Author: Andy Rowell

  • Review of Lesslie Newbigin’s 1956 primer Sin and Salvation

    I am a teaching assistant for Geoffrey Wainwright’s Lesslie Newbigin course at Duke Divinity School.

    Sin and Salvation by Lesslie Newbigin  

    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Basic theology written for village teachers in India, September 16, 2009
    By  Andrew D. Rowell (Durham, NC) – See all my reviews
    (REAL NAME)
      

    Geoffrey Wainwright, professor of systematic theology at Duke Divinity
    School, has called “Sin and Salvation” “a marvelous, moving summary of
    the gospel.” Lesslie Newbigin’s book published in 1956 is succinct,
    clear and ecumenical.

    Newbigin (1909-1998) begins the preface this way,

    “This small book was originally published in Tamil for the use of
    church workers in the Tamil dioceses of the Church of South India.
    Those for whom it was intended are mostly village teachers of
    elementary grade, who–although without theological training–have to
    bear a heavy share of the responsibility for the pastoral care of
    several thousand village congregations in the Tamil country . . . I
    began writing it in Tamil but found that the work was proceeding too
    slowly and therefore completed it in English, and requested a friend to
    translate it. I have therefore tried to write the kind of English
    sentences that would go easily into Tamil, and have had all the time in
    mind the necessities of translation” (p. 7). (Newbigin describes more
    fully the villages he had in mind when he wrote this in chapter 7
    “Kanchi: The Villages” of his Unfinished Agenda: An Updated Autobiography).

    The Duke Divinity School students who read this book for
    Wainwright’s course noted how valuable Newbigin’s little book was for
    helping them review theology. They also appreciated the breadth of his
    description of what the cross accomplished. Newbigin cannot be pinned
    down as merely “Reformed”–his work has traces of Wesleyan, Orthodox
    and Catholic theology as well. (See Wainwright’s extensive analysis of
    “Sin and Salvation” in chapter one of his book Lesslie Newbigin: A Theological Life.

    Fans of Newbigin’s writings from the 1980’s and 1990’s will be
    interested to note that even as early as 1956 when he was 47 years old,
    he was reflecting on what Darrell Guder later called “the missional
    church” drawing inspiration from Newbigin. For example, Newbigin writes
    in the preface of Sin and Salvation that he has has decided to treat
    the “church” before “faith” because “it is the order which the
    non-Christian has to follow when he comes to Christ. What he sees is a
    visible congregation in his village. It is that congregation which
    holds out to him the offer of salvation” (p. 9).

    Most people will likely want to read Newbigin’s later works before
    picking up “Sin and Salvation” but as vigorous discussion continues
    surrounding the nature of Christian salvation and
    justification–consider Justification: God’s Plan & Paul’s Vision by N. T. Wright, The Deliverance of God: An Apocalyptic Rereading of Justification in Paul by Douglas Campbell, The Future of Justification: A Response to N. T. Wright by John Piper, and Inhabiting the Cruciform God: Kenosis, Justification, and Theosis in Paul’s Narrative Soteriology
    by Michael Gorman)–Newbigin’s Sin and Salvation reminds theologians of
    the need to explain the gospel fairly and thoughtfully to preachers,
    teachers, students, new believers, and the curious outsider. It is not
    surprising that late in life Newbigin developed a friendship with Holy
    Trinity Brompton Church in London which developed the Alpha course and
    related resources like Nicky Gumbel’s Questions of Life: A Practical Introduction to the Christian Faith. Another recent attempt to clearly and simply explain the gospel is James Choung’s book True Story: A Christianity Worth Believing In and his sketched diagrams. Newbigin would himself acknowledge the need for such resources.

    I have reviewed a couple other little known books by Newbigin now.

    Book Review: Signs Amid the Rubble by Lesslie Newbigin

    Recommended: Lesslie Newbigin’s Unfinished Agenda: An Updated Autobiography

  • Book Review: Signs Amid the Rubble by Lesslie Newbigin

    I am a teaching assistant for Geoffrey Wainwright’s course on Lesslie Newbigin at Duke Divinity School this semester.  Here is my Amazon.com review of the first book we read in the course.

    Signs Amid the Rubble: The Purposes of God in Human History by Lesslie Newbigin, edited by Geoffrey Wainwright (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2003).

     

    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Important Lectures by Newbigin on Eschatology and Evangelism , September 7, 2009
    By  Andrew D. Rowell (Durham, NC) – See all my reviews
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This collection of Newbigin’s lectures demonstrate his ability to think
    theologically, logically, fairly and passionately about Christian
    engagement in the world. It is not surprising that many have found
    Newbigin to be a helpful guide through these difficult waters.

    Signs Amid the Rubble contains three sets of lectures by Lesslie
    Newbigin (1909-1998) introduced by Duke University theologian Geoffrey
    Wainwright, author of Lesslie Newbigin: A Theological Life.

    The first are a set of 4 lectures given in Bangalore, India in 1941
    when Newbigin was 32 years old called “The Kingdom of God and the Idea
    of Progress” (pp. 1-55). Newbigin criticizes the prevailing view that
    the world is becoming better and better. He points out the evidence
    against this view and then makes the case that the concept of the
    Kingdom of God is far more useful as a framework for understanding
    reality. In particular he singles out C. H. Dodd for his over-realized
    eschatology. “The eschaton, the end, enters into our present experience
    by qualifying all present action: that is its significance. But the
    point is whether it does not lose that significance unless it be also a
    fact which is really going to happen” (33-34). Indeed, Newbigin goes on
    to emphasize that in fact he believes the eschaton is “really going to
    happen”–it is not just a symbol.

    The second set of three lectures are The Henry Martyn Lectures
    delivered at the University of Cambridge in 1986 when Newbigin was 77
    years old (57-109). These have the theme of “mission then and now”
    (97). Newbigin addresses some of the most difficult questions that
    missionaries face. Will all people be saved or only some (66-75)?
    Newbigin writes, “As I find myself in D’Costa’s book classified as an
    exclusivist, I will try to say why” (72). He goes on to criticize the
    trendy terms “dialogue” and “conversation”–arguing that there is a
    legitimate place for “preaching” and action (75-77). He then looks at
    the ways missionaries have engaged culture–arguing that conversion is
    a legitimate pursuit despite the errors of colonialism (78-94).
    Christianity is something that affects “facts” of life (the important
    stuff!) and not just the “values” (one’s preferences and feelings)
    (90). Finally, in the last lecture of the Martyn lectures, Newbigin
    soars. This piece perhaps could be read by itself for its clarity on
    the question of the relationship between evangelism and social justice
    (95-109). He explains that social justice is not a substitute for
    evangelism but that it is still appropriate to love through healing and
    caring ministries while proclaiming the gospel. “Election” (103)
    reminds Christians that they are blessed by God that they might be a
    blessing to others (Genesis 12:2). Newbigin also addresses the
    relationship between the church, the kingdom of God and politics. The
    church is to be “a sign, instrument and foretaste” of the reign of God
    (103).

    The third set of addresses by Newbigin takes up just 10 pages
    (111-121) at the end of the book. They are brief remarks Newbigin made
    in 1996 (at age 87) to the The World Conference on Mission and
    Evangelism in Salvador de Bahia, Brazil in December 1996. They are
    blunt and informal remarks about the importance of evangelism. He
    criticizes the god of the free market and the lack of prioritizing of
    telling the story of Jesus. He goes on to criticize abortion on demand,
    point out the challenge of Islam, and recommend the pursuit of the
    glory of God from a heart of joy.

    I would recommend reading these addresses in reverse order. Read
    the ones from 1996 first, then the 1986 Martyn lectures, then the 1941
    Bangalore lectures. The Bangalore lectures are slightly more
    philosophical and thus slightly more difficult. The Martyn lectures
    wonderfully summarize many of the themes in Newbigin’s later works The Open Secret: An Introduction to the Theology of Mission, Foolishness to the Greeks: The Gospel and Western Culture, and The Gospel in a Pluralist Society. The most accessible place to learn about Newbigin though is his own autobiography: Unfinished Agenda: An Updated Autobiography, which I have reviewed on Amazon.

    Christians looking for a guide on how to think about engagement
    with the world will find a trustworthy, experienced, and wise voice in
    Newbigin.