COMMUNITY CONNECTION 2-13-2024: Dr. Josh McNall with Oklahoma Wesleyan University - podcast episode cover

COMMUNITY CONNECTION 2-13-2024: Dr. Josh McNall with Oklahoma Wesleyan University

Feb 13, 202410 min
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We're doing a free community event at my workplace, socahom Melescien University here in town on Thursday night to sort of sync up with LINT as Christians turn their eyes toward the Cross and toward the resurrection, and to ask some questions of well, how does that work when we say that Jesus saves, especially through the unlikely means of death and through across how does that actually work? And

that's what the book is trying to unpack for just regular folks. Well, that's great, and especially in this time of our world, having that understanding, I think is very important and very beneficial for people to really understand how it is that Jesus saves. And you know, I don't want you to divulge too much information on your book because then people won't come to the community event. But you are having this discussion about how long is the discussion going

to be happening on Thursday? So on Thursday night, it starts at six thirty and it's going to last from between forty five minutes to an hour, so it won't take your whole evening, but we do want to give some time for questions as well as a presentation it's going to be accessible, so there won't be a test afterwards, and we're going to try to make it accessible for anybody. You don't have to be a pastor a theologian to come and enjoy it. Doctor mcnawll, What made you have the decision or the

want or desire to author this book? Well, several years ago I wrote a big academic book on atonement doctrine, which is just essentially looking at how Jesus saves and it was well received by professors and things like that, which is I jokingly say that means that nobody read it. And so one night I was praying with my daughter before she went to sleep. And if you're a parent, you know that bedtime often brings out kind of the deep questions.

And sometimes those questions are just stalling tactic to try to put off sleep a little bit. But never do that. Never. Just yeah, Well, this particular, my daughter asked me, She said, Dad, how does Jesus save us by dying on the cross? And she's a smart girl and she knows that death is not normally a good thing. We had just been to our first funeral as a family. Her uncle died when he was thirty years old from Louke Grigg's disease. And so here's a guy that she

loved who had passed away about the same age as Jesus. And so she was wrestling with We say this every night when we pray, Jesus, you know, thank you for dying on the cross for our sins, thank you for saving us. She sees the cross at church, but even at a young age, she was like, wait a minute, Like this doesn't really make sense. Death is a bad thing, not a good thing. How

does an innocent person dying for guilty people fix anything? I mean, that seems unjust and kind of backwards when we think about how justice or penalties work. And so, whether she knew it or not, she was asking, how does atonement doctrine actually make any sense once we get past just kind of the bumper stickers or the things we say without thinking about it. And so I wrote this book to connect not just with my daughter, but we just

ordinary people who have those sorts of questions. And I want to try to help them make sense of the Cross. Not that I've entirely figured it out, sure, but to help it connect with ordinary people so that we can have more confidence in the Jesus that we say we worship, not necessarily the understanding of the Jesus that we worship, in the faith in which that we have in him. I think you open up very important topics because the concept of death as a reward almost I hate to use the word of reward,

but that is a very difficult thing for most humans to understand. And so I would assume that your book, I haven't read it yet, I look forward to reading it delves into that topic a bit about how death can be seen as a reward, especially whenever our Savior did it on behalf of our of us. Yeah. I think one of the things I try to argue in the book is that human beings have more than one problem. And we know that because we know we're fallen, we know we're frail, and death

is one of the biggest ones. And so I would say that Jesus comes to address all of our problems, but he doesn't solve them in the same way. Right, And so we say that Jesus bears our penalty. We say that Jesus conquers death and the devil. We say that Jesus reveals what love looks like, and all of these are important, but you mentioned the death question. That's the one that my daughter was short was kind of spinning around in her mind. And so I think what I would say for Christians

is that Jesus transforms death. The death is not a penalty right for those who are in Christ Jesus. Death is a gateway to the presence of Jesus. Paul says, to be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord. And ultimately death is just part one because the hope that we have is what happened to Jesus, that the God who raised Jesus from the dead will raise our bodies also, And so the end of the story is not death. The end of the story is not even living as like a

ghost up in the clouds in heaven. The end of the story is what happened to Jesus, which is resurrection. And I think that's one of the things that makes the good news good news, is that death doesn't get the final word. That's very true, and you're right, your daughter unknowingly asked a deep question that I think every human struggles with, especially if you are within the faith, and even more so if you are outside of the faith.

And what is your goal besides really explaining how the atonement for ordinary people to take from your title of your book, what is the goal that you're hoping to accomplish for maybe even non believers. Yeah, I have a huge heart for people who are interested in Jesus. They find him compelling, but they're kind of on the fence, and they have questions they have maybe they have church hurt, maybe they have baggage like all of us do. And

so I would hope that even those folks would come to the event. It's really designed for them, just as much as it's designed for people who consider them selves Christians. I want them to come with their questions and things like that. So really my goal is to illuminate how Jesus saves from more than one angle. Most Christians have some sort of answer that they give, but in most cases I think they fixate on maybe just one angle, one angle

of the problem, but also one angle of the solution. And so one of my goals is to say that the good News is actually better than we think, and it's greater than our attempts to explain it. And so I want to illuminate some historic answers that Christians have given throughout the centuries to expand our appreciation for what Jesus does. And again we're talking here with doctor Josh

mcnawll and Associate Professor Pastoral Theology at Oklahoma Wesleyan University. He has authored a book, How Jesus Saves Atoned for ordinary People and again just touch again on them. In the event that you're going to be hosting this week, where is it at on campus? Where are you going to be doing? What time? About? How long everything's going to be? Well? Thank you

again Nathan for having me. So it's Thursday night, it's at six point thirty and it's on the campus of Oklahoma Wesleyan University here in Bartlesville, Oklahoma. It's going to be in the Lion Performance Hall, which is in the Chapel Fine Arts Center, is the big building that you see from Silver Lake Road. There'll be plenty of parking there. So six thirty is when it

starts. There'll be copies of the book for sale. There's small small group's curriculum, there's video curriculum, and so folks want to pick up a copy, they can do that with check or cash or Venmo. And we just want to serve the community. It's free, it's for people from all backgrounds, from a variety of churches or denominations. We want to bless Bartlesville and

not just the students who attend our campus or suing their degree. We want to serve the community, and so this is our chance to just say hey, we love you, we want to help you out as we wrestle with How Jesus Saves Well, Doctor mcnaell, I tell you great things are always

coming out of Oklahoma Wesleyan University. This is just another thing. Your book, How Jesus Saves Atonemed for Ordinary People, will be available at that discussion that you'll be having on Thursday at the Lion Performing Arts Center on the campus of Oklahoma wesley University six thirty pm. Doctor mcnawell, thank you so much for sharing your story and sharing your book with us here as well. Thank you, Nathan, You're very welcome.

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