Life Worth Living

 


I am thrilled to have finished another fabulous book this month! Life Worth Living (by Volf, Croasmun, and McNally-Linz) was a perfect follow-up to Postman's Amusing Ourselves to Death

Let's dig into what really resonated for me.  

This book was based on a very popular course offered at Yale. Its aim is to take the reader on an excavation of sorts. Uncovering what exactly it is to YOU that makes a life worth living. 

First, I want to share this cautionary tale from the opening of the book. A man named Albert Speer was an impossibly talented architect.  He fancied himself an architect to his very core.  His ultimate dream was the chance to build the unimaginable.  Unfortunately, Hitler made him an offer he decided he couldn't refuse.  He would build the New Reich Chancellery. Hitler's foreign headquarters which included a marble gallery, along with many other massive, groundbreaking structures. See them here.  His work was funded by Hitler and his buildings were built with the aid of slave labor.  

"There is a certain greatness to Albert Speer. It lies in the fact that he was '"above all an architect."' That singular devotion to his career made him an exceptionally good architect. But that greatness also contains the monstrosity of his life because that same singular devotion also made him an exceptionally bad human being. "

It is interesting to me that our culture is so centered on hacks, morning routines, productivity, and success. Yet little thought or wisdom is given to what exactly we are hacking towards, or why we want any of these things, do they deliver, and furthermore ARE THESE THINGS EVEN WORTH WANTING? 

That is the question I am still mulling over: what is worth wanting? This question seems to me like a great foundation.  And a lot of us are building lives with no foundation whatsoever and finding ourselves blowing all over the place. 

The authors include insights from many different religious traditions: including Buddhism, Confucianism, Christianity, and Judaism just to name a few.  The book also explores different philosophies from famous figures in history. Oscar Wilde, James Baldwin, Mary Wollstonecraft, Nietzsche, Jeremy Bentham, and even an indigenous tale called Skywoman. These different perspectives invite the reader to lean into the perspectives that resonate and consider others that don't.  

Each chapter has questions to reflect on and journal.  I found some more useful than others.  The first four chapters of the book were especially valuable for me.  Some of the questions about what you value in contrast to how you spend your actual time and days were revealing to say the least.  

This would be an excellent read for ages 17 and up.  

I read this with a group of friends from church.  There is a podcast series to go along with it too and I will link it here. The podcast episodes feature Claire Danes, Kate Bowman, and Kelly Corrigan.  I have not listened to these yet but several of the ladies in our book discussion loved them.  

I do want to say that I think the Yale course itself would be a lot more engaging and have a better flow than the book.  The first 4 chapters were great as written, but as the book transitioned into all the different perspectives and philosophies, it felt a little bogged down and all over the place.  It was definitely worth finishing though.  

As a follower of Jesus, I have been thinking about how Christ took time to reflect on the character of God, spending time in prayer, in praise, and then pouring out what He was filled with.  He knew what was worth wanting.  And from there He did what was worth doing.  He began and he ended with acts of love.   

So what do you think? What is worth wanting? What is a life worth living? 

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