I believe that wounded justice, lying prostrate on the blood-flowing streets of our nations, can be lifted from this dust of shame to reign supreme among the children of men.
Martin Luther King, Nobel Peace Prize Acceptance Speech, December 10, 1964
Continue reading “The Nobel To King: 50 Years Later”
As We Light the Candles
Written by Jeanie Wylie-Kellermann. Published in The Witness in 1998.
Be patient, therefore, beloved, until the coming of the Lord. The farmer waits for the precious crop from the earth, being patient with it until it receives the early and the late rains. You also must be patient. Strengthen your hearts, for the coming of the Lord is near. Beloved, do not grumble against one another, so that you may not be judged. See, the Judge is standing at the doors! As an example of suffering and patience, beloved, take the prophets who spoke in the name of the Lord. Indeed we call blessed those who showed endurance. You have heard of the endurance of Job, and you have seen the purpose of the Lord, how the Lord is compassionate and merciful.
James 5:7-11
Two weeks before my body succumbed to seizures in early September, an episode that resulted in the diagnosis of a brain tumor, I lay on my living room floor crying as I listened to “God Help Us” by the Miserable Offenders. Continue reading “As We Light the Candles”
End of the Year Appeal
Two months ago, Bartimaeus Cooperative Ministries and Word & World officially launched RadicalDiscipleship.Net, a daily-updated blog designed to chronicle and animate expressions of “Movement” Christianity in North America. The two organizations have had a deep and long history, partnering in the challenge of bridging the gulf between the seminary, the sanctuary, the street and the soil.
Headquartered in the Ventura River watershed of Southern California, BCM animates and builds capacity for communities of discipleship and justice through the work of theological animation and restorative justice, drawing on the giftedness and expertise of Ched Myers & Elaine Enns, respectively. Over the past decade, BCM has been experimenting with week-long institutes (twice per year) and webinars (once-a-month), in addition to mentoring, lectures, sermons & keynotes given around the world.
Through schools, retreats, and mentoring, Word and World draws faith-based activists from various movements into a community of discipleship focused on social & cultural analysis and biblical reflection for social transformation. The goal of W&W is to encourage and strengthen disciples to become “radically biblical and biblically radical” in their work for peace and justice. Since 2001, W&W has hosted a number of schools drawing on the depth of the Civil Rights movement (photo above), liberation theology, the peace movement and faith-based feminist, womanist, mujerista, and LGBT movements.
BCM and W&W are excited for two upcoming events in 2015 that will provide participants unique opportunities to wrestle with scripture, social analysis, movement history and discipleship practices “between the seminary, the sanctuary, the streets and the soil”: Bartimaeus Cooperative Ministries’ Festival of Radical Discipleship in the Ojai Valley of California (February 16-20) and Word & World’s Land & Water School in Detroit (July 15-19).
Of course, virtually every community committed to radical discipleship finds itself, this time of year, staring wide-eyed at their dwindling budgets, asking: where will our financial resources come from this year? Indeed, to be conscience-strident is to be cash-strapped. In order to curate a truly community-and-gospel-rooted learning experience, we ask that you consider making a year-end contribution to either (or both) of these organizations. Thank you for participating in the Movement, in this blog project and for spreading the word.
In Loving Solidarity,
Lydia Wylie-Kellermann & Tommy Airey
Co-Editors, RadicalDiscipleship.Net
Click on to donate:
The Embrace of a Lover

From John Main in The Present Christ: Further Steps in Meditation (1986):
Christ’s forgiveness of our sin is not the reprieve of a judge but the embrace of a lover. Our redemption is our being brought near–so near, in Christ, that we can no longer focus on God as an external object with the mind’s eye but are instead taken beyond all images to be in the presence of the truth, revealed in silence; the eye with which we see is the eye that sees us. Our vision itself is Christ.
St. Nicolas Day
“At our house, we remember Saint Nicholas of Lycia on December 6, before Christmas. We think of the good bishop listening in the night to the cries of those who are afraid or lonely or tired. We remember him searching his heart for what he might do to help them.
We leave our shoes outside the door. And when we find a gift the next morning, we smile to think of the saints of God in all times who have listened in the night and done whatever they could to show us the love of God.
We delight in the saints even now who are listening outside our homes or in our hearts. We give thanks for the communion of saints who have died, but continue to care for us. They are listening and reaching to us with all their love, because God intends for all of us and for all things to be cared for and to be alive with the joy of creation.”
Excerpt from St. Nicolas: The Good Bishop of Myra by Jeanie Wylie-Kellermann
Ecological Hermeneutics: “The Bible and Climate Change”
In a very short order we got very, very big. Human beings have always been in Job’s position–small. Our job is to figure out how to get smaller again. And I think it is essentially a theological task.
Bill McKibben
Ched Myers is always up for the challenge of making the Society of Biblical Literature’s annual gathering of “Bible geeks” accountable to the sanctuary, the street and the soil. He’s been chipping away at the ivory tower for decades now. Here are a few highlights from a paper Myers read at the Society of Biblical Literature, a couple of weeks ago, participating on a panel assessing the 20th anniversary of Bill McKibbon’s The Comforting Whirlwind: God, Job and the Scale of Creation (1994):
On McKibben’s Legacy:
Whether or not we are aware of it, every one of us owes you a huge debt of gratitude for a life’s work of truth telling, movement building and relentless advocacy. Like many of us in the room (I hope), I’ve been following and occasionally participating in 350.org since its inception, especially around the Keystone XL work. You and your colleagues have animated a truly grass roots initiative that uniquely translates the complexities of climate catastrophe into mobilizing soundbytes.
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Indeed, to exhume scripture’s radical critique of imperial culture is to endure diffident dismissal by the secular left, shrill hostility from the religious right, and studied ambivalence from the ecclesial center. Yet your work on Job stands in the noble minority tradition of engaged readers of Word and World such as Jacques Ellul, Martin Luther King, Jr., William Stringfellow, Dorothy Soelle, Ernesto Cardenal, Cornell West, and Elizabeth McAlister—none of whom, let it be carefully noted, were or are professional biblical scholars.
From Job to Jesus, homing in on Jesus’ teaching in Luke 12, “that awkward moment in Luke’s gospel where Jesus, in the middle of a strongly worded diatribe about the economic delusions and entitlements of the rich, whirls around and exhorts his disciples to ‘pay attention’ to the birds and wildflowers (Lk 12:24-28)”:
But what if Jesus is simply summarizing the argument from Job’s whirlwind, a teaching meant to be taken with utter seriousness? What if this paean to birds actually demands that we confront the three pathological characteristics of modern capitalist culture—addiction, anxiety and alienation—as life and death issues? It then becomes for us truly a “text of terror”—but also a key to our liberation.
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Jesus is invoking a cosmology shared by indigenous and traditional peoples the world over and throughout history, which was translated into economic lifeways characterized by symbiosis with nature, sustainable and local production and consumption, and cooperative and equitable work patterns…
Prodding McKibben: A Transition from “petitioning around policy issues” to “nurturing place-based politics” (aka, Watershed Discipleship):
I think we will see in the coming years that it is those who are rooted on particular land who will be most able to say no to the carbon juggernaut, and to say yes to more sustainable lifeways. To me, Bill, this suggests that our movement ought to be spending at least as much effort nurturing place-based politics as we do petitioning around policy issues and organizing big marches, as important as the latter are.
The approach of watershed discipleship is, in the tradition of Job’s whirlwind and Jesus’ ode to birds, blessedly geocentric, and firmly straddles the dialectic of healing the earth and delighting in it. It is my strong conviction that it can animate communities of faith to engage in contextual and constructive witness as they awaken to the realities of climate catastrophe—for which awakening we are greatly indebted to Bill McKibben.
Words to Our Children…Part 2
Leah and I have had a rich correspondence as we have both tried to grapple from our different social locations with the power of racism in our lives. The grand jury decision not to indict Officer Darren Wilson for killing Michael Brown left us both feeling outraged and hamstrung, with the question, what do we do now? And what do we tell our children? Leah has a daughter, Dance (10 years) and two boys, Michael and Gabriel (3 years). I have a daughter, Sylvie (4 years). I asked Leah what she would tell my child, and Leah asked me what I would tell hers.
Kate Foran, November 2014.
Tuesday we posted Leah‘s letter. Today we post Kate’s. Continue reading “Words to Our Children…Part 2”
Words to Our Children…Part 1
Leah and I have had a rich correspondence as we have both tried to grapple from our different social locations with the power of racism in our lives. The grand jury decision not to indict Officer Darren Wilson for killing Michael Brown left us both feeling outraged and hamstrung, with the question, what do we do now? And what do we tell our children? Leah has a daughter, Dance (10 years) and two boys, Michael and Gabriel (3 years). I have a daughter, Sylvie (4 years). I asked Leah what she would tell my child, and Leah asked me what I would tell hers.
Kate Foran, November 2014.
Today, we post Leah’s letter and tomorrow we will post Kate‘s. Continue reading “Words to Our Children…Part 1”
Advent Longing
From author and activist Ken Sehested, a resident of the French Broad watershed of the Southern Appalachian Mountains in Asheville, NC. Ken just launched a subversively informative site called Prayer & Politiks:
Oh Wondrous One, Who rides the skies and consorts with the earth— haunting the heavens, hounding mere mortals with the expectation of ecstasy—come and rouse hungry hearts with the aroma of your Presence.
Let the song of angels sound again, announcing glory to God and peace for the earth.
Give your people wombs of welcome to the news of reversal: the annulment of enmity and the Advent of promise.
Let every lip echo the jubilant manifesto of creation’s destiny with justice and with joy.
Set our hearts on the edge of our seats, shivering in hope, longing, longing for the age when bitter memory dissolves into Magnificat.
Holy One of heaven, mark these dark nights with the brilliance of your star to guide emissaries of exclaiming grace.
The grace of contradiction and scandal to the insolent innkeepers of this age.
The grace of blessing and bounty to the indigent, and to all who find no lasting home save in the age to come.



