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Paperback Truth to Tell: The Gospel as Public Truth Book

ISBN: 0802806074

ISBN13: 9780802806079

Truth to Tell: The Gospel as Public Truth

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An important book for all who are concerned with the impact of Christianity on today's world, Truth To Tell affirms the gospel as the truth - not only for personal life but also for life at the... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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truth to tell

Lesslie Newbigin published Truth to Tell: The Gospel as Public Truth (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, c. 1991). It's a slim volume, making public three lectures delivered at Western Theological Seminary. The lectures are tied together by their concern for truth, because of Newbigin's concern for "the gospel as truth--public truth" (p. 1). We need, to follow Jesus, a change of mind as well as heart. "The problem of making sense of the gospel is that it calls for a change of mind which is as radical as is the action of God in becoming man and dying on a cross" (p. 10). Like the disciples on the Emmaus road, we need our minds changed by the reality of the resurrected Lord! Thus, in his first lecture, Newbigin deals with "Believing and Knowing the Truth." Just as the Classical World lost confidence in truth, so today intellectuals of various sorts discount the possibility of actually knowing anything for sure. Despite our tech¬nologi¬cal prow¬ess, a multitude of philosophical and literary symptoms point to an inner "skepticism, nihilism, and despair. Life has no point. Nothing is sacred. Reverence is an unworthy relic of past times. Everything is a potential target for mockery. There are no honored models to shape behavior. The individual is alone and there are no route maps. Young people ask that question which in a stable society never comes to mind: 'Who am I?' And if there is no answer, the simplest way out is to assert the reality of the self by mind¬less violence, or to submerge the self with drugs" (p. 19). But just as in the Classical World provided a framework for an emergent Christianity, so too our day provides the possibility for Christians to reach a world which inwardly hungers for what Au¬gustine long ago called the food of the soul, Truth. Church Fathers rooted their proclamation in the Word of God, the Holy Scriptures. They knew what they believed because it was revealed by God. In our day, "We have to do is what the Church Fathers and Augustine [did] . . . when classical culture had lost its nerve and was disin¬tegrating. We must offer a new starting point for thought. That starting point is God's revelation of his being and purpose in those events which form the substance of the Scriptures and which have their center and determining focus in the events concerning Jesus" (p. 28). That means we must abandon the misleading distinction between faith and knowledge so easily embraced by many thinkers who define faith, as did John Locke, as "a persuasion of our own minds, short of knowledge." Rather, with Augustine, we must follow Augustine's admonition: credo ut intelligam--I believe in order to understand. That's the way most scientists operate, Newbigin argues, and that approach to knowing the truth will suffice in theology as well. In the second lecture, "Affirming the Truth in the Church," Newbigin urges us to read and proclaim the Bible. He thinks the "liberal/

Insightful, thoughtful, and clearly written

Newbigin brings a solid grasp of the history of thought to his insightful analysis of the contemporary scene. This book is written in an extremely clear manner and is a pleasure to read. Newbigin takes the ideas of Michael Polanyi, a philosopher of science whose thinking had tremendous theological implications, and shows how we can benefit greatly from his philosophical approach. Newbigin analyzes typical arguments from both liberals and conservatives and shows that at many times they both rest on similar flawed assumption. Newbigin also maintains a high view of truth and a strong focus on Christ. I strongly recommend this book for anyone interested in communicating the gospel clearly in a postmodern culture.

The Truth Above All Else

Newbigin gives a daunting challenge in this work for the Christian church. As a church leader I found in this book a provocative challenge to speak the truth in the face of a pluralistic culture that holds up relativism and humanism as gods to be honored. Newbigin calls us to speak the truth which is Jesus the Christ and also warns of aligning ourselves with the political agendas of the right or the left but to remain centered on the truth. This is a must read for all who are unsure what the church is to be and what message it needs to speak to our society.
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