N.T. Wright talks fast! But everything he says is stimulating and worth hearing. Wright is without doubt the most prolific and respected N.T. Scholar alive today. No seminarian can study the New Testament without encountering N.T. Wright. Here he offers an interview occasioned by his book, "Surprised by Hope: Rethinking Heaven, the Resurrection, and the Mission of the Church."
I have not yet read Wright's Surprised by Hope. Fortunately, Jonathan Pedrone has left a valuable Amazon review which I think worth publishing here as well:
N.T. Wright has written another brilliant work echoing he previously published masterpiece on the resurrection [The Resurrection of the Son of God]. Wright's expounds on a Christian hope firmly rooted in the Biblical narrative that longs for new creation.
In a world where the radio orthodoxy of Christianity espouses a gospel of fire insurance, Wright correctly and articulates a gospel and hope for so much more than disembodied bliss. "God's Kingdom in the preaching of Jesus refers not to postmortem destiny, not to our escape from this world into another one, but to God's sovereign rule coming on earth as it is in heaven".
Our hope according to Wright is not "going to heaven when you die" but rather in life after life after death. We hope not for an escape from this earth, but to the glorious day when God will make all things new.
Readers of this book may find the lack of eschatological certainty within the book frustrating. In a Christian sub-culture where end-times charts and elaborate explanations of the book of Revelation are the norm, Wright is careful to show that Christian eschatology is not about a certitude of specific events yet to come, but rather a hope for a renewed earth. Eschatology must be viewed as sign posts guiding our way through a fog rather than a detailed map.
Wright's comments in chapter 12 on the meaning of salvation are worth the price of the book, and his restatement of the doctrine of hell in chapter 11 is worth twice the price of the book. How we view the gospel, and the death and resurrection of Jesus greatly determines how our definition and the outworking of salvation.
In short, this is N.T. Wright at his best. A foremost expert on the resurrection of Jesus and the implications of Christ's defeat of death on eschatology and future hope, Wright has given us a clear, readable, and deeply Biblical picture of Christian hope.