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Posts Tagged ‘Activism’

Mission, Activism & the Prodigal Son

Wednesday, July 20th, 2011

Previous Post – Deviant Sexuality

Recently on the Out of Ur blog, Skye Jethani posted a two-part post entitled “Has Mission Become Our Idol?” (Part One and Part Two).  Related to his forthcoming book “With: Reimagining The Way You Relate To God” (Thomas Nelson, Aug. 2011), Jethani expresses strong concern with a pattern he sees increasingly common among Christians today:

“When we come believe that our faith is primarily about what we can do for God in the world, it is like throwing gasoline on our fear of insignificance. The resulting fire may be presented to others as a godly ambition, a holy desire to see God’s mission advance–the kind of drive evident in the Apostle Paul’s life. But when these flames are fueled by fear they reveal none of the peace, joy, or love displayed by Paul and rooted in the Spirit. Instead the relentless drive to prove our worth can quickly become destructive.” (source)

Warning against what he calls “missional activism” (or “missionalism”, borrowing from George McDonald), Jethani believes that making the mission of God central to our Christian identity not only fuels the fear of insignificance in those who can’t measure up, but also replaces God as the central focus of our faith.  Tying our sense of worth and identity- even our acceptability before God & others- to the works we should do for God is a recipe for burn-out, addiction and a misdirected faith.  In part two of the series, he goes on to use the famed Parable of the Prodigal Son (Luke 15:11-32) to illustrate how God calls us to something different (more on that shortly).

Jethani’s cautions are valid (as I affirm in my post, “The Miracle of Justice”).  After all, so much of Jesus’ teachings (as well as those of His apostles) underlined the fact that we do not find identity or security in fulfilling external acts, but only through entering into relationship with Jesus Christ through His redemption.  However, I feel that Jethani goes too far in his analysis, confusing that pursuit for identity with a commitment to mission itself.  While he acknowledges the importance of active mission, in his attempt to place God before mission (a valid and necessary distinction), he drives to large a wedge between the two.  The resulting (potential) divorce poses a greater danger to the wider church than the one he warns against in the first place.  Let me try to explain where I see this happening.

To illustrate his point, Jethani relies heavily on the Parable of the Prodigal Son.  Comparing the two sons, he says:

“The older son lived for his father. And for his service he expected a reward. In this way he really is no that different from the younger son. Neither boy was particularly interested in a relationship with the father, instead both were focused on what they might get from him. The younger son simply took what he desired while the older son, being a more patient and self-disciplined person, worked for it. Their methods were night and day, but both sons desired the same thing and in neither case was it the father. In other words, both sons sought to use their father. Both were jerks, one just happened to be of a more socially-acceptable variety.” (source)

Jethani goes on to say that the older son’s sin was obviously not his desire to be obedient to the father, but rather that he sought his significance and worth through that obedience.  While such a lesson might be drawn from the story, this is where I believe Jethani departs from the more central concern of the parable.  Less to do with significance and worth, Jesus was confronting the Pharisaical arrogance that their security (and seniority) before God was defined by their adherence to the Law- note, adherence more than obedience.  Further, it was the pride in their adherence over and against the unclean, unacceptable “sinners” that inspired Jesus’ telling of the parable in the first place.

The complexity of what Jesus is saying in this (and the two preceding) parables cannot be overlooked.  While a general sense of what Jethani is suggesting might be true, I do not believe it is at the heart of this parable is calling us to.  I wish I could spend more time unpacking it, but instead I will highly recommend Kenneth Bailey’s must read book “The Cross & the Prodigal: Luke 15 Through the Eyes of Middle Eastern Peasants” (IVPress, 2005).

Asserting by the father’s response (Luke 15:31-32) that what he (and thus God) wants above all else is our presence with Him, Jethani asserts:

“What brought the father joy was not the older son’s service, but his presence–having his son with him. This is what the father cares about most, not his property or which son receives more of it. While the sons are fixated on the father’s wealth, the father is fixated on his sons. This is what they both failed to understand, and it is what both Christian consumerism and Christian activism fail to grasp. God’s gifts are a blessing and his work is important, but neither can or should replace God himself as our focus.” (source)

On the face of it, who could argue with such a statement?  Of course God’s primary concern is with His relationship to each of us.  It is not about what we can get out of God, nor about what we must do for Him.  We must love God, and such a love requires presence, to be with God.  In this, I have no argument with his point.  However, when we read the father’s response to the older son, there is something we should not miss:

“‘My son,’ the father said, ‘you are always with me, and everything I have is yours.  But we had to celebrate and be glad, because this brother of yours was dead and is alive again; he was lost and is found.’” Luke 15:31-32

That the father links in a single sentence the affirmation of his sons presence with him and that all he owns is also the sons, should not be overlooked.  Yes, the father wanted intimate, loving relationship with his sons, but his sons presence included being with his father in the family business (thus the reference to shared ownership).  Unlike today, that affirmation of shared ownership is not akin business partners with equal shares in their business, but something far more meaningful.  The son’s shared ownership of all that the father had was an affirmation of the fathers acknowledged blessing and acceptance of his son.  This is what makes his reconciliation with the younger son so radical, as that son had relinquished his right to sonship in the act of liquidating his inheritance.  Further, the father longed for the brother to join him in welcoming home his brother and in the celebration if his return, which is, in fact, itself central to the mission of God.

The point here is that Scripture doesn’t so quickly divide between presence with God and participation in His mission.  In fact, we are reminded again and again that it is in participation in God’s mission that we are genuinely encounter the presence of God.  While this doesn’t invalidate Jethani’s legitimate caution against idolizing mission, his means of responding to it produces a division that is not present in the very parable he uses to make his point.

Why is this an important division to address?  While there is a need to address the dangerous trend of those seeking identity and significance through activism rather than relationship with God, the solution is not to minimize mission.  The very act of dividing presence with God as separate from participating in His mission will only further separate people from that very presence.  Instead of framing presence with God as a higher calling than participating in mission, we need to help people understand that the motivation for participating in God’s mission is that very presence, which then accomplishes the task of reducing the tendency to earn God’s approval through activism.

While the risks that Jethani point out are real and must be addressed, I am convinced that the opposite extreme- that of people justifying the mediocrity of their active participation in God’s mission- is a far greater risk to the church today.  I fear that these articles might unintentionally contribute to this problem by present the unnecessary division.  Thus my response here.

My relationship with my wife requires intimacy and presence.  Yes, that includes (significantly) time and energy to be with her alone, relishing in each others presence.  However, just as important (and with much, much higher frequency), our presence with one another happens as we share life together fulfilling the so-called “mundane” tasks of life together- raising our children, keeping our home, earning our wages- all with a commitment of love, service and self-sacrifice.  It is the very intimacy and love that we share that motivates us to serve together towards our common vocations.

In the same way, I believe that the best response to the trend that Jethani points out is not to create a hierarchy of priority between presence and mission, but rather to encourage an active presence with God that significantly (though not exclusively) includes participation in His mission, motivated by love and relationship, not fear, striving or pride.

I’d love to hear your thoughts, so please weigh in below.

Tags: Activism, Bible, Missional
Posted in Bible, Discipleship, Jesus, Justice, Missional | 11 Comments »

Interview With Phileena Heuertz

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

Previous Post – Prayers For Living Into God’s World

Living & working in the context I do, the hard work of missional community & activism with the marginalized lives in difficult tension with the need to a life of disciplined spirituality, of contemplation.  It is, perhaps, the single deepest challenge I face in my role in community.  That is why Phileena Heuertz’s new book “Pilgrimage of a Soul: Contemplative Spirituality for the Active Life” is a powerful gift to the Body of Christ.  Speaking beautifully, personally & authoritatively from her own experience, Phileena manages to write a book that will speak to the inactive contemplative and the un-contemplative activist.  In other words, it speaks to every Christians.

In case you haven’t heard of Phileena (and if you haven’t, get familiar with her, because she is an important voice in the Church today), here is her brief bio from IVPress:

Phileena Heuertz is one of the leading directors of Word Made Flesh (WMF)–an international community serving Christ among the most vulnerable of the world’s poor.

Over the years, Phileena has traveled through nearly 70 countries working with marginalized and oppressed people–abandoned children, victims of HIV and AIDS, sexually exploited women and children, people recovering from drug addictions, children who live on the streets, refugees and children of combat and war.

Since 1995, Phileena has served WMF through child advocacy, community care and leadership development. In 2004 she founded the Community Care Center-one of the internal support offices for the international movement. Phileena believes that union of action and contemplation is crucial to ongoing personal transformation, healthy community life, and sustainable, authentic social justice efforts. Phileena’s responsibilities require her attention in the international office in Omaha, Nebraska, as well as in the WMF communities across the globe.

“Pilgrimage of a Soul” is another gem from IVPress (who sent me the book gratis) in their Likewise Books imprint.  I had the privilege to interview Phileena about the book, so hear what she has to say in her own words.  Then order the book today!

Jamie Arpin-Ricci: The subtitle of your book is “Contemplative Spirituality for the Active Life”.  For some people this might seem like an odd fit.  Why do you think it is so critical to bring these two dynamics together?

PH: It is critical to bring together contemplation and action because one purifies and authenticates the other. True contemplation will necessarily bear fruit in activism. Faith without works is dead.

JAR: You decided to explore this topic in a very personal way.  Why did you choose to do so through storytelling?  How will this change the experience for the reader?

PH: Using narrative of my sabbatical year—making pilgrimage in Spain and then in solitude at Duke has a way of making very deep and in some ways abstract spiritual truths more concrete and tangible for the reader.

JAR: Many Christians, while inspired by the life you have followed Christ into, might feel that they will never live the kind of life you lead.  While I don’t need convincing, convince those readers what you book has to offer them.

PH: POAS will invite the reader to reflect on their personal journey and unfolding life story. The message of the book is inviting the reader into living their life authentically.

JAR: Can you very briefly explain the seven movements outlined in the book?

PH: Awakening, Longing, Darkness, Death, Transformation, Intimacy and Union are seven movements that I’ve experienced in my personal spiritual journey. I believe these movements of the soul are universal to those who are attentive to them, and they support ongoing Christian conversion and growth. These movements can certainly be found in the Scriptures, but when they are personally acknowledged and experienced, we are on our way toward living the abundant life of which Jesus so often spoke. Though we can know about these movements, the better is to experience them. Experiential knowledge is the greatest knowledge. We can argue and debate head knowledge. But who can dismiss what one experiences?

Pilgrimage of a Soul attempts to help us connect our head to our heart that we might be more aware of and experience more of the living God.

These seven movements or signposts in the journey are not really linear but more circular in nature. We could be in and out of one movement in almost any order. The spiritual journey is not so much about progressing from one point to another as it is about surrendering to ongoing transformation and union with God. These seven movements support us in that objective; and though these experiences are quite internal and symbolic, they have very concrete, external expressions in our daily life—this is the place where contemplation meets action.

To try and summarize these, “Awakening” is the point in our journey when we see more clearly particular illusions in our life—more specifically—parts of our false self that we had previously been asleep to.

“Longing” symbolizes the discontentment in us that desires more—more connection to God, self, others and the world in which we live.

“Darkness” and “Death” are the necessary experiences to bringing forth new life that we most often resist. Ancient Christian mysticism has always affirmed the gift of darkness that essentially clouds our senses of the consoling presence of God that we might be purified and grow in the spiritual faculties that relate to God on a deeper level.

Death is the experience of final surrender to the illusion(s) we’ve awakened to. Though the illusory false self is just that—an illusion—our identity clings to it all the same. To let go of it is frightening because it’s all we’ve known and we are less acquainted with the true self (if acquainted at all). So there is no comfort in what is coming—it is too unknown to us. Death (in the spiritual journey and the final material death when our body dies) is the ultimate act of faith because it is a final gesture of trust and love in the One who is greater than us and knows us better than we know ourselves. By surrendering to death of our illusions, we trust that new life—resurrection—will come, though we have no concrete guarantee of it.

“Transformation” then is that long, hoped-for new life. Transformation is the period of living into greater truth; living into greater awareness of the true self.

“Intimacy” is the experience of growing deeper in love with God, self, others and the world. Anxieties, turmoil, defense mechanisms, pretensions and pathologies that previously plagued us have been settled, healed and we are freer to know (God, self, others, the world) and be known (by God, self, others, the world).

“Union” is the experience of the fragmented parts of ourselves (identity, confused perceptions of God, broken relationships, misaligned vocation) coming together. In union we experience these previously broken places now restored, redeemed, made whole. We experience greater centeredness in the love of God—which permeates all of our life actions.

JAR: Was there anything in the book you wanted to include, but couldn’t?  Tell us about it.

PH: Interesting question! Actually I’m very satisfied with the content of the book. There wasn’t anything I wanted to include that was edited out. David Zimmerman, my editor at IVP, was really committed to ensuring my voice, heart and desires for the book came through during the editing process.

JAR: David is my editor as well and that has been my experience with him as well, so that is encouraging!  Tell us something odd & unique about yourself that few people would know about.

PH: So funny! I tend to be an open book—especially now with the release of a very intimate unveiling of my life in POAS. Hmmm odd and unique? You’ve really stumped me. Maybe you should ask my husband!

JAR: Thanks Phileena.

Tags: Activism, Books, Contemplation, Missional
Posted in Books, Community | 7 Comments »

  • @MonetteChilson Thanks so much! Let me know if you do. I'd love to hear how it goes. Peace! # 1 hour ago
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