Sermon: “Pauliaus Svajonė”

The audio for my sermon, “Pauliaus Svajonė (Paul’s Dream),” is now posted on the website of Kauno Laisvųjų Krikščionių Bažnyčia (Kaunas Free Christian Church). The text is Romans 15:14-33. Unfortunately, there seems to have been an issue with the audio, so it doesn’t come in until about the 3:20 mark.

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Why Missionaries Can Never Go Home Again

An interesting piece entitled, “Why Missionaries Can Never Go Home Again.”

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Why I Buried Facebook

I may have mentioned that I recently gave up my Facebook account.
(I realize that it’s impossible to delete one’s account once and for all. But I created a dummy email address, changed my FB email address to that email, made a password out of a random sequence of numbers, and used that password to deactivate the account–you get the idea. It would take at least three difficult steps to retrieve it.)
Why did I decide to do this? First, I’ll share an email I sent to Corrie after I buried FB, and then I’ll add further explanation:
Hi,
I really have gotten rid of FB.
Remember in P&R when Ron Swanson falls prey to Tammy Two again, and his friends stage an “intervention” that includes a video of Ron telling his future self that he needs to get rid of Tammy once and for all?
Remember in The Silver Chair when Rillian tells Jill, Eustace and Puddleglum to tie him to the chair and not listen to anything he says in his fits? (Of course, that’s not a good analogy because he was actually sane when he was tied to the chair “in fits.” But I digest…)
Well, this is me doing that with respect to FB. I just can’t control myself. There is a lot of good stuff on FB, but there’s also a lot of garbage and stupid stuff. I’ve realized in periods of “detox” that it has restructured my thinking about issues, people, and what’s important in the world–and not usually in a good way. It controls my emotions in ways that it shouldn’t. It is “fake presence,” and I need to focus on the “real presence” of people that I care about. “Browsing” is something I crave and can’t really stop until I get my fix. That is bad.
The reasons that “Future Benj” will give for starting up FB again might be:
  • To promote our ministry, my writing, or the podcast
  • To get in contact with people whose email addresses I don’t have

Either of those things can be achieved through your Facebook account if necessary. I might at some point ask that we rename your account “CorrieAndBenj” or something like that. But if that is the case, you will need to sign me in and sign out if I ever use your account for the two worthy purposes mentioned above. I can’t have control.

I’m sorry to have to ask you to help me with this. There’s no CD that I can cut up, as with my computer games. I’ve buried the password and the account, but it could possibly come back–I think. If you ever see me browsing on my account again, please look at me sternly and forward me this email.

Benj (it’s really me–not Phil writing this on my email account)

Background on computer games: I loved them when I was in high school and college, especially sports and world-domination games. But I couldn’t control how much time I spent on gaming, so eventually I decided to uninstall the games and cut up my CDROMs (or CDsROM–like postmasters general, right?). That was early on in seminary, I think. At one point, years later, when I had something of a break in my dissertation-writing, I downloaded and reinstalled Civ2, just to see if I could control myself. No such luck: I spent the whole week obsessing over the game, playing every minute I wasn’t working, and ignoring Corrie and Daniel. So, I deleted the game and accepted that I will never be able to play a computer game that takes more than 15 minutes from start to finish (like cribbage or chess).
Back to Facebook: Once again, I’m an addict trying to get sober. That’s reason enough to say goodbye to Zuckerberg. But I think FB’s power to realign and restructure my thinking is worth exploring further.
Some folks are content to use FB to share photos of their kids and occasional funny messages. Fine. But I found myself commenting on posts and sharing strong opinions–which are pretty much the only kind of opinions I have. There is a place for strong opinions, and I think that there are even some online fora that are appropriate for that.
But instead of sharing thoughts with the intention of seeing the best in “the other” and the genuine empathy that changes people’s minds, I tended to share my opinions in a way that signaled my allegiance to (or against) this or that group. This happened both in the comments on posts I agreed with (confirming my “cred” in my own small group) and in the comments on posts that I disagreed with (mostly just telling people they’re wrong in unhelpful ways, in public). How many times did anyone admit publicly on FB that my point was valid and that their opinion was wrong? I can only think of one instance. How many times did I admit when I was wrong? I can’t think of a single instance.
(Arnold Kling has explained this tendency very helpfully in his book, The Three Languages of Politics, which is a steal at $2 on Amazon.)
Facebook is not a medium for serious discussion, because it thrives on the instant, the feed, the fleeting, the self-promotion. Blogs can be used the same way, but they don’t have to be. I’ve likened FB to a giant warehouse with several hundred individuals, each standing on his/her podium, shouting whatever comes into his/her head, while folks meander through the rows, trying to discern something meaningful in the cacophony. The blogosphere, by contrast, tends to have fewer shouters, and–here’s the key difference–the speakers are often reading prepared statements in a measured tone.
The intentionality and delayed gratification of “posting” is the key. On FB, I would post meaningless (if sometimes funny) crap several times every day. Here on my blog, I only write every few days, once a week, once a month (during the lean years). Often, I draft a post, let it sit for a few days, edit it, and finally post it. Good writing is rewriting, as they say. I would imagine that my thoughts would be even more coherent and meaningful if I had to write them out by hand. But then they’d be difficult to disseminate. So, a blog will have to do for now.
The medium does shape the message. It doesn’t mean that this difficulty can’t be overcome; it just means it requires effort. This blog is worth the effort for me–and I hope for at least a handful of you out there. Thanks for reading, thinking, and conversing.
Think hard; but also, think well.
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Jaroslav Pelikan on Tradition and Traditionalism

Tradition is the living faith of the dead; traditionalism is the dead faith of the living. Tradition lives in conversation with the past, while remembering where we are and when we are and that it is we who have to decide. Traditionalism supposes that nothing should ever be done for the first time, so all that is needed to solve any problem is to arrive at the supposedly unanimous testimony of this homogenized tradition.

Jaroslav Pelikan, interview with U.S. News & World Report, July 26, 1989 (HT: Scott Horton).

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November Update: Greetings from Lithuania!

Dear Friends and Family:

Below you will find our monthly update for November. Happy Thanksgiving to our American friends! Be sure to write back and tell us how we can pray for you.

Giffone November 2014 Update

In Christ,

Benj and Corrie Giffone (for Daniel and Elizabeth)

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Best of 2013

I’m going through the thinkhardthinkwell archives and highlighting some of my favorite posts. 2013 was a lighter year for blogging, given that I finished my dissertation, Corrie gave birth to Elizabeth, and my father-in-law was diagnosed with cancer. But here are the Top 8 from 2013:

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What Was Chronicles for the NT Authors?

As I’ve finished off a couple of writing projects but am anticipating some big Spring-term items on the agenda, I’ve pulled out of my archives a study I started a couple of years ago on the uses of Chronicles in the New Testament. It’s mostly scattered thoughts and a spreadsheet of references, but I’m putting out here what I have so far, and where I think it might go from here.

I have not run across any broad studies of the overall usage of Chronicles in the NT. If you have any references to send me, they would be most welcome.

____

Background to the Research Question

What did the New Testament authors and the earliest Christians think of the book of Chronicles? How could we possibly know, and why should we care?

The earliest Christians understood themselves as the spiritual heirs to the faith of Abraham, Israel and Moses, as well as heirs to the Jewish scriptures. Ever since the “parting of the ways” between Judaism and Christianity, Christians have debated the proper role of the Jewish scriptures[1] in faith and practice. The New Testament authors’ handling of the Jewish scriptures, though it is by no means uniform, has usually served as a starting point for wrestling with the Old Testament’s meaning in the church. For Christians, then, understanding the New Testament authors’ views of Chronicles may be valuable for interpreting the book of Chronicles.

Chronicles is unique in the Hebrew Bible in that it is retelling of a grand narrative that exists entirely in other biblical texts: though it incorporates some materials that are not in the narrative of Genesis through Kings (and the beginning of Ezra), it spans the same period (Adam to exile to Cyrus). There are at least three ways of approaching Chronicles in this respect. One approach, reflected in the name given to Chronicles in the LXX (Τα Παραλειπόμενα), is to think of Chronicles as a source of data about the history of Israel that were “left out” of earlier books. Another approach is to consider Chronicles as part of the phenomenon of “rewritten Bible,” like Jewish expansions such as Jubilees.

From the standpoint of post-Enlightenment biblical criticism, the book of Chronicles has enjoyed something of a “Cinderella” story.[2] Whereas critical scholarship of the nineteenth century considered Chronicles to be a midrash on earlier traditions but of little value for reconstructing the history behind the biblical texts, the focus has shifted in the last half-century toward “the Chronicler’s own engagement with his sources and his contribution towards the socio-religious discourse in his own time, most probably towards the end of the Persian era.”[3] Thus, a third approach is to consider Chronicles in order to understand the Chronicler’s own context, rather than the events about which he wrote.

The New Testament authors’ uses of Chronicles may also give historical insight into the earliest Christians’ views of canon, text and scripture. If we can discern a pattern or patterns in the ways that Chronicles is used in the New Testament writings, this may help us explain how other scriptures are used in the New Testament, and why certain scriptures were not used at all.

The Question

We are starting with the premise that a significant goal of the NT is establishing the continuity of the church with Israel—specifically, Jesus and the church as the fulfillment of Israel’s story. Two questions present themselves before we consider Chronicles and the NT. First, what are the possible ways in which Chronicles could function canonically in relation to the NT? Second, how would we know or measure whether the NT authors are using Chronicles in these ways?

The first sort of NT usage of Chronicles would be the “paraleipomena usage”: as a source for narrative information not found in the Chronicler’s Deuteronomistic sources. We might discern “paraleipomena usage” if the NT writings exhibit reliance on the Chronicler’s Sondergut.

The second sort of NT usage of Chronicles would be as “rewritten scripture.” Some scholars suggest that when a narrative and a shorter retelling of that same narrative coexist in the Jewish scripture, the NT exhibits a preference for the latter—e.g., Deuteronomy over Exodus through Numbers. Chronicles does appear to be intended as a rewriting of Israel’s entire history, beginning with Adam and ending with the Chronicler’s own historical era: the Persian period. We might discern a “rewritten scripture usage” if there were a heavy reliance in the NT on the Chronicler’s reworking of his Vorlage.[4]

A third sort of NT usage of Chronicles would be more conceptual and difficult to prove. This could clumsily be termed a “biblical theological trajectory usage” of Chronicles, and could take two forms: Chronicles as a model for the church’s retelling of Israel’s story toward its own community; and Chronicles as the conclusion of a tripartite Hebrew canon.

In the first form of this usage, we might see—for example—similarities between the way in which the Chronicler uses genealogy (1 Chr 1-9) to replace seven-and-a-half books of the Enneateuch (Gen 1 through 1 Sam 30!), and the ways that Matthew and Luke establish Jesus’s Israelite identity using genealogy. The Chronicler uses preexilic, monarchic Israelite adherence to “the law” (including a perhaps recently-added Priestly component) as a map for community renewal in his own day; might not Matthew be recasting “the law” for his community in a similar twist? The speeches of Acts also concisely retell Israel’s story so as to establish continuity between Israel and the author’s community (the church).

The second form of the “biblical theological trajectory usage” of Chronicles would consider allusions to a tripartite Hebrew Bible as subtly highlighting Chronicles as the conclusion of the Writings collection. The LXX/Christian arrangement of the OT books certainly fits the Christian project well.[5] But Chronicles also provides a fitting conclusion to the OT for the purposes of Christian biblical theology, for a variety of reasons.[6]

This third sort of NT usage of Chronicles might be the most difficult to discern. We could discern a “biblical theological usage” if there were linguistic echoes of Chronicles in the writings of the NT that seem to have some conceptual affinities with Chronicles. Perhaps Richard B. Hays’s criteria for “echoes of scripture” will dictate the terms of this inquiry.

[1] I prefer the term “Jewish scriptures” over “Hebrew scriptures” so as not to prejudice the inquiry in favor of the MT and against the LXX.

[2] Louis C. Jonker, “Within Hearing Distance? Recent Developments in Pentateuch and Chronicles Research,” OTE 27(2014): 126.

[3] Jonker, “Within Hearing Distance,” 125.

[4] Textual criticism might be necessary to determine whether the NT is quoting Sam-Kgs vs Chr, and also to determine whether there is a true difference between Sam-Kgs and Chr (the MT of Samuel in particular is a mess, so we cannot always attribute differences between MT Sam and MT Chr to the Chronicler’s Tendenz).

[5] The Latter Prophets give way to the Gospels; Malachi 4:5-6 predicts the coming of Elijah, and John the Baptist comes on the scene in Mark 1:4 (cf. Mk 9:13).

[6] Chronicles retells the story of all that comes before it (Genesis to Ezra-Nehemiah), but ends expectantly, mid-sentence. It concludes with the words of Cyrus, whom Deutero-Isaiah calls “the anointed” (messiah) of YHWH (Isa 44:25-45:13).

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Gradual Makeover

If you are a regular at thinkhardthinkwell.com (love ya, Mom!), you may have noticed some changes in appearance over the last few weeks. I’ve been trying to make the site a more user-friendly vehicle for thoughtful content, which is what I always hoped it would be–though I also use it to post photos, links, and missions updates from time to time.

The first change: I’ve gone “all in” with WordPress and integrated the blog with the “www.thinkhardthinkwell.com” domain, which I already owned through 1and1. This was pretty easy to do, and now all my posts and uploads just have “thinkhardthinkwell.com/whatever,” rather than “thinkhardthinkwell.wordpress.com/whatever.”

(I’m not sure I ever explained the story behind the name of this blog. When I was a teenager, I attended a Christian philosophy/apologetics/theology/evangelism camp called Worldview Academy. I credit WVA with setting me on track to be a thoughtful Christian. If you have or are a teenager, I would recommend WVA summer camps–they are fun, even though they will try to convince you that “joy,” not “fun,” is the goal. Anyway, the slogan of Worldview Academy for a very long time was, “Think hard, think well.” As I check their website today, I see that they now use the slogan, “Find your reason.” Perhaps my reservation of the thinkhardthinkwell.com domain years ago led the slogan change. I like to think that this blog has had at least some impact on the world. Anyway…)

Another change is that I have begun to use the “excerpt” function on my posts to avoid cluttering up the front page. Previously, each blog entry displayed the entire post on the front page, so lengthy posts pushed older headlines out of sight. Now, you can see a dozen titles with a single flick of the scroll wheel. Hopefully, this will make it easier to review older posts.

In “excerpting” older posts, I’ve also made better use of the “Categories,” which are now prominently displayed on the top-right of the homepage. I know that some of you are more interested in my “Bible” stuff and less interested in my hobby, economics. Now you can quickly review the archives by category.

With these cosmetic changes, I’ve republished some older material, presenting my favorite posts from previous years. The top posts from 2008-2012 are highlighted, and 2013 is scheduled for this week. I hope some of the titles pique your curiosity. Feel free to comment, or shoot me an email if you want to chat about anything here.

A few years ago, a mentor gave me the following advice: “Don’t post anything online that you wouldn’t be able to explain in a job interview, in an ordination examination, or face-to-face with a person you’re writing about.” I haven’t always followed that advice on Facebook; but I recently got rid of my Facebook account permanently (maybe I’ll blog about that decision sometime!). I have to say that I stand by my record on thinkhardthinkwell: I don’t always agree with what I wrote years ago (or even months ago), but I’m proud of how I presented my opinions. It’s humbling to think that God has protected me thus far from saying something too stupid. (That’s what Twitter is for!)

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Best of 2012

I’m sifting through the thinkhardthinkwell archives and pulling out some of my favorite posts–simultaneously fun and horrifying. Here are the Top Ten from 2012, in (rough) chronological order. Enjoy!

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Best of 2011

I’m sifting through the thinkhardthinkwell archives and pulling out some of my favorite posts–simultaneously fun and horrifying. Here are the Top Twelve from 2011, in chronological order. Enjoy!

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