One of the first things
I learned as a new Christian was the importance of Bible study. And while
knowledge of the Bible was a good thing in and of itself, I was told, the
really critical thing was application – applying the Bible to my life. It was knowledge,
yes; but it was also knowledge and application. It was faith, yes; but it was also
faith demonstrated in works.
It sounds so simple and
obvious. It is. But it’s not. The not-surprising thing is that we have to
relearn this core understanding with each generation. What is surprising is how
counter-cultural this idea actually is in practice.
And this is Christianity’s
history as well. “In every place (where it has seen explosive growth),” writes
T.E. Hanna in Raising
Ephesus: Christian Hope for a Post-Christian Age, “Christianity was a
powerful counter-cultural movement whose presence took root at the margins and
whose impact derived not from privilege or influence, but from an embodiment of
the life-transforming presence of the Holy Spirit.” Hanna points out that
Christianity is not dying today, but its geographic center is shifting – from
what we consider the Western nations to China and the nations of the South –
South America and Africa.
It happened just this
way in a city in the Roman Empire called Ephesus, near the Aegean coast of what
we know today as Turkey. It is the idea of understanding, application, and
growth – what empowers an individual’s faith and ultimately transform society
and culture – that permeates Raising
Ephesus, one of the best studies of Paul’s Epistle to the Ephesians that I’ve
read.
Hanna divides his study
of Paul’s letter into five parts: Remembering Hope; Recovering Identity;
Redeeming Community; Reclaiming Mission; and personal application, which he
calls Raising Ephesus. Each section combines
solid understanding of the text and contemporary and often personal examples
with a straightforward, engaging style. The study is easy to read, but that
doesn’t mean is isn’t packed with insight.
One brief example: In
the section of the study on Redeeming Community, Hanna points out how
entrenched the myth of individualism is in Western and especially American
culture. It’s so entrenched, in fact, that we think it must be in the Bible,
somewhere. The myth has permeated the church. “This results,” he says, “in
Christians who replace spiritual growth with isolated, self-help projects.
These are Christians who believe they can serve God without having to actually
seek God.” Ouch. And then he explains how Paul explained the concept of
community to the Ephesians.
Hanna, who blogs at Of Dust and Kings (one of my favorite blog
titles), is a graduate of Asbury Theological Seminary who is currently the
pastor of a small congregation. He says this about himself at his blog: “I’m passionate about reclaiming authentic
Christianity in the midst of a culture that has lost its way.” A relatively short work, the book also has an accompanying
five-booklet devotional series entitled Ancient Faith for a Modern World.
Raising Ephesus is the kind of study that encourages me to hope Hanna will
undertake similar studies. Solid, insightful, and full of understanding, it is
also highly readable and applicable.
Painting: Miracles of St. Paul at Ephesus by Jean Restout (1693)
2 comments:
Thank you. I'm always looking for new reading material!
Thank you for the review! I'm glad you found the book meaningful!
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