Folks who follow these matters have been waiting for Charles Marsh’s
Strange Glory: A Life of Dietrich Bonhoeffer for a very long time. Way back in
the nineties, he spied within Bonhoeffer’s witness a whole new way of
conceiving the self: “The new being emerges in and out of togetherness…Jesus
Christ as life together activates the living consciousness of the other as
neighbor” (Reclaiming Dietrich Bonhoeffer: The Promise of Theology). From
there, as teacher, memoirist, and historian, Marsh took a long and fruitful
detour into America’s Civil Rights era, interviewing, recording oral histories,
and chronicling a past that isn’t at all dead in God’s Long Summer, The LastDays: A Son’s Story of Sin and Segregation at the Dawn of a New South, and TheBeloved Community: How Faith Shapes Social Justice, from the Civil RightsMovement to Today. Beloved community, the fact of it, the vision of the thing,
and the way it's always before us as a possibility is also named in his notion of LivedTheology, a project he exemplifies and enables and seeks to cultivate in others. It’s a vision of holistic gospel which makes Marsh
the kind of person who would see a live connection at work where others see
different compartments, issues, isms, and fields of study.
Take for example the spirit that moved community organizer John Perkins to
return to live and minister in Mississippi in 1960 even when his brother, a
decorated WWII war veteran, had been murdered by a police officer there 13 years
before, dying in his arms as his uncle searched in vain for a hospital that
would treat African Americans. Where does this spirit connect to the
motivations behind Will Campbell’s ministry to imprisoned Klansmen or
Bonhoeffer’s decision to return to Nazi Germany? Read Charles Marsh to find
out.
I’ll mention too that Marsh is the kind of person who would take the time
to introduce Jon Foreman to John Perkins to see what would come of it. What
comes of it is this sort of thing.
So….I drop all of this on you to celebrate the arrival of Strange Glory (the title of this post comes from a phrase on pg. 13) AND to notify all Nashvillians that Charles is among us tonight (Thursday 6:30) at Parnassus Books.
Come on out and be delighted.
1 comment:
Dave, I have meant to contact you for years. I read Everyday Apocalypse as a daily meditation/devotion shortly after it came out. I was empowered within it to further deconstruct my beliefs. So mucho thanks. Hey, radical concept--God is so informally present in the daily world-loving people for who they are and seeking to show redemption to them and through them.
I have read, been challenged and inspired by Bonhoeffer since the 1970’s as an undergrad and in grad school. I am not a theologian or a philosopher; I am a family therapist who runs a mental health program for those with thinking, feeling, behavior and/or substance use challenges who are receiving welfare benefits. I look forward to seeing Jesus in them daily. This is the church waiting to erupt. It happens in the daily dirty real world of life where grace and brokenness co-mingle. If it was simpler the world would likely be a better place.
Bonhoeffer inspired me to keep going, to keep finding being a follower of Jesus is relevant in the world today. BTW John Perkins has been a part of that journey for my wife and me since the mid 1970’s. Glad to see Jon Foremen and he connect. I felt like Jon was going to find a way to share his social justice concerns at some point. Take care
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