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  • It's hard to be heard in today's world.

  • Yet it's not impossible.

  • It just requires a bit more thought and creative effort than usual.

  • And in some ways that fits what the 18th century clergyman John Wesley came to see.

  • All his life he never curbed his enthusiasm for the gospel.

  • But he did modify many of his original opinions.

  • His best sermons are masterclasses. Two stand out for being heard in any era.

  • One he called The More Excellent Way, and the other was Catholic Spirit.

  • The gist of the message in each comes down to this.

  • Our interpretations of subject matter, like the Bible, are always open.

  • Our interpretations are, in fact, our opinions.

  • These may be well-formed, partly formed or uninformed.

  • The More Excellent Way and Catholic Spirit suggest our Christian faith enlarges the more

  • we inform our opinions.

  • So let's apply that to today's church.

  • A former Principal of Trinity Theological College, Rev Dr John Salmon, once wrote an

  • interesting - and very much informed - article on how we play with language.

  • He used the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein as a starting point.

  • He suggested that if we thought of G-O-D and R-U-N and put them together we ended up with

  • ground.

  • Paul Tillich famously suggested that f the idea of God in the 20th century was

  • to think of what was the ground of our being.

  • God was the ground of all being, including our being.

  • Now John Salmon, in my opinion, rather adroitly made the ground of being: God's run.

  • That's very much in the spirit of Wittgenstein.

  • And also Catholic Spirit.

  • John Wesley may not have been amused by the language game afoot,

  • but he would certainly have understood its importance and implications.

  • And made it part and parcel of the More Excellent Way.

  • Why's that?

  • Because all his life Wesley lived at the intersection of faith and life, theology and philosophy.

  • In a famous letter he takes one of his spiritual mentors, William Law to task.

  • Wesley gently admonishes Law for weaving faith and philosophy too much together.

  • In earlier times Law had taken Wesley to task for precisely the same:

  • straying too much into the territory of philosophy at the expense of practical faith.

  • So each was a little guilty of the same failing, but, of course it wasn't really a failing.

  • It was the inevitable consequence of living out of the ground, the God-run, of Catholic Spirit.

  • The inescapable fact is that Christian faith has to explain itself with the insights of

  • practical theology and philosophy.

  • The subject of Christianity is life,

  • all its heartbreaks, tragedies, triumphs and successes.

  • It's our explanation of what we are,

  • who we are and how we are in the context of life.

  • As Dr Salmon rightly said it's the God-run of our being.

  • I think that truth is cogent, expressed for the mood of our era, and allows for much experiment

  • in the Wesleyan sense.

  • It will continue to be heard in today and tomorrow's world.

  • By those with ears to listen.

  • Dr Salmon came from an academic background of philosophy of education.

  • He was steeped in it.

  • It was much needed in the Connexional life of New Zealand Methodism.

  • By bringing philosophy into critical interaction with faith today,

  • he set an agenda item that will prove vital for the future well-being of the church.

  • Let's have more language gaming in church.

  • Who knows what creative insights and possibilities it could bring.

  • Game-on.

  • See you next week as we explore more at the intersection of faith and philosophy.

  • And thanks for watching.

It's hard to be heard in today's world.

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