|
BOOK
REVIEWS
“Some
books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed.”
Francis Bacon (d. 1626).
Reviewed by Larry L. McSwain, Professor of Ethics and
Leadership,
McAfee School of Theology, Atlanta, GA.
A Pilgrimage of Faith- My Story
Henlee Hulix Barnette, Macon: Mercer University
Press, 2004, $28 online.
Henlee Barnette was one
of the most influential of Southern Baptist’s Christian ethicists of the twentieth
century in his work as college and seminary professor, author of substantive
works in the field, activist in a variety of ethical causes, and human being
whose very life became a testimony of his faith. In this autobiography
completed only a few months before his death at the age of 93 on October 20,
2004, he tells with modesty the story of his varied experiences and activities.
Barnette was a product
of Southern mountain culture, raised in poverty and impressed throughout his
life with a demanding work ethic that began in his teenage years working in a
cotton mill for subsistence wages. Never loosing his touch with the common
person, he prided himself on his ability to relate to the disposed, the poor
and the outcasts. Converted in the North Kannapolis Baptist Church in
Kannapolis, North Carolina, at the age of nineteen, he returned to high school,
graduated from Wake Forest College, Southern Seminary and engaged in sabbatical
study at Harvard University.
His family itself is
such an integral part of his story as he describes the pain of the death of his
first wife, Charlotte; the happy marriage to his student Helen; the birth of
four children; and the vortex of issues that swirled within his times. It is
ironic that on the day he died, his youngest, James, now University Minister
and professor of religion at Samford University told the story of his older
brothers in worship at McAfee School of Theology. John’s choice to voluntarily
serve in the Air Force with duty in Vietnam at the same time Wayne chose to
move to Sweden to avoid the draft thrust the family into the national media
limelight. Henlee and Helen supported the decisions of both, though his
personal stance was one of outspoken criticism of military involvement in
Vietnam.
This story focuses on
civil rights, his friendship with Clarence Jordan, his travels to the Soviet
Union, his perceptive writings on communism, his invitation to Martin Luther
King to speak in chapel at Southern in 1961, his writing of the classic text Introducing
Christian Ethics (still in print though published in 1961), and his
pioneering work on ecology and medical ethics. After retirement from the
seminary, he served at the University of Louisville Medical School where he
enlarged his influence in medical ethical issues.
Originally written for
his children, the book is clearly written and lacks the format of a formal
scholarly work, much to the reader’s advantage. The pathos of his grief at the
loss of two wives, the struggles to support his four children, the internal
politics of his work as Acting Dean of the seminary during its most difficult
crisis, and his humor in responding to multiple critics make it a delightful
book to read. More importantly, the book chronicles the steadfast commitment to
the ethics cause of an icon known by too few of the present generation. No one
who reads this compelling book need ever feel distant from the man whose life
touched so many in the classroom, the inner city of Louisville, and the
national arena of Christian ethicists.
Editor’s Note: CET
Foundation is pleased to publish Homely Joys: Prayers, Poems, and Barbs by
Jim and Henlee Barnette, offered as a gift to our supporters who contribute $50
or more.
Updated
Saturday, January 21, 2006
|