Covenant News at www.covchurch.org
ROSEMONT, IL (March 6, 2003) - Philip Yancey has climbed to the top of the
mountain in Christian writing circles and is considered one of the most
poignant voices of the evangelical world.
Truth be told, however, Yancey would rather climb real mountains - and he
is surprised by his success. Yancey, an editor at large for Christianity
Today and author of 16 books and more than 600 articles, talked about
his unlikely rise to fame and his hopes for the future in evangelical
America during an interview with Covenant Communications
following the 2003 Midwinter Pastors Conference of the Evangelical Covenant
Church in February.
A Chicago resident for much of his adult life (his wife, Janet, served in
senior adult ministries at La Salle Street Church near downtown Chicago),
Yancey moved to Colorado in the mid 1990s to write, saying he has found the
change of scenery refreshing for both body and soul. He uses mountain
climbing as a way to energize himself for his work.
"There's no more internal act than writing - it lives inside your head -
and I find a need to connect with the material world after writing," Yancey
said. "In Colorado there are 54 mountains over 14,000 feet. I've climbed 35
of the 54 and I'd like to climb all of them. I do most of my writing in a
cabin in the mountains and I do something every day - skiing or
cross-country skiing usually - to get out in the world. The main lesson is
that it shows how small we are. It makes you feel like a small creature.
You get up in the mountains and you realize you're just a frail and small
being - it's a good thing to keep in mind."
The big picture of nature and (more recently) of the world in general seems
to have given Yancey a new perspective on things. Some of it may stem from
a change in what he writes about and how he writes about it. Yancey was a
journalist for Campus Life magazine for a decade. He says becoming a
book author has altered his focus.
Early in his book writing career, he wrote The Student Bible, Where Is
God When It Hurts and Disappointment With God, which
collectively sold more than five million copies. He co-authored three books
with Dr. Paul Brand, including The Gift of Pain, before writing
The Jesus I Never Knew in 1996 and What's So Amazing About
Grace in 1998. Both of those works earned Christian Book of the Year
honors.
"Journalism was a way to perceive the world, to explore life," Yancey says.
"Then I started writing about problematic areas - questions I had about my
faith. When we moved from Chicago to Colorado, it was really an intentional
move away from journalism to a more reflective form of writing. In the
books I've written since then, the spiral is turning
inward."
In recent years Yancey has made numerous trips overseas. An upcoming book,
Rumors of Another World, was influenced greatly by those trips.
Yancey's interactions with foreigners have sobered him as he thinks about
the world. "I found myself confronting issues I hadn't confronted in the
past. America is out on a limb these days (philosophically) and I don't
think we realize it. Pew Foundation did a study of lists (asking what
different countries considered the most pressing issues in the world). In
America the list included terrorism, nuclear war . . . and other countries
didn't even have that on their list. They had things like: How do I feed my
family?"
Yancey's overseas trips have helped him keep his success in perspective. In
the United States, Yancey's writing seems to have captured the point of
view of the common person's Christianity. "I try to represent the ordinary
person in the pew," he says. When he's in a foreign land, however, Yancey
is less known and he often speaks as much as a representative of the United
States as one representing evangelical Christianity. In the process, he
has come to value qualities not often lifted up in the United States.
"The quality that most impresses me is humility," said Yancey in reflecting
on life overseas. "That's not natural for us as Americans. A country like
Japan values that quality, and it's a deeply spiritual quality. We're a
celebrity culture and that even goes in our churches. I'm glad it (star
quality) is less of a factor for writers. Every once in a while I emerge
from my cave and there are the bright lights and a bunch of journalists are
asking your opinion. I'll do a few radio programs shortly after a book
comes out, once every two years, so it's not so big of a problem. Traveling
overseas (as an American), you're exploited, not coddled."
As he continues to evolve as a writer, Yancey believes his faith is
evolving, too. He sees the humility of Jesus, the freedom that life in
Christ can give and the w
illingness of Jesus to relate to the most common people as among the
aspects of faith that intrigue him most. And he seems content to wrestle
with whatever questions he may have as he trusts in the faith that he is
already nurturing.
"I guess I'm convinced that the Christian way of life makes sense," Yancey
said about his growing faith. "I think it's the best way of life. It's a
gamble, there's evidence on both sides. And I think there are good reasons
to choose for faith and for Jesus. There are certainly not irrefutable
reasons . . . but the people I know and have been most influenced
by are faithful to Jesus, and I choose that side of the coin."
Yancey: Mountain Climbing Helps Keep Perspective
By Craig Pinley
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