How many minutes to heaven, indeed. That’s seems to have become the “study notes” sum of Christianity. What’s the quickest route? The safest? The most scenic?
I can analyze one of the key misunderstandings of the faith in even less than ten minutes, however. It seems that my paycheck (American pastors don’t get “stipends” — that’s so socialist, after all) was waiting for me when I came onto the job today (I punched the clock a little late today — but that’s really a matter to be addressed through the employee handbook, as American pastors don’t have covenant ministry responsibilities, but efficiency quotas to meet). You see, one of the key misunderstandings has to do with adapting the faith to a capitalist understanding of production, efficiency, and output. That means that God’s grace produces or manufactures Christians.
That requires, though, that human understandings of “salvation” be welded at the right place and in the right way along the assembly line. Transformation is out, for it suggests corporate salvation, the notion that redemption is anything other than personal. It suggests a universalism that denigrates the merit system by which a society rises or falls. And how did a theology supposedly rooted in “saved by grace” become wedded to a secular business model of merit? After today’s personal lesson, pardon the pun, it seems clear that a human bias about time and space has warped our theological understandings.
Since arriving in Stroud last June, my measuring stick for planning has been that it takes 10 minutes to get to the bank, or 20 minutes roundtrip. This necessitates that for efficiency of my “work” schedule, I must frequently elect to drive my personal vehicle.
But the Bible promises that we shall know the truth and it shall set us free. Today, out of curiosity perhaps, I decided to use the stopwatch mode on my time piece. Now the evidence is overwhelming that my production system has been based on a flawed premise — the ten minute rule, as in “T” is for “ten” which if I weren’t Wesleyan might change the meaning of a “tulip.”
Alas, in reality, it only takes 3 minutes and 6 seconds to walk to the bank. Thus, allowing for a pleasant but efficient one minute chat with the teller, my round trip is actually two minutes and 48 seconds less than my committed “one way” rule of ten minutes. And that bias toward ten has invalidated everything else, for if that one rule is wrong, then the entirety of the gospel I understand must be wrong. Those missing 168 seonds have infected the whole of my belief and I must spend the rest of my life accounting for them. That leaves time only for my personal salvation because transformation requires recalculation for the masses, and that is too messy and inefficent.
So, if you are counting on how many minutes it is to heaven, you might want to rethink how long it takes to make it to the bank. Further, you better walk alone; there’s no way to accurately or efficently predict the exact minutes if you walk with your friends, as well as the widows, the orphans and the strangers in the land. That’s just too messy a calculation, particularly if humans are to do the accounting.
Joel Betow
Stroud, Oklahoma USA