From the monthly archives:

March 2008

Last night I was catching up on my feed reader and came across a link to this humorous post called You Might Be Emerging If…

The post is quite funny, and to be honest it doesn’t bring up a contention with the Emergent movement within the church as much as people’s “need” to draw lines and create camps of Christian (and other) thought.

This is the portion that bothered me the most:

You use these words in a positive way:

Missional, Liquid/Aqua, Ancient-Future, Post ___________, Jesus, Community, Derrida, Liturgy, Global, Creed, Experience, Social Justice, Conversation, Spiritual, Ritual, Beauty, Art, Blog, Ooze, Journey, Discussion, Open, Random, Culture, Technology

You use these words in a negative way:

Foundationalism, Absolute Truth, Church Growth, D.A. Carson, Calvinism, Modernism, Fundamentalist, Bush, Seeker Sensitive, Preaching, Pulpit, Doctrine, Innerancy, Power, Enlightenment, Rationalism, Meta-narratives, Universal, Judgmental

As I look through this list of words I identify positively with a number of them on both lists, and this is what kills me. The Emergent and anti-Emergent movements like to cast a lot of these things as if they were mutually exclusive, and they (quite simply) are not. And to be honest, there are some that I’m not even sure what they mean… (Ancient-Future, Foundationalism or Ooze anyone?)

The list of ones that I use in a primarily positive way are:

Missional, Liquid, Jesus, Community, Global, Creed, Experience, Social Justice, Conversation, Spiritual, Ritual, Beauty, Art, Blog, Journey, Discussion, Open, Random, Culture, Technology, Absolute Truth, Church Growth, Calvinism, Modernism, Seeker Sensitive, Preaching, Doctrine, Inerrancy, Power, Enlightenment, Rationalism, Meta-narratives and Universal.

What I don’t understand are what it is about lists like this that make people feel that the things on them need to be mutually-exclusive. In my understanding of the world at-large there are constantly beliefs and truths that seem to be exclusive and irreconcilable, but they often are. While I probably fall into a category that some would call Fundamentalist, it doesn’t mean that I don’t value people’s stories, experiences and artistic and subjective expressions of faith that are personal. While I lean towards Calvinism, I am convinced that it does not have to be something that is off-putting to people struggling with personal meaning and direction as we all perceive life as being self-directed and therefore find a need for personal meaning to our actions and our beliefs.

We must strive more towards unity in the worship of Christ regardless of it’s expression. Where I will largely credit the Emergent Movement (I don’t really hate it) is that they seem to strive to understand others’ perspectives moreso than Christians who are Modernist, Calvinist and Fundamentalist… and that moves toward unity. Our unity needs to be in Christ, not our church or our doctrine, but Christ himself.

Charles Spurgeon, the Puritan Baptist Mega-Church pastor from the 19th century had it right when he said that we all have fellowship and communion in the sacrifice and body of Christ – that we are united (even when we don’t like it) by our common love and reverence for Jesus Christ.

Fluff Fast

March 24, 2008

in everything

This past weekend, on “Holy Saturday” to be exact, I was in a Family Christian Bookstore and was really pretty upset by the sheer amount of Christian kitsch and fluff that was around me… not to mention the things that don’t have any place in a strictly Christian bookstore. There are crappy little bumperstickers, weight-loss books, American flag t-shirts and lotions that happen to have the word “Eden” on them.

Then there was the shelf labeled “Christian Classics,” books that have been around for centuries; the books that set fire to the Reformation and to revivals for the past 500 years. The shelf was a grand 6 feet of space sparsely filled with the “cheap” books. I decided that, for at least 6 months, I am cutting out the Christian fluff from my life. I am declaring a fast from anything that has been written in the past half-century (with exception).

There will be no Left Behind, or Purpose Drivenness. No books about how rock music is evil or how this regime or that is the Anti-Christ, and (unfortunately) no Piper (despite his non-fluffness). I’m pulling out (from the library and my own book shelf) things written by people named Spurgeon, Bunyan, Lewis, Calvin, Edwards, Foxe, and Chesterton…

Right now I am reading a book of Spurgeon’s sermons, next will be some of the Chronicles of Narnia, then Pilgrim’s Progress and perhaps the Practice of the Presence of God…. we’ll see.

My only exceptions (besides what I have to finish) will be thus: unChristian which has been reccomended by a lot of people as very good and books assigned for the classes that I’ll be taking this summer.

If all of this goes well, I may extend it another six months.

It’s weird to me that I care this much that AU is in the March Madness.

I never cared about any school that I attended, at least not in the sports arena, yet I think this is awesome. Now that I’m a chaplain there I am really starting (starting) to identify with the school. Also, I don’t care about basketball… at all.

Still this is cool, I actually have a team to root for in the tournament and I care.

posting from an iPod Touch

March 5, 2008

the fact that I’m excited confirms that I’m a nerd!

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