Making a New Year’s Resolution to read a certain number of books means that you end up reading some books. Seriously. So, in order to do some worthwhile reflecting and remarking, here are the books I have recently read and some minor thoughts that have arisen in me from them. I think I will split this into two or more parts, assuming that many eyes glaze when reading long passages on a screen. I know mine do.
The first four are in definite relationship:
1. Everything Must Change - Brian McLaren
Much has been written about this book. So I will not really interact with it in depth. Just a couple of thoughts. I appreciate so much the work that Brian is doing. The conversations he is involved in all over the world are so important. The trajectory of his life has made him the center of a hurricane of criticisms.
After considering this work from a social point of view I find myself lacking in resolve in so many areas. I drink too much, I buy too much, I work too little for the luxury I have. I neglect my neighbour, I dislike my neighbour, I work against my neighbour, I don’t know my neighbour. I am grateful for someone like Brian who will confront me and witness to the mission of Christ that we are called to that manages to wind its way out of the church buildings that use to captivate our Saviour (perhaps to keep him from being crucified again.)
When considering Brian’s book from a theological point of view it is another effort to get us to shed this diabolical notion that God’s work (and the church’s) is to save individual souls from eternal hell. More than anything we need to surrender our warehousing instincts. No more pray a prayer and saved forever. However, this DOES NOT mean we are otherwise left to work out our salvation through our works.
Jesus proclaims that simply believing his good news brings salvation. This is “salvation by grace through faith” in a planetary sense: if we believe that God graciously offers us a new way, a new truth, and a new life, we can be liberated from the vicious, addictive cycles of our suicidal framing stories. That kind of faith will save us. If we don’t believe, we will persist in trying harder and harder, again and again, to acheive our own salvation through our existing narratives and the techniques they inspire. Even if Jesus’ “saving poetry” is true, our failure to believe it will keep us from experiencing its saving potential, and so we’ll spin on in the vicious prose cycles of Caesar.” (McLaren, p. 270)
This leads me to a thought I have had recently. Should our salvation as fully expressed in the work of Jesus Christ really be coupled, and really, made one with a subsequent (and preexistent) call to follow? Whether through believing or working I am thoroughly suspicious of a salvation story that ends in something WE do. But I will leave this thread alone for now.
2. Irresistable Revolution - Shane Claiborne
Another World Is Possible.
There isn’t much to say other than GO READ THIS. This book stirred my imagination and dropped a 50,000 pound weight on my pride and greed. There is not a page in the 300 or so that does not convict. Unfortunately I read it a while ago and have since loaned out my copy so I can’t drop down the myriad of quotes that I have underlined in it. I do have one which I had copied into a text file.
“When we are trying to teach kids not to hit each other and they see a government use violence to bring about change, we start to consider what it means to give witness to a peace that is not like the world gives. (John 14:27)” (Shane Claiborne)
As he mentions in his book, it is in much sadness that we hear this kind of life being called Radical. This is the way we are supposed to live! It should be Normal. Everyone, can we please pledge to help make Shane normal?
3. Colossians Remixed - Silvia Keesmaat and Brian Walsh
The imagination thing continues in this epic outpouring from the lives of Silvia and Brian. And I mean lives. These two live out their theology, which is the only way to do it. Praxidoxy? I don’t know.
Anyway, Colossians Remixed is one part commentary, one part translation, one part targum, one part social conscience, and four zillion parts pure creation/gospel/reconciliation-particaptory imagination. How has our current social structures and abuses disguised the subversive culture confronting message of Paul to the Colossians? Now that we have rediscovered the danger inherit in this text how do we translate it to speak into the powers and principalities of our own times? And dare we? If anyone knows of similar treatments of other books in the Bible please send me in their direction. 5 Stars. (note… I actually somewhat dislike the giving of a rating, but I just can’t help it here…. 6 Stars!)
4. Martin Luther King Jr. (Penguin Lives Biography) - Marshall Frady
I’m pretty sure this guy was quoted in all three of the books mentioned above. What to say…
Marshall does not sugar coat King. I really appreciate this. King was in this world just as much as George Wallace. King had no intention of trying to separate himself from the dirt of life. He lived an imperfect life and made it his goal to live intentionally whole. The weight of his choices crushed him from every side. And sometimes he melted. But he could not be moved. As much as we would like to imbue King with angelic status it just doesn’t stick. And I am glad that we are kept from that in Frady’s biography. We can more easily march alongside King and stand against the firehoses and know that while we go home and weep, so does this man who only hopes to have the strength to do it all again – only because he must.
“We are called to play the Good Samaritan on life’s roadside . . . but one day we must come to see that the whole Jericho road must be transformed so that men and women will not be constantly beaten and robbed. True compassion is more than flinging a coin to a beggar. It comes to see that a system that produces beggars needs to be repaved. We are called to be the Good Samaritan, but after you lift so many people out of the ditch you start to ask, maybe the whole road to Jericho needs to be repaved.” (Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.)
Here stands another Radical. Let us stand with him! Please!
Next time….
5. Pagan Christianity - George Barna and Frank Viola
6. The New Christians - Tony Jones
7. What is the What - Dave Eggers
8. The Shack - William P. Young