How the Light Gets In: Restlessness, Christ, & Belonging / Graham Ward
Dec 23, 2023
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In this podcast, Graham Ward from the University of Oxford explores theology, trauma, fear, restlessness, and the human capacity for creativity and destruction. They discuss the purpose of theology, the significance of pastoral theology, the transformative power of the gospels, and the concept of belonging in a fragmented world. The podcast also touches on original sin, control, grace, repentance, and the presence of love in suffering. Overall, it offers a thought-provoking reflection on understanding and connecting with the world around us.
Acknowledging the crack in everything can lead to a new world of understanding and belonging.
Restlessness is a profound disposition within the human condition, driving the search for a better way to accommodate ourselves to the world and understand our place in relation to creation.
Deep dives
Belonging and Restlessness
The podcast discusses the human condition of restlessness and the desire for belonging. It explores the idea that humans are fundamentally restless creatures and are in search of a better way to accommodate themselves to the world, to each other, and to understand their place in relation to the whole of creation. The podcast highlights the connection between restlessness and fear, and the pathologies that can emerge from refusing to acknowledge and embrace vulnerability. It suggests that the Gospel presents a new incorporation and a sense of belonging, with the order of creation being oriented towards being incorporated in Christ.
The Unsettled Anthropology
The podcast delves into an unsettled anthropology, emphasizing that as humans, we are constantly questioning and searching. It discusses the concept of restlessness as a profound disposition within the human condition. This restlessness is associated with a yearning for rest and a desire to understand what we are exiled from. The podcast explores the idea that our restlessness goes beyond physical needs and is about finding better ways to accommodate ourselves to the world, to each other, and to the whole of creation. It also highlights the connection between restlessness and fear, and the potential pathologies that arise from refusing to acknowledge fear and vulnerability.
The Mystery of Christ
The podcast focuses on Christology as the meeting point of the divine and the human. It highlights the enigmatic and paradoxical nature of Christ, rejecting the concept of a 'buddy Jesus' portrayal. It emphasizes that theology should de-familiarize rather than offer easy resolutions, and that encountering the strangeness of Christ is essential for formation and healing. The podcast suggests that Christ's presence creates an interchange of acknowledgments, leading to a transformative process. It also explores the role of liturgy in relation to theology and the church's mission to offer an inclusive and welcoming community.
Grace, Belonging, and Ethics
The podcast discusses the pedagogy of grace and the role of belonging in ethical life. It emphasizes the importance of discerning between creative and destructive actions in our lives. It explores the idea that grace operates in various ways, leading to moments of gratitude and recognition of love. The podcast suggests that our experiences of grace, often found in the details of life, can lead us to participate in the continuous process of formation towards a more creative and less destructive existence. It also examines the significance of the church community in providing a space for discernment and formation.
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How does the light get in? Leonard Cohen suggests, "There's a crack in everything / That's how..." Whether from our restlessness, our fear, or our trauma, to see the world rightly might start with the need to acknowledge the crack in everything.
Only then can we see a new world of understanding and belonging and well-being.
Graham Ward (University of Oxford) joins Ryan McAnnally-Linz to reflect on the purpose of theology, Christology as the place where the divine and the human come together, trauma, restlessness, fear, the human capacity for creativity and destruction (and which will we choose?), and how the Gospels offer a new sense of belonging.
About Graham Ward
Graham Ward is Regius Professor of Divinity at the University of Oxford and is author of several books, including How the Light Gets In and Another Kind of Normal.