āTo desire eternal life with all the passion of the spirit.
To keep death daily before oneās eyes.ā
The lines above form the epigraph of a timely new title, . Some might wonder how these two lines, excerpted from The Rule of St. Benedict, could be combined. How does desire, passion, and eternal life coalesce with daily contemplations of death? Award-winning author J. Todd Billings, research professor of Reformed theology at Western Seminary in Holland, Mich., provides an answer.
Billings explains how embracing our mortality encourages us to trust in Godās promise of eternal life, and he does so with the shepherding heart of a pastor, the mind of an eminent scholar, and the eyes of a keen observer of culture. His gifts as a writer make this a book worth reading.
Billings also braids his reflections on death and discipleship with his own journey into the valley of shadows as a cancer patient contending with multiple myeloma, an incurable blood cancer.
In the psalmistsā laments and the āworld of cancer patients,ā Billings found many others in the valley. His first chapter, startlingly titled āWelcome to Sheol: A Guided Tour of Life in the Pit,ā explores easily missed contours of meaning in the word sheol. Often a reference in the Psalms to the grave or the place of the dead, sheol provided Billings a focal point for noticing how death and faith commingle in the formational poetry of ancient Israel. If a literal grave, how could various psalmists cry out in lament from sheol and then offer jubilant praise for deliverance?
Sheol emerges as an extended metaphor for āplaces of bondage and silencing,ā and for āplaces of loss and fear and loneliness,ā for ādeathā in figurative language. However, death seen figuratively allows at least two different meanings. One semantic range, the one Billings preferred, joins death to words like āenemy,ā a āviolation,ā a āsting,ā and a āhorror.ā
But, after talking to a group at a retirement center, he understood a second range of meaning, one that included words like āreward,ā ārelief,ā a āmercy,ā even one āoverdue.ā Was one correct or preferred? The chapter questions hint at an answer: āMight they both be true at the same time?ā
In the heart of Billingās narrative, one rich with enduring metaphors, comes an invitation to continue following his biography of adversity: āIāve been transported to a different planet ā¦ called modern medicine.ā In this strange place where āstuckness ā¦ deepensā and āsolutionsā often lead to new āproblems,ā the familiar terrain and accessible language almost convince him that our battle is not with sin and evil but with disease and decay; we are ācatechized in the hopeā that science and modern medicine will one day win the war against death and dying.
When hope is thin, Billings feels the attraction of the prosperity gospelās purveyors, those who catechize a similar hope while also promising happiness, health, and abundant life now. With patience and a wise allowance for ambiguity and paradox, Billings gently deconstructs the tempting notions that God assures us physical health and material prosperity.
Billingās expansive reach, his artful prose, and his chronicle of struggle weave together a profound testimony summed up well by words of Peter Craigie: āRecognizing the transitory natureā of our lives āis a starting point in achieving the sanity of a pilgrim in an otherwise mad world.ā Through embracing his mortality, Billings can declare his hope āthat the frailty and decay of my body will not be the final measure of my life.ā And he sings now āas one whose life is āhidden with God.ā From that place of hiddenness, I look forward to the end.ā (Brazos Press)
About the Author
Dave Beach is an educator/counselor/author currently serving trauma survivors as the mental health director at the Johnson-Brower Foundation. He authored Following the Man of Sorrows: A Theology of Suffering for Spiritual Formation and co-authored The 7 Pillars of SheWillStay and The Essential Bible Companion to the Psalms. He and his wife, Cynthia, own a publishing company, . Visit him on Facebook at David R. Beach in Lowell, MI.