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Following Jesus Through the Eye of the Needle

FriJan 8

Tags: contest, Haiti, Missional
Posted in Books, Justice, Missional | 5 Comments »

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As a missionary, it is perhaps odds that I have never been a fan of reading missionaries biographies.  The title of Kent Annan’s new book, however, immediately got my attention.  “Following Jesus Through the Eye of the Needle” (Likewise Books / IVPress) is not your typical missionary story.  What set it apart is the honest and frank way Kent tells his story.  After all, if someone as human as Kent can do what he did, it leaves little excuse for us.

However, rather than me try to tell you, I decided to let Kent put it in his own words.  I hope you enjoy the interview.  Be sure to check out the video at the end and get involved in the exciting contest connected to this great book.

Jamie Arpin-Ricci: In brief, what is the story you tell in your book?

Kent Annan: My wife and I got on a plane one day in the middle of winter, took our jackets, hustled into the airport, and, sight-unseen, moved to Haiti. Within 24 hours we were living with a Haitian family–subsistence farmers out in the countryside, with no running water or electricity. We had one small room in their tin-roof house. We started learning the language quickly–because there was no other choice! More importantly, we started learning more about how to serve. We lived with this family (who dear friends to this day) for seven months, then moved to Port-au-Prince to work on education issues. Meanwhile the country was spiraling toward the ouster of the president. A volatile time. The external story is working to help our friends in Haiti during societal upheaval and danger. The internal story is how do I (and whoever reads it) try to follow Jesus seriously–while being honest and often quick to laugh at the stumbles along the way.

JAR: The title of your book, “Following Jesus Through The Eye Of The Needle” is brilliant.  What does it mean to you?

KA: Jesus meets this rich young man who really wants to know God and salvation. But then Jesus tells him the cost…and he slumps away, unable to give away all he has and follow Jesus. I’ve been that young man many times in my life. If you’re a middle-class (or higher) North American Christian, you too might have slumped away at times from Jesus’ call and our neighbors’ needs. So this is my story of trying to follow–not perfectly–that invitation Jesus gave to the rich young many in Mark 10. The cover of the book is a really powerful photo of a boy in a slum of Port-au-Prince. It’s provocative too–his alleyway is the eye of the needle, with the boy standing in the way. And I believe Jesus is inviting us not because he wants us to be uncomfortable–but because he wants us to lead a better life of discipleship. So the title is about Jesus’ invitation toward what’s hard but good!

JAR: What do you want readers to walk away with when they finish reading?

KA: I want them to have a hard time putting the book down–that is, I want you to really enjoy good sentences and wanting to finding out what happens next. Also, I want you as a reader to feel like I’ve been really honest with you–this is not a typical ministry or missionary book. It’s warts, doubts, stumbles, fears, and all (which includes laughter and joy too!). Finally, I want you as a reader, to feel like this connects with you right where you are (not just in Haiti). I want it it to connect with your experience of faith and finding your way toward justice and helping others.

JAR: Which contemporary writers have been most influential and helpful to you on your faith journey?

KA: I admire the honest faith of people like Philip Yancey. I admire Kafka’s search for truth and creative way of communicating it. Same with Flannery O’Connor. Doestoevsky puts doubt and deep faith on pages right next to each other. Memoirists like Anne Lamott, are deeply faithful but brutally honest about the bumps along the way. A completely different list could pop into mind tomorrow night! These weren’t all contemporary, but they come to mind now. In my faith journey, I’m influenced by writers who I find profoundly honest, ready to laugh (first of all at themselves and then in general), and also approach literature more as a way to take me (as a reader) along on an interesting, faithful journey rather than preaching at me.

JAR: Tell us about the writing/video contest connected to the book (see video below).

KA: Hope you can join us! This book is about active faith–so we thought we’d give people a chance come to Haiti with me and experience the world and ideas of the book. Unfortunately, we can’t take everyone along. So there’s a contest. People can write a brief essay or make a video to enter. The trip is active and personal, just like the book. We’d love to have you enter.

JAR: Tell us about Haiti Partners.  What is it?  How can we get involved?

KA: 100% of my author proceeds from this book go directly to education in Haiti. Specifically, Haiti Partners helps Haitians change Haiti (because ultimately the change comes from them, not us) through education. In a place where only 50% of children are able to attend school and 80% of people live on less than $2 a day, our education work is focused on four main groups of people: students, teachers, leaders, and disciples. So the first way people could get involved is (if you like it!) is to share the book with your church, read it together in a small group, and let others know about it–because people will hopefully benefit from reading it and the book benefits education in Haiti. Second, I’d invite you to check out http://www.haitipartners.ca (or http://www.haitipartners.org for Americans). If what we do resonates with you, then we’d love for you to get involved. We give specific ways that can make it possible for more Haitian children go to school or helping a church get Bibles. All of this–the book and this work–is about wanting to follow Jesus and do justice. And it seems together and as individuals, we’re supposed to be humble in our approach, but bold in our vision and commitment.

JAR: Tell us something unique about yourself that would never know unless you told us.

KA: Hmm, you’ll learn lots about me in the book, since I didn’t think it was valuable or interesting if I glossed over things about the experience! I always joke with Haitian friends about learning to climb a coconut tree by just bare hand and feet, but I watch friends do it and it’s way too scary for me. So I can’t claim that unique (for a North American) skill. Is it unique that I’ve recently regained my skill at Chutes & Ladders (it was Snakes instead of Chutes when I was a kid, but maybe that’s too scary now) with my daughter? Sorry, I don’t have a great response on this one. I guess “lived in Haiti” is my final answer.

JAR: Thanks Kent.

Check out this exciting contest to win a tip to visit Haiti with Kent Annan.


Tags: contest, Haiti, Missional

This entry was posted on Friday, January 8th, 2010 at 12:44 pm and is filed under Books, Justice, Missional. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

5 Responses to “Following Jesus Through the Eye of the Needle”

  1. Drew Tatusko says:
    January 8, 2010 at 12:50 pm

    thanks for sharing Kent!

    i was not aware that your book had been published yet. i will have to buy it asap to support you, your family, your ministry, etc. miss you, hope you are well, and always have fond memories brother. peace.

  2. Jamie says:
    January 8, 2010 at 12:52 pm

    Thanks for stopping by, Drew. I am sure Kent appreciates your kind words.

    Peace,
    Jamie

  3. The Lord’s Prayer (2) – SOTM Series (9) « A Living Alternative Our Missional Pilgrimage says:
    January 10, 2010 at 4:11 pm

    [...] Previous Post – Follow Jesus Through the Eye of the Needle [...]

  4. My Upcoming Trip To Haiti « A Living Alternative Our Missional Pilgrimage says:
    March 3, 2010 at 2:38 pm

    [...] months ago I had the chance to interview Kent Annan about his new book “Following Jesus Through The Eye Of The Needle: Living Fully, Loving [...]

  5. My 2 Favorite Books of 2010 « A Living Alternative Our Missional Pilgrimage says:
    December 20, 2010 at 10:58 am

    [...] Partners: “After Shock: Searching for Honest Faith When Your World Is Shaken”.  (See my interview with Kent about his first book, “Following Jesus Through The Eye Of The Needle”).  This book is [...]

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