Transforming Acts. Bruce G. Epperly

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Transforming Acts - Bruce G. Epperly

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      I believe that Acts of the Apostles provides a fluid, open-spirited, and holistic faith for twenty-first century people as well as a vision for congregational transformation and renewal. Anything can happen to those who follow Jesus. Life is adventurous, surprising, and interesting. Worship leads to mission and mission challenges narrow-mindedness and self-imposed limitations. For those who embrace the spirit of Acts of the Apostles, worship will never be boring and every day will be a holy adventure.

      Acts As A Twenty-First Century Gospel

      As I turn the pages of Acts of the Apostles, I am tempted to exclaim “It’s déjà vu all over again!” The world of the twenty-first century and the world of the first century look surprisingly similar. The author of Acts, most likely the author of the Gospel of Luke, was a keen observer of the spiritual landscape of his own time. As he pondered writing the sequel to his gospel account of Jesus’ life and ministry, I imagine that he saw God’s presence in the adventures of Jesus’ first followers as they journeyed into the Mediterranean world. I suspect that he experienced first-hand the pluralism, uncertainty, relativism, and change that characterized the first decades of the Jesus movement. He had been touched by Jesus and God’s Spirit in a way that joined Jewish wisdom, global mission, and mystical experience. He believed that God was alive and moving through our lives, guiding people through dreams, visions, and unexpected ecstatic experiences. He saw God’s hand in the ever-expanding circles of the Jesus movement, beginning at the Jerusalem Pentecost and embracing Rome and beyond. As he penned the manuscript we now know as Acts of the Apostles sometime between 70-80 CE, Luke believed that he was part of a never-ending story of divine call and human response, unhindered by ethnicity, geography, or sociology. He visualized a faith with a moving center, initially revolving around Jerusalem but eventually embracing the whole Earth. He might even have imagined Christians like us, centuries later, telling and retelling the stories of Jesus and he wanted to give us a glimpse of how a small group of people were able to transform the world.

      Luke saw the Jesus movement emerging in his own “postmodern” world, where old spiritual certainties were being challenged and people craved experiences of the divine to help them face the inevitabilities of aging and mortality. Consider the following descriptions of the first century Jesus movement as they relate to our own particular time. Do they seem familiar? Do they describe some of the challenges we face in our own pluralistic age? The technology differs, and so does our understanding of the universe and the nature of global communication, but we may have more in common with Jesus’ first followers than we previously imagined:

       The early church emerged in a pluralistic and multi-religious society, where it had to compete on equal footing with many other religious traditions. Today, we can no longer claim to be a Christian nation, we are multi-religious nation in which anyone with internet or cable television can become a global citizen. Christianity is just one option among many for the majority of young adults and many of their parents.

       The first Christians had to deal with their poor reputation. They were accused by outsiders of misdeeds such as: undermining Jewish identity, teaching lax morals, and worshiping a strange deity whose character was vastly at odds with the Greek and Roman deities. Today’s Christians need to respond to the perception, especially among young adults, that our faith is intolerant, reactionary, backward looking, anti-scientific, sexist, and homophobic.

       For Jesus’ first followers the world was in flux. Rome was at its pinnacle but soon would be declining. Signs of its ultimate demise were beginning to surface. The old order was dying, not unlike the economic and global transformations which foretell the eclipse of the American empire and the dream of “American exceptionalism.”

       Without fully formed doctrines, creeds, or structures, the early church – guided only by their experiences of Jesus and the Holy Spirit, stories about Jesus, and the Hebraic scriptural witness – made it up as it went along, creating new pathways where none had existed before, trying out new ways of leadership, spirituality, and mission. As Christians today, we have a tradition of two thousand years of doctrinal reflection, but may need to be just as creative in our theological reflection to be faithful to Christ today. There is no clear orthodoxy to guide our path and perhaps there never was a fully orthodox faith affirmed by all Christians, but many orthodox alternatives among the Christian stories about God, Christ, Spirit, atonement, and salvation.

      Living in the Areopagus

      In this second decade of the twenty-first century, many people feel comfortable sampling the varieties of spiritual delicacies available in the spiritual smorgasbord. The possibilities are almost endless for the religious adventurer. There are few signposts to help the pilgrim find her or his way.

      Despite its numerical, political, and historical advantages Christianity no longer can command the sole allegiance of twenty-first century persons but must compete on an even playing field with Scientology, A Course in Miracles, The Secret, the Dalai Lama, and Tai Chi.

      The spiritual landscape is rapidly changing and the congregations and religious institutions that expect to flourish in the future must make it up as they go along, embracing the flow of life and the fluidity of doctrines and spiritual practices while affirming the wisdom of their traditions and founders. Consider the following statistics on North American religion garnered by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life:

       Whereas thirty years ago, less than a quarter of Americans noted that they have had mystical experiences, today 50% of Americans admit to having transcendent spiritual experiences (near death experiences, encounters with spiritual beings, or a deep sense of God’s presence).

       30% of Americans state that they practice multiple spiritualities – they go to church and practice Hindu-based yoga; they join Zen Buddhist meditation with congregational leadership; and they practice reiki healing touch and other energy work and participate in Christian healing services. Traditional religious boundaries no longer apply to many of today’s spiritual seekers. The quest for authentic and sometimes ecstatic

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