Philip Yancey's featured book Where The Light Fell: A Memoir is available here: See purchase options!

My Friend Brennan

by Philip Yancey

| 24 Comments

Brennan Manning has written a memoir titled All Is Grace that will be published this year by David C. Cook Publishing.  I wrote the Foreword, and include excerpts here about my friend.

I first met Brennan Manning at an event called Greenbelt Festival in England, a sort of Christian Woodstock of artists, musicians and speakers that had attracted twenty thousand fans to tents and impromptu venues set up in the muddy infield of a horse-racing track.  Brennan seemed dazzled by the spectacle, and like a color commentator kept trying to explain the subtleties of evangelicalism to his wife Roslyn, a cradle Catholic who lacked Brennan’s experience with the subculture.

We did not see each other often over the years, but each time our paths crossed we went deeper, rather than tilling the same ground of friendship.  When he visited a monastery in Colorado for spiritual retreats, he would sometimes get a temporary dispensation from the rule of silence and meet my wife and me at an ice cream parlor (one addiction he doesn’t disclose in these pages).  Our backgrounds could hardly have been more different— Southern fundamentalism vs. Northeastern Catholic—and yet by different routes we had both stumbled upon an Artesian well of grace and have been gulping it ever since.  One glorious fall afternoon we hiked on a carpet of golden Aspen leaves along a mountain stream and I heard the details of Brennan’s life: his loveless childhood, his marathon search for God, his marriage and divorce, his lies and coverups, his continuing struggles with alcohol addiction.

As you read this memoir you may be tempted, as I am, to think “Oh, what might have been…if Brennan hadn’t given into drink.”  I urge you to reframe the thought to, “Oh, what might have been…if Brennan hadn’t discovered grace.”  More than once I have watched this leprechaun of an Irish Catholic hold spellbound an audience of thousands by telling in a new and personal way the story that all of us want to hear: that the Maker of all things loves and forgives us.  Brennan knows well that love and especially the forgiveness.  Like “Christian,” the everyman character in The Pilgrim’s Progress, he progressed not by always making right decisions but by responding appropriately to wrong ones.  (John Bunyan, after all, titled his own spiritual biography Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners).

At one point Brennan likens himself to Samson, that flawed superman whom God somehow found a way to use right up to the day of his death.  Reading such stories in the Old Testament, I’ve come up with a simple principle to explain how God can use the likes of such imperfect men and women: “God uses the talent pool available.”  Again and again, Brennan made himself available.  In the last few years, nearly blind, subject to illness and falls, at an age when he should have been enjoying retirement on a beach in Florida, he kept getting on airplanes and flying places to proclaim a Gospel he believed with all his heart but could not always live.

“All is grace,” Brennan concludes, looking back on a rich but stained life.  He has placed his trust in that foundational truth of the universe, which he has proclaimed faithfully and eloquently.

As a writer, I live in daily awareness of how much easier it is to edit a book than edit a life.  When I write about what I believe and how I should live, it sounds neat and orderly.  When I try to live it out, all hell breaks loose.  Reading Brennan’s memoir, I see something of the reverse pattern.  By focusing on the flaws, he leaves out many of the triumphs.  I keep wanting him to tell the stories that put him in a good light, and there are many.  Choosing full disclosure over a narrative that might burnish his reputation, Brennan presents himself as the Apostle Paul once did, as a “clay jar,” a disposable container made of baked dirt.  We must look to his other books for a full picture of the treasure that lay inside.

A poem by Leonard Cohen says it well:

Ring the bells that still can ring.
Forget your perfect offering.
There is a crack in everything.
That’s how the light gets in.


Discussion

  1. Amy Terlitsky Avatar

    Thanks for giving me the heads up on Brennan’s new book. How appropriate that you would write the forward for this book on “grace”! I look forward to reading it. I have read just about everything that the two of you have written and have been blessed by the “purpose in the pain” that you both have shared!
    It continues to give this pilgrim hope to know that while the journey is rough, we never travel alone!
    Grace & Peace- Amy

  2. Charlie's Church of Christ Avatar

    Excited to hear he has a new book coming out!

  3. Jim Foster Avatar

    I watch closely for your thoughts and your sharing on prayer, grace and people who have learned to live by both. I look forward to reading Brennen Manning’s works. Thank you for passing this on.

  4. Mrs. Virginia L. Wilson Avatar

    A beautiful and heartfelt tribute to your friend. I pre-ordered the book because you recommend it. I also learned what “grace” meant by reading your books. Thank you.

  5. Ellen Gee Avatar
    Ellen Gee

    I too struggle with the “what if I hadn’t sinned so much” question. Thanks for pointing me in the opposite direction. I shudder to thing what my life would have been without Gods grace.

Share This

[shared_counts]

Recent Blog Posts

The Universe and My Aquarium

31 comments

Alpha and Omega

20 comments

Learning to Write

30 comments

Miracle on the River Kwai

38 comments

Word Play

14 comments

Who Cares?

37 comments

24 thoughts on “My Friend Brennan”

  1. Thanks for giving me the heads up on Brennan’s new book. How appropriate that you would write the forward for this book on “grace”! I look forward to reading it. I have read just about everything that the two of you have written and have been blessed by the “purpose in the pain” that you both have shared!
    It continues to give this pilgrim hope to know that while the journey is rough, we never travel alone!
    Grace & Peace- Amy

  2. I watch closely for your thoughts and your sharing on prayer, grace and people who have learned to live by both. I look forward to reading Brennen Manning’s works. Thank you for passing this on.

  3. I too struggle with the “what if I hadn’t sinned so much” question. Thanks for pointing me in the opposite direction. I shudder to thing what my life would have been without Gods grace.

Comments are closed.