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The Prophetic Imagination by Walter Brueggemann

  • Book Reviews

    Posted on May 3rd, 2007

    Written by Steve

    The Prophetic Imagination Walter Brueggemann

    1978 Fortress Press

    The task of prophetic ministry is to nurture, nourish and evoke a consciousness and perception alternative to the consciousness and perception of the dominant culture around us.

    Reading this book is certainly a watershed event in my life. Sometime in the early 90s, Jamie Howison (priest of St. Benedict’s Table), Larry Campbell (Unlikely Icon, bass) and I studied this book together once a week for several months at a diner on Main St. that offered a hamburger so large that if you could finish it, you didn’t have to pay for it.

    Ironically, the book is about the reality of the church of North America living in the most powerful, most consummative Empire in history.

    Empire, Brueggemann asserts, with its religion of static triumphalism co-opts and domesticates any alternative vision, cannot permit a free God who is not subordinated to the Pharaoh/King, and maintains itself through a politics of exploitation and oppression.

    Tracing the history of an alternative consciousness (the Kingdom of God) to the Royal Consciousness of empire, Brueggemann begins with Moses’ exodus from Egypt, calling it the “primal scream that permits the beginning of history. His exploration continues through to the birth of Jesus which “created a new historical situation for marginal people that none in their despair could have anticipated.”

    All the while, Brueggemann is conscious of his place in history, living as a beneficiary of an empire incomparably greater than Egypt or Rome. In such times, the prophet 1. dares to criticize the empire’s social practices and mythic pretensions and 2. evocatively imagines, articulates and energizes an alternative community toward a new future whose politics of compassion and justice reflect God’s freedom.

    As I’ve thought about this book over the years, and Brueggemann’s description of the prophetic ministry being twofold: criticizing and energizing – I am quite aware that the first is much easier than the second. But smug criticism without imaginative energizing is a bogus prophetic ministry and one we/I see (and practice) too often.

    Walter Brueggemann (I believe) is currently Professor Emeritus at Columbia Theological Seminary in Decatur, Georgia. And this book, The Prophetic Imagination, was voted as one of the “Top 100 Religious Books of the 20th Century” by a large panel of regular contributors to Christianity Today.

    Other books of Walter Brueggemann I’ve read are:

    Finally Comes the Poet: Daring Speech for Proclamation. Augsburg Fortress Publishers, 1989.

    The Message of the Psalms: A Theological Commentary. Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1984.

    Awed to Heaven, Rooted in Earth: Prayers of Walter Brueggemann. Fortress Press, 2003.

    Inscribing the Text: Sermons and Prayer of Walter Brueggemann. Fortress Press, 2004

    This entry was posted on Thursday, May 3rd, 2007 at 6:37 pm and is filed under Book Reviews. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
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