
12 Simon Smart speaking at Narwee Baptist
19 John Dickson at CCC Lane Cove
24 10th Anniversary Smith Lecture by Professor Edwin Judge
Morris Gleitzman and Christian Mother Goose
Greg Clarke
I can’t remember how I stumbled across it, but it has really threatened my Christian faith. It’s a book unlike any other, challenging my worldview and giving me nights of tossing and turning in a cold sweat. The book is The Christian Mother Goose Book by Marjorie Ainsborough Decker, and it’s enough to make anyone an unbeliever.
No doubt in good faith, Mrs Decker has ‘improved’ the nursery rhymes you and I know from childhood into ones she feels better communicate the Christian message. So, ‘Lavender’s Blue, Dilly Dilly’ begins:
| Lavender’s blue, dilly dilly Lavender’s green Teach me to say, dilly, dilly John 3:16. |
| This seems to me to speak of a cultural fear that some Christians have,
where Christianity needs to run away into its own cultural corner,
rather than sit alongside other worldviews just being itself and letting
the watching world make what it will of it. While I was cringing over The Christian Mother Goose, I was also reading Morris Gleitzman’s recent novel for young adults, Grace. It, too, made me sad, for related reasons. The novel tells the story of a young girl, Grace, who is a member of a lovely family who belong to a closed Christian community. They attend church, where the elders control who says what and when, and to disobey them is to disobey God Himself. They are forbidden to have contact with unbelievers; even to touch them is to be defiled. |
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| Regardless of how rare such closed religious communities are,
Gleitzman’s novel highlights a significant problem of perception for
Christianity today: it is seen to be legalistic, world-denying and
psychologically cruel. When it is practised in the manner outlined in
Gleitzman’s novel, it is indeed these things. But that kind of Christian
practice is an aberration, not true New Testament faith and living.
‘Separationist’ Christianity seems to me to miss the central
significance of grace (and, of course, the girl’s name in the novel is
no accident). The Christian idea of grace means that God can ‘live with’
the messiness of real life, the best and worst of human behaviour, and
the intermingling of those who line up behind Jesus Christ, and those
who don’t.
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