2 hours ago · Culture · 0 comments

I am neither an optimist nor a pessimist. Jesus Christ is risen from the dead! — Lesslie Newbigin To hope radically is to see the new possibilities for human flourishing where none seemed possible before. […] Radical hope, as I have been defining it, involves a deep confidence that there is a way of living meaningfully in this world, even when one does not yet have the concepts to understand what that meaning might be. — Jonathan Lear Hope in challenging times can’t be easy, can’t come naturally — that would be whistling past the graveyard. It requires us to, in Auden’s words, “Look on this world with a happy eye / But from a sober perspective.” We have to practice critical hope. How to do this? It’s something I have been writing about for years, and the key point is to refuse to take refuge in our familiar categories. We must make a point of not knowing where we are going, and improvise in trust. See: vendoring culture filth therapy wander lines improvisation in the briar patch…

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