And now for something completely different: an Anglican bishop who believes in the Resurrection

When I first read this story, naturally I suspected that it was a creation of Titania McGrath; it all seemed so implausible.

Bishop Joey Royal is a Canadian Anglican bishop who believes in the physical resurrection of Jesus – and he is still employed! The catch is, he was sent to live in the Arctic.

Read the whole thing here, bearing in mind it still could be an elaborate prank:

For all the talk of mystery and meaning, what a non-bodily resurrection offers is ultimately despair. It is a “gospel” emptied of good news, an exhortation to try hard so you too can have powerful, transformative experiences. Stripped bare of its extravagant rhetoric, it arrives at the same place as the so-called Prosperity Gospel. The latter says “have enough faith and God will make you rich”; the former says “have enough faith and God will make you feel good.” The difference is that one promises material comfort and the other psychological comfort. Both are religious philosophies developed by, and for, wealthy people who are searching for some way to transcend the ennui of their secular lives. Unfortunately, it’s all smoke and mirrors, destined to be discarded when disappointment inevitably arrives.

To all that I say, “No thanks.” If the dead aren’t raised, then our faith is in vain, and we may as well find another cause to which we can commit our lives. But if the dead are raised, and Jesus is the forerunner in resurrection life, then our hope is sturdy, because Jesus has defeated Satan and disarmed the powers of death and sin. That means that our bodily existence—with all the accompanying wreckage and failure and vulnerability and unrealized hopes—are caught up in, and find ultimate meaning in, the reality of the empty tomb. Put simply, we don’t have to have powerful religious experiences, because we have new life, available now and to be completed on the Last Day.

Don’t buy the counterfeits. Christ is risen! And because of that we can rise too.

6 thoughts on “And now for something completely different: an Anglican bishop who believes in the Resurrection

  1. Admirable theology, clear thinking, good grammar requires “IS caught up in”, but that’s venial. There’s hope for our Church yet!

    The South could do with more such people in charge of theological education in our dioceses, don’t you think?

  2. No Christmas (message of God made human) means no Good Friday. No Good Friday (message of atonement) means no Easter. No Easter (message of resurrection) means no Christianity. Professor J. I. Packer wrote: “The real difficulty (of the Christian Gospel) lies … in the Christmas message of incarnation” (Knowing God, 1973, p. 53).

  3. “If the dead aren’t raised, then our faith is in vain, and we may as well find another cause to which we can commit our lives. But if the dead are raised, and Jesus is the forerunner in resurrection life, then our hope is sturdy, because Jesus has defeated Satan and disarmed the powers of death and sin.”

    In a nutshell.

  4. Great article by the Bishop. We would still have an Anglican church if more were like this. Surprised the Journal printed it, frankly.

    • Well, they did print it; and some of us have got into their blog too and been passed for public consumption. Perhaps the penny is dropping at last.

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