Monthly Archives: May 2008

Thoughts in Response to Jacques Ellul’s Anarchy and Christianity

Years ago, I read everything I could get my hands on by Jacques Ellul, the French Protestant social thinker and “lay theologian.” I still consider books such as The Presence of the Kingdom and Apocalypse: The Book of Revelationto be some of my most formative books. By the time his little book, Anarchy and Christianitywas published in English (1991) I had not been keeping up with this ever-prolific writer. I did buy a copy that year, but only this Spring did I finally read this book.

I am glad I read it; it helped me remember why I found Ellul a stimulating thinker. I don’t really regret not having read it sooner, though. It is not a very substantial book. And, like too many of Ellul’s books, it’s written in a pretty haphazard style.

However, this is an important book for not other reason than that it does remain one of the few works by a serious theologian who also takes anarchism seriously.

War, what’s it good for?

In the May 1, 2008, New York Review of Books British historian Tony Judt published a perceptive article, “What Have We Learned, If Anything” (here), that reviews many of the consequences of past and present wars. He answers the question in his title with a “probably not.”

I need to give one quote that seems to me to capture the counter-productivity of war very well: Continue reading

Some of my writings

I have published three articles related to the homosexuality issue in the Welcome Book series. They are each available online.

(1) “What Did Jesus Do?” here

(2) “Does the Bible Condemn Same-Sex Intimacy as Sin? A Thought Exercise” here

(3) “Hospitality and Faithful Community: Why the ‘Gay Issue’ Matters” here