Friday, 29 December 2017

The Other Mountain by Rowan Williams



A slim volume of poems by the former Archbishop, which range widely across time and space, showing, as one would expect, the great word smith at work.

Many take on powerful, painful, events with respectful honesty rather than cheap emotion.

Whale Song: Choosing Life with Jonah by Keren Dibben-Wyatt



Keren Dibbens-Wyatt uses the story of Jonah alongside her personal experience of depression to offer a message of hope.

Writing from within (I assume) an Evangelical Christian tradition her approach to Jonah seems to take every detail as historical fact – but even if you take a less literal approach the message will remain intact.

Keren's message is that even in the darkest moments there is hope – based on love, in particular the all embracing and merciful love of God.

This might make it hard for those without a Christian faith to engage?

This is probably one of those books that is helpful to read before and after the moments of deepest depression – before to give tools and resilience, after to help process the experience – but in the moment itself the mind is often closed off to the rational and external voices.

King Ludwig II




Have our trip to Munich and visits to some of Ludwig's castles I got the following books out the library:

The Swan King by Christopher McIntosh (published 1982), and
Ludwig II of Bavaria by Katerina von Burg (published 1989)

Reading their two accounts of Ludwig's death is a good example of the myths and mystery that surround him. McIntosh is convinced that Ludwig entered the lake in an attempt as suicide, von Burg rules out suicide and is convinced that it was an assassination.

Maybe von Burg is a little too certain to find those around Ludwig in those final hours guilty, however there are enough ambiguities in the events that McIntosh reads as something of a whitewash.

The Day The Revolution Began by Tom Wright



So I have admitted defeat on this one – I find Tom Wright's prose is too much for me. He provides an argument that is so rich that it is hard to keep the ideas all in play at the same time in order to follow it.

I skipped to the end and the final 2 paragraphs provide a summary:

“The cross itself, in short, stands at the center of the Christian message, the Christian story, and the Christian life and mission. It has lost none of its revolutionary and transformative power down through the centuries. The cross is where the great story of God and creation, focused on the strange story of God and Israel and then focused still more sharply on the personal story of God and Jesus, came into terrible but life-giving clarity. The crucifixion of Jesus of Nazareth was a one-off event, the one on behalf of the many, the one moment in history on behalf of all others through which sins would be forgiven, the powers robbed of their power, and humans redeemed to take their place as worshippers and stewards, celebrating the powerful victory of God in his Messiah and so gaining the Spirit's power to make his kingdom effective in the world.

The message for us, then, is plain. Forget the “works contract,” with its angry, legalistic divinity. Forget the false either/or that plays different “theories of atonement” against one another. Embrace the “covenant of vocation” or, rather, be embraced by it as the Creator calls you to a genuine humanness at last, calls and equips you to bear and reflect his image. Celebrate the revolution that happened once for all when the power of love overcame the love of power. And, in the power of that same love, join in the revolution here and now.”

Tuesday, 26 December 2017

Judas The Troubling History of the Renegade Apostle by Peter Stanford



Some might wonder what the point of reading about Judas is – the best we could hope to learn is what NOT to do?

However the way that the Church, and wider society, have related to Judas reveals a lot about what they thought about both good and evil. As Stanford shows the Biblical accounts of Judas leave us with more answers than questions, details from each Gospel could be used to build different pictures.

Central to Stanford’s exploration is the question of whether Judas' action, in leading the authorities to Jesus and kicking off the final events of Jesus' arrest, crucifixion, and, for Christians, resurrection, are the work of the “devil”, ie killing the Son of God, or the work of God, as part of the salvation of the work - something which remains contested and about which Stanford does not conclude.

But it points to the complexity of the very idea of “betrayal”. John le CarrĂ© in A Prefect Spy has one of the characters say Love is whatever you can still betray. Betrayal can only happen if you love.” And Stanford explores the kiss as a token for the relationship that must have existed between Jesus and Judas, and might have endured even across the act of betrayal? And we can recall Andrew Lloyd-Weber & Tim Rice giving Judas the song “I don't know how to Love Him” points to this same tension.

One of the points of departure for my interest in thinking about Judas was his presence at the Last Supper – what does it tell us about the Eucharist that Jesus shared it with Judas, according to at least some of the accounts, despite (or maybe because of) knowing Judas was going to betray Him.

Pope Francis wrote, in Evangelii Gaudium, “The Eucharist, although it is the fullness of sacramental life, is not a prize for the perfect, but a powerful medicine and nourishment for the weak”. And holding on to Judas at the table is a good way to remind ourselves of this fact.

4 of the Church of England's 7 Common Worship Eucharistic Prayers recall that it was “on the night that he was betrayed” that the Last Supper took place. We might not think of Judas as part of our liturgy, although unnamed, his presence is there in our central act of worship.

However the structure of these Prayers, which begin the narration of the institution of the Eucharist with “... on the night that He was betrayed He ...” places in your mind the betrayal before the Eucharist and perhaps clouds your recall of Judas being there. But hen Jesus offers His the bread and wine as his Body and Blood, and says take this “all of you”, that all is addressed to Judas as much as anyone else.

There is a common approach to that of James Goodman's book on Abraham and the Sacrifice of Isaac – looking at the textual origins of the story, the development of interpretation over the centuries, and end with reflections on contemporary understandings.

The first question in this case is whether the texts we have inherited bear witness to actual historical events, and if they do is their witness accurate. Stanford contends that scripture “deserve to be taken seriously but not literally as historical accounts” - that is he wishes to resist the two extremes, both those who would write them off entirely as well as the literalists.

At the end of the day Stanford finds that much of the story of Judas serves little or no theological propose. This, in his mind, points towards its likely historical accuracy, details are included because they are what people remember actually happening rather than to assist the evangelist's polemical agenda.

Much of the book is painful reading, as the Churches for most of their history have used Judas as exemplar for the whole Jewish people, and bound references to Judas and his betrayal directly into wider anti-Semitism. We might place this in the distance Medieval past, but we have to be more honest, it was not until after the horror of the Holocaust that the Churches have made genuine and (near but not) universal efforts to separate themselves from anti-Semitism.

But it is the exploration of contemporary depictions of Judas that are of most interest – one might see some of these to be playful. There is something of a more rounded humanity to Judas that inspires people, artists and writers, to engage with his story in a way that they seem uninterested in most of the other Apostles. (Perhaps Peter's denial is one of the few other opportunities).

Standford writes in an engaging style, covering a huge amount of material in under 300 pages – and signposting plenty of sources to go and explore if you want to go deeper into particular issues.

As a little aside, while in the Holy Land he sees a sign, aimed at tour guides, “Please No Explanation in the Church” - and it made me smile, because as he notes some have perhaps taken that to be a much more general rule...