Ideas

Classic & Contemporary Excerpts from September 12, 1994

Classic and contemporary excerpts

NO JOKE

I believe I am not mistaken in saying that Christianity is a demanding and serious religion. When it is delivered as easy and amusing, it is another kind of religion altogether.

– Nell Postman in

“Amusing Ourselves to Death”

CLEAR ILLUMINATION

Seek to live with such lucidity that the clarity of your motives becomes a lens which projects the image of Christ upon the screens of others’ lives.

– David Augsburger in

“Witness Is Withness”

ART AND TRUTH

Samuel Laeuchli argues that “art threatens individuals because it tends to unveil experiences which they have not been able to digest.” Put more directly, art takes the lid off the horror of censored experiences. In this sense, art is prophetic to the core. It reveals what seeks to remain hidden, especially those sinister powers of deception, prejudice, resentment, grievances, racism, sexism, etc., which require darkness and anonymity in order to remain viable.

Dorothee Soelle reports that the first time she heard Bach’s St. Matthew Passion in 1946, just after the Nazi collapse, the chorus, “His Blood Be Ours and on Our Children” was omitted. Why? The “final solution” carried out in the Holocaust was so close to the populace … that they could not bear to hear Bach’s art. … Art ripped the lid off the horror of censored experience. Modify the art. Maintain a peace that is no peace. Do to the art what has always been done to the prophets: kill it, distort it, exile it.

– C. John Weborgin

“The Covenant Companion” (July 1986)

WHAT DO WE EXPECT?

There is one unmistakable lesson in American history: a community that allows a large number of young men to grow up in broken families, dominated by women, never acquiring any stable relationship to male authority, never acquiring any set of rational expectations about the future—that community asks for and gets chaos. Crime, violence, unrest, disorder—most particularly the furious, unrestrained lashing out at the whole social structure—that is not only to be expected; it is very near to inevitable.

– Daniel Patrick Moynihan in

“Family and Nation” (1965); quoted in “Policy Review” (Fall 1993)

END GAME

Bishop Stephen Neill was fond of observing, “We all have some dying to do. Jesus showed us how it should be done.”

– Quoted by Michael Green in

“Good News” (July/August 1994)

SAINTS MAKE LIFE WORTHWHILE

I got a letter from a sappy woman a while back—she knew I was sappy too, which is to say a life-long Democrat. She was pregnant, and she wanted to know if I thought it was a mistake to bring a little baby into a world as troubled as this one is. And I replied, what made being alive almost worthwhile for me was the saints I met. They could be almost anywhere. By saints I meant people who behaved decently and honorably in societies which were so often obscene. Our own society is very frequently obscene. Perhaps many of us … regardless of our ages or power or wealth, can be saints for her child to meet.

– Kurt Vonnegut in

USA Today’s Opinion Line (June 8, 1994)

LAUGHING AT OURSELVES

If we are sure of our God we are free to laugh at ourselves, and artists have helped heal with laughter—from Moliere’s comedies poking fun at the human condition, to Aristophanes’ hilarity at our bewilderedly mixed emotions, to some of Bach’s mirth-filled and even slightly bawdy secular cantatas. Its all part of what helps keep us in proportion; we can best take ourselves seriously if we are free to laugh at ourselves, and to enjoy the laughter of God and his angels. As William Temple remarked, “It is a great mistake to think that God is chiefly interested in religion.”

– Madeleine L’Engle in

Walking on Water

Copyright © 1994 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Also in this issue

Reaching the First Post-Christian Generation: Baby Busters make new demands on the church

Cover Story

Reaching the First Post-Christian Generation

Andres Tapia

Randall Terry Attacks Religious Right

Joe Maxwell in Jackson

Christians Aid Forgotten Guyanese Poor

John W. Kennedy

Christians Suffer Renewed Attacks

Muslim Death Threats Protested

Protesters Offer Silent Witness in Haiti

Florida Shootings Stifle Pro-lifers

John W. Kennedy

Science Finds Religion at Symposium

Jo Kadlecek

NORTH AMERICAN SCENE: Fragrance-free Service Initiated

New Catechism a Bestseller

Christians Decry Rights Bill

Urban Relocators Build Bridges

Andres Tapia

Jews for Jesus Fights Cult Label

City Erects Pagan Sculpture

Mark A. Kellner

Has Rift Between Orthodox, Protestants Begun to Heal?

Thomas S. Giles in Moscow

Group Picks First American Leader

Mark A. Kellner

Churches Challenge Synod Ruling

Joe Maxwell

BOOKS: Rating Our Theologians

SIDEBAR: Worth Mentioning: News, notices, and curiosities of religious publishing

John Wilson

PHILIP YANCEY: What Surprised Jesus

Christians Suffer Renewed Attacks

News

FEC Targets Political Ad

News

News Briefs: September 12, 1994

News

Closing the Ultimate Sale

Steve Rabey

News

Media Campaign Targets Unchurched

By Patricia C. Roberts

Talking 'Bout a Generation

Michael Maudlin

In Praise of Premise Keepers

EUTYCHUS

The Unrepeatable Tom Skinner

James Earl Massey

Editorial

EDITORIAL: Blinded by the ’Lite’

Thomas C. Oden

Editorial

EDITORIAL: AIDS Policy Failure

Rich Cizik, policy analyst for National Association of Evangelicals Washington office

News

Hard-Core Porn Technology Hits Home

John Zipperer

SIDEBAR: Busters Online

Helen Lee, lee90@aol.com

SIDEBAR: X-ing the Church

Andres Tapia

ARTICLE: Testing the Spiritualities

Jame R. Edwards

ARTICLE: Charting Dispensationalism

Darrell L. Bock

SIDEBAR: Dispensationalisms of the Third Kind

Walter A. Elwell, Wheaton College, reviewer

ARTICLE: Clocking Out

ARTICLE: Who’s Afraid of the Holy Spirit?

Daniel B. Wallace, Dallas Theological Seminary

View issue

Our Latest

How He Leaves

After his final tour, independent musician John Mark McMillan is backing out of the algorithm rat race but still chasing transcendence.

Review

Review: ‘House of David’ Season 2

Peter T. Chattaway

The swordfights and staring lovers start to feel like padding. Then, all at once, the show speeds up.‌

Being Human

Abby Thompson on Overcoming Anxiety in the Big City

A young professional’s journey to self-discovery

The Russell Moore Show

Listener Question: Are Late Prayers Still Worth Praying?

 Russell takes a listener’s question about whether God can still use prayers, and the conversation broadens to mind-breaking theology about God’s transcendence of time itself.

Analysis

Republicans and Democrats Clash on Epstein File Release

The Bulletin with Nicole Martin

The newest documents remind Christians to support sexual abuse victims.

Evangelicals Confront a Revolutionary Age

A Catholic on the campaign trail and the “possibly catastrophic character of what is happening under our eyes” caused deep concern in 1960.

News

Hindu Nationalists Attack Missionaries in Northern India

One victim describes the mob descending on their bus, a rare occurrence in Muslim-majority Jammu and Kashmir.

News

Armenia Holds Inaugural Prayer Breakfast Amid Church Arrests

Some see the crackdown as persecution, others challenge the national church’s ties to Russia.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube