Feature Reviews, VOLUME 7

Margaret Bendroth – The Spiritual Art of Remembering [Feature Review]

[easyazon-image align=”left” asin=”0802868975″ locale=”us” height=”110″ src=”http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51LKb4JyIDL._SL110_.jpg” width=”73″]Page 2:  Margaret Bendroth – The Spiritual Art of Remembering

 
 
As we look at history, it is wise to understand it in its own context.  Historians, or at least many historians, practice something called historicism.  That is, politics, culture, religion, have contexts that influence their development and practice.  We dare not read our own value systems and conceits into their context, judging them for not being modern.  Of course, the Bible is our spiritual inheritance that didn’t develop in a vacuum, so to understand it, we must read it historically – that is in terms of its own context (no modern science to be found in Genesis).  The past has a certain strangeness that must be respected if we are to truly remember and be enriched spiritually.  When we allow this to be true then we can learn from our ancestors.  But righteous remembering requires of us a great deal of grace.
 
We are facing a problem of memory loss, losing our sense of connection with our ancestors.  Too often we are content to commodify history, making it a business rather than letting it instruct us.  But we face the problem of a certain amount of fear and loathing of history.  There is the process of how history is taught (or not taught).  But there is also the reality that history is complex and messy.  Patriarchy dominates.  Slavery is prominent.  What we know of the past doesn’t necessarily fit with our understandings of God in the present.  So, we find it difficult to participate in a fruitful conversation with the past, and yet by avoiding this conversation we are diminished as believers.  We fall prey to restorationist ideas that reject the traditions that have been passed on in search of a perfection that never was (and I will agree with her as I come from one such tradition).  As Americans we seem to face a choice – either tolerance or holding to a set of beliefs or traditions.  You can’t have both, except that this is a false choice.  That leads us to a contemporary problem.  With the current interest in being spiritual without being religious, who or what we pass on the traditions?  Who will carry the conversation from one generation to another? What we need is not a rejection of the past or of tradition, but a mature understanding.
 
Here is the key for experiencing memory as a spiritual practice.  It is to understand that “a religious tradition is a long conversation.”  Therefore, “it is not a set of beliefs or practices set in stone for all eternity, nor does it exist just to give our religious institutions a reason for continuing on” (93-94).  Instead these are conversations about Jesus that include those living, but also those not living.  You may wonder, and Bendroth addresses, who is invited into the conversation.  We all know about the tendency of lifting up “dead white men” as if they are the only ones worthy to engage.  But such is not the truth.  The conversation ultimately is one that involves the Communion of Saints, present and past included. Protestants have had troubles with saints.  As a result we’ve often cut ourselves off from important conversation partners.  Our ancestors rejected masses for the dead, relics, and more.  In the end we struggled with the nature of death and its relationship to life.  The Puritans, for instance, buried without ceremony and outside church yards.  Ironically by separating death from church, many people felt cast adrift and in the 19th century embraced spiritualism.  But we are called to remember.  And if we fail to remember evil can triumph, as was true when the Armenian Genocide was forgotten, giving Hitler food for thought.
 
We do not have to give up our connections to the dead and their witness.  We can share in the conversation that includes a communion far larger than merely those currently alive.  This cloud of witnesses does not speak out of perfection, which might lead us into the death spiral of nostalgia.  There is brokenness in the past just as there is today.  We have the opportunity to remember.  Indeed, as Christians we worship a remembering God.  And what better place to remember than at the Table of the Lord.
 
It is a small book, but it is a powerful witness to the spiritual importance of remembering.  Indeed, should we forget our past we will cease being human.  Bendroth writes in the closing paragraphs of the book that “without our ancestors, we can’t really know what it is to be human.”  She suggests that “it’s not a stretch to say that to be human is to bury our dead – and, even more important, to remember where they are.”  Remembering allows us to be that bridge between what was and what will be.
 
Living as we do in a time when forgetting the past is rampant in our culture, we need to hear this word.  It will help congregations discern what to toss and what to keep.   This is a book to engage deeply, for it will help us develop wisdom we need to be true to our faith in the God who remembers us, and all who live and have lived.  “Do this,” Jesus said, “in remembrance of me.”  This is a command to find spiritual sustenance in the practice of remembering.  Yes, I am a historian and I have a vested interest in the past.  But this isn’t about protecting turf, it is about finding our place in the communion of the saints.  And so with great joy, I recommend this book by Margaret Bendroth to all.
 
——
Bob Cornwall is pastor of Central Woodward Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) of Troy, Michigan, and author of Ultimate Allegiance: The Subversive Nature of the Lord’s Prayer. He blogs at Ponderings on a Faith Journey.
 




C. Christopher Smith is the founding editor of The Englewood Review of Books. He is also author of a number of books, including most recently How the Body of Christ Talks: Recovering the Practice of Conversation in the Church (Brazos Press, 2019). Connect with him online at: C-Christopher-Smith.com


 
RFTCG
FREE EBOOK!
Reading for the Common Good
From ERB Editor Christopher Smith


"This book will inspire, motivate and challenge anyone who cares a whit about the written word, the world of ideas, the shape of our communities and the life of the church."
-Karen Swallow Prior


Enter your email below to sign up for our weekly newsletter & download your FREE copy of this ebook!
We respect your email privacy


In the News...
Christian Nationalism Understanding Christian Nationalism [A Reading Guide]
Most AnticipatedMost Anticipated Books of the Fall for Christian Readers!
Funny Bible ReviewsHilarious One-Star Customer Reviews of Bibles


Comments are closed.