Prayer with Scott Erickson and Justin McRoberts / 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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Scott 0:00

Hearing the voice of God in your life is is it's listening to the voice of love. And I don't know if any of us are like, nope, all filled up don't need any more of that. Because God's love or just God is love that is transforming presence. And so when you're saying like I want to get something out of it's like, yeah, I want to be transformed by love. And I don't think that's anything to be ashamed of. I think where we get in some problems is that we think that we have to be somebody else in order to be successful at religion. And that that is the work that we must work through. Is that like, you know, God is not gonna love us any more than where we're at right now.

Seth Price 1:06

Hello there, and welcome back to the Can I Say This At Church podcast. Today you are in for a treat, but before that, a few announcements to those of you that have rated and review the show on iTunes, I love you. Love you so much. I like going in, I go in about once a week and I see the new ones and I see how the show's impacting you or not impacting you, either way, every time that each of one of you does that, it really does help the show gives me some constructive feedback. And so before we get started, thank you for that, to those of you that support the show on Patreon. And if you don't, why do you not? I’m telling you right now, I've used that platform to give new content. I mean, just recently, many of you were able to listen to a conversation that I had over a year ago that have just never released with Thomas Talbott. And talking about evangelical universalism and the hope that maybe that could be right And then we could all be reconciled to God, ultimately. And honestly, what better thought than that? I don't know where I sit with it still been over a year. It's been years actually. But that's okay.

But you get stuff like that you'll get you know, other content like the four part series with with Paul Thomas on Oscar Romero and just a bunch of other little clips. And I appreciate all of you and it's so…I love that community. I love it so much. And so I would invite you to do that for less than a very, very bad cup of coffee, that literally less than the dollar menu now at McDonald's, come into that environment, consider supporting the show that way.

As this past six months is interwoven, you've probably heard me talk a lot about contemplation, and the Examen, and I'm continuing to do that this year, but I'm trying to work in a few more types of prayer into my daily and weekly routines, and I'm not very good at it, but that's okay. That's not really the point. But I'm finding that the part of church that I didn’t ever really engaged with because I didn't know how was iconography. And so iconography and prayer go hand in hand, especially when you use the two intentionally. So I had a discussion, right on election day. So this, this conversation is a little bit dated about prayer, and maybe intentionally practicing it in a different way.

And so they have co-written a book entitled, oddly enough Prayer 40 Days of Practice, and in that you're going to hear myself and Scott and Justin kind of wrestle with some of the concepts there. And what happens when we engage in prayer, and we're honest with ourselves, and what we do with that uncomfortability. And when I say we, I mean me, and maybe you but that's on you to decide.

Quick caveat on this. So you'll hear in the background, you know, sometimes you hear kids, you'll hear buses, you'll hear trains, you'll hear random static, and so because of the way that the world works, people are busy and so we use the best opportunity to time that we have but because of the conversation and the more that I listened back So I let it sit for months, and then I came back to it. I'm really thankful for this conversation. I'm very thankful for this book. And I've continued to engage in it a couple times a week. And it has really helped me the icons and the images and the prayers that I'm using today are different than the time of this conversation, but entirely still as true for me as I as I continue to do contemplation and wrestle with truths about God and myself. Enough of me and this monologue, let's start this conversation with Justin and Scott.

Seth Price 4:36

Justin McRoberts and Scott Erickson, thank you so much for taking the time at different parts of the planet and the continent, and I'm thankful for the Internet, and your willingness to be able to on on a not busy day, you know, we've all got lives and and it's an election day today as we record this, and so there's a lot and so, thank you for taking time to talk about something I think we all could do better at: prayer. So before we do that, just welcome to the show to both of you. I'm so thankful for you being here.

Justin 5:04

Thanks for having us. Thanks. Yeah, we're excited.

Seth Price 5:07

This will be hard because people can't see you. And so, so people can kind of get to know a little bit better of your voices can each of you kind of just walk through a bit about yourself what you would want kind of the little one to two minute elevator pitch of what you do, why you do it and why it's important.

Justin 5:21

Go ahead Scott.

Scott 5:24

Um, yeah, well, my name is Scott Erickson. And I am a professional artist, which I like to joke means I've taken a vow of poverty. But no, I'm interested in the image, the images that we make and we think about, and I'm interested in how that informs kind of our spiritual formation. And so what I have been doing for a number of years is imaging the spiritual journey, what that looks like. Because my running theory is that you know, our words are informed by an image and then our beliefs are informed by words. So really, when we say we believe in certain things, we have an inner image that we have to recognize and stuff we have to see. And so a lot of times, it's a negative working image that we have to replace and really coming out of a Protestant tradition I didn't have any of that. And so I give a nod to historic imagery, Christian imagery and stuff, but really, I'm trying to develop a new lexicon for that kind of work.

So that looks like creating artwork, being commissioned to make artwork, and then I do a bunch of speaking and performance storytelling, kind of experiences dealing with the image on different topics and and have co authored a book or two with this guy, Justin. McRoberts; and that’s what keeps him busy.

Seth Price 6:56

That's what keeps him busy or you busy?

Scott 7:01

Keeps some of me busy. And then I have three kids and a wife and two. That's and that's a whole other thing too; and a house that we're renovating, which

Seth Price 7:11

Are you building art into the house?

Scott 7:14

I am I'm looking at like three canvases that I have to make paintings for art. Which is nice to be able to be like, well, I can make the own my own art for the house. But no, we we got a great house, but it needs some work. So there's just this like constant list of things to update.

Seth Price 7:32

Yeah. And then sort of bounce that. Justin, tell us a bit about you.

Justin 7:35

So Justin McRoberts. Born and raised in the San Francisco Bay Area, East part of the Bay Area, Oakland side of the water…working backwards. Yeah. Scott, and I've put together two books. The one we'll talk about mostly this morning prayer, four days of practice, and then another one that follows that app which is awesome. I started writing books about 2012. After spending from 1998 to 2012, almost exclusively playing songs, telling stories, then became a little bit more of a storyteller.

I planted a church in 1998 as well. So I've done some work as a local pastor and speaker, I do some retreat leading. I also have kids, I've got two kids. I've got an 18 month old girl, and an eight year old boy. I also run a podcast called the At Sea podcast.

Seth Price 8:34

That's cool. Yeah, I didn't listen to any of those. But I saw it. I went to your website earlier in the week. And I noticed that and because of time, I just didn't have time to listen to it. But I've added it to the list to listen to, I didn't want to, I didn't want to tint to my view of questions ahead of time. By listening to that. I needed them to be genuine for me. So you all have written, written a book on prayer. Entitled Prayer 40 Days of Practice, and I will tell you, the first thing that struck me at it is, when I got it from the publisher, I expected a sit down and a whole bunch of meat. And what I got instead was a whole bunch of work that I had to do,

Justin 9:18

(Laughs) Success!

Seth Price 9:20

which if I'm honest, I don't know that I'm happy with that. But I will say, I will say the prayers interspersed through this are, I don't like so. I don't like having to deal with my own issues. I'm not a big fan of that. I'm a type eight on the enneagram (for clarification I’m a 5–I just didn’t know this yet). I just don't deal with that. Well, I like to set a target, hit the target, move on from target and I don't look back. So prayer specifically contemplative prayer. I'm trying to get better at I feel like it'll make me a better human. But I also hate every single moment of it. And I don't know if there will ever be a time that I jumped over that proverbial shark so

Justin 9:58

I would would assume that there will be.

Seth Price 10:03

Really?

Justin 10:04

Oh yeah!

Seth Price 10:02

Why 40 days? Is that just a magic number…it just felt right?

Justin 10:08

I mean, every year, the season of lent, posts itself up as an opportunity for folks who don't like prayer to feel or don't feel connected to prayer to actually do something in the direction of prayer. So what you know, folks, give up chocolates, folks, you know, quit the internet, folks stop drinking booze, folks. Kind of spend this season of this 40 day season in the spring doing something religious even for those of us who don't consider ourselves particularly religious. And Lent felt like the right season to do that because I think initially the idea of 40 days lighting itself up with the season of Lent. The other side of the coin there is like the thing you were just saying with regards to like, Hey, I don't think we'll ever get to the other side of you know, this particular obstacle my life. You know, Scott and I are in alignment here with the idea that, you know, most things are a matter of practice and they're not a matter of magic. There's this weird thing that's happened in the context of Evangelical Christianity in which we kind of have these magical beliefs about the things that we do.

Whether it's the reading of the Bible, or the Psalm listen to or the sermon, we're going to get that there's going to be like a magic, that it's like the one sermon is going to change your life or it's this one song with a Holy Spirit decide that the Holy Spirit's going to move; or its the one time you pray, as opposed to the reality of the human soul, which is a matter of practice. It's a thing that shapes your heart, your soul, your mind, your body over the course of time and repetition. And so, why 40 days? Well don't just do one of these, don't just hang out here for a minute; give this some time.

Scott 11:49

I think that's great. I mean, there's Biblical precedents for that number of a significance of that time whether it's literal or kind of metaphorical, that lends to this kind of transformational process. And so along with the built in framework for Lent, this kind of Biblical number, it just made sense that if we're going to give like a series or like a time, in order to do this, we said why don't you commit to this time?

I like, I'm gonna go off the rails a little bit, I like your…I like the…I think what Justin's saying is really important about kind of what we start thinking is like, if I could just do this song or I can just do this prayer, there's gonna be this kind of one time and then I'll be transformed versus this constant, kind of keeping the soil tilled, like if you think about the idea of spiritual practice. Spiritual practice is not the the one off thing that we're going to have this experience. If you look if you think about the metaphor that Jesus gives about the sower planting seeds. What spiritual practices is, it's keeping your soil tilled. Because God is actually the one that plants the seeds. So spiritual practice is a way of like being ready for when that seed is planted.

So prayer in of itself isn't this like, moment of like, “Oh, I'm gonna have this spiritual kind of Prozac moment of ecstasy”, not that that not that that can't happen. But the practice of prayer, which you could say is like silence, openness, sitting with the presence of God, sitting with like the presence of myself in my own life and my thoughts in my in my secrets, and all those kinds of things. That keeps me in a space so that when God wants to plant some kind of seed or some kind of word, I'm ready to receive it. Like I'm cutting down the noise of my life of my ego of all these other narratives and I'm giving a space for God to plant that seed.

Seth Price 14:08

I like that. Because prayer in that way, and so something I've been wrestling with ever since I read Aaron Niequist’s book, The Eternal Current is the examen. And it's all the contemplation that I can bite off and chew. It is gradually changing me, but it requires more time than I usually have. And a lot more thought than I was raised to pray with, if that makes sense? I was raised like Southern Baptists. And for me, prayer was always a, I did that it's off the to do list. It's done. Yay, we did it! And that was a way to absolve myself from any actual action, as opposed to doing something. I pray for it. Someone else's job now.

So when we talk about content contemplative prayer, you all talk about that there's four different ways. And so you talk about there's guided prayers, contemplative imagery, meditations, and suggested practices. Can y'all just kind of break those apart in brief? What are we talking about when we do those four things or is it that they all interplay in or weave into each practice?

Justin 15:20

Well, yeah, but they do interleaved with the way we do it in the book as they do in our weave. And just for the for the record, I mean, they're, they're probably endless ways to enter into contemplative prayer. Because contemplative prayer has more to do with the posture than the particular practice. But then again, you have to practice your way into that posture. So it's a little bit of a little bit of a process. But with the book, maybe like what we'll do, I'll open it with a couple and then Scott can pick up the, specifically maybe Scott can pick up the way we need to engage within and journey with contemplative practice because it's one of the things that makes the book really, really unique.

But the suggested practice because although the lifting said, you know, part of what Scott just got after hearing in terms of in terms of your soul, treating your soul, like soil, and tending to soil, that's the thing that has to happen. You do have to spend more time than you want. If it's just a matter of applying myself the way I'm ready to apply myself than I'm going to shape my prayer life around my existing condition. And therefore, I'm not transformed by the renewing of my mind; but my mind’s current corruption is going to transform my prayer life, my view of God and that is in fact the way we go about our spiritual lives.

A lot of the time where a lot of what happens in the context of American Evangelical spiritual practice, we're really good at accommodating our like existing place. Where are you and lets meet you there. I think we're really good at that. We're good at meeting you know, we used to say seekers, we're good meeting congregants where they are, we're good at meeting each other to some degree where we are. We're not as good as taking that to somewhere else. We're not as good at the challenge part of it. So it does take more time. So suggested practice, I think it does oftentimes have to come from the outside. What do you want to do? Do you want to spend 15 minutes in silence? No, you don't! But I'm going to ask you to, I'm going to ask you to spend 15 minutes in silence.

Do you want to refrain from praying for the things that you want to get in your life, but instead, take the time to, like, be thankful for everything you do have before you ask for something else? No, you want to move right into like, what am I lacking? What do I want from God? What do I need to happen? But I'm gonna ask you to not do that for a while, maybe for a couple months, maybe for a year just stop praying for things you think you need to then start being thankful for the stuff you already have and then reframe the things you actually want. In order to honestly be transformed and to actually posture ourselves for what God may or may actually be doing in our lives we have to till the soil have our souls and that usually comes with hands, with practices suggestions, that are that actually are outside it's it doesn't necessarily emanate from like my desires, my will and my existing needs. So a suggested practice usually has to be someone else's suggestion.

Seth Price 18:57

A follow up on that. It's been my experience when I try to tell people about what I'm not learning, but trying to learn in the Examen, they ask questions that I'm entirely not ready or prepared to answer, because of my lack of practice and lack of understanding of the way that that prayer works. And so when I'm suggesting things to people or hearing suggestions from others, how do I weigh that for, not quality, but for truthfulness?

Justin 19:28

That's really good

Scott 19:30

Truthfulness…in what do you mean in like, what, like your honesty, like truthfulness and like kind of honesty?

Seth Price 19:35

I feel like when I say truthfulness, I tend to manipulate things to better me and I’m fearful of doing that with prayer. If I'm brutally honest. And so when i when i get suggestions of either books or reading, or podcasts or music, there's always an inherent part of me that's fearful that I'm going to get it and take what I want from it and turn it into something that it wasn't intended to be. And so how do I guard against that when I'm getting suggested practices of prayer and contemplation?

Scott 20:07

What I mean, it's the process of seeing that kind of desire in you, which I would say isn't necessarily that I would really check and see where the root of maybe that kind of shame or or saying that's wrong. You know, like, hearing the voice of God in your life is is it's listening to the voice of love. And I don't know if any of us are like nope, all filled up don't need any more of that. Because God's God's love or just God who is love that is his transforming presence. And so when you're saying like, I want to get something out of it's like, yeah, I want to be transformed by love. And I don't think that's anything to be ashamed of. I think where we get in some problems is that we think that we have to be somebody else in order to be successful at religion?

And that is the work that we must work through is that like, you know, God is not going to love us any more than where we're at right now. And I think a lot of people I, we're, I'm actually working on this like kind of essay about just why why you'll eventually give up on praying. And one of the reasons is because you can't be yourself. Because you don't think that you can be yourself in prayer. And we because we, like Justin has worded this really well; and this is in the back of our book. We don't pray because we're religious, we pray because we're human. Prayer is a human response. Religion can help us give a structure and wording to that response, but it's not the root of that response it’s just giving a structure to it. So what I found helpful, so like, I think a lot of us when we think about prayer, we think about, like, I gotta be sitting down, and then my hands clasped and I gotta be silent and I gotta be holy. It's like, No, you could you could be a person who goes on like, goes on walks, I have a friend who's a pastor, and every morning his prayer practices, he gets up at 4:30. He's got like, six kids, so he has to get up really early to get any sanity.

But he just puts on his coat and coffee, and he just goes walks for like an hour. And he’s like, “that's how I pray. I can't pray any other way”. I can just go out in the dark in the morning and I walk around and that is A-Okay, like, you can't get prayer wrong. You need to figure out what, what makes sense for you. You need to figure out how you as yourself can enter into it instead of trying to be somebody else in prayer.

So I often tell people I'm like, hey, if words aren't working for you find a song that works for you. Oh, hey, guess what it doesn't even have to be a Christian industry song. Like, you know, when you hear a song and you're like, oh man, that's my song right now, what are we saying? We're saying sonically and lyrically that form is helping me go, this is what it feels like to be in my own skin. Maybe that actually we can use that as a vehicle to approach God honestly, maybe we could just like sing that song, or use that poem, or use that image or use that written word, as the way in which we get to that honest conversation with God.

And that's really the intention of our book.

Justin 23:48

Yes!

Scott 23:50

Our prayer book isn't like, “Here are five paragraphs every day that you need to read it will tell you what prayer is”. We're just giving you some excavation tools through words and images to help you get to that inner conversation with your Creator. Which is what prayer is, is that honest, ongoing inner conversation with the one who gave you life? So I think reframing or just kind of seeing prayer from that aspect, it takes a lot of the guilt away or like, I'm not successful at this. Sometimes, like, I really resonate with what you said, I started, you know Jesus says, when he's telling his disciples before, he gives them the Lord's Prayer. He says, Hey, your Father in heaven already knows everything you need.

And I was like, what do you pray about then? You know? And so I took that as a prompt, and for a year, I would get up at five, like most, like three quarters of the time, I'd make a cup of coffee and I'd sit in my living room in the dark, and just go, “you already know everything. What do you want to talk about”? And sometimes it was just kind of being in a silence with myself. Sometimes I would, I would hear God speak some things out. Sometimes I would after some silence, I would read some Psalms or some Scripture. But I stopped and Justin was alluding to this I stopped feeling like I had to carry the weight of the prayer conversation.

Justin 25:16

Yes.

Scott 25:17

Yeah, I think that's the biggest. It's like we feel like it is all up to us. And so that is a, that is a very freeing move to not put it all on you.

Seth Price 25:29

I want to come back to imagery and iconography. But before I do, so, where do you feel like at least here in America, we went off that deep end? Because as I've done this podcast and spoke to people of other parts of our faith, not everyone has this issue with prayer specifically? A lot of people are much easier or much more able to engage in a contemplated prayer but for some reason we aren't and I don't really know why we disconnected or felt the need in the West to disconnect that part of our brain from our heart? As you were writing this, did any of that researcher or impact come up in this?

Justin 26:09

Yeah, for me, it was a matter of research per se, as in like, specific, like, why I went and did the research. I mean, I like I said, I planted a church in 1998. And I paid attention to the way that people around like, so therefore, I was I was also responsible to or for but I was at least attentive to the spiritual, emotional, psychological needs of a particular group of people over, you know, 15-20 years. And I watched folks struggle. Like the way we would talk about it, like I struggled with prayer. And then we would go to resources that would tell us all about prayer that would diagnose prayer and we’d talk about this is what prayer is what prayer potential looks like here's a hearing out here all these things about what prayer does and it was like, all about prayer in the same way that make sermons talk about God.

So we ended up having encounters with people who tell us about God; or we read essays by people who are telling us about prayer. And so we ended up like how should I say this? We end up like it like a step or an arm's length away from the thing we're really wanting.

Scott 27:22

We are like archaeologists, like we're not in the place we're just like reading about the place. We are studying a historical thing instead of like actually experiencing it.

Justin 27:34

So the dark side, if I work backwards, forgive me if this is a little too far down the prophetic angle here to the prophetic road here, then you want to go. But the truth of the matter is it's a lot easier for me to sell you something that I can offer you than it is for me to actually teach you, if I can, to encounter and recognize God. So part of why we are where we are is because in all reality there is a salesmanship strain in American Evangelical Christianity that dictates way too much of what we do and how we do it. We want to keep butts in seats because I want to keep my job and I want to be able to pay for my staff and my worship leader and our lights and our building. And that means that I've got to create something that you need from me.

So what I'm trying to sell you that is my teaching, as opposed to help you actually commune with God in a way in which I'm no longer actually necessary; where I can be potentially helpful. So part of why we are where we are is because we are, and here is the big prophetic stream, is because American, and white Evangelical Christianity, has been deeply deeply infected by Consumer capitalism, and we're more interested in selling things oftentimes, then we are in actually helping people connect with one another, with each other, with themselves, and with the Lord.

Scott 29:01

Dang! Mic drop.

Seth Price 29:03

Dropping all the mics.

Justin 29:04

That's a lot of why we are where we are. And, again, part of what we're doing with the book is what you'll find in the book is like Scott's got these beautiful pieces that he's drawn. I've written these prayers, but there's not a whole truckload of Scott and I in the book. There's enough of us to prompt and a push but we're we're honestly interested, I swear to you, this is really what we're up to, is we really do believe that you have everything you need in order to connect with the divine. Which is to say you are alive, and God is present to you, period.

So the next steps…the next steps are, how do you dig into you and discover what is all already true, real, and beautiful about your connection with the divine where you are exactly where you're at? So you don't need 750 word or 2000 word essays telling you about prayer. No! You need to look into your own soul recognize He’s been good to you. You are shaped beautifully. You are beloved, you are blessed.

And so these short little prayer prompts, the tiny little prayers, the guided prayers. My intention is to guide you to recognize the presence, the activity, the beauty, the goodness, and truth of God in your life. The same thing with images.

What Scott is doing is like, maybe you're someone who doesn't connect with words, in the same way and I’d love to pass the baton back to Scott here in a second, and get into images that way you want to do Seth does because like, words sometimes for us, my take with the words…like why isn't this book full of words? One, I think we have too many words in general. And two, we don't pay enough attention to the words we already use.

So this is the book, it's got far fewer words in it and they're just way more intentionally chosen. So that you can just sit on like a tweet length prayer for a day and let those words dig into your soul and the images do something really similar.

Seth Price 30:55

I will say before we go to images being that I've already read the book a few times, because it's easy to read, is I'm not allowed to tweet those yet. And it's like, I'm like, I want someone else to read this. So I've been reading it with my son and he's nine. And so it's good practice for him to read. But he also recently got baptized. And so it makes it…it's different. We can still, it's allowing me to work through prayer in a way that I wasn't certain on how to guide him into pray outside of praying over our food.

And so I've been greatly appreciative of that just as a thank you—an unrequested, thank you, it's, it's not often that I've had something that I can pray in a way that's meaningful that he gets the same amount out of it as I do, and it fosters more conversations, and often unexpected ones. Although I will say the question that he asked and so Scott, maybe this can be a good transition is why are there so many trees and so many roots and why do they go not into the ground? And that was his question to me, I was like, well, I'll ask the guy that I think drew those. And so can we start there? Like, what is the relationship of imagery to prayer being that it's not necessarily spoken or even thought? Did I miss you, Scott, are you gone?

Scott 32:18

I probably hit mute. There we go, I’m sorry.

When Jesus is talking to people about anxiety, and he's saying “consider the lilies” and then like, “Look at the birds”. He's saying, look at what's going on and just contemplate it, consider it, consider what you see. And he's like, there is a world that is revealing, what and how God works in the world. So a good question for the visual is what is the mean, another good question for the visual is, what is this bringing out of you? Like, what is this excavating out of you?

Because when we are used to language and we're used to going this is what the words mean. And what what's helpful with poetry is that kind of plays with that. But with imagery it’s like a different kind of language. And so we want to approach it the same way and ask what does this mean? But it actually has like a different function. It goes, What is this? What is this? What is this revealing in you? How is this a mirror for you?

So, these prayers, so these one sentence prayers, and then these images are really the same prayer, they're just kind of working in different ways together. And so what happens is when we see this image, like, and Justin and I do this because we do this live teaching of this stuff, but we'll we'll dissect an image and we'll be like, what does that say to you and Justin will say something completely different than me. You know, they're similar and they have similar things because we start coming at it from the context of our life, what's concerning us right now, what we're thinking about, you know, it helps reveal all those things.

So this was lost in Protestantism, I mean this still exists in the Orthodox and Catholic churches because for shocking for all of those who who love the Bible, like the church didn't have a Bible for like 1500 years like the priests did in Latin, but people didn't have Bibles and they didn't even know how to read, a lot of people. So if you get a chance to go to Europe or something and you see these kind of cathedrals and churches, they were communicating the wisdom and the truth of God through images, through icons, paintings, sculptures, all these kinds of things. But after the printing press was invented, and they started translating it into German, and then local languages, and then people started learning to read through that. Like, they were like, We don't need this stuff anymore. So we kind of lost this tradition of a forming image contemplation. So that's what it is.

So your son’s like, “why does the trees go…why did the roots not go into the ground”? They go into…are they just hanging out there?

Seth Price 35:31

There's a few that go into hearts. There's a few that go into hands. Yeah, there's a lot of root imagery. A lot of heart and a lot of tree imagery. There's only one I think that goes into the ground prayer that you that I don't know which one of y'all wrote it, or probably both. There's one that says

May I never considered my weakness and faults, the larger or most authentic part of me.

And yeah, those roots are obviously deeply rooted beyond the surface. Which I see as the deepest part of me, not my weaknesses or my faults. I might be doing that wrong. But that's what I see.

Scott 36:10

So you're not doing that wrong. That's what's in you bro. You’re not doing it wrong, you nailed it insofar as that's what it's like and I love the way you open it up to you because you're like, Hey, I have this thing, I don't want to do that work because of what I see in me like, what you're describing right now, like you're engaging with the piece, like that's exactly the way we are hoping readers dig in. Again, like there isn't like I think I might be getting this wrong. No, man that's like, like, what does it make you think of wasn't make you feel? Okay, cool. Well, offer that back to the Spirit and see where you go from there. Like that's not wrong. That's like that is the ballgame. Yeah, that's prayer. That's real spiritual, actual, like self engagement with the Spirit of God.

Seth Price 36:55

It's uncomfortable.

Scott 37:00

Yeah. there's a there's a Jesuit priest….(Justin bouncing in and out…)

Just to our listeners out there Justin's on a tour bus because he's a #bigdeal. Somewhere in the county of somewhere in Texas where the reception cuts out every now and then you cut out there, buddy, you were talking.

Seth Price 37:26

No big deal.

Justin 37:28

Oh my bad.

Seth Price 37:30

I'm gonna blame this on my brother. So he lives north of Dallas, which I think is where you are. And so I'm just gonna say that if he paid more in taxes, you wouldn't have this problem. And so James if you're listening I need you to do better. I need you to do better. Oddly enough, who knows if you'll ever listen, and I'm not even gonna tell him I said that. And so that's how we’ll know.

(Music)

Seth Price 38:22

The image that stuck with me the most, I don't know if either of you have your book in front of you, but Prayer 21 where you talk about the depth of generosity and never being swayed by the depths of thanks. The hands and the inputs to the hands are different shapes. Something still doesn't sit right with me about that image. And so can either of you talk to me a bit about either that prayer or that image or how the two interplay?

Scott 38:45 Yeah, that image is weird for me, because I suggest in the way that this book kind of came around is Justin had spent three years tinkering with these one sentence prayers during Lent. And then so he had a pretty complete list and then he gave it to me and then I just spent a number of months going through it and, and prayerfully thinking through them and then making these images. So that one is kind of a is sort of for our listeners, like it's got a it's kind of a Ying and Yang. So it has got a hand you know, an arm and a hand putting in a piece into something.

Oh…Justin, are you on a bus?

Justin 39:31

I'm back now. I made movements that should be way better than I was before.

Scott 39:35

Perfect, perfect. And then it's placing an object into another cylinder that goes into another hand that's placing an object into the cylinder which is the arm. So it's kind of this like rotating thing. That idea was just like, where we give from should not be an empty place. Like where we give from is the place where we also receive from and so I think sometimes we think that we just have to be endlessly generous. And yet God is always inviting us to ask, what we want, what we need, what we desire. To spend time in His presence and receive the love that we need. And this is going to be the place that's going to form the way in which we give and are generous to the world.

See, again, the ways in which religion ruins us is that it makes it all up to us; it puts a lot of the weight on us that we have to be these endless givers instead of giving as just a natural part because we've already been receiving, we've already been receiving grace. There's a Jesuit priest named Anthony de Mello, and he's got this great prayer, which I gotta say, at a certain part of my life I would have been like “that sounds like heresy”. But he says be grateful for your sins, because they are doorways to grace.

And as I sat with that for a number of years now, what it reveals to me is how much I think I need to earn God's love by my perfection. Right? And what he's saying is he's saying like, you your weaknesses and faults, or whatever it is, that is the place that God meets us. God is giving grace to us in those spots, and that is the thing that's going to transform us the most, more than our piety and our righteousness. Um, and so if we think about generosity in a similar vein of like, Where's the place maybe the place of like, lacking in fear is the place that I can trust and give from or maybe the place that I've actually taken taking time to receive. And that's going to inform more of this moving away from a scarcity mindset, that kind of stuff. So, that's what I think is going on there. Again, I want to say there's no so solid “This is the only answer” as much as that was my intention with that image.

Justin 42:25

Yeah. I mean, the original prayer, came out of my own personal life, experience had to do recognizing that if I'm going to be generous, my generosity needs to be rooted in the abundance of God's goodness as opposed to A: like what I feel like I have to offer or B: more insidiously what I think I'm going to get out of giving.

And that's where it's really corrupt, because then all my generosity is like, rooted in this sort of ROI equation. Like if I invested this person's life, then what's going to happen is I'm going to get this and we're going to get this and this out of that investment. So specifically I'm working as a pastor, like some of the strangely, like twisted pastoral training I received had to do with like making sure I was investing in ”the right people”. And usually the right people are people who are going to be able to turn around and reinvest in institutional setting in which I was functioning.

So just my thinking had to do with like, putting time and effort into already qualified people who are qualified according to the needs of the institutional setting in which I was working as opposed to how about you love, cherish, care for exactly who it is God gives you to regardless of what your institution is going to get out of it. You just let the Spirit form the Church, as opposed to you feeling like you can build that by way of your generosity. Yeah, that's where the prayer came from in me is like I need to reorient why it is I give.

Seth Price 43:54

a few weeks ago, about a week ago, I think I put out on Twitter during my lunch break. I was reading through this one of your prayers that was I didn't put out on the prayer, I just put out that I needed this today. And so I had been struggling with a conversation at church about generosity and abundance of grace. And we worked through a bunch of the episodes from the podcast at Sunday evenings at church with a very small group spread out amongst all of the ages and the demographics and whatnot. It was it was beautiful. But something we talked about a lot was being generous, and we could actually impact our community if we just stopped hoarding gifts.

And so when I saw the image, you know, that had sat with me for weeks. And so when I saw the image, what I saw was, I have this gift that I've been given, that I'm supposed to freely give, it's shaped like this and somehow going through the work of the arms of this person, it's transformed into a different gift, which is also freely given in a reciprocal…

Justin 44:55

That's good

Seth Price 44:58

…in a reciprocal way. But again, so the image is just stuck with me. I've revisited it often I took a picture of it and made it in the background on my phone for a few days. I couldn't get it out of my head. So both thank you and not thank you for that.

Justin 45:12

See…yes this is…Yeah! Yea, no, I think it's really important to recognize, like, why is this capturing me so much like that is the doorway to a deeper conversation, right? And it's like recognizing that and then sitting with it. This happens to me a lot with like, a song. I'll hear a song and I'll just be like, what is that? And I'll just listen to it over and over and over again. Yeah, but that's great. That's great. No, man. Yeah, that's exactly right.

Seth Price 45:41

Last question for each of you. And it's not going to be fair. What is either your favorite prayer in this book, and or your favorite image in this book, and they the two don't have to be related. But then why? Like if you had to choose one of these 40 days, this is my baby.

Justin 45:59

That's good.

Seth Price 46:00

Knowing full well, that answer is probably going to change in 30 days for many reasons. But for today anyway.

Justin 46:06

Yeah. Well, depending on honestly insofar as it will probably change by the end of the day, depending on the election results go for me; if I’m being honest.

This prayer about being the same person in all circumstances, that I would be an uncompromising whole person, may I be the same person, regardless of my circumstances, in posture. May I be an uncompromising the whole person, and the image that's associated with that and that it's, for me among the images in the book is the image that keeps coming back, because it is as whole feeling as an image. It's this, it's really there's a there's a base with reach and out of the roots, these leaves are going and it's encapsulated by this sphere and it feels like this there multiple elements to the image but it still feels like one single image its whole, I come back regularly, and it continues to speak to me and inform me and challenge me. That's the prayer that I come back to, you know,

Scott 47:13

Yeah, for me there's a prayer it says

may I have hoped for myself the way I do for others

and then the images this kind of this boat and inside of it as a lighthouse. And I like the words and the images a lot for this because the boat with the lighthouse has kind of become an image of pilgrimage for me, instead of this kind of idea, like, “Oh, I'm just on this journey, and I gotta go to this light and that's the safety” you know, whatever the lighthouse represents this kind of like safe harbor something.

I think putting the lighthouse in the boat is like we're all on this pilgrimage. We're all in this journey. And each one of us have something to offer to the other. So often we'll see other people's light and that's a helpful thing for us. But we can't disregard that our lives have our own light to it. And I can offer I can often, like, see people and be like, then I'm so excited for you, I have so much enthusiasm for what's ahead of you. And then I examine my own life without examining the filters I put on myself, and just go “there's nothing for me”. And it's like, well, that's not true, either. So I think that's a good…that one's been resonating with me.

Seth Price 48:33

Nice. Well, thank you both so much for your time today. And then so in closing work in people listening. Obviously, I would recommend you go out and get this book for a few reasons. It's not extremely expensive. It is entirely engaging and in a way that is not not taxing mentally because it's too much to read. It will be taxing emotionally but I think that's worth the effort. So where would you direct people to both engage with the book and engage with each of you?

Justin 49:00

You can start with just visiting 40DaysPrayerBook.com and that from there you can go to any of the places you would normally buy books instead of picking out one seller and then…

Scott 49:13

40 and in Four Zero

That's the best place to start.

And then Justin is JustinMcRoberts.com and at @JustinMcRoberts on all the social medias. And I'm Scott Erickson, ScottErickson.com and then @Scottthepainter on all the social medias. And that's where you can find out kind of what we're doing.

Justin 49:43

We will be like talking about this content in the next year doing shows and things like that. So we'll have all that information there.

Seth Price 49:48

Yeah, very nice. Well, good. Well, open invitation if you come to the Charlottesville Virginia area, I'd love to reach out…I have no contacts to make that happen. But if you're close enough Hey, I would love to make time to come in and chat with you in person. Yeah, definitely. Well, thank you again so much for your time. Justin, tell you in your #bigdeal friends who don't know me, but I said hello, why not? (laughter all) And Scott, good luck with your um, with your renovations appreciate you both.

Scott 50:22

Thank you

Seth Price 50:50

I don't really know a good way to end this episode and so I'll just leave you with this.

I pray for each of you that you will dive deep into contemplation and sit in silence and pray in new ways this year. That you'll find new facets of the love of God in prayer and that those facets will work themselves into your being at a level that you live differently but not intentionally, it just becomes the new status quo.

You don't try to do it it just becomes you that theosis that part of you week over week over week is changed to be more Christlike and so be well in your prayers. I'm praying both for you and with you as I hope you are for me and honestly everyone else that we come in proximity with.

Today's music was provided by permission from Justin McRoberts. That's right. You heard that name right, the same Justin McRoberts that I just finished talking with. You'll find links to all the music used today in the Can I Say This At Church Spotify playlist, the tracks specifically listed in the show notes.

Talk to you next week.

Be well everyone.

Prophetic Voices with Mark Van Steenwyk / 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


Mark 0:00

I think our prophetic voices are usually very specific. I remember reading this article like a decade ago and it was written shortly after Oscar Romero was assassinated, and it said that Oscar Romero wasn't assassinated because he called people to love and justice because everybody says they like love and justice. It says that he was specific about what love looked like and what justice required and so the specificity of our prophetic voices will change in each place. But there are some general things I think it's something that I see because of living in Minnesota is I think, we those of us who have more privileges need to lend our voice to the rights of indigenous people for their land. Because I think that is one of America's original sins. And I think it's really a spiritual matter. Like everything that has to do with pipeline resistance is tied up in indigenous rights because it's almost always when it comes to these oil pipelines, they're going across indigenous tribal treaty lands. And so I think that is a big one; that understanding the cause of Native Americans and the environment like the way those two things come together is a key prophetic issue for the church today.

Seth Price 1:33

January is done this is the Can I Say This At Church podcast, I'm Seth your host in January is done that's insane. You people are amazing! So over the course of january of the show continues to break numbers, weekly, sometimes daily on episode downloads and you know, the Facebook and the Twitter and the Instagram and the reviews. Love it. I love your intentionality and engagement and I encourage more of it. I've enjoyed the phone calls that I've had with some of you, the private facebook messages, it is a blast to be a part of the community that has developed around these conversations and it is a privilege to facilitate that in any way. So just a quick announcement in February, mid-February hopefully, my goal is…I plan to travel to see some family. And when I get back, I would like to intentionally engage with a handful of people on some of the work of Alexander Shaia of heart and mind and the quadratos view of the gospel and kind of what that causes us to do. And so I'll post links to those signup sheets in the show notes. And if that's something you want to do to those that have showed interest, expect an email. And I look forward to coordinating and doing that with you.

So I have a guest today on the show. Returning guests, Mark Van Steenwyk. Prior, we talked about you know, anarchy and what that kind of looks like for us. To be subversive of a government, and what it looks like for humanity to live in a church and to foster with and partner with the church in a subversive way to help be the kingdom of God. And I wanted to talk more about that with Mark. And so this kind of fostered from when Oscar Romero was canonized and my conversations with Paul Thomas and Mark had said quite a few things and we've done some private messages and I was like, you know, Mark, let's talk this through. I want to talk about what it looks like for people today. And in the recent past of what a prophetic voice looks like. Like I don't want to talk about it pie in the sky. I want to want to dig into the meat of it. How does it feel? What are its drawbacks? I'm gonna roll tape… Mark Van Steenwyk.

Seth Price 4:14

Mark, I'm excited to have you back on the Can I Say This At Church podcast you are on the list of less than I can…I can put the people on a list of one hand, I'm saying that wrong on my hand are five fingers and on those fingers are God….this is why I don't do this. So, welcome back to the show. Welcome back. There's been a handful of people that come back on the second time and you're on that list, you know, with Alexander Shaia and Austin Fischer, and Keith Giles and so welcome back to the show.

Mark 4:46

Thanks for having me again, with that illustrious crew.

Seth Price 4:51

Well, what do you mean by illustrious?

Mark 4:54

I don't know. It just sounds impressive, doesn’t it?

Seth Price 4:57

Well it is, I mean, this is the way…what do you say in the south? They're good people. They're good people.

Mark 5:04

We don't have that saying in the north.

Seth Price 5:06

What do you say then instead?

Mark 5:08

We just don't say anything. (laughter both)

Seth Price 5:12

sSo for those that haven't listened to our prior episode, and I forget what episode it was, I think it's like 24/23 we talked a lot a little bit about your political views and leanings and and that type of stuff. And so kind of bring me up to speed a little bit about what you do with the Center for Prophetic Imagination. Kind of what that looks like what its purpose is what that even means because a center for prophetic imagination, I think in America means also, I'm gonna start speaking in tongues or prophesizing, or the end of the world is next Wednesday, and you did not buy your five gallon bucket brownies yet. You know, so, what does that even mean?

Mark 5:56

Yeah, you're right, like, I mean, I grew up among charismatics and Pentecostals so the idea of prophetic is what usually what Pat Robertson thinks that he's doing but no like there's part of it's a riff off this book this classic text by Walter Brueggemann, which was I think just celebrated its 40th anniversary. We're not named after him. But as part of the inspiration, the book is called the prophetic imagination. And he talks about the sort of the spiritual posture of prophets in the Hebrew Scriptures. But then he does this wonderful thing and all of his work throughout his life has been a recognition that that same spiritual posture, that political posture of the Hebrew prophets, is part of what we ought to be about today so that's part of it. But for me, the prophetic piece is this recognition that it's not just this call for justice, but it's also this call to return to a full, life giving, relationship with our God. And so the nonprofit is about that like how do you nurture that sort of spirituality where we don't see a separation of like loving God and loving neighbor we recognize that as all the same work. I'm frustrated with this tendency just assume that being prophetic just means like any old spiritual person talking about any social justice thing it's a little bit more than that as spirituality. And that we've lived in a society for almost 2000 years where the way that we train and nurture leadership has been helping people maintain a sense of continuity with tradition, but the prophetic impulse is about discontinuity.

So like when you go to be a pastor, if you'd like. So when I went to seminary, they didn't teach us about disrupting stuff they taught us how to maintain things. And so we ended up in this society we're in now where church folks are afraid to speak out against injustice or call people broadly to repentance, at least the way the Hebrew prophets did. Because we're afraid of alienating churchgoers losing donations, pissing people off, losing our 501(c)3 status. And so given that that's the default setting for most seminaries and churches, I started thinking about like, how do you nurture and support people who have more of a prophetic posture to do that work? Because no one else does not. There's tons of other people supporting people in that work. So that's what the Center for Prophetic Imagination is.

Seth Price 8:54

So I find when I call people out on just overgeneralize what I Part of what you're saying when I call people out on what I see. And so, you know, I think that honestly, the something I've learned the Bible is written to people that are oppressed. And like, for instance, I was recently talking with, with Paul, Paul Thomas, and he sent me some stuff about Oscar Romero, and basically talking about, you know, if we give it context for, you know, El Salvador there and before Vatican two, you know, the priest told you what the Bible said, and here's what it says, you know, there will always be the poor among you, man, just deal with it. We need your land, we're going to grow the corn, just deal with it.

And then when they translate the Bible into Spanish, and people can read it for themselves, and I heard him say, Well, you know, as these poor peasant farmers, I'm pretty sure you all lied to us. Like that's not exactly what scripture was saying. Pretty sure it's saying that. This is for me, like you're not supposed to use this to oppress me. And so I find when I tell people that if I see something on Facebook or Twitter or even in person and I say, you know, that is not the way that we're called to talk to people. And that's not even the right mindset to frame things around that I'm just called racist or politically correct or anti-racist or whatever other slightly passive aggressive adjective you want to assign to somebody to basically say, Don't tell me what I can't say. So how do I do that? How do I, I don't even know what that looks like. Because I find that I either don't do it well, or I suck at it or both. That's probably the same thing. But I don't even know how to do that. I don't even know how to do it.

Mark 10:35

Well, I mean, that's the thing is like, I think we can get better at it. And that's one of the points of Brueggeman’ Prophetic Imagination is that prophets usually try to find the most effective means of discourse, the most clear way of basically pissing people off and calling them to repentance. But at the end of the day, the greatest examples of people who do this failed in a sense, like so Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated. Romero was murdered while he was giving mass. Jesus Christ was crucified. And he said, like, you know, anytime the prophets came to you, you treated the prophets the same way and you killed him.

So in some ways, the prosthetic thing is never going to feel superduper successful because you're gonna win some people over and wake some people up but the the weight of oppression is such that those who benefit from unjust systems are too invested in it, and they're gonna want to kill you or silence you. And they're gonna call you things right now that's what happens. They'll call you a snowflake, libtard whatever it is, is a way of just quickly marking you as part of those liberal elite people who are disconnected from reality and espouse Fake News, and so I need to shut you up however.

Seth Price 12:04

How do you do that well on social media because as I become friends with you quasi through social media, you do this better than I do. And it may be because you give more thought to what speaking to people in a prophetically engaging way looks like, because that's not really what I do day in and day out. Even if I think about it, I don't really practice it. And I'm not intentional with it. And so what is the best way to enter into that discourse because most people don't talk face to face anymore? I think over I would have to guess but seven out of 10 conversations are digital conversations. And that's the new norm. So what's a good way to, I guess speak prophetically via 140 characters or less because if you type longer than my iPhone, I stopped reading it was too long didn’t read.

Mark 13:01

I think it's a mixture of things like for me, I feel like I'm in the sweet spot when people can call me names and I won't get mad. So I think that's part of it. Like that maturing process of self differentiation where you don't take personally when people challenge your truth. But then also like this, I try to do these little habits of that's part of it is like I still listen, listen to conservative talk radio, when I can have time because I want don't want to lose sense. Like I don't want to start treating rural conservative vote white voters that supported Trump as some sort of stupid class of people who don't deserve my respect, like and I get why a lot of people on the left will want to, it pisses me off because my family and my background is rural poor, Minnesotan. So I get like why it's easy to make these characters and stereotypes of the enemy. But I think there has to be a certain amount of compassion, not even condescending compassion.

Because the truth is like if I believe when I'm selling, that God is uniquely present in the experiences of the oppressed, that also assumes that there's a unique insight that rural poor people that are white have because it's a unique way of experiencing oppression. And like if we somehow say that just by virtue of their being white, that they're somehow part of the oppressor class in total, like, I think that's what happens, we end up getting into this monolithic way of thinking where we have this stereotype of the oppressor. And we're not patient and able to look at look. There's a reason that a lot of people are buying into these sort of like, really crappy ideologies in is not actually helping them. Somebody is exploiting their pain. Part of the work is not only to trounce them intellectually, but also recognize like that pain and their feeling of alienation is real. But the solution that they're clinging to is false.

Seth Price 15:13

What do you think some of those reasons are? You said there's reasons that people are basically taking advantage of their fear and their pain. What are some of those reasons? Or what do you think some of those reasons are?

Mark 15:22

The reasons why they're being taken advantage of or reasons why they feel angry?

Seth Price 15:27

I mean, either really, but yeah, you can manipulate that fear.

Mark 15:30

Well, I mean, this fear thing like so, you know, back in the 1700s, there were slave uprisings that included white poor people, who saw themselves as basically more having more in common with black slaves, and they did with slave owners. And so it became advantageous for slave owners to start treating poor whites as part of the same white group of people. So whiteness was largely created as a way of separating of divide and conquer between the lower classes which included slaves. So I think that i think that's that strategy is still being employed to this day.

Seth Price 16:08

I agree. So, I haven't told you this, but I've set it outside. And I don't even know if it's aired on any of the episodes. other episodes. Oh my gosh, the other episodes yet. But I am at a place that I really do struggle with the day job. I'm really good at being a banker at a large bank. And I'm really struggling with it because I'm really good at it. I also genuinely feel like I'm helping people be more financially secure. And most of the people I help are not crazy rich. Most of them are paycheck to paycheck, probably less than paycheck to paycheck, but it is fulfilling to help them.

But at the same time, I know that part of what I'm doing is helping make the middle class less middle and the richer class more rich with a greater disparaging part of wealth and I don't even know what to do with it, but I do struggle with it deeply. But I honestly don't see myself changing because I still have a family to provide for. Yeah, it's it's a bad tension. I guess I just have to give away more money, more personal money. But that's about my guilt. That's not about giving it away though. So it's still a problem.

Mark 17:18

Well, I feel like we're all in some ways in a similar spot. Like even the most righteously living like idealist people among us are somehow ensnared within the system more than they want. And I even feel like that impulse to try to like enter into a pure posture where you're not tainted with the system. I think that impulse to move towards that is actually a flawed impulse. Because it pulls us away from people.

So I mean, this is a struggle like I feel like we have to find a way to just just dive deeper into the problems and the flaws of the society around us and leverage whatever we've got. Yeah, and the problem is like, at some point, like, I mean, this is the this is Jesus's narrative like, they told us disciples at some point, something's got to give. And he told everyone, if you're going to be in that spot, choose the cross. That's the good news for us.

Seth Price 18:20

You're gonna be in that spot, get ready for the pain—bring the pain.

Mark 18:22

Yeah, at some point sustainability has to give way towards the gospel.

Seth Price 18:29

So one of the questions that I sent you actually, really the only question that I sent you ahead of this is who is doing that now? If you were to list off a handful of prophetic people today, and I don't really care if they're alive or dead, I'd love for them to be alive, but it doesn't really matter for the conversation. What are some of those voices not necessarily in America, but that can impact the way that you and I live in western civilization and can impact the church and the way that we treat people. So who are some of those and then how are they doing it? What can we learn from them? What practices can we steal for lack of a better word?

Mark 19:11

I mean I feel like no one's pure. Like, there's no perfect example like, you know, besides Jesus, I guess, but like, everyone has their flaws, but you can see in on every invention, some of them like Óscar Romero. I mean, His story is great. And I'm hoping now, a lot of people know who he is. But a lot of people don't know his story. But now that he's he was sainted, maybe they'll know more, but he was, he was the safe bet for the Archbishop of El Salvador. And then he got to that spot and he started using his basically his pulpit to call out the government against repression of the peasant class.

And so and he was murdered for it. And that's why he's a saint now. Or Martin Luther King, Jr. same sort of story. Then they have people that weren't martyred like Dorothy Day. So she is one of the co-founders of the Catholic Worker movement. She leveraged what she had to create space for hospitality to people who are experiencing homelessness, but then also had a big platform because people listened to her voice. And she used that platform to challenge the Catholic church or fellow Catholics to live out their values more faithfully. And it was a big dent that she made, but it was hard like she had to sacrifice a lot of her comfort and ease in order to do that. She didn't use it to build up her platform as a national speaker so that she could have a good retirement plan. Like she didn't do that. Her retirement plan was to grow old and these houses of hospitality that she helped start, and then they'd help take care of her.

So those are some examples. Um, other people that are alive today. I feel like right now, just less than a mile for me, there's a homeless encampment, which Minnesota has tended not to have huge homeless encampments because it's cold. So that tends to happen more in warmer climates, but we have hundreds of tents nearby of people who were all homeless before, but now they're in camped. And so that created this sort of block of people who can then challenge the city to like make greater gains for them. And so I feel like any of the people that made the choice to stay in that encampment instead of like finding a more comfortable place to be, that's a little safer in other way. But they chose to be in this massive encampment to like leverage that to raise their voice against these things around them that need to be addressed.

I think anytime we do that, where we sacrifice the privileges and comforts we'd otherwise have, in order to raise the issue so that people have to look at it like we're prophets do is they make visible things that our society tries to make invisible. And so there's all kinds of great examples and anytime we do that even a little bit, we're being prophetic and if we do a lot of it Eventually, they'll try to kill us. That's kind of the that's the moral of the story of the prophets.

Seth Price 22:05

Beware what you wish for because they're gonna come at you.

Mark 22:09

But, but everyone can take the little steps. And then some people take even more and more steps. And if you take enough steps, you start becoming a clear threat to the system.

Seth Price 22:20

So the encampment that you referenced, is that-was that legal when they did it? Like is it against any ordinance to make this encampment and I have to assume they're getting power and infrastructure from somewhere? So is that a legal gathering or is it something that now the city or the state has to deal with? Because they're not going to move?

Mark 22:40

Its illegal and they I think people were hands off at first. And then as it grew, it became a political issue. Hmm. So that any of the city council if they wanted to get rid of them for a sake of expediency or making the this part of South Minneapolis look good, they would get political back. So it to me it's like I mean any good prophet embarrassed the hell out of people in power?

Seth Price 23:09

Is there a way to do it without breaking the law?

Mark 23:13

No, not usually. I mean, sometimes there are things you can put pressure like, you can put a lot of pressure without breaking the law. But at some point you're gonna run up against the law because (the) laws that we have aren't just made for the common good. They're usually laws exist primarily to protect the powerful and the wealthy.

Seth Price 23:38

Yeah, definitely status quo.

Mark 23:40

Yeah, so if you're going to challenge the status quo, eventually you're going to bump up against the law. Otherwise, it's usually just pure charity. Which charity is, is good and alleviates immediate needs. But once you start going from charity to addressing the nature of injustice, it's like the Dom Hélder Câmara, quote,

When I give food to the poor, they call me a saint. When I ask why they are poor, they call me a communist.

Once you start challenging the origins of the injustice you usually start bumping up against laws.

Seth Price 25:00

So if we think about our political climate, and that (at) recording we’re like a week and a half away from the next midterm elections (2018). And so what are what are for the next handful of years, what do you think are like the top five things that prophetic voices should be addressing or calling out? At least for our nation, or I guess for the not for the church, but well, maybe for the church? Because there's some mouthpieces that when I watched them speak, like a Pat Robertson or Jerry Falwell, Jr. I'm ashamed to call them Christian, but I also feel like I have to call them brother. But I'm still greatly ashamed at the words that come out. But what are the top you think four or five things that, you know, here's what we need to address? And here's why?

Mark 25:45

Well I think a lot of these things, they are based on your context. So I think our prophetic voices are usually very specific. I remember reading this article like a decade ago, and it was written shortly after Oscar Romero was assassinated. And it said that Oscar Romero wasn't assassinated because he called people to love and justice because everybody says they like love and justice. It says that he was specific about what love looked like and what justice required. And so the specificity of our prophetic voices will change in each place.

But there are some general things like I think, and something that I see because of living in Minnesota, is I think we-those of us who have more privileges-need to lend our voice to the rights of indigenous people for their land. Because I think that is one of America's original sins. And I think it's really a spiritual matter. Like everything that has to do with pipeline resistance is tied up in indigenous rights, because it's almost always, when it comes to these oil pipelines, they are going across indigenous tribal treaty lands, and so I think that is a big one. That understanding the the cause of Native Americans and the environment and the way those two things come together is a key prophetic issue for the church today. Two. I mean, it's a clear, obvious one, but I feel like we're losing right now is, is immigration. If there's anything that is super Biblical, it's supporting the immigrant in the stranger. And like, right now our whole like, so my wife teaches English to refugees, that's her job. And in that career area, they're having to layoff a lot of people because there aren't enough immigrants to really, to have teachers anymore in some places, because Trump has basically cut the pipeline. So and to be

Seth Price 27:48

Al there is not enough people that even need to learn English?

Mark 27:54

Yeah, I mean, it's slowed down. It's not like there's tons and tons of people in the ESL industry like compared to other types of teachers. It's not like, you know, despite what conservative folks want to say, it's not like we have an overabundance of immigrants, like especially outside of the borderlands. But the way we're treating undocumented people, immigrants, the children separated from their parents at the border. I mean, that's a crisis. It's not a crisis here but it's a crisis, like throughout Europe and around the world. How do we, as the church stand up for people who have become refugees, largely economic and climate change refugees, that's a huge church issue? And I don't see the church really talking about it a lot at least not in a way where they're offending people enough to lose donation dollars. I mean, this just needs to be more energy on that front. So that's like the second one.

The third one, I think this is every major denomination is in the fault lines of this right now is how we respond to our LGBTQ siblings. Because right now again, like Trump is about to, they're trying to redefine what it means to be trans. So they're going to take that definition away. And so there won't be any sort of legal status for trans people. In this country.

Seth Price 29:23

I read that something about you must be assigned gender A or B at birth, is I feel like that's what I read. But to be fair, I only read the headline and so if that's what you're referencing. I didn't read the full article. Which I know my wife is a nurse, and I've asked her before, and it has a word, but there's a way to be born where basically, you know, hey Mark and your wife. You've got to figure it out right now. This kid was kind of born in between so…

Mark 29:52

Intersex is the word

Seth Price 29:54

Yes. Yeah. I'm not good with the medical wards. But and I asked her, like, how often is that she's like, it's not that it's common, but it's not that it's uncommon like it happens. And then usually you know, when they hit puberty 50% of the time they're wrong like sometimes these these poor kids, they, you know, they chose wrong or they chose right but I can't see how that can even be close to humane much less, right in any thought process like that.

Mark 30:19

And especially like with people that who are assigned female at birth and chromosomally, and in terms of their sex, their female but realize that they that they're trans like so the reason so if you want to look at homelessness rates, or suicide rates, or murder rates, those populations all those rates spike if you're trans. Especially like the most one of the most murder groups of people in this society are trans women, people that were assigned male at birth and are female. And almost all the hatred about these groups of people come from really religious origins. It's like a religious thing.

And so like one thing we did, like, here's an example of I feel like what something we did that tried to be prophetic is a lot of folks in my community, including my coworker at CPI, Center for Prophetic Imagination are trans. And a lot of churches out there, and I understand why this is, theologically don't believe it's okay to be gay. But they don't want to seem like dicks about it. So what they do is they say, “everyone's welcome”, and they like really try their best to include everyone. But then behind closed doors, they're like, “well, if you're gay, we're not going to let you do anything in the church besides, maybe we'll let you be a member”. And so that seems kind of compassionate if you're conservative about it, because it's more than what people used to do.

But imagine going to a church for a few years where you think this is my family and my forever home. And then you find out you can't teach Sunday school because you're gay and you thought for the last few years, that they loved you for who you were. Now, we did this action outside of this church, Woodale, church in Loring Park, Minneapolis, where we just tell the sign that said “your queerness is made in the image of God”. And we offered communion to folks that were coming out of church.

And a lot of people thought we were like, out of our minds because they thought the church was really affirming of LGBTQ folks. And I remember this one person was arguing with me like “no, we're an affirming church”. Meanwhile, like 10 steps away from me, someone was calling my friend Marty who was in drag at the time an abomination. Like someone from that church was like saying they're going to hell. And so all I had to do and they started saying, No, we're an affirming church is point…

Seth Price 33:00

You see your boy over there?

Mark 33:01

Yes! So I feel like the church needs to be honest. Like, we need to be honest about how we stand on this. And those churches that are affirming or celebrating of queer folk need to really put their money where their mouth is. They need to invest time and energy into queer, homeless youth, which is a huge percentage, like just tons of homeless youth are homeless because they were kicked out of their homes, their religious homes, because they came out.

So these are like crisis level issues within the church, that we need to start taking a painful stand on even if we lose donations. You know, because that's what keeps people from making the hard choices is they're afraid of losing donations yet. And Jesus had lots to say about that, I think.

Seth Price 33:51

Yeah, so that leads me so one of my favorite, I don't want to say meme, but I enjoy when specifically the Center for Prophetic Imagination on Facebook, and it's gotta be you. I can't think that anyone but you because I sound like your voice or the pictures seem like you.

Mark 34:06

I'm the primary meme generator.

Seth Price 34:10

There you go, and so it was it's basically a painting that I'm sure someone in the Renaissance era did of Jesus basically flipping tables in the temple. And the words were Jesus didn't get mad because the temple was being desecrated. He got mad because the poor were being desecrated. But the way that you hear preaches it's about the money, you did it wrong. You're buying lambs. You got the wrong stuff. And as I watched that devolve into people arguing about semantics of language and I think it was even you that came in at the end and said, so you're arguing about the verbiage, but you're fine with the image. How are you not seeing the hypocritical”ness”, is that a word? HIPAA?

Mark 34:50

That is hypocrisy.

Seth Price 34:51

There it is. I did it. I'm taking it. I'm gonna edit it like I said it. (Laughter) But I see that often in what you post and what the CPI posts have just the right amount of the right amount of I don't know that I want to read that. So I guess my question is with that in mind, how do we evaluate things so that the the voices that we need to hear aren't just mixed into the loudness of the world? So it's just not a cacophony of sound. It's just overwhelming? How do we filter out for voices as we read them as we see them as we hear them? How do we discern that like, how do we get to the meat of what we need to be hearing? Not what we want to be hearing?

Mark 35:36

Yeah, you know, I don't know like I wish I knew the answer to that. Because here's the thing like, I have to remind myself almost every day when I'm encountering people online that seem just bizarrely extremist from my perspective, I remind myself, they are actually technically mainstream. I'm the extremist, like people that believe that Hillary Clinton ran in a child pornography ring, or child prostitution ring underneath a pizza place—pizza gate— well, yeah, there are more people that believe that than think like I do. Like that's statistically likely. So like, I have to remind myself and the reason this is problematic and hard is like because the content being generated by hate mongers, I mean, technically they're hate mongers. They're selling hateful things. They have more money and resources and they sell more books.

And so, you know, like, what, whenever I feel discouraged that no one's listening to what I'm trying to tell them, I'll go and look up the Amazon sales rank of the people I most admire, and some of the greatest towering people, the most prophetic and amazing voices, even the books written by Martin Luther King Jr., don't sell! We get fooled into thinking that people are listening to The Violence of Love by Oscar Romero or The Cross and the Lynching Tree by James Cone, or any of these great, amazing books. Dorothy Day, William Stringfellow, Howard Thurman, all these amazing things that have changed my way of looking at (the world) all those things put together don't sell as much as one Joel olsteen book. So like, you know, this is what I've got to have like this, you know, I don't know if we're gonna make a difference but we got to keep fighting.

Seth Price 37:36

I would think that we have to because if I look back at history, maybe it's only in depth that difference is made because Martin Luther King obviously made a difference because we still talk about him. Jesus obviously made a difference because the church, and Dorothy Day, so we still talk about those people and obviously their words still have great impact. But people seem to only bring them out of the cupboard when there's an emergency and we need to feel better about the pain. You know after after a mass shooting we'll talk about you know, there's that badly paraphrase Martin Luther King quote about you know, darkness cannot drive out darkness only light can or something like that which you people seem to only bring it out when it's convenient. But they're still spoken about

Mark 38:21

Yeah, or we bring out the the safe quotes, like the long arc of history bends towards justice, which no one would disagree with that even like, fascist would say, yeah, we need justice. And so the long arc of the history like; and then you get people that coopt like so this is my favorite example of Rush Limbaugh like a decade ago said on his radio show that he was the he basically was the inheritor though person keeping Martin Luther King Junior's legacy live.

Seth Price 38:57

By what metic?

Mark 39:00

By his own metric, but tons of people agreed with that. So these figures get co opted or like, sometimes it's severe like the the Rush Limbaugh example. Sometimes it's more subtle, like, the reason that Dorothy Day who was an anarchist, who fed people and protested things. The reason that the Catholic Church, the bishops, wanted to make her a saint was because she also was pro life and so they wanted to make her a pro life like saint, right. Which wasn't the main thing about her message, but they found it useful. So this is what happens is we misquote we appropriate, we misdirect. And so, you know, most people don't know the harder things that Martin Luther King Jr. said.

Seth Price 39:46

So I don't know that full quote. You said it's it's misappropriated and misquoted, what is the full quote talking about the arc of history?

Mark 39:53

That's the quote, he's talking about that but like, if you just take it in isolation, you'd think that that just applies to whatever any old definition of justices but Martin Luther King Jr., had a clear vision of what the Beloved Community looked like and as part of why he got killed.

Seth Price 40:10

Can you frame that? What is the difference for that because I agree with you like for Nazis a justice is this for you know dictators a justice means something different shoot for white guy in the middle of Virginia justice is different for you know, African American justice is different for that poor guy that just immigrated from Canada because he wanted to get a job and then terrorists happen. Justice is different.

Mark 40:33

It is different so how did the Martin Luther King Jr., like what he said about race and people hated him for it. But then when he took a stand almost a year to the day, I think it might have even been his a year to the day before he was assassinated, he gave his speech, I think it was called on Vietnam and he came out against the Vietnam War and he named the giant triplets of evil, militarism, economic exploitation, and racism. And so he started to move beyond talking about ending segregation. He wanted to end to the war and he wanted to start organizing, he started organizing the poor people's campaign. And he wanted blacks and whites and people of all races who were experiencing poverty, to create a permanent encampment in Washington to declare economic human rights to eradicate poverty.

And he was a socialist, like, Martin Luther King, Jr. was a socialist. And he saw that the Gospels supported his socialism. But no one ever talks about Martin Luther King Jr. the socialist, what we do is we have Colin Powell, on MLK Day talk about how America is the great place where people are equal. And so you have this man of the military commemorating Martin Luther King Jr. Day as though he doesn't represent one of the great evils that Martin Luther King talked about.

Seth Price 41:53

I'm realizing now I don't know enough about Martin Luther King Jr., not even nearly enough, which is probably my fault. I'm gonna blame it on the schools, but it's definitely probably now my fault—it might have been their fault, but it's now probably mine.

Mark 42:07

I mean, it's not…well, I mean, I'm sure you could have done more reading but here's the thing. Churches don't preach from what Martin Luther King talked about in his great sermons. The schools don't talk about Martin Luther King Jr. except for the most antiseptic ways, the quotes you see on TV like no one would know. So you'd have to have enough wherewithal to say, I think they're keeping things about Martin Luther King, Jr. from me. So I'm going to go take the effort to go read through some stuff written in the 50s that might be a little hard for me to process. Like it shouldn't be up to individuals to figure this stuff out.

This is where the church has failed we don't call we don't cultivate prophetic voices, we tend to silence them until they get so loud that we can't ignore them anymore.

Seth Price 42:51

Say that again. We tend to silence prophetic voices until the…

Mark 42:54

We silence them until they are so loud that we can't ignore them anymore.

Seth Price 42:56

I don't understand that…that oxymoron breaks my heart and breaks my brain. So how do I silence something so that it's so loud that I can't hear it?

Mark 43:03

No, we silence it until it gets so loud that we can't ignore it anymore. So like, once a moment starts…

Seth Price 43:10

Yeah, okay, yeah, okay. Yeah, I missed…I was mishearing what I thought you were saying.

Mark 43:15

So this is what churches, what our institutions do like. And I'm not anti-church like I believe that the church at its best as a movement, but institutions tend to want to preserve themselves, even at the expense of the individuals in the institution. I mean, institutions want to maintain and survive, and they make compromises for that. So they're gonna want to silence voices that disrupt and threaten their survival. But then when a voice gets loud enough, they'll feel like Oh God, we have to do something about this or it could ruin everything.

Seth Price 43:52

As I've talked with other pastors and theologians, but mostly pastors, I find them when I can get them away from their congregations most of time, they say if I do my job really well, and I get you in a healthy place, you'll stop coming to church, which is the problem. And so I don't, there's a part of them in the back that they can't say that out loud. And they also have to really hold back from preaching truth, because if they do it well, I'm called to leave that church and do something like I'm called to go up to I think it's one of the Dakotas right now, where they're trying to make it where Native Americans can't vote. Like I'm called to go leave or do something and I don't know the ins and outs of that, but I'm called to now pick up and go do this because that's what you should do. And there's fear that if they do that, well, the same fear that I talked about at the bank, like if I do it, and I do it the way that I'm supposed to do it, well, I'm gonna lose the house, you know, declare bankruptcy. I don't know there's a tension. There's a definite tension.

Mark 44:52

And here's the thing like I don't, you know, maybe it'd be good, but I don't assume that it'd be good if everyone, all of us, who have a conscience and convictions basically became destitute overnight like I'm not sure that would do it. But here's the thing like each of us, you working in a bank, me trying to figure out how to make a living with a nonprofit. All of us, the church should be a place where we can start discerning, with other people, of how we are to live, individually and collectively to challenge the things we see around us that bring death to people's souls, right.

But the churches are increasingly not the place for that. In some ways, they're the least safe place to do that. So this is why I like…Black Lives Matter was formed by predominantly queer women of color, queer black women, who were no longer safe feeling in their churches and had to find spirituality somewhere else. And Black Lives Matter came from that. Any opportunity for the church to become a nourishing source for that movement. early on was cut off and then church people came alongside afterwards. But this is the history of radical movements is we have to fight against the churches and then maybe later after they're, it's they can't ignore it they might come along, and that's backwards, churches should be the place where this kind of discernment is happening.

Seth Price 46:18

Yeah, another interview said that, that if we're following the Spirit, we shouldn't be looking behind we should be looking forward and we should be setting the example. The rest of the nation should be coming alongside us as, oh, the church is doing this and we should probably get behind it, including people regardless of their gender or their sexual orientation. We should probably do this because the church seems to be the forefront or we, you know, whatever the human rights are or inherent rights that we have. He was basically saying, you know, the Church should be showing how that looks as opposed to heck no. Yeah, can't do it. Let's do it. Of course the hurricane hit because there's too many gays down there. I need it to end

Mark 47:05

Oh, yes.

Seth Price 47:07

So I don't know, maybe a month and a half ago you had a conference for the CPI what does that look like do you do that every year?

Mark 47:17

I mean, we've only been around for like, now two years as a nonprofit. That was our first conference and we'll do more. And we're trying to figure out the timing for that. And, you know, look, here's the thing, like I grew up among Charismatics, and Pentecostals and Evangelicals. And, I mean, I'm far left politically. Theologically, I'm not very evangelical anymore, but I still have that same sensibility of like church should be minimalist, like it should be about people getting together and like all the smells and bells are a distraction from that. But I realized, like if I'm gonna do this work, I have to connect more with the main line, which tend to be more progressive. So we have this conference that we aim for this sweetspot radical voices but some voices that I thought like mainline like Methodists, Presbyterians, Lutherans, blah, blah, blah, would come to.

And so we aim for that to try to meet with more of our like minded people. And we invited some folks that…it was amazing…all of our main speakers we didn't set this up ended up having kind of overlapping messages around how do we deal with hopelessness, and it was real! Like, a lot of people felt exhausted after the weekend but a lot of people felt energized because it was the only time they could really talk honestly about the fact that we feel abandoned, the society is is marching towards destruction, and we don't want to believe we can just believe that somehow God will like to swoop in and make it better. We're in a predicament and we need to have spirituality sturdy enough to see us through this moment. And it was heavy and raw. And it's not the sort of thing that tons of people would come to.

Seth Price 49:05

It's not a passion conference.

Mark 49:06

No, but it was great. And it was a lot of, you know, a whole lot of pain. It was a lot of pain and not a lot of trying to organize (around) what do we do about it? Because part of the problem is like, a lot of people just think they already know how we should respond to stuff. So we're running around like chickens with their head cut off doing busy work, without slowing down to discern the moment and making sure our actions count.

Seth Price 49:35

I guess the question is, how do you do that without becoming another institution, a prophetic institution? And I mean institution in the way that like, I mean, Southern Baptist or the Presbyterian Church of America, or the Catholic Church, like how do you do that without becoming, especially because I see it now. I see progressive Christians becoming just as tribal as what they're calling against from the Evangelical right. So how do you do that prophetically without becoming what you're prophesying against?

Mark 50:06

Yes, good question. I don't know. It happens. Institutions happen. And I really think we can, if we start fooling ourselves into thinking “well, we're not going to create an institution” then we're going to just act like..,we're going to be pretending that we're not an institution when we are. I feel like what needs to happen is we need to keep investing in movements that happen and be okay with the things we start dying, we have to let things die. Because at its heart an institution is a group of people that aren't willing to let that thing die. That's what an institution is.

Seth Price 50:45

So start something and see the work through maybe have a vision at the beginning of this is what success looks like or as close as we can get to it. And when we reach this, we're done.

Mark 50:55

Let it go and make sure the resources can then go back into the compost.

Seth Price 51:03

So don't make an endowment fund to continue to pay for that (program) for 250 more years.

Mark 51:07

No. And that's hard because like, here's the thing, like, you got to do a little bit of that. Because I'm not exaggerating and I say like, unless I figured out a way to sustain stuff like, it's possible that I will retire into government housing, like I don't have retirement and things like that. And you got to, you have to have some of that because the church is broken, like in an ideal world if you decided, like, oh, I've had this vision of what I need to do, but I'm a banker, and I need to do it. But if I do that, I'll end up homeless, then the church would say, No, we got you. You might not make as much money but we got you. But the church doesn't do that.

So what ends up doing is putting the burden on individuals to be heroic, and then be cut off. So the best you can do is try to make some sort of relationship with churches or institutions to keep yourself going I realize that it's a little bit compromised, like in the scheme of things, but you can't be so beholden that you care more about making sure the nonprofit exists or the Church exists and make that more important than the work. And that's always hard. This is where discernment as a practice, like as a spiritual practice, needs to happen and it rarely is practiced or supported by the church. It'd be great if you had a church meeting like, about, hey, we have this one's like, maybe we should talk about maybe we should just sell the church and stop being a church because there's these needs in the neighborhood. That’s, like no one would ever take that seriously but why not‽

Seth Price 52:44

This meeting is over and we didn't even vote? Well, so my pastor and I, mostly him, but he's taken some of the content from the show and we've had a conversation over the course of six weeks at church. And last night we talked about gratitude taken from a conversation I had with Diana Bass, about an economy of grace. And we talked about making compassion and gratitude and making that a scarcity, like you have to earn it or a quid pro quo. And Diana argues that, you know, in God's economy or if the churches doing the economy, right, and she references Martin Luther King that if we can learn to just freely give at the table, just bring what you have, it could solve so many theodicies, so it would solve, you know, it could solve so many theodicies and then we talked about that, you know, hey, the people that are here, how does that sound and the word that came up was “Well, that sounds socialist, and everybody was like, but it also sounds Biblical, but it sounds socialist”. And so everybody was in this horrible tension.

Mark 53:54

To me this is a great pastoral question or how do we begin to be so free in our ability to Talk about money, that it's possible within a church for someone who makes $300,000 a year, and someone who makes $13,000 a year to actually be facilitated into figuring out how to share resources so that they both live…

Seth Price 54:17

So that they both make $117,500 a year?

Mark 54:21

Or maybe it's not even that. Maybe it's like, well, maybe that person should make $30,000. And then the other person is like, well, it's still better. Like we don't even get that far. But it's so taboo to talk about money and there's such an entitlement. It's funny, we use entitlement as a negative word in our society to talk about poor people, but it's the rich, they feel entitled because they they somehow bought into this lie that they earned it. So it's bizarre to me like how a theme like Protestants, evangelicals, will talk about how God's grace is unmerited favor. You don't do anything to earn His free gift. But we weren't willing to start thinking about what does it mean if you apply that logic to economics? Now all of a sudden, like, I don't earn my salvation, but I did earn all this money. Because capitalism is pure, it's neutral. It's natural, and it and I happen to work harder and be smarter than you.

Seth Price 55:20

Do you think, and this is not theologically relates, but I feel like you have to have an opinion, do you feel like capitalism will break in our lifetime and that the youth of America will basically go, “we're so tired of this crap, we're changing it,” or will that never be allowed to happen? And I'm not arguing that it should. I don't know that I'm educated enough in the economics of both sides to make a cognizant…I know what my personal inclinations are but I'm no economist. Do you think somehow in the future just from the voices that you hear and the people that are around you that it's just going to change, or we'll still be pissed off 80 years from now you and I'll be dead but my kids will be pissed off?

Mark 55:58

I think Capitalism is already broken. And I think there are already a lot of younger generation people who are trying to, like, there's already a movement happening, like, and it's growing. But the problem is we've enslaved them to debt.

Like, if you have someone indebted to you and they can't like have their own self determination. There's not a lot of freedom in their actions. And so I think the system right now is exists, we have a hyper debtor society, the economy is moved to a gig economy so that the younger generation never has enough freedom of resources and time to actually start challenging this stuff. And I think that's where we're at.

I think the reason that the gap between the rich and the poor is so vast and it tends to fall increasingly on generational lines is because this is what happens when capitalism is broken and they want to silence the younger generation. So I don't know, like whether or not they rise up and overthrow or something. I don't know if that'll happen.

But it's already broken. I mean, I hope for a non violent revolution against capitalism. I think it's more likely that there'll be some sort of violence. And that's sad. And I think that when we look back, I don't I don't blame the people who take up arms, I blame the fact that the church, which is 2 billion of us couldn't like the word term is prefigurative politics. We couldn't put this in action enough ourselves to show the world how it could go. And so our lack of prophetic imagination, our lack of political will, brings about violence. It's kind of like when the church stood by and did nothing. Eventually it caused Hitler to rise to power. Right so it's on us right now. The church needs to, you know, show up.

Seth Price 57:57

Yeah, absolutely. I hope we do. Well, I know my son probably will…I'm hopefully not indoctrinating them, but hopefully I'm influencing him. final words mark, what, what else? Anything that I didn't touch on that you're like, here's what people need to hear before they turn this off?

Mark 58:15

Here's this is where like people are like, okay, I don't know what to do with any of that I think every church where there's at least two or three people who generally agree with what I'm talking about. You need to start just meeting together. And I'm going to get old school start praying and asking God, what should we do? And if any two or three people just need help figuring out like, how do we begin, I will respond to your email to help you figure out and discern what's next without like, just telling you what I think you should do. I'll help you discern.

This is my work, like I want to support this. And I think it has to the idea that we somehow are supposed to as individuals put pressure on our church to do the right thing- that's not going to work. We need To start organizing with people that are like minded, even within our churches and start trying to figure out, what does this look like? And so that's my final message. Start where you're at with what you got.

Seth Price 59:13

So how do they email you? Where do they do that? Where do they get in touch with you?

Mark 59:16

I mean, if you go to this center for prophetic imagination, look that up on Facebook and send a message that way, I'll get it. Also, I'm on Facebook Mark Van Steenwyk, just look me up on Facebook. And send me a message and we'll go from there.

Seth Price 59:29

Awesome, well thank you again, Mark for your time this evening.

I'm gonna be real honest with you. I still don't know how I sit with this conversation with Mark. I don't understand in my brain…still that last question that I asked how do we how do we uproot a system without becoming the next institution and I'm willing to wrestle with it? It's worth wrestling with the future of a lot of things, I believe, hinge on that question. And that's the question that has always been there it’s a question that Jesus modeled. Because the price is very high and it's uncomfortable, and that sucks.

Engage with the Center for Prophetic Imagination; follow Mark on Facebook. He posts some, some very thought provoking articles. If you like the type of conversation that we had today, you will really enjoy what happens there on social media. And take him up on his offer, if you feel called to do this type of searching and conversation at a local level email Mark, you'll find that link in the show notes on how to reach him. So I hope you'll do that.

Today's music was provided with permission by artist Built by Titan, you'll find links to all of his music in the show notes and as always the the tracks from today's episode, and as with every prior episode, it has been added to the best playlist on Spotify Can I Say This At Church playlist.

I'll talk with you next week.

God Can't with Thomas Jay Oord / 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


Thomas 0:00

I usually don't try to nuance the phrase “God is in control” because I simply don't think it's true. I don't think God is in control and I find that to be a great sense of relief. And I think most victims do as well. That is, if God is truly in control, that means that every rape, torture, (and) genocide in the world, are somehow caused or allowed by God. And the way most Christians think about it is that it's somehow a part of a master plan, because God's in control. I just can't live that way. And most people I know, can't live that way. Now, sometimes people use the phrase God is in control and by that they mean something like God's still working in this situation. I'm totally on board if that's the meaning that people have, because the God I believe in never gives up anytime. And we're never totally on our own. God is always present, always empowering, always acting for good So if that's what God is in control is supposed to be meaning then I'm on board with that. I just want to get away from the notion that God either could (have) prevented some evil or God was actually the cause of the evil I think that undermines a coherent view of divine love.

Seth Price 1:41

Hey there, everyone. Welcome back to the Can I Say This At Church podcast, January is about over, I'm Seth your host, and I'm excited that you're here. Before the show gets underway. Thank you so much to each and every one of you that support the show on Patreon and if you have not yet done that, click the button, do it. You're going to get some free stuff. Honestly, what Paul helped create with the four part series on Oscar Romero, I've gone back and listened to a few times it is really beautiful. Every once a while, you'll get some of my writings which have no author, but maybe one day. A few videos just BONUS stuff that you wouldn't normally get. Just you're on iTunes, we'd love to give that to you. And so thank you to our newest supporters, another recent uptick over the holidays. And so I appreciate every single one of you, I know that every dollar that you have is well earned, and hard earned. And I am humbled by your support.

If I asked you, is there anything that God can't do? Most people in America would have that normal answer. Of course not! God is all powerful. God is omnipotent. God is omnipresent. God exists outside of time, God can do whatever he wants to do because God is God. I've come to think that that's wrong. There's a lot of things that God can't do, and it's because he limits himself by his love. And that sounds odd to hear out loud but as I've wrestled over these past few years with what the concepts of God are, for me, what love looks like for me, what that changes in my life and how I fail at it constantly, I've realized a beauty and a linkage between love, between fear, between anger, and between pain. And anger and pain are always part of the equation. It's almost like they balance everything out. But that leaves you raw, and it leaves me raw. And it makes me feel like life is often unfair.

Thomas Jay Ord is a theologian he's a professor, he's a lot of things. And he has a book that just released here at the beginning of January called God Can't: How to believe in God and love after tragedy, abuse and other evils. So the topic you're going to hear today in the conversation today is a lot about the problem of evil and the problem of pain, how we deal with that, how we work through it, what we're called to-in it, and honestly, from the bottom of my heart, this book needs to be in every home and every house. hospital and every church library. This book, man it is powerful. And I'm not explaining it well and so I'm going to stop trying. Let's roll the tape on this conversation with Thomas Jay Oord.

Seth Price 4:41

Thomas Jay Oord, I'm so happy to have you on the show be so when I spoke with Mark Karris on prayer, he referenced you in his book so often that I bought it and then I gave it away. There's a small group of people on Patreon I correlate with some of the donations books and I send them books each month and so two months ago, I believe in over By the time this comes out, I sent about eight people your book and and got some great feedback on it. So not not that not the newest book, not the book coming out, right? But uh, but yeah, and so I love what you're doing and I'm so happy you've been able to come on.

Thomas 5:16

Thanks so much for hosting this chat.

Seth Price 5:19

I like to start with a bit about you. So in two or three or five or seventeen, if you do seventeen minutes though I'm going to edit it down, just kind of what brought you to where you're at in life, kind of, you know, the faith of your childhood, how that kind of impacted you growing up and then what brought you to do what you do now?

Thomas 5:39

Yeah, I grew up in a family of people who went to church a lot. My parents are Christians, my sibling Christians. They were not perfect parents, but they were probably above average. And I took Christian faith very seriously. I was one of those adamant door to door evangelists and in fact, I was a part of Campus Crusade for Christ for a while when I was in college. And about my senior year of college I got to the place where I could no longer make sense of faith and God and ended up turning to atheism for a short period of time because the reasons I had for believing that there was a god no longer made sense to me.

I came back to faith not because I was certain that there was a God, but it seemed to be more plausible than not that there was a God. And various factors were involved, but probably two or primary one was, I had this deep intuition that I ought to be a loving person, and that others ought to love as well. And I thought that belief in God provided the best overall framework to place that intuition. And secondly, and related, I believed that life must have some meaning, and I couldn't make sense of life having meaning if there wasn't a meaning maker, a “god”. And so I’m a theologian, married have kids. Probably the most important thing about me is that more than anything else in the world, I want to live a life of love.

Seth Price 7:18

You said two things there that I want to break apart of it, and it's extremely relevant to your writing. So do you feel like if someone disengages from a belief in God, that they can't live a life of love or maybe that's the wrong way to say it? But are the two connected in the way that like two links on a chain are or can they stand apart?

Thomas 7:39

Some of the most loving people I know are atheists. The Dalai Lama would be one of them. The Dalai Lama doesn't believe in God. No you don't have to believe in God to be a loving person. But I do think belief in God, a certain kind of belief in God. I believe in a loving God can be a major motivation to not only love but also think that our lives are meaningful and that love makes sense overall. Maybe another way to put it is, belief in God provides a fundamental framework for making sense of the, I think, deep seated intuition that most of us have that we ought to be loving people.

Seth Price 8:22

the book that's coming out for God Can't and I cannot remember the subtitle, it's longer than I can remember.

Thomas 8:29

Yes, I make long subtitles

Seth Price 8:31

Yeah, I've three small children and subtitles…it's all I can do to remember which episode of Umizoomi that we're on for the three year old. And if any of you listening watch Umizoomi I'm praying for you and I hope I really hope that you praying for me and for my sanity. But the one that I sent everyone is all about the uncontrolling love of God. And so your new book, God Can't really builds or at least I think that it builds off of that. And so I think for those that have not really read that book and I do not want to make this interview specifically about that-at all. But I think that it is good to kind of baseline what you mean when you say that because I think if I said that in any church would be that, “of course God's love is uncontrolling”. And the same way that I would say, hey, how's your Tuesday and not mean anything by it? So what do you mean when you say that?

Thomas 9:20

Well, first of all, you're right to see the connection between the two books. The Uncontrolling love of God was actually published by an Academic Press. And although I tried really hard to make it understandable, it was still a little too sophisticated for some people's reading. The new book, God Can't with the subtitle, how to believe in God and love after tragedy, abuse and other evils is a much more readable book includes a lot of stories, and I really wrote it to be the kind of book that, you know, my mother could read and not feel like she had to have a theology degree. So I do think a lot of people like the idea of uncontrolling Love the uncontrolling love of God. But those same people will recoil in horror if you say God can't do something. And to me those are inextricably linked. And the idea is this that God's love is essentially are inherently self-giving and others empowering. And therefore God must give freedom to complex creatures, you know, who are complex enough to be able to express free actions, or agency and self organization to less complex creatures, even the mere existence or what we call the laws of nature are derived from God's love, and God must love in this kind of way. And if God must self give, and others empower, then that suggests that God simply can't overpower, can't control, can't, you know, be a sufficient cause, to do the philosophical language there.

And so this new book really says it explicitly in the title, in part, because the first book generated lots of mail from people who have been hurt deeply, (have) been the victims of abuse, bad luck, accidents, horrible events. And that previous book gave them a way to think about God that allowed them to think that God didn't sort of stand by and not intervene to help them. So a lot of people have no problem saying God won't control others. But I'm going so far as to say God can't control others.

Because if God simply won't, sounds like God could, and victims of abuse are wondering, hey, where were you God? Why didn't you step in and help me out in the midst of my suffering?

Seth Price 11:48

Yeah, well, and that's a fair, if that's the God that we say that we believe in and the God that's preached on Sundays, that is a fair rebuttal to…I mean, I can't…if I'm God and one of my children is being harmed. If I do nothing, what kind of a father am I? And so it's an entirely fair criticism of what I think a lot of at least Western Christianity, characterizes God, quote unquote, as, or at least the people that I'm engaged with, in day in and day out the people that I talked with day in and day out, why can't God then? So if it's his love, I don't understand how that love restricts him from intervening in something that he created?

Thomas 12:38

Yeah.

So two things to keep in mind, first of all, is to claim that God's love is inherently uncontrolling. So that's sort of a you know, upfront claim that love just doesn't manipulate dominate, allow no free choice in response in return. But secondly, we sometimes can use our bodies to constrain the freedoms of others. You know, maybe you say you get kids, maybe one of your kids is about ready to step into the street and you reach out and grab him by the shoulder and or if you have a boy or not, so you grab your son by the shoulder and pull him out of the way of a car. Well, he was freely doing something and yet you constrained his freedom in some way by pulling him back. So one of the important points of the book is that God is a universal spirit without a localized divine body.

There's some things that you and I can do because we have localized bodies, the God simply can't do directly because God doesn't have a universal body. Now, of course, God can call upon you set the pull your son from out of the traffic and in that sense, you can be God's hands in that moment, but that's a little different from saying that God directly did it with the divine body.

Seth Price 14:32

So this is something, as I finished your book, it's actually something I wrote down so I'm glad that you brought that up this was a thought from it. So is the body, the corporeal body, (a) requirement of this? And so I guess my question is all the things that God can't do as we read through the book, because of the the nature of his of His love could Jesus subvert that since he was God, had a corporeal body could he be like now “No, we normally can't. But since I'm actually here, I am going to grab the shoulders of humanity”, or grab their shoulders of my son or pick a name, pick an instance. Does the body matter or do you mean that more as a metaphorical way?

Thomas 15:15

No, the body really does matter. Now, I think Jesus used his body in ways that help people out, you know, in, in obvious ways, but Jesus also couldn't do things because he was a localized person with the body. You and I can't do a ton of things, even though we can do some things. And so, you know, Jesus was unable to stop some horrific things, including the hurting people in some instances. In fact, he goes to his hometown and he says, he can't heal people there because they don't have faith and don't respond to him. But the claim that I'm making here in this book is that God's essential, we'll call it composition, the stuff out of which God has made his spiritual and it's universal. And Jesus is different.

Jesus has a particular body in a particular place. The kind of Christology I find most appealing is what scholars call a spirit Christology. And that's the idea that Jesus is truly a human. But because he responds to God's Spirit, the Holy Spirit in him, he reveals God's character, he's divine in that way. And so I wouldn't say I wouldn't I usually don't walk around saying Jesus is God. If by that we mean, Jesus had all of the attributes, we typically think God has, like, you know, knowing everything, being everywhere, all that sort of thing.

Seth Price 16:49

That’s fair. Yeah, because you never really addressed it directly in the book, but it was…the question bubbled up as I read. There's a lot of personal stories in this and so the question kept bubbling up and it was Usually around the problem of evil and if there's anything that I've learned this year, the further I intentionally try to connect with a beauty and a love of God, the more of offensive evil becomes and the more angry I get about it. And the more powerless I become—or the more I feel like I become I'm probably actually more powerful. I don't have the stones to act on it. So when you say tragedy, abuse and other evils tragedy, that makes sense, you know, a tornado or hurricane a tsunami abuse. I think I know where you're going with that. But what do you mean when you say other evils?

Thomas 17:39

Well, I think there's other things that happen in the world that aren't necessarily directly related to those first two. So like, let's say, sickness, you know, someone gets sick. This is tragedy. Well, maybe it falls in that category. If you think tragedy is anything that happens that wasn't caused by freewill people. Maybe another form of evil that I mentioned in the book is neglect. Maybe that abuse is big enough to put neglect under. But really that last “evil” is a catch all phrase to talk about any kind of pointless pain, or unnecessary suffering that occurs in our lives. I'm not making the claim in this book, that all pain and suffering is inherently or genuinely evil. I think sometimes we choose, in fact, to endure pain, we self sacrifice, because we believe in doing so we're going to, you know, bring about a better world or help somebody out or whatever. So I'm not making the claim that all pain and suffering is evil, but I do think some pain and suffering is evil. And I mentioned tons and tons of actual cases, but also just general examples like rape, torture, you know, war, etc.

Seth Price 18:57

And so is that what you're getting at you define something called genuine evil. And so is that what you're getting at when or is there a distinction there?

Thomas 19:07

Yeah, I like to say sometimes use the word genuine evil, genuine evil is an event that makes the world worse than it might have been had some other possible event occurred instead. And it's just a way of trying to admit that sometimes people use the word evil kind of loosely, and they will lump what is apparently evil with what is genuinely evil. And I want to say there's a difference between the two of those.

Seth Price 19:38

Do we need evil to have a concept of salvation or sanctification? If we could somehow remove evil from the equation would we even desire, do you think we would even desire will we have any need of a Savior?

Thomas 19:53

Yeah, I don't know that we need that, as if we have a choice over the matter, it's just the way that the world is and so given the world is like that, we also then bring in issues of salvation and the the search for a savior. I think maybe the bigger question is this: is it possible for God to create a world in which even the possibility for evil is not present? And I don't think it is.

I think every world God might create the possibility for evil is there. Now, not the actuality might have a hope that someday there will be no evil in heaven or however you want to talk about the afterlife. But even there, I think the possibility is there but creatures choose to cooperate with God's love.

Seth Price 20:44

So growing up Calvinist that doesn't jive with anything I was taught as a child (laughter from Thomas) because what I hear is God's not in control. If I'm hearing this as a person that's still on the fence of I like what you're saying, Thomas, I like uncontrolling love, I can understand that it calls me to action. I don't know that I'm comfortable with that. But I don't know that I can sit with God unable to create a structure that doesn't break itself because he set up the rules arbitrarily in such a way that he’ll let my son get hit by the car, because he doesn't want to control me, because then I don't love him. He's forcing me to do it. How do you? How do you nuance that for somebody that is still on that rigid fence?

Thomas 21:32

I usually don't try to nuance the phrase God is in control because I simply don't think it's true. I don't think God is in control. And I find that to be a great sense of relief and I think most victims do as well. That is, if God is truly in control, that means that every rape, torture, (and) genocide in the world, are somehow caused or allowed by God and the way that most Christians think about it is that it's somehow a part of a master plan because God's in control. I just can't live that way. And most people I know can't live that way.

Now, sometimes people use the phrase “God is in control”. And by that they mean something like, God's still working in this situation. I'm totally on board if that's the meaning that people have. Because the God I believe in never gives up anytime. And we're never totally on our own. God is always present, always empowering, always acting for good. So if that's what God is in control is supposed to be meaning, than I'm on board with that, I just want to get away from the notion that God either could prevented some evil or God was actually the cause of the evil I think that undermines a coherent view of divine love.

Seth Price 22:52

What do we do with…so when something bad happens what do we do with the trite responses and so this is I usually don't like to get very personal but so my, I have a family member that passed away and she had Downs Syndrome. And you hear a lot of people saying, Well, God got another angel in heaven or whatever, as if it's a way to placate me feeling better, because somehow I needed that. Is there any use for that type of thought process or that type of conversation with someone when they're grieving with evil, and they need something to hold on to? Because I can understand logically, God is still loving me and still working to make this whole and beautiful. And shalom, you know, he's still working for this. But I don't want to hear that right now. Because the parts of my brain that can think logically are turned off because I'm so emotional at this moment. And I just don't want to talk about that. And so is there any, is there any reasoning for placating like that Is it is it worthwhile or should we just not say anything?

Thomas 23:52

What I usually try to do in those situations is not correct what I think is bad theology, but respond with what I think is good theology. So if somebody says, you know, “God needed another angel in heaven”, I don't say, “Come on now, that's stupid. God's got plenty of angels” or whatever. I say something like God now, or I don't know what your name of your friend who had Downs Syndrome was, but let's say it is Jim, I can say, hey, “Jim's in a better place with a different kind of way of existing now”, or whatever.

And this brings up all kinds of questions about whether or not Downs Syndrome is inherently evil or not, or blindness or whatever. And that's a real, real interesting conversation in the disability community. In that kind of scenario, I typically respond to theology that I think is bad by giving a response that I hope is reassuring, but also theology I can believe in.

Seth Price 24:52

So my wife is a nurse. And so she deals with a lot with with loss and grief. And I have to think in your line of work, I mean, a lot of your work is evil and pain and theodicy and grief and angst and I find the more and more that I do this, people ask me questions that I'm wholly unequipped to answer at all, and I just usually say, I don't know, which is the best answer, I can say. What is the the role of empathy? And I feel like you had what was it called? You said something called the Crimson Rule, I believe, and it was, yeah, empathy, and then God feels that pain. And then there's a distinction between what an empathetic God actually is.

Thomas 25:36

Well, in the Crimson Rule, I was contrasting that with the contrast thing, I was supplementing it with a golden rule, which is, of course, “do unto others as you would have them do unto you”. And the Crimson rule is that “we should feel with others as we would have them feel with us”. In other words, we should empathize with them. Unfortunately, many formal or classical theologies have portrayed God is unaffected by what happens in the world. The impassable God is the classic phrase.

Fortunately, most Christians, most believers, have rejected the formal view of God on that point. Most people really do think that God cares about us has compassion and responds to our grief, and empathizes. So I spent one chapter expressing what that looks like, and how we can believe that God really does suffer with us.

Seth Price 27:03

What Scripture, specifically, just four or five, can support this view of God? Because I want to be clear on that. Because a lot of the pushback that I get often is I talk a lot about concepts. And then I talk a lot about theology. And then we don't always relate it back to Biblical Scripture verses. And so for the view that you're holding, and I do know, just based on some research on you that your view has not always been popular in the circles that you've run in, and there's been. So I mean, we can have that conversation. But that's easy enough to Google.

And so as people engage in this they need some meat to take away. And so what Scripturally and why can we read Scripture in a way that that supports this view of a non controlling God and that God can't do things?

Thomas 27:53

I do think that a lot of people are taken aback by any kind of claim that says, “God can't” do something. But I like to quickly point out that there are several passages in the Bible itself, that explicitly say God can't do some things. So, for instance, the writer of Hebrews says, it's impossible for God to lie. James says God cannot be tempted. The Psalmist says God can't grow tired. The passage that I like best is one in which Paul is writing to Timothy and Paul says, when we are faithless, God remains faithful, because God can't deny Himself. And I joined with many, many Christian theologians throughout the centuries, who have said there's some things that Gods simply can't do, because to do them would be to deny God's self.

So for instance, most theologians have said God can't stop existing. God exists necessarily, and so God simply can't choose to just disappear and no longer exist. Or they'll say God can't decide that God won't be in New York this weekend because God's omnipresent, God is present everywhere, etc, etc. And then there's most theologians have said God can't do is logically impossible. I don't know if you had philosophy in your lifetime, but a lot of philosophy classes, they asked the classic question, “Can God make a rock so big that even God can't lift it?

Seth Price 29:35

Yeah, I remember that question.

Thomas 29:37

Yeah. theologians have said, Nope, God cannot. That's simply impossible. It's logically impossible. And there's other things as well.

Seth Price 29:45

I can go without getting so mad at that question in my intro to philosophy because, you know, arrogant me. I was like, Oh, yeah, I know this answer. And the more I think about it, the more angry I get just so mad at that. I hate that stupid question!

Thomas 30:00

(laughs) Yeah, if you look at the history of theology, most Christian theologians have said, there's things God can't do because either they're logically impossible, or they go against God's nature. And I'm taking that second one and saying God's nature's love and that love is self giving, and others empowering, and therefore that means if God always does that, God can't control those he gives this power to or this freedom or agency. So it's kind of just a logical, laying out of the implications of saying, love comes first in God and love is this certain kind of action.

Seth Price 30:40

Big word time so that that view of God is what we call “open theism?” Correct, or am I wrong on that?

Thomas 30:47

Well, it's actually some open theists wouldn't agree with what I just said. What I call that particular view is essential kenosis. But open theists believe that the future is open for God and so the future isn't yet knowable so there's an unknown future.

Seth Price 31:06

And then say those other two words again. So how does that distinguish versus essential kenosis?

Thomas 31:12

Yeah, so I'm I'm both an open theist and an advocate of essential kenosis. I think God necessarily self gives and others empowers and God simply can't control others. But some open theists think that the future is open and God can't know it, but they think God could control others if God wants to. In fact, maybe sometimes God does. So I'm a little bit different than some of my open theist friends on that particular issue of God's power.

Seth Price 31:43

Does…should it matter that God, no…I'm saying this wrong…So I wanna, I can't say this right, and then my brain’s not at work. Okay. So in the last chapter of your book you talked about we need to cooperate with God and I, I struggle to figure out how to do that most days, I can talk a big game, and I can play a big game and I can feel like I'm doing it. And then at the end of the day, sit down and realize, nope, still not doing it. And so what is our role in cooperation to help repair things to help do what God has called us to? To help do the things that possibly God can't do because it needs to be us doing it with him? How do I…I can't make it work. Most days I can't make it work.

Thomas 32:33

Well, I think every day you love your children, you're cooperating with God. Every day you are kind, every day you go to work to do what's helpful for your family in the world you're cooperating with God. Every time you turn on your left blinker at an intersection are that straight in front of you so that they don't get in a wreck you're in cooperating with God. I think it's a lot easier, perhaps in some situations, and we normally think we normally think of cooperating with God, oh, that means I've got to go down and you know, I'm no, picket some unjust factory. Well, maybe that's the case, sometimes. But most of the time, our moment by moment decisions are fairly mundane. They're fairly usual. And God's calling us to do something in every single moment, and it's not spectacular. And when we cooperate, then God's will is being done in our lives and in the world. And I think God requires that kind of cooperation. If the world is going to be the kind of loving place and if we're going to be the kind of loving people God wants.

Seth Price 33:42

Did somebody cut you off in traffic today?

Thomas 33:47

(laughts) No, they did not but that's a good question. (laughs)

Seth Price 33:50

That was awful specific. So there's so many stories of you know, near death experiences, which I don't know how much credence I get to that. I felt like a lot of that has got to be chemical in the brain. And I'm not a scientist, but I don't know that they sound great. They're really fantastical and mystical and beautiful if they work for other people. But there are so many countless stories of God intervening in a way that kind of seemed to contradict the premise of the book. So what do I do with those?

Do I just write it off as “Yeah, those people over there a bit crazy. And we let them believe that because it makes them feel good” or what place should that hold those experiences those miracles, for lack of a better word, that don't really have any other? It seems like God went in and pulled the kid out of the road like, Nope, it's coming back. It's not happening or you know, people will. I mean, there's a movie coming out here soon. I saw a trailer for that a produced by Steph Curry where a kid goes under the water. He's frozen. It's based on a true story. He's down underneath frozen water for like 15 minutes and he comes back to life and he's got this beautiful story. I'm sure I'll go see it in the movies because there's not a lot else coming out around the holiday. So how do we sit with interactions like that, and stories like that, that you hope that everybody's not making them up? And I don't think that they are. So how do I reconcile those with a theology that says, Well, yeah, God really can't do that.

Thomas 35:16

Yeah, so I really do believe in miracles. I really do believe that God is working at all times and in all places, and sometimes miraculous, spectacular things occur—things that were unexpected. So saying, God can't control others, does not mean you have to give up on miracles. But you have to understand miracles differently than one might who thinks that God is controlling. What you have to do is think about other factors, other actors, other cooperations or conditions that are a part of the environment that make the miracle is possible.

The movie you just mentioned, I haven't seen it either. I haven't even seen the trailer. But the idea that someone could be dead for 15 minutes because they've drowned and come back to life. I mean, that's it's happened many, many, many times in history, people have been dead for hours and cold because they've drowned in cold water and come back to life. Now, I think that's totally explainable in a view that says God never gives up on anybody at any time. And when creation cooperates, even at the smallest levels, the cellular, the lungs, the organs, they have a capacity to cooperate or not and when they cooperate, incredibly miraculous things can happen. But I also want to make sure I add in there that these kinds of miracles are made possible because of God's acting first, and then creations response. And sometimes the conditions are not right. Sometimes creation does not cooperate. creatures don't cooperate, and miracles don't happen. To me, that's just as important as affirming miracles, because there's lots of instances in which people are prayed for, and don't come back to life. And if those are part of the world in which we live, and we want to give an account for the hope that we have within us, then we have to ask the question, okay, if God helped some people and doesn't help others, is this a loving God; or can we think God helped everybody? But the conditions were right in some cases and not in others?

Seth Price 37:31

I wanted to end with this. So for those that are driving, and they haven't been paying attention for the last 10 minutes, because someone cut them off in traffic, and now they're angry. Nobody signaled the blinker there-in two to three minutes what is the biggest takeaway that you want someone as they dive into the book and into into into the theology behind it? What is the biggest takeaway that you feel like someone can take and with agency act act upon to further I guess the kingdom of God like to further things to be better?

Thomas 38:09

In terms of this book, you mean?

Seth Price 38:10

Yeah, yeah, like if we take this this thought and and everything from it and we roll it together. And what is when someone closes the book, they set it down, they walk across the room to their wife or their husband or their mom or their neighbor and they say, “Hey, I just read something”. What is it that you want them to hear? Like, what is the ninety second pitch of “Hey, Grandma, you need to look at me in the eyes. I need to tell you something”.

Thomas 38:37

One of the cool things about this book is that I have sent the electronic copy to quite a few people for reviews and podcast interviews like I'm doing with you. And the vast majority of people are blown away by this book. The vast majority of people have heard the tried and true and trite and unsatisfactory answers (that) people give to why a loving and powerful God doesn't prevent the horrific things, the injustice, the pain and suffering, that's unnecessary that we or our loved ones have gone through. And people I think are tired of the you know, “it's all a part of God's plan” or “God is punishing you” or “God just is at a distance and is not involved”, whatever the kinds of answers they've been given. This book solves the problem of evil. I know it sounds cocky to say solve, but I'm not messing around with this book. I'm not sort of throwing out little, you know, cliches and these answers that never made sense. I'm going right to the core. I'm saying God loves you all the time always. But God simply doesn't have the kind of power to control you or your circumstances. And that's good news not bad news! It's good news because you don't have to blame God. You don't have to worry the gods pissed at you, but Because you did something and is now punishing you, you don't have to look at the world and see all the evil and say, well in some mysterious way, it's really good and God's plan. You can look at the world be realistic believe in a God of love and as you finish reading this book saying now this is a God I can actually believe and actually can worship.

Seth Price 40:22

No, I agree. And it's and it's one that did receive the book. I want to be very clear. I walked away with that, that but I want to I want to try to give voice to those...

Thomas 40:34

Yeah. Oh, there's gonna be a ton of people. There are a ton of people who are going to look at the title of this book and say, You got to be kidding me. God, can’t! I know that

Seth Price 40:45

No, I like the title of the book. Yeah, there were many days that I would read. So I'll read while my wife balances a check register or whatever. And so I would read something I would look at her and she she's a nurse to pediatric Cancer kids. So when I said she was a nurse earlier, so it's not just cruel it's children like it's, yeah, it's hard. And it's…

Thomas 41:08

I've got a couple of endorsements from leading psychologists, therapists, and they say this is the book they want to give their clients because this is an answer to the deep questions people have, that most people are not willing to go in the direction I go, maybe it's not right to say they're not willing. I think most people have not even thought about this possibility. And so I think this is the kind of book that you can give somebody who is either in a caregiving capacity or in need of care and say, “Okay, this is the kind of book that can answer your toughest questions”.

Seth Price 41:49

Tom, as people hit end, and they go and they review the show, and they tell their friends to go buy the book, obviously it's on Amazon, but how do they get in touch with you, how do they email you with their thoughts with their questions with their concerns? I will ask everyone, there will be no hate mail or I will block you from downloading the show. I'm not sure how to do that. But I know people at the Google or whatever, but where do they go to engage with you to interact with you to interact with communities that are that are dealing with this?

Thomas 42:22

You know, I'm in I'm a lot on social media. So you could probably find me there. But the easiest way to get in touch with me is probably to sign up for my newsletter. You can go to my website, which is ThomasJatOrrd.com. And if you sign up for my newsletter, you can then just sort of hit respond or reply to a newsletter, and that's my personal email account, ask questions, make suggestions or whatever.

Seth Price 42:51

Nice.

Thomas 42:52

Also, I oftentimes give away free stuff and my newsletters are pointed to cool things and sometimes ask for help. For instance, this book is partly the contributions of people on my newsletter list to send me stories of how the and controlling love of God book helped them. And then I incorporated those stories into this particular book. So there's a lot going on in that, in that with the newsletter crowd.

Seth Price 43:20

Nice. Well, thank you again, so much, for making the time to come on.

Thomas 43:28

I'm enjoyed it Seth.

Seth Price 43:30

Yeah, I would love to talk with you again on a different day. There's a lot of things I'd like to pick your brain about, but we'll save that for a different time.

Thomas 43:33

Let's do it! I'd love to talk about some other things as well. So maybe, I don't know whenever you think is best for your for your schedules. Let’s do it.

Seth Price 44:14

I trust that each of you will wrestle with this topic whether or not you get a copy of the book, wrestle with it. I think I'm gonna give one away, I'm just gonna just gonna buy one and send it out to one of you. So as this show goes live, you know, retweet the episode, share it on Facebook, I'll keep track of those. And I'll have my three year old pick out a name as I write them down and put them in a coffee mug or a ball. And one of you I just want to send one to somebody, if you haven't yet done so we're closing in on about 100 reviews on iTunes and that's a small number, but it's definitely well below the amount of people of you that listen and so if you haven't yet, pause what you're doing rate the show on iTunes or pod bean or wherever you happen to be. I love reading those. They give me such joy and such pleasure to see how the show is resonating or not resonating with you. Be honest with me. Give me some feedback.

Today the music featured was from Becca Bradley. You'll find links to all of her music and a little bit about her in the show notes. You'll find today's tracks on the Can I Say This At Church Spotify playlist. We'll talk to you next week. Be blessed everybody.