| Reading
the Bible as one story - Michael W. Goheen |
Reading the Bible as One Story1
Michael W. Goheen (Trinity Western
University, Canada)
Starting with the Gospel
In this paper I would
like to address the issue of reading the Bible as one story. It would be
tempting to begin with the idea of story and then argue that the Bible
conforms to this idea. I think one could proceed this way, although it
would run the risk of starting with a category alien to Scripture and
then fitting the gospel to that category. Perhaps it would be better to
begin where all our thinking should start, i.e. with the gospel.
Jesus announced good news: 'The kingdom
of God is breaking into history.' This is not the kind of announcement
that could be relegated to the religion page of a newspaper. This is
world news-front page stuff! This is headline news on CNN. It was an
announcement that God's healing power was invading history in Jesus and
by the Spirit to restore the whole creation to again live under the
gracious rule of God. His proclamation of good news stood as the
climactic moment of a story of God's redemptive work told in the Old
Testament that stretched back to God's promise to Adam and Eve. Jesus
announced that the power of God to renew the entire creation was now
present in Jesus by the Spirit. This liberating power was demonstrated
in Jesus' life and deeds, and explained by his words. At the cross he
battled the power of evil and gained the decisive victory. In his
resurrection he entered as the firstborn into the resurrection life of
the new creation. Before his ascension he commissioned his followers to
continue his mission of making the gospel known until he returned. He
now reigns in power at the right hand of God over all creation and by
His Spirit is making known his restoring and comprehensive rule through
His people as they embody and proclaim the good news. One day every knee
will bow and every tongue will confess that Jesus is Creator, Redeemer,
and Lord. But until then the church has been taken up into the Spirit's
work of making the good news of the kingdom known.
From this brief summary of the gospel,
the following observations are important for our subject. First, the
gospel is a redirecting power. It is not first of all doctrine
or theology, nor is it worldview, but the renewing power of God unto
salvation. The gospel is the instrument of God’s Spirit to restore all
of creation.
Second, the gospel is restorative,
that is, Jesus announces the restoration of the creation from sin. The
most basic categories present in the gospel are creation, fall, and
redemption. Jesus' announcement declares a resounding 'yes' to his good
creation and at the same time a definitive 'no' to the sin that has
defiled it. The gospel is about the restoration and renewal of the
creation from sin. In the history of the Western church redemption has
often been misunderstood to be salvation from the creation
rather than salvation of the creation. In the proclamation of
the gospel Jesus announces that he is liberating the good creation from
the power of sin.
Third, the gospel is comprehensive
in its scope. The gospel Jesus announced was a gospel of the kingdom.
Surprisingly even though this was the central category of Jesus'
proclamation and ministry it has often disappeared into obscurity. The
result has been a greatly reduced scope of salvation, limited to
humanity, even human souls. Scripturally, the kingdom is about God's
reign over his entire creation; the kingdom stresses the
all-encompassing nature of the salvation Jesus embodied, announced, and
accomplished. The gospel which forms the lens through which we look at
the world is the power of God through which the exalted Christ,
on the basis of his death and resurrection, restores all of life
by His Spirit to again live under His authority and Word.
The fourth observation is central to
our topic: Jesus and the good news that he announces is the fulfillment
of a long story that unfolds in the Old Testament. Jesus'
arrival into history is into a Jewish community who was looking for the
ending and climax of a long story of God's redemptive acts. All Jews
knew that this story was leading up to the grand culmination when God
would act decisively and finally to redeem the world. They disagreed on
who would do it, how it would be done, when it would happen, and how
they were to live until it did. But they all recognized that the story
of God's redemptive acts was moving toward a consummation. Jesus
announces that he is the goal of this redemptive story. So, on the one
hand, if we are to understand the gospel of Jesus we must see Jesus in
the context of the Old Testament story (cf. Luke 24:25-27). On the other
hand, if we are to properly understand the Biblical story, we must see
it through the lens of Jesus and the gospel (cf. John 5:36-57; Luke
24:44-45). But not only is Jesus the climactic moment in the story, he
points forward to the end. The end has not yet come (Acts 1:6-7). Thus
attending to Jesus points us back to a story told in the Old Testament,
and forward to the end of the story.
There is a final observation: the
church is essential to the gospel. That is, Jesus did not make provision
for the communication of the good news through history and in every
culture until the end of the story by writing a book as did Mohammed.
Rather he formed a community to be the bearer of this good news. Their
identity is bound up in their being sent by Jesus to make known the good
news of the kingdom. The story of the Bible is their life.
Human Life is Shaped by Some Story
All of human life is
shaped by some story. Consider the following event: A fox compliments a
crow and tells it that it has a lovely voice. He asks it to sing a song.
What is the meaning of this event? It is not too difficult to see that
the meaning of this event can only be understood in terms of some story.
Perhaps the fox wants to eat the crow and this compliment is a ploy to
get the crow to drop its guard. Perhaps the fox is a kind-hearted fox
that simply wants to encourage the poor crow. Perhaps the fox is a
tone-deaf choir director seeking to begin a choir among the forest
animals. Clearly these three stories would give the event different
meanings. In fact, this event is part of an Aesop's fable. There is a
famine in the forest and the crow sits perched in a tree with a piece of
cheese in its mouth. The various animals try to get the cheese with
different methods. The fox compliments the crow and the foolish bird
opens its mouth to sing. The cheese falls out and the fox runs away with
it. The moral of the story is don't be deceived by flattery.
This little exercise illustrates
that an event can only be understood in the context of a narrative
framework. So it is with our lives. Lesslie Newbigin puts it this way:
'The way we understand human life depends on what conception we have of
the human story. What is the real story of which my life story is a
part?'2
What Newbigin is referring to here is not a linguistically constructed
narrative world that we choose to live in. Rather it is to speak of
story as the essential shape of a worldview, as an interpretation of
cosmic history that gives meaning to human life. Story provides the
deepest structural framework in which human life is to be understood.
There is no more fundamental way in which human beings interpret their
lives than through a story. N. T. Wright says that 'a story . . . is . .
. the best way of talking about the way the world actually is."3
It is because the world has been created by God in a temporal way that
story can help us understand the way the world is. Brian Walsh says that
'because the world is temporal, in process, a worldview always entails a
story, a myth which provides its adherents with an understanding of
their own role in the global history of good and evil. Such a story
tells us who we are in history and why we are here.'4
If one lives in a culture shaped by the
Western story there are two stories that are on offer: the Biblical and
the humanist. Newbigin points out that
In our contemporary culture .
. . two quite different stories are told. One is the story of
evolution, of the development of species through the survival of the
strong, and the story of the rise of civilization, our type of
civilization, and its success in giving humankind mastery of nature.
The other story is the one embodied in the Bible, the story of
creation and fall, of God's election of a people to be the bearers
of his purpose for humankind, and of the coming of the one in whom
that purpose is to be fulfilled. These are two different and
incompatible stories.5
There are a number of things that can
be said about both of these stories. (1) Both of these stories claim to
tell the true story of the world. They are in the language of
postmodernism 'metanarratives' or in the language of Hegel, claims to be
'universal history.' (2) Consequently both of these stories are
comprehensive. That is, they claim the whole of our lives-social,
cultural, political, and individual. (3) Both of these stories are
embodied by a community. They are not simply the fruit of individual
experience and insight but stories that shape whole communities. The
Western cultural community is shaped by the humanist story. The church
is the new humankind that is shaped by the Biblical story. (4) Both of
these stories are religious; they are rooted in faith commitments or
ultimate assumptions. Contrary to the claim that the humanist story is
'neutral' or 'secular' while the Biblical story is 'religious', both
stories are rooted in ultimate commitments or beliefs. (5) As both
stories claim to tell the true story of the world, they issue an
invitation to all hearers to come live in the story, and pursue its
goals.
The humanist and Biblical stories are
to some degree incompatible; they tell two different stories. It will be
evident that if the church is faithful to its story there will be to
some degree a clash of stories.
The Bible Tells One Story
The Bible tells one
unfolding story of redemption against the backdrop of creation and
humanity's fall into sin. As N.T. Wright has put it, the divine drama
told in Scripture 'offers a story which is the story of the whole world.
It is public truth.'6
When we speak of the biblical
story as a narrative we are making an ontological claim. It is
a claim that this is the way God created the world; the story of the
Bible tells us the way the world really is. There is no more fundamental
way to speak about the nature of God's world than to speak of it in
terms of a story. Nor is the biblical story to be understood simply as a
local tale about a certain ethnic group or religion. It makes a
comprehensive claim about the world: it is public truth. The
biblical story encompasses all of reality-north, south, east, west,
past, present, and future. It begins with the creation of all things and
ends with the renewal of all things. In between it offers an
interpretation of the meaning of cosmic history. It, therefore, makes a
comprehensive claim; our stories, our reality must find a place in this
story. As Loughlin has put it: The Biblical story is 'omnivorous: it
seeks to overcome our reality.'7
Hans Frei makes the same point when he quotes Auerbach's striking
contrast between Homer's Odyssey and the Old Testament story.
Speaking of the Biblical story he says: 'Far from seeking, like Homer,
merely to make us forget our own reality for a few hours, it seeks to
overcome our reality: we are to fit our own life into its world, feel
ourselves to be elements in its structure of universal history . . .
Everything else that happens in the world can only be conceived as an
element in this sequence; into it everything that is known about the
world . . . must be fitted as an ingredient of the divine plan.'8
This insight has been gaining
ground in various areas of philosophy and theology. In philosophical
ethics Alasdaire MacIntyre states that I can only answer the question
"What am I to do?" if I can answer the prior question "Of what story do
I find myself a part?"9
In practical theology, for example, C. V. Gerkin says 'This sense in
which practical theological thinking is grounded in narrative is, of
course, rooted in the faith that the Bible provides us with an
overarching narrative in which all other narratives of the world are
nested. The Bible is the story of God. The story of the world is
first and foremost the story of God's activity in creating, sustaining,
and redeeming the world to fulfill God's purposes for it.'10
In theological ethics Stanley Hauerwas contends that 'the narrative
character of Christian convictions is neither incidental nor accidental
to Christian belief. There is no more fundamental way to talk of God
than in a story. The fact that we come to know God through the
recounting of the story of Israel and the life of Jesus is decisive for
our truthful understanding of the kind of God we worship as well as the
world in which we exist.'11
Sidney Greidanus believes it is important for preaching to hold that
'Scripture teaches one universal kingdom history that encompasses all of
created reality: past, present, and future. . . . its vision of history
extends backward all the way to the beginning of time and forward all
the way to the last day. . . . the biblical vision of history spans time
from the first creation to the new creation, encompassing all of created
reality.'12
Newbigin states further the importance of story for preaching:
'Preaching is the announcing of news, the telling of a narrative. In a
society that has a different story to tell about itself, preaching has
to be firmly and unapologetically rooted in the real story.'13
And finally, in Biblical studies N. T. Wright wants to proceed with a
method that joins 'together the three enterprises of literary,
historical and theological study of the New Testament and to do so in
particular by the use of the category of "story."'14
And yet it is the case that often
Christians do not see the Bible as one story. A Hindu scholar of the
world's religions once said to Lesslie Newbigin:
I can't understand why you
missionaries present the Bible to us in India as a book of religion.
It is not a book of religion-and anyway we have plenty of books of
religion in India. We don't need any more! I find in your Bible a
unique interpretation of universal history, the history of the whole
of creation and the history of the human race. And therefore a
unique interpretation of the human person as a responsible actor in
history. That is unique. There is nothing else in the whole
religious literature of the world to put alongside it.15
We have fragmented the Bible into
bits-moral bits, systematic – theological bits, devotional bits,
historical-critical bits, narrative bits, and homiletical bits. When the
Bible is broken up in this way there is no comprehensive grand narrative
to withstand the power of the comprehensive humanist narrative that
shapes our culture. The Bible bits are accommodated to the more
comprehensive cultural story, and it becomes that story-i.e. the
cultural story-that shapes our lives.
The Bible as a Six Act Play
In The Drama of
Scripture: Finding Our Place in the Story of the Bible we have
attempted to tell the story of the Bible in six acts.16
In Act One God calls into being a marvellous creation. He creates human
beings in his image to live in fellowship with him and to explore and
care for the riches of his creation. In Act Two humanity refuses to live
under the Creator's word, and chooses to seek life apart from Him. It
results in disaster; the whole creation is brought into the train of
human rebellion. In Act Three God chooses a people, Israel, to embody
his creational and redemptive purposes for the world. Israel is formed
into a people and placed on the land to shine as a light. They fail in
their calling. Yet God promises through the prophets that Israel's
failure will not derail His plan. In Act Four God sends Jesus. Jesus
carries out Israel's calling is a faithful light to the world. But he
does more: He defeats the power of sin at the cross, rises from the dead
inaugurating the new creation, and pours out His Spirit that his people
might taste of this coming salvation. Before he takes His position of
authority over the creation he gathers his disciples together and tells
them: 'As the Father has sent me, I am sending you.' Act Five tells us
the story of the church's mission from Jerusalem to Rome in the first
hundred or so years. But the story ends on an incomplete note. The story
is to continue; the church's mission is to continue in all places until
Jesus returns. We are invited into this story to witness to the
comprehensive rule of God in Jesus coming at the goal of history. Act
Six is a yet future act. Jesus will return and complete his restoration
work.
We might ask how this story might be
authoritative for our lives. N. T. Wright believes that the authority of
the biblical story is tied up with its overarching narrative form. He
offers a rich metaphor to explicate this authority.17
Imagine that a Shakespearian play is discovered for the first time but
most of the fifth act is missing. The decision to stage the play is
made. The first four acts and the remnant of the fifth act are given to
well-trained and experienced Shakespearian actors who immerse themselves
both in the first part of the play and in the culture and time of
Shakespeare. They are told to work out the concluding fifth act for
themselves.
This conclusion must be both consistent
and innovative. It must be consistent with the first part of the play.
The actors must immerse themselves in full sympathy in the unfinished
drama. The first four acts would contain its own cumulative forward
movement that would demand that the play be concluded in a way
consistent and fitting with that impetus. Yet an appropriate conclusion
would not mean a simple repetition or imitation of the earlier acts. The
actors would carry forward the logic of the play in a creative
improvisation. Such an improvisation would be an authentic conclusion if
it were coherent with the earlier acts.
This metaphor provides a specific
analogy for how the biblical story might function authoritatively to
shape the life of the believing community. Wright sees the biblical
story as consisting of four acts - creation, fall, Israel, Jesus - plus
the first scene of the fifth act that narrates the beginning of the
church's mission. Furthermore this fifth act offers hints at how the
play is to end. Thus the church's life is lived out consistent with the
forward impetus of the first acts and moving toward and anticipating the
intended conclusion. The first scene of act five, the church's story,
begins to draw out and implement the significance of the first four
acts, especially act four. The church continues today to do the same in
fresh and creative ways in new cultural situations. This requires a
patient examination and thorough immersion in what act four is all
about, how act four is to be understood in light of acts one through
three, and how the first scene of act five faithfully carries forward
act four.
This view of the authority of the
Biblical story assumes a clear understanding of our place in the story.
It is important not only to understand that the Bible is one cosmic
story of the world but also where we are at in the story. The Old
Testament looked to a time when the kingdom of God would be ushered in
in fullness. This was the goal of God's redemptive work. When Jesus
emerged he announced the arrival of the kingdom yet it did not come as
expected. Examining the gospels and listening to Jesus we hear that the
kingdom of God is already here but not yet arrived. What can this mean?
If my wife tells me that our guests from out of town are already here
but not yet arrived I would wonder what on earth she is saying. How can
the kingdom be already here but not yet arrived? And what is the
significance of the 'already-not yet' time period of the coming kingdom?
First we have been given a foretaste of
the kingdom. The gospels often compare the kingdom to a feast, a
banquet. When the end comes we will enjoy the full banquet of the
kingdom. However, the church has been given a foretaste of that kingdom
banquet. A foretaste of the kingdom constitutes us as witnesses. The
reason we have been offered a foretaste of the salvation of the end is
so that we can witness to that salvation. Let me offer another
illustration. The people of God are like a movie preview or trailer. A
movie trailer gives actual footage of the movie that is coming
in the future so that people will want to watch it. The people of God
are a kingdom preview. We embody the salvation of the kingdom which is
coming in the future so that people will see it and want it. That is
what the witness is all about. We are a sign that points to the coming
of the fullness of the kingdom in the future. We witness to its presence
and its future consummation. A biblical witness is a witness to the
kingdom, to God's rule over all of human life.
The worldview significance of our place
in the story can be illustrated by N. T. Wright's reflection on
worldview. In their popular book on worldview, Richard Middleton and
Brian Walsh argue that the Bible provides a worldview by answering
foundational questions that shape our lives. Those questions are: Who
are we? Where are we? What's wrong? What's the remedy?18
Wright follows Walsh and Middleton in his masterly discussion of the
importance of worldview for New Testament studies.19
Four years later in his second volume he writes that there is a fifth
question that needs to be added to the other four, a question that is
fundamental for human life. That question is 'what time is it?' He says:
'Since writing The New Testament and the People of God I have
realized that 'what time is it?' needs adding to the four questions I
started with (though at what point in the order could be discussed
further). Without it, the structure collapses into timelessness which
characterizes some non-Judaeo-Christian worldviews.
Heading Off Misunderstandings
Saying that the
Bible is one unfolding story could lead to misunderstandings. So it
would be good to say a few words to head off some of those
misconceptions. First by saying that the Bible is one unfolding story I
am not saying that the Bible is a nice neat novel. It is not a single
volume but a 'sprawling, capacious narrative.'20
In his discussion on the Bible as a metanarrative Richard Bauckham
states that the 'Bible does not have a carefully plotted single
story-line, like, for example a conventional novel. It is a sprawling
collection of narratives along with much non-narrative material that
stands in a variety of relationships to the narratives.'21
He continues that major stretches of the main story are told more than
once in divergent ways; there are a plurality of angles on the same
subject matter (for example, the gospels). He points further to many
ways in which there is a 'profusion and sheer untidiness of the
narrative materials.'22
He concludes that all this 'makes any sort of finality in summarizing
the biblical story inconceivable.'23
Secondly, the Bible is not only a
narrative document. There are many other genres of literature in the
Bible as well. Newbigin states that while the 'Bible is essentially
narrative in form' that 'it contains, indeed, much else: prayer, poetry,
legislation, ethical teaching and so on.' Yet, he maintains,
'essentially it is a story.'24
James Barr differs radically with Newbigin (and me) on what exactly
story means. Yet he too sees the overall shape of Scripture as a
narrative within which other genres of Scripture fit. Here is how he
puts it:
... in my conception all of the
Bible counts as 'story.' A people's story is not necessarily purely
narrative: materials of many kinds may be slotted into a narrative
structure, and this is done in the Hebrew Bible. Thus legal
materials are inserted and appear, almost entirely, as part of the
Moses story. In this case they are incorporated into the narrative.
Others are more loosely attached: songs and hymns of the temple and
of individuals, mostly collected in the Book of Psalms but some
slotted into the narratives as in Samuel, Kings and Chronicles. . .
. Wisdom books: whether . . . they came from Solomon, or because
they were general lore of Israel, they are part of the story also.
In the New Testament the
letters of great leaders, and an apocalyptic book like Revelation,
form part of the story, along with the more strictly narrative
writings. Thus in general, although not all parts of the Bible are
narrative, the narrative character of the story elements provides a
better framework into which the non-narrative parts may be fitted
than any framework based on the non-narrative parts into which the
story elements could be fitted.25
A third misunderstanding is tied
up with the notion of story. In some approaches to narrative theology-in
fact, in Barr's understanding above-the notion of story enables the
reader to ignore questions of historicity. Story may be only a
linguistically constructed narrative by a religious community, and no
more than that. Yet I use story to speak of an interpretation of
history. It is important that these events really happened. The Bible
requires 'a reality that corresponds to it.'26
The historicity of the narrative matters: '. . .it is of the very
essence of the matter that the events and places which you read in your
Bible are part of the real world and the real history-the same world in
which you live . . .'27
The Importance of Understanding the
Bible as One Story
The importance of
understanding the Bible as one story can be seen by noting Newbigin's
notion of a missionary encounter. A missionary encounter is the normal
position the church assumes in its culture if it is faithful. It assumes
two comprehensive yet incompatible stories. The Bible tells one story
about the world and human life while another equally all-embracive story
shapes out culture. Christian discipleship always takes cultural shape.
So in the life of the Christian community there will be an encounter
between two equally comprehensive stories. When the church really
believes that its story is true and shapes their whole lives by it, the
foundational idolatrous faith, assumed in the cultural story, will be
challenged. As the church challenges that story it offers a credible
alternative; it calls for conversion. It is an invitation to see and
live in the world in the light of another story. Our place in the story
is to embody the end and invite others into that true story.
If the church is to be faithful to its
missionary calling, it must recover the Bible as one true story
according to Newbigin: 'I do not believe that we can speak effectively
of the Gospel as a word addressed to our culture unless we recover a
sense of the Scriptures as a canonical whole, as the story which
provides the true context for our understanding of the meaning of our
lives - both personal and public.'28
If the story of the Bible is fragmented into bits it can easily be
absorbed into the reigning story of culture rather than challenging it.
Newbigin's recognition of this, and thus his passion for the importance
of seeing the Bible as one story, comes from his missionary experience.
In India he saw how easy it was for the Bible to be absorbed into a more
comprehensive and alien worldview. The Bible as one comprehensive story
in contrast to the comprehensive worldview of Hinduism was a matter of
life and death in India. In the West it is equally serious. A fragmented
Bible, then, can lead to a church that is unfaithful, syncretistically
accommodated to the idolatry of its cultural story. Or to use the words
of the Apostle Paul, a church without a comprehensive story to withstand
the power of the cultural story will be 'conformed to the world' (Romans
12:1-2).
Notes
- The substance of two keynote
addresses given at the 'Inhabiting the Story' conference at VUW, 16
July 2005.
- Newbigin, Lesslie. The Gospel
in a Pluralist Society, Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 15.
- Wright, N.T. 1992. The New
Testament and the People of God, London: SPCK, 40. Italics
added.
- Walsh, 'Worldviews, Modernity, and
the Task of Christian College Education', in Faculty Dialogue
18 (Fall 1992), 6.
- Newbigin, Gospel in a
Pluralist Society, 15-16.
- Wright, The New Testament and
the People of God, 41-42.
- Loughlin, G., Telling God's
Story: Bible, Church, and Narrative Theology. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1996, 37.
- Frei, Hans. The Eclipse of
Biblical Narrative. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1974, 3.
- MacIntyre, Alasdaire. After
Virtue. Notre Dame: Notre Dame University Press, 1981, 216.
- Gerkin, C.V. 1986. Widening
the Horizons: Pastoral Responses to a Fragmented Society,
Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 49.
- Hauerwas, Stanley. 1983. The
Peaceable Kingdom: A Primer in Christian Ethics. Notre Dame:
University of Notre Dame Press, 1983, 25.
- Greidanus, Sidney. 1988. The
Modern Preacher and the Ancient Text. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans,
95.
- In another place, Newbigin (A
Word In Season, Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1994, 204-205) speaks
of his personal Bible reading, but his words could as easily be
applied to his understanding of preaching: 'I more and more find the
precious part of each day to be the thirty or forty minutes I spend
each morning before breakfast with the Bible. All the rest of the
day I am bombarded with the stories that the world is telling about
itself. I am more and more skeptical about these stories. As I take
time to immerse myself in the story that the Bible tells, my vision
is cleared and I see things in another way. I see the day that lies
ahead in its place in God's story.'
- Wright, The New Testament and
the People of God, 139.
- Newbigin, 1999, A Walk Through
the Bible, Louisville, KY: John Knox Westminster Press, 4. See
also Lesslie Newbigin, 1989, The Gospel in a Pluralist Society,
Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 89.
- Craig G. Bartholomew and Michael
W. Goheen, The Drama of Scripture: Finding Our Place in the
Story of the Bible, Grand Rapids: Baker, 2004. We are dependant
on N. T. Wright for the metaphor of a drama. He explicates the
Biblical story in five acts ('How
Can the Bible Be Authoritative?', Vox Evangelica 21
(1991) 7-32; and The New Testament and the People of God.
London: SPCK, 1992, 139-143). Brian Walsh and Richard Middleton add
a sixth act (Truth is Stranger Than It Used To Be: Biblical
Faith in a Postmodern Age. Downers Grove: Intervarsity Press,
1995, 182). We follow Walsh and Middleton, and use the latter
structure. See our website
www.biblicaltheology.ca for resources on using the book
including a seven page summary of the Biblical story.
- Wright,
'How Can the Bible Be Authoritative?' and The New Testament
and the People of God, 139-143.
- Walsh and Middleton, The
Transforming Vision: Shaping a Christian World View, Downers
Grove: IVP, 1984, 35.
- Wright, N. T., The New
Testament and the People of God, 29-144.
- Peterson, Eugene. 'Living into
God's Story.' This article originally appeared on the website 'The
Ooze: Conversation for a Journey' (www.theooze.com).
It can be accessed at
www.churchcrossing.com/articles.cfm?fuseaction=articledetail&122
- Bauckham, Richard. Bible and
Mission: Christian Witness in a Postmodern World. Grand Rapids:
Baker, 2003, 92.
- Op. cit.
- Ibid., 93.
- Newbigin, Lesslie. The Open
Secret: An Introduction to the Theology of Mission. Grand
Rapids: Eerdmans, 1995, 81.
- James Barr. The Concept of
Biblical Theology: An Old Testament Perspective. Minneapolis:
Fortress Press, 1999, 356.
- Fackre, Gabriel. 'Narrative
Theology from an Evangelical Perspective', in Yandell, K.E., ed.,
Faith and Narrative, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001,
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- Newbigin, Lesslie. 'Response to
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