Vol. 26, No. 4 |
Winter
(January-March) 2003 |
Strength for the Journey: A Pilgrimage of
Faith in Community
by Diana Butler Bass
San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2002
293 pp. $23.95 hardback
Reviewed by Letha Dawson
Scanzoni, EEWC Update editor
I first became aware of the writings of Diana
Butler Bass through the syndicated religion column she used to
write and which appeared occasionally in my local newspaper. Once,
I thought about writing a letter of appreciation for her column
"WWJD: Do You Really Want to Know?" She pointed out that
when Charles Sheldon originated the idea of "What would Jesus
do?" in his 1896 novel In His Steps, he applied the
question to broad social justice and political issues in ways that
would be at odds with the ideologies of many who promote the
slogan today. I wanted to tell her that many decades ago, as a
15-year-old, I had purchased a copy of In His Steps for 50
cents, and it had revolutionized my life. It changed my career
plans and started me on a path that eventually led to my becoming
a writer on religion and social issues. But along the way, like
Bass, I traversed the paths of evangelicalism, experiencing both
the certainties it offers and the questions it raises.
In reading Diana Butler Bass's Strength for
the Journey, I find that she, too, had a profound spiritual
experience as a teenager. She writes of sensing "a powerful
call to serious Christian discipleship" during an evening
service at the Bible Church that high school friends had urged her
to attend, although she had been confirmed in the Methodist Church
of her parents. It was the beginning of a pilgrimage through --
and sometimes an inner struggle with -- two expressions of
faith: evangelicalism and mainline Protestantism, and finding the
Episcopal church to be the spiritual home her heart had longed
for.
Her personal faith pilgrimage is one with
which many in EEWC can identify. And as the subtitle of her book
makes clear, it is a pilgrimage of faith in community.
Thus, Bass is telling us two stories. As she describes it, it's
"the story of intertwined journeys -- how one woman observed
and experienced the shifts and struggles of mainline religion as
she lived her own journey in eight Episcopal congregations over
two decades. And it is the story of each congregation at a
particular moment in its history" (p.18)
History is of great interest to Bass, who
earned a Ph.D. in Religious Studies at Duke University. Her
dissertation, Standing Against the Whirlwind, Evangelical
Episcopalians in 19th Century America was published by Oxford
University Press. That research background provided rich resource
material for describing her association with Episcopal churches
from the West Coast to the East Coast -- and the insights she
gained from each experience.
Those with evangelical backgrounds will easily
relate to her faith journey -- including her decision to go to
Westmont College as a doctrinally "safe" school for
evangelicals, and finding her mind and heart wonderfully
stretched. "As an evangelical college, Westmont's trustees
and faculty members surely had answers they hoped we would
accept," Bass says. "Strangely enough, they did not
force them upon us. Instead, they gave us room to explore and try
to find our own" (p.30).
And explore she did! So much so that when she
came back to her alma mater years later as a faculty member, she
(along with many of the answers she had found) no longer fit, and
neither she nor the college was happy. She left to teach
elsewhere.
In between her times as student and then
professor at Westmont, she studied at Gordon Conwell Theological
Seminary and at Duke, becoming an active member of a number of
Episcopal congregations along the way, each with a distinct
personality and a story she tells in detail.
During those years, her 10-year marriage to a
very conservative husband ended. Later she met and married a true
spiritual soul mate and became a mother, at the same time learning
to experience God's motherly love. Her spiritual struggles and
changes in outlook are shared honestly, including opening her mind
to embrace women's ordination (which she had resisted while
becoming more liberal on other issues) and coming to a new
understanding of God's love for all and what an inclusive church
can be. Her friendship with her gay priest led her to thank God
for him as she prayed, "Thank you that he has taught me about
acceptance, compassion, forbearance, and love. And forgive me for
all the stupid things I've said and done to my gay friends"
(p.212).
EEWC members will resonate with her experience
of an ongoing theological quest and maturing faith.
Buy the book. I'm glad I did.
- Letha Dawson
Scanzoni, EEWC Update editor
© 2003
Evangelical and Ecumenical Women's Caucus
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