This Hallelujah Banquet Quotes

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This Hallelujah Banquet: How the End of What We Were Reveals Who We Can Be This Hallelujah Banquet: How the End of What We Were Reveals Who We Can Be by Eugene H. Peterson
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“no matter if we come home with the Olympic gold or make a million dollars or pioneer the exploration of space or move the world with some artistic performance or discover the cure to cancer—if we do not love, it is not satisfactory. No matter if we are responsible and work hard and do our jobs well and stay out of trouble and are respected, if we do not love, then somehow we have failed. If we live but do not love, we miss it.”
Eugene H. Peterson, This Hallelujah Banquet: How the End of What We Were Reveals Who We Can Be
“For redemption is not a rescue from evil—it is a redemption of evil. Salvation is not luck but rather a courageous confrontation that is victorious in battle. And that is why praise is so exhilarating. It has nothing to do with slapping a happy face on a bad situation and grinning through it. It is fashioned deep within us, out of the sin and guilt and doubt and lonely despair that nevertheless believes. And, in that believing, becomes whole.”
Eugene H. Peterson, This Hallelujah Banquet: How the End of What We Were Reveals Who We Can Be
“Jesus as the chief master of ceremonies—much like some sort of talk show host who’s here to interview those lucky people who have made it big with God, and the show is interspersed with some upbeat worship music to keep the audience (that’s us) from thinking too much about the awful people in the world who are killing and raping and cheating and making such a mess of things that there is really nothing left for them but the Battle of Armageddon.”
Eugene H. Peterson, This Hallelujah Banquet: How the End of What We Were Reveals Who We Can Be
“we don’t become praising people by avoiding or skipping or denying the pain and the poverty and the doubt and the guilt but by entering into them, exploring them, minding their significance, embracing the reality of these experiences. That is what is so distressing about the religious entertainment industry in our land.”
Eugene H. Peterson, This Hallelujah Banquet: How the End of What We Were Reveals Who We Can Be
“Premature praise is false praise. Praise is our end but not our beginning. We begin our lives crying, not smiling and cooing and thanking our parents for bringing us into this lovely world full of dry diapers and sweet milk and warm flesh. We kick and flail. We yell and weep. We have the popularization of a kind of religion that, instead of training people to the sacrificial life after the pattern of our Lord, seduces them into having fun on weekends.”
Eugene H. Peterson, This Hallelujah Banquet: How the End of What We Were Reveals Who We Can Be
“A beautiful discipline of the soul can become sappy, mindless counsel, if we divorce it from the biblical roots of honesty, grief, lament, and genuine celebration from which it originates. No! If we are to live praising lives, robust lives of affirmation, we must live truly, honestly, and courageously. We cannot take shortcuts to the act of praising. We cannot praise prematurely.”
Eugene H. Peterson, This Hallelujah Banquet: How the End of What We Were Reveals Who We Can Be