Sunday, November 7, 2021

Book Review: Playing God by Andy Crouch

 

Playing God, by Andy Crouch. Downers Grove, InterVarsity Press, 2013. pp.288

            Power is a gift to make something of the world. Andy Crouch unabashedly says his definition of power is from his fellow journalist Ken Myers, as he did in Culture Making. Human beings, the image-bearers of Creator God, are endowed with the power to make something sensibly of nature’s raw material for flourishing. The inspiration for Playing God came after Crouch and Jeyakumar, the director of World Vision (India), paid a visit with emancipated kids from child slavery. The flip side to the life-giving power is idolatry, which is making god by seeking greatness, gaining control, and the ultimate satisfaction, resulting in injustice - playing god, as the twin by-product of abuse, distortion, and misdirection of power. The second part of the book focuses on concrete ways in which idolatry and injustice creep into the way we use power. When misdirected, the distorted power surfaces as ‘coercion and violence (12)’. In part three, Crouch explores institutions as conduits of power for image-bearing or when they go wrong, bringing dreadful consequences. Fourthly, the book deals with taming power under the lordship of Christ through the practices of the sabbath, worship, and other disciplines. Crouch’s remarkable biblical ‘explorations’ interspersed under each section amplify his points.

            A biblical understanding of power flowing from God to His image-bearers for flourishing dismantles Lord Acton’s proverbial dictum ‘Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.” God’s ‘absolute love transfigures absolute power,’ and its refraction is seen through God’s image-bearers as evidenced in child-rearing throughout all cultures (44-45). In Eden, we see the power in multiple, creative displays for flourishing in jussive, cohortative, and imperative forms for the image-bearers to imitate to fulfill the cultural mandate –multiply, fill, and till for thriving (29-36). Using the game-theory understanding of the zero-sum transaction, Crouch elaborates on the Nietzschean view of the power – all of us are on a quest for omnipotence to become ‘master over all space.’ This distorted view is about ‘conspiring together for power’ to rise in this conquest to control space, resources, and dominance. Both idolatry and injustice – god-making and god-playing, are essentially the same in this zero-sum conquest of power conceived as a limited resource.

            Crouch moves on to describe the exercise of power apart from its creative, flouring end in its various other forms: violence, domination, force, and coercion. ‘Violence is wrong by definition’ as it exceeds legitimate bounds depriving image-bearers dignity and liberty. Augustinian ‘just war’ theory allows for accountable governments to exercise measured force for the common good. At the same time, ‘privilege is a special kind of power’ that flows from the ‘ongoing benefits of past successful exercises of power (150).’ Most of us enjoy privileges of some kind that might not be necessarily bad; they are ‘still dangerous’ as we can use them to ‘insulate us from risk, and God and other people. (154)’ It can blind us to our god-playing tendency unaware of its demeaning impact on fellow image-bearers.

            Though devalued with cynicism in the postmodern culture, institutions are vehicles of powerful transformation and flourishing handed down to future generations. Crouch attributes four ingredients: artifacts, arenas, rules, and roles, and in a span of three generations, the institutions emerge as potency agents. As institutional examples, American football, the practice of medicine, Facebook, the Hebrew nation – Abraham, Issac, Jacob’s descendants, the church, and the family, are presented.

            It is remarkably convicting how much our behavior is influenced by a subconscious awareness of a zero-sum view of power. Such Nietzschean ‘ethic’ drives board meetings, committees, and politics in and outside the church. Positive-sum, creative power that makes room for others - for the teeming of life, flows from God, to shape our lives; we need actively find our places in the Gospel story revealed in Good Friday, Easter, Ascension, and Pentecost. Crouch’s delineation of the very nature of idolatry and injustice addresses the perineal problem of pitting evangelism and social justice against each other. Both evangelism and justice are means by which the image-bearers capacity for worship/relationship is restored, and the condition – i.e., shalom, for image-bearing is made possible.

            Nevertheless, the possibility of benevolent god-playing is closer than we realize as our god-complexes are exaggerated but often invisible. Crouch highlights this danger in short-term missions regardless of their orientation – evangelism or justice. ‘Benevolent god-playing happens when we use the needs of the poor to make our own move from good to great - to revel in the superior power of technology and the moral excellence of our willingness to help. (73)’

            Power places us at the crossroads between ‘creation and destruction, flourishing and violence.’ If Crouch’s example of the inauguration of Barack Obama and the smooth transition of the presidency in January 2009 highlights the flourishing of power (138), the January 6th, 2021 incident at the Capitol illustrates the wrong turn at the crossroads in the exercise of power.   

            Crouch’s exposition of John 13, where the ‘Messiah wrapped in a servant’s grimy towel’ to wash His disciples’ feet, Jesus voluntarily and consciously gives up His rightful status and privilege.  The one who holds all things in hand demonstrates His power in forgiving, healing, proclaiming, feeding the thousands, and calming the storm was averse to accruing privilege and status. Here we see the redeeming love and absolute power in humble service as an example to imitate.

            The role of institutions for positive-sum impact for flourishing is vastly relevant for our time. Since the publication of Playing God, marriage has been redefined in the USA, severely undermining society’s foundational institution – the family. The rules are altered; thus, gender roles in marriage can change, inflicting a violent assault on the image of God in humanity. Anti-institutional activism, whether in the name of climate by teenage Tunberg or the swell of ‘nones’ – religiously non-affiliated, with the decline of church membership below the majority for the first time in America, are portent reminders of failures of institutions. The rise of the prosperity gospel in the church is due to the loss of its institutional artifact: the promise to Abraham, Moses, and David is a covenantal ‘posterity gospel’- it’s a lasting, generational shalom with eschatological hope. And the abuse allegations emerging from organizations such as the RZIM, the Southern Baptist Convention points to collective failures of institutions – its overlords, underlords, and trustees.

            Paul’s letter to Philemon and the ‘zombie’ institution of slavery was analyzed in a biblical exploration. Slavery birthed out of the distortion of the Fall required violence to survive. In his powerful letter to Philemon, Paul’s radical appeal has no coercion or imposition of authority to take back Onesimus (a runaway slave) as a ‘dear brother’ display the power of the Gospel to reorient power structures distorted by the Fall. Yet, slavery in its various ‘peculiar’ forms still exists today – more humans in bondage today than ‘were trafficked in the history of the Atlantic slave trade.’ The challenge is placed before the image-bearers to deal with (as Paul did), including other image-breaking institutions like abortion and the prison system in the USA.

            Crouch is brilliant in weaving personal stories with humility and transparency, connecting biblical stories, examples to make his case. Playing God is highly recommended for seminary students, organizational leaders, and reading/discussion groups.

            In the final part, spiritual disciplines of solitude, silence, fasting,  Sabbath observance, confession, study, tithing, and prayer are prescribed to tame misguided, distorted power. They are radical interruptions of power and privilege against our tendency to play god and ‘intentional pursuit of secret defeat’ allowing our merciful Creator to confront us graciously ‘with the depth of our idolatry and injustice.’ The church is the context where we behold God’s power and love in action in God’s story of Creation, Fall, Redemption, and Restoration. The sacraments are rehearsals of curbing our powers to close in baptism in ‘trembling awe of the memorial of the moment when God’s own Son gave up His power’ to defeat the power of darkness.