Tchividjian on Giertz…
Feed: Tullian Tchividjian
Posted on: Thursday, June 30, 2011 4:42 PM
Author: Tullian Tchividjian
Subject: The Whole Debt Is Paid
As you know, my family and I are on vacation and part of being on vacation means less writing and more reading. So, I lined up an all-start cast of gospel addicts to guest blog for me (find out who here). But before I get back to posting their excellent blogs I absolutely had to share something with you that blew me away just a few minutes ago. After sitting on my shelf uncracked for the better part of last year, I finally decided to read Bo Giertz's classic novel The Hammer of God (first published in 1941). I first heard about this book from my friends Elyse Fitzpatrick and Mike Horton. I'm a third of the way through it and it is simply breathtaking. Giertz was a master storyteller and theologian. Both of these gifts shine brightly on every page of this book. It is the story of three pastors who learn the necessity of relying on God's grace. It is law/gospel theology in the most captivating narrative form. But, you'll have to read it for yourself. I just want to share one part. I need to first give some context, though. Set in Sweden in the early 1800′s, Henrik is a young, remarkably gifted and fiery preacher who very much looks up to Justus Johan Linder, a preacher ten years his senior. Henrik is having a crisis of faith. Bothered by the worldliness all around him, he has become widely known for his passionate pleas and exhortations for people to stop sinning. He's meticulous in his examination of sinful behavior both in and out of the pulpit. And it is bearing fruit. The church is packed every Sunday and bad behavior is declining in the village. But, much to his surprise, pride and self-righteousness are popping up everywhere. He's noticed that while drinking and debauchery may be at an all time low, a cold and legalistic hardness of heart has emerged in their place. While on the one hand Henrik is encouraged to see external worldliness dissipating, he's remarkably discouraged to see a cold, loveless culture developing. Not only that, but now he's beginning to realize the depth of his own sin. He feels like a hypocrite for preaching so strongly against the external manifestation of sin while ignoring the deeper problem, sin's root. In despair over his own inability to be as good as he tells other people to be, he breaks down and confesses to Linder that he's not even sure he's saved. Linder's response is pure gold:
Henrik is captivated by the "new" way in which Linder is preaching and he asks about the results. "Do you note any difference?" Linder answers:
The way Linder describes the transformation that took place in his preaching is almost identical to the transformation that has taken place in mine (and Chuck's–click here). I have a long way to go (bad habits die slowly, for sure). But a Copernican revolution of sorts has taken place in my own heart regarding the need to preach the law then the gospel without going back to the law as a means of keeping God's favor. May God raise up a generation of preachers who storm the the gates of worldliness with "It is finished." |