This summer, the church I am attending, Stony Brook Mennonite Church, is combining the adult Sunday Schools. Together, the adults will be reading and discussing Roads Signs for the Journey: A Profile of Mennonite Church USA by Conrad L Kanagy. Simply put the book is a church member profile project. It reports the data recorded from surveys of Mennonites in the United States and it interprets that data. This interpretation of data can be anything from predictions of the future to suggestion for improvement. When I was introduced to the book, I was currently reading unChristian by David Kimmerman and Gabe Lyons, another book that analyzed and evaluated data. Skimming through it, I found it interesting because I could connect the data between the two books. I am excited for this book that we're studying. Unfortunately, because it's the summer, I naturally have other plans that will not allow me to attend every Sunday School class. Yet I want to be engaged in the discussion. So I am going to do a chapter-by-chapter review of the book, plugging in my thoughts and comments for every chapter.
Naturally, as most survey books, the first chapter explains the author's intent and how the author came about to write the book. In this "making-of" chapter, authour Conrad Kanagy admits he had some hostility with his idea. One of the big problems Kanagy had was that some church pastors were not on board because they saw the surveys as mere information collecting. He quotes a pastor saying, "We don't need anymore information that doesn't lead to transformation." I know how Conrad feels. I often too have felt adversity for presenting information or doctrine in a Sunday School classroom because it doesn't lead to application, transformation, or a feel good feeling. Kanagy makes himself well aware of this criticism and he comes preapred. It can be summed up two words: display and suggest. Corad wants to display where Mennonites are right now, where they might be going, and give advice along the way. And Conrad Kanagy doesn't like where it's going.
Just like most first chapters in most survey books, the first chapter introduces the basic data and his basic interpretation. What Conrad Kanagy's data shows is that most Mennonites in the United States live similiar lives to most middle class white Americans. This disturbed Conrad, as well as myself, because it's not Christian and it's not Mennonite. It's not Christian because Paul gives many verses in Bible telling us not to conform to the world, but to be transformed by living counterculturally. It's not Mennonite because the founding Anabaptists fathers lived by the creed, as found in Acts, "We must obey God rather than men!" Anabaptists beliefs, from simplicity to infant baptism can be traced back to living counter culturally. It's as if the Mennonites today are becoming less Mennonite. Fortunately, Kanagey seems a glimmering light at the end of the tunnel. There is a small blip on his survey radar that has continued to successfully live counter culturally. They are the urban Mennonite churches, which mainly consist of minority races. Conrad believes the rest of the Mennonites in America can learn from these minority churches, and he plans to use their practices as suggestions to improve.
Another topic I'm glad Conrad Kanagy is tackling is the role of politics in the Mennonite life. Personally, I have heard mixed beliefs among Mennonites when it comes to politics. Some of the first Mennonites I first met seemed to be so against the political proccess they even refused to vote. Then I met Mennonites who simply stated that Mennonites were allowed to vote, but the church will not sway anyone to vote a certain way. In high school, the Mennonites I met believed interaction with politics was necessary to bring about social justice. All in all, what I'm trying to get to is that the answer I have received has been mixed. I wondered if Conrad's data would give a more solid answer. What Conrad discovered was that the Mennonite church was heavily influenced either by the conservative evangelicals or liberal mainline protestants. Either, like the conserative evangelicals, look to politics to create a moral civil religion, or like the liberal mainline protestants, they look towards politics to bring about social justice. Both use politics, but by doing so, both unknowingly embrace the dicotomy of them too. By embracing the conservative evangelical's moral civil religion, they have "abandoned the costly requirements of the cross, compromised the truth of the gospel, created questionable alliances with political leaders...and abandoned the poor and needy of society" (Kanagy 26). By embracing the liberal mainline protestant's social justice, they have "ignored the power of Jesus Christ to overcome sin in both the social structure and individual lives" (Kanagy 26). I believe this is where it would be good for Mennonites to sit down and have a council to write up their doctrine of government involvement and political involvement. I hope Conrad Kanagy agrees with me and goes further into this.
Corand Kanagy believes the best Biblical passage to approach this study from is the book of Jeremiah. I will admit that when people announce they plan to talk about Jeremiah, I am a little hesistant to listen. It's because of so many misuses of the book. Too many times I have heard people center the whole book around Jeremiah, making it a feel good story, when the real message of the book is far from it. Too many times I have heard people (mainly charsmatics) use the book in a militaristic way, turning Israel to America, and thus turning to message to call America into a moral nation in order to get God's earthly blessings. I'm glad Kanagy does not use Jeremiah either way. It seems that Kanagy gets what Jeremiah is all about: a severe warning for God's people to change the ways they are going wrong or face dire consequences. I can't wait to see how Kanagy exegetes Jeremiah in the next chapter.
The most literal reading of the Bible is to understand the Bible in its original context: historical context, geographical context, cultural context and literary context.
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