Ebook
Do you wonder why some people you know hold theological and political views that blow your mind but they find quite reasonable? Today, Christians are at odds over how to understand the Bible, atonement, and salvation of non-Christians. They are also polarized over issues such as same-gender marriage, income inequality, and health care. Two social science models, Nurturant and Authoritative, explain this divide. Values are at the heart of our disagreements. Nurturants prize empathy and cooperation while Authoritatives cherish obedience to law and order. Each group has distinct core values and these lead them to embrace different theological, moral, and political views. This book explains the divide and makes the case that Jesus embodied the Nurturant way of life. He modeled empathy, grace, forgiveness, and care for those beyond his own tribe. The Nurturant and Authoritative approaches have competed for thousands of years but contemporary research shows that the Nurturant way of life produces better mental and spiritual health as well as superior communities in which to live.
“Borrowing from the parental imagery of ‘authoritative’ and
‘nurturing,’ Sanders dismantles the traditional view of God as an
authoritative dictator who fiercely punishes disobedient children
and draws a picture from Scripture of the God who nurtures with
love, teaches with patience, empathizes with compassion, and saves
us through grace. Because we tend to imitate the God we imagine,
Sanders asserts that our ‘view of God has real consequences for
life.’ Imagine, then, how the world would change if Christians
everywhere rejected the authoritative tyrannical God who trades in
wrath and punishment and decided instead to imitate the scriptural
God who nurtures, loves, and saves through Jesus Christ. This is
the God Sanders reveals to us.”
—Sharon L. Putt, Messiah College
John Sanders is Professor of Religious Studies at Hendrix
College. He is the author of several books including Theology in
the Flesh (2016) and The God Who Risks (2007).