A
AnswersInHovind
Guest
A group at my church is doing a Bible study on N.T. Wright's "Surprised by Hope" DVD. I haven't been to the Bible study, but I watched the first couple sessions on my own time to see what he had to say. Wright seems to get a lot of criticism - conservatives seem to think he's too liberal, and liberals seem to find him too conserative, so it made me curious.
He explains that the traditional Christian view of heaven and earth is not that they are seperate. He says also that when we die, we are dead, and stay dead until the ressurection and the second coming, at which point heaven and earth will become one - the new creation.
I read up on this a little, and saw that this view has indeed existed throughout Christian history, and the view that seems to permeate a lot of Christian culture today (Left Behindesque eschatology) seems to be relatively new in the Christian history.
I'm not saying I agree or disagree with this. I'd never heard it before and don't know what to make of it yet, but I notice that this view works very well with a creationist worldview.
I know Wright himself is not a creationist, but I think of the nature defying feat of making heaven and earth one... some powerful event that would result in a new creation, and how that would completely go against all science and reason. It resonates with me the same notions of God forging the universe in 6 days, a notion that goes against our scientific understanding of the world, amplifying the power of God as we perceive it.
I don't really know where I am going with this thread, but I guess its interesting to compare your origins view with your eschatology view. Are they similar? compatible? Or complementary in their differences? Do we believe God made a perfect world that went wrong? Or that the world was never right and is building up to perfection?
Just some thoughts.
He explains that the traditional Christian view of heaven and earth is not that they are seperate. He says also that when we die, we are dead, and stay dead until the ressurection and the second coming, at which point heaven and earth will become one - the new creation.
I read up on this a little, and saw that this view has indeed existed throughout Christian history, and the view that seems to permeate a lot of Christian culture today (Left Behindesque eschatology) seems to be relatively new in the Christian history.
I'm not saying I agree or disagree with this. I'd never heard it before and don't know what to make of it yet, but I notice that this view works very well with a creationist worldview.
I know Wright himself is not a creationist, but I think of the nature defying feat of making heaven and earth one... some powerful event that would result in a new creation, and how that would completely go against all science and reason. It resonates with me the same notions of God forging the universe in 6 days, a notion that goes against our scientific understanding of the world, amplifying the power of God as we perceive it.
I don't really know where I am going with this thread, but I guess its interesting to compare your origins view with your eschatology view. Are they similar? compatible? Or complementary in their differences? Do we believe God made a perfect world that went wrong? Or that the world was never right and is building up to perfection?
Just some thoughts.