Nowadays, I am a miserable reader. Reading online serves as an excuse, but an insufficient one. The truth is poor discipline on my part.
Nor have I been diligent with my blog posts. Maybe I have spent too much time watching videos; catching up with lost time and missed opportunities is another weak excuse.
So, this morning, having gotten a start on the last project I had planned for these past weeks, the new blog, I am trying something different. I am drafting this post in Google Docs. The Edge browser lets me split the screen with Netflix in a way that Zen does not.
I finished perhaps two books last year. The other has been sitting on my desk, awaiting me to comment upon it. That is John Behr’s Becoming Human: Mediations on Christian Anthropology in Word and Image (St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press). From the SVS page:
This book reflects upon various dimensions and implications of the astounding fact that Christ shows us what it is to be God by the way he dies as a human being. In so doing, he simultaneously shows us what it is to be a human being. Connecting the end - "It is finished" - with the beginning - "Let us make a human being," Fr John Behr challenges us to think again about who we are, as male and female, what we are called to become, and the relation between life and death in this journey.
Presented in a poetic and meditative manner, adorned by images and offset quotations, this book inclines the reader towards a meditative reading, weighing, rather than skimming, each word and image.
A bit of the old soft sell there. It is a short book (121 pages, including notes) that is actually shorter—the format is a very small book, one that can fit into a jacket pocket. This is also a beautiful book with its reproductions of icons and other religious art. Its formatting is both stylish and purposeful. This is an essay meant to be meditated over.
And that stylishness makes quotation difficult—the formatting conveys a sense of movement for the text.
Human nature is fragile; death teaches us to understand the strength of God.
That we only become truly human by saying to Christ, Let it be.
There is another point, too subtle for me to accurately draw out of context, that becoming human does reject the world for Christ, but that is to live as a better human being.
Even more subtle is the discussion of marriage as being for our embracing of the Other. The Other is not an enemy; no human being deserves that title. The Other enhances our understanding of humanity.
Quite a lot of hard punches made in such a short book. It deserves to be read and thought about.
sch 3/7