(Continued from parts 1, part 2, part 3 and part 4.)
Living in light of New Earth
Finally, I run the risk of committing a similar “ministry myopia” error when I fault Platt, even slightly, for echoing a false dichotomy of living for Heaven versus living for this physical world.
Though you and I live in the United States of America now, we must fix our attention on “a better country—a heavenly one.” […] If your life or my life is going to count on earth, we must start by concentrating on heaven. (page 179)
Many Christians may not see a problem here, or even have a problem here. I can only humbly suggest that saying such things could reinforce another myth in Christendom: a myth that spiritual things, jobs and actions — such as preaching the Gospel overtly — matter more to God than material things, such as a Christian’s vocations, creations or talents.
So what I would have really appreciated here is a reminder that God plans to bring Heaven down to Earth (Rev. 21), creating a New Heavens and New Earth. With that in mind, Christians’ goals ought not be just to live for heaven and store up spiritual blessings. How we manage our time, work and talents glorifies God. And even in material, non-spiritual-sounding ways, we glorify Him and live in light of the very real, physical After-world He will create.
Conclusion
In summary, ultimately I recommend Radical, though with some uncertainty. For those already saturated in Gospel-based worldviews and are living in radical ways, it’s a great reminder — yet don’t they already know this in theory? And for more-compromising Christians who need to hear Jesus’ call to radical living, isn’t it better to teach them more about what He has done?
(Further thoughts coming next week.)
[...] (Finally: Radical accidentally reinforces false Heaven-versus-Earth dichotomies.) [...]
“So what I would have really appreciated here is a reminder that God plans to bring Heaven down to Earth (Rev. 21), creating a New Heavens and New Earth. With that in mind, Christians’ goals ought not be just to live for heaven and store up spiritual blessings.”
I think I get your point with this statement, but I think that was worded pretty badly. Christ specifically tells us to make our focus about storing up our treasure in heaven.
Point taken — a better wording might have been: “With that in mind, Christians’ goals ought not be just to live for some out-there, otherworldly heaven and store up nontangible blessings. How we manage our time, work and talents also glorifies God and helps us store up treasures for the life after the afterlife.”