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C**S
A Profound Book that Challenges its Readers
In his book The Gospel in a Pluralist Society, Lesslie Newbigin provides a healthy challenge to the defenses of the secular humanistic plausibility structure, and he challenges Christians to live such lives that bear witness to the living Savior they profess. I have to agree with Newbigin that it is time for secular humanists and Christians to examine and prove their beliefs. If Christianity is true, we should see it demonstratively portrayed among those who profess it. Newbigin asserts that this is Christians' mission; he also challenges secularists to defend their worldview.Newbigin calls out secularists as practicing hypocrisy by cynically questioning and dismissing Christian dogma while refusing to question or even admit our own secular dogma. He writes, "In our contemporary world...the readiness to question dogma is regarded as one of the marks of intellectual maturity and competence." (Newbigin 5) He cites the sharp distinction among us between what we call "facts" and what we call "values." Secularists, he writes, usually think of their own dogma as "facts" and any religious dogma as "values" that can therefore be dismissed.Newbigin contends that secularism's belief in relative moral and spiritual truths is an avoidance of reality. He writes,"The relativism which is not willing to speak about truth but only about `what is true for me' is an evasion of the serious business of living. It is the mark of a tragic loss of nerve in our contemporary culture. It is a preliminary symptom of death." (Newbigin 22)Newbigin refuses and rejects any type of coercion to Christianity. Instead he turns to Christians and essentially writes that if they expect unbelievers to turn to Jesus Christ then they better start living lives that bear witness to their Lord's presence.Newbigin calls Christians to a "radical kind of conversion...a transformation by the renewing of the mind so as not to be conformed to this world, not to see things as our culture sees them, but...to see things in a radically different way." (Newbigin 38)If Christians begin consistently and generally living lives as Newbigin urges that "prove that faith true in circumstances which seem to call it into question," the world could not help but to take notice. (Newbigin 63) The witness of the church should, according to Newbigin, contradict the most fundamental beliefs of our culture.He writes that God has chosen to save all people through Jesus Christ:"The cross of Jesus is the place where all human beings without exception are exposed as enemies of God, and the place where all human beings without exception are accepted as beloved of God, objects of his forgiving grace." (Newbigin 86)Newbigin is adamant to explain that this "good news" does not translate to universalism--a belief that everyone will gain eternal salvation, but it also does not exclude anyone as being beyond God's saving reach.Newbigin emphasizes the community of believers that ought to exist in the world as a witness to the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. He writes that "the distinguishing mark of this community will be hope." (Newbigin 101) This hope springs from the belief that Jesus Christ who died and was raised to life will come again in glory. This hope contrasts what Newbigin calls the culture's "absence of any sense of worthwhile future." (Newbigin 101)For Newbigin, Christians do not have the luxury of living isolated lives enjoying their personal salvation. He asserts throughout this book that Christians are called to live in fellowship and communion with one another as much as with the Lord.According to Newbigin, the church might be falling short in its duty to overcome the enemy through its Lord. As its mission is to bear witness to Jesus Christ, it faces ongoing conflict with the forces of darkness. Newbigin challenges the church to target its real enemy. He writes,"When it goes the way the Master went, unmasking and challenging the powers of darkness and bearing in its own life the cost of their onslaught, then there are given to the Church signs of the kingdom, powers of healing and blessing which, to eyes of faith, are recognizable as true signs that Jesus reigns." (Newbigin 108)Newbigin exhorts the church to follow its Lord in self-sacrificing prayer and in taking on spiritual powers behind the evil in the world. He claims that it is only when the church engages in such battle that it will be empowered to bring blessing and healing.Newbigin writes that the church in affluent societies keeps its faith and hope to itself. To Newbigin, this privatized faith is anathema to the mission of God in the world. This mission is to present a new reality to the world that prompts inquiries that can then be answered by the gospel.He calls Christians to discipleship, which is a closer relationship with Jesus. He writes,"The minister's leadership of the congregation in its mission to the world will be first and foremost in the area of his or her own discipleship, in that life of prayer and daily consecration...is the place where the essential battles are either won or lost." (Newbigin 240-241)Newbigin is not shy about admitting the church's guilt in allowing its own interests to get ahead of Jesus' interests. Newbigin implies that without the power and presence of the Holy Spirit the church's witness is not going to be effective regardless of what they do.Newbigin advises his readers to accept the reality of pluralism but not the message it espouses. For him, Jesus Christ, the divine man, is the one way to salvation--not one among many. I am thankful that he also reminds Christians that their Lord and the heart of the biblical vision is not imperial power but the Lamb of God who was slain for the sins of the world.Craig Stephans, author of Shakespeare On Spirituality: Life-Changing Wisdom from Shakespeare's Plays
A**M
A must read
One of the best books I have read. New begin has the ability to see through the issues and get to the bottom. Learned so much.
G**S
One of the Great Missiological Worldview Books of Our Time
Wow! Where do I begin? Lesslie Newbigin was one the leading missiologists of our time. Newbigin pastored for many years as a Bishop in the Church of South India while serving as a delegate to the World Council of Churches. After retiring from his pastoral/missions work in India, Newbigin assisted in planting an inner-city church in Birmingham, England. With that in mind, the reader should know that the views expressed in this book have not only been conceived mentally, but lived practically. *The Gospel in a Pluralistic Society's* major strength is its thoroughgoing evaluation of post-modern pluralism. Newbigin exposes its weaknesses, inconsistencies, and methodological failures. On the positive side, Newbigin gives an excellent defense of the doctrine of election, the Gospel and its power to change, and the ministry of the church in the world. My favorite quote:"The cross of Jesus is the place where all human beings without exception are exposed as enemies of God, and the place where all human beings without exception are accepted as beloved of God, objects of his forgiving grace" (pg. 86).However, I do have two disagreements with Newbigin: I grow weary of the pitting of God's story/truth as narrative against doctrine/propositional theology (pg. 12). The Apostle Paul did both, he told the story of salvation from Abraham through Israel to Jesus and taught doctrinal truths that should be accepted and believed by every Christian. Second, Newbigin's embrace of Karl Rahner's anonymous Christian idea I found rather curious. To think that a sincerely seeking Hindu is really an anonymous Christian is actually insulting to the Hindu and still does not adequately explain how God judges those who have never heard the Gospel.*The Gospel in a Pluralist Society* was ground breaking when written in 1989 at a time when the West was accepting the presuppositions of the post-modern worldview and the book still maintains its relevance as our society fully embraces the mindset of a supposedly tolerant, pluralistic, non-judging culture.
M**N
A distillation of decades of wisdom
Lesslie Newbigin was a Bishop in South India for around 20 years, and continued to lecture and write on Mission for over 20 years after his return to UK in 1974, so this book, published when he was 80, represents many decades of wisdom. The early chapters are not for the faint-hearted, and tackle the philosophical distinctions between knowledge and belief in an attempt to undermine the prevailing “plausibility structure” in which science is taught as a matter of objective fact, and religion is relegated to a matter of subjective opinion, which weakens the impact of “Mission”. Christianity wouldn’t have become the religion of the Roman Empire if evangelists like St Paul had proclaimed “Some people believe Jesus is risen”. Chapters 12 onwards are an easier read, and address practical issues such as whether Christian missionaries should or could have avoided imposing Western culture, or whether they should have refrained from opposing local culture such as the caste system in India or polygamy in Africa. Newbigin is a supporter of what is still referred to as “Missio Dei”, and recognizes the need for “frontier groups” working in various sectors of public life, but for him such Pioneering initiatives need to be rooted in a local worshiping congregation.
J**E
Worth the read.
This book has been around for awhile, but it is even more relevant now than when it was written.
R**E
Fantastic apologetic towards pluralism
Lesslie Newbigin was a missionary in Madurai and went on to become the Bishop of CSI Madurai and later Madras Diocese. Lesslie after his retirement went back to England and found that England had left its Christian roots and once again had become a mission field. The book was an outcome of his missionary experience in India.Currently the book has global applications as the entire world is pluralistic now. If you are working as a missionary full time or part time this is a great resource.The essence of Lesslie's thesis is that everyone has beliefs no matter what he says about other people's beliefs. The pluralistic person is not really pluralistic. He holds for himself a dear set of beliefs like anyone he criticizes as intolerant because of exclusive beliefs.If you have a theological and missional bent you will thoroughly enjoy the book. I recommend it strongly.
A**R
Five Stars
In great conditions!
P**D
Excellent relevant and challenging
As a fish swims in water so we are immersed in a culture and worldview. It is hard to lift our head out of the water and see it for what it is. This book does this brilliantly.
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