In the Land of the Living #5

Page 63

what we will eat and wear (Matthew 6:25-34), he tells us that the “kingdom of God is among [us]” (Luke 17:20-21), and says those who, “try to make their life secure will lose it, and those who lose their life will keep it” (Luke 17:33). (“Holy shit! What if He meant it?!”) Trying to accommodate Christianity to a 21st century civilized lifestyle is not the life Jesus offers. Christians are not meant to live conventional lifestyles. The first Jesus followers in the book of Acts claimed no “private ownership of possessions, but everything they owned was held in common,” resulting in there being, “no needy person among them” (Acts 4:3235). These are our roots as followers of Christ, roots we desperately need to return to. And where does a critique of civilization fit into all of this? Throughout the Gospels, we see Jesus traveling on the fringes of society, often times retreating to the wilderness to spend time with God. John the Baptist lives a feral faith in the desert off of locusts and wild honey wearing clothes of camel’s hair. The prophet Elijah traveled the wilderness doing as God directs of him. And the founding story of Judeo-Christianity, Genesis’ narrative of The Fall, “reflect[s] on nothing less than civilization itself, and as such it narrates the history of the human condition” (Cultural/Linguistic Diversity and Deep Social Ecology (Genesis 11:1-9), Ched Myers). The story manifested in Genesis, reflects our roots as people thriving in creation with our Creator, then falling into a life of agriculture, suffering, and civilization as we try to be more like Him. For the vast majority of human existence our ancestors were nomadic huntergatherers living rather egalitarian lives with limited wants and unlimited needs absent of guns, cars, poverty, many modern diseases, and everything that goes along with NOT having faith in the good creation for provision. But for 10,000 years, human history has been spiraling out of control into war, technology, environmental destruction, slavery, oppression, and the continuous neglect of all that is living (Fredy Perlman, Marshall Sahlins, John Zeran). Civilization is a continuous path of destruction, alienation, murder, theft, and a disregard for life that will eventually crash or destroy all life on the planet. And the deeper we travel down the rabbit hole of the critique of civilization, the more we find that civilization is incompatible with all that lives. Anything incompatible with the living earth and the life it sustains is incompatible with a life in relationship with the Creator and with Jesus Christ. Christianity, like anarcho-primitivism, was (and should be) a fringe dwelling resistance movement, a resistant movement that offers a way out of this Leviathan we currently find ourselves in both spiritually, and physically. As Christians and people opposed to civilization we have a lot of shit on our plate. Many secular anarcho-primitivists don’t want anything to do with us. Mainstream Christians will be more than reluctant to accept a critique of the system that sustains their comfort and current way of life. We’re stuck in the middle, and even more, the middle is still civilized. Although we’re in a tough spot, I believe we have the greatest access for liberation, both personally and communally. We have a solid, community of humble and passionate people (and music!) full of rage and mercy with the understanding that this mode of existence cannot continue. But most importantly we have God, His grace and teachings from Jesus that, when taken seriously, allow for complete liberation free of all anxiety and free from the fear of death! For me, this means having the faith to let everything go and live out the kingdom of God, a kingdom not of civilization, but of something holy and wild. And this type of radical faith is complete liberation in this life. And in this liberation, in this way of living, we will show the civilized the glorious way of life that Jesus promised. P.SChristianity has always been at its best as a resistance movement. From Jesus questioning and resisting the dominating system of power, to Dietrich Bonhoeffer opposing Nazi Germany, to

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Articles inside

Women Who Run with Wolves (excerpt) - Clarissa

1min
pages 69-70

Anarchy and Ecstasy , Bewilderness (Anarchy and

10min
pages 65-68

Casting Out Demons - Andy Lewis

5min
pages 63-64

I Speak Only for Myself—Bucko Rinsky

6min
pages 61-62

Fire - Jared Himstedt

1min
page 60

The Spell of the Sensuous (excerpt) - David Abram

24min
pages 53-59

John Ball: Primitivist - John Connor

5min
pages 51-52

Re-imagining Health Care - Rusty Poulette

18min
pages 45-49

Interview with Ward Churchill - Andy Lewis and

8min
pages 41-43

The rebels Dark Laughter (excerpt) - Bruno Filippi

2min
page 50

A Poem - Andrew Mandell

1min
page 44

Against a Moral/Pacifist Reading of the Bible

6min
pages 39-40

Analyzing Avatar (excerpt) - Nekeisha Alexis-Baker

5min
pages 37-38

Briars - Joel Cimmaron

0
page 36

Death and Resurrection - Jared Himstedt

3min
page 35

Rilke

1min
page 31

The Tribes of Yahweh Epilogue (excerpt) - Norman

1min
page 34

Community - John Zerzan

2min
page 33

Woman in Nature (excerpt) - Susan Griffin

3min
page 32

Beyond Haiti - John Connor

36min
pages 21-30

Goatwalking, On Errantry (excerpt) - Jim Corbett

1min
page 20

If a Bible Story Could Stop a Culture War - Ched

9min
pages 17-19

Unearthing the Sensual - Anonymous

3min
page 16

The Body and Revolt (excerpt) - Massimo Pas samami

2min
page 15

The Domestication of Origins - Andy Lewis

6min
pages 13-14

I Eat You, You Eat Me - Smoke

8min
pages 6-8

Love - John Zerzan

9min
pages 3-5

Towards a Rewilding of the Mind - Liza Menno

8min
pages 10-12
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