★★★★★
If
Gethin is not a poet, then certainly his love of poetry shines. Verse
mixes with prose to lend richness throughout. I think this is a book
which should be read outdoors, in the squares of our busiest cities or
beside the brooks of our remotest parks.
It's
about God, our perception and experience. It meanders thoughtfully
around the topics of faith, mercy, sexism, and hell, on its journey to
"reaching middle ground" between the various world religions. The
stability of our society rests on "mutual respect, and a genuine attempt
to understand and to appreciate the other, to detect the voice of God
in the other, and to pursue a thoughtful, caring life with the other."
Religious
thought is evolving, but the evolution of our understanding of God has
been a gradual process, and we are by no means at the end of it.
Enchantment is coming back into vogue, and society may be experiencing
sacralization rather than secularization. Many of us yearn to "feel the
Greatness and the Glory, and all those things that begin with a Capital
Letter," but we're unsure how to proceed. The closer we approach the
mystical (though not the magical, that stuff is evil, right?) the
further away we appear.
Gethin's
gimmick of threading the story of Ezekiel throughout the discussion is
what makes the book real. I laugh out loud as I write this, but it is
so; Gethin doesn't feed us the wild-eyed, theatrical Ezekiel most of us
avoid, but the human, struggling-to-understand-it-all Ezekiel. The
Ezekiel strolling mournfully beside Babylon's Tigris, dreaming of
Israel's Jordan. For all his extraordinary visions, Ezekiel never
actually gets to see God.
This book is a joy to read, and one to fill our dreams with hope.
Oddly enough, I just led a Bible study on Ezekiel. This book definitely sounds intriguing.
ReplyDelete:) You know I'm a fan of Ezekiel cuz you read my book about Revelation, but I doubt I'm knowledgeable enough to lead a Bible study!
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