Alastair's Adversaria - Doctrine and Life (with Rev Benjamin Miller)
Episode Date: May 12, 2021My friend Rev Benjamin Miller, a pastor from Long Island, joined me for a discussion of the relationship between doctrine and life. If you have enjoyed my videos and podcasts, please tell your friend...s. If you are interested in supporting my videos and podcasts and my research more generally, please consider supporting my work on Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/zugzwanged), using my PayPal account (https://bit.ly/2RLaUcB), or by buying books for my research on Amazon (https://www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/36WVSWCK4X33O?ref_=wl_share). You can also listen to the audio of these episodes on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/alastairs-adversaria/id1416351035?mt=2.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome. I'm joined today by my good friend, the Reverend Benjamin Miller, who's a pastor on Long
Ireland. And we got into a conversation recently. We've known each other for several years now,
particularly through shared associations with the Davenant Institute and various other things
associated with that. And this conversation arose and it seemed like something that was at for
podcast. So I'll hand it over to him to introduce the subject. Well, first of all, Alist, I'm very
grateful to be able to have this conversation with you. So we were just interacting with some
friends about the recent visibility, I guess, of what are called ex-vangelicals, people who
have professed to be Christians and then become disenchanted with the Christian faith and the Christian
church, and you made a comment in that conversation that really struck a chord with me, and I'm paraphrasing,
but you basically said that evangelicals, evangelical Christians, seemed to put a very heavy
emphasis on getting our theology right as a way of, as you put it, securing people's emotional
and spiritual health. And somehow, for all that emphasis on how theology, good, strong,
sound theology, correct theology, is supposed to produce that health. There's very little talk
often about just wise and careful and loving pastoral guidance, as if correct theology can kind
of carry the whole load. And there's almost no mention of this deeply personal and pastoral
side of things. And I've just seen so much the truth of that observation, my own pastoral work.
I was just wondering if you would be able to elaborate a little on just some of the things you've observed that led you to make that comment.
And then I think I might have some similar experiences on my own.
For me, there's been a number of different things.
First of all, the breach between or the difference between evangelical doctrine and evangelical culture.
And a lot of what people complain about is not so much evangelical doctrine as the way that that's filtered through and embedded.
within a certain sort of culture that is taken for granted, but never really carefully
broken down and articulated. So it's presumed to follow straightforwardly from the doctrine,
but there's no reason why it should. The other thing is that there is a sort of doctrinal
framework within which we want to live our lives. And I've increasingly thought about this
distinction in terms of the difference between the architecture of a house that gives it its
stability that ensures that you are able to live in it without having to have a hard hat everywhere
you go and worrying about falling masonry. But at the same time, there is the need to make that
somewhere that's a habitable dwelling, to have windows put in, to have carpets and places to sit
and to sleep, and places with running water and sanitation, these sorts of things. Now,
so often we treat our theological systems, the edifice.
as if they were sufficient without actually thinking about the means by which someone can
meaningfully inhabit that. And the sort of way that we teach people can often be like learning,
I don't know, learning homemaking from construction workers. It's not actually the best way to
go about it. You do need construction workers, but you need something more than that. And a pastor in
many ways is helping someone to go a step beyond just having a system that actually is able to
stand on its own that isn't going to collapse. There's something more than that. You need more
than a good systematics. That is such a helpful metaphor. Because I find that exact thing so often
is in front of me as a pastor. Things can be orthodox. But,
not necessarily executed in a way that's very edifying, which is to say, you know,
and I think Paul kind of points us to that in the realm of ethics.
The question of whether something's lawful is not the same question as whether something's
edifying.
They're related, but they're not.
And what you just said, it's one thing to have a house.
You know, I often think about this, is Trinity Church where I pastor.
One question is whether it's a safe place for people, spiritually safe place.
Quite another question, whether it's a place people want to be, a place they want to live,
you know, and I find that especially as I think about the children.
and grandchildren of a church.
They're often a very good kind of barometer of a church's culture.
If they don't like being around the church as they get older,
they might have all sorts of correct catechism
and they might know the creed and be relatively grounded in what is orthodox,
but if they are turned off by the culture of the church,
you have to wonder how effective is our witness going to be to people outside the church
to welcome them in if the ones we're already growing up there
are finding reasons to leave. And I realize that's a complicated subject, but I 100% agree with
that distinction. The way also you describe some of this, there's the distinction also between
a sort of sanctified common sense, emotional, just basic groundedness, and having all your
theological ducks in order. On the other hand, and it seems to me a lot of
of Christians are looking for a sort of ideological solution to things that do not have an
ideological solution. You want a system or you want some procedure or technique to solve
something that requires a very different angle of approach. And that has been something I've
noticed on several occasions as a problem that I'm not sure people put their finger upon well.
Yeah, agreed. I agreed. And when you couple that with
a nervousness at best, I think in some cases it probably approaches panic in a lot of evangelical
Christians about cultural influences that seem like they're going to, you know, lead us into,
you know, profound moral compromises or abandoning the gospel. And so there's this sense of needing
to be even more aggressively defensive than usual. I think when you add that in to that confidence
in a system as a cure for all ills, you can actually end up strangely with orthodoxy that,
honestly, at a relational level, if I can put it that way, just becomes pretty toxic.
I have personally witnessed church leadership.
I'm not exaggerating when I say literally empty their church of people because they were so
determined to save their church from corrupting influences.
And somewhere it just seems to me that a good thing has gone way off the rails.
So what are some of the, I mean, if you were to put a name on some of the traits or the virtues that you think are missing, what would they be?
Well, let me back up to something that I don't know if this is too basic or if it's helpful.
But I spent a lot of time since being a pastor thinking about how,
what we call holiness. So just stepping away for a moment from doctrine per se, how a Christian
understanding of holiness can get separated from humanness. I guess this is what I mean.
I grew up in a church tradition that made it seem as if you were kind of at your holiest when you
were doing the least number of things that people outside the church do. You know, you just kind of
stayed away from everything that was going on in the culture and that separation ended up producing
holiness, you know, devotion to God. And of course, as I've grown theologically over the years,
I've realized that Herman Bavig's formulation that grace, the grace of God in our lives, restores
nature, it doesn't destroy nature, it, you know, it purifies us from sin, sanctifies us.
That's really helped me think about God's interest in humanness. You know, to give one example from my own
profession, I often think that seminaries would do better if they taught guys how to be communicators
before they teach them how to be preachers. Because if you don't know how to communicate well,
filling your terrible communication with gospel content doesn't make you effective. You need that
human thing of being able to understand how to communicate effectively before you start preaching.
And so I think in many things in many areas of church life and Christian life, I think one thing
that's helped me is just thinking about kind of how do people work. What sort of
of things are winsome. What sorts of things are enjoyable? Abundant life in Christ is not radically
separate from just the things that make people flourish in general, which is why I think, among other
things, you know, you think about the fact that Jesus gave us the sacraments, a meal, because meals are
just so human. And so I hope that is making sense. I mean, upstream from maybe the particular
virtues, just an appreciation of all things human has helped me a lot. Humans are hungry for hopefulness.
So, for example, if you're in a church that just has this atmosphere of kind of doom and gloom,
I mean, there are things to be concerned about. There are things we ought to speak against.
I think it's even appropriate at times to have a somewhat dim view of what the next, say, 25 years of
life might be like for Christians in particular cultural moment. The persecution is coming
that's not a happy thought. I'm not speaking about our context, but just, you know, if you're somewhere
where that's really happening. But one of the things that you see in the New Testament is just this
joyfulness, this sense that God is good and God, Jesus reigns, and therefore history is fundamentally
something we should be celebrating, you know, as we think of the works of God. Does that help at all?
I mean, just kind of a general mood thing there. Yes. I think that's also something that gets at
the way in which a true presentation of Christian truth should come with a sort of ethos
that's an integral part of it. And it just reminds me that a lot of the time when we're reading
the Bible, what we're trying to do is get doctrine from it. But the Bible doesn't give us doctrine.
It gives us narrative. It gives us exhortation. It gives us encouragement, praise, lament,
proclamation, and recounting of God's great deeds.
Emotional stuff, right?
Exactly. And so it's all clothed with a form of personal address that has emotional force and content and directionality to it.
Now, it seems to me that often we can strip the message of all of that and think that a truer message would be one that comes just in the bare abstract form of the doctrine itself, showing how in its interconnections and everything that it holds together.
Now that can be important in its own place, but that it seems to me is a very much second order
activity. The primary activity of the church is to create or to be a place where we enjoy the
presence of God, where we worship him, where we have fellowship one with another, where we
experience what it means to be joyful, to be hopeful, to be faithful, to be hopeful, to be faithful,
to be loving, and to be those who are exhibiting in all these different ways, fruits of the spirit
that aren't just, I don't know, some aughts that we express, but they come together to form a very
distinctive and compelling ethos. Yeah, I so very much agree. I mean, I think some of this
maybe is just a lack of attentiveness to the Bible. I think sometimes we're just not really
that biblical and how we think about the Bible. One of the things that just struck me again and again
in studying scripture is, you know, at the core of the Bible is the kingdom of God and the kingship of
God. But when you really watch from the very beginning, God rules in this very covenantal way.
He rules by binding himself to those he loves, to his creatures, to his covenant people. And he
binds us to him. And so there's this, I know the word relational gets overused. But it is
relational. It is, as you put it, they're personal relations. God is personal and he relates to us
as his image bears that way. That's how he rules, not just issuing edicts, not just giving us tomes of,
you know, correct things to think. Now, I think at its best, in fairness, sometimes when I listen to
evangelicals talk about how they expect doctrine to carry, do the work of creating emotional and
and spiritual health, I think maybe what they're getting at is that understanding the gospel,
understanding that God has forgiven my sins, that he has adopted me into his household,
that I am justified. I stand before him in righteousness through Christ. That should have an
emotional effect. That should bring, you know, peace and joy and the fruits of the spirit.
So I think at its best, that's often what is intended, is that if you understand what Jesus has done for you and who the Father is to you, for Jesus' sake, then that should begin to create in your life, you know, a sense of identity and security and vitality.
But, boy, I've also seen, we could, I'm sure, you'll talk a lot about just a kind of theological lintz picking that goes on where,
you know, this very precise understanding of all these Christian doctrines
is somehow supposed to make us all good.
And that actually has the opposite effect in my experience.
And maybe part of what's going on is an expectation that doctrine is going to do something
that doctrine was never intended to do.
There are a lot of things, for instance, that we are expected to know
or to learn as people who are embedded as creatures with a brain within God,
good creation and we're supposed to learn and reflect and draw lessons from those who have come
before us and many of those lessons are not found in the Bible directly or if they're found they're
found only tangentially we can think about the ways that you learn how to have a good marriage
I mean there are things that we are taught in scripture but many of the lessons will be lessons
that you learn from other people around you from your parents from
just experience over time yourself. And so the idea that there's a code book that gives you all the
answers for these things without having to undergo that experiential process. Yeah. That seems to me to be
one of the problems that's at play here. Again, we can sort of come back to being biblical, right?
Because isn't that what the wisdom tradition of scripture is, I would even say, gesturing toward.
One of the things that strikes me about the wisdom literature is it does not, it does not try to be, it doesn't try to give us comprehensive answers.
It gestures towards God's world and God's ways in the world.
And you get the impression that these are things that children and parents and children, grandparents and grandchildren, they're going to sit and reflect upon together.
Like you're saying, in, in, Proverbs doesn't tell you how to have a good marriage.
It gives you some basic principles that then you probably should sit and talk with your parents.
about or, you know, wise friends, right? I'm also struck by the fact that Jesus, the word,
took flesh. Why is that important? He dwelt among us. And then you have the apostolic ministry
where Paul says, he preached, but he also says, I was with you house to house. There was this
conversational dimension of his ministry in very personal contexts. I just all of that seems
important for what you're saying that it's God could have just given us voluminous you know a whole
library of stuff to read and study and understand that's just not how is revelation it has worked historically
that's important when we're thinking about the scripture in many ways the scripture is a library
that's one of the ways we can talk about the Bible as a book but it isn't a usual book in many
respects we have different sorts of books that have that function in different ways so for instance
you can think about a recipe book.
You don't have a recipe book as bedtime reading.
It's not something that you'd, again,
you wouldn't say that the best form of engagement with Shakespeare
is a high school English class.
It's primarily designed to be performed upon the stage.
Likewise, a lot of scripture is not really designed to be read in private study.
It's not public performance and embeddedness
in the life of a community.
So you talk about the covenantal character of scripture
and the way that God addresses us.
And that's really so much part of it.
It is a personal address.
So for instance, if you're reading a passage of scripture,
so often we're trying to render what is active and vibrant
and other things like that into something that's latent and abstract.
So we take a passage of Paul's epistles
and we move, remove from a context of personal address,
doxology, encouragement, exhortation, rebuke, whatever,
some doctrine that stands in distinction from that.
Now, that can be helpful sometimes in a way to help us to transport
some of the truths of that to some other contexts
where we're going to express those in an active form.
But within the life of the church,
the word of scripture is an active,
lively word. It's something that we are singing. It's something that we are praying. It's something that we are
recounting. And so when we talk about scripture in terms of just this flat term reading,
I think we're not doing justice to a proper relationship with the text. Likewise, we talked about
the sacraments earlier. The word of God is addressed not just to our minds, not even just to our hearts as
well, but also to our bodies. We are given a place at the table. We're given a personal word of
address over our bodies in baptism, which declares that our bodies are marked out for resurrection.
And so whatever we've done with our bodies has been done to them. However, we view our bodies
when we see them in the mirror. However, we feel the working of death and mortality in our bodies,
our bodies are marked out by grace. We're the limbs and organs of Christ. And that sort of thing,
I think can easily get lost when we're thinking in terms of the church as a realm of doctrine
and losing sight of just how comprehensive God's word of gracious address to us actually is.
And that is just that is that is that is just a massive thing to think about.
You know, I wonder if I wonder if particularly in evangelical circles where there's been a very strong
emphasis on academic study of the scriptures, which has its place. If we've, if we've almost received
scripture as something that was intended for the classroom in the, in the Western sense of the
classroom, actually the scriptures were largely addressed, it seems to me, that, you know,
you think about the New Testament epistles, they were addressed to convocations, to times when
the people of God were gathered together bodily with one another in a worshipful, doxologically
setting, that's where they heard the word. You know, you think about the times when Torah was read
in Nehemiah and Ezra and so on, these gatherings of God's people where this is not a classroom.
Not that, not that I trust it goes without saying, neither you nor I as opposed to the academy
or, you know, scholarly understanding of the scriptures. But that ought to be, that more
abstract and academic study, it seems to me, really should.
be for further enhancing the life of God's people under the word as opposed to almost being
something that's used to sort of beat God's people as if they're not sufficiently academic or
don't have a sufficiently scholarly understanding of doctrine or whatever, as if a child's
understanding of the gospel is a slippery slope into some kind of liberalism or something.
I just wonder about that. One of the things that's really helped me,
as a pastor is just always, always thinking about the children in my congregation. How are they doing?
I mean, say what you will about particular doctrines related to children and the saccharacterines
and all of that. If these little ones are not coming to just love their God and love their people
and love their story and love being with God and being a part of what he's doing, if that's not something that's kind of
washing over them when they're young.
And if our older children and young adults don't feel a comfortableness with the deep,
problematic, thorny questions that I think any thinking Christian has got to wrestle with
at some point, if this is not our relational ethos or culture, then I think you're
breeding ultimately either a reaction to the doctrinalism.
or you will have kids who just become brainiacs.
You know, I've seen that too.
There are kids who just kind of become almost pharisaically doctrinaire.
Neither of these, it seems to me,
as a particularly healthy model for the Christian life.
And so just exploring that a bit more,
a lot of these things imply models of pasturing with them.
So I think a lot of our model of pastoring has just been created by simple facts of demographics
and the organization of our society, particularly around the car, where the church can often
become primarily a center of teaching and preaching. And there's less of a sense of the broader
communal work of forming a life together. And with that, I think, comes
an increasing burden upon the pastor as the one who almost has to, perhaps the way best way to talk
about is astroturf, a community where there is not one that's an organic grassroots community.
So how, as a pastor, do you see some of these tensions, how do you see your role within a community
as integrating these different aspects of the church's life? Well, I will.
have to admit up front that these are things I have learned, am learning through a lot of
trial and error. It's not as if you, I had a great, I had a great class in the seminary called
Reformed Pastor, and I'm grateful for that. But the truth is, you have to get to a place among
a people and learn how to pastor. And so what I'm doing might not be the best. You know,
it's the best I've learned so far.
But there have been some things that I feel pretty comfortable saying,
I believe are important emphases just from what I've experienced.
I do have a friendship model of pastoring.
This has some downsides.
I really try to have a friendship with everyone in my church.
And different friendships with different people.
You can't be quite as close to some as others,
just circumstantially.
But I've really worked over the years to try to really get
to know people and to where the pastoral mantle, I guess, pretty lightly when I'm around
people. I don't, I don't, I've found that if people think of me first as their pastor,
they can often clam them up even, right? There's a sense of discomfort in just being able to
break bread together, let's say, and just enjoy time together and just get to know one another
as real people. And what I've found over the years is I've,
built friendships of various kinds is you kind of begin to understand what these people,
these particular people, some of what they hunger for and what resonates with them and what
draws them and what repulses them and what some of their natural prejudices are,
by which I just mean things in their particular life story that have created kind of a
reactivity to certain things. You know, there are maybe hypersensitive to certain things. And,
you know, we all have those things. And you get to, you get to, you get to,
over time get windows into that. You know, what I've what I've really tried specifically to emphasize
culturally as a pastor, as I've worked on this friendship model is they're kind of five pieces that
I go back to again and again now. One is to constantly be assuring people of who they are,
who they are in Christ and especially emphasizing baptism. What you said earlier about being
marked out for resurrection, I really believe that the foundation of a joyful, healthy, emotionally
centered Christian life is really not, is knowing that God loves you. I mean, it sounds so simple,
but just you're the Lord's. It's, you know, he's your father. Security, it's hard to come by.
And I think that's a big deal. The second thing is just, um,
what we've already been talking about, which is just building good relationships. I'm trying to model that.
Having conversations, I think that, especially with younger ones growing up in the church, my goal for
everyone of the youth at Trinity Church is that they would say, not just of the folks at Trinity,
but of the Christians that they know in their broader community, I want to be like those people.
I want to be with those people. If that's what our young ones really feel, then I think we're making progress on
building good relationships. Another is just having a church where we just enjoy creation. God is the
creator. It's redemption that's kind of thinking of God as redeemer separate from God as creator.
I think short change is a lot of things. So if you love God, you should you should love food and love,
you know, being outdoors and, you know, love oceans and mountains and, you know, and culture too.
You know, the things that God made human beings to do in this world.
You know, it's just amazing.
We should delight in these things and not have a kind of squinting going on at everything
that comes out of culture, even though, you know, we want to be discerning.
Christian humanism maybe is a way I've thought of this.
I want to be a Christian humanist, like love humanity, but do it because I'm a Christian.
The fourth is just hope.
Let's look at the future and look forward to what God's going to do through the rule of his son.
And then the other is, the fifth is just don't shirk the hard questions.
Let people ask.
If I don't know the answer, just say so.
Right?
I'm not an answer, man.
I don't turn to some big theological encyclopedia and pull out an answer to every question.
Sometimes I'm exploring along with people and that's okay.
And there are hard questions, especially in our particular moment, culturally, about the Christian faith.
Let's talk about those and not shame people about those.
And what I've found over the years is these kinds of emphases, they create what I've called a culture of conversation.
We can just talk together and learn together, not be frightened about the wrong question being asked and it kind of blows everything up.
God's truth is stronger than that.
I don't know if that's helpful, but those are just some big pieces for me.
Yeah, so I'd like for you to elaborate a bit more on, it seems to me that often we can put the work of,
I don't know, discipleship, support of other people, encouragement and giving direction and teaching
onto the pastor and forget that that's something that should be exercised more generally
within the church. And I would be interested to hear your thoughts on how as a pastor
you can present yourself as an example for others in their relationship to those that they
have, whether that's their children, whether it's younger people around them, whether it's
brothers and sisters that they can support and encourage in times of struggle. How do you distribute
your task of pastoring, particularly in the current context, where it can be very difficult
simply because of the nature of our society and the limits that that presents for community?
Every day I'm struggling with this, I must tell you, practically. I mean, that's a great question.
I mean, one obvious thing is just realizing that is, that is how Christ wants the church to operate is pastors and teachers are equipping the saints for the work of ministry.
It's not, it's so easy to create a pastor-centered church.
It's bad for the pastor and it's bad for the people.
So one thing is just to consciously keep in mind all the time, how am I actually equipping and empowering and encouraging these saints?
to live as God's people, where they are the churches, they're disciple makers. I'm helping them learn to be
disciple makers and just at least having that kind of as a governing framework. And then, you know,
how do you do it? Well, sometimes it's just as simple as having a couple families together to your home
and just spread food on the table and let them talk. I do know that one of the biggest things,
this is a struggle.
I think any pastor would have to be honest in saying this,
but you need to have a strong family life of your own.
If people don't see that you enjoy, in my case,
enjoy my wife and my four children
and see my home as a healthy place,
now we have all the ordinary struggles, man, I'll tell you.
But that's one thing.
It's just model just a good home life.
And, you know, as people feel safe,
and they can open up to a pastor and they feel friendship with a pastor.
And that begins to kind of trickle out into the congregation.
It is amazing.
People, they do begin to, they do begin to imitate that.
And I hope that doesn't sound weird.
Like I'm not saying I want people to be imitating me.
But there is something contagious about friendship.
Those would be, I guess, some initial thoughts on that.
It's a great question.
And the modern thing of people being so spread out and you don't,
you have more preaching posts really than community.
churches now. It makes it hard. We're not sharing life together anymore the way we once did. And that's probably not,
we're not going back to those, we're not going back to some previous time in history, but I wrestle a lot with, man,
how do we overcome this, the distances of modern life? They're immense.
Talking about the importance of your family life and churches seeing that, that gets me into an area that
has been on my mind a lot in the last few years, which is that of authority and trust.
The way that authority is often something that depends upon a certain recognition that the person who's exercising authority is exemplifying that thing that they are directing you towards.
And there is something attractive about what you see in them that makes them a fitting teacher of the virtues that form that reality to you.
And it seems to me that the great example of this ideally should be parents.
We grow up. We don't understand necessarily why our parents are telling us what to do. And certain instructions they give us are opaque to us, but we trust them because we know that their intentions for us are good. And that we also believe that the time will come when we will understand when the time will come when they will step back a bit and we'll be left on our own. And the lessons that they have taught us will hold us in good stead. And so often I think,
there is a model of authority in churches that just does not take into account the importance of
giving a compelling example of yourself, of presenting people with a form of discipleship that will
lead them towards independence, where they have internalized the principles themselves,
where they don't have to just accept your external word, but there is that tell us,
always there. And finally, that this is something that they can see the fruits of. So Jesus talks
about the importance of knowing people by their fruits. If you want to know what a church is like,
pay attention to the people who, the older people there, the people who have been there for
20, 30 years. What character has it produced in them? Pay attention to the pastor. What character
has his teaching produced in his life? Pay attention to his family. What
What sort of community does he form in his most immediate context?
And what does that say about him?
And it seems to me that those elements of authority, those are really grounding for authority,
of a healthy authority at least.
And it seems to me that you need, I don't know, a certain degree of proximity for that
to operate well.
And I'll be curious to know how you see that, how you have seen that operating.
well? What are some examples that have inspired you? Are the things that you feel are areas where
we really should put a lot more emphasis if we're going to do this well? Yeah. I mean,
this gets back to the deficiencies, I think, of a sort of dominant emphasis on doctrine.
I'm just thinking of this on the fly and I hope it's not a clumsy way of expressing it. But
the thing about doctrine is you can communicate doctrine via Zoom.
But so much of what I really want to communicate as a pastor,
I can't communicate via Zoom if that makes sense.
It can't be reduced to informational exchange.
And so, you know, what I have found for myself,
and this is where I would say my own models and mentors,
the people that I look up to so much,
one of the things I notice about them is that they are almost to a fault hospitable.
and hospitality is is as a is bigger than just having people into your home to feed them there's a hospitable way of life
where i'm just looking i'm eager to welcome and and i think you i think that just has to be
cultivated you know just where people feel that when they're around you you're not necessarily rushed
you listen well you greet them warmly that kind of just drawing people toward you i'm struck by the
fact that jesus people were attracted to him you know that i think there's something about
warm welcoming hospitable people there's a magnetism to them and so much of what i think
hospitality is about is listening well i mean i haven illish describes this
He basically says you have a hearth and a listening, you have a table and a loaf of bread and a listening ear.
We just don't maybe even think about how in our time, how powerful that is.
So, I mean, you know, I have a lot of people that, they're not living close to me.
But every once in a while, I'm able to have them into my home.
We can sit out by my pool and it doesn't always have to be theological.
I try to steer people away from always thinking, well, I'm with the pastor.
I need to ask a theological question.
Let's just talk about life, you know, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and,
time you get to the gospel things, you get to the things of God in a more maybe focused way.
The first big thing I'd say be hospitality. That's what I see. That you can always do,
even in a world that, and authority. I mean, I just think what you've said is so helpful about
authority. I've learned the most about this with my own children.
You know, trust is everything.
And you can, you can shatter trust.
If people don't trust you, then it doesn't really matter how accurate what you're saying is anymore.
And they don't trust you because you're, they don't trust you just because you're accurate.
They trust you because deep down people are looking for two things, I think especially,
do you really care about them?
Do you really care about them, like authentically?
And the other is, are you?
pursuing the God that you're always talking about? Are you, I mean, do you live with him?
Do you, like from the heart? Is this like the fuel of your life? You know, my, one of my children
recently said, Daddy, you're a hypocrite. And it was hard to hear. And I thought about it. And we talked
about it. And I realized what he was saying was he sees a gap between what I say and what I do.
And we had a chance to talk about it. I said to him,
You know, I said, it's not hypocrisy to fall short of the standards that I articulate.
What is hypocrisy is if I ever justify that or I don't repent to you about that.
You know, now I'm really a hypocrite.
But obviously, I'm always going to be saying things to you that I'm falling short of.
And it was a good conversation.
We're able to kind of talk about that.
And I think that's a big part of a biblical authority is I'm following Christ.
And the life of Christ, you can see, you know, what you said, the virtues of the Holy Spirit.
People need to see those in not just in a pastor, but in all of us as,
Christians and when they do, it creates trust. I'll be curious to hear more about how when you've
lost the context of rich community life or family life or the ethos of a community. And all you are left
with is the doctrine and the teaching. How does that explain some of, for instance,
some of the struggles that we're experiencing in evangelical and conservative.
reformed context today with people moving away, rejecting what they were brought up with.
How can some of these, I don't know, some of the deficiencies that we've been discussing,
explain people's reactions and departures?
Yeah.
Well, a few things jump to mind.
maybe
for three or four things
particularly I
what I see when I see disillusionment
in people who have been in the church
and then they
they become antagonistic to it
one is that very often
it seems they were in a church
context where
they just were actually not
encouraged to work through
the challenges of the faith,
that it was made to seem as if doctrine is just obvious.
And, you know, evangelical belief is just kind of almost a given.
And we just keep saying the same things
without necessarily interacting with the possible objections to them.
And so sometimes kids will get out into, let's say, a college setting,
and they feel like they've been lied to.
They felt like there was all this certainty in how things were said,
but no one ever talked about the counter.
arguments and the potential, you know, the pushback that can come. And then they meet these
intelligent, enjoyable, hip, you know, people that are asking these intellectually incisive
questions. They just feel like, why didn't no one ever talk to me about this? That's one.
Related to that, I think quite often people have not, in some churches, maybe, what I see is they
haven't been prepared for the mysteries of God's work in the world. They're made to feel, sometimes
again because of this strong doctrinal emphasis on truth and we know who God is and how he works,
but do we also talk about the dark places of the faith where we're left without explanations?
The Bible does talk about that. If that's not something that we're comfortable talking about in the church,
at some point people will hit a dark time in their life and all that doctrine they've learned isn't
helping if I can put it that way. The third thing I often see is, you know,
Some churches, some Christian communities, I think, are just lacking in just joy.
You know, there can just be a kind of grumpiness.
A kind of, you know, these are not celebratory places.
They're not places where it's just good to be.
It's not, you know, kind of just, if I can put it so clumsily, is it's just not positive energy, you know.
And a fourth is I often see that people have actually had, they've actually had, I guess I would call it relational trauma.
I mean, there are churches that are just abusive, relationally.
And those, any of those things, you can have rock solid theological precision.
But if that other stuff was unaccounted for, man, you know, a headful of theology is not going to help with that stuff.
I hope I'm answering the question, you know, just from my own observations.
Yeah, so your last point, it seems to me that just thinking about trust.
which we discussed a bit earlier, is absolutely imperative.
Truth runs on the lines of trust.
And when you've lost trust, people just won't listen to anything that you say.
And so the way that churches have handled abuse crises,
that has compromised the truth of the message that we proclaim
far more than all sorts of theological heresies.
Because when people see an abusive church and nothing being,
done about it, except things being covered up or shifted out of sight, they know that that's
not a place that they want to learn truth from. They just won't believe you. And with that,
with that comes a failure, I think, often to understand how trust works. People have to give you
trust. You don't have a right to trust. There's no entitlement just because you've got truth on your
side even. Even if you've got all this work that you put into so-called building trust,
trust isn't something you build. Trust is something that you earn and people have to give it to you.
And if you don't respect them or honour them, if you don't have a sign that you really want
their good, I'm thinking about this a lot at the moment in terms of just public messaging around
health, the way in which even good messages that are absolutely correct.
if they're expressed in a condescending and dismissive manner towards people,
they're just not going to get across.
They're going to be absolutely counterproductive.
People will dig in their heels.
They will reject what is said,
no matter how accurate and scientifically supported it is.
And yet this is often how churches can operate too.
And we should know so much better than that.
I, yes.
Emphatically, yes.
You know, I don't think we've ever improved on Aristotle.
It's got to be Logos, Pathos, Ethos, right?
I mean, really, truly, it does.
He was right.
And you can't just have Logos.
You can't just have the facts.
Do people trust you?
And is it presented in a way that just shows some emotional sensitivity?
Okay, so maybe you're absolutely right and they're absolutely wrong, but they don't feel wrong.
Sometimes when I hear people talking and, you know, they're trying to set someone straight,
you realize the person you're trying to set straight doesn't think they're wrong.
So maybe you ought to just get inside their headspace enough.
to kind of see it through their lenses, enough to understand where maybe a meeting place would be at least, right?
I mean, isn't that just persuasion? One of the things that we've really emphasized at Trinity,
and anything I'm saying about, you know, my pastoral work at Trinity, I mean, it's all in process,
things we're learning. I don't want to make it sound like we've arrived at all because we haven't.
But we've really worked for 10 years now to have a very transparent approach to leadership,
which is to say, anytime we make a church decision as elders, we don't, you know, put everything out,
for a vote. It's not a democratic. Presbyterianism is not democratic fundamentally, but we do make
representative decisions, but we talk about it with the people. We explain things to them. We listen to
them. We invite input because we have nothing to hide. We're not doing things in secret. You know,
what our deliberations are mostly wisdom questions. We don't have a word from the Lord about
most of the decisions we make. I had a brother, a pastor one time, and it's so helped me. He said,
you know Ben, he had some pastoral experience. He said most of the time when we've deliberated
as a board of elders and we make a decision, I think I'm about 70% sure we're right. And that just
helped me like exactly. I mean, we get some things wrong, you know. And I think, again,
it's strange how that kind of honesty about your, you hope you have some wisdom, but you don't
have perfect wisdom, I think it actually improves the effectiveness of your authority.
Because just even the fact that your leaders have enough self-doubt to know they might be
wrong is kind of reassuring. That leads into something that I've often thought about in churches,
particularly more evangelical churches, which is there's a tendency to a sort of patronizing mode of ministry
where people are given very clear statements about what they must believe.
They're not taught why.
Again, they're put in a position where they're infantilized.
They're spoken down to in certain ways.
They're not informed and helped to understand the deliberations that lead to a decision
or even talk through the process of interpreting a passage.
That's one of the things that I've really appreciated about good biblical teaching,
where someone would actually show you how they arrived at their conclusion.
And they'll say, okay, this is what I've settled on as my reading of this passage.
Here are some of the other readings that are available.
I'm not absolutely certain of this.
There's a certain degree of, well, it depends on these factors.
If one of these factors were to change, my opinion on these,
or if some other evidence appeared in this area,
it would weight things differently.
and my opinion might alter.
And there's a sense there of the responsibility
of the person who is exercising trust.
You're not just engaging in a complete wholesale giving of your trust
to some other party who could easily abuse it
as they present themselves with more confidence
than they actually deserve.
On the other hand, what you're actually doing
is acting more as a counselor to people.
You're expecting them to take responsibility
for their choices
in life for their directions, but you're giving them the means by which they can make better
and wiser decisions. You're exercising oversight for them, but you're doing that in a way that
is not allowing them to outsource their responsibility. Rather, you're teaching them how to
exercise their responsibility well and giving them the means by which they can arrive at your
conclusions by their own exercise of good judgment. And that,
gets to one of the areas of that you're saying people don't believe that they're wrong. And they don't
do it often because they don't have some of the information that you do or they don't have the
trust networks that you do. They're thinking about things from a very different vantage point.
And so ideally what you're trying to do is not just tell them what's true and force that upon
them, but give them the means by which by their own exercise of their own good judgment and
conscience they could arrive at your conclusions. I'm so glad you circled back to that,
because I remember earlier in our conversation thinking about that word infantilizing.
Yeah, that's, first of all, I would just note, I think that kind of leadership requires more
competency. People that I talk to that impress me the most intellectually are the people who
have enough, they appreciate the granularity of their topic enough to.
realize, as you put it, if one piece of information change, there'd be a sort of different line
we'd take in this schematic. You know, they appreciate the fine points that I'm pretty sure I've
reached a conclusion I'm comfortable with, but if something in my thinking were to change upstream,
then I'd probably be coming to a slightly different conclusion because there's just a lot
going on here. There are a lot, in any truth that we believe, there are a lot of, there's a lot,
there's many strands it has
truth is complicated
in a good way in a beautiful way
and the best thinkers just always seem to have
that awareness of the questions
that are still questions
they have confidence without
absolute certainty if I can put it that way
some things we can be absolutely certain of
but many things
I feel like we have reason to a place where we're comfortable
but there's still a lot to learn.
And everything, there's a kind of tentativeness.
And I don't mean by that a sloppiness.
I think that's actually a form of precise thinking.
So with that observation, yeah, back to the point about infantilizing.
This is something I kind of haunts me as a pastor, to be honest.
This is not quite the way to express it, but I almost feel that if I'm pasturing well,
I'm working my way to being out of a job.
is what I mean. My goal would be that people are walking with the Lord well on their own. So it's still
a privilege to to shepherd them, but I'm not shepherding them in a way that's creating more and more
dependency on me. They themselves have come to lean upon Christ, understand the word, and not only
be healthy themselves and knowledgeable themselves and growing kind of under their own power,
if I can put it that way, but are increasingly able to help others come to that same thing.
Like that, it's in 2 Timothy 2 when Paul says, commit what I've committed to you to faithful men who can teach others also.
And, you know, the thing is, Alistair, if nothing else forces this issue, our mortality should force it.
I, you know, one of the biggest things I think about as a pastor now is just succession.
I'm not going to be around forever.
So if I'm building a ministry and I'm just increasingly creating a community where people are dependent upon me for the right answers and you go to the pastor with all of your problems,
at the best you can say of it is I'm setting them up for a horrible shock when God moves me on.
But I think actually in some cases, it might even be a little bit more sinister than that.
think there can come a real pride in that as a pastor. I am the Oracle. I am the one that people
come to. That can that can really play to your, you know, your ego. So yeah, I, I just, I love what
you said. I think that is something he talked about so much more. Are you creating self-sustaining
sainthood? Talking about the issue of creating teachers, think of the way it's described
in Hebrews that some of you are still needing to be fed milk by the stage you should have been
already teachers of others. How can people listening to this who are not pastors, who are
wanting to be more responsible congregants and more helpful for their pastors, some people who are
actively part of creating a healthier culture within their churches. How from a pastor's perspective
would you counsel such people? What are some maybe the specific steps they can take,
practices they can commit themselves to virtues they can develop? I wonder if one possibility
would be just take take take take take take
Make whatever it is that you feel most comfortable with as a Christian, whether it's something,
maybe it could be something more theological, a book you've read that you've found edifying
or just something, as you think about your own sort of gifts as a Christian, what do you think
is something you might be able to contribute? You know, it could be something as simple as,
I just love to, you know, teach people how to cook. I love cooking. I love to,
teach people how to make good food because it's a big part of hospitality or whatever it might be.
And just maybe talk with your pastor about just doing that with other people in your Christian community.
Maybe you could start a reading circle, read a book together, just have time to talk about it.
And it doesn't need to be anything super organized or, you know, terribly profound.
I mean, it could just be something that's edifying and just getting people to, maybe, maybe you're,
just a person you just like having conversations with people and you'd like to take someone in the
community out for coffee once a week. I just wonder if you could talk to your pastor, because pastors
loves to love them, they love them, people take initiative, at least healthy pastors do.
And if there's just something that you kind of sense God has given you a passion for or some
giftings in and just see how you could plug that into your community. I think that's a small
place to begin, but it's so much better than just kind of sitting back. We don't need like super
teachers in the church so much as just Christians who are actively contributing what God has
given them to contribute. And good relationships will flow out of that and a sphere of influence
will grow. And I mean, it's a simple enough thing, but I think that would actually be if a
bunch of Christians in a church did that, I think would really be quite revolutionary.
There's a difference between that and the sort of extreme dependence upon whether it's
worldviewism or whether it's getting a particular system in place. Those sorts of things
can be attempts at a shortcut towards something that should be achieved just by basic,
simple Christian discipleship and being faithful over long periods of time, which,
is not really theoretically hard. It's practically hard.
Right. But we don't need a college class for everything. We just need people doing life as the people of God in the world.
Right. Yeah, I mean, just it's little things. They make such a difference.
You know, maybe you just get all the all the kids in your church together for a game like once a month.
I mean, for kids, that is, that makes a church a whole different place to be a part of, you know?
I also think one of the important things is just as a member of a congregation,
you have a pair of eyes and ears that your pastor doesn't have.
And there are a lot of things that you'll see and hear as opportunities and needs that he won't.
And take advantage of that, act into those needs and concerns.
And be someone who just is proactive in these things.
This is one thing that's just thinking back over my own experience.
I went through a very difficult period in my late teens and could easily have just gone away from the faith altogether.
And there were just a few people who paid attention and spent a lot of time just mentoring me, join that period.
A woman who was the leader of one of the youth groups that I had been a member of previously.
And a guy who was about 10 years older than me who just took me out to various places.
and talked with me and prayed with me.
And it was just fantastic having someone
who was prepared to notice that I was going through a struggle,
who was able to give time and attention.
And for that sort of attention,
the long-term effects can be huge.
And there are many situations within any congregation
where there will be those sorts of needs
that will go unnoticed.
And there are people who,
you could change their life,
just by paying attention.
And it seems to me that if you're expecting the pastor to do all of that,
he's not going to be able to do it.
You'll feel betrayed and let down.
And because he's just human, he's limited.
But there are many other people within a congregation that can have an impact,
who can support and encourage and exercise a sort of pastoral guidance.
And ideally, you should take the initiative and take advantage of that.
And also taking the initiative is one of the best ways for you to grow.
I found, again, there have been many times in church contexts
where I've just not seen a ministry or activity that would really speak to a particular need
or interest that I had.
And with a group of people, I've set up something just in a very organic way.
And it's interesting thinking back on that and how thankful I am.
for being in churches where there's just been an emphasis upon giving space for that and encouraging it
and wanting people to be enter enterprising, to notice where there is a need and to act accordingly.
Because in many churches there just isn't that, you expect the church, the pastor or the ministry team to do those things.
And they're just not going to do it.
Yeah, I think you have, this is something I would say to pastors and Christian leaders too, is you do need to, I think really,
encourage that. I think it is possible to have a leadership style, quote, unquote, that really is
lovingly prompting and encouraging that. I've told people when they come and ask me, Pastor, can we do
this? I've told them, you don't need my permission. You really don't. Like, don't ask my permission.
It's fine. If the Lord's prompt you to do something, you're his child. Go do it. That's part of
exercising your Christian dominion in the world. You don't need to ask me, because I'm just trying to
make the point. Like, I'm not a clearinghouse for what the Holy Spirit's doing, you know? I'm here
to encourage it. And I think what you said, so much of Christian
disciplining is just coming alongside. It's just, you know, an arm around a brother.
How you doing? What's going on in your life? People have a lot going on.
Honestly, in my experience, they're very eager to share it if they feel like they can trust you.
So just even just asking a question, even if you don't see an obvious need,
just asking a question, how are you doing? You know, I'm in,
praying for you. Is there anything I can pray for particularly?
Trying to just open a door. And man, I'm like you. I have so many times I can look back
on my life where being noticed quite literally changed the course of my life. And I'm very
thankful for that. And I think that's something every Christian can do. I think that is a good
note to finish on. Thank you very much for joining me. This has been a great conversation.
and in many ways one that might spawn other conversations in the future.
It's just such a big subject.
I've loved it, man.
I hope we will get a chance to talk again because it's a very rich topic,
and thanks for letting me join you.
Thank you to all of you who have listened to this,
and I look forward to talking to you again soon.
God bless.
