Richard  Beck

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Richard Beck


Born
June 10, 1967

Website

Genre

Influences
George MacDonald, Arthur C. McGill, William Stringfellow, Ernest Becke ...more


Dr. Richard Beck is a Professor of Psychology at Abilene Christian University, and he is the author of the popular blog Experimental Theology: The Thoughts, Articles and Essays of Richard Beck and the books The Slavery of Death, Unclean: Meditations on Purity, Hospitality, and Mortality and The Authenticity of Faith: The Varieties and Illusions of Religious Experience. As an experimental psychologist and a practicing Christian, he attempts in his writing "to integrate theology with the experimental social sciences."

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There is more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name.
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Richard Beck isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.

First Sunday of Advent: A Poem

"Exile"

Hope cracks dry
underfoot,
tinder for despair.
Dreams sweaty,
fevered, tossed.
Chewed stories stale in the mouth.
Waiting souring
in curdled expectation.
A promise fatigued.

This is the brittle season.

Burnt eyes
scanning the horizon
for a dawn long delayed.
We wait in the city
of the dead.

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Published on November 30, 2025 03:00
Average rating: 4.33 · 2,516 ratings · 424 reviews · 8 distinct worksSimilar authors
Unclean: Meditations on Pur...

4.40 avg rating — 580 ratings — published 2011 — 12 editions
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Hunting Magic Eels: Recover...

4.22 avg rating — 578 ratings8 editions
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Reviving Old Scratch: Demon...

4.26 avg rating — 442 ratings2 editions
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The Slavery of Death

4.49 avg rating — 336 ratings — published 2013 — 7 editions
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Stranger God: Meeting Jesus...

4.43 avg rating — 274 ratings2 editions
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Trains, Jesus, and Murder: ...

4.17 avg rating — 228 ratings — published 2019 — 2 editions
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The Authenticity of Faith :...

4.27 avg rating — 97 ratings — published 2012 — 4 editions
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Experimental Theology

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More books by Richard Beck…
Quotes by Richard Beck  (?)
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“Notice in Acts 4 that there were “no needy persons among them.” Why? Because they shared with “anyone one who had need.” The expression of neediness in the community allowed the economy of love to flow. But in churches in America and other places where affluence poses special problems, the situation is very different. These cultures are enslaved to the fear of death and death avoidance holds serious sway. In these cultures the expression of need is taboo and pornographic. What results is neurotic image-management, the pressure to be “fine.” The perversity here is that on the surface American churches do look like the church in Acts 4 - there are “no needy persons” among us. We all appear to be doing just fine, thank you very much.

But we know this to be a sham, a collective delusion driven by the fear of death. I’m really not fine and neither are you. But you are afraid of me and I’m afraid of you. We are neurotic about being vulnerable with each other. We fear exposing our need and failure to each other. And because of this fear - the fear of being needy within a community of neediness - the witness of the church is compromised. A collection of self-sustaining and self-reliant people - people who are all pretending to be fine - is not the Kingdom of God. It’s a church built upon the delusional anthropology we described earlier. Specifically, a church where everyone is “fine” is a group of humans refusing to be human beings and pretending to be gods. Such a “church” is comprised of fearful people working hard to keep up appearances and unable to trust each other to the point of loving self-sacrifice. In such a “church” each member is expected to be self-sufficient and self-sustaining, thus making no demands upon others. Unfortunately, where there is no need and no vulnerability, there can be no love.”
Richard Beck, The Slavery of Death

“Every American is thus ingrained with the duty to look well, to seem fine, to exclude from the fabric of his or her normal life any evidence of decay and death and helplessness. The ethic I have outlined here is often called the ethic of success. I prefer to call it the ethic of avoidance. . . . Persons are considered a success not because they attain some remarkable goal, but because their lives do not betray marks of failure or depression, helplessness or sickness. When they are asked how they are, they really can say and really do say, “Fine . . . fine.”
Richard Beck, The Slavery of Death

“The prophet proclaims that God cannot be identified with the status quo - however shiny, powerful, immortal, or divine that status quo may appear. The principalities and powers will always seek to capture and enslave God in an attempt to use the name of God to underwrite current power arrangements. To go against the status quo, declare the powers, is to go against God. Religion in this instance becomes another fear-based cudgel, wielded to protect the interests of the principalities and powers and those who currently benefit from business as usual, thus aiding in their success and survival. Consequently, before proclamation to human captives can be made - freedom to those being oppressed by current power arrangements - the prophet must dare to proclaim that God is not the spokesperson for the status quo, but rather stands outside the system - free - to speak a word of judgment. When the freedom of God is proclaimed, when God is outside the system and free to bring a word of indictment against us, the capacity is created to speak on behalf of the marginalized and the disfranchised in the name of God. Being free, God can now be for the weak and the least of these over against those at the top of current power arrangements. This was the real shock at the heart of Moses’s prophetic utterance to Pharaoh— that God was on the side of the slaves and stood with them over against the divinely ordained power and authority of Egypt.”
Richard Beck, The Slavery of Death

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Christian Goodrea...: This topic has been closed to new comments. Christian views of final punishment 55 69 Sep 10, 2021 03:36PM  


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