Author: Jonathan Dodson

Dessert-Sized Jesus

Many of us practice our faith like it’s a cafeteria food tray, with all the different compartments for the entrée, veggies, the roll, and dessert. When we do this, we restrict Jesus to just one of the compartments, the dessert section, or if we are really spiritual, maybe the entrée. Christ is not permitted in the other sections of our lives. Jesus isn’t allowed into work ethic, family dynamics, or our entertainment. We worship him on Sundays, but treat our families or free time without a thought of Christ.

Dessert-Sized Jesus at the Family Table

Men, in particular, need to rearrange their view of Christ. Are you feeding your family a dessert-sized Jesus? Your wife and kids don’t see you connecting Jesus to everyday life. You don’t pray with your spouse or kids, you don’t apply the gospel to your use of movies, TV, computers, video games, sports. You don’t lead your family in any kind of regular Bible reading or prayer. Hec, you think highly of yourself if you happen to read the Bible for yourself. You don’t serve your wife. You don’t have a clue the last time you bought her flowers and told her why you love her. You don’t lift a finger to cook or clean. You come home, plop down on the couch, flip on the TV or computer, and eat your little dessert Jesus, watching your stupid little TV shows while your wife lingers in loneliness and bitterness and your children run around like crazy.

What if Jesus is the Tray? (or holds it together)

Why? Because you have a desert-sized Jesus. Jesus doesn’t fit in the dessert tray, or even the entree section. He is the tray! He is Lord of all, holding everything together, calling us to worship him in every aspect of life. What if you resolved to follow the real Jesus, the one who holds your whole life together? How would that change your family, your work, your free time?

Adapted from sermon on Ezra 6 The Temple and the Cafeteria Tray Jesus

Is the Gospel Dangerous?

The Verge Network is running a series of interviews with some great folks who are leaders in missional community. They recently interviewed me (video posts next week) on the topic of Risk & the Gospel. The more I think about this topic of “Risk”, the more I’m convinced it is a helpful word to challenge consumer impulses in American Christianity. Risk, of course, comes with some theological baggage as it relates to God, but Verge (& Alan Hirsch) is more concerned with human risk. Should we risk? Is the Gospel dangerous? If so, what does risk look like in the life of a disciple and his/her community?

I wrote an article addressing these questions called: “Is the Gospel Dangerous?”

One of the Best Books on the Holy Spirit

Two of my favorite doctrines converge (Creation & the Holy Spirit) in Creator Spirit: The Holy Spirit and the Art of Becoming Human by Steven Guthrie. This book appropriates a theology of creation with a robust understanding of the Spirit and then applies it to Art. Guthrie wields constructive theology, integrating theology across disciplines, with ease. This is one of the best books I have read on the Holy Spirit.

While familiar with much of his helpful explanations of these doctrines, I found his application of these doctrines in the realm of Art, insightful and compelling. His prose moves the reader along in hopeful anticipation of yet, another intellectual and inspiring gem. The ease with which he floats between, for instance, John Coltrane, Plato, and Jurgen Moltmann win me over.

Appreciating More Than Art

Now, this is not stuffy theology, though some theological background is needed. The lofty touches down on the mundane, where we stand in Art Galleries gazing at something we know not how to interpret. Guthrie sweeps across Art criticism and history to provide us with handles for art appreciation (though his work is much more than that). Have you ever wondered whether Art should absorb your attention or redirect it beyond itself? Guthrie helps us here, citing primary sources. While expressionists want us to experience emotion, and Tolstoy wants us to experience the profound humanity in art, Guthrie insists that art is meant to point us, not ultimately to mystery or to its medium, but to God himself. This is the work of the Holy Spirit, who himself is remaking humanity into the form, not of mystery, but of the very image of God.

Knowing the Spirit

In all his constructive efforts, even the non-artist can benefit from this book. Guthrie provides a remarkably concise and stirring theology of the Spirit in chapter two, the same chapter which exegetes John Coltrane’s The Love Supreme (which I listened to with new ears today). His primary interlocutor, church father Athanasias, provides insight into the person and work of the Spirit as the re-humanizing Person of the Godhead. The goal of the Spirit is to re-humanize us after the image of the true human–Jesus Christ. I found Athanasias’ comment regarding the descent of the Spirit upon Jesus insightful: “This did not take place for the advancement of the Word but for our sanctification, so that we may share in his anointing…” In other words, the Spirit did not come upon Jesus because he was divinely insufficient, rather, it was so that Jesus, in his humanity, could become the prototypical new human who is indwelt with the Spirit of God, to become the true human. Of course, this was also an expression of the approbation of God as Jesus succeeded where Israel failed in passing through the watery judgment, to receive the favor and fellowship of God as the one, true Israelite who would lead the people of God out of the slavery of their sin into a new land of salvation. But he did this as the ultimate Man, possessing the power of the Spirit, just as his posterity, the Church does. Oh that we would commune with the Spirit in fellowship and in power to display the new humanity we have possessed by faith to the world, not in bold arrogance but in bold compassion and worship!

Chapters on the communal shape of singing, creativity, and vocation continue to push theology into practice with inspiring twists and turns that, themselves, embody the work of the creative Spirit radiating through Guthrie’s new humanity. This book is not for everyone, but it is about everyone. It is a theological, philosophical, artistic work that brings the reader along with insight and inspiration, grasping more deeply what God has accomplished and is accomplishing in Christ through his Spirit in every follower of Christ.

Free excerpt of Creator Spirit

Books I’m Reading

Summer is a great time for books, but anytime is a great time for books! For those interested, here’s what I recently finished or am currently reading:

Fiction

Nemesis

Sociology

HIP: the history

Modernist America: Art, Music, Movies and the Globalization of American Culture

American Grace: How Religion Divides & Unites Us

Theology

Did Adam & Eve Really Exist?

The Doctrine of the Christian Life

Faith & Culture

Should Christians Embrace Evolution?

The Call: Finding & Fulfilling Your Purpose in Life

Mission

Heart of the Gospel: The Theology Behind the Master Plan of Evangelism