Pilgrim Journey: Instruction in the Mystery of the Gospel
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Pilgrim Journey guides newly baptized Christians to discern the mysteries of the gospel. It is a sequel and companion volume to Pilgrim Letters (Fortress, 2020). Like its predecessor volume, Pilgrim Journey is a series of letters written by Interpreter, the teacher, to Pilgrim, the newly baptized Christian. The theological and ecclesial scope of the letters is evangelical-catholic, free church-ecumenical, and ancient-future. Each letter is shaped by the prophetic imagination of the biblical illustrations of William Blake and informed by the narrative spirituality of The Pilgrim's Progress by John Bunyan. Pilgrim Journey begins with an introduction into the mystery of redemption hidden through the ages and revealed in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. The program of instruction contains the exposition of seven mysteries, each of which displays the central mystery of the gospel: (1) God speaks one true word in Jesus Christ; (2) the two Testaments form the one canon of Christian Scripture; (3) the one true God is made known in the three persons of the Holy Trinity; (4) true knowledge of God is discerned through reading the sacred Scripture literally and spiritually, especially in attention to the formation of faith, hope, and love; (5) a clear understanding of God's mysterious providence is aided by a sense of the scope of God's story from creation, covenant, Christ, and church, to consummation; (6) the marking of Christian time attends to God's unfolding revelation in Scripture as shown in the seasons of Advent, Christmas, Epiphany, Lent, Easter, and Pentecost; and (7) the infinite reality of God becomes present in finite forms in seven sacramental signs of preaching, baptizing, blessing, breaking bread, washing feet, forgiving sins, and anointing. There is a final summary and conclusion about the way things deep, hidden, and mysterious shape the daily active living of Christians as disciples of Jesus Christ.
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Pilgrim Journey - Curtis W. Freeman
Pilgrim Journey
Pilgrim Journey
Instruction in
the Mystery of the Gospel
CURTIS W. FREEMAN
FORTRESS PRESS
MINNEAPOLIS
PILGRIM JOURNEY
Instruction in the Mystery of the Gospel
Copyright © 2023 Fortress Press, an imprint of 1517 Media. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical articles or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Email [email protected] or write to Permissions, Fortress Press, 1517 Media, PO Box 1209, Minneapolis, MN 55440-1209.
All Scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are from New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
Scripture quotations marked (KJV) are from the King James Version, public domain.
Scripture quotations marked (NKJV) are from the New King James Version®. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson. Used by permission.
All rights reserved.
Library of Congress Control Number: 2023933164 (print)
Cover image: Illustrations to John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress.
William Blake, Christian Reading in His Book, Object 2 (Butlin 829.2), 17.2 × 12.6 cm
Cover design: Savanah N. Landerholm
Print ISBN: 978-1-5064-9490-6
eBook ISBN: 978-1-5064-9491-3
For
THOSE WHO HAVE BEGUN THE
PILGRIM JOURNEY IN THE WATERS OF BAPTISM
Think of us in this way: as servants of Christ and stewards of God’s mysteries.
1 CORINTHIANS 4:1
Contents
Preface
IntroductionThe Mystery Hidden through the Ages
Mystery 1One Word:
Jesus Christ
Mystery 2Two Testaments:
Christian Scripture
Mystery 3Three Persons:
The Holy Trinity
Mystery 4Four Senses:
Reading Literally and Spiritually
Mystery 5Five Acts:
The Scope of God’s Story
Mystery 6Six Seasons:
The Church Year
Mystery 7Seven Sacramental Signs:
Holy Things for Holy People
ConclusionThings Deep, Hid, and Mysterious
Illustrations
Notes
Bibliography
Topical Index
Scripture Index
Preface
IN AN ARTICLE PUBLISHED in the Atlantic in October 2021, journalist and former presidential speechwriter Peter Wehner wrestled with the question of why so much of American Christianity simply reflects the divisiveness of the wider culture. Churches have politicized the gospel, reinforced tribal identities, nurtured fears, and sacralized ugliness. In search of perspective, Wehner asked several prominent Christian leaders how this happened. James Ernest, vice president of William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, offered a sobering assessment: What we’re seeing is massive discipleship failure caused by massive catechesis failure.
¹ How could American Christians have failed so miserably to make disciples? If Ernest is correct, and I think he is, the heart of the problem is that churches have largely abandoned the historic practice of catechesis, of making Christians by personal instruction in the basic teaching of Christ. The results of this failure are catastrophic. The void left by the absence of basic Christian instruction has been filled by political, educational, and technological cultures.
Evangelical theologian J. I. Packer shares this assessment of the current crisis. He argues, Where wise catechesis has flourished, the church has flourished. Where it has been neglected, the church has floundered.
² The validation of this judgment seems self-evident. The church in America is floundering. Packer suggests two reasons for the loss of catechesis: the modern cultural rejection of authority and the resistance to authoritative instruction within Christian communities.³ Yet there may be an even simpler reason for the loss of catechesis by Protestant congregations—Sunday school. As Christian education replaced Christian formation, developmental psychology superseded baptismal theology. The aim of Sunday school was not preparation for baptism and discipleship but rather the presentation of age-appropriate educational material, with the goal of gradual conversion to the faith. Among Evangelical Christians and other Free Church Protestants, this developmental model in the Sunday school hour was often followed by an evangelistic and revivalist theology in the worship service, where children were urged to make an immediate decision for Christ and come forward during the singing of an invitation hymn. The theological whiplash from this confused and conflicted process of gradual versus dramatic Christian formation was traumatic, but the upshot was that many Christians in America were simply inoculated with a weak strain of Christianity that rendered them immune to the real thing. The result left them unprotected from the virulent mutation that is now devouring American Christianity.
The good news is there is a growing movement seeking to retrieve the ancient ecumenical practice of Christian catechesis. The recovery of the catechetical tradition can be traced to the Second Vatican Council (1962–65), which called for the restoration of the catechumenate.⁴ That call led to the production of the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults (RCIA) for Catholic catechesis, which was formally approved for use in the United States in 1974.⁵ Protestants began adapting the RCIA and publishing their own catechetical materials. My book Pilgrim Letters was an effort in retrieving the practice of catechesis based on the six principles of the basic teaching of Christ described in Hebrews 6:1–2.⁶ Along the way in the process of writing, I discovered the Institute for the Renewal of Christian Catechesis (IRCC), which maintains a website with excellent resources for catechesis across the Christian traditions.⁷ I am grateful for the encouragement and collaboration of the IRCC and its director, Alex Fogleman, who invited me to join their team as a research fellow. I share the IRCC mission of recovering the ancient art of catechesis as a way of handing on the faith (1 Cor 11:2, 23). While instruction in the basic teaching of Christ may not be an immediate cure for the soul sickness of American Christianity, perhaps it may be more like a vaccination that inoculates those who desire to follow Christ and prevents them from contracting the spiritual disease that is endemic within the culture.
This book builds on the basic teaching of Christ and moves on to explore the mystery of the gospel. The theological and ecclesial outlook of Pilgrim Journey, like Pilgrim Letters, is evangelical and ecumenical, free church and catholic, ancient and future. There is, however, a difference. When I wrote Pilgrim Letters, I was able to draw on a long tradition of catechesis among Free Church Protestants with the aim of retrieving a lost practice. I am not aware of a similar tradition of mystagogy. Yet I hope this book will not only prove to be an exception but might also be a catalyst for more work about instruction in the mystery of the gospel.
Because Christianity has long enjoyed a dominant position in North America, the boundaries between church and culture have grown unclear and indistinct. It should not be surprising, then, that baptismal and post-baptismal catecheses were no longer seen as necessary for the mission of the church. For many, the presumption was that to be an American was to be a Christian or at least to live in a society that privileged and supported Christianity. This position of privilege meant that conversion did not require radical change. All that was necessary was a modest religious adjustment. The social situation in America has significantly shifted. One of the most glaring signs of Christian disestablishment is the rise of the nones,
people with no religious affiliation. In the 1970s, they were 5 percent of the US population, and now they are around 30 percent.⁸ The decline of church membership, the loss of financial prosperity, and the lack of social influence have eroded the cultural establishment of Christianity and signal a future in which Christians must learn anew to practice the faith without privilege.
The bigger problem with the cultural accommodation of American Christianity is that it has lost a sense of the Christian life as a struggle, which was central to the catechetical practice of ancient Christianity. This struggle begins with the humble fact that the church is not the world.
⁹ Becoming a Christian in the early church was not a simple matter. As one historian of early Christianity notes, Conversion involved changes in belief, belonging, and behavior in the context of an experience with God.
¹⁰ In this book, I contend that we can best think about the future of the faith after we have gone back and examined the models of ancient Christianity.¹¹ It is a fool’s gambit to think it is possible to leapfrog from the New Testament to now. We must look to patterns and practices among generations of earlier Christians in order to find models that we can recover and adapt for our current context.¹²
Unlike God, with whom there is no variation or shadow due to change
(James 1:17), the wider social setting in which Christians live is mutable and unstable. In the apostolic age, Christians did not expect or receive support from the wider social culture. The front door of the church opened to the frontier of mission. In the fourth century, a new church-world arrangement began to emerge. This new arrangement was the Christendom paradigm. Christianity went from being a distinct community in a hostile environment to becoming an institution privileged and supported by the empire and its Christian rulers. As a result, the mission of the church became a kind of foreign policy of the state. The Christendom arrangement of church and world continued in various iterations through the centuries. We are living today in the midst of an emerging reality that looks more similar to the days of early Christianity than the longtime establishment of Christendom.¹³
Some Christians will respond to the changing times by putting their energy and effort in service of political processes and market forces. Others will return to the more secluded spaces of their own fellowship and refrain from encountering the wider church and culture. It is not clear that either of these alternatives can sustain a faithful or effective mission for the church. The way pursued in this book commends moving into the future by recovering ancient practices that form Christians who are prepared to engage the surrounding culture through the power of witness.¹⁴ To do so, we must learn to make Christians
who understand what it means to be part of an apostolic and apocalyptic community at the same time.¹⁵ Such formation requires a bifocal vision, which sees that this is that and then is now:
This is that: We are the apostolic community, and the commands of Jesus are addressed to us.
Then is now: We are the end-time people, a new humanity anticipating the consummation of the blessed hope.¹⁶
The conviction that the church is not the world
is not a sectarian or restoration stance committed to the recovery of some version of naive primitivism. It is instead a commitment to making disciples by retrieving the ancient Christian practice of catechesis.
Catechesis is not about reaching a full understanding of the faith once delivered to the saints. Nor is it about encouraging Christians to think for themselves. It is about acquiring a basic elementary language. It is teaching Christians to speak Christian. As my colleague Stanley Hauerwas puts it, You can only act in the world you can see, and you can only come to see what you can say.
¹⁷ Catechesis is the church giving us words to speak the convictions of our faith, and by helping baptismal candidates learn that speech, we provide them with a language to see what we say. Learning the grammar of the Christian faith is essential to seeing what we say. Catechetical instruction is evangelical and ecumenical, formational and educational, confessional and convictional. Catechesis is about making Christians by helping them learn to speak as Christians so that they might live as Christians.
Although Christian churches observed it differently over the first millennium, there were four recognizable stages of Christian initiation: (1) separation: entrance into the catechumenate; (2) transition and preparation: period of initiation and instruction; (3) incorporation: observance of baptism, confirmation, and first communion; and (4) mystagogy: instruction in the mysteries.¹⁸ These four stages of Christian initiation marked four distinct phases of conversion, in which converts were regarded first as seekers, then as hearers, next as kneelers, and finally as faithful.¹⁹ This ancient process provides a model for missional churches today to evangelize the unchurched, disciple new believers, equip maturing believers, and incorporate new members.²⁰
When Saint Egeria traveled from her home in Spain to the Holy Land in the fourth century, she noted that catechumens received daily instruction during Lent followed by a week of instruction in the mysteries.²¹ The focus of baptismal catechesis for Cyril the bishop of Jerusalem was biblical and doctrinal instruction, while the purpose of mystagogical instruction was to expound for newly baptized Christians the spiritual significance of baptism, anointing, Eucharist, and liturgy.²² Recovering this ancient practice of instruction in the mysteries offers an opportunity to renew the life and mission of the church today. God has entrusted the church with the gift of holy mysteries to strengthen us in our earthly pilgrimage. These mysteries are sacred signs that proclaim the gospel of Jesus Christ. They are gifts that belong to all God’s people, and by receiving instruction in the mysteries, we become stewards (1 Cor 4:1). To put it differently, faithful Christian discipleship entails the responsibility to make the mystery of the gospel central to the worship, work, and witness of the church.²³
The purpose of mystagogical catechesis is to stimulate, strengthen, and sustain the understanding of the mystery of the gospel so that it leads to a more committed and mature practice of the Christian life. Because instruction in the mysteries is not only a matter of Christian education but also of spiritual formation, it is important that participants actively seek the available means of grace through prayer, worship, scripture, study, devotion, ministry, and service. The church is a pilgrim community that lives as exiles in the present age but journeys by faith to our true home.²⁴ Like Abraham, we are pilgrims on earth looking forward to the city that has foundations, whose architect and builder is God
(Heb 11:10). This journey, however, is different from others. It lasts our entire lifetime and requires what Eugene Peterson described as "a long obedience in the same