Honest To God, A Voice From Heaven? Communicative Theism In Vanhoozer’s "Remythologizing Theology" -- By: Fred Sanders
Journal: Southeastern Theological Review
Volume: STR 04:1 (Summer 2013)
Article: Honest To God, A Voice From Heaven? Communicative Theism In Vanhoozer’s "Remythologizing Theology"
Author: Fred Sanders
STR 4:1 (Summer 2013) p. 53
Honest To God, A Voice From Heaven?
Communicative Theism In Vanhoozer’s
Remythologizing Theology
Biola University
Introduction
Kevin Vanhoozer’s recent book Remythologizing Theology 1 begins beguilingly, with a voice coming down out of heaven. On the mountain of transfiguration, the voice of God testifies aloud to Jesus Christ, “This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased” (Matt. 17:5). “We heard this voice borne from heaven,” reports the apostle Peter, “for we were with him on the holy mountain, and we have the prophetic word made more sure” (2 Pet. 1:17). There is much going on in the story of transfiguration, and in Peter’s interpretation of it. “Yet what stands out,” says Vanhoozer, “is the voice from heaven.”
Back in the 1960s when theology could make headlines by killing off its god every now and then, John A. T. Robinson published his provocative book Honest to God.2 “Our image of God must go,” said Bishop Robinson, scorning the mythological idea of God as a supernatural agent who intervenes in the world; a being like us, but bigger and higher up. There is no way for rational people living a modern world to continue thinking of God as a supernatural being living “up there” somewhere, or even “out there” somewhere. Mixing a lot of Tillich with a little late Bonhoeffer, Robinson called for modern man to recognize that there was no room for God in a scientific universe, except perhaps as the ground of being itself. Fortunately, Jesus brings a kind of message from this ground of being: “It is in making himself nothing, in his utter self-surrender to others in love, that he discloses and lays bare the Ground of man’s being as Love.”3 In fact, reflected Robinson, “assertions about God are in the last analysis assertions about Love.”4 That was 1963. What would the bishop say if he knew that nearly fifty years later, one of the most estimable theologians in the English-speaking world could, with a straight face and no ironic detachment, begin a major work of Christian doctrine with a voice from heaven? The God of Robinson was not even up in
STR 4:1 (Summer 2013) p. 54
heaven, and if he were, he certainly would not be so rude as to speak from there.
And yet here is Vanhoozer’s big, interesting, intellectually serious book, with a quotation from God speaking in a voice from heav...
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