Further Thoughts on N.T. Wright's New Book, "Christians at the Cross": Thinking Eschatologically
I confess that I've been too busy over the last few days to have read any further from Christians at the Cross . But maybe that was providential, inasmuch as there was a theme that occurred early in the book that had been pressing on my heart to share, one that was less explicit than Wright's presentation of the fresh, new paradigm that I spoke of in my first post . In Chapter 1, The Sermon at the Eucharist on Palm Sunday , Wright says and does something that, I believe, is indicative of one of the central lessons I've learned from grappling with his work in its entirety. Toward the end of the chapter, he says (addressed to the congregation to whom the sermon was originally delivered): "I want you to write down, over the next two or three days, just a sentence or two, or maybe a word or two, about the particular griefs that this community has had to bear in recent years. And over the course of the week we'll gather them up, we'll put them in a basket here somew...