Colour
Supplement
Articles
by writers around the world
Sunday 2 March
2008
Tethered to
Christianity
By
Gordon Atkinson

I saw my father
preach the other day. His hair is now white, and
the skin on his face has loosened with age, but
this is the same man whose face I saw above the
pulpit throughout my childhood. He stood like a
captain in the bow of the ship that he loves,
confident that the vessel would rise and fall
with his voice and break the waves of human need
as it sailed to the promised land.
Emotion and energy rose in him as he warmed to
his task, proclaiming the truth of his beloved
gospel. All have sinned and fallen short of the
glory of God, but the man Jesus Christ, somehow
both human and divine, died for us all. His
death and resurrection forever shattered the
power of death and brings righteousness to all
who believe.
There is no guile in my father or in his
message. He is not ashamed of the gospel, of the
stunning foolishness of its claims or of the
Gordian knot of questions that inevitably follow
them. He is a true believer. He cares not a whit
for American culture or his status in it. His
greatest desire is to hear "Well done, thou good
and faithful servant" at the end of his life.
Because of this, it is hard to place my father
within any group or faction or political party.
The New Testament calls us to proclaim the
gospel so that others may repent and turn to
Christ, so he does. In that he is an
evangelical. The New Testament calls us to love
one another regardless of the color of our skin,
so racism never gained a foothold in his life;
in fact, he was always rather innocently
perplexed by it. In his youth he was known as a
radical or a liberal or a nigger-lover. The New
Testament calls us to care for the poor and
needy, so he does. As a young man, he was not
above smuggling food and blankets into Juarez,
Mexico, when border regulations forbade his
charity. Some might say that he is a social
activist, but the label has no more meaning for
him than any of the others.
My father is the most single-minded, dedicated
Christian I've ever known. Whatever wavering
doubts he has harbored and whatever personal
sins and weaknesses he has struggled with have
always been safely secured and stowed away in
the hold of that mighty ship he steers. What is
in that hold remains a mystery, for I have not
been granted access to it. It's not that he is
unaware or overly ashamed of what lies within
him. There's just no time to focus on such
things. There are funerals to do, and sermons to
preach, and the sick to visit, and churches to
guide toward health. There is work to be done
for Christ.
Jung would say that my father participates fully
in the myth of his people. My father and other
Christians would wince at that statement, but
Jung understood myth in a broad sense. I would
say it this way: The Christian story is my
father's only story, and he lives completely in
that story. People like my father move history
along by living within the reality of their
stories. They are immersed in the plasma of
human history, swimming through it, surrounded
by it, making it happen.
This is as true an accounting of my father as I
can give in a single, short piece of writing. I
am his son, sired by the power of his
commitment, and I bear the mark of it. I will
never be free from the gospel he proclaims.
But that is only half of my story. For my mother
was a woman that only God could have chosen, a
true match with my father. She is a born mystic,
a creative soul, a muser, a thinker and a
wonderer. There is a primitive love within my
mother that no church or creed can tame. Her
gentle, dancing spirit is the only thing that
could ever cause my father to turn the wheel of
the ship. He knows, somehow, that if he does not
change course when she rises before him on the
foam of the ocean, that both his ship and his
pulpit will shatter.
He still drives his ship toward the horizon,
mind you, but she makes him tack to get there.
Someday I may write about my mother, though at
present I do not feel equal to that task. There
is much that is unknown about her. Much that she
has kept to herself through the years. But I am
her son. I was nurtured with the soft music of
her voice, and I see the world with her eyes. I
will never be free of her vision.
I was born on their ship at a time when the
waters began to change and the sky to show dark
color. My father bent his back and will to the
task of holding the wheel straight and true.
There was no doubt in his mind that this ship
would carry us all to that place over the
horizon. And on this ship there was only one
story to tell, the story of Jesus and the cross.
But I lingered near the rails and saw other
ships on the sea. Some of them were beautiful
and drew my eye and, at times, my heart.
Commitment was bred strongly into me, but I
simply couldn't hold onto our ship. There were
too many hard questions with no good answers,
too many things I felt I ought to believe but
could not. In particular, I could not abide the
idea that ours was the only story and that those
on other vessels with other stories were bound
for hell. Even as a boy I couldn't swallow that.
I disconnected from the Christian story somewhat
and floated gently above our ship, though my
father's tether would not let me float too far
away. Rather than living within our story, I
watched it from above, a floating wraith, only
half present to the faith, at once liberated and
broken-hearted. I was the Joseph Campbell of
Christianity, in love with the story but outside
of it.
High above the deck, I saw that there were even
more ships on the ocean than I had imagined, and
that they were good. My heart was filled with
joy but also somehow broken. I loved the view,
but something drew me back to our ship. I needed
a story of my own. And I wanted it to be the
Jesus story of my youth. And so I pulled myself,
hand over hand, back down to my father's ship.
Of course there is no going back once you've
lost your footing. You cannot reenter the story
of your childhood once your feet have left the
deck. The best I've been able to do is feed the
story to others while I myself am never quite
filled. I circle our story from all angles,
looking for a way to be fully immersed in it
again, but I have not found the way back.
I've learned to draw upon my father's
commitment, which comes naturally to me. Does
Christianity need me to preach? I will. Does our
church need me to set up chairs and make ready
for Sunday? I will be there before the sun
rises. Every single week, year after year. Do I
need to believe the story? Then I will find a
way to believe. I will live myself into
believing. I will love others until I believe. I
will read the scriptures until I learn what it
means to be poor enough in spirit to believe.
Do I believe the story of Jesus? Yes, in that
you cannot drive me away from it; I simply won't
leave. I'm having none of the darkness, even if
I only live at the edge of the light. If belief
is a hard and complex thing, also a unique and
personal thing, then yes: I believe.
I have been comforted by gentle and faithful
brothers and sisters in Christ who have always
made a place for me in the community of the
friends of Jesus. And I believe that the New
Testament defines faith and belief broadly
enough to include even me.
The Gospel of Mark tells the story of a man who
wanted Jesus to heal his son. Jesus asked him if
he believed. He boldly said, "Yes." And then,
his faith faltering, he cried out, "Help my
unbelief."
That man is my patron saint.
Copyright 2008
CHRISTIAN CENTURY. Reproduced by permission from the February 26 2008 issue of the
CHRISTIAN CENTURY. Subscriptions: from $49/year from P.O. Box 378, Mt. Morris,
IL 61054. 1-800-208-4097. Visit the
Christian
Century website.
Gordon Atkinson is pastor of Covenant Baptist
Church in San Antonio, Texas and has his own
outstanding website
www.reallivepreacher.com. We are most
grateful to Gordon for his permission to
reproduce his essays
here.
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