52 - Conspiring Prayer with Mark Karris / Transcript

Note: Can I Say This at Church is produced for audio listening. If able, I strongly encourage you to listen to the audio, which has inflection, emotion, sarcasm where applicable, and emphasis for points that may not come across well in written word. This transcript is generated using a combination of my ears and software, and may contain errors. Please check the episode for clarity before quoting in print.

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Mark Karris 0:00

I believe prayer is powerful, but not in a traditionally understood way. Like I would like some people read my book, and they're like, “Oh, so we shouldn't pray at all?” And I'm like, the last section of my book has over 20 prayers by theologians, authors, lay people, I'm very passionate about prayer. The last section of the book is dedicated to that. But it's nuanced. So if one was to ask me, Mark, if I'm praying for my sick father, and he has cancer, does it do anything? Does it matter? And I want to say off course it does. Never stop praying. So for me, there's a few reasons for that. One, is that God loves relationship. We are always to pour our hearts out to God. Right? So for me, it's a relationship with God; in that prayer, it can change ourselves and it can change God in the sense that if I'm praying for my ailing Father, God could whisper into my ears and this is where conspiring prayer comes in. Here is how I want you to be my hands and feet in this situation. Here's where I want you to increase some shalom in your father's life.

Seth Price 1:38

Everybody, happy November! November is a month of gratitude. And so let me first express my thanks to those of you that have downloaded those of you that have listened to the few of you that have been here since the beginning and thousands of you that are here now I am so thankful for each and every one of you for participating in and with this podcast. If you haven't not yet done. So go to the website, CanISayThisAtChurch.com send me some feedback by email, let me know what you would like to hear different next year artists, authors, topics, questions, anything at all would really love if that happened. Please remember to rate and review the show on iTunes, it really does help more so than honestly then you should think that it should. But that's the way computer algorithms work.

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So I've talked a bit in the past a little bit about prayer, but mostly in a contemplate of way, as it deals to how I relate to God. But I feel like we're burying the lead there. So oftentimes, I know we're taught to pray, you know, at the dinner table as a young child, you know, God do this or God please be with this, or God helped me do this or be better at this. And that is called petitionary prayer which is a request, like some grandiose parental Genie figure in the sky that if we do it right, and we pray it right will be granted what we asked for as if for some reason, God doesn't know what we need. So I sat down, I spoke with Mark Karris, who is the author of a beautiful book And I encourage you to get it for many reasons. But most importantly hear it at the end of the show. To those of you listening. If you shoot him an email, just let him know that you got the book you heard about it on the show, he's going to send you some more information, a study guide to sit down in a small group setting or in a setting yourself and engage more in what he calls conspiring prayer. And we'll get into that a bit more in the episode but a bit about Mark.

Mark is a licensed therapist. He's an ordained pastor. He's a theologian, he's a writer. He's extremely genuine and compassionate. And you'll hear that in the way that he talks about prayer. His story is gut wrenching, and honest and so much like your story and my story and so many others that we hear about, through his years of counseling and therapy, and ministry. He's come to look at prayer slightly differently. He's come to look at prayer in a way that we don't ask God to do something for us, we pray in a way so that we come alongside God with him. And I'm doing it a disservice. I'm not explaining it well. And so I think that's a good spot to start. Here we go the conversation on prayer with Mark Karris.

Seth Price 5:41

First off and foremost, thank you so much for making the time to come on to the show. I know we are on different parts of the continent. And so I'm excited for the internet in days like today where it makes it so much easier to have conversations like this. And I honestly think before we get started, that's probably the reason that I think the church has started to shift in ways that it used to not be able to, because people are able to communicate in so much better ways, but it's kind of a side note, kind of a side note. So you wrote a book earlier in 2018, I believe, called divine echoes. I love that book. And I want to I want to spend a good portion of our time talking about the themes and some personal questions that I have out of it. Some questions that I've gotten from some of the listeners and some of the Facebook group from it.

A lot of them are emotionally charged, but I think prayer is emotionally charged. So before we get into that, what would you want people to know about Mark Karris? Like what what is brought you through your life kind of your history to where you're at now? And maybe some of the reasonings on the tail end of that for writing Divine Echoes?

Mark Karris 6:47

Well, first of all, thank you for allowing me to be on your your awesome show, and I'm excited to share my heart and share a little bit about this book. So I guess the Origin Story is what we're talking about now. There's so much to share. But so we're talking about prayer, talking about deconstructing prayer. Really, the book is Divine Echoes, Reconciling Prayer with the Uncontrolling Love of God. So how do we make sense of prayer, specifically petitionary prayer, in relation to a God who I believe whose love is uncontrolling and that uncontrolling piece is going to add a lot of nuance to the conversation, especially in what we're talking about, particularly theodicy. So we're going to be talking about prayer, and theodicy and when I think of theodicy, for me, that's sort of the attempt to make sense of how a good loving and omnipotent God is involved or not involved with the harsh reality of evil and suffering in the world.

So I'm gonna try to have a dance between prayer and theodicy. So kind of the origin story is, well, I think like most people, a paradigm shift, a paradigm shift through suffering, and through a whole lot of suffering. And I talk a little bit about that in my book, basically, to make a long story short, it was to do with my brother and my mother, and those two were instrumental in shaping the questions that I have. So for my mom, you know, I remember I became a Christian around 21 and before that, I was lost, hopeless, a cutter, depressed, suicidal. That's a whole other story, but I eventually come to know Jesus that 21 with a pretty, pretty powerful testimony, very experiential kind of blasting me with tsunami of love that put me in a really interesting state of weeping and crying and not because I was sad anymore but because I felt the amazing love of God.

And so as crazy as Christianity as a religion can be those events of an intimate encounter with God. They keep me stuck with him there it's my stake in the ground. It's hard to not believe in God because of those experiences or experiences. So at 21 I was praying for my Mom, why because she was a drug addict because she was definitely not okay for most of my life, a drug dealer, drug addict. And she was you know, she did the best she could. But it got to the point after cocaine and heroin and drinking and pills that she passed away. And that's after year after year praying for her, praying to God to rid her of her debilitating addiction.

I mean, why not? Why not pray my mind to a God who literally can snap his fingers like Thanos in The Avengers and literally change the outcome of events because that's how powerful I believed God was. But that didn't happen. And although there are glimmering moments when I thought my mom had seen the light those were fleeting, and I never got tired of praying. Well actually a little bit but I always fervently prayed for her fasted, I got other churches to pray for her. But she wound up overdosing and died.

So, fast forward then to my brother, my younger brother. He was the life of the party. He was just an amazing human being, you know, kind of a best friend, fellow adventure And then one day I found this stuff the outside of the curb you know coming home from work and all this stuff outside and like what in the world is going on? Of course I found that very strange. Went in the house he was curled up in a ball mumbling and incoherent he had thrown out all his belongings, I had no idea why. But to learn that he suffered his first psychotic episode. And after that day, never the same again. A cycle of psychotic episodes, going to jail for doing something not very good, getting put on medication, getting off his medication because “he's not sick everyone else is”, and then just the cycle. And to the point he wound up going to prison for really hurting, someone.

And then in prison, off his meds he murdered somebody. And that's, you know, listen, that's after praying. I mean, we took him to deliverance, people that specialized in deliverance services, and casting out demons and once again praying and it got me to a point where there were other, you know, internal struggles, but I started questioning what does prayer actually do? You know, the reminds me of that quote by a famous well known Christian philosopher, Dallas Willard,

the idea that everything would happen exactly as it does, regardless of whether we pray or not, is a specter that haunts the minds of many who sincerely profess belief from God,

and that specter of the failure of prayer haunted me so that's a little bit of the origin story, then fast forward a little bit to visiting Indonesia and Malaysia and Korea and other East Asian cultures and just realizing that wow, prayer is ubiquitous, like praying for to this divine other for shelter and food and health. I mean, prayer is as old as human beings have been sentient. So that sort of got me questioning to in that combination, just said, Man, there's something, something interesting here but something off here.

Because I asked the very important question for myself too. If prayer doesn't work the way we think it does, my God it is increasing the amount of suffering in the world. And it actually contributes to evil and suffering in a way that it breaks the heart of God. That's the paradoxical understanding. Because if I'm praying, thinking God's gonna do something, but God, for other reasons can't which we'll talk about later. And that means the thing the person we're praying for the situation is not getting any better because God is saying, “Yeah, I know about that. I love that person. More than you do. You're supposed to be my hands and my feet in the world!” God's praying to us to do the very thing we mutually want. But if no one is doing anything, because I'm spending energy, praying, believing God is doing it, then that's increasing the suffering not only in the world, but in people's lives. And that was like that hit me like a ton of bricks.

Seth Price 14:22

Yeah, yeah, I agree with that. And it reminds me of and it's not prayer related, but I asked a similar question or similar vein to that to both, I believe Keith Giles and Mark van Steenwyk, one was arguing for you know, like Christian Anarchy. And, you know, we should just get rid of any government for x or y or z reasons and the other was don't vote as a Christian because you're pledging allegiance to the wrong thing. And I asked them both the same thing and Keith was like when I say don't vote, I didn't say don't act like you still you see a need you and or your church or both of you do that.

So people are hungry feed them, but don't vote and expect someone else to do it. And Mark said the same thing. I was like, Well, what happens to the safety nets, you know, medicine and schooling? And he's like, well, that's what the church actually is. When I said no government, I didn't say, no governance. I said no government, so I hear a lot of that, you know, it's not necessarily I prayed, and I've washed my hands of this, I don't have to deal with this anymore. And God's gonna figure it out, which makes me feel good, especially as an American. I feel like we don't always want to put our money where our mouth is. I sent the text to donate relief to the hurricane people. I did my part (and) we're good.

Before we get to petitionary prayer, I am curious. So do you draw a distinction between different forms of prayer? So like, there's me as I did more research, you know, you know, there's exorcisms, which we don't do a lot of in, you know, in the Protestant church and that's a form of prayer. There is petitionary prayer, there's a different form of prayer, you give it a different word. How do you get a conspiring prayer? But what are the distinctions between those like between an exorcism or petitionary or conspiring? Is it my posture? Or is it the intent? Is it the way God's supposed to act as an agent? Like what are the distinctions or what do you think those distinctions are?

Mark Karris 16:26

Yeah, I mean, there's so many different kinds of prayer, and in this book you know, we're talking about something very specific. And I tried to, you know, I tried to talk about that, right? There's, there's praying for oneself. I'm alone in my prayer closet and I'm just praying for myself. For me, that's going to be a little different than praying for somebody who may not know that they're being prayed for. And that's what I you know, call in some ways, petitionary prayer, right? It's praying, praying on behalf of somebody else, usually from a distance. But I mean, it's so nuanced because then I make a difference between face to face prayer, praying for somebody when they're present.

For me, there's actually a little difference with that because the person that we're praying for, hopefully is actually open to receiving prayer. So all those little nuances are going to be different. I mean, then there's, you know, prayers of lament and prayers of thanksgiving and prayers of praise so there's all different kinds of prayers. But you know, what we're talking about is in this book, is really petitionary prayer, praying on behalf of others. We're praying to God, that God would do something that God was not doing beforehand and it's usually to increase God's love in the world in practical ways. But just the essence of petitionary prayer, I believe that God can do it has the power to do it usually and he can literally snap his fingers and do it. And I'm praying to God. And I think some people are actually begging God to increase his love in the world that's kind of for me the essence of petitionary prayer.

Seth Price 18:24

Yeah, yeah. So to drill that down, so say, say I am a cancer nurse or I'm a parent of somebody that has cancer, like my child has cancer, and I am fervently praying in the hospital for healing, which happens often and if you just turn on Facebook, or you go to any church group, and you'll look in their newsletter, and here's who we're praying for, and here's the specific ailment that we're praying for healing for and then whether or not that happens or not, it seems to just be luck of the draw. Atheists get the same reprieve from illness or miracles that Christians do, at least from what I can see. So, are my prayers meaningless? Is this just something that I'm just literally giving lip service to? Is there any purpose for me? Because I will say like, my dad currently has cancer, and I do pray fervently. And then I read what you've written. And it's a compelling case. And I'm like, but I still want to pray for healing. And there's I don't know how to deal with that tension. And I don't know if like my child was dying of cancer, how to deal with that tension, or, you know, in your situation, your mom or your brother. I don't know how to reconcile that tension.

Mark Karris 19:40

Yeah. So once again, here's a nuanced conversation where I believe prayer is powerful, but not in a traditionally understood way. Like I would like some people read my book, and they're like, Oh, so we shouldn't pray at all. And I'm like, the last section of my book has over 20 prayers by theologians, authors, laypeople…I'm very passionate about prayer. The last section of the book is dedicated to that. But it's nuanced.

So if one was to ask me, Mark, if I'm praying for my sick father, and he has cancer, does it do anything, doesn't matter, and I want to say off course it does. Never stop praying! So for me, there's a few reasons for that. One is that God loves relationship. We are always to pour our hearts out to God. Right. So for me, it's a relationship with God in in that prayer, it could change ourselves and it continues to change God in the sense that if I'm praying for my ailing Father, God could whisper into my ears; and this is where conspiring prayer comes in, here's how I want you to be my hands and feet in this situation, here's where I want you to increase some shalom in your father's life. I mean, that's going to be a little different prayer than me praying God, you're the one with all the power. And I know you can snap your fingers and heal my father, for some strange reason you haven't. And you haven't for many years. But I'm going to keep praying, aka, I'm going to keep begging you, because you can do it for some reason you're not doing it. But I have this weird notion that maybe I'm not even saying explicitly that if I pray enough, maybe if I get 30 of my friends pray and maybe 100 through a prayer chain. Once it gets to 100 people, I mean, 99 you're not going to do it. But if it gets to 100 people praying, for some reason that's the cutoff. That's the straw that broke the camel's back. That's where you finally going to say, Okay, I'm going to love this person in this way now.

So for me, is it a waste of time? It's not if you're thinking, you're in relationship with God who cares about your heart and cares about your father, who wants him to be healed as much as you do. But that's going to be different than praying to God who has like some kind of magic genie, who can instantly unilaterally or, or the word single handedly do something different than God was not doing beforehand. So you mentioned Facebook, friend of mine on Facebook was asking your friends and family to pray. She said, you know, can you pray that God will comfort my brother and his wife, they lost their child. And I'm thinking what a beautiful prayer and they say, you know, they lost their child, they're in desperate need of God's grace. So for me, and I know this is hard, but I believe that praying alone in one's room God, please comfort her friends and extend your loving mercy and grace, that family would increase their God's comfort, mercy and grace in their lives.

So for me, God doesn't wait for us to pray before he begins comforting his children who are grieving. Right? God doesn't say the fifth person finally prayed for me to extend mercy so now I will. So for me praying to God that He will comfort and pour out His grace on my family's friend is like asking my wife to do the dishes while she's in the middle of doing the dishes. It's better to ask God, how can I join you in extending your comfort and grace to them just as it is better to ask my wife, Hey, honey, how can I help you with that?

And this goes into our view an image of God. If I really believe God is loved, and that God love is loving moment to moment to maximize the shalom in people's life and in all creation how I pray to that God is going to be different than a God who I believe is withholding or is arbitrary and unfair and to some but chooses not to heal others. (That) chooses to heal this kid from leukemia, but No I you know if I'm going to let this kid just suffer for years for this illness, oh this woman being made I'm going to stop this from happening. But you know what I'm gonna you know, you know that kind of arbitrary unfair God and we're we're perpetuating that image to the world in the wonder why people move away from God this is some tell from God it's an obstacle to relating to a loving an incredible and amazing God in my mind.

Seth Price 24:32

Well it's a valid obstacle I mean as I've had conversations with people, a lot of people, by email and I have to think you you do the same with with the line of work that you're in a lot of people they feel unable to question their doubts and a lot of their doubts are wrapped up in trauma and in pain and in a broken promise because they've been told. If you pray fervently enough x will happen and if it didn't happen, you did it wrong. Which I'm 100% against because that's not the way that I view God anymore. And I genuinely believe the way that we pray impacts the way that we think about God. Before we get to theodicy though, which is where I'm going with that, I am curious so I asked a few friends if they see in Scripture any support for a petitionary form of prayer, and I got the same answer over and over you know, you got Daniel in the lion's den you've got stories and acts about Peter you've got some stuff at the end of James and then you have and I forget I'm gonna get the city's wrong a Soddam and I believe in Gomorrah and you know, I'm gonna go in and well don't kill him…What about if I find 10 people All right, I'm still going to do it. What about you know, what about this many people? What about this many people?

Yeah, so there's some scripture to show. I'm talking in conversation to God and we'll call that prayer. Something different happened. Though I wanted to have happen. And so how do we deal with those texts where I mean, well, you can read Scripture to make it think anything, but there are enough threads to pull there that I can see how someone would make a case for praying that way.

Mark Karris 26:17

Yeah, I totally agree with you. I spend the section of that book dealing with passages that were given to me. That said, Mark, yeah, the Bible says repeatedly to pray, to pray for others. And there's been miracles right. What about the Old Testament? You know, God is going to be violence and kill some people and you pray and then God relents and changed his mind. So, man, that is such a lengthy conversation. I think, how do I begin this?

Seth Price 26:57

Can you just take one of those say the text in James or the texts about Peter, and just kind of go through the examples because I would imagine it's radically this. When I say imagine I've read that portion of the book. So I do know, I do know the answer. But I want others to know. So let's take one of those texts and tackle that just as a concept of how to look at prayer and Scripture in a new light.

Mark Karris 27:21

So I will have to start it with the character of God, and hermeneutics, my hermeneutic is Jesus, my hermeneutic is love. So for me, the hermeneutic is based on you know, I in the book I called the quadrilateral hermeneutics of love, I'll probably change that title. But either way, it's kind of this four part lens that I look at the various texts through. And so that's based on the fruit of the Spirit. The Biblical definition of love, I'm not making it up, the Bible defines love. So and then I look at one of the only explicit parabolic pictures Jesus gave of God the father found in what some people call the prodigal son I consider it the prodigal father actually. And then there's a radical self giving others in power in life of Jesus. So I'm looking at Scriptures through that lens.

So when I look at Old Testament, and I see all these people, you know, maybe they're praying and God relented to violence. I'm saying, Yeah, I don't think that was God. And I know that gets in the hermeneutics and people get really anxious when I say that. For me, people are meaning making store and making human beings. These stories were written long after the events, community, there were communities of trauma that were trying to make sense of life, the world they were living in the world where God was in control, who in Isaiah 45:7 says

who creates the good and creates the evil

making sense of them getting their butts kicked by other nations. And they're then trying to make sense of these stories. And they're trying to pass these stories down to generations to knit these communities back together. And so some of these stories about God, you know, going to destroy or burn alive or use a nation to literally kill others or a God who kills babies or a God who wipes the world with a flood. You know, for me, I can't…is that Jesus? You know, if Jesus is God, can we just say, yeah, Jesus killed babies, and Jesus burn people alive. And we started thinking, I don't know it for me make a long story short, it's hard to buy into that.

So let's take this passage in James I would get that all the time. And that's one of the most you know powerful “hey Mark we need to pray” and encourages the elders of the church to live on hand and pray for the sick, the sinful and those in need of healing prayer. Right. So then he writes the the prayer of a righteous person is powerful and effective. So then he gets into Elijah, right and Elijah was a human being like gods and he prayed fervently that it might not rain. And for three years and six months, it did not rain in the Earth. So first context, the context is praying face to face with people, right, praying for the sick, praying for those who might sin, even sin might be affecting their lives.

Yo'u’re talking about the power of face to face prayer. He then alludes to Elijah, in that being an example for us. But here again, I'm looking at the hermeneutics of love. And I'm saying, Man, Elijah pray that it wouldn't rain. So let me get this straight. Elijah prayed that when it rains to teach another nation and other people, a tribe, that God has tested them because they were are disobedient and sinful? So God made it and cause a drought. But what are we saying? Can you imagine the the detrimental, the destructive effects of a full on drought what some people say it was the entire world. But it did not rain on the earth for three years and six months because God wanted to teach them a lesson.

So I have a hard time believing that particularly when I looked at the life of Jesus and hermeneutical love, that God would literally destroy life to that extent. I mean, that would kill you know, who knows countless amount of people, countless amount of animals, it would have a and think about all the people who would be praying to God for, you know, intervening. So, is that a powerful example of petitionary prayer? I'm struggling with that. Right when I look at the character of God displayed in that particular author's view of God struggle is praying for others face to face powerful. Absolutely.

Is that pastoral advice to look at Elijah and in be encouraged, you know, he was kind of doing a pastoral thing of look at this guy if he could pray, and this can happen. I mean, it's encouraging. I get it, right. It shows us yeah, we should pray. But what does it mean really, when we really start thinking about it? The God costs that cause that much suffering and death to teach people a lesson. So I struggle with those kinds of verses too. They're not the best verses to show. We'll see Mark, it says to pray. Now, there's other verses that call us to pray. The Apostle Paul was passionate about prayer. So there again, I am to prayer is amazing. It changes us, first and foremost. And it changes God only in the sense that when it changes us, it changes what God can do in the world because we become more open to what God has God wants to use us.

Seth Price 33:02

Yeah, I 100% agree. I've been working through the examen for months, I try to do it many times during the week. And it is, I can physically feel myself responding to events differently than I used to. So something is changing in me. And I guess if we want to use a “Christianese” term, we could call that sanctification or a college word we'll call that theosis. It's fine. But yeah, I'm beginning to think that prayer does much more for me, and how I use my words, which impact my actions to help further the Kingdom than it does for and it sounds horrible to say out loud than it does for healing some sick child in a hospital dying right now, and even saying that out loud still feels wrong; but it still feels true.

Mark Karris 33:53

Yeah, and here again, that the nuance of what I'm saying. I mean, going to the hospital and praying for a sick child, there's something beautiful that can occur. And it's going to be how you pray, we could pray make things worse or we can pray in a way that does in that moment, increase the Shalom, maybe in that child's life. And I'm even open to the possibility that in that synergistic encounter between the face of the child and the face of the one who's praying, and and the organs and the food that the child is eating, and the other love that's in a child's life and a myriad of other variables, that what we call a miracle can happen, right? I'm not opposed to that.

But it's not for me, it's always God does a miracle in cooperation with with other variables and elements and wills, and not something that God can do unilaterally. And for me, that makes more sense. So I can still pray. I could believe that God does the impossible, but it's in a different way. It's in a different light. With different nuances with a different paradigm shift, so not I love prayer, encourage people to pray, but not to a magical genie in the sky, who once in a while, you know, pours out His, you know, throws a scrap of love down the world as people beg for him to do so. That kind of Gods difficult to swallow.

Seth Price 35:50

Let's go there. So, theodicy is what we're hinting around there. So what does the view have? I would argue the way most people pray today, what are the theological implications of that? Because I find the implications of that are either willfully contrite and what's the word I'm trying to find a willfully ambivalent, I'll do it if I feel like it, nine year old version of God's grace, and I can't sit well with that. So besides the love of God and his character, what other theological implications does a traditional, petitionary, prayer theologically imply, like, what other issues does it arise?

Mark Karris 36:35

You know, I think it's best to maybe differentiate what I think of as traditional petitionary prayer. And and juxtapose that with conspiring prayer. And we can see the little differences and nuances. So that gets just the into theocracy and this is you know, the the incredible Thomas Ords work. This gets into his work, and he's coming out with an incredible book, literally called God Can't I believe that's coming out in January. And man, that book is gonna rock people's lives. excited for that. But here's an important piece of theodicy right, it gets into the character of God. And what I'm suggesting and others are suggesting is that God is love. And because God is love, God cannot single handedly control other human beings and single handedly control the outcome of events. Right? And when people hear God can't they get freaked out a little bit? Well, God's omnipotent God is all powerful God's almighty. Listen, scripture himself teaches that God cannot do some things. God cannot lie right? God cannot be tempted. He cannot be prejudice. You cannot sin he cannot get tired. And I'm suggesting Let's add another element here for you really take seriously that God is love and 1 John tells us no God love precludes God from unilaterally controlling others.

So in other words, it's not that God chooses not to that is that God cannot disregard the free will and agency of people and force his way into situations and change the outcome. So when we think of theodicy, why does so much evil happened in the world? It's not because Gods arbitrarily well let this happen. I won't let this happen. Gods unfair Gods sort of up in the sky somewhere and sometimes chooses to intervene. Right is that God is love and that God can't do some things. And that means that God cannot unilaterally intervene and change the actual events. That means that God is weeping along side us with many of the things that we experience in this world.

So in traditional petitionary prayer to look at both of them, God can intervene and single handedly stop evil events from occurring in conspiring prayer, and we didn't get into a definition, but let's just do that quickly to conspire literally means to breathe together, to act in harmony towards a common end, now defined conspiring prayer as a form of prayer where we create space in our busy lives, to align our hearts with God's heart, where our spirit and God's Spirit breathes harmoniously together, and where we plot together to subversively overcome evil, with acts of love and goodness. So like I said, knowing that definition in traditional prayer, God can intervene and do whatever God wants. Whenever God wants to do it. However God wants to do it. Conspiring prayer, we say, No, God can't. And that's due to God's on controlling, loving nature.

In traditional petitionary prayer God has arbitrarily loving and shows favorites, conspiring prayer. God loves consistently and fairly.

Traditional petitionary prayer God intervenes on occasion and conspiring prayer God is moment to moment loving and maximizing the good, and the beautiful and Shalom in all people's lives and all creation. And that's that's a powerful statement, right? God's not just up in the sky, God is everywhere in each moment. So in traditional petitionary prayer, we pray to God, conspiring prayer, we pray with God.

We pray with a God who mutually, in many instances, is groaning with us because God wants the very shalom that we are praying for. That's how loving God is. Right? We pray for many things. Because we love and we feel that suffering with another person who's suffering, God, how much exponentially does God experience out of God's love? The traditional petitionary prayer God you bring shalom in this person's life a situation, conspiring prayer, God how can we creatively work towards alone in this person's life or situation, in traditional petitionary prayer, we speak God listens, and conspiring prayer we speak, God speaks, and we both listen.

Hopefully that gets your listeners a little bit of a nuance between the traditional petitionary prayer and what I think is a more effective way of praying petitionary prayers, and that's conspiring prayer.

Seth Price 41:23

You referenced Thomas Ord. And so as I read your book, I read it in September. So one of the the perks for some of the patron supporters that they do a certain level is I send them a book each month. And those books vary widely and honestly, I'm humbled by their willingness to help me to let me curate that because I don't really tell them ahead of time what I'm sending I just something that's speaking or interesting to me, I send out and based on the way that you talk about Ord, I ended up sending out his book on the Uncontrolled Love of God and I can't remember the exact title, I know it's a red cover, by the time they heard this, but I like that idea. And specifically, you talk about God is love, and I'm gonna, I'm gonna read this from your book, although it's mostly from the Bible. And so I feel like I can't plagiarize that. So you say

saying, quote, God is Love is not pure sentimentality pushed by a liberal and progressive agenda,

which I think is a key part of that.

God is love. It is Biblical. And if God is love, then Biblical definition of love, 1 Corinthians 13, must also be characteristic of God. And so therefore God is patient and kind, he's not envious. He doesn't boast he's not arrogant, or rude, or insist and everything else that you would hear at a wedding.

And I really like that and I like that for the same reason that lately I've been dealing with inerrancy a lot. And I like to juxtapose that anywhere that I see the word the word I just put, I hear Jesus. So if if the word will that is Jesus. Then when I see Paul reference the Word, we're talking about Jesus, we're not talking about the letters or in on these pages or the scrolls, we're talking about Jesus. And I enjoy doing the same thing with what you've done there. And I think it's a great definition of love.

I have to think when you stand up and preach this at a church, that you're either going to get one of two outcomes. People say, “All right, great. I've been doing it wrong. I'm willing to admit that I'm a little angry that I may have been doing it wrong, and I've been lied to but “what do I do now? How do I fix it?” Or the inverse is Mark, you're wrong, and they probably run you out of the church very hateful. And I would imagine, in much stronger means and much stronger yelling sessions, because I've been privy to a few of those with some of the things that I have espoused over the past few years. But yeah, I don't really want to focus on that, that I'm sure there's more than enough conversations on the internet about what that looks like. And it doesn't matter if we're talking about prayer or about penal substitutionary atonement or anything else. Yeah, I'm saying sounds the same. So how then do we reconstruct prayer? If we throw it out? And you you talked about it a bit conspiring of what who is listening and how the conversation happens. But what does that prayer sound like? What does that prayer look like? Yeah. And, and hermeneutically or Scripturally? What examples are we drawing from if that makes sense? Like people listening how do they begin to try to do this in with a different mindset of outcome tomorrow or today or next week?

Mark Karris 44:41

Yeah. First off, I want to say I did get kicked out of a church that I was going through because of the book I gave both pastors the book in and yeah, that was not a good outcome. Like I said, we could talk all about that, but I really appreciate the desire to reconstruct and what does it really look like in everyday life? So like I said, I do spend the last part of the book doing that in the chapter. That section is called reconstruction. I have a workbook that goes along with the book that communities, that churches, have been using to come up with their own theology of prayer. And some have, you know, shifted their view of prayer. Some have kept their traditional view of prayer, but then kept the conspiring prayer. Some people couldn't keep any of it. So it's nuanced. But so what does it look like?

So maybe we can look at mass shootings. And I talked a little bit about this in the book because there's been mass shootings and then I you know, you see online, you see it in papers, people praying fervently. So maybe we can look at what traditionally is prayed and then a varied prayer that I prayed in so let's let's try to look at that. So the mass shooting happens. And then it's easy for people to say I pray for the victims families and first responders. Right? And then they maybe pray for, you know, the family. They pray for what they're going to do at school the next day. So I know it seems trite, but just focus on that word, “pray”, like I pray for the victims and families and then move on to something else. There's nothing magical about the word pray. It really doesn't say much right? It doesn't really mean anything. It's no magical power. I used to pray like that terribly proud. Father, I pray for my dad and I pray for my brother or pray for my test tomorrow that I'm going to have.

But although God is gracious enough to look at the heart and consider such prayer, There are much more effective ways to pray. Then you might hear after a mass shooting “God be with the families of the shooting victims, part your grace on the surviving family members and comfort and heal their wounded hearts”. Those who use a conspiring prayer model, already know that God is with those families. Like before you're even praying, God is on the scene! God is all very loving and comforting to the extent that God can! What kind of God are we actually portraying by the prayers that we're praying by suggesting that God isn't?

Would a loving God who can love can can affect the outcome of events, but choose not to just sit idly by and do nothing; is that a loving God? So for me, those who pray the conspiring prayer model we trust that God is loving character competence in heals wounded hearts, to the degree that he is able while respecting their free will, God grieves along with the devastated families, God's grace has been poured out in their lives and is instantly available to them in greater measure, if they choose to open the doors of their heart to Him. It's not just their will, not just the doors of their heart, but that's one aspect of many variables that can come into play. We can share our desires for hurting loved ones with God to experience more of his presence, Grace and comfort, knowing full well God wants them to experience more of those things too. Or we could pray without trusting in the goodness of God. Then there's some who might pray, turn from your fears, anger relented did not bring further disaster and your people. Right. These are people who have an image of God that suggests that God did that it was the will of God, God planned it before eternity, or they could be on the Calvinistic spectrum, or just believe that God is a control of every event that occurs.

Seth Price 49:00

To name that then that's like that would be like and he does it so it's fair. I feel like it'd be like a Pat Robertson saying, hurricane. I can't remember the name not Michael the one prior please don't hit me here please go further south please go further north or if it does hit us because we did it wrong or you know Sandy you know or hurricane…did you not hear that? Yeah he definitely did yeah or you know you'll hear people saying, you know the Twin Towers fell because of you know, we we are we deserved it we we need to pray that we turn our wicked hearts back to God so that the next calamity doesn't happen.

Mark Karris 49:37

Who wants to be in relationship with that kind of God? Like this is serious! Theology matters! It's not just “Well, let's just love everyone all you know all people we basically believe the same thing”. No we don't! There's some theology that's so damaging and such an obstacle people being an intimate relationship with God, and that kind of theology and then a brutal authoritarian, ogre who causes this kind of, and allows, this kind of evil upon people's lives, this kind of violence. And I'm sorry, it's like I can, the people aren’t sick, but that theology can be so damaging.

And as a licensed therapist and researcher, we're doing a lot of research now on how theodicy, how religious beliefs, actually, is there any correlation between that and how we treat each other how we engage in maybe violence ourselves? So there's good stuff up and coming that researchers who don't even believe in God are doing because they know this stuff matters. There's something very important here.

That kind of prayer. “God turn your fears, anger, relent and do not bring further disaster on your people, I don't believe that's the best kind of prayer because that's not who God is. God already hates violence. I don't need to convince God to not do a violence I mean, so violence is sin and sin ruptures, fractures, runes, distorts and numbs our relationship with God with ourselves with others, God is not going to perpetuate that—a loving God is not going to perpetuate violence and sin. So, yeah, Doomsday preachers and angry prophetic teachers. Yep, not a huge fan of that kind of theology.

So Mark, let's get into the nuts and bolts. How have I prayed? Let me let me share with you. Right. Here's a prayer that if I can read this, this is something that I wrote and I prayed, and it's very powerful to me. And this is keeping in mind God's on controlling loving character is keeping in mind humans having free will. I say God, we praise for being good. Thank you for being intimately close to the families, the victims of this heart. Shooting I'm sorry, it's getting me emotional just we know you are aggrieved and mourn with us. We are aware you are angry that this happened again, heavenly, earthly, motherly, Father, we need this violence to stop now. It tears our communities in this role, the part that breaks our hearts and we know it breaks yours. We thank you that you comfort and mend the families, broken hearts, to the extent that you are able. We hope that the families accept your love and experience your tenderness towards them in this painful time. Faithful God what can we do together to stop this madness or at the very least to help these families experience your tangible love. We don't want to be passive bystanders. We want to be Spirit led active adventures, paving the way justice, peace and healing. God we attune our hearts, ears, to your voice in this very moment. What is it that you would have us do as your hands and feet so your empire of love can reign in this hour? Amen.

So for me, that's, that's a conspiring prayer. That's a prayer that keeps in mind, a loving uncontrol and God, a God who yearns for justice more than we do. So we could still pray. Right? I'm not saying that that prayer is done with and over. We can pray powerful prayers that keep in mind, the non controlling love of God. And, you know, people have been joining me all over the world with these kinds of prayers. And I firmly believe that it's increasing God's shalom in the world. And it's doing something very different than the traditional prayers. God You do. I'm telling you, the gods you do kinds of prayers are definitely not as effective as God. How can we do kinds of prayers?

Seth Price 54:11

Yeah, no, I like that. I'd like to end with this. Where are people joining you at how I want to buy one of the study guides, I don't have the study guide, I'm gonna, I'm gonna fix that today. So, besides the study guides, how where do people join you in that is there a collective place that these pairs are being written and shared for, you know, because it is going to have to be a relearned type of prayer, because old habits die hard and old mentalities die harder. So where where did people come for that either under guidance from people like yourselves or in a community is does that exist are you making that happen anywhere?

Mark Karris 54:53

Yeah, yeah. First off, let me just share that for yourself and any of your listeners. If they purchase the book, I'm going to do something crazy and I'm just going to give them the workbook for free that's selling on Amazon. So let's start there, that if any of your listeners buy the book, either print or ebook, I'll send them, just contact me, and I'll just send you the workbook. I'll send you the workbook too. So as far as networks, I mean, I just for me, I get emails, it's mostly from people. I've received them all over the world of people who are praying this way, who have been touched by the book, who have been disturbed by the book, and are shifting and shaping their praise in a unique way that keeps Gods uncontrolling love in mind.

Some have written their own prayers that they've sent to me. As far as a community, I mean, there's a Divine Echoes Facebook group, to be honest, it's not very active, but occasionally some people will post some interesting stuff there. And yeah, it's mostly just people contacting me and just sending me messages. That's where I experience most of the interactions.

But I will say that, you know, I've gotten a lot of emails of groups, church groups, small groups of using the workbook, reading the book and having some powerful experiences in small groups. So start a small group, right? I mean, here’s my thing. I'm a human being, I'm not God. This theology that petitionary prayer I'm offering is my perspective of some, you know, some white male who is living in 2018 in specific geographical location, you know, I have a myopic view of all things divine. So my hope is that other people wrestle through the material and come up, like I said, do their own investigation, deconstruction and reconstruction of petitionary prayer.

Let this be your adventure. You know, I hope people use the conspiring prayer model of prayer. I think it is more effective. I think it's a little bit more of a mature view of God, a healthier view of God. But wrestle through this yourself. You'd be amazed of how many people have never questioned the mechanics of prayer, what their prayer actually says about their view of God. Whether prayer is effective or not effective. I get into the science of petitionary prayer. What does the science say? Is there any science that petitionary prayer is effective or not? Right? There's a $2.4 million study that was done. That's a lot of money on petitionary prayer, whether it worked or not, your readers can check that out. It's in the book or they can search it online. $2.4 million study done by Harvard Researchers and supported by the Templeton Foundation, yeah, check out the outcome of that. Be curious and wrestle and question and get other people who you feel can journey with you without judging you and criticizing you and condemning you because there's plenty of people that will do that. Find some fellow adventurers find what I call your holy huddle.

Those people that you can huddle with, and you could strategize with, you could talk about your inner angst and your pain, your shame and your doubt, and you discussed, and you'll receive mutual love and care and understanding, and even beautiful challenge when needed. That's kind of my plea to some of your lesson.

Seth Price 58:47

Well, thank you. First off for that invitation of the workbook. That's that generosity is. It's not common in the world that we live in. So thank you so much for that. And I do hope that they'll take you up on that.

Where else would you direct people to get in touch with you to find you interact with you?

Mark Karris 59:06

I have a site called conspiringprayer.com. And there are some material that's not in the book that I've written some blogs after the fact that they get into the prayer in general. And you know, there's a short video-there's a, you know, some workbook questions, get an idea of what the workbook is like. So conspiring pro comm probably going to be the best site to go to to, you know, for curious listeners. I think that would be pretty cool to check out.

Seth Price 59:37

Awesome. Awesome. Well, more. Thank you so much for your time this morning.

Mark Karris 59:41

Yeah, thank you so much for having me. It was a great conversation, (I) appreciate your heart. And I know your listeners are continually loved, blessed, and challenged by you.

Seth Price 59:51

Thank you for that.

Outro:

Next year, I look forward to diving more specifically into different practices of prayer, intentional practices that are different and way outside of my comfort zone. And I have to hope many of yours but I found over this last year, that when I get out of my comfort zone, that is where I often meet God, not where it's easy, but where I have to deal and wrestle with hopes and dreams that maybe have not come to fruition, or maybe hopes and dreams it did. And I've wasted those opportunities, or I've abused the privileges and power that comes with it.

Well, maybe I've done it right. And I want to see what more I can do. But I really look forward to digging more into prayer, and the theology of it different ways to participate in it. And I think conspiring prayer is a great way to start. And so as you enter in to Christmas, as you lead liturgies as you participate in liturgies, keep in mind this different method of prayer. I know I certainly will. I do want to see how it changes my posture. I'm excited at the possibility of praying in a different way. I'm excited at the different aspects of myself that I'll see and the different aspects of God that I will see. Please remember to rate review the show on iTunes. Tell a friend

The music woven throughout the episode today was provided by artists Kris Neil, up and coming artists that just randomly popped up on my Spotify playlist and I was blown away. buys music and you'll find today's tracks on the Spotify playlist called Can I Say This At Church? You'll find Chris Neil at Krisneel.com.

51 - Beauty in the Wreckage with Brandon Andress / Transcript

Note: Can I Say This at Church is produced for audio listening. If able, I strongly encourage you to listen to the audio, which has inflection, emotion, sarcasm where applicable, and emphasis for points that may not come across well in written word. This transcript is generated using a combination of my ears and software, and may contain errors. Please check the episode for clarity before quoting in print.

Back to the Audio Episode


BA 0:08

We really don't realize how much our seeing influences how we think and how we respond. And in those moments, all I could see what the dandelions in the yard were a nuisance that needed to be contended with and killed. And on the trail, all I could see was the mud and blood. And both of my kids in both instances saw something that I couldn't see. And so, to me, it was just saying, Man, you know, there's so much about this life that I look at. And I look at it through broken fractured lenses, I look at it in distorted ways that really doesn't have my true heart at the center of it. And so, to me, those were kind of pivotal moments in my life where I thought I need to change how I see those things around me not speaking out. You know the dandelions so much, but just how I'm seeing people and situations and circumstances.

Seth Price 1:26

Man, I do not know about, but I'm really getting tired of everybody just yelling at each other constantly yelling, breaking each other apart, creating tribes amongst interior tribes until we're so far spread apart from each other that we cannot see each other. We certainly can't hear each other. There is intentional and unintentional trauma and pain and it's breaking our churches, our country, our families, our planet apart, literally causing destruction which is the opposite of shalom.

I'm Seth, your host As a Can I Say This At Church podcast what you can expect today in the episode is a conversation that I had with Brandon Andress, where we discuss what the kingdom of God, what Shalom, what finding beauty in the wreckage of our world. And that wreckage is self-imposed often, and it's hurtful and it's painful, and it's not necessary. In an age that outrage is everywhere, in an age where animosity is rampant. In an age where we openly hate each other, I hope that we can hear these words and so I'm going to paraphrase the late Eugene Peterson, from Matthew 11:28-30.

Are you tired, worn out burned out on religion? Come to me. Get away with me and you'll recover your life. I'll show you how to take a real rest. Walk with me and work with me. Watch how I do it. Learn the unforced rhythms of grace. I won't lay anything heavy or ill fitting on you. Keep company with me, and you'll learn to live freely. And lightly.

It's that last part, how do we keep company with God? How do we get away from the busyness of life, the cacophony of noise, and reconnect with a portion of us the beautiful part of us that part of us that used to see like a child, I don't know. But I do know it's worth working for. So here we go. Conversation with Brandon Andress. Hope you enjoy it.

Seth Price 3:50

Brandon Andress, thank you so much for coming on at the Can I Say This At Church podcast. I was pleased if I'm honest, I think a few months ago to get your email and thank you so much for sending me your book. I'm excited to talk about that in a minute. But before I do, thank you again for making the time this evening to come onto the show.

BA 4:09

Yeah, thank you. Um, you know, whenever I listened to your podcast before I came on, I was like, this guy has the best radio voice ever. I love listening to you talk. Good stuff.

Seth Price 4:19

Yeah, well, thanks. Yeah, I'm a little bit threatened. So a few months ago, when I recorded a few like, my voice was literally gone. And like so I talked and people haven't heard those yet. And by the time this comes out, they may have but I got a little bit of like a “Is this what I sound like when I'm sick”, but it didn't matter. You know, the, the show must go on. But, but I interviewed Brandan Robertson, and Steve Austin. And both of them have voices that match mine in baritone. Right. And I'm a little bit insecure about it. I don't know how to. I don't I'm not used to that. I'm a little insecure about it.

BA 4:55

Oh, that's great. No, it's great to be on and thank you for having me.

Seth Price 4:59

So tell me a bit about yourself if I was explaining you to someone to go to church with or someone said, Hey, Seth, who did you talk to last week? What would you want me to know or what would you want others to know about you?

BA 5:11

Man, that's a crazy question. Just to start out, I knew that you would probably ask me that. And I'm not even quite sure who I am. So my story's a little bit strange. You know, one of the ways that I can tell you at the beginning is that I was telling my wife this evening, at supper, I said, it's weird for me to hear that pastors are reading my book, and my blog, and my podcast, because I'm not a pastor. And I didn't go to seminary and I have no educational background in any of it. But we were going to a church probably about 10 to 12 years ago, and we'd been there for quite some time. And we really kind of felt like that we wanted to do something different and step out and start a new church. And so we did so, you know, for the last, I've been out of it for a while, but for about seven or eight years, I was part of a very grassroots non-pastored, staff led church, and it was very organic. It was in downtown Columbus.

And so what's what's kind of funny about all of that is that I never really wanted to do any teaching or anything like that. And all of a sudden, I was kind of getting into this role of teaching. And I did about four to six years of seminary training within nine months of reading, because you know, if you're going to do something, you really need to know what you believe yourself. And I grew up in the church, and I really didn't know what I believed myself. So anyway, long story short, is that through all of that process, I really started discovering some things and opening my eyes to a lot of things that I didn't know about my faith.

And so my deconstruction, you know, that's kind of the buzzword was in 2007 and went downhill from there and then had been building up since then. So while some people are just coming to that place of deconstruction mine happened quite a while ago, and I'm on the other side of that.

Seth Price 7:12

So I want to clarify. So when you say that you did nine months worth of reading to get seminary education, you're talking about just self like, Alright, I don't know anything about this. So I now need to have better answers. So you self educated or were you like taking classes?

BA 7:27

No, no, I didn't take any classes. I just started buying books. And I mean, there were a few books that really kind of set the trajectory of where I'm currently at. I always tell people, there were two main books. One was Myth of a Christian Nation by Greg Boyd, and I think he was on your podcast. And that one introduced me to the kingdom of God of which I didn't know anything about at the time, but then that shattered every paradigm, everything in my mind, every thought that I thought I’d ever believed, was destroyed at that point. And then, as if my foundation couldn't crumble anymore, I read The Kingdom of God is Within You by Leo Tolstoy and it was all over after that.

Seth Price 8:05

I haven't read that. But actually, so I've tried to read the myth of a Christian nation and I've told Greg this, it's written a bit above my head and, and I use him as an example often that people like, well, who’d you talk to, I was like, well, I talked to a guy one time that as he could see me on the video, he said,

“Seth, I can see things coming out of your ears. Stay with me, I can see the brain coming out but stay with me…”

…and I was like, you're gonna have to explain it to me like I'm a kindergartener, because that's what I need.

BA 8:33

Right. Yeah. Well, I'll tell you what I mean. Honestly, if anyone said, you know, who do you think you are, I would say, I am a guy that understands Greg Boyd and understands Leo Tolstoy but I feel like I'm a guy way below that, who I know all the people that I know will never read them. And so I feel like it's my job to take those paradigms and to make them understandable for other people.

Seth Price 9:00

So you've written three books now. And so if you're thinking about that, where does your most recent Beauty in the Wreckage fit in to helping educate people about what your current views are?

BA 9:15

Yeah, I mean, my obsession over the last decade has been the Kingdom of God. And I think that there's just so much misunderstanding from Christians within the church on what that even is…I grew up understanding the kingdom of God is just being future Heaven, you know, future distant heaven. And, you know, there's that verse and John, it's actually the title of the book that I just referenced, where Jesus says, you know, you're looking for the kingdom over here, then you'll say, it's over there, but the kingdom of God is within you. And then you start really realizing that every time that he says, The kingdom of God is like, he's referencing a reality that describes what we are to live presently.

And it's certainly something that will be realized in the future, but we need to begin living it and actually letting it work through our lives presently. And so kind of leading up to that I think I've been frustrated over the years because even though I use the phrase Kingdom of God, I still feel like that there's a lot of people that don't understand it. And kind of leading up to this book, you know, one of the frustrations is just like I know that everything that I want to talk about, at its heart is about the kingdom of God. But I, finally acknowledged that we don't live in a time where there are kingdoms, and that there are kings and there's not princes and princesses and Queens. And so this language is archaic, and it's foreign to us.

And so, really, as I approach this book, for the first time, I thought, I'm going to introduce different language that gets at the heart of what it is, but something that's more relatable and understandable and so the word that I actually pair with it is shalom. Which to me, shalom is that perfect relationship between us and God, that then we embody and extend into our relationships and then outward into the communities and ultimately it's, you know, the completeness and harmony that we experience with ourselves and with others in our creation. So, you know, ultimately that's in essence, what the kingdom of God is, but I just wanted to introduce different language coming into this book. So that was a huge step forward, I think, for me expressing that.

Seth Price 11:39

So when you started talking about Shalom, and I think it was in the introduction. I wrote like a hard line, like a double line. And my comment was, I feel like shalom is not even close to possible right now in America.

BA 11:53

Correct.

Seth Price 11:54

But I don't know what to…it's it….I don't even know why we're fighting anymore. I don't and because of that, I don't know how to sit with that. I mean, as we're, as we're recording this, it's like two weeks before the the elections on the sixth. And it's only going to intensify and then continue to intensify, and I don't see anything close to shalom.

BA 12:25

No.

Seth Price 12:26

So what do with that?

BA 12:27

I mean, what a state we're in. What an absolutely discouraging state that we are in. I don't know, man, my heartbreaks. And one of the bigger problems that I've seen for at least the last decade, if not longer, is just how entrenched Christians have become in that system. You know, kind of that binary system of this side is right, this side is wrong. And then the other side says the exact same thing and we've kind of bought into that narrative as the church and then unfortunately, we've started acting almost identical in throwing our anger and hatred and vitriol and dividing against other people. And so he's been large contributors to it now, you know, and I think that there would be many who would point out that evangelicals were overwhelmingly the ones who elected Donald Trump.

So introducing a book like this, where, you know, the title is Beauty in the Wreckage, Finding Peace in the Age of Outrage. I think that the subtitle has really caught people's attention, because I think that down deep, I think that people will intuitively know that this is not the way that we move forward. We can't move forward. We're spiraling downward but I don't think that anyone knows what to do about it. And unfortunately, our churches are just continuing to contribute to the problem. And so, I want people to know that like, right at the beginning of this conversation, this book is not a step by step manual to tell people how to fix themselves in the world. And this book is not a fill in the blank sermon, that’s gonna tell you how to do all of this stuff. This book is birthed out of my own personal experience and my own personal pain and what I've gone through personally.

And so you know, what you're going to get with this book is not some deep theology or something that tries to, you know, sermonize or pick apart parts of the Bible to, you know, change things. What you're going to get with this is someone who's willing to walk with you vulnerably through it and say, “let's reevaluate how we see ourselves how we see others, how we see our relationships, how we are currently living with one another”.

And then is there a way that we can begin living differently and so it's a very, I would say, it's less me standing in front of people with a billy club or rope trying to pull people as much as you know, I'm a part of this thing as well. And I just want to lead gently.

Seth Price 15:06

So when I tell people that, and I did it today, you know, on Twitter, or I do it by email, I just get called a heretic because I don't want to buy into what let's just say mainstream Christianity because I can't come up with a better metaphor at the moment. How does someone like myself or it sounds like you engage in the communities that we're in, enter into the wreckage that is all around us and the pain and the cynicism and the bigotry and actually be present in it without contributing, breaking more things into pieces and making more and more wreckage and more and more, what do they call it Flotsam and aboat wreckage? How do I do that? Like if I'm a pastor listening, or if I'm not like my wife and I teach Sunday school and these middle schools ask us questions like this often, like, what do we do about this? When we're talking about Jesus and that the gospel is written usually to people that are oppressed? While we're in America? What does that mean? And I find myself never really able to answer the question. A because I'm not their parent, but be because I'm afraid to do harm.

BA 16:24

Yeah. I mean, these are the real issues that we face, unfortunately. And I, you know, I think one of the things that I would be very quick to say is that the way that everything is being painted in the media is that, you know, your only response can be extreme on either side. And I think that because of that we've lost really kind of an essential humanity where we can't even see other people as human beings. And I think it's in chapter two of my book where I start talking about we've become so accustomed to labeling people and classifying other people and automatically assuming that we know about them and you know, their personality, their attributes, who they are at the very core, just by giving them a label that we really have dismissed their own humanity.

And I think that that's really a kind of a call to. I mean, this is not even making it a spiritual discussion at this point is just calling people back to your really basic humanity, of getting to know people and, you know, I think that we've become so detached and so depersonalized from other people because we're on social media all the time where people don't even have you know, hearts and feelings and children and relationships. And we look at them as another, you know, kind of depersonalized entity in cyberspace, where all of a sudden we can rip them to shreds and; man, I don't know I just I kind of feel like that. If my kids are coming to me saying how do we do this better? If we are going to move forward, I would say we've got to get back at a very basic humanity where, you know, I remember watching, this isn't in the book, but I remember watching that show with Morgan Spurlock? I don't know if you remember that when he did the 30 days with the fast food thing. But then he did a television show.

And when he took people who were diametrically opposed with one another on specific issues, like really hardcore issues. Things like one guy was a border agent who was capturing people as they crossed and he was so adamant against it and very vocal about it. And then he took people who had crossed over illegally who were living here, and he had them live together for 30 days. And the most shocking thing was that everything that each one of them presupposed about the other person began to break down over these 30 days to where they started becoming friends. And then all of a sudden their opinions about each other change, then all of a sudden, they just saw the basic fundamental humanity of each other. And by the end of it, both of them had changed their opinions of the other person, just because they got to know the person.

And I think not that my book is going into all of that. But I'm just, you're asking me a very difficult question about, you know, how do we get people because I think the cynic in me would just say, I don't know if some if many people even care.

Seth Price 19:39

I don't think they do. I think the actions a third way that we treat people repetitively and unintentionally, like just at our nature.

BA 19:51

It is and here's, here's, here's my, I hope maybe this is the optimist in me is that I hope that The most aggressive people are those who are at the far ends of either side of any issue. And that there is real, that there that there are more people in the middle who are just like, frustrated that they know that we can't continue on this way.

And so maybe, you know, while I hope to change the hearts and minds of people on either extreme end because I do pray for them, and I want people's hearts to change towards one another because we can't exist in a country where we are at each other's throats ready to kill, you know, and chant, “send them to jail” or “send them to prison” or “lock them up”. We can't live in a society where we are inciting violence and riots and mobs against one another. But I am speaking to the people right in the middle two of just saying, No longer can we be sitting in the middle of all of this just watching it passively that we actually have to in this would be the point of the book is to say, discovering shalom is something that's not a passive experience. It's a very active presence in the world.

And so, you know, some people could very cynically look at my book and say, Well, what are you saying? are you just saying that we should sing Kumbaya and sit on the corner and be happy and you know, feel close to God? And it's like, well, I mean, certainly, I think that we would go a long way to find our hearts once again. And I think that there are places where we can discover that through breathing as prayer, when we find solitude and nature, and just, you know, the small things of relationships. But at the same time, what we are getting from that that shalom that we're finding is that which we take into the world of that point. And there's there's ways to face issues in this world without taking more fire into it. And that would be the point.

Seth Price 21:55 

I like the way that you throughout the book, and I do this often at least on this podcast and I do a lot in, in, in person interactions is I like to weave my family into the story. And so you have done that at a great level. And there are two stories that speak to me.

So for almost everyone listening, except maybe my wife, I was an Eagle Scout at a time, and so you tell a story about you and your son, I think he's four. And you're going off and out into the wilderness and just his expectation, and just the beauty that he sees, when as adults, we've been reconditioned to see things in a different way. And you do a similar thing, I believe with your daughter, and with Dandelions. And when I read that it really spoke to me I have a she just turned six, but I had a very similar experience where I wanted to remove them all. And she wants to pick them all and present them to me as a bouquet.

BA 22:54

Oh, yeah.

Seth Price 22:58

And so the tension is like when I read that I was like, so I'll tell you one thing Brandon, one thing like I was reading a book as I couldn't read it in one sitting. Because of the personal stories in it and he relation to it, if that makes sense.

BA 23:11

Oh, it absolutely does

Seth Price 23:12

And we talked about it not being like a five step plan or a sermon notes version of, you know, just say this on Sunday. It's absolutely that, like, you have to let it sit with you, which are, for me the best books, but they're also the worst books. Because I don't really like to always challenge myself.

BA 23:29

Yeah, right, you're not the first person who said that, and I really appreciate it when people say that because even at the end of every chapter, I put self reflection questions and so people can let it set and think about it. And just, you know, I think part of it is just being very contemplated and thinking about ourselves and who we are and what we're doing. But you're exactly right. I have more stories into this book than anything I've ever done. And you know, my first book When it came out, it was way more preachy, I say, and kind of like Isaiah walking down in the streets naked for three days yelling at people,…

Seth Price 24:11

In Ohio! (Laughter)

BA 24:11

Yeah, I'm just gonna, I'm not gonna say anything. I had a great follow up but I'll just leave it there. My second book was way more tongue in cheek. And people have said, you know, how is this book different than the other two? And I would say that this is the best expression of my heart. If people want to know like, really what's in my heart, this is my heart. And so this book is deeply personal.

You know, and obviously, a lot of the stories that I put in most of them, with my kids being the central characters, me being kind of like the thick headed apostles, and my kids being the one teaching us. But I'll tell you, both of them really quick. sent in I went backpacking and he was four at the time. And the trail that we were on was just lined in mud. And on the side of each trail, it was just lined with thorn bushes. And so, you know, I don't feel like going on an overnight trip getting muddy or certainly like walking into thorn bushes, bleeding, but I was doing both. Both my boots were caked with mud, my arm had blood dripping from it, and I was kind of looking at it, and Will, the entire time that he's walking down this trail, not paying attention to the mind not paying attention to the thorn bushes, was just looking straight ahead.

And he was saying, for goodness sake, this is so awesome. For heaven's sakes. This is so awesome.

And I was just like, man, it might have been one of the most poignant moments I've ever had in my life where I thought I have a There's beauty around me. And I have this, you know, amazing moment with my son. And all I can see in the moment is the mud caked on my boots and the blood running from my arm. And it hit me because it's the same point that you brought out with my daughter whenever I was talking about the dandelions is that we really don't realize how much our seeing influences how we think and how we respond.

And in those moments, all I could see with the dandelions in the yard were a nuisance that needed to be contended with and killed. And on the trail, all I could see was the mud and blood. And both of my kids in both instances saw something that I couldn't see. And so, to me, it was just saying, Man, you know, there's so much about this life that I look at, and I look at it through broken fractured lenses. I look at it in distorted ways that really doesn't have my true heart at the center of it.

And so, to me, those were kind of pivotal moments in my life where I thought I need to change how I see those things around me; not not speaking of you know the dandelions so much but just how I'm seeing people and situations and circumstances.

Seth Price 28:00

So I live on the backside of the Blue Ridge Mountains, right where Skyline Drive starts, and so my backyard is well, it hasn't yet because we get a lot of rain for some reason this year but here here soon it will, it will just bloom into every color imaginable. And it is beautiful. And it's full of mosquitoes, but it is it is also beautiful. (laughter)

And I find more and more, especially this year, as I've tried to intentionally slow down usually late at night after the kids are at bed. And I begin to pray and I'm trying to take time to self reflect that I'm seeing more beauty, but I have an advantage because I live next to some. And so how if I live like in the middle of Dallas or in the middle of Chicago, what would be some things that you could intentionally do to set yourself aside from the metropolis to look for and hear and see and feel what I would call those you know those thin spaces where the divine can break through; or to borrow a phrase from Tupac, the rose grows up through the concrete?

BA 29:09

Right, right…

Seth Price 29:10

I can see how it's easy for someone in a rural area like myself, where I can easily seclude myself, but I don't know that it would be as easy for my friends that live in bigger cities, or in a different line of work, quote, unquote, with that they just don't have the same time to set aside to be intentional to look for beauty.

BA 29:29

Yeah, it's a great point. And it's actually one that I made in the book. Because a lot of the examples that I use have to do with backpacking. I'm fortunate enough, and I love to go backpacking, and I've been to some amazing places throughout the United States and Canada. And I've had those real, surreal, moments where I'm in just solitude where I'm just kind of about finding my breath again, but also seeing the beauty of it.

And I think it doesn't take a person having to go to Alaska to find that or to find respite in Moab, Utah, or, you know, on the John Muir Trail in California at the top of Mount Whitney. I think about those experiences that we have, that we all have shared experiences, and you know, maybe it is as subtle as just going into the family room with a loved one a brother or a sister or your mom or dad or your grandparent and just holding their hand—or, you know, just finding a tree to just lean up against and just watch the ants work and just watch the wind blow the leaves.

You know, maybe it's sitting outside on the patio or the stoop or the stairs and just watching people as they go by and just seeing the beauty of each person and, you know, I think that it's what we create. We all have those places…you know, even with my job, I'm in my car all the time. And just the other day I was kind of locked in to figuring out like, Am I gonna listen to a podcast on my commute? Am I gonna listen to some more music on my commute? And I looked down and I saw this beautiful morning sunrise and all of the kind of fog just hanging up close to the ground. And the way that was shining through the trees, and I just stopped for that moment and just took it in and appreciated it.

So, you know, I don't think that it takes a person having to necessarily live in rural areas or live in the Blue Ridge Mountains or, you know, have those special places that you go to as much as having the eyes to see the beauty that is around us already. We did this one thing a few years ago, I didn't do it it was something that somebody else set up. He gave each one of us cameras. And I'm not saying that people need to do this. It's just going to make a point. But he gave each of us cameras. And he said, we're going to go out and just walk through downtown. And just take pictures of beauty that you find in the ordinary.

And I mean, we were finding the, you know, the grass breaking through the cracks. We were finding like, I had this picture of a popsicle that had melted where the stick was still on the ground and just the shape of what had melted was there and I took a picture of it; or this little circle in the middle of the pavement where it had like this perfect green, it wasn't even grass. It was like this really neat green right in the middle of the road and I took a picture of it.

I thought, the things that we pass by every day that we don't even pay attention to, you know, the smile from your wife, holding your your friend's hand while they take chemo. therapy. I mean, it's it's the hugs that we share with one another. So, yeah, man, it's, it's not the exception. You know, it's the rule. I think that it's there for us all the time that we have if we're there for it.

Seth Price 33:14

Yeah, you talk and, and I like this so much so that I put it on Facebook tonight. So I'm sure you've already read this, but you speak in your book about what you call the relational disconnection from God. And that that is the beginning point of every lie. And one of my favorite episodes that I've done of this show is with my pastor, and we talked about the concept of ego and soulchild and some of the work from Henry Nouwen, and other work on that, you know, the powers and path of oppression and, and whatnot.

Then we talked about pain and trauma and how we shelter ourselves and we try to to create this facade, that becomes us but it isn't really us. And I hadn't really heard anybody say that except for my pastor. Aside from like Henry Nouwen and that kind of stuff. So what are you getting out when you say relational disconnection from God? Because I feel like if I can find a way to look for beauty, it's gonna make me confront whatever that disconnection is. How do those two interplay?

BA 34:25

Yeah, so I mean, first off my background is psychology. So I kind of tap into that a little bit. But, you know, one of the really funny things I did see you post that, and I was surprised that I wrote that because it sounded really good. And I was like, man, I don't know I was capable of writing something like that. I honestly forgotten a lot of the stuff that I've written in the book (laughs)

Seth Price 34:51

I triple-checked, I wanted to make sure you weren't quoting someone else. And I was like, yeah, this is him. So here we go.

BA 34:55

So one of the things that was going on in the back of my mind at the time is that everybody likes to throw in, you'll see that I've done this several times throughout the book with different churchy type words, but one of the words that has just been abused for forever is the word sin. And really what I'm getting out with that is sin, because, you know, kind of spell it out in that job in that chapter is just talking about like, 75% to 80% of the time that we see the word sin used in the New Testament, it is a noun.

And it's more of a position rather than, you know, everybody always thinks of sin as being these little naughty deeds that you do like the verb actions of it. But the truth of it is, is that sin in its most basic form is a position where we stand in relationship to God. So people have made it like this horrible word that we throw around and I don't want to downplay it, but I also want to say that there's a real relational element to it.

And so the way that I see it is that there's a relational disconnection between us and God. And if God is life, and if we are choosing to walk away from life and if there's a relational fracture or break, then we are walking away from life. To me, it seems like that in that place is where we find all of our brokenness, all of our darkness, all of our all of our waywardness. So that's really what I was getting at is just, I was using different language to kind of re-understand sin, honestly.

Seth Price 36:34

So, can you talk (about that) more? What do you mean when you say positional, something about that still isn't clicking for me? When I you just alluded to, but when I hear sin, I think you're living in sin, or I'm intentionally doing something and so, specifically, what do you mean positionally, like if you were to, if you were to explain that to my six year old, how would you explain that?

BA 36:55

Well, I'll say this first part, which I wouldn't say to your six year old is that the Greek word That they used for sin is ἁμαρτία (hamartia) which is a noun. Okay. So kind of at the very beginning, it's telling us it's giving us this idea that it's a noun, and then what the word means. And this is what I would say to your six year old. And so whenever you are shooting an arrow at the bullseye, and the arrow is off target, it's in a relational position that's off where it should be. It's not in line with it.

So really, whenever I talk about a relational disconnection, it's it's the place that we find ourselves when we have strayed from life in the divine.

Seth Price 37:40

And so to stretch that metaphor, if I'm shooting an arrow, and that arrow would be would be me in my heart in my intention, and how I treat others in this world. I think, if I'm moving, am I changing my aim or is God moving the target?

BA 38:01

Yeah, I mean, it's a great question. You know, I would say that anytime that we choose non-love, anytime that we choose non-life, those are the positions. I don't think that those ever move if God's very essence character nature is love and life to the fullest, I don't think that there's a whole lot of movement on Gods and away from us and that it's like God is fully immersing us and holding us and surrounding us in His love and goodness. And I think that whenever we stray away from that, whenever we choose non life, you know, the easiest way to understand it is kind of like what I wrote.

We actually begin believing that we are the source of that life which can become very prideful and very disconnected and it can become a place where we start feeding into the false self and running away from our true Divine Self.

Seth Price 38:57

Now, I like that and I like that metaphor. I'm going to, well, luckily, I'm recording this. So I'm going to write that down and use it again. You have and I think it's I don't believe it's a chapter. I think it's a sub chapter, but you talk about repentance. And you frame it in a way that most people listening to this, most in the English speaking world, think of repentance, like a tent revival, Hellfire and brimstone, you know, repent and turn away from what you're doing. But then you break down that we don't really translate the Greek word, and I'm going to say it wrong. So I'm not going to try to say it. Not-not very well in English, and that we need to rethink the way that we posture ourselves to repentance. Can you go into that a bit?

BA 39:46

Yeah. So again, I need to kind of balance it by saying that I don't want people to be worried that this book is a theology book because it's definitely not. I spend just a little bit of time. And one of the chapters going into some of this because of the story that set all of it up talking about an experience within the church, where I heard a specific speaker talk. And so I start getting into some of these words that we that's invaded our collective psyche that haven't served us well in the way that we understand them.

And so what I've done is really just tried to go back to the heart of in the essence of what the words are to help us kind of re understand and reorient around them. So one of the words is repentance, which, you know, 99% of the people listening to this probably would say, yeah, I mean, that's a word that means to turn 180 degrees around, to turn away from seven to whatever I mean, I grew up in that as well.

The Greek word is μετάνοια (metanoia). And what we find with metanoia, which then later in the book, I go into describe it even more of how within In the Greek world, they would have understood this word and some of their, their stories that they would have had at the time is that metanoia actually means to be transformed; it's kind of not so much a light switch turning off and on, but it's this gradual slow progression that's happening over time.

And it's not, you know, something where all of a sudden, because we've had this idea that, you know, well, once you turn the switch, then you have to be God’s and you have to be changed, and you have to be and it's like, well, I'm not sure that that's necessarily what the word repentance is getting at; its that there is a lifelong process of shedding off the old and becoming new. And I think that that's really true, more true to the heart of it, because what this policy says, He talks about the renewing of our minds, and I think that is a process and it's something that's going on, rather than something that happened at one point in time, where a did it take or not, should I get rebaptised do I need to say good words again?

Seth Price 42:04

for the 87th time,

BA 42:06

Right!

Seth Price 43:08

Yeah. So I wanna, I want to bring our conversation to a close with this specific call, and maybe some best practices. And so if I'm able to set find a place to set aside time to look for beauty intentionally, in this horrible mess of whatever country it is that you happen to live in. I think they're all in a similar space except for, you know, maybe someone that doesn't have the internet yet, which….they're winning. So, how do we recognize and how do we hear and most importantly for me, how would you say that we should document and record experiences that we see beauty to be able to reflect back on? Because one of the things I'm worried about is that and I would call that like a mystical experience. And I have no issues saying that even though I know many in the church would would would take issues with, with using that verbiage for different reasons. I don't believe that they are listening to this show, but I know many would say that and, and when I retail and I relive mystical experiences, if I'm not careful, I alter them, and I change them. And so I'm, how would I, you know, what do we do to look for those specifically?

And then how do we make sure that we record them and preserve them in a way that they can impact us for years to come?

BA 43:34

Yeah, I mean, some of it's gonna be really practical. And I think that some of it you stumble into. Jesus always said, for those who have the eyes to see in the ears to hear whenever he was referencing the kingdom of God. And I really think that that's true. I mean, there are practical things that people can do but then other times, you just have to have the eyes to see it.

I was sitting on my couch many years ago, and at the time, I just had my two daughters and one was seven, one was four. So that would have been about 10 years ago, 11 years ago. And I was suffering from severe body pain, which I've dealt with for the last 19 years and I was post supper my wife's cleaning up the kitchen, my dog is going crazy barking my daughters are playing very screech(ily) really loudly in the family room, and it was the kind of playing that just grates on a parent's nerves and I had all those (feelings) kind of right there at that moment. And I just remember putting my head back on the couch.

And I just started crying and I thought this is the most beautiful experience that I could ever imagine. And you know, I've got my kids right here with me. I have my dog with me running around like a wild animal. You know, it was a really surreal moment and I had another I don't know if I put this one in the book but I had another experience where I was in Denali in Alaska. And we've been backpacking all day and it's pouring rain, 45 degrees, just horizontal winds with nowhere to duck into, to take a break or get respite.

I sit down and just sat in the rain and ate my snack and the cold. And one of the guys looked at me, and I said, You know what, on a scale from one to 10 of this being the absolute worst experience ever, or an absolute greatest moment ever being at 10. I said, this is and I think everybody's waiting for me to say a one. And I said, this is an 11! Because you could be working right now.

And, you know, again, it's like I was in Alaska, but it was the perspective and whenever you talk about that, I mean, there are practical ways that people can enter into it by having some really, and I don't discuss any real practical things. I don't think in the book, but having discipline in those areas of finding respite or, you know, Jesus was very good about, even when he was busy even when people needed him around, he ducked out just to find space to pray and to breathe. And so I think that there's some practical things there, you know, whenever you talk about documentation, man journaling would be huge. I think sharing your experiences with your close friends, just so people can hear where you're going. And what you're experiencing-is huge.

I have my phone that I took with me to on one of the trips and on the microphone, I would just talk into it and just talk about like, what I'm feeling and what I'm thinking, what I'm experiencing what I'm learning. So I think the practical ways; on the other side of it, you know, I really wholeheartedly believe that despite our circumstance, despite our situation, no matter how good, how bad, how painful, how beautiful, that there is a deep well of God's goodness that we can tap into that supersedes and transcends every circumstance that we're in where we can find the resident goodness of God and all things.

And it's something that doesn't make sense. It's something that defies all logic defies all convention. But it is there in that moment, even whenever you least expected, it can be right there in the most broken, heartbreaking moment. And, of course, I have stories of that in the book about where that's happened. But I say, I don't want people to think that it's simply, well, you know, if I change a few things about what I'm doing, then I'm on the track to have everything right. And I think that there are disciplines that we enter into, but at the same time, I think that there is a deep well of God's goodness through the Spirit that can teach us and show us how to exist within this terrible tension at times.

They can give us a peace that surpasses all understanding, even when everything around us is wrecking and breaking and hurting and sad and any reach that we can have peace in that moment.

Seth Price 48:03

Yeah, absolutely. Yeah or as, as you, as you say early on in your book that we can have peace and have it abundantly or have life and have it to the fullest. Yeah, that's right. Well, Brandon, where can people obviously the books on Amazon, where do they engage with you though?

BA 48:20

Yeah, there's a couple of spots. One is easy one is BrandonAndress.com. That's my blog. The one that points directly to the book where you can get free sample chapters where you can get the promotional videos there. The places where the books for sale is beautyinthewreckage.com. So that would be an easy place. If people want to check out my podcast, it's Outside the Walls where find podcasts are delivered, distributed, whatever you say.

Seth Price 48:49

I've never quite come up with a good way to say where to find it. I usually just say it's on the internet, you'll…

BA 48:56

…you'll stumble on it somewhere. Yeah, it's

Seth Price 48:58

Yeah you'd have to try not to find it. If you were looking for it.

BA 49:01

Yeah, one thing I will say, and I don't know when this is going out, but Amazon actually ran out of my book and that is encouraging. But it also says that it's gonna be one to two months. I think it's going to be much sooner than that. But, you know, don't fret, you can get the E book for 99 cents and also order a physical copy to come in.

Seth Price 49:22

I saw that actually, I intended to ask you that. But I am curious now. Because after you talk to someone for an hour, you feel like you know, I'm a bit, but I know that as of recording on October 15-16th (2018), whatever day it is here, at least for today. You were you were superseding Joel Osteen. And a part of me likes that because he blocked me on Twitter because I called him out for proof. So part of me likes that. But how do you feel about currently out selling Joel Osteen?

BA 49:49

Well, to me, I don't really care about the ranking so much. But I will tell you this is that whenever you look at the rankings, and you see all of the people who are typically at the top, we'll just use him as the example. You know, I think that there is, I'm gonna say a different way. I think I'm praying that there's a hunger for more substance. I'm praying that there are people that break beyond the circumference, break beyond the edges, and are hungry to get into something deeper. That's deals, I'm not going to say that he doesn't deal with real life but it's certainly one element of real life that is maybe skewed one direction, and at least from my book, you know, making the pitch for it is saying, I do not run away from the heartache I don't run away from the pain, the suffering or the division and conflict. I don't even dismiss it, I take it on, full on, and and I walk people through it and so for me, what I see are people who are starved for a message like that. And I really feel like that the more people that pick it up and kind of read through it, we'll see, you know what I've felt that or I've experienced it. That's what I'm hearing from people more times, even in parts that I didn't think that people would resonate with that much. Those are the words that people are sending to me saying, No, that's where I'm at right now. That's exactly where I sat at the kitchen table when I looked out the window, and I thought, What am I doing with my life?

And so I think that, you know, we've spent so much time on the cosmetics of, you know, even within the churches of just going through the motions or standing on the edges or being super superficial, that people are just hungry for depth and honesty and vulnerability above all things.

Seth Price 51:37

Absolutely. Well, Brandon, thank you again, so much for your time this evening. I enjoyed it. I enjoyed it tremendously.

BA 51:44

Yeah, me too. I hope we can do it again. And I am so honored just to be on here. So thank you

Seth Price 52:18

Imagine what it would look like if we took the time to slow down intentionally, myself included, I am the worst probably person in the world at that a lot of that is self imposed, pretend to not have the ability to say no sometimes. But I've been challenged by so many authors and theologians and just conversations this year to make space for something holy, to make space for something beautiful and to not be afraid to let things break and as Brandon would argue, there's beauty in that.

I know as Alexander Shaia would argue, if we allow Christ, God, the divine, to hold us back together, that breaking when we become whole again is more beautiful than before, but we may not be the same and we have to learn to be okay with that.

A very special thank you to the Windtalkers for the use of their music and today's episode, you'll find links to hear their music and engage with them on social media in the show notes, as well as those tracks will be listed on the Can I Say This At Church Spotify playlist, remember to rate and review the show, thousands of you listen weekly, hundreds of your review. Let's make those numbers match.

Anyway, regardless whether or not you do I appreciate each and every one of you and I'll talk to you next week.

50 - Prophetic Narratives in Scripture with Walter Brueggemann / Transcript

Note: Can I Say This at Church is produced for audio listening. If able, I strongly encourage you to listen to the audio, which has inflection, emotion, sarcasm where applicable, and emphasis for points that may not come across well in written word. This transcript is generated using a combination of my ears and software, and may contain errors. Please check the episode for clarity before quoting in print.

Back to the Audio Episode


Walter 0:00

I think the day is over, when pastors can coddle parishioners and work very hard not to offend them. In fact, the gospel is a great offense. And it offends us more the extent to which we are committed to the dominant ideology. I understand how risky that is and how dangerous it is. But that is exactly how risky and how dangerous it was in Germany.

And a very small part of the church had the courage to do that. But I think There are many lay people who understand this as well. And what preachers have to do is to find allies, on lay people, no lay people have succumbed to the dominant ideology very many late people know better than that. And they are waiting to be empowered and, and verified in their hunches about what the gospel requires of us.

Seth Price 1:41

You are listening to the Can I Say This At Church podcast and I'm happy that you are before I get started. If you have not yet done so, go to patreon.com/CanISay ThisAtChurch or CanISayThisAtChurch.com and click the button for Patreon become a supporting person that listens to the show. This show is entirely supported by the listeners. And I am entirely entirely grateful for that. And I would encourage you to do so if you haven't, you get some perks and new things coming. I'm gonna try to do some videos only for y'all. Where I'm just hopefully doing that and you'll hear a bit from me a little bit different flavor, but we'll get there later; today though I am so flippin excited. Today's guest is Walter Brueggemann in he has to be one of the most influential biblical scholars of our time. He's authored over 100 books, and I'll say that again, 100 books many of us have never read 100 books and he's written over 100 books.

His works have greatly influenced me I love the way that he talks about prophecy and what prophetic voices are and what a prophetic imagination is, and what when we think about the Old Testament into scripture as a whole, what the story and the overarching themes are and how that impacts our posture for how we seek to live in the world today as Christians, I really think you're gonna enjoy it. Walter and I had to talk about so at the end of the show, as you're listening please shoot me some feedback. Some comments, let me know what you thought. Share it with your friends. Here we go. Walter Brueggemann roll the tape.

Seth Price 3:51

Dr. Walter Brueggemann, thank you so much for joining me on the Can I Say This At Church podcast. We alluded to it a minute ago before we started but I am very excited to speak with you and thank you for taking the time to be here today.

Walter 4:04

I'm very glad to get to be with you, thanks.

Seth Price 4:06

So normally, I have people introduce themselves a bit, but I'd like to forego that mostly because I feel like you have been prolific enough of a writer and an influence in so much of church and in Christianity, at least in the circles that I'm in that, that I would like to not belabor that point. And so I'd like to start with a slightly different question. Overall today I want to talk a little bit about prophecy, prophetic interpretations of Scripture, and then just kind of what that means for today. But to build that foundation, what do you think, or what purpose does the Bible specifically the Old Testament have for us practically today in quote, unquote, the West but for today's purposes, I guess we could say America, or Canada, but I live in America.

Walter 4:58

Yes, right. Well, The Bible and therefore the Old Testament, I think articulates an alternative narrative of what it means to live responsibly and joyously in God's world. The dominant narrative in our American culture is a narrative of fear, anxiety, accumulation, and violence. And the counter narrative of the Bible provides the foundation for a different kind of life that focuses upon generosity, abundance, and neighborliness. And I think today that our work in Biblical interpretation is to show how the dominant, the primary, narrative of the Bible contradicts the dominant narrative of our culture.

Obviously, there are many, what I would call fake interpreters, who read the Bible as though he had served phenomenal, dominant narrative of our society. But I think that's not an honest case to make.

Seth Price 6:26

What do you mean by that, where they read it in a way that it serves our society specifically?

Walter 6:31

Well, it's all the confusion of God and nation and we read the text as though America is the chosen people and as though our greed has God's will, and so our militarism serves being chosen as God's people, etc, etc, etc. And in fact, it is the same seduction The German church practiced under Hitler, in which it found it easy enough to accommodate the gospel to the claims of national socialism. And I think much of the American church is engaged in the same practice.

Seth Price 7:20

So that's from what I remember reading about your your biography. That is a lot of your background. And so what would you say are two or three similarities, I guess, of the Christian faith in Germany at that time and where we're at today?

Walter 7:36

Well, I think it was the assumption that the main function of Christian faith, and the church, was to legitimate the regime and behind that is, in order enormous anxiety about the collapse of old certitudes that have an economic spin off, and an appeal to authoritarianism, as though somebody is a master who can solve all these problems and work out all these issues, and that we are willing to lose our civil rights in the interest of security and prosperity. I think that's exactly what happened to Germany. Because after the First World War, there was a great failure of nerve in Germany. The economy was not doing well and Hitler presented himself as the one who could solve all these problems, and very many Germans simply signed on for that authoritarianism. I think we're, I think we're moving in the same direction.

Seth Price 9:00

I don't disagree, but it is disheartening to hear that because I have a lot of life left ahead of me. And I would rather that specific chapter in history not really ever repeat itself. But that's probably naive of me to say that it won't because I think you're right things progressively tend to get worse. With that in mind what is the role of a prophet like how do we today know when someone's speaking out; and they're raising their voice, so to speak, and they're finding what they're called to say, how do we weigh and test that—either Biblically, or extra-Biblically, how do we weigh in know that what they're saying is a word that we should heed?

Walter 9:42

Well, it's not easy or obvious, but I think that we have to have a very clear sense of Biblical revelation of the character and will and purpose of God and I have no doubt that the main trajectory of Biblical faith is that a God wills, generous, abundant, peaceful, just neighborliness. And any voice that serves a cause other than that, I think is a false voice. So that is not identification with liberalism or conservatism. I think there can be responsible conservatives and responsible liberals been a Christian conservative or a Christian liberal has to be engaged on behalf of the common good that practices peace on the basis of economic justice. And I don't think it's complex to see the main outline of that plot.

Seth Price 11:01

If you were that voice, giving voice to that, and tomorrow, economic justice was achieved. What does that look like and how does the church pull alongside that in unison?

Walter 11:15

Well, I think the church is very good at neighborly charity and I don't discount that. I think that's really important. But the church also has to be engaged at a policy level urging that we have laws and statutes and regulations that protect the common good, that provide viability for economically vulnerable people. And we are now in a season of political reactionism in which deregulation is unleashing predatory powers and the absurd tax law that was passed simply monopolizes the wealth for the powerful few at the expense of the many who are vulnerable and the church has to be engaged in those issues to redress those cynical acts of injustice.

Seth Price 12:25

Well, I guess here's my question. So if I was a pastor, which I don't think I could ever do, but if I was a pastor, there's a part of me that I don't know that I would have the gumption to stand up and say that in church knowing that the people in that church are probably not going to continue to attend there and so I've got a vested self interest in not doing that.

Walter 12:48

Well, I don't think it's the aim to, to upset or antagonize people and I don't think it's easy. But when a pastor needs is a long range teaching strategy, so that the congregation gets introduced to interpretive categories, so that they can read what's going on in our society differently, which was the task of the prophets. And I think the day is over, when pastors can coddle parishioners and work very hard not to offend them. In fact, the gospel is a great offense. And it offends us more the extent to which we are committed to the dominant ideology. I understand how risky that is and how dangerous it is. But that is exactly how risky and how dangerous it was in Germany.

And a very small part of the church had the courage to do that. But I think there are many lay people who understand this as well. And what preachers have to do is to find allies, on lay people, no lay people have succumbed to the dominant ideology very many late people know better than that. And they are waiting to be empowered and, and verified in their hunches about what the gospel requires of us.

Seth Price 14:27

Yeah, I would agree with that mostly because I hope I'm doing something similar to that in in the effort of this podcast of just voicing and questioning and, and pressing issues that bother me. And I find a lot of pushback but I also find an overwhelmingly more people are like, “Hey, I appreciate you taking the time to wrestle with this because it needs to be wrestled with”, for a pastor preaching on Sunday or Wednesday or whatever day what are some of those categories? You talked about the categories of the profits, what are some of those? Can you drill in on those a bit?

Walter 14:58

Well, the way I formulated lately is that the task of preacher of a prophetic preaching is not to harp on specific issues. But it is to imagine the world as though the God of the gospel were a real agent. And if you if one does that, if you imagine the God, the God of the gospel is a real agent, then we have to identify the things in which we are implicated, this contradict to the purposes of God, that's not very hard to do, we can see what contradicts the God of the gospel.

And what we know is that matters that contradict of god of the gospel, eventually end in profound trouble. So you cannot separate children from families and displace them and not expect outcomes that are negative. That is a contradiction of the God of the golf. That's an easy case.

But you can find many other cases, the whole business of monopolizing healthcare for money people and proposing junk coverage for poor people, that doesn't help people at all with health care. That's a contradiction of the God of the gospel, etc, etc, etc. So it's not it's not scolding, it's not harping. It's teaching people how to think gospel a, about the reality of a world. And we can do some of that because when people come to church, they expect us to talk differently about many things we ought to be doing that we ought not to be an echo of what people thought before they come to church.

Seth Price 17:11

Yeah, and if we are echoing what I'm hearing you say is we need to stop coddling people to make them feel good that that's not the purpose that you come to church.

Walter 17:21

That’s correct. I understand pastoral care. I understand pastoral gentleness. I'm not against any of that. But but that's, that's different than letting the illusions of the dominant narrative become normative for baptized people.

Seth Price 17:41

Yeah. When you said counter narrative earlier, is that what you mean that scripture is speaking out against whatever the current culture is, or a specific culture?

Walter 17:51

Well, I'm talking specifically about our culture. I think you could say the same in many other contexts, but But I'm not interested in that kind of generalization. I am interested in the place where God has put us in the midst of this dominant narrative. Which is a narrative, as I've said, of fear, anxiety, scarcity and violence.

Seth Price 18:17

I agree. Yeah, we did in an adult Vacation Bible School since the parents were already there. And someone brought up in it a few months ago that they wondered why churches don't engage in hard conversations more. And I remember my pastor saying he's like, you know, it's hard to do that, because we're really good at it, scaring people into continuing to come to church, and that he thought maybe or I hope I don't put words in his mouth that, that there may be a certain type of a mentality in churches and pastoral ships that I need you to be a certain level of scared because that's what keeps you coming in, which is the wrong way.

Walter 18:58

Yeah, I don't think it's a matter of scaring people. I think it's a matter of helping people think through what it means to be baptized. And, you know, we, in the Christian congregation, baptized people have signed on for this particular version of reality. And we've not done a good job of helping people think about what that means. So there's there's no scare in it. In fact, it's a gift to come down where you ought to be. And what this teaching does, when it is well done, it helps us get in sync with our true selves, and gives us comfort and ease. But as long as we are committed to practicing the contradiction we are just buying loads and loads of anxiety for ourselves. And there's nobody to talk about that except the church.

Seth Price 20:12

Yeah, if they won't, nobody will. You have used an analogy in the past of and I like it specifically because I've used your I quoted you in the past of you know, when we're reading scripture, we have to make sure that we are at least aware of our own biases reading into the text, but I have my own biases when I read you know, Harry Potter as well, anything I'm reading, the newspaper, the news, Facebook, I have a programmed ingrained bias that I was born with based on the culture that I grew up in. And so when you talk about scripture I've heard you use the analogy that scripture is is should be looked at more like a compost pile. Can you go into that a bit?

Walter 20:50

Well, what I meant is that then a compost pile if you just leave it alone, it will sprout new growth. And the new growth consists in insight and courage and resolve and grace. And the wonderful thing about the compost pile is you don't know how will come out. You don't you don't know what it's going to produce.

So my use of that image is to suggest that the Bible cannot be read as though everything in it had one meaning. It's more ambiguous, it's more open. It's more risky, it's more demanding. It's more imaginative than to think that it is a flat statement that you once get and you're done. Now, the point of all that is to say if we're serious about the Bible, we must be engaged in interpretation, so we can't just read it out as though it's perfectly obvious. And when you get to serious interpretation, that's when our fears and our hopes and our hurts impinge upon us, and cause us to read and understand in certain ways. So it's a very complex process. And I think that what the church needs to do is to invite more people in to that complex process.

What authoritarianism wants to do, whether it's authoritarianism of the government or the authoritarianism of Church orthodoxy, wants people to think that there's one answer to every question and you just get that and then you're done. I'd like to say, it's like having a teenager in the house, and having a teenager in the house means you've got to endlessly renegotiate everything. And that's how it is in Biblical interpretation, which is why we keep at the task of writing new commentaries, and why we have not yet written our final sermon, but we keep writing fresh sermons, because the task of interpretation is endlessly demanding. And we need to equip and empower people to engage in that process, because what that process does is it militates against every authoritarianism.

Seth Price 24:26

How do we deal with texts that have multiple interpretations or texts that are harder than I feel like my pay grade allows me to engage in and I'm thinking of texts, like Ezekiel and waterwheels in the sky and I really struggle with those. So how does someone like myself even begin to engage in that outside of the tried answers of will just read it and pray on it and you know, yeah, that's not gonna be good for me?

Walter 24:50

Yeah, I think you're right. I think some are very hard and there's some that I don't understand, but I always I always like to ask two questions of text like that? One is, can you think of a reason why somebody included in the Bible? What did they think they were doing with that? And that requires imagination. And the second question is if this text doesn't make any sense to me, who can I think of in the world today that might take up this text and find it meaningful? What that does is to break me out of my little cozy interpretation cell to allow meanings other than the ones that are obvious to me. Now that doesn't solve everything. But it can open things up…

Seth Price 25:45

just to clarify that you're meaning not who can I find that can speak with authority on this, but who can I try to put myself in the view of or the culture of and try to read the text that way?

Walter 25:59

That's right. If you take for example, the story of Ruth, Katharine Sakenfeld, an Old Testament scholar, did a lot of work on family structure in Southeast Asia. She spent a lot of time over there. And what she discovered is that they read over there, the people she dealt with, read the story of Ruth as being basically about the tricky interaction between a mother in law and a daughter in law. Well, that's hardly a question comes up in our interpretation of Ruth. So you know, people in different cultural settings, we'll find ways into texts that do not occur to us.

Seth Price 26:51

I recently spoke with a gentleman out of Arkansas who wrote the Forgotten books of the Bible and he dealt with Ruth in that and sometimes And it stuck with me since reading it is, is the role of the “Redeemer” and if there's a vernacular for that, for today's society, like if that role still needs to exist, should it exist and can it exist? And I still don't know if it does exist if there's anything like that. And I feel like if there's not there should be, but I don't know what that looks like.

Walter 27:23

Yeah, yeah. Well, it's worth working on. Yeah. Yeah. Right. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

Seth Price 27:29

So when I take away certainty, how do I know what I'm reading is true?

Walter 27:36

You test it out by saying…it's a practical test, “What if I lived according to this insight, what would happen to me? What would I do?”, and if it leads to behavior that you sense is not appropriate, then that cannot be truth.

Seth Price 28:06

I wanted to ask so I heard you in an interview, and I feel like it was years ago, before I ever decided to do this, but I can't source where it was. And so I hope I'm not taking it out of context I might be and if I am, tell me and we'll leave it in and I'll eat that crow. Um, I heard you say something that the, that the Old Testament and the destruction of Jerusalem is a parallel or can be made as a parallel to what happened to America on September 11. And when I heard you say that it wasn't off putting, but there's a part of it. That reminds me of those preachers that will say, of course, the hurricane destroyed Florida, there's too many gays in Florida. Or of course, this happened, this calamity happened. So am I wrong in hearing that or did I miss the point when you said that?

Walter 28:52

Well, I don't want to suggest that it's a one to one analogy, and my inclination is not to read from the destruction of Jerusalem to 9/11, but to read from 9/11 back to the destruction of Jerusalem, because what 9/11 suggested to us is that America is more vulnerable than we thought and that was the big discovery in ancient Jerusalem. So, to draw that kind of analogy helps us read the Bible more knowingly, and it may have spin offs. If you if you read it back and forth both ways. It may have spin offs to understand 9/11 differently, because I want to be asking, why was 9/11 such a traumatic event for us because there had been many crises in which many, many more people died? So my reading of that is 9/11 became such a crisis, because of its symbolic value, not because of the actual bodies.

So then I asked, well, what does it symbolize? And what it symbolizes is that America as God's chosen people, is at risk. So that's how the back and forth, it seems to me, helps us at the same time, interpret our circumstance and the circumstance in the Bible about which we're reading. But that is not to say that God sent those airplanes… You know, what do you think about that let it lay there. let it do its work.

Seth Price 31:07

Yeah. Well, I don't like to be uncomfortable. So I don't I don't really want to. Um, I will. But if there's anything I've learned this year, it's, I grow when I'm uncomfortable, and I hate every single minute of it.

Walter 31:21

Of course, of course! Which is why the preacher gets such resistance. Because it's uncomfortable, and I don't want to be uncomfortable.

Seth Price 31:30

It's something I'm wrestling with now. And I spoke with the gentleman that listens to the show yesterday, he just called me out of the blue and something we talked about, how do I wrestle with or how would you recommend someone wrestle with the the counter testimonies that we find in Scripture? So like, I have promises that God will never leave me or forsake me but a lot of places in the Old Testament, he certainly appears to do so like I'm gonna be here and I'll be gone for a bit I'll be back and when I get back, we'll be good. Or like I have, you know, the Old Testament violence of God and I have the love your neighbor version that's not the same. So how do I sit with this?

Walter 32:04

In my old testament theology I’ve tried to lay out the tension between the core testimony and the counter judgment. That's what I called it. And sometimes the the counter testimony of the Bible that tells against the core testimony strikes us as true. So that's also biblical. So, if one is a pastor, and no one is experiencing, the absence of God or the violence of God, the work of the pastor is not to talk them out of that (but) the work of the pastor is to help them live with it, and see what comes of it.

So those texts are really important because they are so close to lived reality. And the Bible is not a it's not an escape hatch that lets us out all the trouble stuff. But what the Bible does is to help us process all that trouble stuff by giving us text that brings that stuff to speech. And it can be brought to speech, then it can be processed. If it is not brought to speech. It will never be processed.

Seth Price 33:25

I agree. And the reason I ask is, often I find when things go wrong, I feel the absence of God like when, I mean, my wife is a pediatric nurse, and she deals with a lot of kids with cancer. And I can't imagine if I put myself in that same mind's eye, if one of my children had cancer, that I would feel the abundant presence of God. And part of me feels guilty for that and the other part of me feels righteous and feeling that way. And so I personally just wrestle with both aspects of that.

Walter 33:53

See, what I think is that the awareness that there are these contradictions in the Bible, what I call a core and counter testimony is a mirror of the contradictions that we are carrying around in our bodies. So we are mixes of faith and unfaith, of certitude and doubt and all of that. And the dominant narrative of our society requires us to pretend that we do not have that unsettlement going on in our bodies. But but that's the truth of the human self, the human self, every human self, is a conundrum of contradictions. And our human work is to process those contradictions. And the Bible helps us do that by bringing the many facets of the conversation To speech. So on different days, in different situations, we resonate with different kinds of texts that give voice to one element of the contradiction that we are carrying in our bodies.

Seth Price 35:19

But that doesn't devalue or de-weight the other voices. They're still present. I'm just not engaging with them right now.

Walter 35:25

That's right. That's right. Yep.

Seth Price 35:28

I like that. I don't know that I've ever heard you say that or read you say that. I like that a lot. I actually got when you were when you're talking about I got. I was trying to write it down. And it didn't work very well. So luckily, we're recording this so listen to it again. So I want to switch gears a bit to prayer. Because I feel like most prayer in America is trite and maybe that's just the circles that I'm in. But I'm finding in this season in my life, that if I spend time intentionally praying that it does change me, and I don't do it regularly enough, but how would you say we can engage as a as a culture and as a religion and as a church and a people in an imaginative view of prayer. And then what I mean before we answer that, what is an imaginative view of prayer?

Walter 36:13

Well, I, as you may know, I have published some prayers. And I think you're right most prayers in the church are pretty flat and unimaginative. So my habit about praying is to find an image or a metaphor and walk around it, and just keep walking around it so that it yields something. So you might, you know, do a tree or a spring water, or an orphan, or a flag, or even many numbers of concrete objects you can think about, or a second strategy that I have found useful is to take a biblical text and pray it back to God.

There's a marvelous example of that I’ll just cite the the text, I won't go into it. But in Exodus 34:6-7 there is this declaration that God is steadfast and long suffering and all that good stuff. And in Numbers 14, word for word, Moses praise that those same words back to God and lays it on God. So I think it's very useful to take Scripture and pray it back to God in ways that are demanding, and honest, and uncompromising.

So that the engagement that we make with God ought to be strenuous and honest. And what you can see about the prayers of the Old Testament is that the human person who prays has a great sense of entitlement in the presence of God. Most of our prayers are excessively deferential to God. And there isn't much of that deference in Old Testament prayers. So you just take Job as an example, Job before God was filled with chutzpah, and I think that's a very healthy way to pray.

Seth Price 38:45

I like that, besides the Lord's Prayer, I've never really tried to…I've done some lectio Divina, but that's not quite the same as what you're saying. So I do like that. I'm going to give that, I'm going to give that ago. Have. So I asked Brian Zahnd many, many months ago, if he thought that America the way that we're currently postured is like a new version of Babylon thinking of Babylon and the biblical text. I'm curious your thoughts on that analogy?

Walter 39:15

Well, I think so. I've, you know, I think the analogs are always complex. But yes, I do think that and if you read the characterization of Babylon in the book of Revelation, I think it's maybe chapter 18 or somewhere there. It rings true, because the accusation that is made of Babylon is that everything and everyone has been turned into a commodity. And that's pretty much the case in capitalist America, everything and everyone has a price and that's how we are Great. So I think there's a lot to that, yes.

Seth Price 40:03

Thinking of America, and this is a question I posed actually on Facebook last night, which has gotten a bit of traction and more than I thought it would. Do you feel that we will I feel like I know what your answer is going to be but but humor me, do you feel like we idolize currently in the culture and the political climate and m the Empire saturation that we have in America, the Make America Great Again, as an idol, that it is become elevated above the Bible, above Jesus, above the kingdom of God. And that has become the focus on what we should inform our opinions of other people and our policies in our direction.

Walter 40:43

Yes! And I think that slogan is profoundly racist. The “Great Again”, that's being talked about is white supremacy. I do think it is an idol and I think it's very seductive among us.

Seth Price 41:02

Yeah, I fully agree with that it was only great for a very small subset of human beings that happen to live here it was not great for everyone for most, actually. So how do we unwind that then? Is it realistic to think that America is going to be able to unwind itself from its love affair with Empire? And its lust for greed? Or is it inevitable that we just run our course and explode like Rome did? Which oddly enough, one of the comments on that question was an analogy to making Rome great again, and he made the similar correlations of you know, how someone's elected the appeal to Empireism, the appeal to Nihilist thoughts, there was a lot of correlations that I never thought about before. Do you think it's possible for us to unwind ourselves or is this just inevitable that we explode?

Walter 41:51

I think that depends on good teaching and good preaching, and that requires a great deal of courage, but I think it's art ask whether whether it will succeed? I don't think we know. But I say I think we have to do a lot of teaching about American history. That's why there is such a battle about textbooks. And that's why so called Christian Schools want to shellac black American history. They don't want to tell the truth about slavery, about Native Americans, about American history being essentially the history of brutality, etc, etc, etc. And we have a great deal of work to do about that.

Seth Price 42:40

Yeah, I want to ask you just a final question because I'd like it to affect the way that everyone listening helps to raise the next generation. And so in my experience, I always feel like the generation before me feels like they have the quote unquote, true theology. And if I'm honest I think most of the time I feel like where I'm at is true because it is for me. And so with that in mind, how do we posture ourselves toward Scripture in the Bible in such a way that we don't lose the next generation? Because all signs seem to point that they are not interested in engaging in any way, shape or form in any long term format of church. So how do we course correct that?

Walter 43:23

I don't know the answer to that. Well, what I was going to say before you said your last sentence is, I think the problem for young people is not testimony in Scripture, if the institution of the church and the church will have to find very different and very fresh ways of living out his life. And that really is beyond my competence to know about that but it's going to be radically new forms. That will feel very really uncomfortable and displacing for very many of us. Yeah.

Seth Price 44:05

Well, as we alluded to earlier, the uncomfort is usually when you grow, but I don't like it either. So that's right. It's right buckle up, it's gonna be, it's gonna be a horrible ride. And hopefully the end is good. Who do you think besides yourself are for those listening and we'll close with this are some some poetic or prophetic voices that are currently in our purvey now that people that want to get engaged in imaginative views of Scripture and imaginative use of prayer, or just other viewpoints? Who would be some people, including yourself that you would that you would direct people to?

Walter 44:41

Well, Jim Wallace at Sojourners is certainly one. Michael Lerner who is the editor of the Jewish journal Tikkun. But I don't I don't keep a list like that. I think William Barber who was leading the Poor People's March I suspect Bishop Curry of the Episcopal Church is out in front and stuff like that.

Seth Price 45:16

One of the thoughts that I'm liking in that list is they're not all Baptists. They're not all Catholic. They're not all Protestant. Like they're, they're different channels, which I think is a beautiful picture of ecumenism.

Walter 45:29

That’s right.

Seth Price 45:31

Yeah. Well, but engaging in that forces you to deal with Scripture in a different viewpoint in and of itself, because they're coming from a different background. So I like that part of that list. Dr. Brueggemann, thank you so much for coming on today; it was a pleasure, a genuine pleasure, to speak with you. So I'm so thankful for you coming on.

Walter 45:51

Well, it's great to talk with you.

Seth Price 45:57

All right. So you're all here with me, mmmm…so good. Walter Brueggemann is one of the smartest people I've ever spoken with. And I'm so thankful that he was able to come on, I hope that you got as much out of that as I did. Specifically thinking about it in terms of this election cycle, and what the counter narrative of Scripture is, and how we should really posture ourselves to not just the Old Testament, but the New Testament and the underlying over arching theme of Scripture. So, so thankful that I was able to talk with Walter.

Another thing I'm thankful for. So this show is about to hit its annual anniversary and I have no signs that will be slowing down anytime soon. I am so excited for that. so thankful for that and honestly so blown away, that so many of you were engaging in the show, I would encourage you to share the show on social media. Tell your friends family, please rate and review the show.

And as a second bonus a few episodes back with Paul Thomas about the butterflies book and the overarching love story of God in the Bible and Scripture and what that means for humanity as we try to relate to the divine. Paul has quite a bit of knowledge about El Salvador and a bit more knowledge of Latin America and the history there and the culture there because he's spent some time there. And I just don't have that knowledge. And I've learned so much from talking with Paul. And so he offered to talk a bit about the canonization and all the services that went around in the fall, for the beautification of Oscar Romero into (into Sainthood). What that looks like in the context around the socio political climate, what the church climate time, guerrilla warfare just so much there, and the feedback from the first part of that bonus episode that many of you have heard has been amazing and so as an appreciation gift and token to all the Patreon supporters, the other parts of that on patreon.com/canisaythisatchurch . I'm trying to find many different and engaging ways to thank you for your end like better way To give y'all just some special nuggets that you won’t get elsewhere. You are one of the reasons that this show continues to be here a year later. And I'm so thankful for you and I would in any way or capacity if you're not, I still love you. And I'm thankful that you're listening each week. And I'm so happy at the growth of this show, and I can't wait to see what happens next year. And so here we go a few minutes of part two of the Oscar Romero bonus episodes, just to give you a taste of what you'll hear on Patreon.

(begin Oscar Romero clip from bonus on Patreon)

Paul Thomas 48:30

So there we are. We've got this oligarchical class of overlords and they start to hate Romero. He is a thorn in their side. They want to kill him. In fact, when the assassination happens, they turned it into a little fundraiser. They had a little lottery where people pitched in some money, and then they drew straws to see who would have the privilege of murdering the Archbishop of their country.

On the evening, before Romero was assassinated, he addressed the armed forces, you know, the soldiers of the Armed Forces directly, and he told them that it's their own people that they're killing. And that no soldier is obliged to obey a command that is contrary to the command of God, “Thou shalt not kill” and talking directly to the members of the armed forces. he famously said, he said,

In the name of God, and in the name of this suffering people whose cries rise up to the heavens every day more tumultuously I beg you, I beseech you, I order you stop the repression.

Now the government's looking at him and he's saying, “No, he's stepping too directly on our toes. From a government perspective, he was a guerrilla sympathizer” and they had very little voice, in order to have their voice heard. They marched into the city and they took over the cathedral downtown where Romero said mass on Sunday. And Romero empathize with them in a sense, I mean, he he was of the opinion, look, if this is a constitutional democracy, then we have to let people participate in it.

If we don't give them a voice at the ballot box if we don't give them the right to assemble, if we don't give them the right to form up and become and get elected to the Legislative Assembly so they can express their opinions and the whole legislature can vote on them like you do in a civilized country. If we don't give them that then the only way they have to express themselves is taking over the cathedral. So if they do that, you know what I'm going to do. I hope people listen to them. I'm going to go say mass at the church down the road. And the government sees that is oh he really he loves the People and now he's talking to our people.

Seth Price 51:08

The music and today's episode was brought to you by artists band musicians, called Shofar Band from the new album that launched in 2018 entitled Behold. You can find more info you can find more information about the band at as always, you can also find the music featured in today's episode on the Can I Say This At Church Spotify playlist.