your books &
teachings have been making a pretty big impact
on the current christian culture. you are
stirring the pot and causing people to really question
what they believe about life as a christian. why
do you think the message you are sharing has become so
powerful?
At this point, I think my work has been
more provocative than powerful. I hope it will be
powerful in the sense of motivating more and more people
first to see, then to care, then to act, and then
to make a
difference. Here's what I mean: I was talking to Jim
Wallis the other day, and we were talking about the
change in the wind that we both feel - that more and
more Christians are seeking an integral or holistic
understanding of the faith, one that puts personal
spirituality and social justice together. But then Jim
added, "But 30,000 more people died yesterday from
preventable diseases. Until that number goes down to
20,000, and 10,000 and 1,000, we aren't really making
the difference that's needed."
For that to happen
- for us to move from thought to feeling to
faith-in-action to Spirit-empowered-change - it takes
groups like The Refuge working all this out on the
ground in their neighborhoods, which is why I'm so
thrilled to be talking with you.
I think that we
all can feel a change is in the air. Something is trying
to be born. Something is trying to take root. We feel
the Holy Spirit groaning deep inside us, refusing to let
us be complacent and satisfied. I
hope my books are a little shred of those groanings, and
that they're resonating with the groanings other people
feel.
what do you think
isn't working too well in the contemporary
american church? what still amazes
you about
it?
I like the way you phrase that. I think a
lot is going well, so uch really. But at the end of the
day, I think Dallas Willard is right: we have a "great
omission" in our "great commission" which means that we're
making Christians (or born-agains or charismatics or
Baptists or Pentecostals or whatever) but not
necessarily making disciples of Jesus the Liberating
King. To put it more strongly, we're better at making
Christian consumers than we are at forming
love-and-good-works-producers.
But a lot does
still amaze me ... a little Anglican church in Canada
where people faithfully come to say and mean the Lord's
prayer and celebrate the eucharist and confess their
sins and be sent out "to love and serve the Lord" - it's
a small miracle, really. A big megachurch in the US
that's mobilizing it's people to address racism and poverty. A
pentecostal super-megachurch in El Salvador that started
a recycling center because they believe the Holy Spirit
not only produces healings but also environmental
responsibility. There are ten thousand beautiful stories
like these.
Jesus had a lot to say about
injustice, power, and the least
of these. why do you
think it's been so easy for us to ignore injustices
both locally and globally? what do
you think we're afraid of?
One of the big reasons is that we've been
taught to read the Bible in special ways that blind us
to a lot of its power. We've been taught to spiritualize
and segment and hyper-analyzie and focus on trees
and miss
the forest. And I think you're right when you imply that
fear is a big part of it.
Partly, I think we're
afraid of change. But before we even get to that, I
think we're afraid of being criticized. A lot of our
religious communities run on fear: ask the wrong
question and you're seen with suspicion. Don't be
satisfied with the standard answer and you're out the
door, with people talking about you behind your back.
This
atmosphere of fear accounts for a lot of our
religious behavior, I think.
the title of this newest book is
everything must change: Jesus,
global crisis & a
revolution of hope. why must everything change?
what do you think is going to
happen if we don't
change?
Jesus taught us to pray, "Your kingdom
come, your will be done on earth as it is in heaven."
So, wherever we see God's will not being done ...
wherever God's dreams for our earth aren't coming true
... that's where change is needed. Of course, it doesn't
happen all at once: I'm not calling for violent
revolution or careless insurgency. How the change
happens is as important as that it happens: it happens
quietly, but steadily, like yeast working in bread, like
light penetrating darkness, like salt flavoring or
preserving food, like fertilizer transforming soil so
gardens can thrive.
In the book, I describe the
peculiar and rather startling situation we're now in:
we've developed a large population, a huge rate ofglobal
consumption and waste production, and a complex and
somewhat fragile economic system supported by the most
dangerous weapon systems in the history of history. This
puts all of us at risk. I'd rather leave it up to
readers' imaginations to answer your question about what
happens if we do nothing ... because it's not a pretty
picture.
The good news is - and really, the book
is about hope and good news -if we have faith as big as
a sesame seed on a bagel, we can begin to turn things
around. With God, nothing is impossible, and so
mountains
of injustice can be moved, and valleys of poverty
can be filled in. I really believe that!
you travel a lot and see a depth
& breadth of injustice in the
world that many aren't aware
of. which injustices have gotten under your
skin the
most?
I suppose religious injustice comes to the
surface first: religious people who use their holy texts
- whether the Bible, the Torah, the Quran, or whatever -
to legitimize the status quo or justify meanness. That
makes me sick.
But beyond that, I've been
thinking of economic injustice the most. I've been
asking how can we turn capitalism around so that it
becomes an engine not just of win-lose competition ...
us versus them, me
versus you ... but instead becomes a
catalyst for collaboration, you and me together for the
common good. I guess you'd call it capitalism with a
conscience. I'm really inspired dreaming about an
ethical buying movement, where we use the democracy of
dollars to work for global social justice. Wouldn't it
be great to go into a store and find a code or rating on
every product ... so that we had the chance to choose
products that were produced by means that are socially
and
environmentally sustainable? I really believe
that's something that we as people of faith could make
happen, and it could make a real difference for billions
of people.
we agree with
you, that as Christians we have spent a lot of our time
& energy in the wrong place--focusing on what we
need to do to get to heaven, instead of thinking about how to live out the
Kingdom here on earth. what are some ways
you believe we can live the Kingdom
now?
For Jesus, it starts with how we treat our
neighbors. So you're white and you're getting on the bus
or you're walking into a party - where do you sit and
who do you try to get to know? Another white person of
your social class and race? Or do you specifically look
for "the other" - the woman with a Muslim head scarf, or
the kid with a bunch of tattoos, or the African American
teenager standing in the corner? A smile on the
sidewalk, an extra kind word in the check-out line ...
these small actions add up.
Of course, it's an
election year, and so we all need to take voting
seriously. As I see it, as a follower of Jesus, I can't
simply vote my self-interest. I have to vote on behalf
of the salmon and the warblers and the desert tortoises
who don't have anyone voting for them. I need to vote on
behalf of the innocent kid in Iran who might be bombed
pre-emptively if we elect a warrior president. I need to
vote for the poor farmers in Sierra Leone - whose lives
would be way better if we had a president dedicated to
using American power as a good neighbor, not as an
imperial power. That sort of thing comes to
mind.
Ironically, for those of us who believe
that heaven is a gift of grace, not something we have to
work for or achieve ... we of all people really don't
need to be preoccupied with that any more, so we should be of all
people most free and ready to invest our lives for the
least, the last, and the lost, as Jesus did.
In
the book, I try to help people understand how to make a
difference by looking at the world in terms of three
interlocking systems - a prosperity system, a security
system, and an equity system. I think that we can find
ways to function in each of these systems according to
kingdom-of-God values ... and we can be agents of the
kingdom in all our daily actions.
you are a
spiritual activist, calling out some things that you
believe are wrong with the system.
how do you live out what God has layed on your
heart even though the system doesn't like
it very much? does it make you angry, others'
responses to you, calling you a liberal heretic among
other things? what do
you do with your anger? how do you not get
cynical? (we are taking
notes)
If religion is the opiate of the masses,
as Marx said, then cynicism is the opiate of
intellectuals and the graveyard of activists who burn
out. So you're so wise to see the dangers of cynicism
and bottled
up anger - which turns to bitterness and ruins your
ability to serve others in love. I don't like being
criticized, but I try to keep a few things in mind.
First, as the singer Jackson Browne said, if you have a
few real true friends, somehow all the other ones are
easier to bear. So I cherish my friends as never before
when I find a lot of people lining up as
critics.
Second, I remember I'm a sinner, which
normally isn't very hard because I'm constantly proving
the fact. The worst thing anyone has ever said about me
isn't as bad as what I know about myself, and nothing
compared to what God knows about me. In this way,
critics are what you could call "cruel friends" - they
do you an immense service of helping keep you humble.
Third, I try to remember that people who criticize me
are just doing what they think is right. I've
criticized
a lot of people unfairly or in ignorance myself
through the years, so how can I be angry at others for
doing what I myself have done? Fourth, I remember
Scriptures like Paul's words in Colossians, where we're
called to forgive others as God has forgiven us in
Christ, or I
recall the Lord's prayer, where Jesus teaches me
to forgive as I would have God forgive me.
Fifth,
I realize that I can learn a lot from criticism. Some is
just mean, and you have to filter that out. But some
criticism is
constructive and a great learning opportunity.
Sixth, I pray a lot. There's a beautiful prayer someone
gave me - it's by a Serbian Orthodox bishop, and it's
called "prayer for enemies." People can find it on my
website .... brianmclaren.net. That prayer has helped me so much,
I can hardly say. It begins, "Bless my enemies, O Lord.
Even I bless them and do not curse them." Then it lists
all the ways enemies and critics help us. "Just as a
hunted animal finds safer shelter than an unhunted
animal does, so do I, pursued by enemies, find safer
shelter in the shadow of your wings" - it's really
beautiful and inspiring and challenging.
But I
wouldn't be honest if I didn't add that sometimes I just
fail and the anger gets the best of me, and I start to
get discouraged and overwhelmed.
Often, at that point, God sends along some encouragement
through a friend or a reader or someone I meet. So
ultimately, I feel that I'm upheld by a power far
greater than I can take any credit for.
there are all
kinds of labels people have given to
describe you--liberal, nonorthodox,
neoevangelical. how would you like to be
described?
Hmmm. I guess I'd like to be known as a
fallible human being who is trying to learn to follow
Jesus. As a human being, I have something in common with
everyone in the world - Jewish, Muslim, atheist,
Catholic, Protestant, whatever. And as someone trying to
learn to follow Jesus, I am called to serve everyone and
love them as my neighbor, which flows from loving the
God who loves us all. But my guess is that this can't be
reduced to a functional label very well!
okay, last
question, this is a practical one. the refuge is
a rag-tag community of
Christ-followers. we're pretty messed up
ourselves, without alot of
resources, but we have huge hearts to impact the
Kingdom. what are some things we could do as
individuals to do to start a "revolution of hope"
in a really practical
way?
At the end of "Everything Must Change," I
really grapple with this question, and I decide not to
come up with a list, but simply to focus on one thing:
faith. I believe the most radical thing we can do is to
disbelieve the many framing stories that are given to
us, and believe the story given to us by
Jesus.
If we have that shift in confidence, I
think it will work out in a thousand really exciting
ways. In fact, we'll be developing a blog where people can
share ideas about what they're doing and how it's going.
And that will be a major function of the tour we're
doing early next year too - to help people dream
together and share ideas.
Thankfully, there are
so many great organizations that we can team up with. Amahoro-africa.org, floresta.org, sojo.net, emergentvillage.com, World Vision, the
One Campaign and
the MIcah Challenge
are some of my favorites.
But let me just add
one more practical idea. I think passionate people like
you all could do something really interesting and
enjoyable:
throw parties for your neighbors. Just get people
together. Have some games, help people get-acquainted,
have some good food, wear name tags, share email
addresses and phone numbers. Then the host could say
something like this: "I'm really glad everyone came
over, because I
think we all feel that the world needs a lot of
change, and I'm hoping we can try to be good neighbors
for each other. In other words, we know the world needs
a lot of change, and we can make a little start there by
being the kind of neighborhood that would make the world
a better place. That's why we wanted to get everyone
together, and if you have any ideas, I'm ready to help."
Then see if anyone has an idea. No prayers, no
sermons, just an act of good will toward your neighbors.
I think that if a bunch of us did this sort of thing,
pretty soon people would be talking about God, because a
good neighbor is a sign of the kingdom of God, at least
I think that's one thing Jesus was telling
us.
++++++++
brian mclaren is an author, speaker, pastor, and
networker among innovative Christian leaders, thinkers,
and activists. married to Grace, they have four young
adult children. you can learn more about brian
& organizations he is involved with at
www.brianmclaren.net.
check
out info for the everything must change 2008 tour
here (tracy
howe collaborated with brian on a CD that is companion
to the book & is part of the tour. details
below)
to order
everything must change, click here
check out
this brian mclaren YOUTUBE video for an overview of everything must
change