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Book Review: "Finding God in the Questions" by Timothy Johnson


By John E. Phelan Jr.

CHICAGO, IL (July 3, 2004) - Timothy Johnson is known to most of us as the medical editor for ABC News and a regular on shows like Good Morning America, Nightline, and 20/20. For others of us Tim is a good friend known for his intellectual curiosity, generosity, and compassion. In addition to being a physician, Johnson is also a Covenant pastor and member of the Community Covenant Church in West Peabody, Massachusetts.

His latest book is an example of the genre "apology" or, more simply, witness. It recounts his life in faith and his struggles as a man of science to make sense of questions raised by the Bible, the church, human life, and, perhaps especially, his fellow believers! While some Christians become fearful and defensive in the face of such questions, Johnson welcomes them as a way to God. He knows from thousands of conversations with friends and colleagues that many others are asking the very same questions. "Finding God in the Questions" is his way of bearing witness to the God he found in these questions and of helping others in the same pursuit.

The collision of the world of consoling piety with the world of skeptical science produces many of the questions that plague Johnson. Having studied both theology and medicine, he is well aware that practitioners of those disciplines provide very different answers to basic questions of life and its meaning. The first section of the book explores the startling wonders of our world. He argues that the case for a creation by design is more than plausible given the complexity revealed in the world. God's purpose may seem perplexing and even maddening at times, but, Johnson insists, "there are 'footprints' of an intelligence in our universe that expresses itself in the mind-boggling complexity and 'coincidences' of our cosmos and in the very nature of what it means to be human." But this only raises additional questions. Assuming the existence of such a being, what is God like? And what can the Judeo-Christian Scriptures and traditions teach us?

Johnson begins his next section with a short basic introduction to the Bible, but spends most of his time on the teachings of Jesus. He encourages his readers to read the Gospels for themselves, but takes them through the highlights of the actions and teachings of Jesus by quoting extensively from the Gospel accounts of Jesus's life. Jesus, he argues, reveals a God lavish in his love and full of compassion for what Robert Capon called "the least, the lost, and the losers."

Johnson then moves to the question of Jesus's identity. Who was he and what did his death accomplish? Johnson here and elsewhere is impatient with the reductionism of creeds and confessions. Theological explanations of the significance of the cross, for example, he finds at times constricting and impersonal. "Rational or dogmatic formulas" are often substituted for "something that is ultimately inexplicable in human words--the power of God's love to forgive and 'wipe out' even the most horrible of evil." He continues, "Even though I cannot put its meaning easily into human words and theological formulas, I have always found the story of Jesus' crucifixion to offer the hope that evil can sometimes be overcome in this life--and that it has been overcome in some ultimate sense that we will fully understand only in the life to come."

This "overcoming" is seen clearly in the resurrection of Jesus and the transformation of his early followers, that Johnson sees as powerful witness to the truthfulness of the resurrection. He encourages his readers who struggle with the truth of the resurrection to begin to follow Jesus anyway: "I do believe that if you choose to follow Jesus, you will eventually believe in his resurrection." So who was this figure God raised from the dead? Johnson concludes his discussion of "Who was Jesus?" with a critique of the Nicene Creed and an argument for a more biblical, less "biological" explanation of the significance of Jesus. He prefers the simplicity of John's language of the "Word made flesh" to the complexity of Greek philosophical speculation carried out under the watchful eye of Constantine! He quotes with approval the words of New Testament scholar N. T. Wright: "The being we refer to as 'God' was, and is, fully present and fully discoverable in and as Jesus of Nazareth."

Johnson goes on to insist there is more to being "saved" than simply believing the right things about Jesus. In fact, he has come to prefer the phrase "follower of Jesus" to the word "Christian" with all of its historical and theological baggage. Jesus in the Gospel called for disciples, not just adherents. Unfortunately, too many "Christians" look nothing like the Jesus they are supposedly imitating and following. For Johnson, following Jesus involves a "bet on the heart of God." The immensity of God's love is shown in the life and ministry, death and resurrection of Jesus. But this love calls us not simply to correct belief but to discipleship. Being "born again" is more than a transaction; it is a commitment to a new life.

In his critique of creeds and confession and his insistence on a life of following Jesus, Johnson is speaking out of his Covenant and pietistic heritage. Our forebears argued that orthodox belief in and of itself was not enough. This is not to say they believed in salvation by any other means than the grace of God. They rather insisted that a life of discipleship, a life increasingly like that of Jesus, was evidence of true and growing faith. They heard the sober warning of Jesus that there would be some who called him "Lord" and didn't really mean it. There would be weeds in the midst of the wheat. Johnson calls on his readers to pay attention to Jesus. He calls them to observe his actions, listen to his teachings, and, most importantly, follow the path he laid out for disciples. He does not shy away from difficult questions and admits he does not have all the answers. But he has found something in Jesus he wants others to discover. In fact, he believes "Jesus modeled and taught the kind of life that the creator God had in mind for us." This is the life Johnson calls us to.

By its very nature "apology" or "witness" is profoundly personal. It is recounting what God has done for me. We all have different experiences and raise different questions about our lives and faith. Some readers will undoubtedly be troubled by the answers preferred by Johnson. He freely acknowledges that some of the "orthodox" explanations leave him cold. And some of these explanations do go beyond the Scriptures in their attempt to create and sustain identity boundaries. This is one reason Covenanters claim the word of God as "the only perfect rule for faith, doctrine, and conduct." The ambiguity of the Bible is preferable to the overly precise articulations of the creeds and confessions. On the other hand, Covenanters have also honored the creeds and confessions as profound human attempts to articulate the faith. In fact, all Covenant pastors recite the Apostles' Creed at their ordination. This does not mean the creeds are "ultimate" or "final" for us, but that when we recite them we acknowledge our dependence and solidarity with those who have gone before us. At the same time we work to restate the meaning and significance of the Jesus story for our own generation and community--as Johnson set out to do in his book.

Reading Finding God in the Questions is like having a long and good conversation with a wonderful, thoughtful friend. Sometimes you say, "Yes! Exactly!" At other times you say, "Now wait a minute!" As a recovering fundamentalist myself, I identify with Tim's critiques of our more harshly conservative brothers and sisters. But as Tim well knows, harsh, cruel, and unyielding folks are found on the left and in the middle as well as on the far right. Furthermore, academic theology may seem arcane and even implausible. But it is the very human attempt to make sense of the ways of God in the world and to answer the very questions that are so troubling to Tim, and indeed, to all of us. It is no more surprising that people want to know how God could be "fully present and fully discoverable in and as Jesus of Nazareth" than it is for people to wonder how it was that our "current cosmos burst forth from a pinpoint of extremely dense and hot 'quark-gluon plasma.' " The same questions that motivate the wonder of scientists motivate the wonder of theologians.

These caveats aside, Tim Johnson never flinches in the face of difficult questions and consistently leads people to Jesus. He may not answer these questions in the way you might or I might, but his honesty and passion for Jesus are clear and compelling. We all know people who are struggling with the questions he raises. Tim's book offers a way through the thicket of life's confusions, losses, and fears.

Many will find his way compelling and redemptive. I highly recommend Finding God in the Questions.

Reviewed by John E. Phelan Jr., president and dean of North Park Theological Seminary. This review originally appeared in the July 2004 issue of The Covenant Companion.

Copyright © 2008 The Evangelical Covenant Church.

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