Every person who goes to a church should walk away saying, when
Speaker:I was there today, I saw Jesus.
Speaker:They should not walk away saying that's a great pastor.
Speaker:Or, that's a beautiful piece of music.
Speaker:Those things are all fine to say, but if they don't, if they come away
Speaker:and they did not encounter Jesus, they've, the church has failed.
Speaker:So yeah, there's one place, one person to go to, it's Jesus.
Speaker:Um, uh,
Speaker:In a world where many are deconstructing their faith, what can we learn from
Speaker:studying the causes rather than judging or just ignoring the issue?
Speaker:Listen as we answer this question and more with Scott McKnight,
Speaker:a New Testament professor and prolific author of over 90 books.
Speaker:His latest book, Invisible Jesus, a book about leaving the
Speaker:church and looking for Christ.
Speaker:Co authored with Tommy Phillips, tackles the deconstruction movement
Speaker:head on, viewing it not as a crisis, but as a prophetic movement that
Speaker:urges a return to a Jesus first faith.
Speaker:Scott, welcome to Seek Go Create.
Speaker:thank you very much for this invitation.
Speaker:It's good to be with you.
Speaker:good to have you here too, Scott.
Speaker:I just finished reading Invisible Jesus really just about 30 minutes ago.
Speaker:It poked at me some, but, we'll talk about that in a little while.
Speaker:then I read Revelation for the rest of us a few weeks ago.
Speaker:we're gonna have fun tying some things together, my first question, I'm gonna let
Speaker:you Pick which question is my first one.
Speaker:Scott, I used to ask the question, what do you do as sort of an icebreaker
Speaker:and get started, I've recently started giving people the choice of, would
Speaker:you rather answer the question, what do you do or who are you?
Speaker:Which question would you prefer to be the first question?
Speaker:Well, I hope that everybody would want to answer who are you?
Speaker:I'm a follower of Jesus.
Speaker:I'm a husband.
Speaker:I'm a father.
Speaker:I'm a teacher.
Speaker:mostly I am someone who, is indwelt by the spirit.
Speaker:And I am in Christ, and I've just been reading 1 John, and how we are
Speaker:in God, and God is in us, and we are in Christ, and Christ is in us, and
Speaker:we are in the Spirit, and the Spirit is in us, and love is in us, etc.
Speaker:So that's, who I think I am.
Speaker:That's good and you are correct that most people are leaning
Speaker:towards answering that Who are you?
Speaker:But I think it takes some people back depending on business people and
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:to giving a
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:So I appreciate that and thanks for answering that
Speaker:I know i've got a Boatload of questions here and I know we're
Speaker:sort of limited to time, but I think I would love to start with asking
Speaker:for a few definitions from you.
Speaker:the first definition kind of revolves around the book Invisible
Speaker:Jesus that, just recently released as the time we're, recording this.
Speaker:and the big word that you're using there is the word deconstruction.
Speaker:And my observation, Scott, is that there, there's some people throwing that
Speaker:word around in a lot of different ways.
Speaker:So how do you define deconstruction or how do we want to frame it for
Speaker:the conversation we're going to have?
Speaker:In this book, deconstruction refers to shedding elements of a local church's
Speaker:faith, or a denomination's faith.
Speaker:that were not important to Jesus.
Speaker:we don't use it in the classic philosophical sense that it's the self
Speaker:destructive dimensions of power claims.
Speaker:That can be unmasked by unraveling it by chasing down its own assumptions.
Speaker:We're using it for the process that believers, Christians, are using
Speaker:to shed elements that they are finding in a church that they think
Speaker:are just not important to Jesus.
Speaker:So, that's what we mean by it.
Speaker:on perspective, is it a good word or a bad word?
Speaker:for us, you know, I don't want to get into the debate.
Speaker:With deconstructors or critics of deconstructors of whether it's a good
Speaker:term or a bad term because for us it's a real term It's it's a term people are
Speaker:using for a process of shedding elements of the faith so they can reconstruct
Speaker:a healthier Jesus shaped faith.
Speaker:So for us, it's a term that we use that we want to listen to the people
Speaker:who use this term for themselves to find out what's going on in the
Speaker:church and with these people's faith.
Speaker:Seems to have, there seems to be some gasoline that's been poured on this fire
Speaker:recently, or is that just our observation?
Speaker:I think you're right.
Speaker:I think it's a fresh, expression of a term.
Speaker:I was talking to an Old Testament scholar who said, well, the prophets
Speaker:were the original deconstructors.
Speaker:And then Tommy often says, Jesus was a deconstructor.
Speaker:And others would say, John in the book of Revelation is a deconstructor
Speaker:I think that this is true.
Speaker:And the Reformation is an ultimate deconstruction movement.
Speaker:it launched Reformanda Semper, Semper Reformanda, always reforming.
Speaker:And if we really believe that the church constantly has to go back to scripture
Speaker:to see its faithfulness, and if we really believe the church is honest and fair,
Speaker:it will always find dimensions of the faith that need to be shed so the church
Speaker:should always be deconstructing, but there's a little bit of a trend going
Speaker:on right now with this term, and it pertains to a certain group of people.
Speaker:Now, some people are using it for those who completely walk away from the faith.
Speaker:But our study, we had access to a proprietary study that discovered
Speaker:that 86 percent of people who use the word deconstruction for
Speaker:themselves remain in the church.
Speaker:So it's not, you know, We're concerned with that 86%.
Speaker:The 14 percent I think would be dealt with in a different way, but we have
Speaker:found the voices of the Deconstructors to be prophetic They're telling us
Speaker:about some things going on in the church that we need to listen to.
Speaker:right?
Speaker:So what's interesting for me, Scott, is that I didn't grow up.
Speaker:In or around the church, I got saved at 28 years old is what many would say
Speaker:would be my, the date, but I did grow up in the southern US, Bible belt culture
Speaker:where people pretty much thought just by association, they were Christians, So, and
Speaker:I was also saved in a business setting.
Speaker:So I've actually realized that I just have never liked a lot of we
Speaker:will call the church was doing.
Speaker:I just, and I'm not anti church, but I was.
Speaker:Probably more hypercritical or I just like going, what are they doing here?
Speaker:What are they talking about?
Speaker:Because it doesn't fit with some things I'm looking for.
Speaker:And so kind of my next, maybe a definition question that kind of came to my mind as
Speaker:I was reading through book over the last few days is, We hear a lot of people,
Speaker:you know, Dallas Willards and people like that talk about spiritual formation.
Speaker:A lot of people in theology schools and things like that.
Speaker:And then we have deconstruction as y'all talk about it in your book.
Speaker:And to me, From my journey, it seems like there's a relationship there,
Speaker:but could you compare and contrast spiritual formation, people just going
Speaker:through their journey to get closer to Christ or get closer to where they need
Speaker:to be, and then deconstruction where people are kind of walking away from a
Speaker:church world to get closer to Christ?
Speaker:Closer to Christ if I if I worded any of that wrong, correct me But is there
Speaker:any relation between those two or am I just trying to make something of nothing?
Speaker:No, I don't think you are.
Speaker:I knew Dallas Willard a little bit, and I followed his movement,
Speaker:and I know those who are closely associated with him, or were.
Speaker:And Dallas, I think, would, partake in a sense of deconstruction, although
Speaker:as a philosopher, he'd probably want to use the word the way the French
Speaker:deconstructors do it, so he wouldn't say it's part of the church, but he
Speaker:would say that the church needed to be deconstructed In that, it wasn't leading
Speaker:people to Christ likeness, which was sort of his agenda, through the spiritual
Speaker:disciplines and he's very individualistic in the way he frames the Christian life.
Speaker:it's not very church centered, so he doesn't do much of the group stuff.
Speaker:Dallas Willard would say there's a lot of things that go on in the church
Speaker:that are largely a waste of time.
Speaker:And that we would do better, having smaller classes and having people
Speaker:ponder, more, serious issues of gravity.
Speaker:I'm sure he would say that deconstruction is in some ways the
Speaker:heartbeat of what was going on in the spiritual formation movement.
Speaker:Richard Foster, James Bryan Smith.
Speaker:Now, James Bryan Smith is much more oriented toward a local church.
Speaker:But they all, focus on individual.
Speaker:Personal formation into Christ likeness and anything that doesn't
Speaker:move in that direction in a church could very well be wasting our time.
Speaker:Hmm, and there's a lot of that going on right now,
Speaker:I don't quite orient myself toward those categories, but I know that, I'm
Speaker:certain that Richard Foster and Dallas Willard would say that very thing.
Speaker:I'm not going to speak for James Bryan Smith,
Speaker:right?
Speaker:because he's so committed to the local church.
Speaker:I don't know what he would say about that.
Speaker:Wrestle at times internally with My internal criticisms of the local church
Speaker:versus voices in my head and spirit.
Speaker:And it could be, you know, dogma that came from where I grew up of don't,
Speaker:don't mess with that local church.
Speaker:And, when I read through invisible Jesus that you and Tommy wrote,
Speaker:and Tommy is a local pastor, I think we need to mention that,
Speaker:yeah, he is.
Speaker:y'all still have a heart that local church body.
Speaker:it's not as if you're trying to throw that out.
Speaker:Correct.
Speaker:that's right.
Speaker:in fact, what we're saying is these Deconstructors are not leaving the church.
Speaker:They're leaving a church and largely, gravitating toward another church
Speaker:that is more consistent with what they think Jesus wants for his church.
Speaker:So, in a sense, they're uber committed to the church.
Speaker:and willing to abandon churches that they don't think are consistent with
Speaker:what Jesus wants for his people.
Speaker:So, yes, we perceive 86 percent of those committed to the church, and both
Speaker:Tommy and I are committed to the church.
Speaker:Tim, I grew up under the teachings of Francis Schaeffer when I was, a
Speaker:college student, and Francis Schaeffer handed on to me Some very severe
Speaker:critiques of the American church.
Speaker:So as a college student, I'm 20, 21, 22 years old, and I've got some
Speaker:weapons in my hands because of Francis Schaeffer and those weapons, I was
Speaker:using and peeled off a lot of things.
Speaker:in my fundamentalist past.
Speaker:And there were times when I knew a lot more about what I didn't
Speaker:believe than what I did believe.
Speaker:And it took a while.
Speaker:It took me another decade probably to flesh out what I thought
Speaker:the church should be all about.
Speaker:And I'm not saying that we've ever attended a church that lives up to
Speaker:those expectations, but I'm a Bonhoeffer reader, and I know we have to surrender
Speaker:our dreams of what the church could be for what the church actually is.
Speaker:Hmm.
Speaker:And I've often said, you have to lower your expectations of the
Speaker:church to find the fullness of the expectations that we should have.
Speaker:Now there's a, I think it was chapter nine in the book that, I was so thankful
Speaker:that I got to this place where y'all were talking about what to look for
Speaker:in a pastor or what to look for in leaders, I think was what it was.
Speaker:Because in
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:at times, Scott, I'm thinking.
Speaker:really, this is a negative thought, I know, but there's really no one
Speaker:else, no one out there to follow.
Speaker:And I think the message is we shouldn't be following men.
Speaker:We should be being more Christ like.
Speaker:But y'all gave some examples of, I think, some bad traits and then some
Speaker:traits to look for in that chapter.
Speaker:That's it.
Speaker:Chapter nine.
Speaker:and so I'd love to talk to because we do have a lot of leaders.
Speaker:We have leaders that are listening in probably in ministry and business scott,
Speaker:so Give give just some thoughts there We're going to obviously recommend
Speaker:people read the book but just give some thoughts about what leaders to be doing
Speaker:when it comes to, either the local church or even, I mean, some business
Speaker:guys I think could learn from this.
Speaker:How do they need to be leading in the world we are in today?
Speaker:This will probably
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:late 2024.
Speaker:People might be listening in 2025.
Speaker:How should leaders that are attempting to be Christ like be?
Speaker:should they be leading
Speaker:Yeah, I think that they should lead from their character.
Speaker:And Tommy, is an addict of the fruit of the spirit, which is a good thing.
Speaker:He often brings in the fruit of the spirit.
Speaker:So in that very chapter where Tommy is talking we both write this book
Speaker:for what to look for in a pastor.
Speaker:I thought this was really important for him to draft for himself
Speaker:because he's a pastor after all.
Speaker:It's a lot easier.
Speaker:For them to listen to one of their own kind, loving and joyful and peaceful
Speaker:and patient and kind and good and faithful and gentle and self control
Speaker:that's all from the fruit of the spirit.
Speaker:But I would say I would, reduce this in a sense and gather it
Speaker:all into the bundle of character.
Speaker:When a person has a Tove or a good character, they make good decisions.
Speaker:They relate to people in the right way.
Speaker:They, pursue a vision that is shaped by goodness rather
Speaker:than by, let's say success.
Speaker:So I would say that we would say a good pastor is someone who leads from character
Speaker:and that character ultimately would be Christ likeness or the fruit of the spirit
Speaker:or the beatitudes or following Jesus.
Speaker:Rather than, let's say, their success, their skills, their preaching ability,
Speaker:their entrepreneurial, set, their vision, their enthusiasm, their charisma,
Speaker:and look, Tim, we all know that this is what churches end up finding.
Speaker:They have a big platform.
Speaker:They want someone to fill that platform and make it bigger
Speaker:and bring people to the church.
Speaker:Put butts in the pews.
Speaker:Butts in the pews mean bills in the plate.
Speaker:Bills in the plate might mean baptisms in the water.
Speaker:Baptisms in the water might be buildings on the campus.
Speaker:And they see this process and there are, there is a skill set that can
Speaker:accomplish this, that can be absent or minimal amount of character.
Speaker:And we both believe that.
Speaker:We should focus on character and we should be following people of character.
Speaker:the one thing I'll just mention something that nags at me and I'll
Speaker:let you respond to it Because I I don't and I totally agree with that
Speaker:But one of the things that bothers me is the systems i'm a systems guy.
Speaker:I'm an engineer from georgia tech So I look at the structure of what
Speaker:we're doing and I i've often wondered scott we've created the structures
Speaker:And asked what will, I'm doing air quotes for those listening, if you're
Speaker:watching the video, you see, ask pastors do some things that are almost.
Speaker:impossible for a human individual to do.
Speaker:And let me give you the context for it.
Speaker:And then you could agree, disagree, throw stuff at me, whatever you'd like to do.
Speaker:I've often wondered if to actually pastor someone
Speaker:It can't be done to scale.
Speaker:It's, it's done in small settings.
Speaker:I mean, the biblical example that I see, there was about 12, maybe
Speaker:a few more, maybe a few less.
Speaker:wondering if to put 200, 400, 600, 10, 000 an auditorium and say that's a pastor.
Speaker:I mean, are we, are we it the wrong thing or are we structurally wrong?
Speaker:Am I missing something here?
Speaker:What are your thoughts when I bring that up?
Speaker:Are we
Speaker:putting men and
Speaker:I'm totally with you.
Speaker:in position to fail almost immediately?
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:I think we put people in positions to succeed at what we want on that platform.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:So, but that doesn't make them a pastor.
Speaker:what we've created is a platform for someone who has the skill
Speaker:to keep our attention for approximately 45 minutes once a week.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:And frankly, there are some really good people who can do this.
Speaker:But you cannot pastor 20, 000.
Speaker:You cannot pastor 10, 000.
Speaker:You cannot pastor a thousand.
Speaker:You, you can't really pastor much more than, I know 12 is what Jesus has, but
Speaker:that's a little, that's a little easy to latch on to a number, If you have
Speaker:time and you have presence, I suppose you can pastor 100 to 200 people.
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:I mean, I'm not a pastor, but I am in pastoral relations, as it were, as a
Speaker:professor of seminary students with dozens of seminary students who rely on
Speaker:me for wisdom and advice and suggestions.
Speaker:but I'm not, I'm not truly pastoring them in the sense of
Speaker:mentoring them in the faith.
Speaker:And it is true that you can mentor someone, some people you can
Speaker:mentor for a year, and they're so skilled as Christians, they grow
Speaker:so quickly that they can kind of move on and you can just be there.
Speaker:And occasionally have conversations over coffee.
Speaker:Others take more work.
Speaker:And so I, I'm totally, I understand what's going on in churches, big churches
Speaker:with amazing speakers and amazing performers on the, on the platform
Speaker:with music, I get that and it draws people in, but that's not pastoring.
Speaker:Pastoring is to nurture.
Speaker:a person into Christ likeness.
Speaker:And nurturing requires presence.
Speaker:It requires relationship.
Speaker:It requires time.
Speaker:I mean, I know lots of these pastors who are on these big platforms that
Speaker:you couldn't get to, you couldn't get to with a, with a, I don't know,
Speaker:with an Uzi, with a, um, a huge army vehicle blasting down doors.
Speaker:I mean, there's so many layers.
Speaker:I don't understand how that's a pastor.
Speaker:Uh, but I do know what preaching is, and that's what we've created
Speaker:in our churches, is platforms for preachers who can bring people into the
Speaker:a
Speaker:church.
Speaker:lot of entertainment factor and I sometimes joke smoking mirrors when I
Speaker:mean smoking fog machines But smoking mirrors our son had a situation.
Speaker:He was at a church in la, uh semi famous Pastor and younger going
Speaker:through some stuff and we just kind of recommended, Hey, why don't
Speaker:you talk to someone at church?
Speaker:He served on their cleanup team.
Speaker:So he cleaned the bathrooms and all that kind of stuff.
Speaker:Hey, you're serving there.
Speaker:You're giving there, you know, go, ask one of the assistants.
Speaker:I know you're not going to get to the main guy because he's famous.
Speaker:And even the assistant, which you called hirelings, I think in the book, even,
Speaker:yeah,
Speaker:assistant, this was the comment they made.
Speaker:And truthfully, it ticked off mom and dad was my time is not my own.
Speaker:I don't have time to meet with you and have a conversation.
Speaker:And you know, this was, you know, our son, young man that was going through
Speaker:stuff, probably had Was it deconstructing?
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:Might've been, you know, he's.
Speaker:Gone through a lot of questions and stuff is solid young guy.
Speaker:But anyway, I, I see that and that grieves me we have those situations.
Speaker:should, it should grieve you, that's, that's the task of a pastor.
Speaker:Right,
Speaker:And you shouldn't call yourself a pastor.
Speaker:You know, when, when students come to me, Tim, I, I get students who are
Speaker:thinking about becoming pastors too.
Speaker:I used to get more of them when I was, when I was teaching undergrads, but.
Speaker:They'll come to me.
Speaker:Do you think I should be a pastor?
Speaker:And I always ask this question.
Speaker:Who are you pastoring right now?
Speaker:And who considers you their pastor?
Speaker:Because if both of those answers are nobody and nobody,
Speaker:then you're not a pastor.
Speaker:Pastoring is not a job.
Speaker:It's a calling.
Speaker:And I know a lot of pastors, and they pastor people.
Speaker:They pastor everybody they talk to, and it's the way they are.
Speaker:That's the gift that God has given them.
Speaker:So I'm, I'm totally with you.
Speaker:I think we got a, a massive problem, uh, in creating platforms that
Speaker:attract charismatic personalities and Lots of whom are narcissists
Speaker:who, um, who can really entertain.
Speaker:I, I, you know, I, I wouldn't even reduce it to entertainment.
Speaker:They're just really gifted speakers and they can pull it off.
Speaker:I mean, I, I love to listen to Andy Stanley, you know, I, I really do.
Speaker:I, I, I'd sit and stop and listen to Andy Stanley.
Speaker:Um, and I know he pastors people on the staff, people around him.
Speaker:I know him well enough to know that.
Speaker:But.
Speaker:Uh, you can't pastor the massive audience that he has, um, but there
Speaker:aren't very many people who have those kind of speaking skills that can,
Speaker:that can hold an audience like that.
Speaker:I mean, those are, that's really quite a gift.
Speaker:And it's unfortunate that little churches are just pouring all their
Speaker:people into these big churches in part because the, the local pastor can't,
Speaker:can't, can't perform the way he's at.
Speaker:Those megachurch people can.
Speaker:right.
Speaker:It was, uh, I'm going to shift a little bit and maybe look more at this circle
Speaker:back to the, to the deconstruction topic and some of the reasons for it.
Speaker:And it was, it was good for me.
Speaker:I think I was able to read your revelation for the rest of us, uh, a few weeks ago.
Speaker:It seems to me like some of the big questions that come up, and maybe this
Speaker:is of the results of this 86%, this study that y'all were able to get access to,
Speaker:seems as if there are two, two big topics that are kind of driving people to have
Speaker:questions that, Individuals need to answer and then also leaders need to answer.
Speaker:And this is, I think, one of the calls you have in the book is to, to those leaders.
Speaker:But it seems like there's that in the beginning question,
Speaker:we'll call it like creation.
Speaker:then there's in the end questions, which is, know, death and what's happening,
Speaker:eschatology and things like that.
Speaker:Those seem like Two of the big thing, big themes that are causing questions.
Speaker:And then there's some sub ones that we'll talk about in a little
Speaker:while, like politics and, uh, you know, things that are going on with
Speaker:systems in the world and all that.
Speaker:Would that, would that be accurate?
Speaker:And I, and I think y'all address some of those when I was reading through the book.
Speaker:You know, uh, Tim, we've listened to a lot of these stories and we haven't
Speaker:really, um, done any demographic of what, what, what causes people to go through
Speaker:into a crisis and start deconstructing.
Speaker:So, I, I tend, uh, I don't know that those are the two most important,
Speaker:but those are two important ones and we're, we're happy to talk about those.
Speaker:Creation science, I mean, I taught undergrads.
Speaker:for 17 years, and I taught Introduction to the Bible, and when you do
Speaker:Introduction to the Bible, you do Genesis 1, and when you have science
Speaker:students in the room, they're listening.
Speaker:They want to know what you think, and I've had plenty of students who over the
Speaker:years told me they grew up with a certain kind of creation science, and they have
Speaker:studied enough biology and the history of Let's say the genome and genetic DNA,
Speaker:et cetera, that they're not so persuaded of this young earth creationism stuff.
Speaker:But the problem is that it gets tied to a group that believes this.
Speaker:It gets tied to inerrancy, and then it becomes authoritative, and
Speaker:then all of a sudden, if you don't believe that, they, you're rejected.
Speaker:And you go through a crisis, you know, what's wrong with me?
Speaker:a part of this group anymore.
Speaker:So creation science is one of the major issues and it doesn't usually stand alone.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:in my lifetime, I've seen people be able to evangelize successfully
Speaker:on the basis of the question.
Speaker:I think it was James Kennedy's question.
Speaker:if you had to meet God tonight and died, uh, what would be your reason
Speaker:for God admitting you to heaven?
Speaker:That's the ultimate eschatological question.
Speaker:is what happens when you die, and will you go to heaven?
Speaker:I, I saw in the early 2000s that this question just disappeared
Speaker:from a massive segment of American, uh, churches and Christians.
Speaker:They weren't asking that question anymore.
Speaker:So that ultimate eschatological question died out.
Speaker:I don't believe we should end that question, because if, if eternity is
Speaker:real, I think we ought to be ready for it.
Speaker:But at the same time, those, those are two questions a lot of deconstructors
Speaker:are deeply bothered by the fact that of some Calvinists who think there
Speaker:are very, very few people who will be saved in all of Iran and all of Iraq
Speaker:and all of Russia and all of China.
Speaker:And all of a sudden you start thinking, you mean the whole world
Speaker:is going to hell except just a few.
Speaker:Presbyterians in the United States and in Denmark and, um, the Netherlands.
Speaker:And you think, you know, there's something wrong here that we need to rethink.
Speaker:And, uh, so that, that is, that is a major issue.
Speaker:And we usually see it in a version where people start talking about hell.
Speaker:That they're really bothered by how Christians, uh,
Speaker:frame the doctrine of hell.
Speaker:So those are two very significant issues that what we have seen is
Speaker:it precipitates a crisis of people thinking, do I believe this?
Speaker:And if I don't believe this, what's going to happen to me?
Speaker:with the group of Christians that I worship with.
Speaker:What's going to happen in my own family?
Speaker:What's going to happen to my leadership at church?
Speaker:As a pastor, am I going to lose my job?
Speaker:Am I going to lose my income?
Speaker:Where are we going to live and what am I going to do?
Speaker:Those are questions that are immediately precipitated when people begin to
Speaker:deconstruct and there, we want a world in which people can ask those questions.
Speaker:Yeah, and unfortunately, a lot of our structures don't allow that,
Speaker:uh, that kind of opens the door.
Speaker:I, I just want to ask a question or two related to, the, uh, I think you
Speaker:called them dissident disciples in your book revelation for the rest of us.
Speaker:and, and the reason is kind of pertinent for me, Scott, is.
Speaker:I'm approaching 40 years as a follower of Christ.
Speaker:as if I've been growing and learning and all the whole time.
Speaker:And unfortunately now at 60, I feel like I know less than I knew.
Speaker:And a good thing.
Speaker:I'm not, you know, embarrassed to say that there's, more there,
Speaker:but I realized that I had a bait.
Speaker:in dispensationalist mindset.
Speaker:And the thing I liked about that book was that spent a good bit of time sort
Speaker:of busting up that, um, we'll call it the dogma of dispensationalism.
Speaker:I don't know if that's a good term or not, but we'll, we'll,
Speaker:Fair enough.
Speaker:Fair enough.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And just, just a question or two about that.
Speaker:How, Why is that, just that one mindset, why is it dangerous, and
Speaker:how does it relate to your new book, Invisible Jesus, and people
Speaker:going through some deconstruction?
Speaker:If at all, if I'm trying to match something up here, you
Speaker:can say, don't worry about it.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:why is it dangerous?
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:A lot of people are dispensationalists.
Speaker:And I would say the instinct of American evangelicals of a non reformed bent.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:The reformed people tend to be post millennial or at least amillennial.
Speaker:But the, the other part, uh, are more or less dispensational.
Speaker:And there is a broad range of people who have dispensational instincts.
Speaker:Some of whom are really detailed.
Speaker:Way too detailed, and they know that Putin's the Antichrist, those sort.
Speaker:And there's others who are just sort of Dispensational, that's
Speaker:what their instincts are, but they don't think about it very much.
Speaker:Um, I think the biggest problem that dispensationalism handed on
Speaker:to the American church, and Tim, I don't want to deny This, it's huge.
Speaker:The impact is everywhere.
Speaker:Most people in most evangelical churches have dispensational instincts.
Speaker:Is that we have no, because of dispensationalism, we have no
Speaker:theopolitical discipleship in the church.
Speaker:Now what I mean by that is, our discipleship does not, has not taught us,
Speaker:How to think politically in a theological manner to understand leadership in the
Speaker:world Political powers how government works how it relates to the church There's
Speaker:just so little of this and it's almost like whatever America does is good Because
Speaker:we're the best nation in the world and therefore our support of Israel and our
Speaker:Paying for bombs to beat the daylights out of Gaza, uh, our support of Ukraine
Speaker:and maybe that's going to end now.
Speaker:Uh, that's okay.
Speaker:There's just no reflection.
Speaker:Christians just go, well, that's the government, that's their job.
Speaker:And we support the government.
Speaker:I, I think that the book of Revelation was, was written for
Speaker:an entirely different purpose.
Speaker:It taught people, the believers of the seven churches in Western Asia Minor,
Speaker:how to think politically about Rome.
Speaker:And we get a beautiful template.
Speaker:Now, we're not going to apply everything in the vision of, especially Revelation
Speaker:17, 18, a little bit of 19, on how, um, the apocalypse describes Rome.
Speaker:And it's, it is powerful critique, prophetic, and it teaches believers.
Speaker:And there aren't very many of them.
Speaker:But John somehow thinks there's going to be.
Speaker:An innumerable number of believers in the final kingdom of God, which is LOL
Speaker:moment for those little house churches in Ephesus and Pergamum, is that he's,
Speaker:he's teaching them how to look at Rome in a completely different way and to follow
Speaker:Jesus as the Lord, because someday, The kingdom of God is going to be on earth.
Speaker:And that's what we look forward to.
Speaker:So, uh, now deconstruction I have found this isn't, you know, I can't gather
Speaker:together all the deconstructors and hand them revelation for the rest of
Speaker:us that I wrote with Cody magic and say, now, what do you think Tommy, uh,
Speaker:preachers on this, he has preached for about a year on revelation and he's
Speaker:got good, really good sermons and he knows that these deconstructors love.
Speaker:This vision of the book of Revelation because it is it gives them a
Speaker:hermeneutic prophetic resistance to political powers that run the world
Speaker:astray and that create injustices.
Speaker:So I really believe that, uh, that revelation for the, you
Speaker:know, you've, you're the first person who's asked this question.
Speaker:I think a revelation for the rest of us is a recipe for the soul.
Speaker:For the deconstructor.
Speaker:I think they liked that book.
Speaker:I think so, too, and I hate to put timestamps on these, but you
Speaker:and I are recording this three days, four days after the U.
Speaker:S.
Speaker:elections in November.
Speaker:I'm not sure when exactly it will release, but and it kind of framed my mind when
Speaker:I was reading through Deconstruction, and what I realized is that I believe
Speaker:with reading those two books, Election conversation and wherever side people
Speaker:on kind of is irrelevant to me.
Speaker:It's, it's, I realize that I'm actually deconstructing in my mind, many things
Speaker:that are in what I'll call our Babylonian system, I, I'm almost deconstructing
Speaker:government, What I think about work, what I think about money, definitely
Speaker:church, as we talked about earlier, some people even, you know, family.
Speaker:I mean, to me, it seems like there's just a lot of deconstructing going on and,
Speaker:you know, there's no data on that, but it seems like that's kind of what's and the
Speaker:political environment is no different.
Speaker:Would that be, I don't know, accurate or
Speaker:I, I totally agree with you and I know Tommy would agree with you.
Speaker:Yes, there is.
Speaker:There is deconstruction of all these capitalism work, how work is constructed.
Speaker:Family life is constructed.
Speaker:How housing is developed.
Speaker:Wage, economic, uh, immigration, all these things are up for grabs.
Speaker:The deconstructors are saying if Jesus and the kingdom of God, is the
Speaker:center of the vision of God for this world, then we ought to be pursuing
Speaker:those things rather than how to, uh, um, let's say aggrandize the power
Speaker:of the United States or aggrandize the power of our political party or
Speaker:aggrandize the power of our church versus another church in the neighborhood.
Speaker:That all, they see that and they think this is just completely
Speaker:backward and upside down and wrong.
Speaker:And so, yeah, they see in the book of Revelation.
Speaker:all the themes that could be connected to invisible Jesus.
Speaker:Oh,
Speaker:I love the subtitle of Invisible Jesus, a book about leaving the
Speaker:church and looking for Christ.
Speaker:this is kind of like maybe a little bit of a softball to you.
Speaker:Maybe not.
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:Is it possible that we're getting to the place where many of us, many people,
Speaker:many, I don't know, individuals are realizing really is only one place to go
Speaker:and it's towards Jesus?
Speaker:No,
Speaker:I thought you meant one church.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Well, which one you talking about here?
Speaker:one
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:One
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:I,
Speaker:one political party.
Speaker:Which party is it, Scott?
Speaker:Tell us.
Speaker:No, I'm just kidding.
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:Um, I think, um, yes, every church, every person who goes to a church
Speaker:should walk away saying, when I was there today, I saw Jesus.
Speaker:They should not walk away saying that's a great pastor.
Speaker:Or, that's a beautiful piece of music.
Speaker:Those things are all fine to say, but if they don't, if they come away
Speaker:and they did not encounter Jesus, they've, the church has failed.
Speaker:So yeah, there's one place, one person to go to, it's Jesus.
Speaker:And those who gather to Jesus want to be in fellowship with one another.
Speaker:That's where church theology starts, in being around Jesus, listening to him.
Speaker:Oh yeah.
Speaker:the, um, the message of this book, invisible Jesus is to
Speaker:me more Jesus get with Jesus.
Speaker:is the So, uh, anyway, I, I recommend the book.
Speaker:I think it's a great book.
Speaker:It got me thinking.
Speaker:There were times that I recognized some of my, uh, dogmas and I'm okay to admit
Speaker:that, uh, I, I highly recommend it.
Speaker:Uh, one quick question before we wrap up here, Scott, I know you have
Speaker:to jump off, but written 90 books.
Speaker:Good gracious, that's a lot of books.
Speaker:Any, any of it that would need to be changed or adjusted.
Speaker:I'm sitting here thinking over the course of 40 years, like, uh,
Speaker:you know, we were all on a journey, any, any of your journey caused you
Speaker:to go back and revisit something.
Speaker:And, uh, we don't have to go deep on this, but just curious.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:You know, every book I'm, I totally live with the reality that when I
Speaker:write a book, it's connected to the world in which I live at that time.
Speaker:And so, for instance, I was looking at my little, uh, NIV application
Speaker:commentary on Galatians recently, and I liked my exposition.
Speaker:And then I looked at the, they call it application at that time.
Speaker:I went, Oh, I wouldn't talk about that today.
Speaker:So yes, um, but that's, that's the nature of writing.
Speaker:We learn and we grow and we develop and things that we said 30 years ago
Speaker:are not things that we would say today.
Speaker:I don't think, I think my exegesis of Galatians is, for me, it's rock solid.
Speaker:I still pretty much adhere to all of that.
Speaker:But, um, the world to which I would speak that is a different
Speaker:world than I did at that time.
Speaker:So yes, and I'll tell you one book, uh, that I loved writing.
Speaker:It's called Embracing Grace.
Speaker:Um, that book was totally reframed and, and dismantled by a book called King Jesus
Speaker:Gospel, and that was, I was exploring how best to talk about the gospel.
Speaker:And I wrote Embracing Grace, uh, and I liked the idea of grace,
Speaker:uh, but it wasn't Jesus centered enough in King Jesus Gospel.
Speaker:Did that so I never recommend people to read embracing grace
Speaker:final question.
Speaker:I know you need to jump.
Speaker:We're seek go create Scott.
Speaker:Those three words.
Speaker:You probably guess where the origins of some of those are.
Speaker:I'm going to allow you to choose one of those is just my final question.
Speaker:Which do you choose?
Speaker:It just resonates currently with you more than the other seek go or create and why?
Speaker:Well, that's a good question Create I believe that God in Christ is Recreating
Speaker:us to a new life and I want to participate I want to be involved in the work of
Speaker:God in my own life I want I want God to do that and I want to participate
Speaker:with others in the recreation of gospel grace life in our world today, and God
Speaker:is the actor who can make this happen.
Speaker:So I think that's, I think that answers your question.
Speaker:it does.
Speaker:I'm sure the books are available where everybody can get books, correct?
Speaker:Uh,
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:right here.
Speaker:got it on my iPad.
Speaker:Not my iPad, my Kindle.
Speaker:there's a hard copy.
Speaker:Man, that looks good.
Speaker:I like that black cover.
Speaker:That looks nice there.
Speaker:It's so clever, because the letters, Invisible Jesus, are
Speaker:black as well, but they're risen slightly above, so it's cool.
Speaker:there's a fading of the uh, invisible there.
Speaker:That's cool.
Speaker:Yeah, they're fading in the color version too, so, this is a good cover.
Speaker:Yeah, I really like it.
Speaker:really cool.
Speaker:That one would jump out.
Speaker:Well, anyway, thank you, Scott.
Speaker:And thank you, and in spite of the fact that you're a part of the
Speaker:Rambling Wreck of Georgia Tech.
Speaker:what, what is wrong with that?
Speaker:That's a, that's a plus right there, isn't it?
Speaker:My parents lived in Atlanta, but they, uh, I don't think they were
Speaker:big fans of Georgia Tech at the time.
Speaker:people?
Speaker:Hopefully not.
Speaker:Uh, no, no, they're from Illinois, but, uh,
Speaker:Thank you so much, Scott.
Speaker:I appreciate it.
Speaker:Make sure you get a copy of the book Invisible Jesus.
Speaker:I also think Revelation for the Rest of Us is an excellent book to add to it.
Speaker:It will get you thinking.
Speaker:There's no doubt about it.
Speaker:We have new episodes every Monday here at SeekGoCreate.
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Speaker:If you're watching this on YouTube, down in the comments.
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Speaker:So again, thanks for listening until next time continue being
Speaker:all that you were created to be