Ephraim Radner–After the Fall

In fact, in a few short years, the legal and political order simply reinvented itself, like a genie, flew out and left the self-styled prophets tongue-tied. Now we see that the church was but a dog following behind its master, behind a culture washing through the institution and dissolving its commitments in every corner of its corridors. To be sure, we have long been subject to the harangues of those warning against a “church that bows to culture” and does not transform it. But the extent of its subservience in this case still astonishes.

And the extent is itself a theological challenge, as well as opportunity. The church has been swallowed up. The challenge, furthermore, is not The Episcopal Church’s alone. It represents a kind of march of moral hollowing and distraction that has lulled the whole world (or at least its formal leaders). We should make no mistake about this: every church, and along with them our families and our friends, are being carried along. That is the message of the churches’ own secondary and even tertiary role in this movement, for it is the rush of the civil current that has first inundated the space of all our lives.

So what does this amount to? Our refusal to see the Church as Israel is what has robbed us of the tools to see the meaning of this clearly. Christian ecclesiology is a study of Israel first, given in the only Scriptures the first Church read. Ecclesiology cannot be something founded on the bits and pieces of New Testament practical advice that have so often stunted our ecclesial categories. And the point is this: Israel falls completely.

Read it all.

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Posted in * Anglican - Episcopal, * Culture-Watch, - Anglican: Analysis, Ecclesiology, Episcopal Church (TEC), Ethics / Moral Theology, Religion & Culture, Theology

3 comments on “Ephraim Radner–After the Fall

  1. Albany+ says:

    Excellent, truly helpful, the road we are on and the the road to take. Solid food. Solid encouragement. Thank you, Ephraim+.

  2. A Senior Priest says:

    Awesome. I could never have written something so magnificent. Would make a wonderful sermon.

  3. Albany+ says:

    One of the principal things so helpful about these reflections by Radner is that they deal head-on with the simple truth that we struggle so hard to accept: there is no place to go, no pure Church, no safe harbor but only hope in the Lord’s merciful judgment. The judgment is universal. The work, so to speak, is completely local. No high horses left to ride. Ash Wednesday everywhere.