The Homebrewed Christianity Guide to the Holy Spirit: Hand-Raisers, Han, and the Holy Ghost
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About this ebook
The compelling power of this volume comes from the creative interplay Kim orchestrates between images such as the Spirit as vibration, breath, and light and her powerful unpacking of different images such as the releaser of han, a Korean term for unjust suffering, or the concept of Chi. This isn’t simply a guide to what the church is saying about the Holy Spirit—it’s a guide to actually opening our theological imaginations to a Spirit that is present, active, and calling us to participate in life-giving work.
Grace Ji-Sun Kim
Grace Ji-Sun Kim (PhD, St. Michael's College, University of Toronto) is associate professor of theology at Earlham School of Religion. She is author or editor of fifteen books, including Embracing the Other,Christian Doctrines for Global Gender Justice, and Intercultural Ministry. She is an ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church (USA).
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The Homebrewed Christianity Guide to the Holy Spirit - Grace Ji-Sun Kim
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Introduction
When I first sat down with Tripp Fuller and Tony Jones to discuss writing for the Homebrewed Christianity (HBC) series, it was over beers. No surprise there. What maybe did surprise them was that I insisted on writing the volume on the Holy Spirit. That’s because I think the church has no future unless the Spirit is at the center. For real. The church is going to be as relevant as the members of *NSYNC not named Justin if it doesn’t get full of the Holy Ghost.
Don’t worry, I am not about to lay hands on you through these pages, causing you to fall down and speak in tongues. I am Presbyterian, after all. What I am going to tell you is something that might get you frustrated or excited—or hopefully both. The Father and the Son get way too much play. For two millennia, the church has talked nonstop about the Father and Son and has treated the Spirit like bicycle training wheels: you keep the Spirit around to lean on when the two Dudes run into a problem, but otherwise you ignore it.
I’ll try to say this charitably. According to Saint Augustine, the Father and the Son require the Spirit. The Spirit is the bond of love that sustains their relationship in the heart of God. I am simply updating that to say the church needs the Spirit just as much. Here are four reasons (because three would be too obvious):
Ignoring the presence and activity of the Spirit leaves Christians thinking like deists, where God is up and out while we are down and in the world. We’re alone, unless and until the Son interrupts, as he occasionally does, for one of his big arrivals.
Not surprisingly, when God talk is 90 percent about Father and Son, there are material consequences—for example, the relegation of women, the planet, and non-Christian neighbors to the sidelines. You might not think these are connected, but I will show you the connection and introduce you to someone who completely disagrees with me in the most legit way.
Nota bene, the entire Hebrew Bible is obsessed with the Spirit, Jesus talks about it nonstop, and so does Paul. I am just saying, as a biblical feminist theologian, that the Spirit should be at the center of our faith. Too often, our conservative Christian friends replaced the Spirit in the Trinity with the Bible and only focused on the Bible to the detriment of the Spirit. Our progressive Christian friends just stopped reading the Bible and have thus also forgotten the Spirit.
Paying attention to the Spirit is especially relevant in today’s context. Today’s church and the spiritual ecosystem in which it operates are more diverse and global than they ever have been. Might it make sense to focus on the very theological doctrine that insists God is actually present and a part of this diversity? Maybe, if we learn to listen to the Spirit through them, we can even be blessed and not threatened by this reality.
Theological Purity Kills
For too long, theology has been done by white European men. Other global voices around the world have not been taken into consideration, as the old-boys’ club felt that they may bring impurity to theology. What white European men did was usually viewed as pure and real theology, and most things outside of that tight-knit circle were viewed as unorthodox.
It was believed that outside thoughts would contaminate theology. However, if we listen only to the old-boys’ club, we will never understand the magnitude, depth, and beauty of God.
Theological purity kills. We need to hear global voices, especially from the margins, which will add depth to our understanding of God. Different cultures, histories, and experiences can help us walk toward a more freeing understanding of God as Spirit whose presence can be felt all around the world.
The Spirit God is infinite, and we are finite beings. Our experiences and contexts limit our understanding of the one who created us. We need to recognize that theology is affected by cultures, other religions, customs, and practices. For example, Christians around the world observe Easter and consider it one of the holiest events in the Christian calendar. However, many of the practices around Easter are rooted in ancient pagan practices related to the spring equinox. The sooner we acknowledge this, the faster we will reconcile ourselves to the understanding that theology was never pure. Recognizing this will give birth to a theology that challenges the status quo, destroys inequity, and promotes justice and liberation.
Spirit-Filled Syncretism
Different cultures, religions, and ideas clash. But when they clash, new ideas and forms emerge, offering beautiful new ways to view the world, religion, and God. The Spirit moves and hovers over the earth. It blows like the wind, and thus we cannot predict which way it will move. We feel the results of the movement, but we cannot predict it, and we definitely cannot control it.
The Spirit is vibrant and alive. As it moves, we come to understand it not as pure but as a movement that is syncretistic and holy. Globally, different people have different words that evoke the Spirit. Though the words may not all be the same, these words express a similar concept. The Israelites called it ruach, the New Testament church called it pneuma, German theologians called it geist, and Asian theologians call it Chi. These different words have similar meanings but also show a syncretistic view of the Spirit. How Asians experience the everyday movement and power of the Spirit may not be the same as how South Americans will experience the Spirit. But the various ways we experience, understand, and talk about the Spirit all add richness.
We recognize that the Spirit isn’t dead, as some Eurocentric theology has portrayed, but rather, it is alive and affecting the world. The world experiences this in so many ways, and these experiences are a testament to the beauty, power, and wonder of the Spirit, who continues to stir us to work for justice.
1
Creation Vibrates
It is genuinely difficult to talk about the Spirit, and I should know. I grew up in a church so Jesus centered that I don’t really recall a time when the Spirit was preached or talked. I think that’s because talking about the Spirit feels vague and intangible. For most of my life, I didn’t want to study it or even talk about it. In my master of divinity studies, I avoided taking any classes on the Holy Spirit, and I managed to do the same in my PhD program. I then avoided dealing with the question for the next decade. Only recently did I feel the desire to begin reading about it.
My avoidance of the Spirit is typical of many theologians. I sympathize with readers who feel the Holy Spirit is difficult to understand. But that’s no excuse, so let’s dive in!
Modernity has flattened our understanding of the world and given us reductive modes of inquiry. This has had consequences in how we think about the world and about God, leaving no room for a dynamic, present view of the world and God’s presence in it. Many of us do not feel permission to view a moving and vibrant Spirit. If we continue to live in a world where God is contestable and mechanistic accounts of the world reign, the Spirit can easily be neglected. What this means is that the church and secular logic
ignore and relegate the Spirit. As we look in a new direction to see how the Spirit participates in our vibrant world, we want to trek back through the Bible and see how the Spirit changed the lives of the Israelites.
The Holy Spirit in the Old Testament
Our Christian understanding of the Holy Spirit comes from the Bible, the church, and our own experiences. Many who have ignored the Holy Spirit will be pleasantly surprised that the Spirit was vibrant, alive, and moving among the Israelites during the Old Testament period. In the original Hebrew, the word ruach appears 405 times in the books of the Old Testament, used in various forms to mean the Spirit of God, the spirit of humanity, and good and evil spirits, as well as wind, breath, soul, life-giving spirit, and God. Many biblical narratives unveil the power and splendor of the Spirit. For example, the first verses of Genesis employ the feminine noun ruach to speak of the mothering, life-giving Spirit of God that hovered and brooded over the deep at creation.
Wind is often linked to ruach. One cannot see the wind, just as one cannot see the Spirit. But as one can see the effects of the wind, one can also see the effects of the Spirit. Wind was understood to be caused by God.
I once was part of a group of Korean-American Presbyterian ministers who traveled to Hawaii as part of a pastoral consultation to visit some churches, including several Methodist congregations, and see how they emerged and sustained themselves over the years. One afternoon, a United Methodist district superintendent gave a presentation with a wonderful history of the church in Hawaii. He explained why there were so many Methodist churches in Hawaii and fewer Presbyterian ones: when the two denominations were deciding on which areas to evangelize, the Methodists decided to go to Hawaii, and the Presbyterians to Alaska, which led one of us to joke, That gives a new meaning to the ‘frozen chosen’!
Presbyterians like me are often afraid to live out the Pentecostal vision. Presbyterians like to do things decently and in order,
which means that it is rare to see Presbyterians as Spirit-filled
Christians. We are reserved churchgoers and don’t necessarily want to raise hands and allow the Holy Spirit to come upon us. Like the Israelites, we may feel that we are the chosen, but we do not want to publicly live the Pentecostal life.
However, occasionally, the Presbyterian church that I attend will invite a guest preacher with some Pentecostal tendencies. I remember one who was preaching up in the pulpit, and in the middle of his long sermon, he started saying Amen!
He expected the people sitting in the pews to respond to his Amen, but that never happened. He continued repeating the word. He paced back and forth near the pulpit, raised his arms in the air, and even shouted parts of his sermon. Occasionally, you heard a faint Amen from the pews. But generally, it was a frozen chosen
crowd.
The Israelites were the chosen people, and God was with them. They felt the power of the Spirit as they were fleeing Egypt and came to the Red Sea. The Spirit as wind was real to them. The power of the Spirit as wind was upon the sea as Moses called upon God to save them. The Spirit came as a gusty wind and spread the sea apart. The root of the word ruach was probably an onomatopoetic word for a gale, the strong wind—ruach—that divided the Red Sea for Israel’s exodus from Egypt (Exodus 14:21).[1] As an onomatopoetic word, it imitated the whoosh
or blowing sound made by a strong wind. This force was seen as the power of the almighty God.
The Hebrew people migrated to Egypt during a time of famine. After many generations, a new Egyptian ruler who came to power enslaved the Hebrews. At first, the suffering slaves could find no way to freedom. But God called Moses to deliver the Hebrew people out of Egypt.
Initially, Moses was reluctant to obey. He is much like us, resistant to God’s call and God’s work. The work looks difficult, costly (even health and life threatening), disturbing, and at odds with our own intentions. But eventually, Moses did respond to the call and mustered the courage to demand that Pharaoh let the people go. When Pharaoh refused, God sent plagues upon the Egyptians. After ten horrible plagues, Pharaoh gave in and let the Israelites go free.
As the Hebrew people came to the Red Sea on their way out of Egypt, they were horrified to find that Pharaoh had a change of heart and sent his army of war chariots after them. As the people stood before the Red Sea with the Egyptians bearing down behind them, Moses lifted his staff in the air, and the Red Sea parted with the help of a strong east wind all night [that] made the sea dry land,
(Exodus 14:21) so they could escape Pharaoh’s chariot. They stood in wonder and delight in the power of the wind. They experienced liberation, hope, and mercy through the wind that parted the sea and gave them a walk toward freedom.
The image of the Holy Spirit as redemptive power is perhaps best seen in this account of the Exodus from Egypt. People can recognize the actions of God by their effect on the people and the world. These manifestations of the Holy Spirit of God were both practical and encouraging for the Hebrew people, affirming for them that God was present and would continue to work in their lives. It assured them that God would not abandon them.
However, although the Hebrews recognized God in the wind, they experienced their own difficulties. After their escape, their forty years in the desert taught them the destructive side of the wind.
Walking in the Desert
If you have ever walked in a desert, you know the harm that wind and sand can have. There are several forms of desert. Some are primarily sand, such as the Sahara Desert, which is the largest hot desert, with large sand dunes and long stretches of sand between oases. There are also rocky deserts with cacti and other thorny bushes that can survive in the dry heat.
A few years ago, I took several seminary and college students to Nogales, Mexico, with the BorderLinks program to study immigration and the plight of Mexicans crossing the desert into the United States.[2] BorderLinks took us on a short walk in the desert to get a firsthand experience of its difficulties and hardships. They warned us to wear long pants, as there are flying cacti (jumping cholla) and thorny bushes that will cling to your legs and cause lacerations. Of