I was given a copy of "Blue like Jazz", by Donald Miller, as a birthday present. I am a few chapters from the end.
(Finishing a book is a huge personal victory for me, but believe me, this one was easier to get through than most others I've tried). Donald Miller describes his book as "non-religious thoughts on Christian spirituality". I loved it. I connected with the author in almost every chapter.The book makes you feel OK with the fact that you don't have it all together as a "Christian". He writes about the embarassing and underwhelming stuff that is common to everybody who is honest enough to admit it. Like blue navel lint.
He liberates the "Christian" from having to know all the answers in life. I admit, I don't know why navel lint is blue.
Are guys like Donald part of a new generation of believers that are so uncertain, so watered down, that they will become the weak link in the Christian legacy? I prefer to think of them as Western Christianity's only hope. Salvaging respectability for believers from the wreckage left behind by a preachy, smug, insensitive generation of delusionally "grand" church leaders.

I will admit, I know nothing about navel lint...ha ha ha..
ReplyDeleteBut I enjoyed the Book "Blue like Jazz", especially the illustration of falling inlove with jazz only after seeing a jazz musician inlove with playing the blues....
I sometimes think christianity is much more appealing if someone is so inlove with God, that others in a sense find God through our love and not us convincing them to love him...
The book is obviously very open, honest, RAW and sometimes alarming...especially because he is so honest. But i think we as humans relate well to weakness's...because we all have them...and him being honest for example in the chapter where he speaks about himself not really tithing(ha ha ha)thats just brilliant....because it helps us to see we not perfect...we all on a journey of self improvement...
Anyway...I love his book...
He is real...and when someone is real...i think they help others to open up doors in their hearts to trust and to just relax in their own skin...
i think that one of the most important qualities for a christian to have is that of honesty. it doesn't help if we pretend to have things all together if, on the inside, we are confused and uncertain. there are few things that put off non-christians more than hypocrisy and when we pretend to have things together when we don't, we are being as hypocritical as ever! i think that christians don't realise just how obvious it is to non-christians when we are lying about out security in God. if we are doubting, they see it. and if we pretend that we aren't doubting when we in fact are, then they feel scorn for us and by extension things in which we believe (ie God!).
ReplyDeleteso... we mustn't be scared to admit our shortcomings and lack of answers. people respect honesty. and in a world searching for answers, a world that is accustomed to having less than the full picture revealed, few people expect anyone to understand EVERYTHING, anyway.