- 01. Editor’s Note
- 02. Introduction
- 03. Seek First the Kingdom of God
- 04. Christ in Us
- 05. The Meaning of Trust
- 06. Resurrection Life
- 07. God Moves In
- 08. Ways of Being For, With, and InFrom the table in “A Brief Overview of the With-God Life,” The Renovaré Spiritual Formation Bible, Richard J. Foster, ed. (San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 2005), xivi–xivii.
01. Editor’s Note
In June of 2012, Dallas Willard presented two hours of teaching on the Book of Acts to the Renovaré Board and Ministry team at a retreat center in Colorado. Given the theme of this issue of Conversations, “Streams of Living Water: Celebrating the Great Traditions of Christian Faith,” and the “incarnational” focus of Dallas Willard’s presentation, we thought you might want to listen in on part of that talk. What follows, after a brief introduction from Gary W. Moon, is an edited version of portions of that talk.
I encountered a teaching on the uniting themes of Scripture that I’ve never been able to forget. It was posited that if you step inside the Bible, anywhere between Genesis 1:1 and Revelation 22:21, you would not have to turn many pages before bumping into four retreated themes:
- God loves people and has prepared a suitable dwelling place both as an inheritance and a place of being together.
- God desires to be with His people in loving relationship.
- Humanity continues to reject both the inheritance and the offer of presence and relationship.
- God does not give up on His offer to be with the ones He loves.
Henri Nouwen, in Bread for the Journey: A Daybook of Wisdom and Faith, offers a daily reflection on how the prepositions change as you turn the pages of the Bible. The very language of covenant or “coming together,” that you see so prominently in Scripture, reveals God’s desire to be together with us. And as you turn the pages, you see that some very important prepositions change from for, to with, and finally in. In early versions of the covenant relationship, we see that God is “for” His people, to protect from dangers and guide to freedom. With Jesus comes a new dimension of the covenant; God is now “with” His people in the muck and mire of life, growing, living, and dying. But with the resurrection and the gift of the Holy Spirit comes the full depth of the covenant and final preposition, God can now be “in” us, as close to us as the air we breathe. God can animate us.
God’s desire to be for, with, and in us is not news to Dallas Willard, who was very inspirational to the creation of The Renovaré Spiritual Formation Bible that is sometimes called the “with-God Bible.” Indeed, it was Dallas Willard who inspired the project team with his vision of a panoramic view of biblical history that shows the progressive nature of how God has offered His presence. Three sample columns from the much larger organizational table found in the preface of The Renovaré Spiritual Formation Bible can be found at the end of this article.
And against that backdrop, let us listen in on Dallas Willard’s teaching on the Book of Acts within the context of the entire Biblical narrative. —Gary W. Moon
02. Introduction
Being invited to deal with Acts in two hours is a little like eating a horse for lunch, so we will see what we can do.
I do not think Acts is normally appreciated for what it really is. So, I want to begin our discussion by just asking you, “Can we understand Acts in terms of contemporary church life?”
Sadly, I think that for the most part we have to look past present-day church life to understand the book of Acts. We have to place it in the context of God’s march through human history to fully grasp what was happening there. And if we don’t do that, it may block understanding of what the Kingdom of God is doing for us today.
I believe if we want to get this—what was happening in Acts—right, we have to start in the first chapter of Genesis, specifically in Genesis 1:26, and observe what was happening on the last day of the creation account. It is extremely important to understand the statement in verse 26 because these words are about you and me. Here is what the record says: “Then God said, ‘Let us make human beings, man, in our likeness . . . in our likeness.’”Note: All Scripture quotations are the author’s paraphrase.
Now of course, God was not talking about how we look, because actually we look pretty rough sometimes. In our “likeness,” refers to letting them rule, or as some versions say, letting them have “dominion.” Or, you could capture it well by saying, “let them be responsible.” That is, I believe, the image of God. The image of God in the human being is the ability to rule, to have dominion, to be responsible.
Now, human beings outside a proper understanding of this are likely to start thinking that they are at the top of the “rule chain.” But the verse does not say this. The rule of the human being is meant to be under the rule of God, and it only works that way, and that is why when Jesus came, after a long historical development, his message was simply, “Repent, for the Kingdom of the Heavens (which is the Jewish understanding of the Kingdom of God) is here.”