenant, right? And then He says this, “Today, this is fulfilled in your hearing.” Day one of His ministry in terms of public preaching. Then we see that being worked out, salvation.

By the way, the root word of this is the the verb ‘sozo,’ which means “healing” and “saving.” So it's sort of like, “making whole again,” but also “rescuing.” So that's all packaged in salvation so that someone who gets healed by Jesus is being saved. Someone who gets delivered of demons is being saved. Someone who's forgiven of sin is being saved. By the way, all of that's happening before the cross. He's saving people before Good Friday.

Then on Good Friday, well the whole weekend, we see Jesus death and His descent into Hades and victory over that, and then His resurrection. These two are like the climax of this salvation event whereby God reveals Himself through Jesus, especially on the cross, that He is self-giving, radically forgiving, co-suffering love. He’s poured himself into the world as love and that love saves us. What does it save us from?

Penal substitution taught that Jesus Christ saves us from God. No, Paul says God was in Christ, reconciling the world to Himself, not counting our sins against us. He saves us decisively from Satan, sin and death. As far as I can see, that is The Gospel testimony of the saving work of Christ. So you can see how, “How does how does the cross save us from hell?” Or even, “How does the cross save us from the punishment or wrath of God?” It's just too small of a question.

Seth 19:10

I find when I talked to people about this, and predominantly my stream that I am in and around is a Calvinist stream just by proxy of where I'm at and the friends that I have from Liberty, and I'm fine with that. I know going in that I'm going to be called heterodoxical or a heretic, and I'm not really certain what the difference is between those two. Why do we need, as a church, there's penal substitution, there's Christus Victor, there's governmental, there's moral influencers, there’s ransom theory, why do we even need? Are we making this more difficult than it needs to be? Do we need all of these theories at all?

Brad 19:49

Yeah, it's incredibly problematic in this sense. First first of all, let me just say a word about atonement. So, in the Eastern Orthodox churches, they're very nervous about that English word to begin with because of what's happened to the English word. The roots of the English word really were what, in one of the questions you had sent me was “at-one-ment.” Now you don't normally take a word and split it up like that to get its meaning. We call that a exegetical fallacy, but in the case of “atonement,” that is how the word was formed “at-one-ment.”

Here's why the Orthodox are nervous of that word. At the outset, when the word was first coined in English, it meant “reconciliation,” “to reconcile,” but the English word has morphed over time, and it doesn't mean that anymore. The word “atonement” now means something closer to the word “appeasement.” Therefore, the atonement theories of the West tend to stop asking, “How does God in Christ reconcile us to Himself?” By the way, He didn't need to be reconciled to us, He never turned from us, but we needed to be called back home, like the younger son in the prodigal son story, he's reconciled to his father. So if that's the question, no problem. “How does God reconcile the world to Himself?” By forgiving us of sin, by conquering death, and by opening wide paradise to us again.

But the question changes if the word changes. So now, in penal substitutionary atonement, for example, the popular version, the unnuanced version, and maybe we'll say the classical version from Calvin, is more like, “How does the torture and death of Jesus Christ appease the wrath of God so that He can forgive you?” While some would say that's The Gospel, the Orthodox would say, “No, that's a heresy,” because you're making God into this angry, wrathful judge who needs to be appeased by a child sacrifice. Well, when I first met Archbishop Lazar Puhalo, he said, “Oh, I see your problem. You worship Molech, he’s the god of wrath who needed to be appeased by child sacrifice. Yahweh is not that way. Yahweh comes in the flesh to let us know we are forgiven, we are loved, and we are welcomed unconditionally.” That almost makes it a different religion.

Sorry to ramble, but now, you're question was, “Do we need all these different theories?” I want to say that, aside from the problem of the word atonement, there's a confusion. The Gospel I grew up with was an atonement theory. That means we were mistaking The Gospel for an atonement theory. The Gospel is that Jesus came, died, and rose again to save us from Satan's sin and death, and to renew us to relationship with God. But these atonement theories are just about, “How did that work?” Do you need an atonement theory to preach The Gospel? Well, you do if you think your atonement theory is The Gospel. But if we go to the book of Acts and read every single evangelistic sermon, to Jews or Gentiles, by any apostle or by the proto-martyr, Stephen, not one of them includes an atonement theory. And by the way, not one of them includes the threat of hell either.

The Gospel I grew up with was an atonement theory. That means we were mistaking The Gospel for an atonement theory. The Gospel is that Jesus came, died and rose again to save us from Satan's sin and death and to renew us to relationship with God. But these atonement theories are just about how did that work? Do you need an atonement theory to preach The Gospel? will you do if you think your atonement theory is The Gospel, but if we go to the book of Acts and read every single evangelist sermon, to Jews or Gentiles by any apostle or by the proto-martyr Stephen, not one of them includes an atonement theory. And by the way, not one of them includes the threat of hell either, not once. So whatever The Gospel is, it doesn't need that.

We also confuse atonement theories with biblical metaphor. So it's almost like you've got The Gospel first; second, you have biblical metaphors describing The Gospel from the mouth of Jesus and Paul and James and others. Then after the fact, hundreds of years later, you add this third layer that we call atonement theories. So okay, those can be interesting to talk about, but they certainly shouldn't be confused with the biblical metaphors or with The Gospel as such.

By the way, also, you mentioned Christus Victor. So that's another problem because people in the West will think that Christus Victor is one of the atonement theories. It's described that way in Gustav Allen's book, Christus Victor saying, “Well, what's the atonement theory of the early church?” I don't believe Christus Victor is an atonement theory. I think it's a description, biblical metaphor of The Gospel where Christ is victorious over death. That’s not a theory. That is Gospel.

So I go into depth in all of these in A More Christlike God, and I even tip my hat to a version, a very subtle version of penal substitution, where we say, “If you mean, by substitute, that Jesus did something for us that we could not do for ourselves, well, of course. Of course He did. If you mean by penal that Christ suffered death, which is the penalty for sin, penal, well, of course He did.” You’ve got scholars in Germany, like Tubingen, talking this way. Okay, in the academy it's very subtle, but that's not what it means in popular preaching, is it? It means, “God punished Jesus instead of you.” That's what it means, so I would just absolutely resist that, because God doesn't need to do that.

Seth 25:31

Yeah. That sounds similar to a friend of mine sent me, he didn't endorse it I one way or another (I'm certain he'll listen and I don't want him to feel attacked), he sent me a YouTube clip of NT Wright basically saying that, “You can still hold penal substitution while holding Christus Victor or while holding other versions.” It doesn’t have to be an “and/or,” it can be an “either.”

Brad 25:55

Yeah, Wright is an interesting fellow. His last book on the cross is really important and worth reading. It's called The Day the Revolution Began. Here's the problem with Wright. When he talks penal substitution, he doesn't mean wrath appeasement at all; in fact, he has his own version, he's created his own version of penal substitution whereby he gets to keep using that phrase, but I don't think he should do that when he clearly says, “It is not about wrath appeasement.” So in that book, and I'm quoting him, he says, “There are versions of The Gospel where it's about the appeasement of the wrath of an angry God,” and says, “That is paganizing The Gospel.” In other words, Wright is calling the popular preached version of penal substitution, “pagan,” then I think he should let go of that phrase because, for him to say, “But I believe in penal substitution,” then redefine it, that's like me saying, “Well, yeah, and I'm a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.”

Seth 27:12

“And by that I mean this,” because you are a latter day saint and you follow Christ.

Brad 27:20

Exactly right. But I'm not a Mormon. Wright is not a five-point Calvinist or a four-point Calvinist. At least I felt like he was being disingenuous until this last book. Now he's come out and just clearly said it, “if you mean that Christ had to appease the wrath of an angry God in order to forgive you, that's paganizing The Gospel.” I [think], “finally you said.” I'm sure someone won’t like that he did.

Song 27:49

I’m not your friend. I am something you never comprehend. No need to worry. No need to cry. I’m your messiah, your reason why. You, I would die for you. Darling, if you want me to, I would die for you.

Seth 28:31

Here's a question that naturally arises when we think about Christ and the cross. As a father, if what I'm hearing you say is the cross is not an instrument that allows God to forgive or to love, it’s not the tool, it’s not the means. I can’t voice that well, but I think you hear what I'm trying to say. Was it even necessary that I would have to sacrifice my son, if I was in God's position? Why would I do that? Does it take away something, especially in light of we're in the Easter season as we're recording this, does it take away something to know that He possibly didn't have to do this?

Brad 29:12

I believe He had to do it, but not in order to forgive. Then, if it's not like God's anger poured out on Jesus as violence and death dealing, if that's not what releases God to forgive, then why does that need to happen at all? Here's our answer to that. The cross was absolutely necessary for two reasons. Remember, it's not just Jesus, the man, on the cross; God is on the cross. There's an old Latin expression that expresses how the indivisible Trinity, so remember that for a moment; we believe in one God - Father, Son, and Holy Spirit - one in essence and undivided. That's in the liturgy that we sing every Sunday. I'll say it again. We believe in one God - Father, Son, and Holy Spirit - one in essence and undivided. Any atonement theory that divides the Trinity where God and Jesus Christ become separate is a formal heresy, because now you've got either tritheism, three gods, or you've made Jesus Christ less than the Father or he ceases to be God in some way. That’s just Arianism.

Seth 30:34

Can you say that again, for those in the back row, and if you're in your car and you dozed out, please come back around and listen right now.

Brad 30:41

Okay, so we believe in one God - Father, Son, and Holy Spirit - one in essence and undivided. That means it's God on the cross. So the Latin phrase I was going to tell you is, “All the operations, or workings, of God in this world are undivided.” That's why it's Yahweh says in Zachariah 12, “You will look on Me, the One you have pierced.” Who is “Me”? Yahweh. Where is God, the Father on Good Friday? Paul tells us in II Corinthians 5, God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself.

To split away, to have Father and Son, the Godhead, severed, which penal substitution requires, you fall into one of two errors. Either you split the Trinity, which is invisible, so that's an error, or you make Jesus less than the Father. For example, we might say, “Christ became sin, and the Father can't look on sin.” Oh, okay, so Christ is not fully God anymore? Wait a minute. This is Christian orthodoxy, that Jesus Christ never ceased to be fully God at any moment. He never ceased in fellowship from His Father. In fact, in The Gospel of John, He says this, “You will think I'm alone, but I'm not alone. My Father is with Me.” I mean, how much more clear does He have to be?

Well, if it doesn't fit your system, you just ignore those verses. But what about, “My God, my God, why have You forsaken Me? Well, that's rooted in Psalm 22:1; you just keep reading the Psalm, verse 22, 23, 24 and He says this, and it's from the same mouth saying, “God has not despised the afflicted One. He has not turned His face from Me.” One more verse, in Isaiah 53, it prophesies this very error. It says, “You will look on Me, and you will think I was stricken by God, but it was your sins I endured or bore.” In other words, if you think God did this, you're wrong. But you will think that, but I'm telling you right now; already in Isaiah, He's warning us against that very mistake.

Seth 32:58

Yeah. So is it just obedience, then? Is Jesus incarnating just to die because I said I have to?

Brad 33:06

No, it's more than that. So I would say it this way, and I said it before, I slipped it in before, and now we'll make it overt to this moment. Why did Christ go to the cross? Two reasons. One, to reveal God as self-giving, radically forgiving, co-suffering love. In other words, God Himself, He gives Himself over to our wrath, He submits to our darkness, to our rebellion. He submits Himself to that. We pour out our wrath and violence and hatred on Him. Then what does He say? “Father, forgive them, they don't know what they're doing.” So He radically forgives the sinners, He forgives all sinners. But also then, co-suffering, and by that I mean He doesn't just forgive sins, He suffers the injustices of all time and all history are drawn up into Him on the cross. He swallows them in love and recycles them as forgiveness. So he's in solidarity with every victim from every war, from every rape, from every murder, from every embezzlement and all. He takes that into Himself, and His love purges it.

That’s the revelation part, that He's showing us who God is, what He's like, but also then it's a decisive victory over Satan, sin and death. So in John, concerning the cross, He says, “Now I'm going to be glorified, and the prince of this world will be driven out,” like now from on the cross. In terms of sin, God could already forgive sin; but now, in a decisive way, He forgives all sin, because because it has been drawn to this moment in time. Then He, most importantly, perhaps, Jesus needed to die to conquer death. Here’s the logic of the early church fathers. When we sinned, the consequences of our sin is not the God kills us, but that sin kills us. Sin kills us. And now we have this…

Seth 35:22

So it's sin, not God, demanding I don't want to say the word payment, but that's what's been ingrained in me.

Brad 35:32

No, sin causes the death. So if the ransom is to anything, the ransom is to death itself. What has to happen is God needs to enter the realm of death to destroy death, but He can't because he's God. But wait, if He takes on a human nature, He can. So what happens is, in the one person of Jesus Christ, through His human nature, He is able to die. By being able to die, He can enter death. But wait, He's still God. So when God enters death, what happens? Death blows up. It's destroyed.

Think about the movie Men in Black. I don't know if you've seen it. Tommy Lee Jones virtually taunts this giant cockroach into eating him whole. The cockroach eats him, but he doesn't die. Then Will Smith taunts him. Then, finally [Smith says], “You shouldn't have done that.” And you hear this weapon powering up from inside the bug, and it blows him up from the inside, and there's Tommy Lee Jones fully alive. This is the early Christian vision of the death and resurrection of Christ, that God needs to become man so that He can enter death, so that He can destroy death.

In our liturgy, we always sing this, “Christ is risen from the dead, trampling down death by death, and upon those in the tomb bestowing life.” So the idea is that all humankind has come under the curse of sin or the wages of sin, which is death. It's not enough for Christ to forgive sin, He has to deal with the problem of death, and he has done so. So He overcomes death, and now He holds the keys of death and Hades. I love to ask this question. If Christ holds the keys of death and Hades, what do you think He'll do with them? Well, He unlocks Hades and leads a parade of captives out in His train according to Ephesians. He preaches the good news to those who were enslaved in the tomb. Peter says this, “Those who were judged in the body are made alive in the spirit.” The idea is that He had to die to break death, and and He did so. For us, death is the big problem.

You did mention payment. Do you want me to talk about payment a little bit?

Seth 38:00

Sure.

Brad 38:01

So here's the problem. We have some verses where it just clearly says [in] II Corinthians 5 that God wasn't counting our sins against us. Even in the Old Testament, Psalm 103, “He forgives all of our sins. He heals all of our diseases,” and then He says, “He has not treated us as our sins deserve.” So God is not into eye-for-eye justice, that’s the whole point of forgiveness. Forgiveness is when you don't demand eye-for-eye justice. Pardon is even a legal term for that, right? When you pardon someone you say, “You don't need to be punished according to the measure of your offense, you’re pardoned.”

All right, then, where do we get the idea of payment? It's from two metaphors, ransom and redemption. Those are biblical metaphors, but we think of them in modern terms. Ransom is when you pay a hostage-taker to set someone free. Redemption is when you pay for an item or for a slave, for the slave owner or the pawnbroker to release something into freedom, right? So here's a problem already. Is God the hostage taker? Did Jesus pay God? Is God the one who enslaved us? No. But then, wait a minute. Who's being paid? This was a question in the early church. Then what we realized is this. Ransom and redemption are metaphors rooted in the exodus, in the Old Testament, where it says that God redeemed Israel out of Egypt, or He ransomed Israel out of Pharaoh's hands. So the metaphor is freedom from slavery, right? But wait! In the Exodus, who did they pay? Nobody. In fact, the people of God plunder Pharaoh. They not only rescue their slaves without payment, they actually take a whole bunch of gold and people even with them, right.

Seth 40:05

And then make a country out of it.

Brad 40:07

Right. So this is the limitation of redemption and ransom language is that it is about freedom, but it's not about payment. You see this in a poignant way when in Jesus’ parable when He says that He's going to bind to the strong man, enter his house, and plunder his goods. So it's not a payment, it's a home invasion. The home of Satan is sort of, metaphorically speaking, is death and Hades. Christ is going to bind the strongman, Satan, enter his house, death, and plunder his goods, the dead. He does, so that’s redemption.

Seth 40:47

The people of that day would have gotten that connection, correct?

Brad 40:50

Yeah. Oh, for sure.

Seth 40:51

The audience that he was speaking to would have known what he was referencing.

Brad 40:55

Absolutely. You see, that's a typical metaphor, but it's not really an atonement theory, right? It is The Gospel but in metaphor.

Seth 41:03

If I've learned anything from doing this podcast, it is that Western Christianity has insulated itself to such a point that we no longer know the history of the faith and, because of that, the culture and everything. It makes it hard to grasp those things unless you actively seek it out, which is sad. It’s a disservice. Ugh.

Brad 41:26

Well, we don't mean to, but here's what we did. In the Protestant Reformation, we reject the whole of Christian history and say, “We're going to go back to the Bible ourselves, and we're just going to figure it out by ourselves. But, by the way, we're going to do it with a legal lens, a courtroom metaphor, and every verse will be read through that legalistic metaphor. And if it doesn't fit that sort of “God as a punishing judge, and the law demands punishment, and sin is law breaking; if it doesn't fit that model, then we can't even see the verses.” They don’t count.

Seth 42:02

Yeah, just read over it. It's the nutrition facts on the label. We're not worried about those. I'm worried about how it tastes. I want to end with this, then. You had said at the beginning, after I'd said “I'm not quite certain what I believe with atonement theories,” you would hope to indoctrinate me. What theory should I hold to? What do you think personally best fits? What theory would you point people to learn more about, as they listen to this? I have many more questions, so I can't think that no one else also doesn't have more questions.

Brad 42:32

Yeah, I would say be aware of atonement theories. Be aware of them, but you don't have to hold to any of them. What you do need to come back to is, “What is The Gospel? And what does the Bible say about The Gospel?” So as a result, perhaps what you thought of as an atonement theory, Christopher Victor, I would say that's a good biblical metaphor for what The Gospel accomplished. It’s Christ's victory over Satan, sin and death.

Another one that you get in Scripture that you could use as a metaphor, it becomes sort of the early church fathers, one of their favorites, is the picture of the great physician. Sin is not just law breaking behavior that needs to be punished. Sin is a fatal disease, a wound deep in my soul that needs a great physician, and you will never punish that out of anybody. He didn't just come to save us from the consequences of sin. He came to save us from the disease itself. In that case, you [think], okay, instead of looking at it as a courtroom with a judge and a need for punishment, you see it as a hospital, and you get this in the Good Samaritan story, that we're a hospital where the Great Physician has come to heal us of this fatal disease. How does he do that? By uniting with us. When He unites with me, His healing love pours into me in that love union, and it cleanses me of sin. It doesn't punish me of sin, it cleanses me in the same way that if I was a garment with a stain, He cleanses the stain out of the garment, without destroying or hurting or tearing up the garment, or shouting at the garment, or lashing the garment. If that's a theory, the theory is this - His union with humanity heals humanity. All early bishops would say, Christ became human so that you could become divine, not by nature but by grace.

Seth 44:42

Yeah, yeah. That's beautiful. Brad, where would you direct people to engage with you? Obviously, you got your writings. You've got the magazine, which I will say I enjoy that magazine, I frequent it, probably about once a month. I enjoy the magazine, because I find it's honest. It seems to not have as much of an agenda as you will get from A camp, or B camp, or C camp, so I appreciate that. Where would you direct people to either engage in the work that you're doing, or just overall? Where would you send people to?

Brad 45:21

You know, I have a website called bradjersak.com. Of course, the ptm.org website is where you'd find my [work]; I have a blog there, but also this magazine. I’m on Facebook as Brad Jersak. I'm on Twitter as @bradjersak.

One thing I recommend, it's a good foundation, perhaps, to Eastern thought and to my thought, is if they Google “Jersak chairs Denver.” If you do that, you'll see that there's a third minute video of me describing what we call The Gospel in Chairs. Basically what I do is, in 30 minutes, I described the difference between how we tell The Gospel in terms of the penal substitution model, and then the glitches in that which I felt needed upgrading, and that I found in the Eastern early church fathers. I retell The Gospel as “God is in relentless pursuit of us. He never turns from us. He's always after us.” I do that just using the Bible. It's online in various forms. But if you do “Denver,” that's the one that's best produced. It's got multiple cameras, better focus and sound and all of that.

Seth 46:45

Fantastic. I have not seen that. I'll search that out today. Well, Brad, thank you again, for your time this morning. I appreciate it very much. And I hope you have a great day.

Brad 46:54

My pleasure. It was good to be with you, and I’ll see you again.

Seth Outro 47:03

Thank you all for listening. I want to ask you to, if you didn't do it at the beginning, do it now. Go to iTunes, rank the show. That is the best way that you can help the conversations that are happening here to bubble up on the Internet so that more people can interact with them. On top of that, share the show; share it with your family, your friends, Facebook, social media, whatever avenue you choose is a great avenue. I would also ask, if you feel so led, to become a patron at patreon.com/canisaythisatchurch. You'll also find a link to that on the website, canisaythisatchurch.com. I am very grateful for those of you that have taken the time and your money to do so. Talk to you next week.

Seth Music Credit48:04

Music from today's episode was used with permission from artists Noah Guthrie from his most recent album entitled The Valley. You can connect with Noah on all the social medias, as well as follow him on Spotify. You can listen on Apple Music. As with all of our artists, you will hear the selections from today's episode in our Spotify playlist, Can I Say This At Church.

20 - Unafraid with Benjamin L Corey / Transcript

Note: Can I Say This at Church is produced for audio listening. If able, I strongly encourage you to listen to the audio, which has inflection, emotion, sarcasm where applicable, and emphasis for points that may not come across well in written word. This transcript is generated using a combination of my ears, software, and the help of a friend and so it may contain errors. Please check the episode for clarity before quoting in print.

Back to the Audio:


Seth 0:25

Hey, guys, welcome to another episode of the Can I Say This At Church podcast, I'm Seth, your host. I'm excited that you're here. I'm excited for you to hear the upcoming interview, I have the delight to sit down with Benjamin Corey, who has written a book Unafraid and you'll hear us reference it many times about moving beyond a gospel, or a Bible, or a faith, or religion based entirely on fear. How that is not Jesus, how it is nowhere close to Jesus, the risk that we take when we do that, and the distance service that we do to our culture, to our faith to our children to ourselves, when we engage in a study of Scripture, that is entirely rooted on fear. I'm excited for you to hear it. And so let's do this…Benjamin Corey.

Seth 1:37

Benjamin L. Corey, thank you so much for joining us on this episode of the Can I Say This At Church podcast? It has been it's been a long time coming a hard thing to organize it. So I appreciate appreciate it finally coming to fruition.

Benjamin 1:50

Yeah, no, absolutely. Seth, I appreciate having me on the show. And after all the back and forth with several different people. I'm glad that it finally worked out for me here with you.

Seth 2:00

Yeah, me as well. So I wanted to discuss In brief, just, your latest book a bit about you. And then wherever that leads, and I feel like that could go off into too many different places. And so for those that are unfamiliar with you, which who knows how many people or what people's streams are on how they got here? So can you just briefly give a bit of your background? I specifically like that you were in the military. It was just a lot about you that I think most people would hear our “progressive Christian“. Of course, he was raised differently or whatever. And so I think that's interesting.

Benjamin 2:38

No, definitely. I mean, I grew up the, you know, the the oldest of four kids on a dairy farm in rural Maine, where my dad is still an organic dairy farmer; milk the cows twice a day. And so grew up in just real small town, farming community. Mmost folks were kind of conservative evangelical, and was kind of raised in that conservative, evangelical arena. In high school, I got pulled more into what I would call fundamentalism, as I, you know, was interested in travel and interested in mission trips. And so, you know, when I was a sophomore in high school signed up for my first mission trip that that summer, my sophomore year in the organization turned out to be definitely much more hardcore type young earth creationism, you know, no mix bathing type of boys in the back girls in the front type stuff. And but, um, so I ended up doing a two summers of mission trips with them in high school, both in Russia and in Eastern Europe.
So that kind of got me pulled more into the fundamentalist direction, where I think I was definitely kind of, I was kind of always a misfit of sorts, and I was kind of looking for some sort of belonging. And, you know, the odd thing is, I never really belonged in fundamentalism, I was even the misfit there, but there was at least a structure to it that, you know, kind of made me feel safe. I think, you know, even though I was raised conservative evangelical, my folks divorced when I was eight, and life became really unpredictable for most of my childhood. From that point on just back and forth. I think, at one point, I had in fifth grade change schools, you know, three times and you know, spent part of the year semi-homeless just crashed for a half year at my grandmother's house. And there's four of us kids that would all sleep on the pullout hideaway bed in the living room, and you know, take turns three in the bed, one on the floor kind of a thing. And so life was like really unpredictable and unstable. And I think when I got pulled into fundamentalism, it was meeting more of a deeper primal need for stability and security, even if it was based on things that were ultimately toxic.

And so from there, I ended up after getting out of high school, went on with that same fundamentalist organization to their Bible school in upstate New York, where I really wasn't a good fit even though I tried, I just could not toe the line. It was as if I believed everything that they believed. I, you know, kind of sort of went along with the program, but I think the structure just became too much for me, and there was no grace. And, you know, by the end of the first semester, I just started to realize that something didn't sit right in my spirit, something didn't feel good or right about this. So over Christmas break, I dropped out of Bible school and enlisted in the military and ended up spending the next 10 years of my life in the military. I did seven consecutive years overseas, you know, been in hospital fire zones from, you know, the Balkans to Kosovo and went through 9/11 in Korea, you know, with full Chemgear and gas masks and wondering if Kim Jong Ill was going to you know, do something while we were distracted, you know, with 9/11. So did an entire decade there, you know, became professional military education instructor teaching, you know, the younger troops how to lead and then ended up taking an early retirement after 10 years. And from there, I moved back to Maine and decided to use my GI Bill and went to conservative evangelical seminary went to Gordon Conwell Theological Seminary outside of Boston, Massachusetts, where I did two masters their masters of theology masters and Missiology. And then I went on to Fuller Theological Seminary and got my doctorate.

Seth 6:45

Nice.

Benjamin 6:47

Sorry, that's a long answer.

Seth 6:49

No, no, that's fine. I think it's important to understand where people come from because it…where you come from matters and whether or not you stay where you come from. And you keep that mindset or you move past it, it matters where you came from, because there are pieces that you can always there are pieces that you keep and pieces that are important, and where you come from as part of what made you you today. So I'm curious. So you said when you came back, you used to GI Bill and went to a conservative seminary. So what would be the difference between that seminary versus the one that you didn't fit in with?

Benjamin 7:22

Oh, my goodness. So let's see. So when I went to Word of Life, it was much more of here are the questions you're allowed to ask. Here are the answers memorize them?

Seth 7:35

That sounds similar to my school? I went I went to Liberty so very…

Benjamin 7:39

Sure, you know, Liberty and Word of Life, were kind of partners like because Word of Life wasn’t credited and Liberty was one of the few places where you could go after a year of life and actually have your credits count. It was like, you know, but the funny thing was I remember being at Word of Life and they actually considered Liberty to be liberal. And they were, even though they had this partnership, there were these warnings about, you know, they would say, you know, we had the president of Word of Life back in the time was a guy named Jack Wyrtzen and he would say, “Yeah, well, at Word of Life we have Jack Wyrtzen but at Liberty University, they have Jack Daniels!”

Seth 8:15

I can't imagine anyone calling Liberty liberal Well, maybe Oral Roberts or Pensacola,

Benjamin 8:22

So Gordon Conwell, I have nothing but the highest esteem from Gordon Conwell. Gordon Conwell, very conservative, evangelical seminary, very well respected academic institution. The difference was, certainly they were conservative evangelical, but there was certainly a wide diversity of, maybe not a wide diversity, there was more diversity of thought. But there was also truly the freedom to ask your own questions and come to your own conclusions. I mean, I wrote papers, you know, disagreeing with the professor and still got an A on it. So it didn't impact the relationship at all, as long as you were doing good academic work and using your mind. There was, you know, it was definitely like more of Calvinist leaning as far as the staff. But, obviously, I didn't turn out to be a Calvinist. But, you know, certainly my years there were massively broadening, specifically in that they had many charismatics, and they had many mainliners. And so for me growing up, we were taught that charismatics were possessed by demons, and that that's how they spoken jibberish, you know. So to be sitting alongside charismatics, and to, over time, get to know them and be like, Oh, these guys like sincerely love Jesus, like, I you know, I whether I agree with this or that, like you can’t deny that man, these guys are totally following Jesus.
And, the same thing with the Episcopalians, and the Methodist, who, you know, growing up, we were taught that those mainline churches like Methodist, Episcopal, you know, congregational that they were quote unquote, social clubs. And they were nothing more than social clubs.

And so basically, you know, as I went through my, you know, you know, my three and a half years of Gordon Conwell doing those two masters, it just really kind of shook the stereotypes and what I was taught first about other people, but then about theology. And for me, it was realizing that even though they were conservative - evangelical, they actually were they actually, you know, undid a lot of fundamentalist theology, which they thought was extreme such as dispensationalism and end times. And so for me that I think having the end times, you know, theology be upended for me was really like the gateway that led to everything else, because that's the one that started asking me like, oh, if I was wrong about this, what about everything else?

Seth 10:59

Yeah. And so that segues beautifully into your most recent book. And for those who are listening, you've written more than one book, I think the one before this was called Undiluted. And I can't remember the subtitle predominantly about Jesus…

Benjamin 11:13

Rediscovering the radical message of Jesus…

Seth 11:14

Big fan of talking about Jesus, I like to always end on Jesus if at all possible, but your book Unafraid, and I referenced it before we started recording made me laugh out loud, there's a portion in there, that you say I forget how many numbers, but the 872nd time that she prayed to ask Jesus into your heart, you're hopeful that that was it. And and that made me think of the Spiritual Emphasis weeks that we'd have at Liberty where they bring in a massive speaker, and we're going to keep doing this altar call, until half of Vines enter is empty, we got it, everybody needs to be on the floor. So yeah, so your book? What is kind of the beginning of that? What made you want to write your most recent work? What is the goal?

Benjamin 12:02

It was an interesting process in that, you know when, you know, when the idea for my second book was bought and put on a contract, it was actually a totally different book. It was actually bought as a book called American Heresy and was going to be just kind of this general book critiquing, you know, things like Christian nationalism and stuff like that. And as I sat down to write it, the process was really, really difficult for me in that I was I don't know, if I consciously realized it that at the time, but subconsciously, like, I had so many things swirling under the neath the surface in my life.
I was questioning so much, I was frozen with what to do with my future, so much of my life felt like it was falling apart. And so, you know, I would spend entire days in front of the computer and realize that I had, you know, written like, three sentences and deleted two and a half of them. And so I definitely started to panic at one point, because when you get a book contract, it is kind of like borrowing money from the mafia, they give you money up front to write it. And then when the due date comes, it's like, if you don't produce…somebody, go show up at your house for that.

Seth 13:19

They are your leg and taking your laptop.

Benjamin 13:21

Yeah. So I ended up just spiritually crashing, as I sat there and didn't know how to write the book. And in the end, I was in counseling, and realized that everything that I was struggling with in life kept going back to fear. And so one day, my counselor asked me, he's like, “Who is it Ben? Who is it?” He's like, ”you're dancing for somebody, you're trying to appease somebody, you're trying to impress somebody”, he said, ”Are you trying to impress your mom, your dad, who is it?” and I was like, “Oh, my gosh, it's God,”

I am so afraid of God, that I am frozen in my life and don't know which way to turn, I'm scared to make any decision. I'm scared to plant my flag on this theology firmly or that one, because I don't want to be on the wrong side of God. And so I realized that my life was in part, like, sort of crumbling because my faith was crumbling. And that was deeply rooted in the idea that I just had this fear of God. And so one day, I just sat down and started writing about no longer wanting to be afraid of God. And all of a sudden this entire new book was born, about moving beyond fear based faith. And that was kind of the process how this book was truly born from some of the deepest and most painful places inside of me, which is certainly why in this book, I are more vulnerable and authentic than I've ever been in any other area of my writing.

Seth 14:53

There's a part in the book that you talk about sitting in a chair, basically. And I'm assuming it's not long after that, and basically having a conversation from both points of view. That was moving, I read that I actually read that part twice. I let it sit for a while and came back to it; you don't hear men specifically talk about emotions? And it's, I don't know, I don't know.

Benjamin 15:17

I was really deliberate in that. I wanted to frame this book, bookend it both as beginning in my counselor's office, you know, and ending in my counselors office in that, throughout the process, I was obviously, severely depressed, I was grieving different things in my life.

And I think seeking help, and working with a counselor is really a healthy choice that so many of us need to do. And certainly from the Christian environment I grew up in it was pretty frowned upon. You know, my grandfather died by suicide, you know, from untreated depression. And just came from this cold where you didn't really seek help, because it was so stigmatized. And so I wanted to be really deliberate about talking about the role of counseling in my process. And that's why I began and ended the book that way. And yeah, that story about sitting in the chair and doing kind of that role play. When my counselor you said it we needed to do that. I mean, I thought it was so hokey, I don't do things like that. It just is so cheesy.

And I was just doing it to go through the motions. And it turned out to be one of the most profoundly like moving spiritual experiences I've ever had. And yeah, I almost think that those are like, my favorite two pages in the book.

Seth 16:37

Yeah I would agree. They were definitely the most, you tell a lot of stories, but they're not. They're very topical. So the people that know you best will know the full story behind that story. But that right seemed to be one of the stories that was raw. So you talked about moving past of faith in God based in fear. And so when you've broken everything apart, you've escaped from a Gospel of fear, there's just pieces laying on the ground and you don't know where and you used the word earlier which side to plant your flag on? Where do you stand on? How do you begin? Or how does someone listening to this begin to know, okay, this is the piece that I can pick back up and chew on and work with and begin to have some foundation as opposed to just, I'm never coming back to this pool. This water is tainted, it's going to kill me look at the news, it's poison, I don't want it!

Benjamin 17:33

So one of the foundational concepts in Unafraid is, is almost like this subtle critique of deconstruction and how back in the day, you know, you know, the emergent movement would deconstruct theology, and how maybe sometimes progressive Christianity, you know, deconstructs theology. For me, I think a season of deconstruction can be critically important when you know, things, certain things, need to be dismantled. But at the same time, I felt like in deconstruction and other leading voices out there the one step that is often missed is the okay, but what now. And so for me, I realized that my deconstruction process was starting to leave me empty handed. And I panicked both because of myself feeling empty handed, but also realizing, you know, that, there are thousands and thousands of people that could potentially be the same way, because they followed me and I didn't want to leave them empty handed.

And back when I did podcasting, had Rob Bell on my show, and was talking to Rob. And I asked him, I said, “Hey, you know, what would you say to somebody who just doesn't know what they believe in anymore?“ And he would say, “I would tell him, that's not true. It’s not true that you don't know what you believe anymore. What is true is that right now, you're keenly aware of some things you no longer believe, but that's not the same thing.“

And so that kind of became like, I call it in the book, like a decoder ring moment, in that I was like, ”oh, sometimes naming what you don't believe that part that you just described? Like, what do I do with this actually lead you to what you do believe? Because you just have to ask the next question. And so in the book is really about Okay, so I don't believe in this, like Angry God anymore that I have to be afraid of. So what do I believe? Okay, so I don't believe in this anymore. So what do I believe? And it was really founded upon the importance of asking that second question, so that you can move beyond. I think certainly in a lot of the, in the book, I critique my own kind of folks in progressive Christian circles and how we just kind of get stuck, and maybe we don't move beyond. And so I wanted to ask that next question, like, “Okay, how do we move beyond? Okay, great. This isn't true. I don't believe this anymore. But what now?”

And I really do think that when you name out loud, those things you don't believe in anymore? That really, it's just a matter of asking that next question. And you can often almost instinctively answer for yourself, if I don't believe the future is full of doom and gloom, what do I believe? It’s open to possibilities.

Seth 20:47

I want to name a few of those things and get your thoughts on those. And some of this is from what I see you write on your blog, which I highly recommend people go and read. Front and center in my mind, just specifically because of I'm here in Central Virginia, about an hour north of Lynchburg. And Shane Claiborne's about to have a thing down there in April and Jerry Jr. is not happy about that. And he wrote a piece today basically saying, Yeah, and so I find; I don't know why. I used to be there again, I went to liberty and I was all in it Christian tribalism seems to be the church as opposed to the church. And so I guess my question is, why do we as a country, or as a planet, use Christianity as a litmus test for anything for church for revival for politics for universities? Why has that become the status quo in your opinion?

Benjamin 21:48

Well, can you ask me that slightly different way?

Seth 21:52

Yeah, I guess my question is, anyone that wants to become a leader, or run for politics, or a church, your politics matter, but only as long as you fit into this small bucket of Christianity? That is? Well, I don't really need to define it, because you can just turn on Fox News and see it. And I would call that Christian tribalism as opposed to a religion.

Benjamin 22:16

Oh, for sure.

Seth 22:17

And so how have we gotten there?

Benjamin 22:20

Yeah, so as a start certainly Ithink tribalism an innate human instinct. We certainly just as human beings seemed to consolidate around commonalities in order to, you know, be with like people in order to protect from enemies. So we do kind of gravitate towards tribalism. And I think like the Gospel is actually in, you know, a calling, and an antidote to move beyond that kind of tribalism. But certainly in America, you know, it's honestly, it's more than tribalism. What it is, is this desire for political power, and there is definitely a prominent group of people who want nothing more than control and political power. And it's becoming more and more apparent that they will do anything to get it including, like selling out their own values.

And so I don't even know if in their case, it's an issue and tribalism, I believe is a pure lust for political power. And they will actually reframe things in whatever way they need to, in order to to achieve that power. And I mean, a great case in point is just Donald Trump. The religious right I grew up in there was no way we would have ever supported somebody as grossly as immoral as he is. But today that lust for power is just so overwhelming, that they will literally look aside and explain away and disregard everything that he does. That is so blatantly immoral. And so like I said, it's not even so much about tribalism, as it is they just want power and clearly will do anything together.

Seth 24:08

Yeah. Which is the inverse of what Jesus stood for. He literally gave it gave every power away, was offered all the power. And so I don't know, you're not even asking the right question this isn't even the right power. you're offering the wrong power.

Benjamin 24:24

Yes, temptation in the wilderness. Yes. offered him all the political power. That was the first test before ministry is rejecting that.

Seth 24:32

Other things that I think fall away. When you move past a fear based version of God. And you say it in your book, and I'm going to paraphrase it, you say something about the leaders in a Calvinist movement, or I would say the church proper, from what I've noticed in church, make the case that we cannot even experience God's love until we are sufficiently and appropriately afraid of what he would do to us if we don't love him back in the right way. I had many issues with Calvinism, or I become to have many issues with Calvinism. But I get the most pushback on these shows, specifically from Calvinists.

And so I guess what would you say to someone not that is currently a Calvinist and listening because I can't think there would be many, but from someone that is teetering on, do I believe in some of the points? Maybe I just want to let it all go? What would you say to someone moving past that? What can they cling to when they when they let go of that fear and embrace grace, you alluded to earlier? The the grace, there was no grace at Word of Life-it was all fear.

Benjamin 25:38

No, for sure. Gosh, as far as Calvinism I gosh. I you know, I think maybe I wrote in the book that, you know, I was a Calvinist for, you know, as Calvinist for you know, for a few days, and it was, you know, the longest, you know, six months of my life and it's just for me, I don't have much connection with it at all. And certainly some of the folks who have gone after me over the years have most predominantly been Calvinist. I mean, just, yeah, almost mercilessly. They can't stand me. You know, but this idea that we have to be sufficiently afraid of God, to me is just nonsense in that when the Bible describes the opposite of love, it doesn't describe hate, it describes fear.

And you know, it says that there's there can be no fear, love, and that perfect love casts out all fear. And so, if the Bible is saying that perfect love makes fear go away, like, how can you say that we can't experience love until we're sufficiently afraid? It's ridiculously grossly unbiblical, right on the surface. Furthermore, it doesn't make any practical sense. For example, you know, I talked about ISIS terrorists and setting people on fire and how could you ever like be in a relationship with somebody who was willing to do that? I mean think about abusive relationships. How do you really have a deeply connected and authentic relationship with somebody who you're afraid, in the back of your mind, that if you step on the wrong thing, they are going to unleash on you and harm you whether physically emotionally whatever the case may be, you know, you can have a you know, a really dysfunctional relationship a you know, somebody you can have a relationship based on appeasement or codependency. But I don't know how you have a relationship that is founded upon fear that is anything like what I would imagine God longs to have us.

Seth 27:33

Yeah, I agree, wholeheartedly agree. There was a portion in your in your book, and right in the mid center, that I had never learned never heard of. I had seen Darby’s translation of the Bible. But I had no idea why that name was a name that mattered. And you talk a bit of the history of Darby, and kind of how before his version, the church did what the church should do if people were hungry, they fed them is Salvation Army, they set up libraries, and they would do what needed to be done. And so I feel like there has to be a pile of people that are not familiar with a bit of Darby, and how that impacts dispensation ism. And how that makes us look at what we do with our military. And so can you speak a bit about that history and kind of how it relates to today?

Benjamin 28:20

Yeah, no, I think it is absolutely fascinating. In that so many Christians today, obviously grow up being taught some version of like end times theology, you know, there's going to be a rapture and even if you don't believe in a rapture, you know, oftentimes most people believe in the coming tribulation, and that just everything is getting worse and worse. And that just seems to be in modern evangelicalism, like so prominent, even if there's different degrees of nuance that people believe. And certainly, that's what I was raised with and I believe that that generates an incredibly pessimistic view of the future.

And I had no idea that Christians ever believe anything different because growing up, I wasn't even taught that there was an alternative. I was in my 30s, at seminary and heard a professor, you know, mocking the idea of a rapture and I sat there and I was utterly bewildered because I didn't know what he was talking about! That there was another view. But certainly, man if you go back…go back to the 1800s, man, evangelicalism in America did some amazing things.

I mean, certainly Christians back then did some horrible and abhorrent things. But there were like some evangelicals that were so optimistic about the future. They didn't believe that, like the world was ending, they believe that, you know, that the kingdom was was both now and not yet. And that we need to make the world into the kind of place, you know, ready for Jesus to return to and to reign. And they were, you know, addressing, you know, social problems and social ills with this optimism. Even like the big tent old fashioned revivals, there was a famous revivalist called his name was Charles Grandison Finney, a really famous revivalist. He preached two things, he preached the need for personal conversion, which is what you'd expect at a revival. But then he also preached that you need to become socially useful. And so there was this concept of being socially useful tied to what it meant to be an evangelical Christian. And they just did some amazing things. And so but then things started to change. There was this minister from England, John Nelson Darby, and he was not trained in the Bible was not theologically trained, he just had some, some pretty wacky ideas. And he either, you know, popularized or, you know, invented the idea of a rapture. Sometimes there's some debate where it truly originated, but clearly he is the one who popularized it at least.
And, you know, this was in the mid to latter 1800s when this happened, and so, it ended up slowly kind of taking root. And what Darby taught was, he rebuked Christians for having an optimistic outlook on the future. And he said that we can only expect things to get worse and worse until God has no other choice but to judge the world.

And so at first, it didn't really take hold. But then as time went on, it really began to take root. And then of course, we ended up getting the Scofield Study Bible, which many people had growing up. And in the Scofield study Bible it had Derby's notes in the margins, which a lot of just lay people confused with, like the true Scripture itself, began to take root. And then more and more Bible schools propped up there were all…all these like Bible schools in around that time that were propping up most of them were all founded on the concept of teaching, you know, dispensationalism. And so it started to gain traction. And then by the time we see World War One hit, and you know, and then certainly World War Two, people started saying, hey, maybe he's right…

Seth 32:07

Everything is getting worse,

Benjamin 32:08

Everything's getting worse. And then from there, people realize that you can make a shit ton of money off of writing about the end of the world. And so they just ran with it..

Seth 32:51

So taking that to its end result, and I think you can speak to this from a side that many can't. So you've lived in all of those camps. You've been in the military, you've been fundamentalist. So what then, as a I am currently struggling with, how do I sit with gun rights? How do I sit with how we use our military, and pacifism, but also I’m going to…I feel like I'm going to punch you in the mouth, if you punch me first. And so how do you stand on that? What should be the purpose of a nation to use a military and what should be the churches either support or retribution, or whatever the with that?

Benjamin 33:34

Well, the church's job is to follow Jesus and to make Jesus known among the nations and to teach everyone you know, to go to all the nations and to baptize them and to teach them to obey everything Jesus commanded. And Jesus clearly commanded that we love our enemies, that we do not repay, you know, evil for evil. You know, in fact, you know, both in Matthew and in Luke, Jesus says, you know, to not repay that way, but were to love our enemies. Matthew says, you know, for then you will be acting like children of your Father in heaven and Luke adds the caveat saying, for, you know, for he is kind to the ungrateful and the wicked. If when we love our enemies, and when we do not repay evil with evil, that we, we are acting like God Himself. And so, do nations have a right to have a military clearly, you know, a nation can do whatever a nation wants. But the role of a church is to teach people Jesus, and Jesus did not go around dropping bombs. Jesus taught against all of that. And so, I believe the church's number one role is to keep pointing people to Jesus keep pointing people to Jesus and what Jesus taught. So even though I acknowledge that a secular state has the right to do what a secular state does, I certainly have no idea how somebody can simultaneously follow Jesus, like legitimately follow Jesus, and follow his teachings and teach other people to follow his teachings, while also simultaneously supporting and advocating and propping up things that Jesus was very specifically against. I just, I honestly don't know how that works. I don't know how you do that.

Seth 35:22

Yeah, well, I don't either. I've been asked that question so many times, and I never had a satisfying answer. And I find when I tell people, well, I would like to view the world through the lens of if my neighbor is hungry, I'll feed them. And in this case, the neighbor can be Mexico or Belize, or it doesn't matter. And they're like, well, they're just going to come take your things! And it’s like well what are you valuing? And my value is Jesus

Benjamin 35:45

Jesus said, Okay, well, they take your hat, give then your coat too. Okay. That's it. I mean, for me, people ask me these question, my friend Brian Zahnd one time, before I was going on before debate, and he just he gave me the advice. He said, “Just let Jesus do all the heavy lifting.”

And I think it's the best advice I've ever gotten. You get in these conversations, let Jesus do the heavy lifting. And it's amazing how people will not want to have a discussion with you, how a Christian will not want to have a discussion with you if you keep pointing them to Jesus. But what did Jesus say? What did Jesus say? Yeah, it's, it should be like the easiest thing for a Christian to accept. And yet, it will be the most maddening for many people.

Seth 36:31

So we're running out of time. And so I want to get a bit too and you don't really talk a lot about this in your book but it's inferred and and you can extrapolate from it. So what do we do with you know, in the news lately, we've had, you know, in Tennessee, there was a church that basically was told if you bring this senior minister, that's a woman, you can't be a part of this Southern Baptist Convention, or Cooperative Baptist fellowship, or whichever version of Baptist it was. And then you got, you know, John Piper taking a jab at women every which I take a umbrage at, because I have two small women that if they want to be ministers, right, women were as effective as ministers as men in the Scripture. So what would you say to someone that lives in that misogynist, dualistic, Idon't even remember what the word is complementarianism. I don't know if that's what the word is, how do you? And you've written to it recently, and so I'd love to hear some of your thoughts on that.

Benjamin 37:27

Well, you know, what would I say to such a person? I mean, you know, I think I was in an interview a couple of days ago, and they said, “What would you say to a person who“, and I'm like, Well, every person is different. And every communication style, you know, needs to be adjusted for the individual. If our desire is to truly persuade, and convert, I never know how to answer directly the question, what would you say to a person because to me, every person is different. And you know, if my goal is to change your heart, I want to find the most effective way communicate with a person as I can.

But certainly, as far as women in ministry, I mean, Oh, my gosh, I just did a post the other day with 10 points, in that there are strong female leadership throughout the Old Testament, and that, obviously, you know, the Old Testament, in news are written from a very patriarchal and misogynistic society. And, you know, but we still see the emergence of strong female leaders, we see, you know, even in the writings of Paul mentioning, you know, female church leaders, and so even Paul, if, you know, you interpret him the way that like the Calvinist want to, isn't even consistent, because one time, you know, in, he says, women stay silent in the church, and the other few chapters later, he's talking about women standing up in front of the church prophesiying. And so, you know, I think, you know, the biggest thing that I would, you know, want the biggest point I would want to convey to such a person is the, the contextual nature of so much of Scripture, that would be the point I'm trying to get across in that, you know, Paul is writing letters to specific churches addressing specific problems. There are occasions where we actually know the problem he's trying to address, such as somebody sleeping with his stepmother. And so he's giving advice to the church, you know, on that, but in other cases, Paul is like, we are writing these churches, and we don't always know exactly what he's trying to speak into.

So to truly honor scripture, we will need to make sure like we are applying everything on a one for one equivalent, and we just don't have the ability to do that. Not understanding all that Paul contextually was speaking into, but certainly my favorite one that I like to do with, with people in the complimentary in camp, especially when they're literalist is I like to say, “Oh, yeah, when you go to church, do you greet your brothers with a holy kiss?” They're always like, “NO!!!”

Okay, then you already believe that some of what Paul commanded was historically contextual to a time and place we don't follow today, you know, so don't give me this nonsense about “Oh, when Paul says is about women, is for all time, but when he tells the guys to kiss each other at church, all of a sudden, like that's past that.”

Seth 40:12

And so for the women listening, and for my daughters in 20 years, if they feel like listening, the message would be you are loved. And you are entirely empowered to witness, and to minister, [and preach] the gospel, and you were no way put in a subservient place.

Benjamin 40:28

Yep. I mean, God chose women to be the first two people to preach the Gospel that Christ is risen, and they preached it to men. So it's good enough for God is good enough for us. You can preach any preaching, preaching, preaching?

Seth 40:43

So I want to end on on this. So how do we make sure that we raise a generation..and and let me back up a bit, I was talking with an extended family member recently, and and we both find it odd that the generation of Dr. Falwell-those chills can raise my generation, which seemed to be entirely more socially minded and arguably more “less dualistic”, then at least my small circles are so how does our generation now raise our children in such a way that Jesus isn't based on fear, while still having a proper exegesis Jesus of Scripture? Because I find it hard, my son asks a question, the other day at breakfast, just that how do I know that God is Jesus and Jesus is God? And it's hard when I have to talk about, you know, substitutionary atonement or penal substitution it's just hard. So how do we train our children in such a way that God is not rooted in fear?

Benjamin 41:47

Well, you know, I think that can be a complex question. I know, for me, I teach my daughter Jesus, and I focus Jesus and how he loved people and how he cared for people and how he brought people in. And, you know, I will frequently say, I think I probably heard Greg Boyd say at first, but I have certainly picked up a habit for saying it myself. That, you know, the only way to describe what God is like is to describe what Jesus is like. Like, that's the only way I mean, Jesus is our doctrine of God, if you want to know God's like, you got to look to Jesus.

And so I basically I teach my daughter, that it is all centered on Jesus. Jesus is where we begin. Jesus is the Word of God, Hebrews calls Jesus the Wisdom of God, He is the full expression of God's essence. And so I just keep pointing them to Jesus. And, you know, you know, I think, you know, maybe back in the day, a lot of people heard the analogy, it was often used about exposing a false Gospel, they would say, “Well, you know, how they tell counterfeit money. You know, they don't study the counterfeits they study the real thing. And so you notice the counterfeit when you see it.”

And so I do apply that concept. We go to Jesus, we go to Jesus, everything that doesn't look like Jesus is not God. You know, everything that doesn't sound like Jesus. No, no, that's not of God. And so, for me, I don't know what else to do other than to really deeply root your entire foundation in Jesus and let Jesus be that lens.

Seth 43:26

Awesome. We're going to wrap it up. So where can people interact with you, I know you're active on social media, and plug the book as well. And for those listening, all of those links will be in the notes as you just scroll right past the play button. And so I will link everything there. But where would you point people to engage with you, to interact with others that are struggling with these issues?

Benjamin 43:51

Well, definitely. Well, folks can find me on Twitter at @BenjaminLCorey, and also on Facebook, you can find me @BenjaminLCorey, you'll see the blue checkmark there to know that that's my public page. And I am working on definitely interacting and engaging with readers more. It's been a long year for me, and I've been a bit isolated, you know, in many, many ways. So they can join the discussion there on Facebook. And then of course, they can always go right to my blog on patheoa, or directly through formerly funding calm. And so all of those places, you will find me BenjaminLCorey is the easiest way to track me down.

Seth 44:32

Great, great. Well, Benjamin, I hope you have a great rest of your morning. And a great, I hope for us great for you. I appreciate the same question. Is there another book coming? Are you back in bed with the mafia?

Benjamin 44:44

I am not back in the bed with the mafia yet, but I just took the sheets out of the dryer and I am moving in that direction.

Seth 44:52

Good, good, good.

Seth Outro 44:26

People, people listen. I hope that you got as much out of that as I did. It was so fun talking with Ben. It's odd to find someone that has worn all of the hats-has been fundamentalist has been Calvinist has been in the military is a father has been divorced. It's just, it's refreshing to hear from someone that knows genuinely where you're coming from. And so where do we sit with that? I know personally, and it's been referenced in other episodes, I find that my job now is to love as Jesus does teach my children to do the same. And if I'm honest, I'm slightly fearful that I'll fail at that. And, and so I'll pray for you, you pray for me, it is hard to be that transparent, and to not lose our temper, either online, in our family, at our job. But I think that it's doable. And I think we can do it. To those that have supported the show on Patreon. Thank you so much. So much, I have no idea what an honor that is to earn your support in that way. This show is entirely supported by you, 127%. I've enjoyed the conversation and the interaction with many of you on Twitter. And I would encourage you to reach out on Facebook, on social media everywhere. The conversation is fantastic. I enjoy it. And I know it helps connect many of you that are of a like mine that are dealing with these same conversations. And so thank you for that to the handful of you sitting on your couch or in your car. consider becoming a patron as little as a buck a month. But do what you feel called to do. And I will be grateful either way. Be blessed and we'll talk to you next time.

The music that you heard today was provided from the band Verses based out of Newcastle, Australia. You can find their music on Spotify, iTunes, or at their website vs. Music. com. You can also find all of the music featured from any episode on Spotify playlist Can I Say This At Church