Theology in the Raw - S2: BONUS Q&A November 2023
Episode Date: November 29, 2023Welcome to a sneak peek of the Bonus Q&A episode, part of the Theology in the Raw premium subscription. In the full episode, we discuss: 00:00 Introduction: 0:35. What pushback did you get on you...r Israel/Palestine interviews? 9:21 CS Lewis commends the reading of Old Books. What are your favorite ‘classics?’ Would you say there are any ‘most Christians’ should read? 12:20 What is the biblical basis for people stating that the 1st ministry priority is one’s nuclear family? What is a good theology of family? 20:11 Thoughts on Church Discipline from 1 Cor 5? What about when someone believes they aren’t living in sin, but I think they are? To them it wouldn’t be unrepentant 25:37 What is Jesus' lesson in Luke 16:8? Can't imagine He's actually condoning the behavior of the dishonest manager? I'm stumped. 27:14 Was the Revolutionary War (American Independence) justified in your eyes? 29:40 When Jesus talks about the “Abomination of Desecration” being in the Temple as a future event- how are we supposed to think about this? 33:47 I feel like I fear hell more than love God. Do you have tips on how to switch that around? I grew up in a very fear based context, hell house productions, etc 37:30 Do you think street evangelism is a beneficial way to share the Gospel, or should we only focus on relationship-based evangelism? 44:44 Do you believe any part of the Bible is NOT God breathed/authoritative? (I.e. added in later, not original.) 49:55 Do you vote in elections? Thoughts on the 2024 election? 56:06 Is the view that Jesus is eternally subordinate truth or heresy? What is the biblical basis either way? 1:00:27 If we somehow discovered one of the lost correspondences of Paul, would it be Scripture? What if it offered contradictions to his writings? 1:02:19 Rapid Fire Questions If you've enjoyed this content, please subscribe to my channel! Support Theology in the Raw through Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/theologyintheraw Or you can support me directly through Venmo: @Preston-Sprinkle-1 Visit my personal website: https://www.prestonsprinkle.com For questions about faith, sexuality & gender: https://www.centerforfaith.com My Facebook public page: https://www.facebook.com/Preston-Spri... My Facebook private page: https://www.facebook.com/preston.spri... Twitter: @PrestonSprinkle Instagram: preston.sprinkle
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey friends, welcome back to another Q&A bonus episode of Theology in Iran. I'm going to address
several questions such as what pushback did I get on my Israel-Palestine interviews? What is
the biblical basis for people saying that their first priority is one's nuclear family? Do I vote?
And if so, who am I voting for in 2024? Is the doctrine of eternal subordination heresy? Was
the American Revolutionary War justified? Do I believe any part of the Bible is not authoritative
or God-breathed?
These are just a few of many, many questions that my Patreon supporters sent in, which
I'm going to address on this Q&A podcast.
You're going to get a sneak peek in the first few minutes of this episode.
And then if you want the full-length Q&A episode, you have to become a Patreon supporter.
You know the drill, patreon.com forward slash theology in a raw, uh, get access to not only the full length Q and a episodes, but also,
um, get opportunity to actually ask questions for the next Q and a episode.
Let's dive in here. What pushback did I get on my Israel-Palestine interviews?
I was pleasantly surprised at how overwhelmingly positive the feedback that I've seen,
how positive it's been. And I say, yeah, I have to stress the feedback that I've seen. I mean,
there might've been other many more negative comments somewhere that I didn't
actually go looking for and didn't read.
But I did actually look more than I usually do.
Like I actually went looking to see how people were responding to these episodes.
So I looked at a lot of the comments on YouTube.
I read reviews of the podcast where some people were leaving some comments and then on social
media, Twitter, Facebook, and so on. The overwhelming majority that I saw were very
positive. I wasn't expecting that. I thought that there would be a lot more negative reviews. So
yeah, I was really surprised about that. But you ask about the pushback, not about
the positive reviews. So yeah, I read through several YouTube comments that were critical,
even though like, like 95% were positive, um, which is shocking for YouTube. I mean,
I usually get at least 10% super negative on YouTube, no matter what I say. So, um, yeah,
that was, that was shocking. I would say the, let's see, most of the pushback I got
had to do with the first episode of Daniel Benora, the Palestinian Christian.
And I'm recalling several people that thought his historical retelling of the last 150 years in Israel, Palestine was either inaccurate, was biased. And so how do I,
let me just let you know where I'm coming from. Okay. Here's my thought process.
I was raised and really bathed in a certain narrative of the last 150 years of Israel. I
was raised in an environment where, you know, Christians had a theological mandate to support the modern state of Israel. And, you know, 1948, uh, was a fulfillment of
prophecy and Israel is pretty much, you know, they're the good guys and Arabs and Muslims are
the bad guys. So there's this kind of war between good and evil, kind of like cowboys and Indians
kind of style, you know, for, and actually there's some parallels there, but that's what I was, you know, raising, never even questioned it to last couple of years
where I'm like, man, how much, I've never really looked into it, never read critical sources,
never really read like scholarly sources on the history of Israel, Palestine. And I still haven't,
I still haven't. Now in the wake of the massacre on October 7th and all the subsequent events, I was like, man,
I would love to have some conversations with various voices just to learn, just to learn more.
I don't know enough about the history to be able to say whose retelling is more correct than others.
I have done some research. I've listened to actually quite a few credible historians and journalists on
various podcasts. I've listened to people who are very knowledgeable about the history.
I've read a few things, but I haven't read like a full length scholarly book on the history.
So that's where I'm coming from. So I'm here to listen and to learn. And, you know, I don't, when I'm listening to somebody,
I'm not necessarily agreeing or disagreeing unless I go and do my best fact checking, you know,
thinking what they're saying. So that's what those interviews were. Now the theological one
with Gary Burge, like that one is something I feel very confident. I feel confident in my beliefs,
which pretty much are the same as Gary's on a theology of the land. But with the
other perspectives, these are perspectives from people actually living in the land. So when it
comes to Daniel, here's where I'm coming from. He is literally from the land. He is a very sharp
guy. He has two master's degrees and is doing a PhD at Notre Dame. He has read a lot of scholarly literature from actual historians, Israeli and
Palestinian and neither. So I'm not saying his history is right. I don't know enough to say
whether it's right or wrong. I'm saying he has done a lot of groundwork. And so some of the critiques I saw
saying, well, he got this wrong. You got that wrong. Or half the time, they didn't even say
what he got wrong. It's like, his history is wrong, you know, whatever. But I'm like, well,
have you read through all the literature and you can say that his retelling is actually wrong?
Have you read? How many of the like new historians have you read? Do you even know what the new
historians are? These are, you know, Israeli historians that had access to the documents that were released, what, in the late
seventies, the government documents that were, they were private for so long. And then what is
it after 30 years, they released them. So after, you know, was it late seventies, these documents
released. And so now we have a whole, whole new set of, um, information on the actual history of Israel, Palestine. And there's been
a good number of Israel, uh, Israeli historians like Benny Morris, Ilya, uh, Elon Pape, Shlomo
Sand and others who, as far as I can tell, correct me if I'm wrong, you can fact check this. I, I,
you know, um, I have not read these works. I just know about kind of some of the things they
say. I don't think Daniel is saying anything different than what, I mean, he even referenced
Elon Pape is like, this is a great book that, that everybody should read. He's drawing on,
what is it? The ethnic cleansing of, of Palestine. I think it's called Elon Pape.
Again, I'll say it one more time. I don't know, I'm not going to say these guys, Pape or Morris or Sand, I don't know if their retelling is accurate.
All I know is there is a complex scholarly conversation about the history that's been
going on for a few decades. And so if somebody is just completely unaware of that, they have not
interacted with this material, maybe they read a few pro-Israel websites on the history, or they just grew up in certain, a certain environment where there's a
certain narrative that was said to be true and all other narratives are not true. You know, I,
I just, I don't, what am I going to do? I got, I I'm, I'm going to, I'm going to be more keen
to listen to somebody like Daniel than somebody that has read a few blogs and websites or something and isn't even aware of the complexity of the last 150 years in Israel-Palestine.
So that's where I'm coming from with the history piece. There were some, oh, there were some
critiques about, a couple of people said they felt like he and me justified the evil committed by Hamas. I mean, I guess I'm trying to
figure out how in the world they would get, they'd be justified it. Like he literally condemned it
on several occasions. Like, I think here's my assumption. I much good, Palestinians, bad, Hamas, pure evil, period.
Don't ask any other questions.
Don't ask about context.
If you even ask about context, even go into the blockade that has been enforced on cause over the last 18 years. If you go back into the history, if you look at, uh, grievances, grievances against the Palestinians, if you look at massacres that
have been considered committed against them, no, no, no, no, no. Don't, don't give me any of that.
Just affirm Hamas, pure evil. Israel has a right to defend itself. And, um, they're for the most
part good. Um, and that's it. So I just, yeah, I'm just not, that's just not,
that's just, I think that's not a very wise or intelligent response. So my assumption is if,
if anybody says, well, let's look at nothing happens in a vacuum, let's open up this context
a little more so we can understand how and why something like this would happen. If, if somebody
is like, you're not allowed to even say that, then I just, I just disagree with that. So maybe that's why some people, and again,
this is a very timely, it's like two or three comments that I saw against loads of people that
were really positive on the whole thing. Um, but yeah, just a few comments that, you know,
people said that we were justifying, um, the violence. Okay. Let's go to the next question here.
Okay. Lee Nichols asks, C.S. Lewis commends the reading of old books. What are your favorite
classics? What would you say are the ones that most Christians should read? So, Lee, I am so
ashamed to say I have read hardly any old books books and that's not because I disagree with Lewis.
I, I, I am, uh, sinning with a high hand really by not following, uh, Lewis's recommendation.
Part of it is I, I, I don't read nearly enough fiction. I read hardly any fiction. And I think
that's actually, I think reading fiction is actually very healthy, extremely healthy. And I
just, I can't get around to it. Um, I think it's good to read old books. I just, I, here's the thing. Um, I have a
massive reading, reading list, like, like a stack of books that I'm trying to get through. And that
the list grows faster than my ability to get through them all. I also have, apart from just reading a book,
I also spend a good chunk of my time doing research on an issue, which might involve reading,
you know, several peer-reviewed journal articles, reading, you know, maybe a chapter
of a certain scholarly book, but reading that chapter, like combing through it, you know, like not where I'm just sitting back by the fire, you know, sitting next to my dog,
reading a book, although I do do that. Um, you know, a lot of my reading is really more
researching a specific question or issue rather than reading kind of a book cover to cover.
So all that to say, I am constantly stressed out and overwhelmed by not being able to get to all
the books I want to get to. So I guess that's my quasi
excuse. But again, to my shame, I have not read hardly any old books. The few that I would
recommend that I really loved is The Brothers Karamazov. It's fiction, but it's goodness. It's
so awesome, like theologically and philosophically and morally. It's a really powerful book. It's so long and
dense. So it's a slug to get through, but I read it a couple of years ago and just was really
impacted by it. Years ago, I read Augustine's Confessions. And I do read some of the early
fathers, but again, usually it's with kind of theological questions in mind, not just sitting back and, you know, cranking out Clement of Alexandria or something. Uh, I've, there, there was a season
when I read some chunks of, uh, Karl Barth's dogmatics, which was really fascinating. I,
I really like, uh, Karl Barth and I, I just think he's, he's a, a, a powerful theologian and exegete.
So yeah, other than that, I honestly can't think of any others
that like predate 1900 that I've read recently. All right, next question. What is the biblical
basis for people stating that their first priority is in one's nuclear family? What is a good
theology of family? This is a great question. And I don't, this is one of those things that I think has just simply
been assumed. I think it's in the air of our culture, certainly in the air of the church.
And I don't, I think most people haven't, it's not like they did a deep dive study of scripture
and came up with the idea that our first priority is with the nuclear family. It just seems intuitive, right? And again, I'm not saying it's either right or wrong. I'm just
saying, I don't think it stems from a well thought out theology of family. Now, having said that,
I did kind of reflect and said, is there a biblical basis for this? A couple passages
that come to mind, well, one passage and one kind of
broader theme. 1 Timothy 5 says, 5a says, if anyone does not provide for their, my translation
says relatives, I think the word there is household, and especially for, oh, I don't know
what the Greek word is there. I don't have my Greek in front of me. It's okay. So, this translation
says, if anyone does not provide for their relatives and especially for their own household,
they have denied the faith and are worse than an unbeliever. The context, I think it's a little
bit, that sounds very general, but it is, if I remember correctly, let's see, verse six,
it's talking specifically about widows or caring specifically for widows.
And I know verse eight seems really broad, but I would want to make sure we're interpreting it in
context. But this would be a verse that does specifically emphasize providing for your own
household. Now in the first century, household could include lots of different people who are,
you're, you're, you're not even related to including unfortunately slaves and other,
even, even like if you had any patrons, if you were a client that had patrons,
then that was part of your household. I'm some households could have been like low, like dozens of people that were not related to you in, uh, like your blood relatives. So
we do need to understand what household means in the first century, but still this verse would
still emphasize kind of like a priority given to those that you are, that are kind of under your roof, so to speak. I do think, I think in the first century, you know,
the whole view of the household, I think was much, how do I want to word it? Much of what
was believed about the household was, I would say, assumed by the New Testament. Let me say it like this. Etched into the culture
was a view that the household was like the foundation for society. Like households were
like a microcosm of the greater polis, the city. This is Aristotle, right? I mean, Aristotle
lays this out and you see this kind of assumed throughout culture that, you know, that the household is the basic building block of society.
You want a well-oiled society, then you make sure the households are well-oiled.
That's a dumb metaphor.
But if the household breaks down, the society will break down.
Like that whole thing, like we hear that today, you know, family, you know, the breakdown of the family will affect all society.
Well, that goes all the way back.
As far as I understand, I mean, that goes all the way back to like Greco-Roman thinking, um, Aristotle
and, or even August, not Augustine, um, Caesar Augustus. Um, he established these like marriage
laws in the first century, first century, because he realized that if people aren't, you know,
getting married and settling down and, and not sleeping around with whoever they want to sleep
around with, like that's actually disruptive for society. And so we need to tighten in the reins a little bit and have, you know,
and he gave like tax breaks, I believe for people that were married with like two or more kids. So
now, okay, so that's the broader culture. The New Testament does just simply seem to reflect this.
It even has several household codes in Ephesians 5, Colossians 3, 1 Peter 3, that reflects kind of
household codes in Ephesians 5, Colossians 3, 1 Peter 3, that reflects kind of the household codes in the first century. The New Testament does challenge the hierarchy and power dynamics
of these household codes. I mean, and that's what's stunning. When you read Ephesians 5,
1 Peter 3, in light of the broader context and how people talked about the household,
of the broader context and how people talked about the household, the power dynamics are almost flipped on its head. I mean, quite literally in Ephesians 5, where you have the head of the house,
you know, giving up of his life in service to somebody who is of lower social status,
namely his wife. So, can you hear the tension? So the new Testament doesn't diminish the importance of
the household. Um, it does sort of gut the power dynamics and hierarchy from the inside out.
So I, I have not, I'm going to leave it at that because I have not reflected on this too deeply
in light of your question. Cause it's a really, really good question, but I just wonder if there is sort of this assumption that, or an assumption built into
the New Testament regarding the significance and priority of the household, not at the expense of
being obviously inhospitable, not at the expense of loving your neighbor or enemy, but one of priority, um, that if
going outside of your household and serving others and caring for others at the expense of
not caring for your household, if some, if that is happening, I think, I think, um, the new
Testament would have a problem with that. However, you do have these radical statements like in Mark
three, when, you know,
people confront Jesus and said, Hey, your, your, your mother and brothers are here. And he's like,
who are my mother and brothers? And he looks around and points at the, his, his disciples
and says, here are my mother and brothers. Whoever does the will of God is my brother
and sister and mother. In Luke 14, Jesus even says, if anyone comes to me and does not hate
father and mother and wife and
children, brothers and sisters, yes, even their own life, such a person cannot be my disciple.
Obviously that's hyperbole. The one who said, love your neighbor and enemy and honor your father
and mother is not literally saying you must hate your wife and children and brothers. It's like,
that's just, you know, but he is saying some people just leave it at that. Like, ah, it's
just hyperbole. He doesn't really mean this.
I'm like, I agree.
But like, well, what does he mean?
Like, he's got to be saying, okay, what's he getting at here?
And I think he is, you know, not diminishing your biological family, but I think he's elevating your spiritual family.
So I don't know.
I don't know exactly how I would land the plane on this question.
I do think there are these maybe tensions in scripture, and I would want to do more thinking and research before I say anything more confident than that.
I do.
I'd love the challenge of this question, though, that it just seems so obvious, such a given that our first priority is our nuclear family. Everything else
is secondary. And I do at least want to submit that to scripture and say, is this scripturally
correct? All right, next question. All right, this is from Selton, wants to know my thoughts
on church discipline from 1 Corinthians 5. What about when someone believes they aren't living in sin, but I think they are, you say?
To them, it wouldn't be unrepentant because they're living in a way that they don't think
is sin. So, this is a great question. I think my answer is a bit simple. I guess here's what I would say. In an ideal situation, the church... First of all,
church discipline, it is a church decision. It's not an individual. It's not like somebody,
some random person in the church goes and says, you're living in sin, we need to kick you out.
I wouldn't even say it's a single leader that should do this. This is maybe the
leaders of the church, but I think, I mean, if you have to go back and read 1 Corinthians 5,
you get the sense that this is kind of a church-wide conversation. It's not just a
one-on-one conversation. So in an ideal world, a local church, they will be clear
on what are the behavioral expectations and orthodoxy, orthopraxy. Here are
the things that members of the church or people who belong to the church, people who call this
church family, people who are, whether you like this phrase or not, you know, submitting to the
leadership of the church, that there is clarity on the things you must believe in to be part of that church and the
way in which you must live.
So there's certain behavioral standards that should be clear up front.
So when you say, okay, I want to join this church, I want to be part of this family,
that the family, the expectations of what it means to be part of this family are clear.
So that if somebody ends up living against those expectations, decides they don't want to live
according to the standards that are agreed upon by the church, in my opinion, it is quite irrelevant
whether they think those things are not sin or sin or whatever, you know, like, because they've already like that.
Because yeah, you can fall into a rabbit hole of just subjectivity saying, well, I think this is
sin. And you're like, I don't think this is sin. But again, if the church up front says, okay,
we think these things are sin. So we're going to be committed to striving to not live according to
this sin. And if we, if somebody does fall into sin, we're going to
help that person out. And if they keep living in unrepentant sin, then they are by their actions
showing that they no longer agree with the standards of the family. So that's how I'd go
about it. I think where people get really hung up is if there are things that are considered or things that aren't stated up front.
So that if somebody joins a church, becomes a, again, I'm just using generic language here,
you know, becomes a member, joins a church, whatever.
And all of a sudden, you know, starts living a certain way.
Maybe they're sleeping with their girlfriend and the church is like,
hey, you can't do that.
That's sin.
You need to, we're going to kick you
out. Um, and the guy's like, well, where are you? No one ever told me that this is wrong.
And like, well, yeah, but it, it just is, you know, it's like, well, that that's,
that's a little unfair if the expectations of what holy living looks like are not clearly
stated up front. Then yeah, then yeah, I could see some frustration
among people that said, well, I didn't sign up for this. I didn't know this ahead of time. But
again, if there's clarity up front and somebody goes against that, then I think,
yeah, church discipline is something that should happen. Now that language, like, okay, so even
that, like, I feel like my language is being a little too abrupt and maybe harsh.
Just pastorally, I think churches have really mishandled this kind of conversation.
So I've been part of churches where there's been church discipline.
I've seen it done well, and I've seen it done not well.
When it's done well, people in the church have been pleading with the person.
They have extended.
It's not like they just wake up one day and you're living in sin.
You're out of here.
You know, like there's a grief that surrounds the whole thing.
Literally, like I remember one situation where the pastor was in tears because he was so pain, agonizing over a member that was living in sin.
And it was actually causing, it wasn't just living in sin. And it was actually cause it wasn't
just living in, I was living in sin, but it's actually harming other people in the church.
And I won't go to details, but I mean, it was like, it was like by not disciplining,
by not exercising quote unquote church discipline, innocent people were being hurt. Um, and see,
he was grieved at that. He was grieved that this person that was once a really solid believer was no longer living that way, you know? So, uh, I think that's all I have to say on that. Let's
go to the next question from Patrice. Oh gosh. Okay. Um, this is going to be quick.
Um, your question is what is Jesus's lesson in Luke 16,8? I can't imagine he's actually condoning the behavior of the dishonest manager.
I'm stumped.
Well, Patrice, welcome to the club.
I am too.
This is that famous parable of the dishonest manager.
And it's, to my mind, one of the oddest, certainly the oddest, most troubling parable.
Also, one of the weird weird kind of strangest passages.
And honestly, Patrice, I, I, I would need to do some heavy research, read, read some commentaries,
um, and see if somebody has better insight here. Cause I'm stumped too. So, um, I will
in the future, if you don't figure this out in the future, near future, I will try to gather some thoughts. But
at the moment, I just, I don't know. I read some stuff on it. I did hear a talk on this years ago
at a theology conference. And I remember thinking, gosh, if she's right, it was a scholar. I'm like,
if she's right, then that kind of that, that, that alleviates the
tension in this passage, but I can't, but she's, I can't for the life of me remember what she said.
I just remember feeling in the moment like, oh, this is really interesting. So, um, I'm sure
there is a, a response out there and I will, uh, try to do some research, um, to, to figure this
out. But at the moment I do not have a good answer. I too
am stumped. All right. Was the Revolutionary War justified in my eyes? My quick answer is I don't
know nearly enough about the Revolutionary War. Yeah. So a part of me doesn't want to
pretend like I do, but I would say quickly,
just from a Christian, well, I, yeah, I would, I would want to know, are you talking like
biblically or politically? Cause I think those are two different questions. Like
biblically from, from my Christian nonviolent perspective, any violent revolution is not
justified. So, and it was clearly a violent revolution.
So no, I'm going to say, no, I don't think that's justified.
In fact, I would go so far as to say,
I think Jeremiah 29, Romans 13 and other passages.
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