THESE ARE THE GENERATIONS. The Story of How One North Korean Family Lived Out the Great Commission for More Than Fifty years in the Most Christian-Hostile Nation in Human History. By Mr. and Mrs. Bae, as told to the Rev. Eric Foley. .W Publishing, 2012. 121 pages.

My wife and I heard about this book through some Eric Foley interviews we listened to online at https://secure.persecution.com/radio/. So I bought the book for my Kindle, and read it in a hurry.

The book traces the story of the Bae family in North Korea for three generations. Their faith in Christ endured under the Japanese, and then under the Communists. But it was not easy. Here are some remarkable aspects.

In the grandfather’s day, there were times when God would give him clear instructions to flee from the town or city where he happened to be living. That would seem cowardly at first blush. But it made it more real to me that Jesus told his followers to flee from Judea once they see the abomination that causes desolation (Matt. 24:16). Several times, his fleeing in a particular moment would save not only himself, but others as well.

Under Communism, the family realized that they would have to get rid of their Bibles, public worship, etc. So they considered what they would keep. The 10 commandments were key, as the older generation would very secretively advise the younger generation on how to live by these rules. This helped me to picture just how precious God’s commands are.

I’ve seen images and stories of the poverty that people live through in North Korea. It was interesting, then, to read about one of the generations struggling with the temptations involved in advancing successfully in a career in the military. There is indeed an amount of worldly happiness for a sector of the population in North Korea.

In the final section about fleeing from North Korea, to arrive ultimately in South Korea, the difficulties they faced were heartbreaking. But then the strangeness of their arrival in South Korea was even more startling: that the South Korean government has to be very careful to screen refugees to discover spies among them. Then the Baes admit that life in South Korea is not perfect either. But they keep on trusting God.

The organization that Eric Foley leads has as its goal not simply to help Christians in North Korea: “The vision of Seoul USA is that the North Korean church become the catalyst for spiritual examination, repentance, and renewal in Asian and Western Christianity, with North Korean defectors serving among the leadership pillars of the church around the world.” May God bless their work.

 

PARTNERS IN CHRIST: A Conservative Case for Egalitarianism. By John G. Stackhouse, Jr. IVP Academic, 2015. A revision of FINALLY FEMINIST, 2005.

The New Testament has some seemingly clear instructions for women not to be the leading authorities in church and family life (1 Cor. 11:1-16; 14:33-35; Eph. 5:22-33; 1 Tim. 2:11-15). In many circles, evangelical Christians have turned away from those instructions and patterns, adopting modern egalitarian/feminist approaches. The best I’ve been able to see, that is a very problematic thing to do, especially if you try to keep on believing that the Bible is infallible. Last summer I asked a woman in ministry for a basis for her setting those problematic passages aside. She referenced this book. So I decided I should read it.

(I read it on Kindle, and I’m not sure if I got the page numbers exactly right in what follows.)

It was a much more enjoyable read than I expected. Among academics, Stackhouse is probably one of the most honest that I’ve ever read when he comes to discussing his personal feelings and judgments about difficult subjects. There are a lot of aspects of modern feminist struggles that I never took the time to appreciate. Also, his desire to honour the truthfulness of all of scripture is evident, along with his desire to see more and more people in the world won for Christ.

However, as much as I learned from Stackhouse, and as much as I enjoyed his gentle and respectful spirit, I was left with some serious questions:

His driving force toward accepting egalitarianism (feminism) and rejecting paternalism (complimentarianism) is basically that he just plain sees women as equal, both in identity and in their rights to aspire to the same roles as men. He writes the book assuming that I will see this too, and that he just needs to get those pesky aspects of scripture out of the way for me. But while equality of identity and worth are clear in scripture and in my mind, equality of roles does not seem so clear-cut and obvious to me at the start, like it does to him. So I’m either right, or I need someone to explain more of the basics to me.

In chapter 11, Stackhouse outlines his central interpretive argument: that there tends to be “doubleness,” patriarchy and egalitarianism side by side in many passages of OT and NT alike. He takes the patriarchy to be accommodating, and the egalitarianism as ideal. Stackhouse posits that such duality is based on God’s willingness to accommodate the sinful institutions and views of a society, in order not to distract from the central message of his salvation. That was fine then, he says, and it is a fine thing to do today, e.g., when a female missionary goes into a strictly Muslim country. However, he claims that our North American culture has reached a stage where a conservative approach to gender roles actually hinders the furtherance of the gospel instead of speeding it. Our culture has come of age, and it is time for the church to embrace this beautiful thing called feminism. (Page 71)

(Stackhouse views himself as doing something different from Webb’s approach in Slaves, Women and Homosexuals. Webb’s approach looks for a trajectory, while Stackhouse looks for a duality. At a more basic level, it is a similar kind of effort to see something deeper in the scripture than what is found at the level of a basic reading.)

As I struggled to understand why Stackhouse says what he says and assumes what he assumes, I realized that a big part of my struggle is based in the difference between his background and mine. He grew up in a strict Brethren setting where rigid male headship was enforced. And he grew up in a time when feminism was still struggling for a footing. I grew up in quite the opposite setting, where male headship was the subject of jokes, and feminism was celebrated. And I watched my church decline and close, along with many others. When I look around at the few churches in my region that are thriving at reaching people with the gospel, they tend to be churches that hold to complimentarianism (paternalism). I see most families around me dealing with various kinds of disintegration and dysfunction, and I don’t see the wide embrace of feminism as having helped that in many ways at all.

Furthermore, Stackhouse came to his conclusions in a time before the feminist movement got lumped together with the gender-fluidity movement. Stackhouse sees eschatology (end times) as ultimately producing a world of equality between sexes. That seems obvious to him, and he assumes it will seem obvious to his readers, too. But it also seems obvious to him that the sexes would remain distinct, as two sexes. More and more of Western culture sees even that as too conservative, now, as elementary school students are encouraged to consider whether they are really a different gender from their biological sex. If Stackhouse is going to base his argument on what seems obvious to our culture, then he will have to make a more watertight argument that the sexes are still distinct.

Endnote 1 to chapter 10 is fascinating. Stackhouse critiques his allies Fee, Bruce, and many others for trying to resolve the issues according to technicalities, like the meaning of kephale “head” in Ephesians 5. He says that such an approach “seems to me to miss the patriarchal forest of the entire Bible for the particular textual trees.” Egalitarians should make careful note of that: one of their champions is stating that the plain reading of scripture is a patriarchal reading.

Another way that this book is a help to a complimentarian is in how Stackhouse seems to have read much complimentarian material, and not only agrees with some aspect of it, but also points out the challenges inherent in other aspect of it. For example, he points out on page 76 that complimentarians are weak at explaining exactly what male leadership in the home looks like. Exactly how should male leadership/headship be exercised, e.g., in decision making? That is a challenge for us (soft) complimentarian husbands to get our heads around, and I appreciate Stackhouse for making the challenge more explicit.

In chapter 11, note 3, Stackhouse references the argument from naming in genesis 2. I’ve come up with this argument myself, and have looked for a long time for anyone in the literature to address it, and I’m grateful Stackhouse “names” it. The argument is basically that in Genesis 2, since Adam names Eve “woman,” then that is evidence of his position of authority over her before the fall. (Many egalitarians try to argue that the first mention of male authority over woman only comes as a consequence of the fall in Genesis 3. Stackhouse then makes some bad rebuttals against it, saying that Adam didn’t even really give Eve a name at first, just called her woman. But God didn’t give day a name at first either, really, he just called it day. And clearly God has authority over all that he made. Anyway, this is an interesting avenue for further research.

On page 96 Stackhouse discusses the Trinity. He says complimentarians get the better side of argument from trinitarianism. Nevertheless, he says that in Gen. 1, with the introduction of male and female created in God’s image, he says that there is no explicit reference to the Trinity at all. He neglects to see the brilliance of man created male and female in the image of the one who says “let us make man in our image.” He then takes issue with the inner-trinitarian analogy in 1 Cor. 11:3, just because it’s jarring, basically.

On pages 99-102, Stackhouse makes some suggestions that alarm me. He seems to be suggesting that the very identity of God as “lord” was an ancient accommodation. The transcendence of God was what God was trying to get across, but “lord” was good enough for that culture. But where does that leave us today. To say, like Rauschenbusch, that we need a “democratic” view of God? (Rauschenbusch, Walter. A Rauschenbusch Reader: The Kingdom of God and the Social Gospel. Benson Y. Landis Ed.  New York: Harper & Brothers Publishers, 1957. Page 122) To abandon the most basic Christian creed, that “Jesus Christ is Lord”? If this essential rejection of absolute authority is what is at the heart of much of egalitarianism, then egalitarianism is much more theologically dangerous than what I ever imagined. But maybe I’m misreading Stackhouse. (John Frame makes some interesting arguments that might get right to the heart of what has led Stackhouse astray on this point. He says that while modern theology has carved out the categories of God’s “transcendence and immanence,” the Bible never seems to express God’s greatness or closeness in exactly those same ways. Rather, whenever God’s “transcendence” is expressed in the Bible, it tends to emphasize his majesty and lordship. Such authoritative dimensions get left out of the concept of transcendence today. (John Frame. The Doctrine of God: A Theology of Lordship. P&R Publishing, 2002.)

On another topic, Stackhouse nods to the insight of the complimentarian position again. On page 113, in rejecting homosexuality, Stackhouse says that “there is something crucially complementary about marriage of a man and a woman (versus same-sex unions) just as God created humanity in his image as “male and female” in Genesis 1.” Then he admits that he doesn’t know what the difference is between male and female. His subsequent rejection of homosexual practice bespeaks his age. He has appealed to the spirit of the age so much up to this point, that he sounds out-of-tune to be saying things that are so culturally odd today.

Overall, I would recommend this book to careful readers of both the complimentarian and egalitarian side of Bible-believing church life. May Stackhouse’s irenic spirit and rigorous scholarship set an example for us all.

However, I have to confess that Stackhouse leaves my soft complimentarian (paternalist) position unshaken. Indeed my position is better informed on many points now than it was before I read this book, and I hear various particular challenges clearly, for living and teaching consistently. Yet my complimentarianism remains intact, and I feel more motivated than before to challenge egalitarianism’s claims.

 

THE KOREAN PENTECOST & The Sufferings Which Followed. By William Blair and Bruce Hunt. Banner of Truth Trust, 1977. 162 pages.

As tensions and intrigues increase between the USA and North Korea, we read an article in World Magazine that emphasized some of the events from this little book. So we ordered the book, and were thoroughly blessed by it.

The first half of the book tells the remarkable story of how God prepared the Korean people to hear the gospel. Written by missionaries of those early days (William Blair went to Korea in 1901; Bruce Hunt was a generation younger and suffered under Japanese and Communist persecution), the book shares the incredible vigor of those missionaries. It seems like nothing could deter the Presbyterian missionaries of those years.

A century later, what is striking is that South Korea is so alive with the gospel, having caught that same missionary fervour. Meanwhile Japan, having such a similar culture and located so close-by, has yet to embrace the gospel in any significant numbers. The book gives some indications of what God did in the hearts of the Korean people to prepare them to embrace the gospel. But the book also does well to show that it was very much God’s doing, not man’s.

The Korean Pentecost happened in 1907 in Pyengyang (Pyongyang in today’s media). It was a prayer meeting, a large gathering of Bible study leaders, basically. As these people began to confess their sins to God, and as the leader encouraged them to all pray together at the same time, God’s Spirit came upon that meeting in a tangible, powerful way. The church throughout the country was purified and blessed by that experience. It was not something those Presbyterian leaders were particularly pushing for – Presbyterians are usually more about good thoughts and good order than about frenzied charismatic experiences.

The test soon came, of whether that experience was from God or not. The occupying Japanese soon demanded that all Koreans (Christians included) pay regular homage to the Shinto shrines. Many Christians refused, and many Christians suffered intensely for it. It is an interesting test to think through: there are a variety of ways that a Christian could justify bowing to those shrines (and many Christians did it and justified it). But in hindsight, the martyrs’ resistance to that forced worship was so very right.

The resilience the church learned under the Japanese only prepared them for the worse trial under the Communists after Japanese surrender and the partition of Korea. The most memorable story for me was of a martyr’s wife warning him before his execution: if you recant, you are not my husband anymore.

Overall, it was a very good book to remind me of how real God is, how real our testing in this world will be, and how I need to be ready to relinquish everything in order to cling to Jesus.

 

BEING MORTAL: Medicine and What Matters in the End. By Atul Gawande. Doubleday Canada, 2014. 282 pages.

My parents asked me to read this book. It is on how to make wise decisions as you see the end of life approaching – or about how to help loved ones make those decisions. In the end, it is about the author’s own experience of navigating his father’s cancer and dying. (Father and son, and mother too, are all MD’s.)

You expect a book on this subject to be about spirituality, and/or about doctor-assisted suicide. But it hardly touches on either. Gawande’s larger concern is to help us all navigate the more mechanical aspects of approaching death. Some of that involves choices about nursing homes, assisted living, etc. Some of it is also about the growing field of hospice care. The crux of the book, however, is in learning to ask the right questions of the doctors, and to learn to ask the right questions of the dying.

Doctors are involved in an intensive program to extend life. Sometimes they will give you the impression that the only acceptable course of action is for you to tackle your disease by invasive and risky surgery, chemo, radiation, etc. Often the treatment is sure to make you life miserable if you survive, and not sure to give you many more years of life. Often the doctors are only trying to get you a lottery ticket for the slimmest chance to live a few more years.

Few doctors have learned to ask patients about what their real goals are, what their real fears are, what their acceptable trade-offs are, etc.

Gawande shows the great worth of having these conversations with our loved ones. Sometimes, when a parent is in the middle of surgery and things aren’t going as planned, a son or daughter has to make a decision. If we know the loved one’s priorities, what they could be happy to live without and what they could not live without , then we know what risks to tell the surgeon are worth taking.

Working as a pastor, being around plenty of dying people, I see very clearly how valuable this book is. I borrowed it from the library, but I think I will buy a couple copies to share around.

A couple of details:

  • One of the differences he emphasizes between assisted-living vs. nursing homes is that you have a door you can lock. In an assisted-living apartment, you have control of your own space. Reading what Gawande says about this, I realized that I’ve heard various people talk about their door-locks, as they contemplate their options. It’s an important part of a person’s concept of their own space.
  • Gawande quotes a study’s findings, that as death approaches, a person wants less and less to meet new people, and more and more to be around the people he or she already knows. This has some interesting implications for church life, especially in ageing congregations, but also conversely in younger congregations.