Posts Tagged ‘Culture’

The Christian, The Church, The Culture

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

church steepleI have been thinking lately about the combination of church and culture in the hearts of American Christians.  Actually, as a pastor, you might say this issue is ingrained in what I do on a weekly basis, but nonetheless, it has been on the surface in recent days.  Where does church fit into our priorities and schedules?  How are we acculturated to view our spiritual selves?  How much of that do we bring into our weekly church habits?  Is church (as we know it) really all that important in the long run?  So, as any decent blogger, I thought I would think out loud about a few things.

There are no major, publicly accepted institutions that enforce the importance of the spiritual.

The biblical view, which I believe is the accurate anthropological view, is that everything is spiritual (with apologies to Rob Bell).  Though we are accustomed to a view in which our normal, day-to-day lives are lived in a non-spiritual and wholly “secular” world, it is more accurate to say that there is nothing that is not God-soaked.

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Funerals Are A Pain

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

54688170_CivilWargravesiteFunerals are a pain.  And I don’t mean that in the sense that they are an annoying inconvenience – they are pain.  They mark the passing of family or friend, and they stand as that public moment when we all grieve, love on each other, and make steps toward a new normal without the one we loved.  As a pastor I sometimes get to watch as families deal with their loss while the pain is very fresh and sometimes the members of families are all at very different places at all the same time.  One thing I have never appreciated about some is their immediate tendency to try and brush aside the grief with something like, “at least they are in a better place.”  Though that is true for those who die with Christ, and though that truth is part of the healing process, we ought not to short-circuit the process of death and grief so quickly.

A recent article in CT deals with the new book, The Art of Dying: Living Fully into the Life to Come, by Rob Moll.  In the article we are encouraged to think more about funerals as an act of spiritual formation and even community formation under Christ.  We are, after all, people of a crucified and risen savior living in inevitable physical decay.  We ought to therefore embody a community of resurrection – and remember that resurrection implies death.  Rob Moll notes:

We live in a culture that has forgotten how to help people measure their days. Through medicine and science, we know more about death and how to forestall it than ever before. Yet we know little about how to prepare people for the inevitable. The church is a community that teaches people how to live well by teaching them how to measure their days. Put another way, when the church incarnates a culture of resurrection—one that recognizes the inevitability of death but not its triumph—it teaches people how to die well.

Have we become so obsessed with living well or living comfortably that we have lost sight of dying well as part of the spiritual act of the believer?  If we have neglected this, does it betray a lack of confidence in the providential guidance of God in all seasons of life?

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It’s Alive!

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

DNAMuch has been made of a recent technological breakthrough in which the researcher, Craig Venter, assembled a fully synthetic strand of DNA.  Such announcements tend to come with some rather grand claims, as evidenced by the article’s headline in The Economist, “And Man Made Life” and this opening paragraph:

TO CREATE life is the prerogative of gods. Deep in the human psyche, whatever the rational pleadings of physics and chemistry, there exists a sense that biology is different, is more than just the sum of atoms moving about and reacting with one another, is somehow infused with a divine spark, a vital essence. It may come as a shock, then, that mere mortals have now made artificial life.

A good collection of reactions and analysis by biologist Jonathan Wells of the science can be found on the blog, Evolution News & Views.  As it turns out, nothing too spectacular has happened, despite some of the implications of some of the reporting.  All Venter and his colleagues have done is take some life apart, and recreate just DNA (which is not a living organism).

But what is going on in the desire to report this as “life-creating” or even the desire to recreate life in our own image?  Two vast questions indeed, but here are a couple of thoughts.

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Seekers vs. The Sought

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

witnessingI have been reading through our missionary guest’s book, Off-Road Disciplines (by Earl Creps), and ran across an idea I like very much.  In a chapter about spiritual friendship and witness, he says:

“I suggest that we might refer to lost people not as seekers but as the sought.” (pg. 58)

In other words, instead of looking at them through what they might want to find in us, we ought to look at them as those we are actively seeking, praying for, and looking for.

A very healthy way of looking at things!

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A Statement of Christian Conscience

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

Several Christians of all stripes have signed the Manhattan Declaration.  It takes a clear Christian stand on basic moral issues and promises to stand firm on them.  You can read the declaration and the original signers by following the link below, and consider signing yourself.

The Manhattan Declaration

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