Keeping an Open Mind

Much is made in my culture about open-mindedness, especially with regard to biblical interpretation. The assumption is that every reader of Scripture should be equally open to other perspectives on this or that bit of exegesis, and to other theological and ideological perspectives.

I believe that willingness to listen to other perspectives is a virtue for both the scholar and the Christian. However, I wonder there should not be more talk (within my circles and without) of a willingness to reorder behavior, not simply thought, into conformity with Scripture. In my experience, people rarely read Scripture, interpret, and then live according to the principles they find; rather, we decide how we want to live, and then read and interpret Scripture in accordance with our desires. Yet if Scripture is communication from God, it must have authority over our thinking and our living.

I recognize that the devil is in the details of exegesis, hermeneutics, conceptualization and application. But surely reflection on Scripture should start from an attitude of trust and submission, not suspicion and rebellion. I have tremendous respect for interpreters with whom I disagree on interpretation but agree on these attitudes.

It’s not easy to walk the line between faith and criticism without falling into blind fideism on the one side or rebellion on the other. I appreciate the following example highlighted by Clay Croy in his book on NT Interpretation (N. Clayton Croy, Prima Scriptura: An Introduction to New Testament Interpretation, 2011):

François Bovon, professor at Harvard Divinity School, is the author of a commentary on the Gospel of Luke in the prestigious Hermeneia series. In the preface of his first volume, he writes: “I wish to examine [Luke’s] Gospel with the sober reserve of a scholar and with the confidence of a believer. For I hope in this manner to arrive at genuine understanding. I also realize that this becomes possible only if God leads me into his Word” (2002: xiii). In an online review of Bovon’s commentary, Joel Green remarks, “This is itself a startling declaration in the preface to a contribution to a series that characterizes itself as ‘critical and historical.’ Where one would have anticipated assertions of scientific objectivity and scholarly neutrality, Bovon lays claim to his theological commitments and ecclesial location—not as hindrances to but as partners in the interpretive enterprise” (Green, 2003).

Bovon thus provides a good example of a virtuous reader: honest, open, attentive, obedient, and pious. Biblical interpretation in confessional contexts presupposes that Scripture is inspired by the Holy Spirit, even if the precise nature and effects of inspiration are variously understood. It is appropriate then to appeal to that same Spirit for guidance and illumination when the Scriptures are read in communities of faith.

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Quo Vadimus?

As I begin to prepare for my first semester as a full-time university faculty member, I reflect on the challenges and rewards of “classroom teaching” at the college level. Random thoughts…

1. I must not imagine that my students will learn everything there is to know about the course subjects in a single semester. Rather than teaching, the goal is really to inspire in them the desire to learn, and to keep on learning.

2. As much as I would love to teach students that only desire learning for learning’s sake all the time, this is not realistic. I was an undergraduate not too long ago, and I liked to learn–but I had other pressures and responsibilities. The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak. One of my responsibilities as “instructor,” then, is to set up requirements, rewards and consequences in such a way as to keep them accountable, while not squelching their desire to learn.

3. I am intrigued by the “inquiry method” of pedagogy advocated by Postman and Weingartner in Teaching As a Subversive Activity. In this method, the teacher provides few or no “answers,” but rather stimulates discussion through questions. I have several doubts about the use of this method in my context. First, I am a biblical educator in a Christian context. To a certain extent all education subverts presuppositions, but I also wish to confirm and strengthen my students’ faith in the Bible. Questions and answers can result in stronger faith. Second, many of my students will have English as their second language and may not feel as comfortable in classroom discussion. Third, if the students are not accustomed to an inquiry method, they may be like the fourth son in the Passover Seder, the “son who does not even know how to ask a question.” I will need to work on modeling this for them, and not just giving them answers. Fourth, I am interested to see what discussion looks like in a classroom with students of different confessional/theological backgrounds, and different levels of training/understanding in the material.

4. I believe that feedback is the key service I provide as the professor that cannot be provided by other sorts of “content delivery” (videos, readings, lectures). My responses to their questions and comments, and especially to their written assignments, will shape their further inquiries beyond class. Frankly, I’m tempted to not assign tons of writing, because I’m a young professor with a 4-year-old and a 1-year-old, living abroad for the first time, with my own research and class prep to do. But if my responsibility is to the students, I will need to focus on providing meaningful feedback–that’s probably more important than anything I “preach” at them in class.

5. Teaching literature is fundamentally different from teaching language. Language is a skill to be mastered; literature is a realm to be explored.

Posted in Culture-Economics-Society, Research | 1 Comment

The Legacy of Benjamin in Judah’s Bible

A lecture is now posted at “Out of Exile”: “The Legacy of Benjamin in Judah’s Bible.” Presented in the Stellenbosch Faculty of Theology OT Seminar, April 23, 2014, this lecture summarizes some of the findings from my doctoral dissertation, “Sit at My Right Hand: The Chronicler’s Portrait of the Tribe of Benjamin in the Social Context of Yehud.”

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June Update

Hello Friends,

We are down to our last two months before our move and plans continue to unfold. We are so grateful for the prayers and encouragement we receive from so many of you, and want to keep you current on how things are going.
1. We moved! We now live with Corrie’s parents in Perkasie while we finish cleaning out our Lansdale apartment. Benj figured out a way to store our tempurpedic mattress across the top of four shelving units in the basement. All of our possessions are now in one bedroom and one section of the basement. We miss our home, but we look forward to the extra time with Grammy and Poppop. Daniel talks sometimes about things he misses from home and about things he will miss when we move to Lithuania.

Please pray for time and energy as we finish getting rid of stuff. Pray for our children (and their parents!) through many transitions.

2. Visas- after moving, we drove to NJ/NYC for a packed weekend. Benj preached at Preakness Valley United Reformed Church on Sunday night. We spent two nights with Benj’s father. On Monday, we drove to the Lithuanian Consulate in NYC to apply for visas. Praise God that all of the paperwork came together as we were still collecting forms and documents up to the last minute. We also got to visit Benj’s grandfather who lives in the city, and Benj got to attend a hockey game with him.
3. Goodbyes and happy endings- over the last few weeks Corrie has finished teaching piano lessons and enjoyed end-of-the-year recitals. This weekend, Benj finishes his role as worship leader, and also teaching Sunday School at our church. We are grateful for the opportunities we have had for work and ministry.
Please pray for good transitions.
4. Support- we praise God that we have reached 62% of our goal for the first year, and we are trusting God will provide the remainder. We see each gift as an affirmation of our calling, and as a humbling reminder of friends who love us and believe in us.

Please pray that we receive the financial support we need.

Your prayers and encouragement as supporters means so much to us and keeps us going. We thank you again for your part in our journey.

Love,
The Giffones

IMG_20140609_171516 IMG_20140609_220408 2014-06-09 14.21.50
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When YHWH Becomes an Enemy

Things have been quite busy recently, as Corrie and I raise support and prepare to move to Lithuania. Recently, some of my thoughts on Lamentations–my research area from about three years ago–have surfaced again in the wake of several public tragedies and world events. I’m therefore posting a paper that I presented at Reformed Episcopal Seminary a couple of years ago. It’s a plea to the church to rediscover lament and not to smooth over the rough parts of Scripture.

______

Introduction

Why study Lamentations? That question arises whenever I have the chance to teach Lamentations, whether in a church context or in my academic work. When I tell folks at church that I write on Lamentations, they say, “Oh”—and then move on to some other topic. They don’t say it, but I know they’re thinking: “Why in the world would you study such a depressing book?” When I discuss Lamentations in academic contexts, I get the sense that many of my colleagues believe that the only reason to write on Lamentations would be to pad your résumé.

But for students and scholars who embrace the Bible as the Word of God that has authority in our lives, Lamentations poses several problems. This book is certainly not as well-known or beloved in the church as are the Psalter, Isaiah, the Gospels, and the Epistles. The most familiar verses of Lamentations are primarily known through the words of the hymn, “Great is Thy Faithfulness”—yet this hymn betrays little of the rest of the book, which contains some of the most shocking and difficult material in all of scripture. Pastorally, it is difficult to see how dwelling on such human suffering and emotion can contribute to the spiritual health of an individual or a congregation.

I have three goals in this presentation. First, I’m going to demonstrate to you that the difficulties that the book of Lamentations presents to a high view of scripture are, in fact, significant. Second, I’m going to offer some ways that I believe those difficulties can be addressed, and that our high view of scripture can be even stronger through engagement with those difficulties. Finally, I think that the process of working through these difficulties will recommend Lamentations to you as pastors, church leaders, and students of scripture. We’ll consider three key implications of the book of Lamentations for theological understanding, apologetic endeavors, and pastoral care. My hope is that you will gain a greater appreciation for this book and all that God has to teach us through it.

Initial Thoughts

One way to think about the meaning and purpose of a biblical book is to ask, “What would be missing in God’s revelation if this book were not part of Holy Scripture?” I hope we’ll find something of an answer to this question by the end, but initially, let’s turn the question on its head, and ask: what aspects of Lamentations make the book appear—at least, in our human estimation—to be an unlikely choice for inclusion in the Old Testament canon?

First of all, no author of the book is named, and—unlike the Psalter, Proverbs, Song of Songs and Ecclesiastes—no prophetic figure is linked with the book until long after its recognition as part of the canon. Lamentations came to be associated with Jeremiah only because Jeremiah is considered “the weeping prophet”—but no textual or historical evidence indicates that Jeremiah was the author.

Second, Lamentations is a book that describes a particular moment in Israel’s history that was eventually reversed. The destruction of the first temple in 587 BC is the catastrophic inspiration for Lamentations’ five poems, but we know that Judah’s captivity ended in 539 with Cyrus’ decree, and that the second temple was built between 515 and 500. So, why would a set of shocking laments over catastrophe have been preserved and revered after the tragedy had been in large measure reversed?

Third, four of the five poems in Lamentations are alphabetic acrostics—that is, each verse or poetic phrase begins with a successive letter of the Hebrew alphabet. There are eight psalms that follow this pattern, as does the poem of “The Excellent Woman” in Proverbs 31. Lamentations 3 is a triple-acrostic: three aleph lines, followed by three bet lines, etc. This acrostic form fundamentally connotes completeness or wholeness.[1] But to the modern reader, the use of such a contrived artificial form in sacred poetry about suffering and death seems somewhat sacrilegious.

And finally, Lamentations contains some material that is not easy to reconcile theologically with other books in the Hebrew Bible. We will explore this further in a moment. But my point is that these four factors—the lack of connection to a known prophet, the time-bound nature of the events described, the acrostic form, and the apparent theological difficulties—make the book an unlikely candidate for inclusion in the Bible. I think this means that God, in his sovereignty, had very important reasons for including the book in scripture—reasons which we’ll explore today.

Proposition 1

What might be some of those ideas that make Lamentations difficult to reconcile theologically with other parts of scripture? My first proposition is that Lamentations is not primarily a book of confession, but a protest against the perceived injustice of God. In considering this notion, we will look briefly at a few secondary texts, and then make some observations about the book itself.

Tod Linafelt titled one of his books Surviving Lamentations[2]because many interpretive approaches to the book have struggled to endure the weight of suffering and horror. Yet that process of enduring the horror is itself part of the intended effect of the book. Linafelt writes that Lamentations—chapters 1 and 2 in particular—“is more about the expression of suffering than the meaning behind it, more about the vicissitudes of survival than the abstractions of sin and guilt, and more about protest as a religious posture than capitulation or confession.”[3]

Linafelt feels that too much emphasis in Lamentations studies has been placed on Lamentations 3 and on the singular, masculine “[strong]man who has seen affliction,” and not enough on the Daughter of Zion in Lamentations 1-2. Linafelt also argues that readings of Lamentations that portray suffering merely as punishment for sin are insufficient, given the book’s emphasis on the suffering of innocents.

Kathleen O’Connor has written what I feel to be the best commentary on Lamentations from an exegetical and applicational standpoint. In Lamentations and the Tears of the World, O’Connor recommends Lamentations as an instrument of personal and communal healing. Lamentations’ “theology of witnessing” is for her a theological antidote to blind praise amid suffering, as well as a way of validating pain and protesting suffering in the world. One of the strengths of O’Connor’s work is her recognition of poetic form and its relevance to interpretation. The use of acrostic form, multiple perspectives/voices, the personification of Jerusalem as a woman—these are all tools used deliberately and sharply by the poet(s) to communicate pain and protest with cool, horrific calculation rather than dismissible hysteria.

O’Connor astutely notes the lack of resolution in Lamentations. Chapter 4 is an abbreviated acrostic that communicates the catastrophe that befell Jerusalem with more urgency and shock-value than the first three chapters, which are longer. Chapter 5 is even further abbreviated, and breaks with the acrostic form. Lamentations concludes without hope—hope that is present in Lamentations 3 but that the book cannot sustain. “To [sustain that hope] would be to lie, to cover over, to deny the reality of the survivor’s longing for God’s missing voice.”[4]

O’Connor also addresses the silence of God in Lamentations. If a hypothetical “Lamentations 6” had been composed with an answer, “no matter what God said, Lamentations would come to premature resolution, and the book’s capacity to house sorrow would dissipate.”[5] Lamentations in this way “honors truth-telling and denies ‘denial’”[6]—denial that most of the world lives in relative poverty and insecurity, denial of family tragedies, and denial of pain. Lamentations mirrors human sorrow and permits it to stand unmitigated and unanswered—“It calls us to see.”[7]

These scholars and many others argue—and this will be a theme in our discussion today—that Lamentations is focused on the fact of suffering rather than on any satisfying explanation of that suffering. This is not to say that no explanation is possible, but that that explanation is found elsewhere in scripture. That a book of scripture is devoted exclusively to the fact of suffering is theologically significant.

The scholars that I have cited thus far are critical scholars who would not be considered “evangelical” in any sense. Frankly, evangelicals have not, in my estimation, placed enough emphasis on Lamentations’ message of protest.[8] Part of this has to do with the structure of many commentary series, which functionally treat Lamentations as a shorter supplement to some of the lament sections of Jeremiah, rather than as a literary work in its own right.[9] But I think the deeper reason is that many evangelicals don’t really know what to do with a difficult text like Lamentations, which, like some of the psalms of lament and imprecation does not provide a satisfying theological resolution.

Herein lies the problem with most Lamentations scholarship: many critical scholars have good readings of Lamentations, but in service of unorthodox theology. Evangelical scholars, on the other hand, have good theology, but often they import their valid theological conclusions into a book that, on its face, resists theological conclusions. In other words, they have the right message, but the wrong text.

Postmodern scholars have paid quite a bit of helpful attention to Lamentations in the last fifty years, especially in light of the Holocaust. I argue that we can appropriate some of these literary insights in the service of interpretation, and bring the theological insights about lamentation and protest generally into a coherent biblical theology.

Here’s my attempt at an analogy. Imagine you’re at a restaurant, and the waiter brings you a blob of ketchup on a plate—and, that’s it. The ketchup represents the message of Lamentations: strong and unpalatable by itself. Critical scholars say, “This meal is terrible—what an awful restaurant!” Evangelicals say, “No, no, the restaurant is fine—let’s just try to make a ketchup that tastes like a burger, French fries and ketchup all mashed into one!” What I’m saying is, let’s keep the ketchup—and order a burger and fries to go with it. We don’t need to reject orthodoxy because of Lamentations’ difficult message, as critical scholars do—nor do we need to “mix in” some orthodoxy like evangelicals unfortunately try to do. Rather, we need to let Lamentations’ “strong taste” be part of a complete, balanced theology.

But it’s important to note that postmodern interpreters are by no means the first to be uncomfortable with Lamentations’ message of protest. Christian Brady (incidentally, an evangelical Anglican who teaches at Penn State) shows that the rabbinic interpreters perceived the book as possibly too rebellious, too vindictive towards God. The Rabbis therefore sought to “vindicate God” by smoothing over the sharp protest into a confession of sin and imprecation against the Jews’ enemies.[10]

Having considered some of the secondary literature, the question remains: does the text of Lamentations itself reflect this stance of protest? Let’s take a look at the book itself. We’re going to focus primarily on chapters 1-2 in this brief examination.

First, let’s consider whom the text blames for the troubles of Judah. Lamentations 1:5 and 1:8 place the blame on the nation of Judah for its many sins. Elsewhere—for example, 1:10—the poets blame Judah’s enemies, the Babylonians who invaded. The last verses of chapter 4 even blame Judah’s cousins, the Edomites, who supported the Babylonian invasion rather than lending aid to their distant relatives.

But most often, Lamentations places the blame squarely on YHWH’s shoulders. For example, let’s look at chapter 2, starting in verse 1:

“How the Lord in his anger has set the daughter of Zion under a cloud! He has cast down from heaven to earth the splendor of Israel; he has not remembered his footstool in the day of his anger. The Lord has swallowed up without mercy all the habitations of Jacob; in his wrath he has broken down the strongholds of the daughter of Judah; he has brought down to the ground in dishonor the kingdom and its rulers.”

If you continue reading through verse 8, you’ll see that YHWH’s barrage against his people seems to have no end. Even while acknowledging Israel’s sin, the poet asks whether YHWH has gone too far. In 2:20 he says: “Look, YHWH, and see! With whom have you dealt thus? Should women eat the fruit of their womb, the children of their tender care? Should priest and prophet be killed in the sanctuary of the Lord?” At the heart of Lamentations is this question of God’s justice in allowing (and even causing) human suffering. Perhaps the leadership of Israel, or even the entire adult population could be held responsible—but the children? Are they to blame? Do they deserve to starve or be slaughtered?

Let’s now integrate the strange acrostic form of the poetry and see how it contributes to the book’s meaning. Each of the 22 verses in chapter one consists of three poetic lines, making a total of 66 poetic lines. Each of the 22 verses begins with a successive letter of the Hebrew alphabet—the first line of three in each verse.

Next, you’ll notice that verses 1 to 11 have few phrases in quotation marks; these verses are mostly spoken by an omniscient, third-person poetic voice, whereas verses 12 through 22 are mostly in quotation marks, indicating a separate, in this case feminine, voice. This female voice is the Daughter of Zion, the city of Jerusalem personified as widow weeping over her children.

Again: remember that there are 22 verses, 66 phrases. The most logical place to divide such a balanced and neatly structured poem would seem to be right down the middle, between verses 11 and 12. This would produce 11 verses and 33 phrases in each half. What the poet in fact does with these two poetic voices is quite close to an even division. However, you’ll notice that Daughter Zion chimes in twice in the first half of the poem: once in the third phrase of verse 9 (“Look, YHWH, on my affliction, for the enemy has triumphed”) and once in the third phrase of verse 11 (again, “Look, YHWH, and consider, for I am despised”). If we were to picture this poem as a performance in a courtroom, and the poet were a prosecutor, bringing charges against YHWH, it’s as if Daughter Zion as the victim can’t contain herself; she bursts out before “her turn” to speak. Does that sort of make sense?

Here’s another way of thinking about it. Three times in Lamentations 1, Daughter Zion says bitterly, “Look, YHWH.” Repetition focuses our attention on something that’s important. The word for “look” in Hebrew—רְאֵה—begins with the twentieth letter of the alphabet. If you were to read this poem with the acrostic in mind, you would expect this phrase to occur at the beginning of verse 20, which it does. But the fact that Daughter Zion bursts out twice before verse 20—רְאֵה in verse 9 and רְאֵה וְהַבִּיטָה in verse 11—these outbursts show us her emotion, the depth of her anguish and protest as a weeping mother.

This is one example of the way in which the strange form of the poetry acts like a skeletal structure to focus our attention on things we might not notice apart from that structure. In this case, the acrostic form draws attention to the emotion behind the measured, structured poetry—anguish and turmoil hidden behind a thin veil of composure.

Proposition 2

I am arguing that protest runs through Lamentations as the dominant posture. You may begin to perceive the difficulty that Lamentations poses for a doctrine of scripture that takes the Bible seriously as authoritative revelation from God. These poems are simultaneously the word of humanity in protest against God and the authoritative Word of God revealed to human beings. Do you see the problem? How does this complaint against the Word of God (that is, the decree that Israel be punished) actually function itself as the Word of God?

As I mentioned before, modern interpreters are not the first to see these problems with Lamentations. Let’s consider several possible ways of explaining this apparent contradiction in scripture’s witness.[11]

One approach has been to soften or ignore the protest of Lamentations. As I mentioned previously, rabbinic interpretation of Lamentations attempted to “clarify” that YHWH was quite righteous in punishing Israel for her sins. Many Christian interpreters likewise don’t take the protest of Lamentations seriously, instead choosing to focus on four verses in the middle of Lamentations 3: the “Great is Thy faithfulness” passage.

Second, Lamentations has been understood as prefigurative of the sufferings of Christ at his crucifixion. This is especially true of Lamentations 3, in which a geber (“strong man”) suffers as a representative of his people. This is a valid christological reading of Lamentations 3 especially, but poses some difficulties in the other chapters.

Third, Lamentations may express the poets’ personal and private sentiments, which are not sanctioned by God, but are to be excused because of the state of crisis. Certainly these scriptures contain fervent emotion. But it would be difficult to understand why God would choose to include Lamentations, if the emotions were completely unsanctioned and inappropriate. Plus, scripture contains no explicit statement that, “These poems aren’t to be taken seriously.”

Fourth, the protests of Lamentations could express resistance of God’s chastening for sin, which reflects Israel’s hardened rebellion that led to the exile and their ultimate rejection as God’s particular people. Essentially, then, any protest in Lamentations would be considered sinful. And again, it is difficult to understand why God would allow so much sinful protest to stand in scripture unexplained and uncontraverted.

Fifth, these protests could be understood as poetic exaggerations of both the destruction of Jerusalem and of God’s responsibility for it. There may in fact be some exaggeration of the extent of the destruction of Jerusalem and its environs—but certainly many people died and suffered a great deal, even if some of the specifics are expanded for poetic effect. Once you “dial back” the suffering somewhat to account for hyperbole, you are still left with the problem of suffering and protest against God, which still needs to be explained.

A final explanation is that Lamentations expresses a righteous protest, with the goal of convincing God to intervene on Israel’s behalf and to exact his justice upon her enemies. Lamentations, in this view, does not reflect rebellion against God but a plea that he would resume his covenant promises to Israel. This, I think, is the interpretive approach that does justice to the depth of the emotion expressed in the book but also allows us to integrate its message into the consistent message of scripture as a whole.

Proposition 3

This leads us to my third proposition: Lamentations accentuates a key point of tension in the Old Testament: God’s justice in punishing sin, and his faithfulness to his covenant. This is a tension that we see throughout the Old Testament, that ultimately finds its resolution in the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.

In his Theology of the Old Testament,[12] Walter Brueggemann presents this tension in terms of Israel’s different testimonies concerning the reality of the world and YHWH’s rule in it. For Brueggemann, Israel’s testimony can be categorized into three streams: core testimony, countertestimony, and unsolicited testimony. These three divergent but complementary streams together form Israel’s proclamation of the testified version of reality: “Yahweh-dominated truth and Yahweh-governed reality.”[13] Let’s take a moment to consider in particular these ideas of core testimony and countertestimony.

The core testimony consists of the Bible’s descriptions, metaphors and record of actions that reveal YHWH’s character. This core testimony reveals YHWH’s purposes for the world, and his sovereign power to accomplish his purposes through Israel, for Israel’s own good and for the good of the world.[14]

Brueggemann defines Israel’s “countertestimony” as a necessary cross-examination of Israel’s testimony to YHWH’s mighty acts.[15] Cross-examination is not intended to undermine the core testimony but to strengthen it and to mobilize YHWH to act in accordance with the core testimony to his character.[16]

In Lamentations, we find perhaps the best example of countertestimony in the Old Testament. In Lamentations, Israel does not deny its sin, but points out to YHWH that he has made covenant promises to his people—to dwell in their midst within his temple, to bless them in the land, and to protect them with his royal and priestly representatives. These promises, Israel contends, have been broken—but YHWH is powerful enough to save and to restore his reputation. Consider the concluding verses of Lamentations:

But you, YHWH, reign forever; your throne endures to all generations.

Why do you forget us forever, why do you forsake us for so many days?

Restore us to yourself, YHWH, that we may be restored! Renew our days as of old—

unless you have utterly rejected us, and you remain exceedingly angry with us.

Answers

Now, let me bring back together a few of the strands we’ve been unraveling here.

I’ve contended that Lamentations consists primarily of protest against the suffering that YHWH perpetrated upon his people, and that this protest is difficult to reconcile with other testimony in the Old Testament concerning YHWH’s character as a faithful God who keeps his covenant. I’ve argued that this difficulty is not something that we as Christians committed to the authority of Scripture should be afraid of, but that we should embrace this “countertestimony” and the implicit tension with other teaching in the Old Testament.

I believe that we can embrace this tension for two reasons: because it finds its culmination and resolution in the work of Jesus Christ, and because it mirrors the tension that we find in the Christian life between Christ’s resurrection and ours.

The death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, I would argue, proves that Israel’s protest against God in Lamentations was successful. Israel, wallowing in the consequences of her sin, appealed to God’s covenant. In his faithfulness, God provided a means by which his justice could be satisfied—his wrath against sin, poured out upon Jesus as he hung on the cross—and by which God could once again dwell among his people—except this time, his presence was mediated through a better priest, a greater king, a surer covenant.

In the Lord’s Prayer, we pray: “Your kingdom come, Your will be done on earth as it is in heaven.” In this prayer, we acknowledge God’s sovereignty, but also point out to him that his world is not as it should be based on his own precepts and his own revealed will. Lamentations, like the psalms of lament and the cries of the prophets, constitutes a divinely-sanctioned (even divinely-commanded) protest against God, continually calling upon him to keep his promises.

The subtitle for this presentation is, “a canonical reading of Lamentations.” By reading Lamentations in the context of God’s unified revelation, we can see both the sharp, unmitigated protest against God’s tolerance of human suffering, and God’s plan to redeem the world in Jesus Christ. I think that both are necessary in our gospel witness in the church and to the world.

Implications

So now, in conclusion, let me offer three areas in which Lamentations should affect our ministry to our churches and to the world. There are so many other aspects of Lamentations that I wish we had time to explore: its similarities to the city laments of ancient Sumeria; its intertextual relationship to Deuteronomy 28 and Isaiah 49-54; its use in Jewish and Christian liturgy throughout the centuries. But I hope today will be the beginning of your exploration of Lamentations rather than the end.

At the beginning we asked: what would be missing from God’s revelation if Lamentations were not in the Bible? We have seen that Lamentations contributes one facet of scripture’s unified witness to God’s holiness: his judgment upon sin, and also his impeccable faithfulness to his promises. The countertestimony challenges and strengthens the core testimony; both are validated at the cross of Christ.

Lamentations has the potential to deepen our liturgy and personal piety. In an article entitled, “The Costly Loss of Lament,” Brueggemann exposes the deficiencies that result in the life of the church when laments are marginalized in liturgy and interpretation.[17] He argues that laments provide a sense of genuine covenantal interaction between God and human beings: “Where lament is absent, covenant comes into being only as a celebration of joy and well-being….The greater party (God) is surrounded by subjects who are always ‘yes-men and -women’ from whom ‘never is heard a discouraging word.’”[18] He wonders: what kind of relationship would we have with God if we could never bring to Him our complaints, our anger, and our pain?

I think that those of you who stand in a liturgical tradition have an advantage over the rest of us in this regard, since laments are part of the historic liturgy. Brueggemann notes that the Christian liturgy retains this tension between praise and lament, in, for example, the commemoration of Holy Week: even though “Sunday resolves Friday, the core testimony resolves the countertestimony,”[19] both sorts of prayers “linger” alongside one another in the prayer book.

Suffering people in our churches often struggle with the feeling that no one sees, no one understands their pain. In a Western culture that tries to cover, ignore or drown out pain, Lamentations is a breath of fresh air and cool honesty.[20] Daughter Zion asks in Lamentations 1:12, “Look and see if there is any sorrow like my sorrow, which was brought upon me.” To those who are in pain, Lamentations says: God sees. To us who minister, Lamentations commands us to look and see, to acknowledge suffering and brokenness, not to pretend that we can fix what only God can fix.

Finally, Lamentations can be a powerful apologetic tool against the argument that the Bible has no answer to the problem of evil. At the heart of the problem of evil is the tension between human responsibility and God’s sovereignty: the Bible affirms both. The atheist argues: how could a good God foreordain evil, or create human beings with the capability of choosing evil?

The atheist’s attack self-deconstructs, since an atheist has no basis for a definition of evil. But the problem remains for Christians who believe what the Bible says: that God is good, and just, and merciful, and sovereign—and also allows evil to exist.

Lamentations is God’s statement that he sees, that he knows and understands. The book points us toward an answer to the problem of evil: even if I cannot explain suffering, I trust that God can. We can trust that He has experienced the worst of human torture—“coming in the likeness of men…and humbling himself to the point of death—the death of the cross.” Rather than destroying our pain, scripture says that “our griefs He Himself bore.” What other religion has such a story, in which the Creator enters his creation to save it, the playwright joins the cast, the potter becomes the clay?

God’s justice, and His faithfulness to His promises, and His love, and His sovereignty, are all proven at the cross.

__________

[1] Benjamin D. Giffone, “A ‘Perfect’ Poem: The Use of the QATAL Verbal Form in the Biblical Acrostics,” Hebrew Studies 51 (2010): 49-72.

[2] Tod Linafelt, Surviving Lamentations: Catastrophe, Lament, and Protest in the Afterlife of a Biblical Book (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000).

[3] Ibid., 4 (emphasis original).

[4] Kathleen O’Connor, Lamentations and the Tears of the World (Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis, 2002), 79.

[5] Ibid., 85.

[6] Ibid., 86.

[7] Ibid., 94-95.

[8] Quality evangelical treatments include: J. Andrew Dearman, Jeremiah/Lamentations (NIV Application Commentary; Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2002; Tremper Longman III, Jeremiah, Lamentations (NIBC; Peabody, Mass.: Hendrickson Publishers, 2008); Iain W. Provan, Lamentations (New Century Bible Commentary; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1991).

[9] See, for example, Philip G. Ryken, Jeremiah and Lamentations (Wheaton, Ill.: Crossway, 2001).

[10] Christian M.M. Brady, The Rabbinic Targum of Lamentations: Vindicating God (Boston: Brill, 2003).

[11] I’d like to acknowledge my debt to Professor Brian Toews, one of my mentors, for his teaching on the imprecatory (or hateful) psalms. There are quite a few similarities between the imprecations and the laments in the Old Testament and the ways in which these two genres have been interpreted in the church historically, since they both express extreme dissatisfaction with God and his world. I have adapted some of Brian’s ideas and applied them to the psalms of lament and Lamentations; see Brian G. Toews, “Imprecatory Psalms, Jesus, and Our Enemies,” presentation to the Student Theological Society at Cairn University, March 8, 2006.

[12] Walter Brueggemann, Theology of the Old Testament: Testimony, Dispute, Advocacy (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2005).

[13] Ibid., xvii.

[14] Ibid., 306.

[15] Ibid., 317.

[16] Ibid., 321.

[17] Walter Brueggemann, “The Costly Loss of Lament,” JSOT 36 (1986): 57-71.

[18] Ibid., 60.

[19] Brueggemann, Theology of the Old Testament, 401.

[20] O’Connor, Lamentations and the Tears of the World, 3.

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May Update

Dear Friends and Family:

We are entering the home stretch—or perhaps more appropriately, the “away” stretch—of our journey to LCC International University in Klaipėda, Lithuania. This update will be more concise, but we have many important moments and decisions coming up in the next few weeks for which we covet your prayers.

MOVING

Our tentative date to shift our “home base” from our Lansdale apartment to Corrie’s parents’ home in Perkasie is June 7. That gives us less than three weeks to make many of our packing decisions, which is stressful. We have been in contact with several families who recently moved to LCC, and they have counseled us to take as little as possible this time around because of the size of our on-campus apartment. If we need more space or more things, we can reassess our housing situation and our things when we come back to the States next May.

We will be getting rid of most of our furniture. Please pray that everything will sell quickly. If you live close and would like to come by for a look at anything (bookshelves, bedroom set, kitchen table and chairs, dressers, ottoman, and more), please let us know!

Our flights from Newark to Klaipėda via Copenhagen are booked: August 11-12. Shipping our items by boat takes 6-7 weeks, so we hope to send much of our luggage ahead of us in early July.

MINISTRY

Corrie’s teaching and ministry responsibilities are finishing up, one by one. My responsibilities at Lansdale Presbyterian Church conclude on June 15. In the meantime, I’m scrambling to leave the administrative details of the music ministry in reasonably good shape for my successor. Pray that God would provide the right person to lead LPC’s music ministry permanently.

Pray for me as I preach one more time at Preakness Valley United Reformed Church in Wayne, NJ, on June 8.

Please also pray for me as I begin gradually to take up the administrative and teaching responsibilities of a full-time faculty member. I have three classes to prepare, as well as constant dialogue with the other faculty about curricula and departmental tasks. I hope to be able to devote more time to these tasks once our move from Lansdale to Perkasie is complete and my LPC responsibilities have concluded.

SUPPORT

Our support for Year One at LCC (one-time gifts and regular supporters) stands at 41%. It is humbling and encouraging to see how God provides through His people.

A couple of weeks ago, just after we booked our flight to Klaipėda, I dreamed that—suddenly, it was August, and we were still only 20% funded. I woke up in a cold sweat, and settled back into a fitful sleep, wondering how I would come up with all this money. Later that morning, we received an email from a couple, pledging support that amounted to roughly 11% of our total first-year need! I was humbled, encouraged, and ashamed that I had usurped (in my mind, anyway) sovereignty over this mission.

Please pray that our financial support would continue to grow. We have meetings coming up with several missions committees at local churches. At one such meeting this week, dear brothers and sisters in Christ whom we had never met previously gave us a generous gift and committed to pray for us. God continues to flabbergast us with His provision.

______________

Thank you all for your prayers and support. Stay tuned for further updates; be sure to follow us on the web and join (and share) our Facebook group. To receive monthly updates about happenings at LCC, you may wish to sign up for the university’s newsletter, Transformations.

In Christ,

Benj Giffone (for Corrie, Daniel and Elizabeth)

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Academics as Global Missions

Last year in the Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society, Keith Campell issued a challenge to the North American evangelical academy (see “The American Evangelical Academy and the World: A Challenge to Practice More Globally,” in PDF below). If we really care about global missions and believe in the power of biblical education to transform lives, he argues, why don’t we make it easier for those who wish to teach at academic institutions overseas (Christian and secular) to do so?

Campbell wants seminaries and denominations to develop more of a global mindset and begin training their talented pupils with overseas teaching in mind. Given the excessive supply and waning demand for biblical educators in North America (a trend I’ve highlighed here, with links), these institutions should be thinking globally:

To meet this global need, I suggest that those entering (and some who are already in) American evangelical scholarship reassess their vocational goals. As implied above, the traditional vocational track for most aspiring American scholars is Bachelors—Masters—Ph.D.—teaching position in the U.S. A more theologically consistent vocational track, based on the missional heartbeat of Jesus in the Great Commission and based on the global need just discussed, is Bachelors—Masters—Ph.D.—teaching position in a strategically global location. Theologians have long argued for believers to practice their vocations missionally. Those who serve in the disciplines of evangelical academic life, wherein a thorough understanding of biblical missions is assumed, should be first to practice their disciplines globally. (342)

Obviously, going overseas doesn’t happen overnight. It can take years of training, support-raising, and lifestyle adjustments:

More practically…in order to practice their disciplines more globally budding evangelical scholars should plan early by structuring their lives and education towards these ends. Moving and living abroad rarely occurs quickly, easily, or without significant sacrifice; often, mountains of obstacles stand in the path. To navigate this terrain as efficiently as possible we should plan our savings, property ownership, marriage relationships, and debt wisely within a long-term agenda of serving globally….In essence, up and coming scholars who want to contribute to the world’s broader academic communities will be wise to plan earlier rather than later. (349-350)

Financially, Corrie and I have worked diligently over the last eight years (since college) to remove as many obstacles as possible to whatever calling God might have for us.

  • We have also been blessed by gifts and support from family, and with good health. Corrie’s parents committed to paying for her university studies, but Corrie worked very hard to earn substantial scholarships. Her parents have provided innumerable gifts that have benefited us financially: letting us live with them for several months; watching the kids while Corrie teaches lessons; letting us do laundry for free; letting us piggy-back on their cell-phone plan so that our bill is only $30/month; letting us use a spare car; and too many more to list.
  • In decades past, missions organizations would not consider candidates who had any debt, even student debt. Today, most organizations recognize that student debt (unfortunately) accompanies nearly all sorts of academic preparation for ministry. Currently, we have no debt except for $9,000 remaining on seminary loans. We have never paid interest on a credit card bill or a car purchase.
  • We paid for my graduate studies at Stellenbosch–MTh, PhD, four trips to South Africa, including one vacation for just the two of us after my master’s defense–out of pocket (or with credit-card points!).
  • We have never had cable/satellite TV–not only to save money, but also because I would not have finished my thesis and dissertation with sports perpetually available on TV!
  • We don’t own a house. Renting has prevented us from worrying about repairs and other homeowner’s expenses.
  • I have diligently (though sometimes ruefully) resold books that I used in seminary and graduate school, keeping our expenses down and my library relatively small and portable. Living within driving distance of Westminster and Princeton Seminaries has helped with this tremendously.
  • My job in pharma has a generous benefits package that has allowed us to build up retirement savings that are quite decent for a thirty-year-old couple. Family members have contributed very generously to our children’s college savings. So, we can afford to a couple of years without contributing to these important savings plans.

We are grateful to God for His many financial blessings. We feel that it is important for those who sacrifice to support us financially to see that we ourselves have been financially responsible and made sacrifices. We celebrate our “portability” that has allowed us to consider this transition in a relatively short period of time.

We also feel that teaching at LCC is a good “investment” in God’s Kingdom for us and for our supporters. LCC is providing housing and a few other expenses, so our portion is only 60%. LCC is an established ministry, which provides a great deal of continuity–if something were to happen to us, or if our finances collapsed and we had to come home after one or two years, the ministry would go on, and our contribution would “count.”

As many challenges as there are to packing up and moving to a small apartment in Eastern Europe, I compare our situation to those of my friends and acquaintances, and I ask, “If not us, than who?”

Thank you for your prayers and support. Campbell concludes his article:

In paying the price to leave the crowded corridors of evangelical scholarship in the U.S., I think that scholars will satisfyingly resonate with a quote traditionally attributed to John Keith Falconer, nineteenth-century missionary to Yemen: ‘I have but one candle of life to burn, and I would rather burn it out in a land of darkness than in one flooded with lights.’ (353)

Article: D. Keith Campbell, “The American Evangelical Academy and the World: A Challenge to Practice More Globally,” JETS 56 (2013): 337-353.

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“Captives of a Scientific-Technological Elite”

A lesser-known section from President Eisenhower’s farewell address (January 17, 1961):

Akin to, and largely responsible for the sweeping changes in our industrial-military posture, has been the technological revolution during recent decades.
In this revolution, research has become central, it also becomes more formalized, complex, and costly. A steadily increasing share is conducted for, by, or at the direction of, the Federal government.

Today, the solitary inventor, tinkering in his shop, has been overshadowed by task forces of scientists in laboratories and testing fields. In the same fashion, the free university, historically the fountainhead of free ideas and scientific discovery, has experienced a revolution in the conduct of research. Partly because of the huge costs involved, a government contract becomes virtually a substitute for intellectual curiosity. For every old blackboard there are now hundreds of new electronic computers.

The prospect of domination of the nation’s scholars by Federal employment, project allocations, and the power of money is ever present – and is gravely to be regarded.

Yet, in holding scientific research and discovery in respect, as we should, we must also be alert to the equal and opposite danger that public policy could itself become the captive of a scientific-technological elite.

It is the task of statesmanship to mold, to balance, and to integrate these and other forces, new and old, within the principles of our democratic system – ever aiming toward the supreme goals of our free society.

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Graduation in South Africa

Highlights of this South Africa trip:

1. Getting an entire row to myself for the 14-hour flight from NYC to Jo’burg.

2. Being serenaded as we landed in Jo’burg by an acapella group that was traveling in my section of the plane. Come to find out it was the Soweto Gospel Choir, and they’re kind of a big deal–like, Grammys and Oscars big! (http://www.sowetogospelchoir.com/)

3. Staying with my lovely hosts, Pastor Doug and Marike Wannenburgh, and their lively brood of four. Thanks for teaching me some cricket!

4. Presenting in the Stellenbosch OT Seminar on the topic: “The Legacy of Benjamin in Judah’s Bible.” It’s nice to at least make one contribution to the Stellenbosch Faculty of Theology community–better late than never!

5. Springbok for supper with Julia Burét. Leaner and faster than venison…

6. Coffee in Muizenberg on the beach of False Bay with Craig Richardson.

7. Successfully walking across the stage in my long red dress to receive my burgundy cape and diploma at the graduation ceremony. I have no idea what Louis Jonker said summarizing my dissertation topic–I was concentrating on walking at the right time, and not tripping over my dress.

8. Supper with Professor Jonker–his treat. Conversation about the growing overlap of Pentateuch and Chronicles scholarship; ostrich meat with chardonnay (I’m assured that there are no longer any rules about meat and wine pairings); and malva pudding with vanilla ice cream.

What a tremendous trip–a pity it was less than 72 hours…

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April Update

Dear Friends and Family:

You are reading our first “missions update!” (I attempted unsuccessfully to embed a fanfare sound effect.) We know that some of you have not heard from us since our initial letter stating that we have decided to follow God’s call to serve at LCC International University in Lithuania. Quite a lot has happened in our lives over the last couple of months. Hopefully, future updates will be somewhat more concise, but we have much to rejoice over, and much that requires prayer.

(Read on: LCC’s ministry to church leaders; Eastern European young people who need Christ; great deals on furniture and technology)

LCC STUDENTS

I presented a paper on the books of Samuel and Chronicles (related to my dissertation) at a regional academic conference back in March. The conference was enjoyable; however, the recurring theme of conversations with graduate students and fellow young PhDs was the abysmal North American job market in Biblical Studies. Those conversations reinforced in my heart and mind the importance of biblical education in regions like Eastern Europe, where need is quite urgent and the supply is desperately low.

Pray for LCC International University in this accreditation year. Pray for Rev. Dr. Tom Boone, interim chair of the Department of Theology (my new boss), as he works with the administration and Lithuanian church leaders to develop a new church-planting program. He writes: “[The program] will involve a one-year Diploma of Christian Studies at LCC followed by a one-year period of mentorship in churches. The training will be in English and Lithuanian, and with full cooperation of church leaders who will themselves identify potential candidates. Rather than costing $120,000 for a student to attend a three-year seminary with the family transplanted, this experience will cost about $7,000 per student and keep young leaders here.” LCC continues to have a tremendous impact on churches in the region; for example, sending speakers to a recent church leadership conference in Latvia, and hosting the annual LCC Congregational Conference [KBUK].

MINISTRY

These few months have been very busy as we continue to finish out our ministry commitments at Lansdale Presbyterian Church. I will continue to serve as director of contemporary worship music until June 15, and I am also teaching a Sunday School class on Isaiah. Corrie continues to serve on the steering team of MOPS, a ministry to young mothers. She also plays and sings with the worship team from time to time, and is directing the church choir for two weeks—Palm Sunday and Easter Sunday!

Pray that God would bless and encourage those whom we leave behind at our church—our sisters and brothers who are how sending us into the field.

Pray that God would give us boldness and strength as we prepare for a ministry of evangelism and discipleship on the LCC campus, where the majority of students do not possess a saving knowledge of Christ. Many of the students have never even opened a Bible before coming to LCC. One of the professors shared with me some of the students’ responses when he asked at the end of a semester, “What have you learned as a result of reading the Old Testament?” Here are just a few:

· “Every time I was reading it I was feeling inner peace. The Bible strengthened my belief in God.”

· “I am discovering a surprising thing. God is sovereign. I had always thought God was not interested in my personal life, but this new lesson challenges me.”

· “This was my very first time reading Old Testament. I can honestly say that it opened my eyes. I feel much closer to my spirituality and God than ever. Firstly, I learned how important it is to have good relationship with God. Secondly, I learned how great and sovereign God is and how sinful is the nature of the human. Furthermore, I started realizing the importance of repentance for sins and the need for restoration.”

· “I used to blame God for the bad in life, but after reading the Bible I no longer blame Him. He is actually wanting me to have a better life, but I can only have this if I am one of His children. How does this happen?”

Pray for the hearts of these students and their families in countries that are darkened by communism, corruption, instability and widespread depression. Lithuania has the world’s second-highest suicide rate.

WORK

As we attempt to raise our financial support, I will probably need to continue to work full-time at ICON Clinical Research through mid-July. Corrie continues to teach private piano and voice lessons through the end of May. We are tremendously grateful for God’s provision through numerous means. Providentially, at just those times when we’ve become disheartened, an unexpected windfall or a generous financial gift has arrived. You’d think I’d have learned by now that God is faithful, having seen His provision for us throughout seminary and graduate school—and having a PhD in the Bible, for goodness’ sake!—but somehow I always need those timely reminders. Part of a tax refund paid off one of my loans from seminary, so our total debt is now under $9,000—all of it student loans.

Pray that we would raise all our financial support. Our first year at LCC (August 2014 through July 2015) is currently about 14% funded through a combination of monthly supporters and one-time gifts. Many of you have given so generously, and we are very grateful. If you or someone you know would like to become part of our monthly support team or give a one-time gift, instructions on how to do so can be found here.

Pray that God would give us strength to finish well at our jobs—not doing the minimum, but with every effort “as unto the Lord.”

PREPARATION

As we prepare to move in with Corrie’s parents sometime in June, we are already considering which of our things we will ship to Lithuania, store in the basement, sell, give away, and throw away. Especially difficult in this process will be deciding about books, clothes, and toys that have sentimental value (more for us than for the children!).

Pray that God would allow us to bless people with these things, even as many others have blessed us with gifts. As we look around our apartment, we see very few furniture items that we were forced to purchase at full price—most of it was given to us or purchased on Craig’s List! We are trusting that God will give us all the things we will need when we get to Lithuania, and again meet all our needs whenever we move back to North America. We are grateful that we have very few large possessions that will be difficult to discharge or store.

We have been blessed by several families in our church and neighborhood that have watched Daniel and Elizabeth while we have worked on support letters or sorting through things. If you have time and are willing, we would be grateful for even more help in this way. We will also need help moving large items in June.

Keep an eye out on Facebook for good deals on furniture and technology items that we’ll be selling!

PEACE AND JOY

As we press on though this very busy season of preparation, the danger is that our busy-ness will crowd out our joy in the mission that awaits us and in the journey

Pray that God would keep our eyes fixed on Jesus in the midst of all these important tasks.

Pray that we would continue to disciple the little hearts in our care: Daniel (3 years) and Elizabeth (9 months), who was baptized just this past Sunday.

___________

Thank you all for your prayers and support. Stay tuned for further updates; be sure to follow us on the web and join (and share) our Facebook group. To receive monthly updates about happenings at LCC, you may wish to sign up for the university’s newsletter, Transformations.

In Christ,

Benj and Corrie Giffone

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