![]() | CLM 596 Subversive Spirituality (Book Review) |
Clergy/Leaders' Mail-list No. 596
BOOK REVIEW: Eugene H. Peterson, Subversive Spirituality, Eerdmans,
1997.
What grade would you give a parish minister who never attended one
church committee meeting in 25 years, and got most of his pastoral
inspiration from novels and secular poetry? Careful now, because Eugene
Peterson is by common (pastoral) consent the best contemporary writer
about parish ministry in the English-speaking world.
Peterson is a biblical scholar (most of us have 'The Message' on our
shelves), a wordsmith, spiritual director,
hiker-every-Monday-in-all-weathers, a marathon-runner, and mentor to
ten thousand pastors (he was pastor for 29 years of Christ Our King
Presbyterian Church in Maryland, before taking up a five-year
appointment as Professor of Spiritual Theology, Regent College,
Vancouver). Two of his books - Take and Read, and Under the
Unpredictable Plant - would be in my 'top ten' for pastors...
Subversive Spirituality is a collection of 'noticings' - articles,
poems and interviews published in various journals over about twenty
years. Most important novel for a pastor to read? The Brothers
Karamazov by Dostoevsky. Most important roles for a pastor? Prayer,
preaching, spiritual direction.
Now I could nitpick: I would have liked him to distinguish between
'academy' and 'seminary' (most seminaries are actually acadamies,
which is why they fail to produce more effective pastors). Peterson
comes close, when he criticises professors who seem 'more interested
in spelling than spirituality, spending far more time on paradigms
than in prayer' (p.54). And it would be nice if he'd had a bit of
the writing color of, say, Frederick Buechner...
But let Peterson speak for himself:
# Any attempt to denigrate the intellect... is unacceptable (58)
(Peterson says he was brought up in an intellect-denigrating
Pentecostal church and by a ditto father)
# Most pastoral work takes place in obscurity, deciphering grace in
the shadows, blowing on the embers of a hard-used life (147)
# The pastorate is one of the few places in our society where you
can live a truly creative life (195)
# Busyness - which is essentially laziness - is the enemy of
spirituality. A busy person is a lazy person because they are not
doing what they are supposed to do (237)
# If I were to set up a seminary curriculum, I would spend a whole
year on a couple of poets (252)
# The twin pillars of ministry are learning and prayer (255)
Five chapters - Learning to Worship from St John's Revelation,
Mastering Ceremonies, Teach Us to Care, and Not to Care, Novelists
Pastors and Poets, and Haphazardly Intent - are worth the price of
the book. If your pastor seems to be more guilty when reading than
not reading or needs to be omnipresent at committee-meetings give
him/her this book!
Rowland Croucher
March 1998
--
Shalom! Rowland Croucher (rowlandc@mira.net)
John Mark Ministries - resources for pastors/leaders
(Bookroom, library, and worldwide F.W.Boreham Trading Post)
WEBSITE 1000+ articles 1000+ links http://www.pastornet.net.au/jmm
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