Archives For 2011

I Finally Met Henri Nouwen

Chris —  March 30, 2011

I’m not sure how I’ve gotten this far in life without having read the works of Henri Nouwen. Now that I’ve finished Spiritual Direction I have high hopes of devouring much more of his wisdom.

Nouwen (1932-1996) is what you’d call a “pastor’s pastor.”  He served as a Catholic priest, a teacher at Harvard and Yale, and most notably, as a caretaker for those with severe handicaps in a L’Arche community.  Despite his considerable success Nouwen struggled his entire life with a true sense of vocation, sexuality and depression.  He is most known for books like Wounded Healer, and his focus on the scriptural image of the Prodigal son.

Spiritual Direction is a collection of essays, speeches and notes published posthumously.  They deal with the deep questions that must be answered in order to listen to and follow God’s call.  Along the way, he shares about his own struggles.  Probably the most powerful are his thoughts on the “spirituality of the body,” where he shares about his struggle to commit to God amidst questions of vocation, aging and sexuality.

It’s hard to capture why it’s important to read Nouwen, so I’ll leave it with this quote:

“For most of my life I have struggled to find God, to know God, to Love God.  I have tried hard to follow the guidelines of the spiritual life…and avoid the many temptations to dissipate myself.  I have failed many times, but always tried again, even when I was close to despair.

Now I wonder whether I have sufficiently realized that during all this time God has been trying to find me, to know me, and to love me.  The question is not “How am I to find God?” but “How am I to let myself be found by God?”

Litany Against Fear

Chris —  March 14, 2011

 

The Bene Gesserit “Litany Against Fear” from Frank Herbert’s Dune.
(http://kubuzetto.deviantart.com)

MAGL Spring Reading List

Chris —  March 11, 2011

Today in the mail a bunch of new friends came.  They’ll be hanging out with me for the next two months as I prepare for two weeks of  Masters of Arts of Global Leadership classes through Fuller Theological seminary.  They are:

Community of Character by Stanley Hauerwas.  When I first read Hauerwas’s The Peaceable Kingdom it sent me down a path that has defined much of my thinking ever since.  I’m super excited for more.

Experiencing the Trinity by Darrell Johnson.

Renovation of the Heart by Dallas Willard.  I’ve been through this once before on audio.  Anyone who I’ve ever talked to about books knows that there’s no one I hold in higher esteem that Willard.

Spiritual Direction by Henri Nouwen.  I’m not sure how I’ve made it this far in life without reading Nouwen.  Time to change that

The Ascent of a Leader by Thrall, McNichol and McElrath.  Leadership books always inspire me toward greater focus.

Spiritual Leadership by Blackaby.

The Next Christendom: The Coming of Global Christianity, by Phillip Jenkins.  More of a sociological study for the “Global” in MAGL.

Announcing the Kingdom by Glasser, Van Engen and Redford.  Written by the Fuller Missions staff, this looks to be the heaviest theological work I’ll be doing this quarter.

Open Secret: An Introduction to the Theology of Mission by Lesslie Newbigin (not pictured). As I’ve said before, Newbigin is responsible for launching much of the conversation in the Church today.  This will be important.

Time to get to work!

Just because Justin Cronin’s mammoth entry into post-apocalyptica, The Passage, doesn’t try to do anything new doesn’t mean it doesn’t have anything to offer.  By now we’ve seen 28 Days Later and I Am Legend and know that vampires are made in labs, and having read The Road or The Stand we can find our way through the dystopian landscape.

To overcome the sense of familiarity Cronin tweaks the vampire myth sets much of it in a Wild West and adds a spiritual element reminiscent of the “Dark Christianity” of The Stand and the messianic undertones of Lord of the Rings.

The story revolves around Amy, or “the Girl from Nowhere.” It tells her story, and the story of those whose life purpose seems to be to take her where she needs to go. This includes nuns, rapists, mad scientists, murderers, women with crossbows, Texan militia men, and of course, psychic vampires.

At 800 some odd pages, The Passage literally is not light reading. It takes getting through the first 400 pages of The Passage to realize it’s going to be a journey story, and like Fellowship the Ring or A New Hope, there’s two more volumes to go.

And just like Planet of the Apes or even The Time Machine, The Passage harkens back to the first great disaster of human civilization: The Tower of Babel. When man is closes to reaching heaven, he is bound to fall. But just because you’ve fallen doesn’t mean God wasn’t there all along, guiding you where you need to land.

On My Bookshelf (Winter 2011)

Chris —  February 4, 2011

Academic

Spiritual Leadership; J. Oswald Sanders. [Amazon] [Audible] Think How to Win Friends and Influence People, except with all the anecdotes being about British missionaries.  Kind of a proto-John-Maxwell.

Learning to Listen, Learning to Teach; Jane Vella.  Reads as part memoir, part textbook of an incredible world traveler and educator.  Anyone who works with adults in any form or any culture can learn something useful.

Cultivating Communities of Practice; Etienne Wenger, Richard McDermott, and William M. Snyder. The story of how business creating Communities of Practice.  Anyone who really wants to move from small groups to missional community needs to really understand what they’ve tripped upon.

Life on the Vine: Cultivating the Fruit of the Spirit in Christian Community; Philip D. Kenneson. “It may be read as a biblical and theological study, as an inspirational work on spirituality, as incisive cultural criticism and as a practical guide to Christian discipleship.” (from Amazon.com.)

Living Faith Day by Day: How the Sacred Rules of Monastic Traditions Can Help You Live Spiritually in the Modern World; Debra K. Farrington. “Farrington formulates a practical and thoughtful guide for developing an individual, God-centered “rule for life,” incorporating monastic wisdom into everyday activities.” (from Amazon.com)

Personal

Fiction

The Passage; Justin Cronin.  One of best reviewed books of the last two years.  Think of 28 Days Later on the scale of The Stand.

Millennium Falcon; James Luceno. [Amazon] [Audible]  I’m a sucker for the Star Wars Expanded Universe books.  Han and Leia, now grandparents, travel the universe to learn the history of the ship that saved the galaxy.

Non-Fiction

Getting Things Done; David Allen. [Amazon] [Audible]  I’m thinking a lot about productivity these days.  Allen is the great popular thinker of our day.

The Big Sort; Bill Bishop.  “a one-idea grab bag with a thesis more provocative than its elaboration. Bishop contends that as Americans have moved over the past three decades, they have clustered in communities of sameness, among people with similar ways of life, beliefs, and in the end, politics.” (from Amazon.com)