Stirring Up the Hornet’s Nest
My last post has generated many interesting discussions (of course, those are happening by way of email or phone or IM, since many of you read but usually don’t post comments … no big deal; part of the fun of web 2.0 is that we can communicate however we choose).
I’ve been in discussions with like-minded folks and listened (or read) patiently while someone blasts my “radical” notions.
Having been an English (and Theatre Arts major) in school the first time around, I thought I’d put to use some of those history-of-the-English-language skills.
RADICAL: etymologically, the word “radical” comes from the Latin (radix) meaning “to the root.” Feel free to check me on this by clicking here. Looking at radical’s synonym visual family yields this:

From this visual it seems that a “radical” is someone who is revolutionary or extremist to the root about something in particular.
Don’t you think the Christian faith, the Christ-follower is to be radical? Shouldn’t we be engaged in life-long transformation to the root of all that we are? Shouldn’t every aspect of human experience be under constant conversion to the very base of all we do? Shouldn’t our core theme be radical discipleship? It seems this is what Jesus often calls for, invites others into. When Jesus says, “Come and see,” accepting that invitation means a life of change … to the root.
So allow me to stir up the hornet’s nest some more …
Here’s another un-truth I’ve learned from the church: the world is made up of two kingdoms (dualism).
I learned from the church that we Christians should gather in the “church” building as often as possible so that we might escape the evils of the world, be discipled to be more unlike the world, and be equipped to go out and win the world for Christ.
I don’t find that world-view with Jesus at all. Our ancient spiritual ancestors from the pages of Hebrew scripture displayed a type of dualism. They saw good and evil. Sometimes they saw both good and evil coming from God (try to make that one fit in our postmodern orthopraxy!). They felt “called apart” as a specially chosen people.
But Jesus fulfilled what they were progressively learning: God is dreaming to reconcile all of creation to God’s self!
Grappling with this revelation causes us to stop looking at parts of the world as sacred and parts of the world as … well, the world. All of it is God’s creation. All of it is sacred. All of it is being reconciled.
The question for the church is: Are we engaging with God’s activity in reconciling all of creation? Are we making disciples outside the church walls (into all the “world”)? Do we really believe that God’s grace goes before us and that Christ’s Spirit is already at work everywhere?
What I’ve unlearned about dualism is that Christ-followers should see all of creation as Jesus sees it. This is called messianic. And we see ourselves in this creation as ambassadors of and co-workers with the Messiah … everywhere we go!
SO TELL ME SOMETHING:
Do you have a dualistic or messianic view of creation?
——
Brian Niece
www.brianniece.com
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Tags: radical, Christian, Christ-follower, discipleship, un-truth, dualism, messianic
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