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A review by drbobcornwall
How to Inhabit Time: Understanding the Past, Facing the Future, Living Faithfully Now by James K.A. Smith
5.0
We can argue about whether God is outside of time or not, but when it comes to us, we inhabit time. We have experienced the past, at least our own past. We know that there is a future ahead of us, though we don't know what it will entail. We may have our expectations and our plans, but until they become our present things can change. So, with past and future framing our life experience, how might we live faithfully in the present? As one who is trained as a historical theologian, I have a great appreciation for what has already transpired, for good or for bad. That past helps form the present. It also helps form the possibilities that lie ahead of us. In other words, history has great value for we are all part of the historical process.
I found James K. A. Smith's book "How to Inhabit Time" to be not only thought-provoking but clarifying. Smith speaks of time being a "spiritual adventure" (p. xiii). If it is an adventure how do we experience it? Smith brings to this question his scholarly acumen as a philosopher (he teaches philosophy at Calvin University). He's written about Augustine, and that informs this conversation. He is a Reformed theologian, and that orientation is present in the book, and that might be problematic for some, but I found him to be fair and open to possibilities. Thus, is not a hyper-Calvinist tract. In other words, I as one who believes that the future is open did not feel as if he writes anything that would shut down that conversation. That is because Smith invites us as the reader to reflect and contemplate what it means to live in time. While the book is rooted in scholarship it is offered to a broad audience, which is fitting for a book under the Brazos imprint.
Smith seeks to address what he perceives to be a temporal disorientation present within Christianity. We seem unable to keep time, and thus live in a temporal fog. He notes that "too many contemporary Christians look at history and see only a barren, textureless landscape." We seem unable to "appreciate the nuances and dynamics of history." Thus, we can't discern the "when" of our existence. In other words, we don't understand how the past influences and impacts both the present and the future (p. 5). That affects the way we read Scripture and live our lives as Christians. As an example, he points to the way some white Americans can't discern why "All Lives Matter" is an inappropriate response to "Black Lives Matter." Thus, the ideal -- "all lives matter" -- doesn't take into consideration the now of the declaration that Black Lives Matter. Thus, this book is a call to address our distorted spiritual time-keeping by recognizing our embeddedness in history. No, this isn't a book about time management!
Having established the importance of spiritual timekeeping in the introduction, Smith begins exploring this reality of being embedded in history. The first chapter reminds us that we are "Creatures of Time." We live in time. Our existence is contingent. That is what is might not have been and could be otherwise. He writes that "history is the zig and zag of choices and events that both open and close possibilities" (p. 31). In other words, we can't go back to the past. That has already been written, and the choices in the past affect the possibilities going forward. So, we move forward into time, with the Spirit present with us. Moving on in chapter 2 to "A History of the Human Heart," Smith speaks more fully about the nature of potentiality, noting that the possibilities available in the future are not infinite. Again the past and present influence the potentialities of the future. Regarding the past, he speaks of grace overcoming what has happened but not erasing it or undoing it. He writes that "to be human is to be the product of a history that should have been other wise: that's what it means to live in a world off-kilter due to sin and evil. " That history is who I am. (p. 67).
In "The Sacred folds of Kairos" (ch. 3), he speaks of the present, where history and eternity intersect. In this chapter, he draws on Kierkegaard, and speaks of what it means to be a follower of God. It is not enough to be present with Jesus in his own time and place, it is a question of how we follow in this moment. It is a reminder that time is not merely a straightline, but in terms of kairos, it "bends and curves around the incarnate Christ like a temporal center of gravity." Here he speaks to the nature of the liturgical calendar (p. 85). This leads to a conversation in chapter 5 about embracing the ephemeral or loving what we'll lose. Thus, he writes that "Christian timekeeping is like a dance on a tightrope: on the one hand, we are called to inhabit time in a way that stretches us, to be aware of so much more than now." Here he speaks of living futurally aware of our inheritances. But on the other hand, "we always live in the present" (p. 100). The question then is how we live in the present as the nexus of past and future. As such we live with the ephemeral, what fades away. As Ecclesiastes suggests, all is vanity. It is impermanent. Time involves change.
Thus, in chapter 5, we learn to inhabit the now as we encounter the "Seasons of the Heart." As Ecclesiastes reminds us, there is a time for everything. There are seasons of inevitability and others that involve choices. In our journey, this reality involves discernment, of recognizing our seasonal location. Discernment involves prayerful listening while in the midst of things. He suggests that if we wish to transcend time then we should develop multi-generational friendships. Here he notes that "there are patterns of a human life that, despite our claims to utter uniqueness, are in fact repeated and shared" (p. 134). When it comes to our relationship with God, while God might be eternal we are seasonal. That relationship then will be marked by seasonality. We experience God differently in different moments of time.
The Christian life is a spiritual adventure that involves different seasons. We may be moving toward the future, but Smith suggests we shouldn't live ahead of time (chapter 6). We should not get ahead of ourselves. We can imagine many things, but it is experience that tells us what is possible. These are the constraints of our creaturehood. Here he reflects on eschatological matters, and more pointedly on what he calls "practical eschatology. Because we as Christians are futural people, we pray for the coming of God's kingdom. But even as we pray for it to come we know that it has yet to come. That means we are a "waiting people." So, we should not rush the kingdom. So, "living eschatologically is not so much a matter of knowing the end as knowing when we are now. An eschatological orientation isn't only about a future expectation but also a recalibration of our present" (p. 148-149). That doesn't mean we wait passively or "fetishize and atemporal eternity" (p. 149). In other words, we should not neglect the present by expecting the future. Thus, "eschatology is about how we live in the now, and that 'we' is as wide as humanity, even if we're not all keeping time in the same way" (p. 155). Thus, eschatology is political. It is also a call to live without hubris.
I found this book to be a helpful reflection on the nature of time, of how we live in the present while knowing that a future awaits us, both and present and future are impacted by the past. Yet there is grace that allows us to overcome even if we can't erase that past. The good news is that God makes all things new.
.
I found James K. A. Smith's book "How to Inhabit Time" to be not only thought-provoking but clarifying. Smith speaks of time being a "spiritual adventure" (p. xiii). If it is an adventure how do we experience it? Smith brings to this question his scholarly acumen as a philosopher (he teaches philosophy at Calvin University). He's written about Augustine, and that informs this conversation. He is a Reformed theologian, and that orientation is present in the book, and that might be problematic for some, but I found him to be fair and open to possibilities. Thus, is not a hyper-Calvinist tract. In other words, I as one who believes that the future is open did not feel as if he writes anything that would shut down that conversation. That is because Smith invites us as the reader to reflect and contemplate what it means to live in time. While the book is rooted in scholarship it is offered to a broad audience, which is fitting for a book under the Brazos imprint.
Smith seeks to address what he perceives to be a temporal disorientation present within Christianity. We seem unable to keep time, and thus live in a temporal fog. He notes that "too many contemporary Christians look at history and see only a barren, textureless landscape." We seem unable to "appreciate the nuances and dynamics of history." Thus, we can't discern the "when" of our existence. In other words, we don't understand how the past influences and impacts both the present and the future (p. 5). That affects the way we read Scripture and live our lives as Christians. As an example, he points to the way some white Americans can't discern why "All Lives Matter" is an inappropriate response to "Black Lives Matter." Thus, the ideal -- "all lives matter" -- doesn't take into consideration the now of the declaration that Black Lives Matter. Thus, this book is a call to address our distorted spiritual time-keeping by recognizing our embeddedness in history. No, this isn't a book about time management!
Having established the importance of spiritual timekeeping in the introduction, Smith begins exploring this reality of being embedded in history. The first chapter reminds us that we are "Creatures of Time." We live in time. Our existence is contingent. That is what is might not have been and could be otherwise. He writes that "history is the zig and zag of choices and events that both open and close possibilities" (p. 31). In other words, we can't go back to the past. That has already been written, and the choices in the past affect the possibilities going forward. So, we move forward into time, with the Spirit present with us. Moving on in chapter 2 to "A History of the Human Heart," Smith speaks more fully about the nature of potentiality, noting that the possibilities available in the future are not infinite. Again the past and present influence the potentialities of the future. Regarding the past, he speaks of grace overcoming what has happened but not erasing it or undoing it. He writes that "to be human is to be the product of a history that should have been other wise: that's what it means to live in a world off-kilter due to sin and evil. " That history is who I am. (p. 67).
In "The Sacred folds of Kairos" (ch. 3), he speaks of the present, where history and eternity intersect. In this chapter, he draws on Kierkegaard, and speaks of what it means to be a follower of God. It is not enough to be present with Jesus in his own time and place, it is a question of how we follow in this moment. It is a reminder that time is not merely a straightline, but in terms of kairos, it "bends and curves around the incarnate Christ like a temporal center of gravity." Here he speaks to the nature of the liturgical calendar (p. 85). This leads to a conversation in chapter 5 about embracing the ephemeral or loving what we'll lose. Thus, he writes that "Christian timekeeping is like a dance on a tightrope: on the one hand, we are called to inhabit time in a way that stretches us, to be aware of so much more than now." Here he speaks of living futurally aware of our inheritances. But on the other hand, "we always live in the present" (p. 100). The question then is how we live in the present as the nexus of past and future. As such we live with the ephemeral, what fades away. As Ecclesiastes suggests, all is vanity. It is impermanent. Time involves change.
Thus, in chapter 5, we learn to inhabit the now as we encounter the "Seasons of the Heart." As Ecclesiastes reminds us, there is a time for everything. There are seasons of inevitability and others that involve choices. In our journey, this reality involves discernment, of recognizing our seasonal location. Discernment involves prayerful listening while in the midst of things. He suggests that if we wish to transcend time then we should develop multi-generational friendships. Here he notes that "there are patterns of a human life that, despite our claims to utter uniqueness, are in fact repeated and shared" (p. 134). When it comes to our relationship with God, while God might be eternal we are seasonal. That relationship then will be marked by seasonality. We experience God differently in different moments of time.
The Christian life is a spiritual adventure that involves different seasons. We may be moving toward the future, but Smith suggests we shouldn't live ahead of time (chapter 6). We should not get ahead of ourselves. We can imagine many things, but it is experience that tells us what is possible. These are the constraints of our creaturehood. Here he reflects on eschatological matters, and more pointedly on what he calls "practical eschatology. Because we as Christians are futural people, we pray for the coming of God's kingdom. But even as we pray for it to come we know that it has yet to come. That means we are a "waiting people." So, we should not rush the kingdom. So, "living eschatologically is not so much a matter of knowing the end as knowing when we are now. An eschatological orientation isn't only about a future expectation but also a recalibration of our present" (p. 148-149). That doesn't mean we wait passively or "fetishize and atemporal eternity" (p. 149). In other words, we should not neglect the present by expecting the future. Thus, "eschatology is about how we live in the now, and that 'we' is as wide as humanity, even if we're not all keeping time in the same way" (p. 155). Thus, eschatology is political. It is also a call to live without hubris.
I found this book to be a helpful reflection on the nature of time, of how we live in the present while knowing that a future awaits us, both and present and future are impacted by the past. Yet there is grace that allows us to overcome even if we can't erase that past. The good news is that God makes all things new.
.