Yesterday I posted some general and positive thoughts on Rob Bell's new book Sex God. Today I want to register my critique. I usually don't do this, but I've been asked by so many to set out my views so I am doing so.
What I say today does not change my mind from what I said yesterday. I have no hesitations in giving this book to those who are pondering marriage and want to discuss relationships -- especially college students, those considering marriage, and young marrieds. Overall, I like the book. I think that was clear in my post yesterday; today I wish to register some criticisms and I do to open up discussion and to hope we can improve our thoughts together. My criticisms do not impact the substance of this book -- which, as I've said, I like.
I have three problems, and one piddly set of problems. By the way, I'm not fond of the title and some of the chp titles. What some will see as clever communication, others will see as irreverent. Furthermore, the book is quite conservative and doesn't dwell on any topic at length. It's short; it says simple and good things; and moves on.
A glaring omission I found in the book is a lack of Trinitarian thought: Rob is big on the term echad, the Hebrew word for "one." And he sees God's oneness as an intimation of what our marriage and connections are about. True, the "one" of Genesis 1 is the same "one" of Deut 6. But, has he gone far enough toward a Christian understanding of God and marriage? This word, echad, in Deut 6 means "one God, and only one God, and that God's name is YHWH." For a Christian the "one" God means "one God, who happens to be Three-in-One" -- and this perichoresis of mutual indwelling and interpenetration forms a far better basis for comprehending marriage as "one" than a simple use of the Hebrew echad. The Oneness of John 10:38 or John 17 is the Christian, Trinitarian development that gives more substance to the "oneness" theme of Eph 5 in Paul's theology of marriage. I think the book needs a chapter that explores sexuality and Trinity -- and it would make the book better.
Use of rabbis. Some of you might not care about this; I do. Rob has an annoying habit in sermons and in books. He equates rabbinic writings, which are sources from the 3d to 9th Century AD, with Judaism of both the 1st Century (Jesus' and Paul's worlds) and the Judaism of the day of Moses. And he reinterprets things in the Bible through those rabbinic sources. At times in his uses of the rabbis it just happens that the rabbinic information is something found also for the 1st Century or ancient Israel (but rarely). He tells us fun things, scintillating and titillating things that average folks don't know, and they go "aha, so that's what's going on, the covenant formula is actually about sitting under the chuppah of a Jewish bride and groom. How neat to know this." His 7th chp is about "under the chuppah" and explains Israel's relationship to God as what takes place under the chuppah -- the prayer shawl stood up with four poles and under which the couple formed their union. Problem is, no, it isn't accurate; that prayer shawl and chuppah stuff is later and had nothing to do with Exodus and Deuteronomy and the covenant formula of YHWH's relationship to Israel. (Unless there is evidence for a couple wedding under a chuppah back then that I've not seen.) We are dealing in Exodus/Deut with a treaty formula from the Ancient Near East, not with the later specifics of a rabbinic marriage custom or with the sexual union that occurred under the chuppah. The whole chp for me is misconstrued through that rabbinic lens.
Here's the general rule: as we don't use contemporary conditions (globalization, etc) to explain what the framers of the Constitution meant at that time, so we don't use the rabbis to explain Jesus and the Bible. To use the rabbis to elucidate the New Testament we need evidence from the 1st Century that confirms what we find in the rabbis.
Along this line of using ancient sources, I don't like that Rob chose to say that there is a "spark" of the divine in each of us. Why? That's from the Gnostics and it means something quite different to me because of its use by them. In other words, for me "this" (the spark) is not "that" (God's image). That language is from a different world altogether than "image of God" in Genesis 1.
I wish Rob would be more judicious in using etymologies to explain the meanings of words. "Sincere" doesn't mean "without wax" just as "cupboard" doesn't mean "board on which cups sit" -- and these are my own examples of others using etymologies to explain a word. The origin of a word may or may not have anything to do with the usage of a term. And Rob gets one badly wrong: "epithumia", a Greek word normally translated "lust" or "desire," does not mean "in mind" (Bell's claim) but "in passionate fury" or something that has to do with rage and overwhelming passion. It could be translated "in heat." The meaning of a word is determined by its usage, not by its etymology.
Piddly points: this book should have been either twice as long or bundled up in a book half as long. As it is, it frustrates: there is more to be said about everything. (Particularly singles -- you can't give singles one page in a book this long about connections.) And I'm not keen on the cover or the production -- too much space between paragraphs; too many blank pages. And I think his footnotes are too playful -- readers don't go to footnotes to find fun. Footnotes by definition are business. Some of the pink or peach pages were hard for me to read. I suspect many will like the production of this book. I admit these are piddly; but they are mine. Do these points matter? Nope, or at least not much. It's preference. Who cares? I do. Some don't. I respect that.
By the way, I've not read Ben Witherington's post on this. I scanned it to see what he was doing and he did a long post both summarizing and interjecting observations. I'll take a look at his, but won't let that get into play on this response of mine.

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I liked the colors on this book's cover... Velvet Elvis was too white.
(Actually, I have more to say than that but it's already been said twice by three different people, and so I just like the colors).
Scott-
I don't know if you remember me or not, but it was great to meet you after your talk at Willow Creek several weeks ago. It made our trip down to Chicago worthwhile. I have not explored much of your website or all of the comments you have posted about Rob's book, but I really appreciate what I have read so far.
A few questions I have based on my time in Israel/at Mars Hill/w/RVL:
1 - I underdstand your criticisms of Rob using the Mishnah in interpreting the New Testament. The Mishnah was written in 200AD as a recording of oral tradition. I understand that oral tradition is not 100% accurate, but if I am not mistaken, doesn't the Mishnah record the dimensions of the Second Temple almost exactly correct - approx. 130 years after the temple would have been destroyed? And what about recorded sayings of "r"abbis who lived before/during/and after Jesus (Hillel, Shammai, Akiva, etc...)? Is this all legend or can any of it be considered accurate? Is not the Mishnah also a recording of history as well as interpretation of Torah?
2 - I don't think Rob is naive enough to think that Moses saw Chuppas at wedding ceremonies. I think what he was getting at (but maybe didn't say clearly enough) was that Jewish weddings were modeled after the scene at Sinai - what Jews later came to see as the marriage between God and his people. Hence, the Chuppa came to symbolize the smoke above the people and Mt. Sinai not the opposite of this i.e. God didn't give the ten commandments in the context of a marriage contract, but rather Jews later arranged their marriage contacts like the contract they see in Exodus between God and his people. Rob isn't confusing the time period of the rabbis or Jesus with the time of the Exodus, but is explaining the lens through which Jews during the first few centuries AD viewed the scene at Mt. Sinai - as an example of marriage.
I would be interested to hear what you think about this.
Matt,
Thanks for your note. I'll be direct.
First, it is a huge assumption to say that Mishnah records exactly what happened -- which it didn't in many things nor did it need to (it wasn't written for us so we could figure out NT stuff) -- and that therefore it is what was going on in the 1st Century. As I said in a comment above, it is like assuming our science classes in grade school can be used to understand pre-Civil war classes. It is not acceptable in serious scholarship to assume for the NT what is now found in Mishnah -- neither Jewish nor Christian scholars do this. No one says Mishnah is always inaccurate; it is sometimes recording stuff from an earlier era. How do we know? By finding confirming evidence elsewhere: NT, Dead Sea Scrolls, OT Pseud, OT Apocrypha, Targums, Philo, and Josephus. A good place to work on this is with EP Sanders' book Judaism: Practice and Belief.
Second, Rob states that at the time of Moses the chuppah stuff was going on. Had he said what you said, I'd have been fine with it -- that is, that this is nothing but an analogy. Instead, he puts chuppah back in Moses' day.
Third, check out what he does at the very end of the book. Once again, he explicitly states that the disciples would have recognized the John 14 words as words of a groom to a bride ... c'mon, I say, show me the evidence that all grooms always made this speech ... are we to believe that all grooms were adding rooms to their fathers' homes?
It is this sort of stuff that is simply inaccurate history and makes his stuff (1) catchier and (2) less credible to those who study the material.
Some Thoughts Regarding Rabinical References:
1: I'm not sure there exists any perfect or concrete ways to use historical understandings as interpretive lenses when studying scripture.
2: With that said:
If we believe God purposefully interacted with the people of Israel over a large span of time, then the traditions flowing from that interaction are certain to give us valuable insight into the the collective and evolving understandings of that historic people group.
It seems this would be equally true (although perhaps in different ways) regardless of what time period we observe that tradition occurring in. If we have evidence of it in 300AD, then some form of that tradition was happening in 500BC, and some elements of it's origins were probably present at Siani.
3: I think it's important to view these insights as educated attempts to see a different world through different eyes. I have always understood that to be Rob's intent. I don't think his teachings make more or less of them than that.
4: Similarly, we have a choice on how we interpret any writer's motivation behind "undrawn" conclusions. No matter how big a "mother church" is, any church planter that I have known has had low expectations of who might join him/her from the planting congregation, and fearfully low expectations about who might show up at all. In "Velvet Elvis" Rob related these common feelings in hopes of expressing a spiritual truth. If you want to project intentions beyond that effort you might want to first clarify what leads you toward those type of suspicions, and where that leading is taking you.
I have been following this thread, but not commented because I wanted to think long and hard about what to say. So I find myself today reading what Daniel as said, and being feeled compelled to say...Ditto.
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