Tuesday, July 7, 2009
Progressive & Religious Reads: Six for the Summer
Summer is well under way, and we are fortunate to have a number of great books out that will feed the mind and the soul and make great additions to the beach bag or day pack. We've picked a handful of our recent favorites below (listed in alphabetical order by author).
In the same spirit as Howard Zinn's groundbreaking work The People's History of the United States, Butler Bass's A People's History of Christianity brings to life the movements, personalities, and spiritual disciplines that have always informed and ignited Christian worship and social activism.
Currently: $14.98 Buy Now at Amazon
David Gushee argues convincingly that there is in U.S. politics an evangelical center of voters who do not identify with the politics and religion of either the right or the left. He suggests that the evangelical center is poised for growth; this book could be its manifesto.
Patal is the founder of the Interfaith Youth Core, an organization that unites young people of different religions to perform community service and explore their common values. Patel argues that such work is essential, manifesting the faith line that will define the 21st century.
The only fiction book on our list, but a beautiful companion piece to her prize-winning novel Gilead. Home is a moving and healing book about families, family secrets, and the passing of the generations, about love and death and faith. In the tradition of George Eliot, Robinson has earned the reputation of being not only one of our generation's best writers but also one of our most insightful theologians.
Currently: $17.04 Buy Now at Amazon
This groundbreaking anthology features over 35 articles on a wide range of social justice topics by leading and emerging Jewish intellectuals, activists, and communal leaders. It provides a set of intellectual and spiritual resources to encourage a sophisticated conversation about Judaism, social justice, and environmental responsibility.
For members of the PRR community, Rowman & Littlefield has issued a special sales code. To buy the book at this sale price, click here, and enter promotion code "4S9JONE50" at checkout.Feel free to forward this along to friends and colleagues.
List Price: $24.95
Labels: book review, book salon, progressive religion, progressive religious voices
Sunday, September 21, 2008
I've included Sarah's review of the book below. You can check out the full review and discussion thread at Firedoglake.com. I want to extend my gratitude to the Lake for the great discussion.
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By Sarah Posner
Welcome to the FDL Book Salon on Robert P. Jones' new book, Progressive and Religious: How Christian Jewish, Muslim, and Buddhist Leaders Are Moving Beyond the Culture Wars and Transforming American Public Life. It’s a really interesting and engaging read, and offers some valuable insights into how politically progressive religious people find the source of their progressive values in their religious traditions.
Because we are in the throes of the presidential campaign, peoples' minds (including my own) tend to be calibrated toward well-known and highly politicized religious movements like the religious right, which emerged with the expressed purpose of influencing elections, or the less easily defined religious center/left, which seems to seek to influence candidates' and parties' positions on issues but hasn't organized, as the right has, as a reliable voting bloc for either party. Recalibrate your thinking for this discussion, though: it has nothing to do with electoral politics, and everything to do with community organizing.
Robby opens the book with interviews of Jewish leaders, and the central concept they lay out -- that of tikkun olam, or repairing the world -- is a guiding principle even for most secular Jews (and Jews, both religious and secular, tend to be politically progressive). God made the world imperfect, messy, broken, and it’s our job to fix it. That principle informs the imperative to help the poor not just as an act of charity, but to question authority, raise hell, and transform society. It is, as Rabbi Eric Yoffie, the president of the Union for Reform Judaism, tells Robby, “establishing the conditions for justice.”
It’s not a huge leap from that concept to the underlying principles of Christianity, of course, but that central element of Jesus’ teachings has been so warped by judgmental, condemnatory fundamentalism and the political rise of the religious right that many people don’t associate it with our country’s majority religion. I know I promised not to talk about the election, but Sarah Palin’s RNC speech was emblematic of religious right disdain for the social justice Jesus. As was pointed out by many after her speech, Jesus was a community organizer, but you might forget that if you listen to the religious right too long. In those circles, Jesus’ teachings on poverty have been eclipsed by a handful of bible verses that have been twisted to condemn homosexuality.
Alleviating poverty by radicalizing social, economic, and political institutions is central to the social action of the Christian leaders in Robby’s book, as well as the Jewish ones. I was struck by the discussion in the book of the “extravagant welcome” these Christian thinkers find in Jesus’ teachings, and the imperative of welcoming all to an “open table.” (Similar concept in Judaism is how it is a mitzvah, a blessing, to welcome guests into your home.) But the “extravagant welcome” is not just into one’s literal home, it’s about, again, transforming the world to subvert the conditions and institutions in which inequality -- of wealth, of opportunity, of education -- persists.
While poverty is at the fore of these activists’ teachings, they extend that “extravagant welcome” to people marginalized and shunned by the religious right. In John 3:16, the verse cited by religious right activists to emphasize the imperative of salvation (“For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believed in him should not perish, but have everlasting life”) these activists find “whosoever” to include everyone, and especially the LGBTQ people the religious right has condemned to hell.
The holistic theme of transforming the world, of course, runs through all three Abrahamic traditions, and Robby’s interviews with Muslim leaders reflect this view as well. Muslims in America must combat terrible stereotypes about not only their religion but themselves, and as a tiny minority -- less than one percent -- of the American public, that is surely daunting. Yet for the leaders profiled in the book, the principles of justice, goodness, and beauty are central to their teaching, as well as the imperative of ijtihad, or the independent thinking required to link centuries-old traditions to democracy and human rights. In denouncing the extremism of some Muslims, progressive Muslims say, in language that would resonate with Christians and Jews, “that what you do to my fellow human beings, you do to me.”
Robby also briefly explores American Buddhism, which, unlike the other religious traditions, is not based on monotheism and sacred texts. I have to admit to a paltry understanding of this religion, but Robby’s exploration of “Engaged Buddhism,” or the “interbeing” of all things, was a nice primer.
Many people think of religion as a set of principles, rules, or ceremonies, or possibly a way of connecting to a community with a shared place or tradition. But Jones' book casts it as something else, as well: a philosophy for social change that challenges authority, and that is often elegant and revelatory, even for secular allies.
Labels: book salon, progressive and religious, reviews



