UPDATE: You can read my full review, HERE.

In the next few weeks I’ll receive my copy of Rob Bell’s new missive on “heaven, hell and the fate of every person who’s ever lived” called Love Wins. While some have speculated that it is universalism through and through—I have on good authority that this is the case—a recent re-read of Bell’s first book, Velvet Elvis, suggests this has been his trajectory for at least 7 years.

Consider his assertions in pages 145-146

We cannot earn what we have always had. What we can do is trust that what God keeps insisting is true about us is actually true.

Let’s take this further. As one writier puts it, “While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.” ((Romans 5:8)) While we were unable to do anything about our condition, while we were helpless, while we were unaware of just how bad the situation was, Jesus died.

And when he died on the cross, he died for everybody.

Everybody.

Everywhere.

Every tribe, every nation, every tongue, every people group. ((Revelation 5:9))

Jesus said that when he was lifted up, he would draw all people to himself. ((John 12:32))

All people. Everywhere.

Everybody’s sins on the cross with Jesus.

So this reality, this forgiveness, this reconciliation, is true for everybody. Paul insisted when Jesus died on the cross, he was reconciling “all things, in heaven and on earth, to God.” ((Colossians 1:20)) All things, everywhere.

This reality then isn’t something we make true about ourselves by doing something. It is already true. Our choice is to live in this new reality or cling to a reality of our own making.

I didn’t notice it the first time, but this is fairly universalistic. It seems it is the case that Rob Bell is a universalist, albeit a Christian one in some respects.

While it is true that humans cannot earn their salvation, it is not true that humans “have always had” it. Universal Salvation is not a condition into which humans are born. Universal Sin is the condition into which humans are born.

While it is true that Jesus died for every person on the planet, at just the right time, at just the right moment while we were dead in our rebellion, he did not create a new reality (or New Being in the language of Tillich) that is simply true for the whole world regardless of their personal decision to embrace Jesus as Lord and Messiah.

To support his claim Rob woefully misapplies Colossians 1:20 by making it do something that it isn’t doing: like other universalists, Rob uses Colossians 1:20 to argue for universal salvation where the context argues for no such thing. Rather than being soteriological, Colossians 1:20 fits within a broader Christological context (in Col 1:15-20) that argues the resurrected, exalted Jesus is the only Lord through whom reconciliation at the cosmic level is under taken.

In other words the point is that Jesus (and no one else) is the fix for the our universal, collective sin problem. Just as the first part of the Hymn of praise emphasized the universal significance of Christ at the creation event, so also does the second part emphasize the universal significance of Christ on the cross for the entire creation. It is through Jesus (and no one else) that the cosmos is restored, that humans can be rescued and re-created. Again, salvation is not in view, but who Jesus is; this verse and passage is not soteriological, but Christological.

Paul (and Jesus for that matter) is explicit for the necessity for new birth through repentance and confession. Being “in Christ” is a state that one comes into after leaving behind the old through deliberate, explicit faith by confessing Jesus as Lord and believing that God raised Him from the dead, by believing the gospel. There are some who are in Christ and some who are not.

Rob, however, believes that somehow all are in. We do not make this New Reality true by doing something, presumably by following the traditional evangelical route of receiving Christ as Lord and Messiah. Instead in his words, this New Reality/Being “is already true.” We just have to live as if it is.

Bell made a similar suggestion—that the story is about “renewing all things”—in his July 2009 Poets, Prophets, Preachers conference in Grand Rapids. I live-blogged through this conference and was surprised with his overt universalist statement in his session entitled “The Story We’re Telling”:

The story is about:

Renewing all things

Restoring all things

Reconciling all things (col 1)

ALL THINGS= means ALL THINGS. Jesus, Peter, Paul is about reconciling and rewnewing…ALL THINGS.

(then [Rob] said there are a whole lot of theological things that could be said…but didnt say them…UNIVERSALISM?!)

Though others doubt that Rob is a universalist, I find that hard to believe based on this and other things he has said; it appears he is just that. While he and others would suggest he is a Christian universalist, I’m not so sure that’s the case. From what I have read from others, those claiming to be Christian universalists are really pluralistic universalists parading around as such. Their Jesus really isn’t necessary because of their view of our problem (sin), solution (salvation), and even their perspective on Jesus Himself as its bearer.

For them Jesus isn’t necessarily the point. Love is (which incidentally was Paul Tillich’s, too, a German liberal theologian).

I want to affirm that rescue and re-creation is available for every single person on the planet, while also saying that sadly not everyone will receive this possibility by receiving Jesus as Lord and Messiah. This is why I’m helping cultivate a new expression of the Church in Grand Rapids, one which I hope will create experiences for people to explore and find the new life offered through Jesus.

Not everyone will be rescued and re-created, but praise God that the possibility is there to receive it, in faith.