I’ve read Donald Miller’s Blue Like Jazz twice, I nod my head and laugh every time, it’s a great book, you should probably read it. I was actually gifted 3 copies by a campus crusade friend, I’ve given all but one away.
There’s one story in the book though that drives me crazy, its like the only one, it stokes flaming flames of indignation every time I read it or even think about it.
It’s when Miller and some young Christians set up a “confession booth” on the Reed College campus and apologize to their classmates about everything Christians have done from the crusades to televangalists. I get so indignant, I say classic one liners to myself like “confessional apologizing is a stupid.”
But is it?
GK Chesterton once said.
“The great strength of Christian sanctity has always been simply this – that the worst enemies of the saints could not say of the saints anything worse than [the saints] said of themselves… Suppose the village Atheist had a sudden and splendid impulse to rush into the village church and denounce everybody there as miserable offenders. He might break in at the exact moment when they were saying the same things themselves. You can say anything against a man who praises himself, but a man who blames himself is invulnerable.” 1
Taking it one step further, the strength of the saint is not only his ability to blame himself and tribe for stains of sinful transaction but his humble apology, first to God, then to man.
Don’s story isn’t wrong, I’m wrong. If I can’t apologize to man, how can I apologize to God?
Humility is like an invulnerable cup of wine-apology that lovingly, and vulnerably, points to and owns it’s stains…
Image Credit: xemulon @ deviantart.com
- Dale Ahlquist, Common Sense 101 (San Francisco: Ignacius Press., 2006), 238. ↩
























