Thursday, December 09, 2010

Radical and New Way to Be Human (2 book reviews)


Charlie Peacock, New Way to Be Human: A Provocative Look at What It Means to Follow Jesus (Colorado Springs, CO: Shaw Books, 2004), 237 pages
David Platt, Radical: Taking Back Your Faith from the American Dream (Colorado Springs, CO: Multnomah Books, 2010), 231 pages

I read these two books this fall, back to back. I generally try not to read the same genre back-to-back, but both books were recommended and I was quickly drawn into into their pages.

The first book is by Charlie Peacock, a Christian musician who has written a primer on the Christian faith. What I like about Peacock’s approach is how he lays out “God story” as found in scripture and then encourages us to incorporate our own stories into God’s. He reminds us that like it or not, we all create a story! Peacock criticizes Christians for claiming too much knowledge about God. Instead, we take what we know and use it to frame how we share God’s story and to see how God is active in our lives. Then, out of gratitude, we act. Peacock also talks about how God’s story should help us in our own relationships with others. He’s honest about sin, admitting that there is always something wrong with God’s people on this earth (but that we should get too cozy with the idea). We have to be honest about our short-comings and failures if we want God to help us improve.

My favorite chapter in the book is on imagination and creativity. As an artist, it’s a topic close to Peacock’s heart and he writes about how as creatures, created in God’s image, we’re given the ability to imagine. But, we have to be careful, for though our imaginations can be used for godly work, it can also be misused for sinful desires.


Although he doesn’t call it such, David Platt’s book is a primer against the prosperity gospel. (No, God doesn’t give us riches so we can enjoy and ignore others; such blessings are to be used to help others.) Platt invites his readers to examine their cultural values (that often get mixed up in our own theologies) and to ask the hard questions about what Jesus would really do. At the end of his book, he invites his readers to commit to a one year radical discipleship experiment.

Platt is a Baptist pastor, currently serving a congregation in Birmingham, Alabama. In 2005, he was living in New Orleans, where his life was turned upside down by Hurricane Katrina. After losing everything, he and his family had to rebuild. This experience gave them a different outlook on life. Platt also challenges many of the contemporary evangelical tactics (even suggesting the “sinner’s prayer” is superstitious on page 37). His point is that American Christians spend way too much time worrying about individual salvation and never getting around to God’s concerns. Although he doesn’t deny the need of telling others about Christ, he is motivated by the crippling poverty he’s sees around the world and how Christians are so comfortable and affluent in the West and don’t make any serious efforts at helping those in need.

There is much in this book for American Christians to consider and I do recommend it. However, I did take one exception to his motivation. In Chapter 7, he encouraged Christians to get serious with God’s work because if they don’t many are doomed to hell. Jesus never used hell as a motivator for anyone to accept him, but Pratt makes the case that hell should be a motivator for Jesus’ people to evangelize. I can’t buy this big guilt trip. Yes, we’re to do our part to share God’s love, but we’re also to trust that God has others working and that we’re not alone in the struggle. I like how Peacock points to our misguided attempts at evangelism, where we try to save people from hell instead of focusing on life with God. (20)

Both books provide valuable insight into being a follower of Jesus in the 21st Century.

A few quotes:
Peacock on Conversion: “When the ‘personal Savior’ story gets mixed together with individualism and consumerism, a nasty liaison is born. The combination has shaped the lives of men and women into something quite different than what Jesus had in mind when he called the disciples to follow him.” (19)

Platt on Sacrifice: “The challenge is not just to give away excess stuff that you really don’t need anyway. That’s not sacrifice. Sacrifice is giving away what it hurts to give. Sacrifice is not giving according to your ability; it’s giving beyond your ability.” (195)

13 comments:

  1. I believe both these books might prove worthwhile reads—though like you, I also disagree with the notion that works, not belief, is the determiner of salvation. Not that we Christians should opt for closed-mouth laziness…but work alone is not going to cut it. I do think the modern prosperity theology is counteractive to what Jesus taught and lived. That said, I still appreciate your sharing these reviews.

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  2. Thanks for sharing these, they seem both like very good reads....your description of both make it worth checking into!

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  3. Hey Sage, what a coincidence! I interviewed David Platt last week and today I'm writing a story for 280 Living (the local paper here) about Platt and the Radical Experiment.
    During the interview, I looked for signs of arrogance, or other character flaws, but I really didn't pick up on anything.
    He seems very sincere. He has another book that will be out in late spring or early summer.

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  4. Grizz, I agree with you on all this. I think the prosperity gospel is dangerous and counter to what Jesus taught

    Karen, if you read them, why not review them and let us know what you think about them!

    Life, Interesting. Are you reviews/interviews available online?

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  5. On the 1st; there are times when it depends. One could look at the cave painting at Lascaux as a warming against gluttony. But the person who did the painting could have a different idea. So, fitting God to our lives is not the thing but the other way round surely.
    2nd; the Instruction is to Love God and Love your neighbour. Nowhere does it say you need to preach to them. And loving God does not include building a CV of good works.
    They are trying here to go the Harvard route with the Universities endowments where you cannot take a turn without running into some benefactors name.
    Mostly though, I think that people are lonely.

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  6. One would think that the Prosperity Gospel heresy would've been completely debunked by the mere existence of the Book of Job.

    Cheers.

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  7. I also think it's a serious misstep when some Christians claim to know exactly what God wants and thinks. That's nothing but pure ego and not a very Christian thing to do if you ask me.

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  8. Vince, I don't think either one of them think we should fit GOd to our lives, rather we should seek out God and try to fit our lives into God's story

    Randall, yep, Job does cut the teaching down to size, but so does a good economic downturn. It was starting to take on in Korea in the 90s, but the Asian downturn in 98 brought things back to reality

    Charles, agreed!

    Shady, thanks for stopping by

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  9. I never agree with the hell as a motivator either. Good review!

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  10. I love what Platt has to say about sacrifice. It makes so much sense, doesn't it?

    Charlie Peacock's book sounds like a breath of fresh air. I may look into that one when I get through all the others. They're piling up...and I have to remember all the wonderful recommendations you've given me throughout the years, starting with Carl Hiaasen.

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  11. This is an outstanding review. I too have a problem with Prosperity Evangelism. We should all go to the deepest recesses of our heart and act with Kindness and Humanity. Or as my Aunt who is 91 says, "An outstretched hand must be met by another!" Amen!

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