Boyd says he always wondered why a tree with the fruit of the knowledge of good and evil was a bad thing.
Consider, why was the fruit of the forbidden tree a fruit that was said to give the knowledge of good as well as evil? Isn't the "knowledge of good" a good thing? Aren't we Christians supposed to be promoting "the knowledge of good"? Isn't following God all about increasing our "knowledge of good and evil" so we can side with "the good" and resist "the evil"? And yet, whether it fits our preconceptions or not, in the Genesis narrative the nature of the sin that separates us from God is said to be the "knowledge of good and evil."A conundrum indeed. Boyd continues:
We have failed to understand and internalize the biblical teaching that our fundamental sin is not our evil--as though the solution for sin was to become good-- but our getting life from what we believe is our knowledge of good and evil. Our fundamental sin is that we place ourselves in the position of God and divide the world between what we judge to be good and what we judge to be evil. And this judgment is the primary thing that keeps us from doing the central thing God created and saved us to do, namely, love like he loves.Coming from a not-quite-fundamentalist background, I really had to wrestle with this concept. After all, I was always taught that holiness meant separation, that "we" are somehow different from "them." To be sure, there are biblical commands that we should be "different" But the question is, "In what way should we be different?"
What really interested me in Boyd's book was in chapter three when he talks about the "center." He writes,
Christians sometimes try to assess how they or others are doing on the basis of such things as how successfully they conquer a particular sin, how much prayer and Bible study they do, how regularly they attend and give to church, and so forth. But rarely do we honestly ask the question that Scripture places at the center of everything: Are we groing in our capacity to love all people?...Are we increasing in our capacity to ascribe unsurpassable worth to people whom society judges to have no worth?That's the center--LOVE. The way we are different or peculiar (I love that word) is that we love wholly and completely. Jesus said they will know we are his disciples by our LOVE, not by our "knowledge of good and evil."
Boyd then raises the object that some people have.
Even as I write these words, I can hear someone saying, "Yes we must love. But we must balance love with truth." "Love has its place, but we must not forget God's wrath." "Love must never take the place of correct biblical doctrine."The problem is that nothing "balances" love. Love is the pinnacle. 1 John says that God IS love. It doesn't say that God IS wrath. There is nothing that balances out love.
Peter Kreeft says:
What is the wrath of God...? Is it real or not? It is real, but it is not part of God himself. God is not half love and half wrath, or 99 percent love and 1 percent wrath. God is love. Wrath is how his love appears to us when we sin or rebel or run away from him. The very light that is meant to help us, appears to us as our enemy when we seek the darkness.Back to the Garden...When we realize that judgment falsely puts us in the place of God, we become free to more truly resemble him by loving. Judgment creates and "us vs. them" mentality. It becomes easy to look at people from afar and make sweeping generalizations about them. But love doesn't allow us to separate ourselves from others on any basis, even if it's what we consider to be the greatest sins. Love is blind to that kind of thinking.
Will there be judgment for sin? Absolutely, but we can leave the judgment up to God and just love people--as Boyd says "ascribe unsurpassable worth" to them.
For God did not send his son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him. (John 3:17)It's taken me a while to grasp this principle and it's actually one that I still wrestle with, but at this point, I can't deny its truth.