Hope: A User's Manual (MaryAnn McKibben Dana) - A Review
HOPE: A User’s Manual. By MaryAnn McKibben Dana. Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2022. X + 179 pages.
We could all use a bit of hope in
our lives. In recent years, life has become increasingly complicated and
stressful. We’ve seen it in our politics, cultural life, and even our religious
life. It’s come to the point that many folks, including Christians, worry about
the future. Things were already heading in that direction before the COVID-19
pandemic hit, and it only made things worse. People got sick and died. People
lost their jobs and businesses closed. Students from the youngest through
graduate school struggled with their studies. Everyone seemed to endure
loneliness and disconnection from one another. Then as we tried to navigate the
pandemic, our politics became even more polarized and people in the West,
including the United States have begun to worry that democracy might not
endure. Then inflation made daily economic life more challenging. So, it’s
understandable that hope has been in short supply. So, we might welcome a user’s
manual that can help us build some hope into our lives.
MaryAnn McKibben Dana has written just
that manual that can be of help even to those of us who might be skeptical
about such offers of help. Many a false prophet has offered false hopes, so you
might wonder if this book is any different from the many self-help manuals that
fail to produce what is promised. We might start with the fact that the author
is not a purveyor of self-help platitudes. She is by background, besides being
a writer, an ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church USA. PCUSA pastors
generally are serious thinkers, so that should settle our nerves a bit. Besides
being a pastor she’s a ministry coach, and clergy need hope as well.
When Dana speaks of hope in Hope: A User’s Manual, she’s not offering a word of optimism. She doesn't
downplay the realities of our time. After all, this book was written in the
midst of the pandemic. I’m sure she heard from clergy and laity alike about these
realities. Instead of optimism, she offers this book to "religious folk
who" like her, "are weary of pat answers and scripty-font platitudes
about hope" (p. 3). In other words, this isn't a book that offers easily
reshared memes offering "be happy" sentiments that fit nicely on
Facebook or other Social Media devices.
She has organized the book around
six themes. Each theme/section is divided into several brief chapters (usually
3-4 pages in length). Thus, this book could easily serve as a daily devotional
for those needing a dose of hope. In these six sections Dana explores these
ideas/concepts: "What Hope Is Not;" "What Hope Is;"
"Hope Lives in the Body;" "Hope Travels in Story;"
"The Practice of Hope;" and "Hope Beyond Hope." Each
section breaks down into six to nine brief chapters, each of which explores an
element of that theme. The message we encounter in these chapters is often
personal, as Dana reveals elements of her own life and that of her family. That
includes revealing that her young daughter struggled with depression during the
pandemic, something many families have dealt with along with their children and
youth and young adults. So much so that it’s difficult to get into any form of
therapy.
It’s appropriate that she begins
the book with a section titled "What Hope Is Not." Sometimes stating
the negative is more helpful than offering a positive definition. In this
opening section, Dana makes it clear that hope is not prediction or optimism. It’s
not the opposite of despair or even solace. Regarding what hope is, she tells
us that hope is what we do. The reason why it’s what we do is that "hope
is wrapped up in what we make real. Hope isn't what we think. Hope isn't what
we feel. . . . hope is what we do in the face of suffering, pain, and
injustice" (p. 39). Ultimately, the message of the book is that we
experience hope when we take the long view and persevere through thick and
thin. To do this, we are called upon to recognize that hope must be embodied, while
involving storytelling and requiring practice. So, as we move to the book’s final
section, which is titled “Hope Beyond Hope,” we are again reminded that hope is
really an act of protest and resistance and therefore it requires perseverance.
This is a book for those who desire
a word of hope but don’t expect easy answers. It offers a word of encouragement
that acknowledges that we face deep challenges and that a be-happy attitude is
not enough to sustain us. She recognizes that many of us, even folks in the
church, experience things like depression. Life is complicated. So, in her closing
chapter, she points to the story of Jesus calming the storm on the Sea of Galilee.
The message she discerns for us in that story is that hope is about enduring and
persevering through the storm. Yes, hope is found in riding out the storm.
May Mary McKibben Dana’s Hope: A User’s Manual, fulfill its promise that the reader might experience hope while
navigating this very complicated world we live in.
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