Michael Gorman chose the title of his book with some care. Becoming the Gospel is a programmatic title, not only for the book but for how Gorman understands the nature and role of each Christian and each Christian community. From the very first, Paul "wanted the communities he addressed not merely to believe the gospel but to become the gospel and in so doing to participate in the very life and mission of God." (2) In his earlier book on Inhabiting the Cruciform God, Gorman firmly set this trajectory. Looking to the consummation when "God will be all in all" (I Cor 15.28) Gorman concluded, "In the meantime, by the power of the Spirit of Father and Son, the new people, the new humanity bears witness in word and deed to that glorious future by participating now in the life and mission of the triune cruciform God."
That word participation is fundamental in Gorman's understanding of Pauline spirituality and to Paul's view of mission. In 2 Corinthians 5.21 Gorman finds an astonishing promised exchange between the cruciform God and those communities responsive to the Gospel and therefore called to "faithful allegiance" and "trusting loyalty". "For our sake God made Christ to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God."
The cruciform shape of Christian faith, practice and mission is distilled by Gorman in the sentence, "The cross of Christ reveals a missional, justifying, justice making God and creates a missional, justifying, justice making people." (9) This is a book about particpatory mission or missional particpation, and throughout Gorman expounds Paul's theology by taking with utmost seriousness Paul's vision of human life being caught up into the life of the cruciform triune God. In the power of the Spirit each Christian and each community participates in that life as agents of reconciliation, peacemaking peacemakers, persecuted for their faithfulness to the God of kenotic love and cruciform conciliation as they turn from the idols of the age and demonstrate deepest loyalty to God by their counter-cultural commitment to the new life in Christ.
Quoting Morna Hooker, another pastorally alert Pauline scholar, Gorman spells out what he intends by his title, becoming the gospel. Referring to the "we" of 2 Cor. 5.21m sge argues:
"The we has particular significance for Paul's own understanding of discipleship and ministry, and becomes an invitation tyo others to share in the divine activity. What Christ is to us – righteousness, wisdom, sanctification, redemption – Christians must now be to the world." (6)
What is God up to in the world, what is the missio dei? What happens if we read Paul's letters and interpret his life from the standpoint of the church as a sent community? the answeras to these two questions will take up the next review post. Beyond that Gorman takes us deep into the texts and contexts of several of Paul's letters, exploring and confirming his overall thesis that Paul's view of the gospel assumes a people who, in response to the love of God and the faithfulness of Christ revealed on the cross, and given vital reality throughout creation by the resurrection, become themselves faithful communities. By the power of the Spirit, redeemed into a new creation which is cruciform in shape and energised by resurrection, Christian communities are called to faithfulness, love and hope, embodying the very reality of that cruciform reconciling and renewing love set free into human life, the life of the creation and indeed of the entire cosmos.
If Gorman is right in his overall interpretation of a missional Paul in the service of a missional God, calling into being missional communities of faith and faithfulness, then he is providing a post-Christendom church with a theology of mission adequate to our condition. A church haemorraging confidence as quickly as members, which despite desperate attempts at cultural adjustment and accommodation is being increasingly pushed to the peripheries of post-modern culture, and urgently needs to rediscover, and recover, its own raison d'etre. By focusing on God's purpose for the church, and embedding that in the biblical narrative of Christ crucified and risen, and affirming communities called into being to re-present and participate in that same cruciform, reconciling kenotic love – that is to begin to give the church back its true existence, and that is what Gorman aims to achieve. As participants in the divine nature, as those who through the astonishing exchange of redemptive love, each church recovers its own true value as created by God, its own mission which is essentially, and necessarily different from the cultural icons of 21st century Western society. That difference will inevitably lead to persecution, almost in proportion to a community's faithfulness to and faith in Christ. This book is about spelling out the nature of that difference as seen in some of the earliest communities in the New Testament.
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