Episode 40: Anna Case-Winters - What Does It Mean for God to Be with Us?

In this episode of Faith for Normal People, Pete and Anna Sieges Beal talk to Anna Case-Winters about incarnation and crucifixion, the coexistence of humanity and divinity in Jesus, and how process theology can help us reimagine divine power. Plus, Pete gets to ask questions about the cosmos. Join them as they explore the following questions:

  • Can Jesus be fully God and fully human? The math doesn’t seem to add up there.

  • How can process thought help us work through the contradiction of Jesus being fully divine and fully human?

  • What is it about Jesus that teaches us to think about God differently?

  • Is incarnation limited to Jesus’s birth?

  • How does incarnation help us understand the crucifixion?

  • In what ways can we think of the cross differently to not glorify the suffering of Christ?

  • What does it mean that God is with us when we encounter so much human suffering and even creation suffering? 

  • If God doesn’t control the world, how can he be with us in suffering?

  • Who is the “us” in God with “us”? Just Christians? Humans? Animals? Other planets?

Tweetables

Pithy, shareable, sometimes-less-than-280-character statements from the episode you can share.

  • A central conviction of Christian faith is that God is with us—that's fundamental—and that God's presence is seen in a decisive way in Jesus the Christ. But early Christians did struggle to understand how and in what sense God was in Christ. — Anna Case-Winters @theb4np

  • Many Christians [settle] either for a Christology from above that will de-emphasize the human, or a Christology from below that will de-emphasize the divine. And both are problematic for different reasons. — Anna Case-Winters @theb4np

  • If we look to [Jesus] and the life of love for God and neighbor that he manifested, then we see something like a true reflection of who God is, of God's love and self-giving. — Anna Case-Winters @theb4np

  • People have said once we have seen God in Christ, we cannot help but see God in all things. This manifestation changes the way we view God—everything. — Anna Case-Winters @theb4np

  • I think we have a small view of incarnation. We think of “The Incarnation,” and that in itself is amazing. But there is, I believe, so much more to God's incarnation. — Anna Case-Winters @theb4np

  • I don't think we've gotten the full implications of incarnation until we see the big picture. And I think we see it best looking through the lens of the incarnation in Jesus of Nazareth. — Anna Case-Winters @theb4np

  • We need to make a better interpretation of the cross in order for it not to be misunderstood as a glorification of suffering and promoting sacrifice in ways that might be unhealthy. — Anna Case-Winters @theb4np

  • When we see that God is present with us in our sin and our suffering, and loves and redeems and extends hope for more to us, then we have reason to hope. [There are] better ways to think about the meaning of the cross than some of our history [provides]. — Anna Case-Winters @theb4np

  • Part of my work is rethinking omnipotence, sort of in the way I've been rethinking the cross. I don't think perfect power is domination and control. I think perfect power is the power of love. — Anna Case-Winters @theb4np

  • I think of God as loving, and love does not control the beloved. And God not controlling world process sort of explains how the world is the way it is when a God is a good God. — Anna Case-Winters @theb4np

  • We can claim, and with the full wealth of conviction, that Jesus is wholly divine without claiming that he is the whole of the divine. — Anna Case-Winters @theb4np

  • We're beloved of God, surely, but we're not the whole show. And we are all connected in this wonderful web, this convivial community that is creation. — Anna Case-Winters @theb4np

Mentioned in This Episode

Pete Enns

Peter Enns (Ph.D., Harvard University) is Abram S. Clemens professor of biblical studies at Eastern University in St. Davids, Pennsylvania. He has written numerous books, including The Bible Tells Me So, The Sin of Certainty, and How the Bible Actually Works. Tweets at @peteenns.

Previous
Previous

Episode 273: Jennifer Garcia Bashaw - What Did the Crucifixion Do? (REISSUE)

Next
Next

Episode 272: Hugo Méndez - Who Wrote John?