
	 
	CONVERSION AS A FUNDAMENTAL 
	CATEGORY OF CHRISTIAN GROWTH
	John Markey, O.P., has recently published a challenging study of American 
	culture and its impact on Christian moral experience entitled Moses in 
	Pharaoh’s House: A Liberation Spirituality for North America (Winona, 
	MN: Anselm Academic, 2014—ISBN 978-1-59982-326-3). The image in the title 
	evokes the need that Moses had to get outside of Pharaoh’s house in order to 
	realize that he was a Jew, not an Egyptian, and to discover that he had to 
	liberate himself from privilege as he undertook to liberate his people. 
	Moses serves as a good example of someone who moved from gradually being 
	caught in structures that isolated him and distorted his vision to 
	solidarity with and leadership for his people.
	The first part of the book explores the "walls" of Pharoah’s house for us 
	today—individualism, greed, and escapism—and the ways in which they function 
	as a default perspective on life for most Americans. To be liberators of the 
	poor who are the principal victims of these structures, we have to be 
	liberated ourselves from considering this perspective as normal. As John 
	says, "Americans appear to be enmeshed in a false value system that causes 
	them to fundamentally misinterpret their lives." (74) 
	Chapter Five, "Liberation as Conversion," is a good example of what this 
	book offers. It is central to understanding the author’s argument, since the 
	liberation from false values and a new commitment to a truly good life will 
	entail taking on new perspectives through processes of conversion. As you 
	will see, Markey argues that conversion is an ongoing practice of openness 
	to growth in multiple areas of life. In laying out and discussing the five 
	areas of conversion proposed by theologian Donald Gelpi, John also clarifies 
	the interdependence of these areas of personal growth. At the further end of 
	the trajectory of conversions, things don’t look the same as they did 
	before. The new person has new goals—and new responsibilities.
	Later chapters explore inauthentic images of God, the crucial Christian 
	option for the poor, and strategies for cultivating a liberating culture. 
	John concludes with a meditation on the communal dimension of Christian 
	spirituality and the importance of a Trinitarian model for understanding 
	Christian life.
	Each chapter has excellent reflection questions. This is a carefully 
	researched and prophetic book. It is certainly a timely topic. I think that 
	anyone who reads it will come away not only enriched, but challenged and 
	stimulated to rethink the role of culture in Christian life and 
	evangelization.
	Paul Philibert, O.P.
	Promoter for Permanent Formation
	Southern Dominican Province, USA