Friday, August 28, 2020

Justin Giboney

I listened to (and watched) an interview on The Trinity Forum with Justin Giboney, who started The & (And) Campaign and wrote the book Compassion (&) Conviction. I had never heard of him, but wow! What a lot of wise things he said. I will try to remember to come back and link to the interview. Here is a link to a different interview that was good, too, and another. He and his co-author Michael Wear have a podcast, "The Church Politics Podcast." Here are a few things that struck me in the interview. They're not word for word quotes, but things I remember.

  • After being in politics a while, I realized that Christian people assumed that if you want to be in politics you are going to have to surrender some of your convictions. That should not be.
  • Our faith should impact our political outlook.
  • It gives us purpose and mission, connected to everything we do.
  • The love & truth of the gospel - what does it have to do with our interactions.
  • Christians speak the truth in love.
  • We can't be self-centered, we must also be interested in others as much if not more than others.
  • Makes us more willing to go against our own interests, to do what is right.
  • Our faith demands self-sacrifice, which is different than many others'.
  • Walk into what seems a hopeless situation and have hope, to look at others who have hurt you and have love.
  • Let go of our desire to get even, to be right, lay it down and yet speak the truth in love.
  • We are missing moral imagination -- to see past this moment. Faith, seeing through the eyes of God allows you to see past it.
  • Otherworldly, not always rational to give someone the benefit of the doubt, not to seek vengeance.
  • We are witnesses, showing the love of God, not winning. Witness over winning.
  • Everything is a response, "what-about-ism." That can't be the way of Christians. We have our own set of standards.
  • Defend human dignity and promote human flourishing. Stay focussed.
  • The government is ordained by God. It is for order and justice.
  • The political parties are a tool, not your identity. They are a way to get things done. If someone criticizes your party it's not as if they were saying something about your mother.
  • It's good to distance your self from your party or side. List 6 critiques of your own side. If you can't do that you might be getting too entwined in it.
  • Whether you're Christian or not, the question is: Is your neighbor worth it? Your neighbor is worth it because you are worth it. If you don't protect your neighbor you're not protecting yourself.
  • Justice starts with the Imago Dei, that each person is the image of God.
From a partial transcript of an interview:

MARVIN OLASKY: Okay, so let’s talk about the AND Campaign a little bit. What goes on both sides of the ampersand?

JUSTIN GIBONEY: Yeah. So I would say love and truth. Compassion and conviction. Uh, social justice and moral order. Justice and righteousness. One of the things that we found is when Christians get into politics, they feel like they have to go all the way to the left or all the way to the right. And we say, well, if you go all the way to the left, you understand there’s some convictions that you’re not going to be able to take with you, whether it be sanctity of life or the historic Christian sexual ethic. You can’t take those all the way to the left. And if you go to the right, you know, we would say that you, you’re not going to be able to take your compassion to the right with you. And so what we wanted to say is say, b b but instead of that being an or, right? Because our society separates love and truth, it separates compassion and conviction, for whatever reason. The gospel doesn’t, but our society does. We want Christians to see politics differently and say, no, no, no. When I go into politics, I’m about love and truth, compassion and conviction. I’m not gonna make that false choice. Because that’s really what it is, it’s a false dichotomy. And too often we make that because our ideological tribe or our party forces us into that, uh false choice.

Monday, August 24, 2020

Every day is Blursday.

 Read somewhere. Such a good description of days in this time of Corona.


Friday, August 14, 2020

"If we think that the ultimate goal of the church is to fix things then when we are faced with an un-fixable situation we are disappointed in God in a way that's pretty unfair..." Sarah Condon.

On the Mockingcast episode I listened to today, the hosts talked about "crisis of capacity"" -- the point you reach when you can't do anything more. It's not about what you should do, what needs to be done, but the fact that you cannot. Near the end of the episode, Sarah Condon says this:

If we think that the ultimate goal of the church is to fix things then when we are faced with an un-fixable situation we are disappointed in God in a way that's pretty unfair; we're disappointed in our own abilities in a way that will only separate us from God's grace and it's really dangerous. The church is actually, generally speaking, terrible at fixing things because there's social services institutions with people with educations that are able to do that. We can only do so much. 

But if you think that the ultimate purpose of the church is to preach Christ crucified for sinners and salvation, then even when there's nothing else you can do to help or to fix, that is always a place you can turn to. You can always stand at the foot of the cross. When we're able to do that, we're able to see our own mistakes and our own failures as God just getting us ready for a miracle. In the moment when we stop trying to fix it, when we think, "I'm done," that's the moment when you're like, "Look out!" Guess what, you're not good at this. Something is going to happen that goes way beyond your abilities, way beyond your capacity, and you're just going to sit there and watch it happen.

RJ talked about a sermon his brother preached on the story of Joseph and all the heinous things that happened to him -- 50 chapters of Genesis. "It's a beautiful story of redemption. The truth is we're all just in chapter 37 right now."

From Chabad.org.


"I think the hardest thing for anyone is accepting that other people are as real as you are." Zadie Smith

Photo by Mike Chai from Pexels
...That’s it. Not using them as tools not using them as examples or things to make yourself feel better or things to get over or under. Just accepting that they are absolutely as real as you are and have all the same expectations and demands. And it’s so difficult that basically the only person that ever did it was Christ. The rest of us are very, very far behind.




Comparative suffering - Mel Gibson and Jesus

I saw the meme referred to here before, and this discussion of Zadie Smith's writing about it on the Mockingcast was great. I wrote along these lines myself in my last email of God's love


Love, Compassion, and the Relative Suffering of Christ on the Cross: Intimations by Zadie Smith

by CJ GREEN on Aug 5, 2020

Zadie Smith’s Intimations is a short collection of essays about life in corona-time. Most of them are fixed on that singularly bizarre March/April when “surreal” was the only word most of us could cough up; not surprisingly, Smith has a more expressive vocabulary. If the book arouses any suspicion, it’s that it came too fast, but personally, I appreciate the hasty documentation. It’s like reading a bundle of letters from a friend. And I wanted to share a few snippets.

In an essay called “Something to Do,” Smith reflects on her new schedule in lockdown: “in the first week I found out how much my old life was about hiding from life.” She concludes that capital-L Love—“not something to do, but something to be experienced, and to go through”—is what makes life worth living. Not work. Not even art. Of her life pre-corona, she writes:

Conceiving self-implemented schedules: teaching day, reading day, writing day, repeat. What a dry, sad, small idea of a life. And how exposed it looks, now that the people I love are in the same room to witness the way I do time. The way I’ve done it all my life.

The book’s final section is comprised of pithy acknowledgments, “Intimations.” Here Smith quotes Lorraine Hansberry, playwright and author of A Raisin in the Sun:

“When you start measuring somebody, measure him right, child, measure him right.” Therefore: compassion.

To see a person fully is to feel for them. It’s this full, empathetic view that makes Smith such a good novelist and assessor of our current predicament.

Along similar lines, in “Suffering Like Mel Gibson,” Smith addresses the increasingly modern tendency to compare suffering: to neglect one’s pain by measuring it against someone else’s. A long paragraph, it’s nonetheless worth mulling over. Mostly because she evokes Christ on the cross, who, despite everything, had faith that death was not the end.
… I was sent a meme that made me laugh out loud: a photograph of Mel Gibson, in a director’s chair, calmly talking to Jesus Christ himself. Jesus (also in a director’s chair) was patiently listening while soaked from head to toe in blood and wearing his crown of thorns. The caption read: “Explaining to my friends with kids under six what it’s been like isolating alone.” As a rule of social etiquette, when confronted with a pixelated screen of a dozen people, all of them inquiring, somewhat half-heartedly, as to “how you are,” it is appropriate to make the expected, decent and accurate claim that you are fine and privileged, lucky compared to so many others, inconvenienced, yes, melancholy often, but not suffering. Mel Gibson but not Christ. Even Christ, twenty feet in the air and bleeding all over himself, no doubt looked about him and wondered whether his agonies, when all was said and done, were relatively speaking in fact better than those of the thieves and beggars to his left and right whose sufferings long predated their present crucifixions and who had no hope (unlike Christ) of an improved post-cross situation … But when the bad day in your week finally arrives—and it comes to all—by which I mean, that particular moment when your sufferings, as puny as they may be in the wider scheme of things, direct themselves absolutely and only to you, as if precisely designed to destroy you and only you, at that point it might be worth allowing yourself the admission of the reality of suffering, if not for yourself, exactly, then in preparation for that next painful bout of videoconferencing, so that you don’t roll your eyes or laugh or puke while listening to what some other person seems to think is pain.

"Christianity, rightly understood, is a religion of losers."

I heard this being read in the Mockingcast podcast. The title and subtitle really spoke to me since the small number of people in our pews is a concern to me. I know we should not get all caught up in numbers and make goals of gaining more people who show up in the church. On the other hand, we do need people in order to do something as basic as hold a worship service.

Christianity, when properly understood, is a religion of losers

 This article is more than 5 years old

A church that successfully proclaims the message of the cross – death first, then resurrection – is likely to be empty and not full.

Christianity, properly understood, is a religion of losers – the worst of playground insults. For not only do we not want to be a loser, we don’t want to associate with them either. We pointedly shun losers, as if some of their loser-ness might rub off on us. Or rather, more honestly, we shun them because others might recognize us as among their number. And because we secretly fear that this might actually be true, we shun them all the more viciously, thus to distance ourselves all the more emphatically. And so the cock crows three times.

But it is true. Deep failure, the failure of our lives, is something we occasionally contemplate in the middle of the night, in those moments of terrifying honesty before we get up and dress for success. Ecce homo, said Pilate. Behold, the man. This is humanity. And the facade of success we present to the world is commonly a desperate attempt to ward off this knowledge. At the beginning of Lent, Christians are reminded of this in the most emphatic of ways: know that you are dust and to dust you shall return. Those who used the period of Lent to give things up are invited to live life stripped bare, experiencing humanity in the raw, without the familiar props to our ego. This has nothing to do with the avoidance of chocolate and everything to do with facing the unvarnished truth about human failure. There is no way 100 top business leaders would endorse the cross. It is life without the advertising, without the accoutrements of success. It is life on a zero-hours contract, where at any moment we can be told we are not needed.

But here’s the thing. The Christian story, like the best sort of terrifying psychoanalysis, strips you down to nothing in order for you to face yourself anew. For it turns out that losers are not despised or rejected, not ultimately. In fact, losers can discover something about themselves that winners cannot ever appreciate – that they are loved and wanted simply because of who they are and not because of what they achieve. That despite it all, raw humanity is glorious and wonderful, entirely worthy of love. This is revealed precisely at the greatest point of dejection. The resurrection is not a conjuring trick with bones. It is a revelation that love is stronger than death, that human worth is not indexed to worldly success.

In a world where we semaphore our successes to each other at every possible opportunity, churches cannot be blamed for failing to live up to this austere and wonderful message. The worst of them judge their success in entirely worldly terms, by counting their followers. Their websites show images of happy, uncomplicated people doing good improving stuff in the big community. But if I am right about the meaning of Christ’s passion, then a church is at its best when it fails, when it gives up on all the ecclesiastical glitter, when the weeds start to break through the floor, and when it shows others that failure is absolutely nothing of the sort. This is the site of real triumph, the moment of success. Failure is redeemed. Hallelujah.

Another article with quotes from Giles Fraser.

"I'm not going to get better right now."

Image by Alexas Fotos from Pixaby.

"This is not a time in my life when things will get better. Things are not going to improve right now." Sarah Condon quotes a best friend who says this in the Mockingcast episode, Episode 193: Those Upgrades Can Wait.

In this episode the hosts talked about innovation and the neverending drive to improve. They referenced this article as well, tying computer upgrades to the concept of that drive.


Thursday, August 13, 2020

"Chaim Potok’s Wandering Jews: Holding to Faith in a Critical Age" by Wesley Hill

Yoram Raanan, Har Sinai Bavli, oil on canvas and book cover collage, 2019

I love Chaim Potok's books. This article gives me even more reason to love them. "Potok’s best novels probe what it means to 'hold' to tradition in a new, changed way." I follow a lot of people who talk about deconstruction of their childhood Christian faith. This article speaks to the fear that if you deconstruct too much, you won't be a Christian at all. I am drawn to the "second naiveté" this author writes of.

At the heart of Chaim Potok’s 1985 novel Davita’s Harp is a child who is searching for faith. The parents of Ilana Davita Chandal offer little help. Her father was raised Christian in New England but has abandoned his earlier Evangelical fervor. Her mother, a Polish Jewish immigrant, has given up observance of the mitzvot and joined the Communist Party; she is now committed to fighting the fascism she hears is on the verge of consuming Western Europe. Through much of the book, Davita seems unsettled by the snatches of religious language and observance she is able to pick up. When her aunt urges her to have faith in Jesus, Davita raises the classic Jewish objection: “Why is there a war in Spain if Jesus is the Prince of Peace?” Later, when Davita finds her mother’s King James Bible and takes it to synagogue, she horrifies her peers: “They all backed away a step or two as if I were holding in my hand a specimen of forbidden vermin.” “That’s a goyische Bible,” her friend tells her, making her blush with shame. “I did not go back to that synagogue for a long time,” Davita says.

Yet in 1937, she does return, after learning of her father’s death in the bombing of Guernica, where he had been working as a journalist. It is one of the novel’s pivotal scenes. Davita goes back to a synagogue and, finding herself in a kind of daze, says softly aloud the Kaddish, the traditional doxology that asks for the sanctification of God’s name. Davita mouths the words in memory of her father. She can see the men’s side of the synagogue through the curtain. She watches the men rise.

And then I was on my feet too, listening to the voices on the other side of the curtain and reciting faintly with the men the words of the Kaddish, which I found, to my astonishment, that I knew by heart. There was a surge of whispering, a soft surflike rush of sound from the women around me. Someone said, “What is she doing?” Another said something in Yiddish. I stood, quietly reciting the words. There has to be more for you, Papa, than just one memorial service. Can one recite the Kaddish for a father who wasn’t a Jew? I didn’t care. I went on. The Kaddish ended. I sat down and closed my eyes, feeling upon my face the hot stares of all those nearby.

The service went on. Then, moments later, I heard again the words of the Kaddish, and I rose and began to recite them too, louder this time, and I thought I heard one or two of the women answer, “Amen.”

Maybe it is because I think about Paul Ricoeur’s diagnosis of modern readers of the Bible and would-be believers in its God – “Beyond the desert of criticism, we wish to be called again” – that I am tempted to regard Davita’s budding curiosity about Judaism as one of the most immediately relatable entries into Chaim Potok’s work as a whole. A religiously observant life is less and less accessible or intelligible to modern Westerners, yet many of us remain haunted by its possibility. Even the demographic designation “nones” invokes religious sensibility by naming its absence, tacitly acknowledging that, even in the desert, faith’s echo can be heard. Davita’s halting entry into an observant life dramatizes a journey we too might take. Her story makes the prospect of finding a home within a religious tradition, even in a secular age, a live, beguiling one.

Herman Harold Potok was born on the eve of the Depression in the Bronx. The son of distinguished Hasidic parents, Chaim – as he was known at home and later in the world of literature – grew up in a devout and strictly observant Jewish community. He attended the more liberal Yeshiva University’s boys’ high school and later the university itself in New York and was ordained to the (even more liberal, by the standards of his childhood) Conservative rabbinate after training for four years at the Jewish Theological Seminary, also in New York. Eventually he earned a doctorate in philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania, in order, he said, “to see what the center of the Western World was really like.” He started writing fiction in high school, despite the fact that his fellow Hasidim regarded it “at best as a frivolity, and at worst as a menace,” as he would later put it. Talmudic scholarship was an admirable aim for a Jewish boy of Potok’s world; becoming a writer of stories was not.

Potok published his first novel in 1967, when he was thirty-eight years old. The Chosen spent over six months on the New York Times bestseller list and was a finalist for the National Book Award. Like its eventual successor Davita’s Harp, The Chosen is chiefly interested in what an observant Jewish life might look like in a modern Western context, but it comes at the matter from the other direction. Where Davita tiptoes her way into shul attendance and the study of Talmud, the protagonists of The Chosen can’t remember a time when they weren’t immersed the world of Judaism. For them, the question isn’t about how to be at home in a forbiddingly strict and insular realm of piety but about how to embody their devotion to it within a wider secular culture that has little use for it – and how to allow that world’s ideals to challenge the way they practice their Judaism, too.

In The Chosen, Danny Saunders is the son of his tight-knit Brooklyn community’s formidable rebbe, which in the Hasidic tradition means he is also his father’s designated successor. In high school, however, he secretly studies Sigmund Freud and yearns for graduate studies in psychology. The tension between his Hasidic identity and his apparent destiny on the one hand, and his burgeoning thirst for secular learning on the other, is unrelieved throughout most of the novel. At the climax, we see Danny refuse the choice: he will go on to become a psychologist, studying among the goyim, but he will remain an observer of the commandments, albeit not as a rabbi.

A religiously observant life is less and less accessible to modern Westerners, yet many of us remain haunted by its possibility.

The same tension animates all of Potok’s best novels. In his second, The Promise, Reuven Malter is studying at an Orthodox rabbinical school under the watchful and forbidding ministrations of Rav Kalman, a Holocaust survivor who views Reuven’s father’s secular Zionism and historical-critical interpretations of the Talmud with suspicion and fear, and who watches for, and prepares to stifle, signs of their influence on Reuven. As Reuven begins to prepare for his ordination exams, Rav Kalman urges him away from modern critical approaches to the sacred page. One of the novel’s most thrilling scenes is Reuven’s oral examination. For anyone who has studied Jewish or Christian scripture in their original Hebrew and Greek, and who has pored over commentaries on both, as I have, it is hard to overstate how well Potok manages to evoke the tingling excitement a student can experience when performing a close reading of a text. At one point during Reuven’s examination Rav Kalman draws his attention to a passage from the Mishnah, the second-century CE collection of the so-called “Oral Torah,” part of the rabbinic tradition of Talmudic interpretation. Here is how Reuven, called upon to explain the passage, describes the scene:

It was one of the passages I had been waiting for. There were others like it scattered all through the Talmud. Sooner or later I would have managed to steer us onto one, or we would have come across one by ourselves. Now I was in it and explaining it and knowing exactly what words I would use and seeing it all half a dozen steps in advance like a chess game.

The scene climaxes with Reuven’s rabbinical examiners listening open-mouthed as Reuven demonstrates his mastery of the Talmud as well as of modern critical approaches to its study, even as he declares that he will remain an observant Jew and protect the sanctity of the Pentateuch as divinely given.

In the Beginning, published six years after The Promise, goes even further into the territory of modern critical study. Its protagonist, David Lurie, a yeshiva student, tells his father that not only does he want to know about modern critical approaches to Talmud, he also wants to see how secular university researchers and lecturers apply them to scripture itself. His father responds, “Tell me what it means to study Bible in a university. Your teachers will be goyim?” David says there will be Jews at the university too, though not all will be observant. “How can a goy who believes in Jesus or in nothing teach a Jew the Torah? How can a sinful Jew teach the Torah?” his father retorts. But David, like Reuven Malter, refuses to accept his father’s presumption that critical study of the Bible and an observant Jewish life must necessarily be in conflict. In a moving moment, one generous rabbi offers private encouragement to David not to shy back from the university but to bring the fruits of his learning back to his Orthodox community afterwards:

Lurie, if the Torah cannot go out into your world of scholarship and return stronger, then we are all fools and charlatans. I have faith in the Torah. I am not afraid of truth.… I want to know if the religious world view has any meaning today. Bring yourself back an answer to that, Lurie. Take apart the Bible and see if it is something more today than the Iliad and the Odyssey. Bring yourself back that answer, Lurie.

In what is for me Potok’s most disturbingly powerful achievement of all, his third novel, My Name Is Asher Lev, we meet another young Brooklyn Hasid, the son of inspiringly just and devout parents, this one with a gift for art. Through his adolescence, Asher Lev devotes all his attention to drawing and painting, to the bafflement and then to the hurt and angry bewilderment of his family and wider Orthodox community. Several years later, after he gains notoriety as an artist, Asher is driven to try to depict the pain he had watched on his mother’s face as she parented him alone while his father traveled the world at the rebbe’s request, rescuing persecuted Jews. Asher had watched her standing in pain astride the gap between her devout, traditionalist husband and the defiant son who could never understand – or be understood by – his father. What other symbol could possibly suffice for this depiction, Asher asks himself, than the form of the cross, the same symbol under which the Jews his father spent his life rescuing were driven from their homes and killed in pogroms? When Asher’s parents attend his show at a prominent New York gallery, Asher watches in agony as his father glimpses his final two paintings, Brooklyn Crucifixion I and II, in which his mother occupies the center, “tied to the vertical and horizontal lines.”

Then my father moved toward the paintings. I saw him bend to read the titles. His shoulders stiffened. Then he saw the name of the museum that had purchased the paintings. He straightened slowly. He turned and looked at me. His face wore an expression of awe and rage and bewilderment and sadness, all at the same time.… Who are you? the expression said. Are you really my son?… He did not speak to me.

Like Potok’s characters Danny Saunders and David Lurie, Asher Lev is compelled to venture beyond the confines of his father’s carefully circumscribed world, but he does so without abandoning his Judaism. He cannot be a Hasid, but he chooses to remain an observer of the commandments.

One of Potok’s sharpest and most sympathetic critics, Daniel Walden, founder of the Jewish Studies Program at Penn State, says that every Potok novel always circles around two basic questions: “1) how to live as an observant Jew in a secular society, and 2) to what degree [one can] hold to the tradition of Orthodox separateness in a secular society.” I think that is true as far as it goes, but Potok’s best novels (with Davita’s Harp the exception, as I earlier hinted) probe what it means to “hold” to tradition in a new, changed way. Potok’s Hasidic protagonists never give up Jewish observance, but they do, all of them, practice their Judaism in a way that represents a genuine break with their past understandings and practices of it. The Hebrew Bible scholar Jon Levenson, from his perspective as an observant Jew who teaches at Harvard, has remarked on the ability of some religious scholars, Jews and Christians alike, to hold together their use of modern critical biblical studies with an ongoing faith in their inherited religious traditions. In this way, Levenson says, using Ricoeur’s phrase, “the ‘second naiveté’ of those touched by historical criticism is to be distinguished from the innocence of the orthodox believer who has never become aware of the historical context and who does not feel the claim of historical investigation.” The novels of Chaim Potok dramatize young Jews finding their way to forms of Jewish life they wish to hold on to – their “second naiveté” – but at the real cost of leaving behind their former innocence and shocking or even alienating their communities of origin in the process.

It is this aspect of Potok’s work – his portrayal of young religious fundamentalists who are confronting modernity and negotiating their tradition in the process – that I think explains my initial enthrallment with his novels when I discovered them in my early twenties. There was, at first, a shock of recognition: I, a Gentile and an Evangelical Christian, knew something of what it was like to grow up in Potok’s world. The theorist and professor Michael Warner has spoken of the Pentecostal church culture of his childhood as a “profoundly hermeneutic” one: “Where I come from, people lose sleep over the meanings of certain Greek and Hebrew words. … Being a literary critic is nice, I have to say, but for lip-whitening, vein-popping thrills it doesn’t compete. Not even in the headier regions of Theory can we approximate that saturation of life by argument” – by ongoing contestation, that is, of the sentences and paragraphs of Scripture.

That captures my childhood church and family culture too, perfectly, and to this day I haven’t lost the conviction that when one is reading the Bible, the stakes are high. The agonies and desperations of Potok’s characters are instantly recognizable to me. (“Even though the faith Potok writes of is orthodox or Hasidic Judaism, Evangelical readers [and there are many] find themselves understanding and empathizing with the conflicts he presents,” wrote Cheryl Forbes in Christianity Today in 1978.)

Potok’s best novels probe what it means to “hold” to tradition in a new, changed way.

I was also drawn to the extraordinary depictions of friendship between young men in Potok. Daniel Walden says that the friendship Danny Saunders and Reuven Malter enjoy in The Chosen is “a kind of love story,” which I take to be a clumsy effort to sum up the way their relationship isn’t romantic and yet is obviously much more intimate than what one often encounters in similar portrayals – or in real life, for that matter. Daniel Boyarin, professor of Talmudic cultures at Berkeley, has made the case that “Judaism provides exempla for another kind of masculinity, one in which men do not manifest ‘a deeply rooted concern about the possible meanings of dependence on other males.’” Potok’s novels themselves provide some of these exempla, as their male characters confide their secrets in one another, confess to each other their insecurities and ambitions, and at times weep with or in front of each other. In my post-college years of loneliness, angst, and longing for male friendship, I found this aspect of Potok’s novels almost unbearably poignant.

But their primary source of power for me comes from their dramatization of the quest to retain one’s childhood faith in a new, altered form. I recall taking courses in the Hebrew text of the Old Testament and the Greek text of the New Testament at a conservative Christian college and learning, for the first time, about biblical criticism. I learned about what textual critics call variants – differences in wording and syntax of biblical verses that appear in various extant manuscripts, forcing translators to choose which ones they think are best supported over others they find less likely to be original. I was forced to grapple with tensions within the canonical texts that I had never noticed before. Mark 10:46, for example, says: “And as he [Jesus] was leaving Jericho with his disciples and a great crowd, Bartimaeus, a blind beggar, was sitting by the roadside.” But in Luke’s version (18:35), Jesus notices the blind beggar as he arrives at Jericho. Matthew’s Gospel has Judas committing suicide by hanging (27:3–10), whereas the Book of Acts has him die by falling and gashing his abdomen open (1:18–19). What, I wondered, did tensions like this mean for belief in the Bible’s inerrancy – its status of being inspired, without falsehood in matters of doctrine as well as historically and scientifically accurate? Reading Potok, I met characters who lost sleep over questions like this too.

I read a lot these days about “exvangelicals” – people who had upbringings like mine who now want nothing to do with them, people who have left Evangelical Christianity behind for good, owing variously to its anti-intellectual impulses; its demand for cultural and political conformity; its tribal disdain for those deemed outsiders; its inability to self-criticize, with sometimes abusive results; or all of the above. I understand and sympathize with the “exvangelicals.” In many ways, I am one. Like Potok’s characters, I went away to university and experienced something of the wider world beyond the confines of my Baptist, Republican childhood. I now make use of historical critical tools in my biblical scholarship and seminary classroom, and I am now a member of the Episcopal Church, which, to my childhood eyes, was barely a church at all.

I can’t be the Christian I used to be, but I want still, very much, to be a Christian.

Even so, the Evangelical faith in which I was nurtured continues to beguile, inspire, and compel me in ways I am still discovering. I can’t be the Christian I used to be, but I want still, very much, to be a Christian. Potok’s characters help me understand my complicated feelings. They are not only interested in the deconstructive moment, in which childhood certainties are relinquished. They strive also for the chastened second naiveté, on the far side of the desert of criticism, that will make it possible for them to go on being faithfully Jewish.

The eighteenth-century aphorist G. C. Lichtenberg says there is “a great difference between believing something still and believing it again.” The novels of Chaim Potok show us what the latter looks like, and in doing so, make believers like me feel much less alone.

In 1976, after the publication of In the Beginning, Potok talked with interviewer Harold Ribalow. Ribalow asked, “Why do you think non-Jews read your books?” Potok replied:

What non-Jews are doing – if I can get it from the letters they are sending me – is that they are simply translating themselves into the particular context of the boys and the fathers and the mothers and the situation that I’m writing about. So instead of being a Jew, you are a Baptist; instead of being an Orthodox Jew, you are a Catholic; and the dynamic is the same. The particular words or expressions that might be used might be Jewish or what have you, but they are simply putting themselves in the place of the subculture which is clashing core to core with the umbrella culture in which we all live.

It is no accident, probably, that Potok mentions Baptists and Catholics as the closest kin to the characters in his novels. “The Hebrew Torah is,” according to Gerald Bruns, “a monumental example of a binding text; its significance lies not only in what it contains or means but also in its power over those who stand within its jurisdiction.” Just this is the situation of those Christians – like the Baptists I grew up among – whose Bible exercises supreme authority in their traditions. For any readers, then, who treat Scripture as a “binding text,” for any so-called “people of the Book,” who, by dint of historical time and circumstance, must live with others who are not so bound and who marshal weighty arguments for their freedom, the novels of Chaim Potok will go on providing guidance and solace.



"Facing Anxiety Through the Arts: Attending and Transcending" by James K.A. Smith

This article made me feel a little intimidated at first, when Smith wrote about art that transcends and referred to a bunch of artists I don't know. But as I continued to read, and especially when I looked at and read about the example he used, I ate it up.

In this age of spiritual uncertainty, we need art that connects us to the pain of this world and then points us beyond.

But not the art that is offered to us for mass consumption. Many films and novels and songs promise entertainment as an escape from what makes us anxious. But mere escape does nothing to actually address our anxiety. Our entertainments offer distraction instead of comfort; or rather, entertainment pretends distraction is comfort, as if self-medicating our way to addiction is the way to address trauma or grief. It’s no wonder, then, that the anxiety comes roaring back after we leave the cinema or finish binging the series or become bored with the latest album.

The art we need in an age of anxiety is art that faces our fears and invites us to overcome them — art that both attends to the world and transcends the world.

One of the unique powers of art is an uncanny ability to attend to what is right in front of us; to become attuned to the familiar in a strange way; to light up the mundane that our hurried busyness too often misses. You can see this in the paintings of Vermeer or Alfonso Cuarón’s remarkable film, Roma. You can see it in the poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins and Joy Harjo. Such art teaches us to slow down and see. The arts attend to the world in such a way that we see it from a new slant. And that angle of attention can be revelatory, calling forth sometimes gratitude, sometimes grief, often both, and perhaps a renewed sense of what our society needs from us.

Art is especially adept at showing us beauty and brokenness. Seeing both is necessary for a meaningful life — and therein lies our calling. Frederick Buechner once said, “The place to which God calls you is the place where your deep gladness and the world’s deep hunger meet.” Art can often take us to that intersection by showing us the familiar anew. In other words, the arts help us hear our calling, giving us a sense of purpose in an uncertain world.

Attending to what’s wrong — what we’d rather not see — is the beginning of how art also invites us to transcend our moment, and even ourselves. By “transcend,” I mean that the arts attest to the fullness of our humanity and our ineffaceable longing for something more. This transcending is not escapism by other means because you only come to it by working through attention to our broken world.

Such art functions a bit like the prophets and psalmists of old who mastered the discipline of “lament.” Lamentis pitched at this intersection of attention and transcendence — attending to what’s wrong with the world and hoping for it to be otherwise. Such art isn’t simply “protest;” it is art infused with an imagination for how the world could be otherwise. Art that laments also “transcends” by getting us to hope, lifting our anger and grief to another horizon.

Some of our best art, even if it isn’t explicitly religious, nonetheless embodies what, in theology, we call “eschatology”—art that longs for another world, points to a “kingdom come,” hopes for the inbreaking of something new. But this eschatological art laments, it rages against the injustices of might, because it attends to what’s wrong with this world. A wilderness precedes every promised land.

Consider, for example, this work called “Sugar and Spice,” part of Letitia Huckaby’s “Suffrage Project.” A young African-American girl looks despondent. Her protest sign, “Enough!” resting on her shoulder is its own version of “How long, O Lord?” The print appears on a vintage cotton-picking sack, and once you realize that, an entire history of oppression and marginalization creeps up from your gut, up your spine, into your heart, halting at a lump in your throat. You don’t need it to reach your mind; you now “know” something you didn’t know before.

And yet that gentle pastel pink skirt evokes a ballerina’s tutu, and the image births in us a longing to see this young girl dance, to see her despondency turn to joy, to trade the now-necessary sign of protest for a banner of praise.

Prophetic art that inhabits this tension of lament and hope does not only communicate a “message;” it enacts what it embodies, it performs this transformation of mourning into dancing. Lament without hope is merely anger; hope without lament is a lie about the present. Art that is prophetic, that both laments and hopes, will be a unique offering to a heartbroken world that has forgotten to sing such songs. The arts breathe life when they help a society remember how to sing such music.

During this pandemic, my son and I re-read Camus’ famous novel, The Plague. The passage that struck me most powerfully was a scene in which Dr. Rieux and Tarrou, exhausted by their work on the front lines of the plague, nonetheless steal away for a swim in the Mediterranean Sea. The narrator tells us that “a strange happiness possessed him. Turning to Tarrou, he caught a glimpse on his friend’s face of the same happiness, a happiness that forgot nothing.” The arts enable us to transcend the tragic when they invite us into a joy that forgets nothing.

James K.A. Smith is professor of philosophy at Calvin University and serves as editor-in-chief of Image, a quarterly journal at the intersection of art, faith, and mystery. His most recent book is On the Road with Saint Augustine.

This essay is part of a series called “Finding Faith in the Age of Anxiety.” It explores solutions that faith offers in countering the troubles of our time. Perspectives from various religious traditions are represented.