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Jim Wallis: Seven Ways to Change the World

by **Rowland Croucher** <rccroucher@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 5, 2008 at 09:19 PM

Jim Wallis: Seven Ways to Change the World: reviving faith and politics 
(2008).

Jim Wallis is probably America’s highest-profile ‘progressive 
evangelical’ and advocate for Christian left-wing causes, especially 
peace and justice issues. His ‘flag****p’ publication is Sojourners 
magazine. Other well-known books include 'The Great Awakening: Reviving 
Faith and Politics in a Post-Religious Right America' and 'God’s 
Politics: Why the Right Gets it Wrong and the Left Doesn’t Get it.'

Wallis is especially scornful of the Religious Right’s misuse of the 
Bible: ‘Jesus didn’t speak at all about homo***uality. There are about 
12 verses in the Bible that touch on that question ... [t]here are 
thousands of verses on poverty. I don’t hear a lot of that conversation.’

'Seven Ways…' has forewords by Jimmy Carter and Tim Costello. In a 
commendation of the book, British PM Gordon Brown wrote, ‘Jim Wallis 
challenges us to create a society which both addresses injustice and 
stresses personal responsibility, and his call for a global covenant 
through which rich countries meet their obligations to the poor will 
have a resonance across the world.’

Jim’s style is readable, racy, and autobiographical. The people he likes 
– Martin Luther King, Dorothy Day, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, John Howard 
Yoder, William Stringfellow, et. al - are quoted often.

His thesis: the Religious Right in America, which has campaigned, 
negatively, against abortion and homo***ual marriage under the rubric of 
‘moral values’ is diversifying. The issue of climate change, for 
example, previously treated with disdain by conservatives, is now – 
albeit often reluctantly - on many of their agendas. After all, 
shouldn't ‘family values’ have something to say about the world we leave 
to our children and grandchildren? Many younger Evangelicals, in 
particular, are ‘taking back the faith’ as he urged in his book God’s 
Politics. They’re concerned about poverty and economic injustice, 
HIV/AIDS, *** trafficking, Darfur, Iraq. We’re experiencing another 
‘wave of revival’ similar to the spiritual awakenings that led to the 
abolition of the slave trade. Even megachurch pastors like Rick Warren 
and Bill Hybels are getting on board. Barack Obama is linking faith and 
politics in a dynamic way which appeals to younger generations of 
Christians - and others. Even conservative columnist George Will is 
saying that the economic ideology that runs American society has eroded 
family and cultural stability.

But the ****ft away from the Religious Right is not necessarily a ****ft 
to the Left. This new generation is looking for a ‘Religious Centre’. 
The progressive Evangelicals in this group are reading theologians like 
Bishop N T Wright, who in a little book (Simply Christian) introducing 
thoughtful people to Christianity covers topics such as poverty, the 
environment and human rights. Thirty years ago, says Wright, these were 
secondary issues. They’re majoring on Jesus rather than Paul; their 
commission for mission is in Luke 4 (good news for the poor) as well as 
Matthew 28 (go and preach). They’re studying the prophets, with the help 
of scholars like Walter Brueggeman, and re-discovering that God hates 
injustice, everywhere.

Wallis writes that his concern for social justice has led him to embrace 
many aspects of Catholic social teaching, with its emphases on the 
well-being of the community as well as the rights of the individual.

There’s a wonderful tribute to Jim’s dad in an appendix. A list of 
discussion questions would have been a good idea.

Writing as a fellow-traveler with Jim Wallis en route from conservative 
Plymouth Brethrenism to following Jesus and the prophets, (I too was 
taught that the Sermon on the Mount didn't apply to us, but belonged to 
'another dispensation') there’s not much here I’d want to argue with. In 
fact the only bit I marked negatively was his attribution of the famous 
quote (gleaned from the John Mark Ministries website rather than an 
original source) in the index to Richard rather than Reinhold Niebuhr: 
‘The worst evils in the world are not done by evil people, but by good 
people who do not know that they are not doing good’ (p. 214).

Buy this book for every person under 35 who's prepared to re-think their 
childhood faith and/or their inherited conservative political stance!

Rowland Croucher
May 2008
-- 


Shalom/Salaam/Pax!                         Rowland Croucher

http://jmm.aaa.net.au/
  (20,000 articles 4000 humor)

Blogs - http://rowlandsblogs.blogspot.com/

Justice for Dawn Rowan - http://dawnrowansaga.blogspot.com/

Funny Jokes and Pics - http://funnyjokesnpics.blogspot.com/
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Jim Wallis: Seven Ways to Change the World
**Rowland Croucher** <  2008-05-05 21:19:44 

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