Over six months ago Rob Bell unleashed upon America, ney the world, a theological and spiritual tsunami the effects of which are still being felt. I mean, when was the last time you can remember the Church so engaged in docrine? Even William P. Young and his Shack didn’t trend Twitter! What’s more: when can you remember the last time our culture was so interested in the inner doctrinal dialogue of the Church? MSNCB, CNN, Good Morning America, TIME Magazine and more all courted the conversation about heaven, hell, and the fate of every person whose ever lived.

I personally engaged in the conversation, because I am pastor-theologian in Grand Rapids, at the time I was planting a Church in the area, and I was increasingly dismayed by the response—or lack thereof—from my non-Reformed peers. So a few days after the book was released I wrote my own 7500 word review that’s garnered tens of thousands of reads and hundreds of responses. (In fact on most Google combinations of “Rob Bell” “love wins” and “new book” that response makes atleast top 10.) The local ABC affiliate interviewed me as a respondent to Rob. I even hosted a decently received public forum response in down town Grand Rapids to help address the issues in the book and the broader conversation surrounding Love Wins. Given my own interest in this book and attention it’s received, I thought I would reflect on Love Wins, once again, six months removed.

This reflection isn’t so much a review of the book and it’s theology. If you want that you can read or download my original review. This is more about what I’ve learned and observed regarding this conversation over the past few months. So here are 3 of 10 reflections in the aftermath of Love Wins. The other 7 will come in 2 other posts.

Our culture has deep, existential questions that demand pastorally sensitive answers.

In a post-9/11 and post-Great Recession world; in a world where 1 billion people don’t have access to clean drinking water and 15 million children die of hunger; in a world of rampant consumption, broken families, depression, and poverty; in other words: in a world where it appears like hell is reigning on earth, there are real, deep questions about the meaning, direction, and end of life.

Hasn’t it always been like this? Haven’t most people wondered why things are so screwed up and how on earth we can fix our screwed-upness?

I think so. And people are still seeking answers to those real, deep questions about life, just not in the Church or in the Story the Church is telling.

That doesn’t mean the world over has lost interest in finding spiritual answers to their existential questions. Far from it. Polls and books on the subject consistently show a deep desire for spirituality. Just a waning interest in the Church and Her Story.

Enter: Love Wins. This book is an alternative Story to the one the Church has always been telling.

And it’s resonating. Big time. NY Times Best Seller big time. Cover of TIME Magazine big time. Twitter big time.

The first forum discussion Rob engaged the day before the book was released illustrates this resonance. I remember a moment in the message of hope Rob was sharing in NY City very well: a camera panned over to a young woman with tears streaming down her face. At the end that same camera returned to that same woman who was giving Rob a standing ovation and a bright, wide smile on her face. This woman found hope in Rob’s message, and I think I know why.

For all the problems I have with the theology of Love Wins, I think what it does well, and what the Church often fails at miserably, is offer a pastorally sensitive posture toward the stuff of life. It is honest about how screwed-up life in this world is—how screwed-up our own lives are in this screwed-up world—while trying to reassure people the “universe is on their side.” Instead of responding to the tragedies of life with the raw human response of tears and embrace and just sitting with our friends in their grief, holding them and crying with them, we are quick to respond with bible verses and Church doctrine. There’s a place for that, for sharing biblically and theologically honest answers, but not at the expense of being dishonest about the reality of peoples lives and stuff.

This book and the reaction to that book has helped expose a deep longing for answers to real, deep questions about life, and an underlying current of discontent with the Story typically told by both the Church in response to those questions.

Our culture has deep, existential questions that demand biblically and theologically honest answers.

In the face of those real, deep questions about the meaning, direction, and end of life I believe the Church is called to respond to those questions with biblically and theologically honest answers. Yes, sit with people in their grief. Let them doubt. Let them struggle and question. And, yes, let them even shake their fists at the heavens. But along side that grieving and doubting and struggling and questioning and fist-shaking we are called to give an answer for the hope we have in Jesus Christ. And that calls for being honest about what the Scriptures say and what the Church has always said about God’s Story of Rescue and it’s pieces—creation, rebellion, rescue, and re-creation.

The problem with this latest effort at answering the real, deep questions about life by Rob Bell and his book—and others like him—is that the book does not offer hopeful answers because they are not honest answers. These answers aren’t honest about our human problem…that we are busted beyond all self-repair…that every one of us is a rebel against a holy, righteous God and dead in sin. Honest about who Jesus is as the only one—true—God in all the world, through whom and for whom it was made. Honest about what happened on the very blood-soaked boards of execution that held the limp, lifeless body of Jesus…honest about the sacrificial death he suffered to pay our price…in our place. And it isn’t honest about the reality of judgment…that every single person on the planet will be judged by Jesus Christ himself “in Christ” or “outside Christ” and those outside Christ will be separated from God. Forever.

The tragedy of these versions of the Christian faith represented in Love Wins is that it has has sold the faith entrusted to God’s holy people—it has exchanged the gospel of Jesus Christ for something entirely different. This version is not real. It is fake. And it’s time the Church stands up and says so.

Responding to Love Wins isn’t about tribalism, it’s about the historic Christian faith.

This has got to be one of the lamest responses in response to people like me who have responded to Love Wins. The charge is that the bruhaha that boiled over the past 6 months has been about tribalistic factions vying for doctrinal control over the Christian faith. Bell’s editor, Mickey Maudlin, made the claim shortly after the book and controverys erupted. Here is what he said:

As a young evangelical, I was socialized to see the biggest threat to the church as theological liberalism. But now I think the biggest threat is Christian tribalism, where God’s interests are reduced to and measured by those sharing your history, tradition, and beliefs, and where one needs an “enemy” in order for you to feel “right with God.” Such is the challenge facing the church today and what the reaction to Love Wins reveals.

Apparently insisting that people are born sinners; Jesus really is God (and the only one true God at that); the cross and resurrection is much more important and profound of an experience than “when we take a bite of food;” the cross was the point at which the objective realities of evil and sin were dealt with; the resurrection of Jesus was actual, physical, and witnessed; people will die once and then will face judgment; and heaven and hell are real, experiential outcomes to the judgment of Jesus—apparently all of these beliefs are tribalistic beliefs, they are a narrowing and particularizing of God’s interest that “are reduced to and measured by those sharing your history, tradition, and beliefs,” rather than beliefs that have always been central to the historic Christian faith.

This certainly makes for great rhetoric, but has little grounding in reality.

While a bulk of the reaction to Bell has come from Calvinistic camps, the response I have seen has not been about a Reformed response to Bell, but a Christian one. And rightly so. Responding to Bell and his teachings is not about defending narrowly defined doctrinal positions, but about asserting what has always been central to the Christian faith, what has always been central to the gospel.

Rob says that since people can make choices in this life, he assumes they can make choices in the next. That’s not Christian, and we have the right to say so.

Rob reduces the glorious, awe-inspiring cross and resurrection events to taking a bite of food—they are symbols that express the elemental reality that death leads to life. That’s not Christian. In fact that’s insulting to the very Christian faith he claims, so we definitely have the right to say so!

Rob insists that in the end God’s love will melt even the hardest of heart. It may take 10,000 years to do so, but in the end love will ultimately win. That’s not Christian, and we have the right to say so.

Tribalism? Please!

What about you? What do you think? Have you noticed anything in the fallout from Love Wins 6-months later? If so, what?