What if … Pelagius had won the argument?

I took a day off (!?) today to read and write.
I have looked at the Pelagian controversy and had to write a closing letter in a debate which we will be having in 2 weeks time. I, and 2 friends, will be Augustine debating with 3 others who are Pelagius.

It’s an interesting argument where Pelagius believes that as we were made by God he gave us the ability not to sin and that our salvation all depends on how we achieve. We are under obligation to lead sinless lives!

Augustine on the other hand argued that although originally that was the case, since the fall we naturally fall into sin and can only be saved by the grace of God. He days if we consider a pair of balance scales, the scales are weighted onthe side of sin as this is where we will naturally go. We, says Augustine, continually need God’s help. So, salavtion is not earned, but is freely given!

I’m now thinking through the significance of this argument for today.
It’s another ‘what if …’
If the church had agreed with Pelagius we would be leading pretty austere and frightening lives. Churches would be full of people who believed they did not sin, and that no one else needed to. Surely this would result in congregations full of judgemental narrow minded people who could not see their own failings because of their interest in the failings of others. Those that did sin would not be welcome and if they complained of difficulties would have been pushed aside due to their ‘feeble excuses’ in the words of Pelagius.

People would not be real. They would pretend everything was alright.
I’m now wondering if Pelagianism has disappeared after all!

Anyway – back to thinking of it’s sgnificance for today!

Jesus is my disequilibrium

I’m looking forward to getting my hands on the new Hirsch book, The Forgotten Ways.
There are tastes at his new blog here and today speaks of churches seeking equilibrium and so kicking Jesus out.

We want equilibrium:

But Jesus disturbs our equilbrium. He won’t be controlled. He won’t be handled only by priests and professional religionists. He won’t be domesticated. He is Lord! Yes, Jesus is our disequalibrium. And the way back to an authentic Christianity is simply to put Jesus back into the equation. Christianity plus Jesus equals World Transformation. (Hirsch)

I think this kind of sums up how I feel about church and stuff at the moment. Church seems to have forgotten Jesus. The emphasis seems to be on service delivery, rotas, finance, where people are, what we believe, who has upset who, building programmes and so on.

Now I KNOW this is me generalising and I will get it in the neck for doing so, but I am sking ‘where has our focus on Jesus gone?’ Hirsch suggests we need to reboot back to Jesus.

Rebooting is an idea I like, it suggests turning everything off, holding down ‘ctrl alt del’ and starting afresh. It’s something I do now again when the laptop stops working properly, or slows to an unbelievable snail pace due to too many programs open and leaving their residue bits in the temp files folder.

Remnants of past programs, bits of old software. Remains of ideas and visions. Used plans, unused thoughts. Could all these be clogging the church and forcing Jesus to stand outside the door and knock, and wait to come into his church?

Maybe we need a reboot. A pause. A moment to realign ourselves back to Jesus, to remind ourelves of the founders characteristics, before we step out again.