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About Russell Moore

Russell Moore is Dean of the School of Theology and Senior Vice President for Academic Administration at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary and executive director of the Carl F. H. Henry Institute for Evangelical Engagement. Dr. Moore is the author of The Kingdom of Christ: The New Evangelical Perspective (Crossway, 2004) and the forthcoming Adopted for Life: The Priority of Adoption for Christian Families and Churches (Crossway, May 2009).

Website: RussellMoore.com

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Russell Moore

Dean of Theology, Southern Baptist Theological Seminary

Tuesday, September 01, 2009

Reflections on the Kennedy Funeral

There's much to be admired about the funeral of the late U.S. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy today. An amazing crowd gathered to honor the man's epic life, a crowd that included four presidents, hundreds of Members of Congress, and dignitaries of business, labor, journalism, and religion.

Even so, the funeral homily and the litany offered by family members ought to sadden us, if we hear what was being said.

The homily offered spoke much about the kingdom of God, but the kingdom was defined in an impoverished, politicized way. And the kingdom just happened to line up with Sen. Kennedy's legislative career. The words about the kingdom, frozen as they were in the partisan debates of our little blip of history, didn't communicate the transcendence offered by the Basilica itself.

USA Today said this afternoon that my disappointment (posted on my Twitter account ) was "vitriolic" compared to the "hope" offered at the funeral itself. I'm willing to be corrected, but I see neither vitriol nor hope here. Is it "vitriolic " to say that the vision of the kingdom held by the church through the ages (Catholic/Orthodox/Protestant) is more than legislation, more than politics, more than human accomplishment?

It's as though the vision of the kingdom offered at the Basilica were written by Nicodemus, before his night-time conversation with our Lord Jesus. This isn't unique to the Kennedy family. It's the way almost all of us are prone to view the kingdom, the gospel, the Christian faith.

This isn't a Catholic/Protestant divide. I've heard many, many Baptist preachers do the same thing at a celebrity funeral. This is true even when the "celebrity" is just the kind of small-pond "celebrity" of the furniture store owner who happens to be the wealthiest man in a tiny hamlet.

It's not a conservative/liberal divide either. The Religious Right establishment often confuses the kingdom with a set of legislative goals just as surely as does the Left. There are many churches and ministries whose kingdom litanies would sound just like the Kennedy funerals, except on the other side of the legislative docket.

Church leaders had the opportunity to give the Kennedy family, and the rest of the onlookers, the opportunity to hear something we all need to hear: the gospel is bigger than politics, bigger than history, and bigger than one man, even this man's, life.

They didn't, and that's sad. When given the chance to preach the kingdom, all we heard was Camelot. That's not enough for hurting people anywhere, not even for the Kennedys.

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Most Recent User Comments
mariadgarza
9/2/2009 2:06 PM
I didn't even listen to all of it except for what Ted Jr had to say,there were feelings there obviously,he loved his father. But in reference to what all people need to hear which of course is Jesus Christ our Savior and the plan of salvation sorry no mention what a shame. Unfortunately man is still glorified and the basilica no less. They are blind. They focus on what the man was in the world not what awaits him in the afterlife. Because they know not the TRUTH!!!Exactly like Nicodemus was!! In the dark even though he was one of the leaders of the church, knew alot religiously but not spiritually.But we know that one day good or bad,saved or not all knee WILL bow before our Glorious Father,what a day that will be!!!
MAJ52653
9/2/2009 1:39 PM
When I was in a Hindu monastery for five years before becoming a follower of Jesus, one of the things the monks marveled at was how "Christains" worshipped dead bodies. Since I came to Christ, I of course learned that funerals were not worshipping the corpse. However I may just change my mind back again after the Kennedy funeral. Such pagentry, such a cover up! Not one word of this being the funeral of a power hungry, rampaging wino and sex addict who was trying to force the world into liberalism's Kingdom of God on Earth, without God being allowed to have any part of it. At least according to liberals, the Bible verse should be rewitten: "Voting liberal covers a multitude of sins."