Book Reviews – “Strange Virtues” by Bernard T. Adeney

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Strange Virtues – Ethics in a Multicultural World. By Bernard T. Adeney, InterVarsity Press Academic, 1995. 281 pages. Softback.

Ethics, both in study and in practice, is a not-trivial exercise.  In many ways it is where the rubber meets the proverbial road, that place where religion, philosophy and human interactions intersect (sometimes violently) as people try to “do right” by each other.  In a world as divergent and varied as this one, there seem to be as many ethical standards, codes and systems as there are people to implement them.  Violent collisions of different ethical assumptions and practices occur daily as people deal with one another.  As the world networks and becomes truly global, these cross-cultural ethical conundrums become more and more frequent and harried.  Travel is no longer needed to experience this distinctly human phenomenon, as the world has truly “come to our door”, both in the form of immigrants and the world wide internets.   It is no longer a question of if one will endure these ethical collisions, but a question of how to handle it when it does happen.  Thankfully, this is a situation that men like Bernard Adeney attempt to understand and while there are some conclusions that some authors such as Adeney come to, their advice is helpful and frankly, necessary.

Adeney’s purpose for writing Strange Virtues is clearly stated in the form of a question: “How do we respond to situations where our values are incongruent with those of another culture?” (14) Simply put, people believe differently from each other.  They have different values and different understandings of right and wrong.  They have different political systems, religious convictions and cultural ceremonies.  Different cultures have different views on what constitutes morality, manners, relations and proper epistemology.  Cultures vary in how virtue is achieved and what is “…the vision of a virtuous person in a good community.” (15)  Rightly understanding these various perspectives and rightly responding to them can be a tricky business.  The job becomes more difficult, in some respects, when one approaches the conundrum from the perspective of Christianity.  Christian belief and doctrine are at their core exclusive.  There are things that Christianity states are Truth and which it cannot budge from, or else it ceases to be biblical Christianity.  It is not generally a religion of plurality and diversity of beliefs when it comes down to its core issues.  Yet the Bible does not lay out patterns of expected behavior for every particular ethical possibility.  In “Strange Virtues” Adeney brings up issues of bribery, theft, lying and honor where at first glance the appropriate ethical action may be obvious to our western sensibilities, but when viewed from the context of another culture, there is always more than meets the eye.  As such, “Strange Virtues” is written by a Christian to Christians (particularly in the West) to encourage them to think out of and think through their ethical and cultural boxes and consider what Christianity teaches from other cultural perspectives.  Doing so can be fraught with danger, but it can also be enriching and rewarding.  

If anything, “Strange Virtues” is a book seeking balance.  Prescriptionist applications of Biblical commands and principles can be a good thing.  Absolutist understandings of culture and the world about can be healthy and in fact is actually necessary and natural.  Yet Adeney also understands the dangers of prescriptionism and absolutism in the realm of Christian Ethics when they are divorced from the Word and Will of God.  It is a good thing to behave a certain way based on what God says in Scripture.  Yet doing “good” based on your interpretation of what God says in Scripture can be another story entirely.  Realistically, it is next to impossible to do one without the other.  Yet, it is all too easy to allow culture assumptions and perspectives to creep in; taking the place of authority that should be kept for the Word and the work of the Holy Spirit.

As a parallel, in asking Westerners to think outside of their cultural shells (while encouraging them to remain in them), Adeney does a fair job in presenting the perspectives of other cultures.  When it comes to issues like bribery, most Americans would recoil at the thought of paying money to civil servants in payment for some service rendered.  There are rules of law in America that discourage such practices.  Adeney reminds the reader that this practice can be quite common in Asian countries, but not for the reasons Americans might think.  In pointing to different cultural assumptions within peoples of the West and the East, the Author points out that it is quite possible that the gift or favor might be done, not out of greed or a desire for more wealth by the official, but because of Eastern focus on relationships and honor.  To his credit, Adeney does not allow that this by definition should free such practices from the charges of bribery, but he does ask the reader to consider the situation more fully from an ethical perspective before rendering judgment.  

Additionally, Adeney shares some very helpful advice on communication in his chapter “Strange Communication”.  Any person who has been married for any amount of time knows just how important communication is.  In marriage, there is in some sense a wedding of cultures.  There is a man and a woman being married.  Both think different, function differently and feel differently.  Likewise, marriage is the joining of two people from different families.  Families form their own miniature sub-cultures, complete with family dialects, philosophies and perspectives.  For two such different people to have a successful, faithful marriage, communication and understanding must be a driving focus.  Likewise, cross-cultural understanding starts at cross-cultural communication.

I will never forget a weekend we spent with a French family in 1970.  My wife and I picked up Jean Marie, who was hitchhiking outside Paris.  We were just beginning to study French, and he spoke no English.  When we left him off, he invited us to his home in a small village for the weekend.  There, through music, laughter, food, wine, children, flowers, chores and shared grief over the injustice of the world, we became like brothers and sisters.  Of the few words that we were able to exchange, only one do I remember as significant: the French word simpatique expressed what we had found together. (127)

Adeney goes on to explain that communication need not even be purely verbal.  As stated above, it can take the form of laughter, music, food and beauty, but it does require the effort of two or more parties submitting their ignorance and swallowing their pride to become a learner in a strange situation or setting.

Adeney’s most helpful portion of the book follows along the same lines, and that is his discussion on the “adaptation of the role of a stranger” (130).  In particular, his explanation of the three stages of assimilation is especially enlightening.  The first stage is the “preliminary stage” or the “honeymoon stage”.  This is the time in the transition where the stranger is new and strange to the host culture, and the host culture is new and strange to the stranger.  It is a time of new experiences and sensory overload, where everything is exciting, and both the host and the stranger tends to put their best feet forwards.  Close on its heels, though, is the “Transition Stage”.  While the stranger is now accepted in this stage, his novelty has worn off and he might often be ignored.  “The host wants to know how committed the guest really is and how long they are likely to stay.  The guest wants to know if he or she is really still welcome and how long that is likely to continue.  Neither side wants to be simply exploited for the interests of the other.” (135) Finally, if he is accepted, the stranger becomes incorporated into the culture.  She is now completely free to be one of the members of the host culture.  Yet, a former stranger, while completely accepted, will never be “blood kin” but will be accepted as an adopted child.  Quoting Gittins, Adeney goes so far as to say that “…if strangers are unwilling to accept this and show it in their attitudes, they are unlikely to be incorporated into the culture.” (136).

As helpful as this book is, it is not without its weaknesses and shortfalls.  Perhaps the biggest shortcoming of the book is Adeney’s attempted pluralistic tightrope act.  It is one thing to be a pluralist, but Adeney becomes something of a meta-pluralist by attempting to be a pluralistic, inclusivistic and exclusivistic all at once.  To be fair, Adeney does pose the proper questioning observation “If all religions are equal and truth is equally unknown by all, then there is no standpoint from which to condemn any religious practices”.  This is a problem that pure pluralism has no solution for, but Adeney tries too hard to balance too much.  He wants to sympathize with liberal Christians as well as with conservative evangelical Christians, but his attempts at doing so ring hollow.  In particular, his chapter titled “The Ethical Challenges of Other Religions” is rather unfortunate as he does a poor job of understanding other religions from a Christian perspective.  In fact, his critique could really masquerade as a critique from a fair minded agnostic discussing all the major religions of the world.  His repeated statements of the “goodness” of committed, sincere practitioners of these religions (even Christianity!) are troublesome at best when considered in light of the Ten Commandments and Romans 3.  

“Strange Virtues” is most helpful to the Christian man or woman considering cross-cultural work.  Adeney’s discussion on humbly submitting to the host culture as a stranger is golden and is extremely helpful and encouraging.  Likewise, his repeated focus on encouraging Christians to consider their beliefs in light of possible inherent cultural assumptions is very helpful.  It is all too easy to supersede God’s Word and Law with what culture and personality says and then judge people by it.  Such behavior is especially unfortunate when it comes to poor cross-cultural communication.  Quiet respect for one man might be rank rudeness to another.  It would be sad indeed for the second man to become angry, when the first man was simply attempting to be respectful.  Yet, not being mindful of such cross-cultural intricacies can cause great harm.

Still, understanding one’s own culture is even more important than understanding another.  Human beings often unknowingly create cross-cultural blind spots and immunities.  Learning from other cultures help to reveal those blind spots and allow the Christian to better submit himself to God and to His Word.  Such a man is then better prepared to move into a strange culture with strange virtues because he is better grounded in the Word of God, the Truth that transcends all cultures and peoples and time.  

“Strange Virtues”, while not without some serious problems, is a thoughtful, thought-provoking, and ultimately encouraging treatise on the problem of cross-cultural ethics and how the Christian is to understand them, live with them and honor God by them.

Book Review – “The Celtic Way of Evangelism”

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“The Celtic Way of Evangelism” by George G. Hunter III is an interesting, somewhat informative, trite and simplistic study of early Celtic Christianity and its historical role in missions and evangelism.

The book begins strong with a solid synopsis of Patrick, the “Apostle to the Irish” and does a decent job of telling the high points of Patrick’s life and ministry. Hunter does an equally good job in describing the community and lives of early Celtic Christianity, expressed in their loves for men and in their hospitality towards strangers. Hunter additionally goes to great lengths to articulate the Celtic Christian’s superb ability to relate to the culture around him and to contextualize the Gospel of Jesus to a lost and dying world. He describes the Celts’ love for art, music and story and he speaks of the Celtic Christian’s ability to craft music and narrative in such a way as to present the Gospel message to the barbarians of their day in the British Isles and to the lost on the European Continent in a meaningful and powerful way.

Hunter spends much of the last half of the book postulating how contemporary Christianity can communicate the Gospel message in the Celtic Way. By itself, this is not a bad goal. Hunter rightly notes the emergence of the post-Christian “New Barbarians”, making a semi-direct correlation between the New Barbarians of today and the barbarians of yesteryear. He notes in these New Barbarians the same worshipful regard for nature, the same disbelief in the God of the Bible and the same self-destructive behaviors of the barbarian. This is not necessarily a wrong correlation to make nor is it unwise to not only learn from past mistakes, but to learn from past successes and ask ourselves how we can use those means to communicate the Gospel. The problem in this book is with Hunter’s approaches to evangelism and Gospel Communication. Instead of asking himself first what the Bible says about missions, Hunter considers the task from a uniquely American and Pragmatic standpoint and asks the dangerous question: “What Works?”.

This faulty approach leads Hunter to trivialize the comparison of the Celtic vs. Roman ways of Christianity and because the Celtic Way “worked” in the British Isles, in Hunter’s mind it so dominates Roman means so as to leave Roman methodologies impotent to affect true change (no matter that Roman Christianity ended up winning and “working” in the long run). Hunter does make a valid point in his comparison, namely that it is better to aim for a people’s heart rather than the outward trappings of culture and society. Yet his pragmatic approach to applying the Celtic Way negatively colors his valid points and leaves the reader feeling his postulations are somewhat lacking.

The book is a good read and is, at the beginning especially, fairly thought-provoking. Hunter’s analysis of the Celtic Way is beneficial and it will cause the reader to desire to study the topic further. Still, the lack of thought given to the Biblical Way of evangelism and Gospel communication is disappointing at best and a dangerous precedent for the serious evangelist.

Book Review – “Rediscovering Paul: An Introduction to His World, Letters and Theology”

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Rediscovering Paul – An Introduction to His World, Letters and Theology. By David B. Capes, Rodney Reeves and E. Randolph Richards. InterVarsity Press, 2007.
329 pages. Hardback.

“Rediscovering Paul”, a book written by David B. Capes, Rodney Reeves and E. Randolph Richards is (for the most part) a successful attempt to provide an introductory text that gives a fair overview of Paul, his writings and his theology; giving special consideration to those topics in light of Paul’s world as he lived it. (pgs. 15-16)

Particularly, the authors strive to present a Paul that in many respects runs contrary to the preconceived notions of the students whom they teach. All three are deans of respected Universities in the Bible Belt, and all combat “Western”, Americanized misguided perceptions of Paul and his letters.

These preconceived notions of Paul (presumably the notions of the authors’ students) are at the forefront of the authors’ minds as they explore who Paul really was. For instance, one of the authors states that as he thought about who Paul was, he “…began to question if my Western, domesticated, middle-class perception of Paul was the real Paul. Had my culture superimposed its values over the biblical Paul? (p. 14)”. In some respects, this statement smacks of the same tired critiques of “the West” that have recently been offered up by those in the Emergent Movement. Yet perhaps such critiques are needed, especially those directed at church-goers.

It must be said that all three of the authors are obviously well-read and well-studied. To their credit, they have learned the ideas and writings of men throughout church history whom they disagree with, yet they present the material in a fair and thoughtful way. In the chapter entitled “Paul’s Conversion, Call and Chronology”, the authors give a substantial amount of thought and ink to dealing with the “New Perspective on Paul” contention that Paul’s “conversion” was not along the lines of the traditional Lutheran type of salvific conversion, but rather it was more along the lines of a re-focusing of his “Jewishness” to include the Gentiles as well. While the authors seem to disagree with the “New Perspective”, they do so in a balanced and somewhat refreshing way (pgs. 90-94).

Additionally, the authors do a fair job of defending the primary issues of Christian Orthodoxy. In defending the creation of the Canon, they state that “Sometimes it is necessary to question the ‘establishment,’ as Martin Luther did; however, the verdict even on Luther’s actions was determined by the church over an extended period of time. (p. 293)”. They perceptively ask the rhetorical question: “Why do we think we have the right to question a decision accepted by millions of Christians worldwide over two thousand years? (p. 293)”. While the authors are not shy about asking some hard questions of themselves, their students and their readers, they do well to not go too far and leave the walls of Orthodoxy itself.

Yet, “Rediscovering Paul” is not without its weaknesses. While the authors aimed to have a “…finished product that was relatively seamless, speaking with one voice while still drawing on the expertise of each author (p. 16)”, the book does not read as seamlessly as the authors would have liked. In the discussion on the book of Romans, much effort is given to explaining chapters one through eleven, yet chapters twelve through sixteen, the “application” part of Romans, is only given a terse two page summary. This abruptness is somewhat disconcerting, especially when viewed in concert with the long (and somewhat tedious) discussion regarding letter writing in Paul’s day (pgs. 54-82).

While many will find things in this book that will challenge them, make them uncomfortable and perhaps even anger them; the authors deal with the question of who Paul was with a necessary honesty and openness that their students and their readers would do well to follow.

Quote of the Week – The Point is Jesus

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American evangelicalism has not done a great job at making Jesus the point of the enterprise of faith. We take the Gospel notion of “faith alone,” a belief many Reformers died contending for, and make it about us. We turn perseverance into personal empowerment and sanctification into self-improvement. We’ve made religion a bad word by turning Law into legalism and grace into license. We made Jesus our buddy, our co-pilot, our sidekick. We don’t have sin — we have “issues.” We say we have bad habits rather than admit we have sinful hearts. We look to Scripture in general as a toolbox of pick-me-up quotable quotes and to the Gospels specifically as a chronicle of warm-fuzzy behavioral aspirations. We forgo Christian repentance and gospel proclamation in favor of the culture war against gay marriage, evolution, atheism, liberalism, America forgetting her heritage, what-have-you. - Jared Wilson (http://gospeldrivenchurch.blogspot.com/2009/05/point-is-jesus.html)

Being on God’s Side, by Joe Carter

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A quote:
Protecting the sanctity of innocent human life and defending the traditional definition of marriage are clearly essentials. Those matters are based on principles that can be clearly derived from our traditions and holy texts. Other issues, however, are often less opaque. For example, can someone be a part of the “religious right” and not support the war in Iraq? The fact that question can even be asked shows how we’ve muddied the waters. While I personally think that, on the whole, the war was morally justified and a necessary humanitarian intervention, I can respect those who disagree.  Indeed, the alternate opinion may be as rooted in Biblical and conservative principles as, I believe, is my own position to be. We must be careful and deliberate about where we draw the lines of political heresy. (emphasis added) - Joe Carter
If you have time, go read this very thoughtful and helpful article.

Quote of the Week – Tullian Tchividjian

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The difference that people are longing for, in other words, is a difference in being, not doing. So while many church “strategists” are locating reformation and revival in structural renovation, we must remember that the deepest needs of the Church today are spiritual, not structural. And yet, we are told that the Church’s cultural relevance depends ultimately on its ability to keep up with the changing structures, on its ability to do church differently.
I have good news for all of us who are becoming weary of this type of pressure: We don’t have to keep up the way we think we do; the world doesn’t want us to! So how do we compete? We don’t! We must come to see that God has established His Church as an “alternative society”, not to compete with this world, but rather to offer a home to those who realize the homelessness of life in this world without Him. It is the calling and the privilege of the Church to be “against the world for the world”. We should be encouraged and challenged by the historical reminder that the Church has always served the world best when it has been most counter cultural, most distinctively different from the world.
- Tullian Tchividjian