Discerning God's Will Together: Biblical Interpretation in the Free Church Tradition.
Jacobs, Rachel Miller
Discerning God's Will Together: Biblical Interpretation in the Free Church Tradition.
Discerning God's Will Together: Biblical Interpretation in the
Free Church Tradition. By Ervin R. Stutzman. Telford, Pa.: Cascadia
Publishing House. 2013. Pp.176. $16.95.
The "problem" that Ervin Stutzman addresses in Discerning
God's Will Together is that the notion of the hermeneutic community
in Anabaptism has been "primarily ideological and not sufficiently
concrete or practical really to test the concept in the life of a
congregation" (149). He argues that "invoking the discernment
function of free church ecclesiology can effectively aid the
contemporary church in communal efforts at biblical interpretation, even
amid conflict and controversy" (22).
The book is organized into six chapters. In addition to his thesis,
chapter 1 includes Stutzman's underlying assumptions and the limits
of his study. Two of these are especially worth noting: his literature
review is limited to secondary sources (with particular reliance on the
work of Stuart Murray and John Howard Yoder); and his recommendations
assume healthy congregations with relatively low levels of conflict and
relatively high capacities for flexibility and paradoxical thinking.
Sara Wenger Shenk notes one additional limit about which Stutzman is not
explicit: the book appears to be aimed at readers who grew up in aging,
white, Swiss German communities (12).
Chapter 2 makes the case that discernment is a necessary function
of a free church ecclesiology--that a contrast-culture notion of the
church inevitably shifts the responsibility for biblical interpretation
away from experts or external authorities and squarely to the
congregation, the community of the Spirit distinguished by "the
more excellent way" of love (33). Stutzman goes on to note both
barriers to discernment as well as components or steps in a discernment
process.
Chapter 3 is the longest of the book. It lays out the
characteristics of Anabaptist hermeneutics, offers a critique of the
weaknesses of that hermeneutic, and suggests ways to offset those
limitations. It also names a number of modern developments influencing
the hermeneutics in the twenty-first century, including technology, the
variety of biblical translations available in congregations,
historical-critical study of the Scripture, insights from the sociology
of knowledge, and rhetorical analysis.
Chapter 4 explores ways to work with the ideological and practical
differences which inevitably arise in communal discernment processes.
Stutzman argues that a dialectical approach that recognizes the value of
opposing "poles" is an especially appropriate way to work with
tensions in a postmodern (pluralistic) world. He lists eight idea pairs
that stand out in the literature on free church ecclesiology: church vs.
world, church vs. kingdom, kingdom present vs. kingdom future,
discipleship vs. justification, Word versus Spirit, individual vs.
community, clergy vs. laity, and scholarly contributions vs. unlettered
contributions, suggesting that polarity management is the best way to
work with them. This means recognizing that both poles are necessary,
acknowledging that each pole has downsides as well as upsides, and
learning "to swing back and forth between them in a relatively
balanced manner" (111). He briefly discusses transformational (as
opposed to transactional) leadership, listing types and levels of
typical church conflicts, recommends the use of trained
facilitators/leaders, and identifies the goal of all of this work as
reconciliation.
Chapter 5 very briefly suggests ways to engage with the Bible in
the three arenas of congregational life identified in the congregational
discipling model: worship, community, and mission. Stutzman also notes
that congregations are not the only hermeneutical communities: small
groups, groups of congregations, and academic institutions are also
group settings in which people interpret the Bible. Chapter 6 gives a
brief overview of the whole book and lists possible topics for further
study. The seventh and final chapter comprises one of the regular
features of Cascadia's Living Issues Discussion Series:
affirmations and critiques by three responders and a response from the
author.
Discerning God's Will Together does well what it intends to
do: make a case that Anabaptist ecclesiology and Anabaptist hermeneutics
are inextricably linked. And it provides an overview of ways for leaders
to help groups work together at biblical interpretation and discerning
God's will for specific contexts. It is clearly written and
extensively researched. It contains some beautiful little gems: ideas
elegantly stated, or thought-provoking observations. The foreword and
the responses nicely point to areas that deserve further attention.
Chapter 3, "Biblical Interpretation in the Anabaptist
Tradition," draws together different authors and ideas in brief
form. I will likely assign it in at least one of the classes I teach.
But I have to confess that I ultimately found this book
disappointing. Its topics have fascinated me both in my pastoral and
academic work, yet because Stutzman is covering so much territory in
such a relatively small number of pages, his engagement with his
material, while broad, is necessarily shallow. This raises questions for
me about the audience for whom this book is intended. If it is for
scholars, Discerning God's Will Together lacks engagement with
primary sources and a sufficient breadth of secondary sources, including
perspectives that match the diversity of Mennonite Church USA. If it is
intended for pastors and other congregational leaders, the book lacks
the specificity leaders need to carry out group biblical interpretation
in a discerning way. By combining hermeneutics and discernment, and by
addressing these topics from both a systematic and a practical theology
approach, Stutzman has set himself a bigger task than is possible to
accomplish in the format within which he is working.
In addition, by focusing his recommendations specifically on groups
or congregations who are not in significant conflict, Stutzman has
sidestepped some of the most thorny issues in communal hermeneutics. It
is relatively easy to lead a process when people are mostly in agreement
or behaving with maturity. Yet in the socially, culturally, and
politically polarized context in which we find ourselves, and which is
deeply (and often unconsciously) forming our attitudes and actions, this
book does not pay sufficient attention to the creation of the habitus
that would make discernment, biblical interpretation, and communal
processes not only possible but profitable. As George Schemel and Judith
Roemer (quoted in chapter 3) note, the first three elements of their
discernment process are not so much actions as "habitual modes of
mind and heart." They are part of the group's lifestyle rather
than something it quickly does on the morning of a decision'"
(48). Jan Wood picks up this notion in her response at the end of the
book. "Being committed to Christ--in and of itself--does not
empower folks for the task of being disciples-in-community" (153).
Unless we pay a good deal more attention to our formation as
"disciples-in-community," I doubt that overviews of either
theology or process will be able to move us far along in discerning
God's will together.
Anabaptist Mennonite Biblical Seminary
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