Strangely Bright: Can You Love God and Enjoy This World. Joe Rigney. 2020. Crossway. 128 pages. [Source: Review copy]
First sentence: This little book has a simple purpose. I want to address a problem that I suspect many readers have felt, even if you’ve never named it. If you’re a faithful Christian, this problem or tension has probably haunted you, playing at the back of your mind and affecting you in subtle ways...how does a single-minded pursuit of the glory of God fit with a real and deep enjoyment of created things?
In Joe Rigney's newest book, Strangely Bright, he addresses the tension between loving God and loving the world. He insists it isn't an either or question. It isn't either we love God with all our hearts, souls, and mind and hate the world....or love the world with all our hearts, souls, and minds and hate God. There is room in our hearts--in our lives--to love both. He uses Scripture to back up his argument.
Of course, he knows that there are Scriptures to support both viewpoints. There are scriptures that tend to insist that we are to love God and only God and hate the world. There are scriptures that encourage us to celebrate life and all of God's gifts--to see God, to see God's blessings and gifts, to see God's providence in everything. Rigney encourages readers to embrace all the Scriptures have to say. Don't limit your loves and call yourself pious, in other words.
I like that each chapter tends to focus on one or two passages of Scripture at a time. This keeps it manageable to keep up and follow his argument.
Did I like this one? Love it? Well. I found it a bit strange. I'll try to clarify exactly what I mean. Is it possible to agree with his conclusion but not exactly how he arrived there??? I believe we were created to enjoy, to experience joy. I also believe this only truly works when God is at the center. Or perhaps at the top? However you want to phrase it. I believe in priorities and not necessarily excuses. In other words, it would be super super easy to use the "well, God is in everything and everything is in God" argument (I actually hate that phrasing but Rigney uses it in his book, so there you go) and enjoy a lot of things that God really isn't all that crazy excited about.
Also I don't really think people need encouragement to enjoy the world more. I don't think we live in a culture--a Christian culture--of self-denial and minimalism. I don't think the majority Christian culture is all that "set apart" and isolated from worldly pleasures and experiences. Perhaps a few people do feel guilty about how much pleasure they take in various experiences. But I don't think most do. And places where guilt is occurring may not connect directly with I'm sinning against God by enjoying XYZ. For example, a person may feel guilty about REALLY loving cheesecake. But if you get right down to it, it has more to do with body image, what culture has to say about what we eat, about what we look like, about what we should be doing or not be doing. There might be a lot of regret when we give into temptation--but I doubt "I am sinning by daydreaming about cheesecake instead of daydreaming about Jesus coming back isn't going to be on a top ten list" Or "I hate myself because I love cheesecake more than reading the Bible."
I do think people need more encouragement to actually take joy--find joy--live joyfully--IN Christ. I think more people are binging on the world than on Jesus Christ. If people actually lived more in the Bible and actually tasted and saw God in all his glory--or as much of His glory as we can humanly fathom--we'd rightly appreciate God in relation to his blessings and gifts.
A book that I would recommend instead is probably The Practice of the Presence of God. Or perhaps John MacArthur's Found: God's Will.
I also found it a bit strange in conveying ideas.
First, as we’ve seen, creation is designed by God to show us what he is like. Or, to be more specific, creation is designed to reveal who Jesus is. God has designed the entire universe to reveal Jesus. Long before you and I existed, long before Jesus came in the flesh, before the Bible was written down, from the very beginning God invented something called “hunger” and something called “bread” so that some day, when Jesus showed up, we would have categories for understanding who he is. In other words, when Jesus says, “I am the bread of life,” he’s not finding or discovering a convenient metaphor. He’s revealing the main reason that bread exists. Every growling stomach, every empty belly, every hearty meal, every satisfied hunger in the history of the world has been leading to the moment when Jesus shows up and people ask, “Who are you?” and he replies, “I am the bread of life.” Second, in this case, it’s not merely that God’s creation reveals who Jesus is. Human culture reveals who Jesus is. Jesus says that he is the bread of life, not the grain of life. Grain is something that God makes. Bread is something that people make out of the grain that God makes. That’s what culture is—a mixture of God’s creation and man’s creativity. And this tells us that not only is creation designed to reveal God, but human culture is also capable of showing us what God is like. When we faithfully mingle our creative labor with God’s creation, we glorify the things of earth. Bread is grain, but glorified through man’s efforts. Wine is grapes, but glorified through man’s efforts. While human culture is fallen and broken by sin, it is still able to be a reflection of divine wisdom and glory so that we can know who Jesus is and how we should relate to him.
I would have to spend a lot of time trying to think through this before I arrive at a conclusion if I agree or disagree with this argument.
But there were plenty of places we do agree.
To say that we desire nothing besides him is an empty compliment if it is literally true. It would be as if to say, “I desire nothing besides you because I’ve never desired anything at all.” But surely what the psalmist means is, “I have desired many things in my life, many things of earth. But compared to you, they are as nothing. You are my strength. You are my portion. Jesus is better.”
No comments:
Post a Comment