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Rob Bell – “Jesus Wants to Save Christians”

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To be honest, I have tried to like Rob Bell’s work many times without much luck.  That’s probably a bad way to start a review.

I’m not a Bell-basher, but I’m not a fan either; I understand his appeal, but it doesn’t appeal to me; I have been to his church, I know some people there, and I like them and have enjoyed worshiping at Mars Hill.

Many who haven’t read Rob Bell’s books are at least familiar with the phenomenally successful series of short films called Nooma (which are quite good). Jesus Wants to Save Christians: A Manifesto for the Church in Exile is the third of his provocatively titled books – the previous two being Velvet Elvis: Repainting the Christian Faith (my review) and Sex God: Exploring the Endless Connections between Sexuality and Spirituality.

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If you’ve ever heard Bell speak, it’s easy to hear his voice when you read his books – his pacing, pauses, and emphases are communicated well by the format of the text. The size and outside cover designs are clever and appealing, making them nice books to be seen with.

In Jesus Wants to Save Christians Bell uses the motif of exile to illustrate the condition of God’s people at present and in times past, drawing parallels between the two. Exile, by Bell’s definition, is “when you fail to convert your blessings into blessings for others… [and] when you find yourself a stranger to the purposes of God.”

Bell wisely recommends that, “a Christian should get very nervous when the flag and the Bible start holding hands. This is not a romance we want to encourage.”  And adds: “For a growing number of people in our world, it appears that many Christians support some of the very things Jesus came to set people free from.”

He does excel at delivering a concise synopsis of Old Testament Biblical events, but beyond that and into his interpretation of the events, I found little of value.  The book does not deliver on it’s promise.

In describing the new covenant Bell says: “No more fear, no more terror, no more thunder. That was the old way, the former thing, the first covenant.” In this new covenant, “the truth will be so deeply etched into people’s consciousness that they will naturally do the right thing.” There is a common thread in Bell’s work, one that is the cause of some accusations that he favors Universalism. There are certainly overtones of that soteriological view and it would be nice to hear Bell explain his thinking on the matter a bit more.

By challenging Bell’s allusions to Universalism, one is put into the position of having to answer questions like “Are you saying you DON’T want everyone to be saved?” That is not the point here. Of course everyone (except the most extreme hyper-Calvinist) DOES hope that all will be saved, but the likelihood of this goes against numerous passages of scripture.  Some will spend eternity separated from God; Bell would do well to mention this more often in his teaching – not as a gleeful condemnation, but as a plea for repentance.rob-bell_don-golden.jpg

The text on the back cover says the following:

“There is a church in our area that recently added an addition to their building which cost more than $20 million. Our local newspaper ran a front-page story not too long ago revealing that one in five people in our city lives in poverty. This is a book about those two numbers.”

That claim is not substantiated in the pages of JWTSC; it would have been a much better book if it had.

The tone and scope of JWTSC reminds me of two other titles I read. Neither one sold me completely on its thesis and both are secular in orientation, but they challenged my preconceptions more effectively. So if a vibrant screed against the culture of excessive consumption and affluence is what you’re after, you’re more likely to be inspired by reading Naomi Klein’s No Logo or Kalle Lasn’s Culture Jam: How to Reverse America’s Suicidal Consumer Binge–And Why We Must.

  • http://www.michaelkrahn.com Michael Krahn

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  • Warren

    I believe that the problem with the “no more fear”, is that “fear” is a conflation of completely separate biblical concepts.

    The biblical “Fear of God” is not superceded, or cast out, by the concept that “perfect love casts out fear” (fear of death, fear of punishment, fear of retribution).

    There is a proper Fear of God:

    “See, Lord, at thy service low lies here a heart, Lost, all lost in wonder at the God thou art.”

    The word fear is not at all out of place. But it is not fear of punishment.

    “Though he slay me, yet will I serve him….” It is not a fear which makes you run away. It is a fear which undoes you, unbinds and opens you. A fear that leads you to call upon God, to fall on the rock of his mercy, and be broken, and subsequently healed, rather than have the rock of his justice fall on you, lest you be destroyed.

    Or so I reckon.

  • http://www.jimkastkeat.com jimkastkeat

    Michael

    Great review, very honest. While I loved the book (and all the sermon series that it came out of) I think you have some great things to say.

    More coming via gmail…

  • http://www.planetdanno.com Danno

    I was a big fan of Velvet Elvis and Everything is Spiritual. This book left me very dissapointed. His take on scripture went from “what if this meant that” in VE to “this DOES mean that” in JWTSC…and even a fan can admit he takes some pretty broad leaps this time in doing so. It would also seem he was intentionally misleading concerning our presence in Saudi Arabia. I think Rob Bell is a very intellegent and gifted person. I pray that he does not use the gifts given to him by God to push a personal agenda and do Rob’s work instead of Gods.