Saturday 1 November 2008

Claiborne Again

The trouble with being back at work and also having the kind of week that I've had with something on every single night is that you don't get time to blog....!

I finished 'Jesus for President' last week (see post below) and my very first inclination was to reread it - then my next inclination was to suggest to my son that he read it. He is doing Politics at university and he is also a Christian and I thought that it would be a book which would encourage him to think differently about his faith and his view of God. On reflection I think what I wanted was for him to be stirred up by such a radical and potentially life-changing vision of Christ and what Christians are called into. I'm still kind of mulling on it and haven't started to re-read it yet.

The book blew me away and I think I'm still kind of in shock - I thought it would be a tinsy bit challenging about Christian 'lifestyles' or something but it's so much more than that. It sets out to explore God's agenda and Christ's life, death and resurrection politically, economically, socially, nationally, environmentally, spiritually... I was surprised at something so politically radical coming from the States - (Sorry if my surprise surprises you - it's just my experience / understanding that America is ultra conservative - seriously in no-one else's universe would Barak Obama be considered anything other than a social democrat - but socialist - I think not!)

The book is a challenge fundamentally about how we live, what we think is important and what our priorities and focus need to be. I heard Claiborne say in an interview, that growing up in the Bible Belt in America taught him a lot about what to believe but not a lot about how he should behave. It's that sense that you can be a Christian and yet live in a way that's no different to anyone else - Christianity doesn't really effect the fundamentals, but Claiborne is setting out an alternative radical Christian agenda which would, if it was lived, probably have a major impact on the world. It's G K Chesterton's adage that 'Christianity has not been tried and found wanting; it has been found difficult and not tried.'

"It's a shame that a few conservative evangelicals have a monopoly on the word conversion. Some of us shiver at the word. But conversion means to change, to alter, to make something look different than it did before..We need conversion in the best sense of the word - people who are marked by the renewing of their minds and imaginations, who no longer conform to the pattern that is destroying our world. Otherwise we have only believers, not converts. And believers are a dime a dozen nowadays. What the world needs is people who believe so much in another world that they cannot help but enact it..Then we will start to see some true conversions vans that run on veggie oil instead of diesel. Then we will see some converted homes that run on renewable energy, power their laundry machines with stationary bicycles and flush their toilets with dirty sink water. Then tears will be converted to laughter as people make their machine guns into saxophones or police officers use their clubs to play baseball."

I'm reminded of a great piece of liturgy from Abbotsford Church in Clydebank called I Believe

I believe in a Miracle that made stars dance and galaxies pirouette
I believe in a Desire that gave birth to wonder and cast it in a human form
I believe in a Relationship that radiates with life: full life, total life, eternal life
I believe in Creation
I believe in Love
I believe that destruction ends
That a broken creation rebirths
That harvests and land will be shared
I believe in a Promise that, with a baby's cry, pushed himself into the world
I believe in a Truth that crushed sin and celebrates its freedom with new life
I believe in a Reality where love conquers untruth, injustice and death
I believe in Incarnation
I believe in Love
I believe that a man who was meant to die, refused
That a body that was still and broken, danced
That a voice that was silenced, laughed
I believe in a Vision that has noisy cafeterias in churches
and children with muddy feet running through Parliament, turning white papers
into tickertape parades, asylum bills into party invitations and bombs into flower bulbs
I believe in an Artist that paints the world in its true colours
I believe in a Mother that cannot help but respond to her child's cry
I believe in Spirit
I believe in Love
I believe that wall's that are permanent, fall
That racist systems, die
That terrorists in Northern Ireland, talk
I believe
And I believe
In Love
Copyright: R Hamilton 1999

I might very well come back and post more on Shane, because Yes - he has become part of that small but very elite group of people I've given my life to including Brian McLaren and David Crowder (well you just have to). D - if you're reading this - you know what I mean.

2 comments:

Doug said...

You have convinced me I need to get this book. I really liked his last book (The Irresistible Revolution)and was a bit unsure whether the next book would have anything new. Judging by the number of Americans you have given your life to i am quite surprised that you were surprised how good this was....

I blame Doris Day said...

No I wasn't surprised at how good it was - I've heard him speak so I knew he would be good. I was just surprised that something so politically radical was written by an American. He has had accusations of being 'un-American'. You should definitley get it.