Having written all this, I should also confess that there
are some books I read very occasionally because they reflect the roots of my
coming-to-faith.
I’ve read – and mostly enjoyed – the first twelve Left Behind books because the church in
which I came to faith taught the Rapture. I still love reading Chick tracts (here’s
my favourite) – not because I agree with the theology peddled in them, but
because they, as a medium, resonate with my ecclesial roots. And I often
re-read the Christian biographies I devoured as a teenager – books such as
Melody Green’s No Compromise (about
Keith Green), Nicky Cruz’s Run, Baby, Run,
and David Wilkerson’s The Cross and the Switchblade. Indeed, No Compromise,
or perhaps Keith Green’s life itself, continues to challenge me.
A few weeks ago, I picked up a book by the aforementioned
David Wilkerson: Hungry for More of Jesus: The Way of Intimacy with Christ. I figured this (£1.00!) book might
be a useful read for me, given that (a) I’m going through something of a dry,
intimacy-free patch with God at the moment, and (b) I have some kind of respect
for Wilkerson, a respect borne of reading about his exploits in New York City.
But I have to say, I’m two chapters in and I’m wondering if the rest of the
book’s worth reading. Why? The second chapter of Hungry interprets the book of Ruth in such a way that it offends my
scholarly sensibilities (yes, I do have some)
by taking far too many liberties with the text. I can see how Wilkerson’s
approach would go down well in certain local church contexts, or even as part
of the rhetoric of preaching; his overall point in the second chapter is surely
sound. But it’s not the destination that bothers me; it’s the route.
A few days ago, a friend and I were talking about Christian
paperbacks. I said that these days, I’m hesitant about reading Christian
paperbacks because I’m not sure what I get from them. She suggested that maybe
reading Christian paperbacks is difficult for someone who’s been trained to
think in certain ways – and she, a trained and practising educational
psychologist, admitted that she finds reading pop-psychology books frustrating.
I appreciate the parallel.
Of course, this might be a case of my being snobbish: How
dare I refuse to learn from someone who hasn’t articulated himself using the
language of the academy? (Surely this works both ways. I could retort: ‘Well,
how dare you assume that some who usually articulates himself using the
language of the academy has nothing to teach the so-called ordinary person in the
pew?’) But I don’t think it’s a refusal
to learn on my part. It’s simply that the medium doesn’t resonate with me (at
least, not these days), so that whatever good Wilkerson is saying (and he is saying good things) is buried beneath
communicative forms with which I (now?) find it hard to identify. Employing a
limited analogy, and assuming that musical form is neutral, I could argue that
most people would find it hard to worship singing hymns death-metal style
(perhaps that should be ‘grunting’ or ‘growling’ hymns rather than ‘singing’)
simply because it’s not a style that resonates with many churchgoers. The form
of our communication, the words we use and the style in which they’re dressed, surely
does matter.
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