This book by Walter Brueggemann was one of the most holistically profound, affirming, challenging, enlightening and generally energising-of-the-spirit books I've read in a while. It explores through radical and faithful analysis of Biblical themes and narratives the lens of sociopolitical critique common in the prophetic traditions, which with deep relevance touch on everything from economics to personal virtue to cultural memory in both their original contexts (as cries lobbied against Israel as an ancient people and state, trying and failing to live in collective relationship with their creator and liberator God) and you-don't-need-to-dig-too-far-down-to-find poignant assessment of the world's ongoing broken mode of being; the theological thrusts found here are characteristically recognisable in the human condition and so universal enough to have a pertinence that fully transcends historical context, speaking to us as persons in a much broader sense. Brueggemann tracks these themes through God's covenant with Israel, as Moses and the Law-based society was intended as a developmental (and flawed/incomplete) model of how humankind could live in relationship with God - and this formed an alternative form of community which was fundamentally at odds with those mainstream form of community prevalent among the species, termed the 'royal consciousness', which prioritises individual gain and power such that everyone is trying to be the king of their own little worlds (which is lucky enough for the tiny minority who actually are kings, or royalty, or whatever, but obviously then leads to entrenchment of inequality and alienation of people from each other which compounds the breakdown of a society of sinners); this is particularly stark reading in our current vein of history, where never before has the average human had so much sheer abundance of resources to consume, concretely or abstractly, in lives of competitively-dulled-to-its-own-spectacularity blasé luxurious discontent. The countercultural forms this alternative community takes are discussed in broad scriptural strokes, as are the forms of counter-countercultual suppression launched in response by the royal consciousness. Next, from closer analysis of prophetic writings, we look at how particuarly gifted members of the alternative consciousness/community are able to stir up remembrance of the betterness of that alternative through: exercising sympathetic and empathetic action as a critique of the lovelessness of the mainstream order; and energising the collective imagination of the alternative community's members to provoke amazement at, and thereby realign social consciousness toward, the God who liberated and established such a community at all. Further chapters then explore how Jesus took these aspects of prophetic function to their extreme in his teachings, life and death etcetera. Finally, there is a chapter and also a postscript considering how these ideas may be applied in practical ministry.
This is not a book for everyone. It will unsettle many conservative and liberal Christian readers alike, at its clarity of argument and yet the seemingly-radical nature of working through its implications. But Brueggemann is a well-rooted scholar of God's word, and this book is a hugely potent systematic examination of one of the most intangible concepts in theology (relative to the current hegemony of materialistic positivism anyway) in ways that shed great light of insight into recurrent Biblical themes and narratives, while being inarguably of immense and urgent necessity in our world today. As a global civilisation, we are careening slowly across the wilderness without even clear voices to be heard more than few far between shouting in it; I believe as believers the truths of faith are as brilliantly and deeply relevant as ever yet we have lost our capacity for meaningful cross-cultural dialogue in societies poisoned by secular anxiety and corporate blinkers - thus it is even more imperative that Christians with a capacity for communication, for engaging their sociocultural contexts in ways that are as pragmatic, flexible and sensitive as they are conscious of the primary, holistic, eternal context, to do so with such things in mind as they speak, write, create and relate.
This is not a book for everyone. It will unsettle many conservative and liberal Christian readers alike, at its clarity of argument and yet the seemingly-radical nature of working through its implications. But Brueggemann is a well-rooted scholar of God's word, and this book is a hugely potent systematic examination of one of the most intangible concepts in theology (relative to the current hegemony of materialistic positivism anyway) in ways that shed great light of insight into recurrent Biblical themes and narratives, while being inarguably of immense and urgent necessity in our world today. As a global civilisation, we are careening slowly across the wilderness without even clear voices to be heard more than few far between shouting in it; I believe as believers the truths of faith are as brilliantly and deeply relevant as ever yet we have lost our capacity for meaningful cross-cultural dialogue in societies poisoned by secular anxiety and corporate blinkers - thus it is even more imperative that Christians with a capacity for communication, for engaging their sociocultural contexts in ways that are as pragmatic, flexible and sensitive as they are conscious of the primary, holistic, eternal context, to do so with such things in mind as they speak, write, create and relate.
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