Brennan
Manning—former Catholic priest, speaker, writer, icon for many evangelicals—is saying
goodbye. He’s 79, in failing health, under the care of a caretaker, but still
telling his stories, still telling the rest of us that God loves you where you
are.
All
is Grace: A Ragamuffin Memoir, written with writer and author John Blase,
is Manning’s farewell and, in a sense, final confession. He devotes a
considerable portion of his farewell to his failures – a point Christian writer
Philip Yancey takes issue with in the foreword to the book. But that’s the point
of a confession, and especially a final confession. “Forgive me, Father, for I
have sinned.”
And
what is on Manning’s mind is his never-ending struggle with alcoholism, the
strained relationship he had with his mother, and how he failed his wife Roslyn.
He provides information about his childhood and growing up, and how he became a
priest, but it is those three things that are on his mind as he moves closer to
the end of life.
From
the time he was 16, he says, he’s embraced, fought, lost, recovered and lost again
his battle with alcohol. He drank so much as a teenager that he was nicknamed
the “Funnel.” He drank so much that he experienced blackouts, including the one
in the New Jersey hotel room in 1993 when he missed his mother’s funeral. He
readily admits his lies and deceits, his denials and the hurts he caused to
families and friends alike.
His
felt something sorely missing in his relationship with his mother, and that
something was acceptance. One feels the pain of the little boy who believes he
can never do enough to be accepted by his mother, and Manning describes that
pain here. He eventually finds and offers forgiveness a decade after her death.
And
he describes the eventual failure of his marriage to Roslyn. He left the
priesthood after falling in love with her, and that was the beginning of his
fame outside the Catholic Church as a speaker and writer. He describes their
life together in New Orleans. But he didn’t know how to be a husband, he says, and
his alcoholism eventually doomed the marriage.
And
yet he knows that despite all of his failures, he knows God loves him as he is,
and he is forgiven. In All is Grace,
Manning offers his testimony of failure so that we, too, no matter what we are
and what we have done, can know that we, too, are God’s children, forgiven and
loved as we are.
Related: Co-author John
Blase writes about Manning and the book for the Huffington
Post.
Thanks for this reminder Glynn...I love his writings. Failure is never the punctuation mark of a life but it is in the sentence structure.
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful write Glynn.
ReplyDeleteAnd I love what Jerry wrote too.
Glynn,
ReplyDeleteThis review is wonderful. Testimony carries real power when real failures are revealed, then forgiveness is revealed.
Thanks for this.
Brennan and John...
ReplyDeleteA good pair to meet and get to know one another.
Glynn- This sounds like an interesting read. Thanks for the review.
ReplyDeleteOn the wish list at Amazon - thanks so much for this lovely review. It is powerful to be reminded that even if 'the demons' rise again and again, we are - first, last and always - loved and forgiven. Confession is good for the soul and I pray peace to his.
ReplyDeletenice...manning is one of my favs...on the list...
ReplyDeleteA graceful review, Glynn...thank you.
ReplyDeleteTHis one is on my wish-list too, Glynn. Thanks for this peek.Sounds like a heart-bender. These are the best ones to speak the truth.
ReplyDeleteGoing on my to-read list! We can never exhaust the subject of God's grace. Great review! Thanks!
ReplyDelete