under the overpass by mike yankoski
Summary: Two college boys (Mike and Sam), in search of what it meant to live in Christ, decided to experience life on the streets for 5 months in 6 different cities. The book is a summary of their experiences, of what they learned, and how they grew as lovers of Christ.
I had some disappointments with this book, but also some big delights, here they are.
Why I really appreciated this book:
1. The descriptions of homeless life in America as seen through the author's eyes and the personal stories of real individuals struggling on the streets.
2. The author's passion to help people who are usually avoided by those with higher status.
3. The author manifested his trust in God, showing how he used the Bible to maintain and grow his trust in God in difficult situations. Really cool!
4. Very challenging. Put your trust in God and show the love of God in hard places to hurting people. He challenges the church to live and love radically, the way we were always meant to live and love.
5. Near the end the author shows us what comes first: our love for God. And says this should be our motivation to love others. Because God loved us in Jesus Christ (even to death) therefore we should love others with this same kind of love. Awesome! Show the love which He showed us.
Some disappointments:
1. The author often sounds condescending, impish, and arrogant. (It's too bad, because the author really does care about people, I think, so it's just too bad).
2. Sometimes he makes slightly unfair or unnecessary conclusions about the churches he visits. Or about the people who avoided him on the streets.
3. There are a few assumptions in the book that lead to falsehood (bad theology), which can lead to hurtful and unwise living (bad orthopraxy).
Examples
Of one of my disappointments:
Ex. On pages 55-56 Mike talks about a family of three (dad, mom, young child) that passed him and his partner (Sam) as they were sitting in front of an Italian restaurant in Washington D. C. Mike says the mom was pushing the toddler in a stroller and the dad was beside the mom. As they passed Mike heard the mom say, "We have to be about the gift of giving and the wisdom of the Holy Spirit." At this point, Mike says, "But when I caught her eye, she looked away and quickened her pace." Okay. You should know something else, though, Mike and Sam are both over 6 feet tall. Surely, they were dirty and smelled bad, which were (probably) contributing factors, but these guys are both big guys, young, and strong and compared to a mom pushing her stroller down the sidewalk, I mean, we should give her some benefit of the doubt, right? So, I wish Mike could have shown a bit more empathy in the writing of this book. He does show more empathy near the end, but wants to encourage us to show the love of Christ. And I agree, I think the mother could have been more loving if only she had not been so very full of fear.
Of some of my delights:
In San Francisco Mike and Sam were helped by Russ (a worship singer with tatoos) and James (a 17-year-old preacher) who, when asked by Mike why they were helping him and Sam, said, "The Bible says that we must reach out to those in need . Jesus loves us, so we get to love you. It's a privilege." - Really cool. This is our motivation.
A quote from G. K. Chesterton's Orthodoxy: "We do not want anger and joy to neutralize each other and produce a surely contentment. We want a fiercer delight and a fiercer discontent." ;
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