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7 - The individualism of the Fourth Gospel

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2011

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Summary

Individualism was more at home in the ‘Liberal Protestant’ world than it is in the present climate of theology. For the ‘Liberal Protestant’ frame of thought it was easy to recognize the kingship of God in each individual who accepted the will of God, but harder to grasp the idea of Christianity as incorporation by baptism into membership of the Body of Christ – a corporate existence, entered upon and maintained sacramentally and institutionally. It is one of the results of the revival of ‘biblical theology’ that, of the two, the latter emphasis – the corporate and the sacramental – has come to be widely recognized as closer to the roots of authentic Christianity.

But this recovery of a theology of the Church has tended to swing the pendulum too far, sometimes actually to distort the picture and to engender an unwarranted suspicion of anything that sounds ‘individualistic’. The famous Lucan saying (Lk. xvii. 21) about the kingdom of God being ἐντὸς ὺμῶν is today generally so interpreted as to rescue it from the unacceptable inward and individual sense; or, if there were an acceptable alternative today, it might be to blame ‘Luke the Hellene’ for introducing an alien individualism into the doctrine of the kingdom. It is almost a slur on a biblical writer – or else on his expositor – if an individualistic note is detected.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1982

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