Vol. 27, No. 3 |
Fall
(October-December) 2003 |
After the Locusts: Letters from a Landscape
of Faith
by Denise M. Ackermann, Foreword by Desmond Tutu
Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Pub. Co., 2003.
Paperback, 200 pages.
Reviewed by Sarah E. Oesch
I hunger for stories of strong women. Growing
up, the stories I read were of women who fulfilled only the
traditional role. Now I long for stories of women who have stepped
beyond -- stories of women who reflect on life and faith and dare to
challenge conventional ideas. Denise Ackermann is such a woman.
Formerly the chair of Christianity and Society at the University
of the Western Cape in Belleville, South Africa, she is currently
visiting professor of practical theology at the University of
Stellenbosch, SA.
The title of her book, After the Locusts:
Letters from a Landscape of Faith, intrigued me. What did
locusts have to do with faith? In the introduction, Ackermann
explains that the metaphor of locusts comes from an incident
recorded in the book of Joel. Israel had been devastated by an
invasion of locusts, which had destroyed fields, stripped trees
and laid waste the entire land. When the people called upon God,
God promised to restore the land. Ackermann uses the locust
metaphor to describe both her own personal demons and the role
that apartheid played in South Africa. She shows her readers that
just as the locusts had devastated ancient Israel, the policy of
apartheid laid waste her country and separated families and
friends. She admits that it was her opposition to apartheid that
helped lead to her alienation from her own family. And she shows
us that a strong faith can be forged through the fires of
suffering.
That reality struck me forcefully this past
summer when I took a trip to the Sequoia National Forest. As I
stood among the groves of these giant trees, I was astounded at
their greatness. The staff at the visitor center explained that,
in spite of our anxieties about naturally ignited forest fires
that are part of a healthy ecosystem, it is through fires that the
trees are able to grow. The fire heats the cone, which allows the
tree to pollinate. The fire also clears out the brush and smaller
trees so the seedling can grow in rich soil and unobstructed
sunlight.
I thought about how amazing it is that
something so beautiful comes from so much pain, and I had similar
thoughts as I read Ackermann's book. She strips herself of her
academic robe and stands naked before all of us to tell of the
struggles, the fires, which have helped to form her faith. It is
after the locusts that the healing and restoration take place.
This is the hope she offers us. The landscape of faith that she
invites us to see has become interwoven with all the things that
have contributed to its beauty. She wants us to see not only the
beauty that is, but also the devastation that has helped it to
grow.
To tell her story, she has written each
chapter in the form of a letter to someone who is, or has been,
important in her life. Some of the "letters" are
addressed to persons already deceased, such as a letter to her
mother, who had never seemed to understand or approve of Ackermann
and her faith.
In all her letter-chapters, Ackermann works
through issues of life and faith to help us answer the question,
"What is life worth living for in troubled times? When the
locusts come and eat away at everything we hold dear, when the
fires tear through our hearts, what makes it worth going on? What
I liked best about After the Locusts was the author's
honesty. She does not try to gloss over her struggles, fears,
grief, and regrets. She voices my own heart's cry when she says,
"What does my faith require of me? To be vigilant about
justice, to love boundlessly, never to cease hoping, and to be
actively involved in the work of healing. I find this
daunting" (56). Challenges she sees all around her include
sexism, the racism that continues as a legacy of apartheid, and
the tragedy of the AIDS crisis in South Africa and throughout
sub-Saharan Africa.
As a seminarian, I have come to realize how
much I really do not know. Growing up in the church, I had all the
Sunday School answers memorized. But I have found that faith is
much more than the Sunday School answers. As Ackermann says,
"It is the naked desire to know God more intimately"
(28). In the letter to her mother, Ackermann writes that
"doing theology requires faith, whereas studying religion
does not" (24). Maybe there should be a warning label when
someone decides to take on the task of "doing" theology:
Warning! This could change your life. "Doing" theology
can not only change your way of thinking, but how you live and
act. Ackermann notes the dismay she feels at seeing the
incongruities between belief and actions and how this dismay
drives her to find more consistency. "The theological
challenge," she says, "is to hold the continuities,
dissonances, and differences that make up the often untidy and
tangled experience of living in conversation with the Christian
faith"( 34).
While we grapple with the locusts that plague
our lives, we seek hope. Ackerman defines hope as more than
"religious optimism." She says, "It is toughminded
perseverance in dire times because we believe in God's promises
and know that faith without hope is simply not possible. Reality
focuses our hope. Clear-sightedly we see the hunger, pain, and
suffering around us. We also note the courage and care and dare to
hope that the hungry will be filled with 'good things'" (29).
To have hope does not mean we just sit around and wait for good
things to happen. We must be actively involved in trying to bring
about what we are hoping for (81). We cannot abandon hope even if
it seems foolish, because without it, life is a "wasteland of
non-fulfillment" (81). Hope is something that Ackermann
believes we can hold onto even when the locusts have seemingly
destroyed everything.
The most common reaction to all the injustices
that plague our lands is anger. Ackermann, however, found her
answer to those injustices in lamenting. It is my
understanding that our relationship with God allows us to express
our distress with injustice. If our faith is based on a false
understanding of the relationship that God has with us, then the
pains and struggles of life will only weaken our faith instead of
strengthening it. The power of lament has many facets. It is for
communal and individual expression, public and private, and for
both the suffering and the penitent.
I think one of the most powerful expressions
of humanity is when a person admits her or his own faults.
Ackermann can at one level lament her treatment as a woman; and at
another level, she can lament what she, as a white woman, left
undone during the time of apartheid. Such a lament is carried by
hope to the ears of God. It speaks honestly about the suffering
and entreats God to action. Ackermann believes lamenting helps to
heal our doubts and restores our "faith in our power to call
on God to act on our cries" (124). It is this that she says
makes life worth living.
Each time I read a story of a strong woman, I
feel empowered to continue on the path I have chosen as a
feminist. At times it feels daunting and overwhelming, but I know
I too will make it through; and in the end what has been destroyed
will be restored into its own landscape. So I say, Thank you,
Denise Ackermann.
- Sarah E. Oesch
A new member of EEWC,
Sarah E. Oesch works full-time as the Recorder in the
Office of the Registrar at Fuller Theological Seminary, Pasadena,
CA. She is also pursuing a Master of Divinity degree at the
seminary.
© 2003
Evangelical and Ecumenical Women's Caucus
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