After all the prepublication stir about it, I was eager to read Rob Bell’s new book, Love Wins. I had never read anything by him before nor had I seen his popular NOOMA videos that have been all the rage for quite some time. So I went into Love Wins with little preconceptions about what it might be.
Overall, I liked the book very much. I’m glad it has ignited a fire in the church world because it brings a topic to front and center in the Evangelical world that deserves to be considered and discussed. That topic has to do with the implications of the shared view of all believers that God is Love.
The biggest controversy surrounding the book before its publication had to do with whether or not Bell ascribes to Universalism. He is not a Universalist. That is clear, unless people think him a liar. He has plainly denied being a Universalist in interviews he has done and reaffirms that position in the book. He writes, “So will those who have said no to God’s love in this life continue to say no in the next? Love demands freedom, and freedom provides that possibility.” Then again, a few pages later, “Will everybody be saved, or will some perish apart from God forever because of their choices? Those are questions, or more accurately, those are tensions we are free to leave fully intact. We don’t need to resolve them or answer them because we can’t, and so we simply respect them, creating space for the freedom that love requires.”
The problem many have with Love Wins are the unanswered questions Bell raises. The flesh hungers for definitive answers and the Western World thrives on it. But, alas, our God has been and always will remain Mystery in many regards. That can be maddening to some. Hope isn’t equivalent to dogma and Bell posits nothing more or less than what many through church history have seen as a well-founded hope for mankind’s ultimate future. While most of the Evangelical church world has largely gone into frenzy over his views, the Eastern Orthodox church would surely wonder what the big deal is about it. The theology of Love Wins finds its roots all the way back to the Cappadocian Fathers in church history.
I don’t believe the book is going to immediately change the minds of many who are predisposed to resist such a hope but it will encourage those who already have an underlying sense of hope about the subject. Love Wins will certainly continue to stir controversy, not because it lacks biblical support but because it flies in the face of the traditional views that many have held. At times, it becomes easy for any of us to confuse the difference between sacred doctrine and sacred cows. This book certainly will attack some of our sacred cows and they've never been known to die quietly.
The strength of the book is that Bell writes with simplicity in the way that the average reader can understand. While I’ve said that I don’t think the book will immediately change the minds of opponents, I do think it may plant the seed of hope in many. His consistent focus on the ontological nature of God as being love may well set open minded readers on a trajectory toward positive implications of that reality.
I think he also did a good job in showing how the kingdom of God is among us now as opposed to simply an eventual escape for those who believe. His now-and-not-yet approach to heaven hopefully will awaken the minds of many evangelicals whose tradition has left little room for the social implications of the gospel in the here-and-now. Many of us come from traditions that focus so heavily on the afterlife that the idea of living out kingdom life in ways that confront systemic evil now hasn’t even been on our radar.
Bell doesn’t deny hell’s existence in the slightest. In fact, he makes it clear that choosing to try to function independently and not live experientially in His love is the essence of hell both now and post-mortem. To Bell, rescuing people from hell isn’t something that only delivers them from an eternal fate but sets them free from its reality right now.
I do wish that the book had addressed the matter of the importance of the Trinity as a starting point for our theology. While Bell has done a good job describing the love of the Father, I think his message might have found greater strength had he discussed the perichoretic aspect of our Triune God. To understand the relational aspect of the Trinity and to see how that sharing that relationship with all humanity has been the divine plan from eternity past may have helped clarify why Bell has such hope for mankind’s ultimate future.
I understand that the book is about the ultimate fate of every living person but also would have like to have seen a greater focus on how living in the “Circle of Life” today makes a difference in the world. As already noted, Bell is not a Universalist but one of my critiques against Universalism in general is its focus on who goes to heaven and hell to the exclusion of much said about what it means to participate in the life of the Father, Son and Spirit now.
I end as I began my thoughts about the book. I appreciate Bell’s willingness to weather the storm that he surely must have known Love Wins would bring and am happy that he has brought this topic to the front of the ecclesiastical room so that it must be discussed. Perhaps many will see that there is another option than being a Universalist who dogmatically insists that everybody goes to heaven or a Calvinist who emphatically insists that only the minority elect go there. This book reminds the reader that there is tension in the Scripture on this subject but encourages us toward the reality that “love hopes all things.” The implication of that fact may lead us to differing viewpoints but must leave us all with the conclusion that love certainly wins because God is Agape and Agape cannot lose.
What a beautiful, exploratory, and honest view you've shared. I think many believers are afraid to be okay with the tension between two truths..I was/am that way. But it seems the way..to learn to be okay resting in those "tensions." Embrace the paradox, etc. :) Thank you for sharing. My husband and I just finished the chapter "Dying to Live." We're really enjoying it. It challenges the believer, both in theological interpretation..but also, it seems to cause some to chafe who'd become comfortable having an excuse to "sit this one out." Meaning life. Anyway.. JOY and LOVE rain down on your head!
ReplyDeleteThanks Mr. McVey for your taking time to read his book. I know you are a digger for truth and relaying the truth as you see it to your readers.
ReplyDeleteTommy
www.stressterminator.com
Thank you for this review. I appreciate your ministry so much and especially the recent video you posted regarding hell. The Lord has used you tremendously in my life and walk with Him; I wish I could thank you enough but I thank Him for you and pray that He blesses you and your family for your heart of devotion to Him and to truth.
ReplyDeleteThanks Dr. McVey:
ReplyDeleteI appreciate your well thought out Christ centered view on the gospel. I plan on reading Rob Bell's book, "Love Wins." I am so sorry that some who call themselves Christians, have already damned Mr. Bell to hell. I have never heard of Rob Bell prior to this book. But I have read many of the views of those who are supposed to be the Christian leaders of the western world and I am unimpressed by the lack of leadership shown. Again thank you for your leadership in reading the book and taking a balanced position. The Lord bless you and your service in His ministry.
Which Afterlife?
ReplyDeleteIn his new book "Love Wins" Rob Bell seems to say that loving and compassionate people, regardless of their faith, will not be condemned to eternal hell just because they do not accept Jesus Christ as their Savior.
Concepts of an afterlife vary between religions and among divisions of each faith. Here are three quotes from "the greatest achievement in life," my ebook on comparative mysticism:
(46) Few people have been so good that they have earned eternal paradise; fewer want to go to a place where they must receive punishments for their sins. Those who do believe in resurrection of their body hope that it will be not be in its final form. Few people really want to continue to be born again and live more human lives; fewer want to be reborn in a non-human form. If you are not quite certain you want to seek divine union, consider the alternatives.
(59) Mysticism is the great quest for the ultimate ground of existence, the absolute nature of being itself. True mystics transcend apparent manifestations of the theatrical production called “this life.” Theirs is not simply a search for meaning, but discovery of what is, i.e. the Real underlying the seeming realities. Their objective is not heaven, gardens, paradise, or other celestial places. It is not being where the divine lives, but to be what the divine essence is here and now.
(80) [referring to many non-mystics] Depending on their religious convictions, or personal beliefs, they may be born again to seek elusive perfection, go to a purgatory to work out their sins or, perhaps, pass on into oblivion. Lives are different; why not afterlives? Beliefs might become true.
I think there are so many things we could discuss in regards to the Bible and it's not easy to include every single doctrine into one book on one subject. The fact that he didn't specify any 'trinity' concepts, even all the books in the world could not hold all the things that Jesus did. Are you wondering how Bell incorporates the Spirit being our teacher in regards to this book he wrote? I guess I'm confused on why you felt the need to add that as your critique. I'm interested in hearing your thoughts on that.
ReplyDeleteThanks Steve for your insight on this. I just ordered the book myself and I'm glad its being dicussed. The tide will turn eventually and trinitarianism I believe will again take its place in the christian mainstream I believe. Its just a matter of time in my view...keep fighting the good fight....
ReplyDeleteWell done Steve. One of the few reviews I've read where I feel like the reviewer read the same book that I did instead of taking the "buzz" by so many who have decided what the book meant before they even opened it. I picked up on the Eastern Orthodox bent as well and I agree with you that a perichoretic slant would have helped to clarify some things too.
ReplyDeleteYou say:
ReplyDelete"I do wish that the book had addressed the matter of the importance of the Trinity as a starting point for our theology", yet that very notion (Trinity) is very hard to defend and almost impossible to arrive at from scripture unless one starts with a pre-conceived idea thereof in the first instance.
There isn't one scripture that cannot be explained or properly understood unless there is a trinity concept, so Rob Bell does well in steering away from this non-scriptural bias.
Steve I think the reason universalism concentrates so much on heaven / hell / afterlife is because that is what the church has done for so long. Most people have been in churches who have taught those concepts very heavily. So naturally they will be focussed on refuting those church doctrines.
ReplyDeleteBut I know many non-hell believers (who might or might not call themselves ‘universalists’) who talk about the kingdom being here and now, within us. Seems to me hell can be within us too!
Anyway I’ve not read the book yet….still reading “Velvet Elvis” - another great book of Bell’s.
Regards, Tess
Sacred Cow? 'Kill and eat!' - lets have some hamburgers!
ReplyDeleteThought that crossed my mind while chewing my hamburger-
ReplyDelete"What it the parable of the Prodigal Son is the real heaven/hell scenario? All who want to be reconciled will be welcomed with open arms, regardless of how they may have squandered their lives, while the ones working so hard to win God's favor turn their backs and refuse to enter in the the joy of the Lord because their works turned out to be unnecessary to winning the love of God?"
These burgers are good!
Thanks for the nice, clear and appreciative review. You seem to have understood the book when so many have not.
ReplyDeleteThe Prodigal Son is more than a parable. All three of Luke 15 are stories Jesus told implying they have real true life application for God has joy when a sinner repents and invites others to have joy about that. The first only is called a parable (the 90 and 9.)
ReplyDeleteI too have been blessed by Steve's ministry and have had him speak at my church. But, Steve, you are dead wrong on this one.
ReplyDeleteI too have read Rob Bell's book and in one sense he is not a Universalist simply because his view does not fit perfectly in that category as it is historically defined. But in the end, he is a Universalist in the broader meaning because he says that in the afterlife everyone will eventually believe having been won over by God's love. A rose by any other name is still a rose.
The issue is quite simple: It is appointed unto man once to die and then the judgment (Hebrews 11:27). Jesus clearly taught that judgment was immediate and that one's decisions on earth were eternally fixed when he taught about the Rich Man and Lazarus.
The issue of there being tension between God's love and his wrath is a legitimate discussion. But that is not the discussion of Rob Bell's book. The way he raises questions is not helpful because he doesn't really wrestle with both sides in any significant way (For example, his explanation of the greek word for "eternal" is horribly lacking. He says it has meaning of "pruning" but doesn't tell the reader that the same Greek word is used in the same sentence to apply to eternal life for those who believe. He twists language to fit his purpose and insults his readers in the way he does it). God's love is used to simply trump all passages that deal with God's judgment and straightforward meanings of words are twisted to suit his purposes. Sadly, it is very similar to how the serpent used God's words with Eve in the garden. Shouldn't be something we are comfortable with.
If we cannot be clear on hell, there isn't much that we can be clear on because Jesus spoke more about hell than any other person in Scripture. No where does Jesus give any indication that it is about hell on earth but it is always an eternal destiny that is fixed.
I am comfortable with wrestling with the tensions between God's love and his wrath. But Scripture presents both attributes as glorious and worthy of our acceptance. The way Rob Bell deals with the tension is in the end he decides that one must trump the other.
In His Grace,
Tom Buck
So do you agree with Bell that after death people can leave hell (however you define it) and enter Heaven if they choose?
ReplyDeleteI haven't read Rob Bell's book but Tom's comments above prompted a search for the passage being talked about - I could only find Matthew 25:45 "And these will depart into eternal punishment, but the righteous into eternal life.”
ReplyDeleteI must admit I'm perplexed these days in what explicitly constitutes salvation but Jesus is quite clear here, in the preceding verses, why folks are consigned to eternal punishment. It is because they didn't provide succour to the hungry and thirsty, because they didn't visit those imprisoned and didn't were not hospitable to the needy. Nothing to do with faith / belief here but perhaps a more humanitarian view.
Whatever accusations about Bell's interpretation I think standard, evangelical explanations are also lacking.
thank you for this article. I have been heartbroken over the way believers are speaking out against Rob. Makes those who don't believe in Jesus just be more firm in their conviction. I am reminded of Ghandi - "I love your Christ but I don't like your Christians." I was very refreshed and challenged by Rob's book. I have been following Jesus for 43 years. It was not until the last five that I realized I had made a god that fit nicely into a box that I could "understand." I don't want a GOd that fits into a box. He is big and majestic and loving and gracious and mysterious. I have not made up my mind about hell and inclusion, but I am open to where the Lord wants to change my heart on these subjects.
ReplyDeleteI think it's awful that so many are setting fires with their tongues about Rob Bell without even reading his book or watching his interviews. And what's even worse is the divisions they are creating by being dismissal and labeling him a "Universalist." A very influential Christian figure who I will not name tweeted "Farewell Rob Bell." When his book came out. I watched an interview with Rob and Adrian Warnock http://www.premier.tv/lovewins
ReplyDeletewhich was an actually civilized discussion that we as brothers should be having! It's worth checking out.
I really enjoyed the book. I understand the controversy, but, I really hate when believers attack other believers.
ReplyDelete