DMcFadden
Puritanboard Commissioner
Many pastors in lectionary using congregations preached on Mark 7's account of the Syrophoenician woman last Sunday. I was struck by the ways in which this text has been used by those on the left.
A "Ten Second Sermon" by the "Women of ELCA" quoted Mark 7:27 where Jesus says, "Let the children be fed first, for it is not fair to take the children's food and throw it to the dogs" (NRSV)
Then, it comments: "If our Lord Jesus can make an error in judgment, we mere humans certainly will. The problem is not in the mistake, the problem is in failing to acknowlege it. Jesus said he was sorry by healing a precious daughter. How will you say it?"
The idea that Mark 7 "proves" Jesus to be in error, in this case to engage in racist name-calling, presumably along with the idea that he shared the jingoistic notions of his fellow Jews regarding Gentiles, is astounding!
A post today by Robert Gagnon on "First Things" reports on the recent denial of tenure to a Fuller Seminary prof who supported same sex unions. As a pretty close observer of my alma mater since graduation nearly four decades ago ('77), the denial of tenure is welcome, but a bit surprising. During my seminary years a much respected theologian (Westminster trained Paul K. Jewett) argued that the Bible was "wrong" on egalitarianism; Paul simply allowed his Pharisaical training to overwhelm his theological common sense as epitomized in Galatians 3:28. Now another Westminster trained professor is denied tenure 40 years later for suggesting that the Bible was wrong on homosexuality. Surprising, but welcome.
When the current president, Mark Labberton, was an associate professor of preaching at Fuller, he wrote a blurb on the back of this same tenure-denied professor's book strongly endorsing it: “What makes this book exceptional is that [it]. . . . addresses a complex and commonly felt set of controversies about Jesus, Paul, women, sexuality and homosexuality and does so in particularly careful, unflinching ways. . . . demonstrating an interpretive manner that both honors Scripture and wrestles with it.”
Gagnon writes,
Pity the poor Syrophoenician woman. Her encounter with Jesus which ended rather well (for her, her daughter, and was a great affirmation of faith) has been hijacked by the left to defend all manner of poppycock, prattle, and palaver.
A "Ten Second Sermon" by the "Women of ELCA" quoted Mark 7:27 where Jesus says, "Let the children be fed first, for it is not fair to take the children's food and throw it to the dogs" (NRSV)
Then, it comments: "If our Lord Jesus can make an error in judgment, we mere humans certainly will. The problem is not in the mistake, the problem is in failing to acknowlege it. Jesus said he was sorry by healing a precious daughter. How will you say it?"
The idea that Mark 7 "proves" Jesus to be in error, in this case to engage in racist name-calling, presumably along with the idea that he shared the jingoistic notions of his fellow Jews regarding Gentiles, is astounding!
A post today by Robert Gagnon on "First Things" reports on the recent denial of tenure to a Fuller Seminary prof who supported same sex unions. As a pretty close observer of my alma mater since graduation nearly four decades ago ('77), the denial of tenure is welcome, but a bit surprising. During my seminary years a much respected theologian (Westminster trained Paul K. Jewett) argued that the Bible was "wrong" on egalitarianism; Paul simply allowed his Pharisaical training to overwhelm his theological common sense as epitomized in Galatians 3:28. Now another Westminster trained professor is denied tenure 40 years later for suggesting that the Bible was wrong on homosexuality. Surprising, but welcome.
When the current president, Mark Labberton, was an associate professor of preaching at Fuller, he wrote a blurb on the back of this same tenure-denied professor's book strongly endorsing it: “What makes this book exceptional is that [it]. . . . addresses a complex and commonly felt set of controversies about Jesus, Paul, women, sexuality and homosexuality and does so in particularly careful, unflinching ways. . . . demonstrating an interpretive manner that both honors Scripture and wrestles with it.”
Gagnon writes,
http://www.firstthings.com/web-exclusives/2015/09/fuller-seminary-takes-a-standKirk recently published further indications of support of committed homosexual unions. On June 9 in a blog post entitled, “Gay Christians: Should Relationships Matter?” he made a bad analogy between Jesus changing his mind toward the Syrophoenician woman and Jesus changing his mind about “gay” relationships. I think a better reading of the story in Mark 7:24-30 is that it concerns a change only of timing as regards Gentile outreach (sooner rather than later), not a change in substance.
Pity the poor Syrophoenician woman. Her encounter with Jesus which ended rather well (for her, her daughter, and was a great affirmation of faith) has been hijacked by the left to defend all manner of poppycock, prattle, and palaver.