Friday, October 31, 2008

The Quote that won't go away (in a good way)

A quote I wrote in May of 2001 popped up again on Christianity Today's Out of Ur. Here's what I said.
"Conversion in the U.S. seems to mean we've exchanged some of our shopping at Wal-Mart, Blockbuster, and Borders for the Christian Bookstore down the street. We've taken our lack of purchasing control to God's store, where we buy our office supplies in Jesus' name."
Here's the original post. Give me some grace, it was 2001.. yes and parts that talk about authority make me cringe. I don't think I've actually said that again since 2001, but maybe I should.

Thanks to Skye to hanging on to that little quote for so long. Skye if you read this, we're both speaking at the NPC in San Diego in Feb. let's have a conversation. I'm interested to read Skye's book that he's writing on consumerism.

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Thursday, October 30, 2008

Come Hang with me in Tulsa in April

April 27-29th my friend Jonathon Reitz (of the Leadershed fame) will be hosting a Leading Church B conference in Tulsa. So much of leadership presented by publishers, conferences and speakers is based on a leadership style few people actually have.

This is Leadership for the rest of us. This is NOT for everyone. Everyone is a participant and you will experience a fundamentally different way of leading people.

If you want more info let me know and I'll send you some info on it!


mark

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Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Band name meme

Bevan has an entertaining game to come up with your hypothetical Band’s name, album title and cover art for your first album.

You do that by:

1. Band Name: Random Wikipeda Link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random

2. Album Title: Random quote generator (take the last four words from the quote) Link: http://www.quotationspage.com/random.php3
3. Album Art: Flickr Interesting Photo: http://www.flickr.com/explore/interesting/7days/

To cool.
My Band name: Blackwater
My Album Title: except death and taxes
Cover Art:

I'd love to see what the band names and titles might be for other friends of mine.
Marko would be the kind of music you play on a pink guitar,
Dan Mayes would probably be named after Amy Grant,
Todd Littleton would likely be some kind of college music,
and Dan Kimball's band would be a rock a billy band that covers elvis...
I'd also like to see Brandon Grissom's band name. That is if it weren't named after himself. :-)
and though I don't think he reads my blog, I'd love to see what Zach Lind would name his band if it were to be changed from Jimmy Eat World.

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Who am I going to be for Halloween? Hint number 1



Bevan and Evie can't guess. :-)

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Crickets

When a person says something uncomfortable or awkward the resulting silence is referred to as "Hearing crickets".

What is it called when a crickets says something uncomfortable or awkward?

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Monday, October 27, 2008

Riffing on Commitment

This morning I visited a message board of some youth worker friends and saw a conversation about commitment. I thought I'd riff on it for a bit on the message board, then I wondered what the readers of my blog might think. What do you think?

i think this is often about community as well.
I have a couple theories on this, tell me what you think.
It's something of a chicken or egg thing.

Engagement and responsibility it at the core of commitment. People who aren't engaged by feeling a sense of belonging and responsibility for what happens at youth, or the church but do feel that way in other areas of their lives will be more engaged in those other activities. If I'm missing from my basketball team, or cheerleading squad then the team simply can't function as well with out me. I serve an essential function on that team, a unique role and when I'm not there, the team struggles. Whether be a point guard or the person a the base of the pyramid, i feel a sense of responsabilty to be there. In churches were leadership is taken care of, and people give up their responsibility to others, then it gives them space to no longer be engaged.
Youth, families and individuals within our church who aren't engaged in community or see themselves as responsible for their own spiritual well being and the nurture of others quite simply aren't committed to your church. The question then becomes why?

Scenario 1:
On one hand it's a followership issue. People just won't do what we want them to do, or be engaged to the level we think a healthy individual, family, etc should be engaged. In this scenario the leader talks about people outside the room a lot. The leader's job is to somehow leverage influence or to persuade youth, families, indivuals of the benefits of life in the church, or with God etc. This leader either talks like a vicitim a lot, or like a visionary. The victim wonders why everyone outside them won't align with the way things should be, at least from their perspective. The visionary attempts to conform the world to their (read: God's) vision for the church and the world. It seems that only difference between the the victim and the visionary is the amount of confidence and force. I suppose this really isn't a followership issue, it's more of a leadership isn't it? I suppose people value what we teach them to value and if our leadership style is victim or visionary then people aren't really valued in either. The victim resents the people for not going along with their idea. The visionary sees people as cogs in their plan. "Those people will be in community and love each other if it's the last thing I do! WE will be a beautiful church that loves each other and their neighbors!" What people really value, or are committed to doesn't really matter in this view, with the exception of lip service. The visionary church leader sees people as sheep, dumb and in need of serious direction.

Scenario 2:
On the other hand, it's a followership issue. For real this time. That people actually value things, and some might actually value your youth group, and your church. Just in the way's you've taught them to. People who see themselves as responsible for something have a choice. They will either hold on to that responsibilty or they will pass it off to someone else. To hold on to responsibility is be a disciple, to be human to be how we were created. To give away the power and responsibility to someone else is the act of a consumer. The parent who drops their teenager off at your activities but never talks about God might be an example of this. They have give you the power and responsibility to spiritual form their child. They have become a consumer. But before you go off on a "How consumeristic people are..." rant, it should be noted that it takes two people to make a transaction like this and that the more you talk about it, the more you sound like the victim listed about in scenario 1 above. I guess I'm just saying that you freely encourage their action by your action, and probably by your church's action.

That said. You're probably asking the how question by now right? How do we change this pattern? How do we make parent's more responsible? How do we stop enabling them? How do we make people commit or be more accountable.

Friends, How is the wrong question. At least at this point in the game.

How only leads to more of the same. Why? Read the questions I just listed. They are all victim or visionary oriented. They are about people out there, people who must be manipulated or persuaded to fall in line with what I think. More of the same. If you like where you are now, keep asking how. You will never see change, other than superficially.

It begs the question:
What is the role of leadership in the church?
What does engagement look like in the church?
I need to run, but I'm sure there will be more soon...

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Sunday, October 26, 2008

Stuff I've read recently

Jimmy asks, "If I call Myself a Christian, Does it Associate me with this...?" I was wondering myself, actually. Too bad he missed this little beauty.

Michael Toy wrote a very good poem. I'm not a poem guy, but this spoke to me.

The LA Times says that Robert Schuller ousts his son for the Hour of Power. Evidently they had a lack of shared vision for the future of the ministry. I guess they should have spent some more time together to figure that out before they made the transition. Pretty unbelievable actually. Link

Bob Larson is in the news. He's going to be doing exorcisms the sci fi channel.
Mr. Larson admits it’s an unusual combination of spirituality and entertainment, saying he can envision fans “throwing house parties with pizza and popcorn” while they watch him command demons to depart from tormented souls.

Nice. link

Marko has discovered Taylor Mali. Link I dig this named Reading Allowed

Here's a touch of goodness.

Then there's my buddy Bevan who wants more from the presidential candidates here.

That's enough for now.

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Saturday, October 25, 2008

I can't get enough Bill Mallonee

One of the greatest songwriters of our day, who is by and large unknown. The genius isn't in his guitar playing, but in his lyrics. He writes lyrics you think with my friends.

Unfortunately, folks who love him are also crappy videographers. The youtube footage of this guy is tough to come by and often poor in quality. Someone do the world a favor and record this guy live with something other than a camera phone or camcorder.



Below is an older song. but with an actual video.
lyrically he captures you in the story of the dust bowl.

"lost my first born that winter, my wife on the first day of spring.
so I poured sweat into the earth, yeah to see what that harvest would bring."
amazing.

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Thursday, October 23, 2008

Classic Dave Grohl

Foo Fighters on Craig Kilborne. just good old fun. Dave Grohl hits the solo just about note for note. This is mostly just fun,not beauty.

Stairway to heaven



Then there's this with Will Ferrell. (warning: a bit of language)

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Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Eikon, a quote and the voices in my head

As a person leading a local community hoping to live I have a lot of voices (from the outside) telling me to do things differently than I am. It seems to me, that leadership has something to do with distinguishing between the right and wrong voices echoing with my grey matter and what to do with them.

A couple of the voices I hear from my past.
"You have to reach 200 people in the first 2-3 years or you'll never reach more people."
"You have to act like you have it all together."
"Change should happen faster than this."

Then I'm reminded of what I hope eikon will become, who we are and the power our community holds, and is only beginning to explore together. Eikon is becoming a radically hopeful expression of church. More every day.

Then I read this quote from Peter Block.
"Something shifts on a large scale only after a long period of small steps, organized around small groups patient enough to learn and experiment and learn again. Speed and scale are the arguments against what the individual and communal transformation require. They are a hallmark of the corporate mindset. When we demand more speed and scale, we are making a coded argument against anything important being any different."

Eikon is becoming something beautiful, not because of we are getting big fast, but because something important is happen in our lives as a community, and in our lives individually.

I'm thankful for what God is doing amongst us.

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Monday, October 20, 2008

Marko Reviews Inside the Mind of Youth Pastors

My buddy, and president of Youth Specialties has read and reviewed my new bookd "Inside the Mind of Youth Pastors". Pay Marko a visit and read what he says.

Link

Cartoon for the day


Jon Birch cartoon.

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I dig Chris Cornell's voice...

This guy can sing.

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Saturday, October 18, 2008

quote for the day




There is always a heavy demand for fresh mediocrity. In every generation the least cultivated taste has the largest appetite.

-Paul Gauguin, artist
Paul Gauguin

Friday, October 17, 2008

Inside the Mind at Barnes and Noble

I'm excited because Barnes and Noble will be carrying the new book. When a book is written, folks from your publisher, in this case Zondervan /Youth Specialties tell book stores about your book. At that point the stores decide if they want to buy your book and then make an order. The publisher has a secret formula for how many books to print based on how many orders they get from various stores. Today my google news feed sent me this Link . Barnes and Noble. At least in the only store. It's a bit of an odd experience. I'm learning a lot.

Thanks to the good people at Zondervan and Youth Specialies for all their hard work to get B&N interested in my book.

I continue to get positive feedback on Inside the Mind of Youth Pastors and I hope it will be helpful for the church.

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Thursday, October 16, 2008

Toying with an idea

I'm toying with an idea. My good friend David Welch recently suggested this idea and I've been tossing it around and thought I'd get your input.

Folks email me questions pretty often these days wanting some outside perspective to various issues and I respond to every email I get. I give my take and I try to get the takes of others I know. When appropriate I might even spend some time talking with them you) on the phone.

Still others invite me into the church and I partner with them in their own context.

David suggested that I answer some questions that people ask me via video and post them in a video blog post.

What do you think?

I'm really asking here friends. What do you think?

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Quote for the day

More and more, it feels like I'm doing a really bad impersonation of myself.
- Chuck Palahnik

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Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Quote for the day

Never forget that justice is what love looks like in public.
-Cornell West

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Love is against the Grain

Do you remember the Dime Store Prophets from the 90's? Their lead singer Justin Stevens (aka Justin Dillon) is front and center in the "call + response" to the issue of sex trafficing.

Sex /slave trade film from Justin Dillon. Here's the link to the video on CNN .

Well worth investing a few minutes into if you ask me.
Here's the trailer for the movie on Apple.com

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Cartoon for the day

David Howard does it again.

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Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Quote for the day

It ain't those parts of the Bible that I can't understand that bother me, it is the parts that I do understand.
- Mark Twain

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Behave Children! Behave!


awesome.
(thanks to Andrew)

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Leadership and Catalyst Quote

"Sometimes I just absolutely love CATALYST and other times I feel so deeply challenged by the whole experience. Just because I feel so messed up emotionally, spiritually, and psychologically by the whole event.
It felt like God was doing spiritual surgery on me on Day 1. What causes me to feel like that you ask? It's a mixture of seeing all the incredible
things so many leaders and visionaries are doing to change the world, the speaker messages, the worship, the environment; just the whole experience -
and then feeling like I'm a disgrace compared to these people who living with total abandon for the Glory and renown of our Savior. Like I'm not doing enough for my King."
- Hervict Jacobs


What stands out to you about this quote?
His last two sentences stand out to me.

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Monday, October 13, 2008

A program-less youth ministry

Adam over at Pomomusings has invited dialogue on program-less youth ministry.

here's my response to his question.
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lots of thoughts on this man.

1. I love the heart of this.
2. I'm guessing you know more about this than I do.
3. I might ask the question a bit differently. The way the question is inherently retributive in nature, it's the like the kid who is growing up asking who will I become, as long as it's not like dad. The question contains barriers the possibilities are you hoping for. The goal isn't program-less ym so much as it is, what are the possiblities for great ministry to/with/for/from youth and their families. Or perhaps better than that is a series of questions for each community to answer like:

What might community look like in our context?
What is the role of a pastor in a community?
What is the role of a community member, and how well am I (as a member) contributing to youth and children?
How important are youth to me as a community member and what kind of commitment am I willing to make to kids here?
What rhythms and activities in my life (as a community member) encourage and interfere with our hopes for community and spiritual formation for youth?
Are youth important to us as a community, and in what way have we lived this out?

It seems to me that how a church answers these questions will lead them to answer yours. To declare youth ministry be program-less is actually another subtly colonial leadership style to impose on people in a church. The vision of program-less youth ministry then becomes one more way in which a leader declares what they think is best and attempts to align people with their program. buy in or ownership in this circumstance will likely not happen on a meaningful scale, because it is essential the same thing as program driven youth ministry, just a different means. A leader trying to leverage influence to minister to youth.

the question then is, instead of how do I as a leader, or resident expert try to create a program-less youth ministry that I believe in, it becomes, what environment do I need to create to enable the congregation to care for youth in a way that is meaningful, healthy, and faithful to them.

Just a thought or two.

-----------------------
I think this is true for any area of ministry actually.

What do you think?

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What will you be like in 5 years?

Where will you live?
Who will your friends be?
What will your marriage be like?
Will you be married?
How much will you weight?

What will your kids think of you?
How well will your friends know you?
How about your spouse?

What questions will still be unanswered?
What questions, must be answered?
Who do you know know who will no longer be with you?
What kind of tangible good have you left in your wake?
What did you stop doing?


these are the things I'm thinking about today. These are the qwestions I'm asking.

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Sunday, October 12, 2008

Blame

Oscar Wilde once wrote, it's not whether you win or lose, it's how you place the blame.

Blame is often what we do, when we don't want to take responsibility for our actions. Again, there are cases when it is not true. But it's true, more often than not.
In politics this is pretty clear.
Our current economic situation.
Dems blame republicans. and vice verse. The truths is both are to blame.
everyday joe six pack :-) blames politicians. politicians privately blame joe six pack.
The truth: we are all to blame.

to deny this keeps us from an actual solution. blame doesn't change things, it only leads to more of the same.

blame is the game we play when we feel like telling the truth might cost us something.
Telling the truth, taking responsibility always costs you something. Perhaps that's why so few people do it.

Blame isn't just the game of politics, it also finds itself in our marriages, our work, our families, our singleness, our grief, and our understanding of self.

Blame is what we do when we have nothing else to bring to the solution.

You and I can spend a lot of time complaining about politics, but citizenship, discipleship, personhood means something more than blame.

that's all for now. just some random thoughts

Saturday, October 11, 2008

High Noon

A friend of mine, Andy Mullins, has developed some pretty cool software. It's build for his Marketing and T-Shirt company to better care for his customers and increase pace and quality. If you own a creative company this might be a good solution for you.

Check it the software out here.

Here are some of his ventures. here. and here.

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Quote for the day

Hope begins in the dark, the stubborn hope that if you just show up and try to do the right thing, the dawn will come. You wait and watch and work: you don't give up.
-Anne Lamott

Friday, October 10, 2008

Question

Are you who you'd thought you'd be when you were a 10, or 21?
What would the 10 or 21 year old you, say to the present day you right now?

There's something to learn here.

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Quote for the day

When we honestly ask ourselves which person in our lives means the most to us, we often find that it is those who, instead of giving advice, solutions, or cures, have chosen rather to share our pain and touch our wounds with a warm and tender hand.
- Henri Nouwen

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Educating my friends

For Bevan and Ryan who haven't heard of Dimitri Martin.
I think of Dimitri as the Sufjan Stevens of comedy.

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Thursday, October 09, 2008

so cool looking

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Brandon Grissom's Brighter

People are starting to notice. Brandon Grissom is the real deal.

Link

I liked this part in particular:
There a some seriously horrible worship albums out there. I want let you in on a secret. A diamond in the rough. His name is Brandon Grissom … and he’s the the real deal.

Living in the Chicago area, I get to meet some very creative and talented people. Living in the back yard of Willow Creek Community Church–I am friends with many young, shiny faces that come to Willow from around the world because of their gifting. Often these folks, while talented, seem to be on the fast track to become minor “Christian celebrities” and, to be brutally honest, lack a collaborative heart. The bright lights of the mega church (and the notoriety and salary that come with it) have drawn them like moths to a flame … and some hearts just get burnt up.

Grissom seems to have escaped all this nonsense. Why is all this important for a music review? It’s really simple, if you are going to make real worship music what’s in your heart is 99% of the battle.

Out of a man’s heart flows his music. Out of a man’s heart flows his lyrics. You should investigate Brandon Grissom’s heart.


Great job B!

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Thoughts on Leadership

“No man is satisfied in a swimming bath; he knocks his knees and elbows against its sides; he wants the sea. So with man’s soul, he hungers and thirsts for the ocean, for God; God infinite and Other, different to man, yet working in man…” - Baron F. Von Hugel

"Lust is the craving for salt of a man who is dying of thirst." - Fredrick Buechner


What people say they want, and what they really want may be two different things. The church is a place where people discover there is a sea, and where their brokenness and thirst can be quenched by living water.

As a pastor I carry with me, the fact that I don't want to keep people from the sea, or restoration.

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Flight of the Conchords

Love these guys...

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Wednesday, October 08, 2008

Uke Shaft



In honor of Marko, who loves uke music.

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Questions, doubt and Consumerism Part 3

Getting Mad:

There's a reactive response to this problem (some might say epidemic). That is that church leaders get mad at people for not getting it. For wanting to make this transaction. for wanting to give up power. It may be the youth pastor who's frustrated by the parents who can't find 30 minutes every two weeks to have an intentional conversation with their kids, or is frustrated by parents who simply drop their kids off.

It might be the associate pastor who can't get his church to get involved in a community, or missions etc.

All of these show the problem. and lead to more of the same.

check this out:
A pastor trying to get his people involved, so that it's not a top down organization, places the blame from the top down.

What does his church really value?

This is the hard part right? Accepting the fact that people don't actually value what you do.

It's also true that people are being faithful to what we've taught them. Wasn't it you who taught them, you'd take care of everything so they could come to church?

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Tuesday, October 07, 2008

Leading Church B: April 27-29, 2009

Mark your calendar now.

I've received a lot of inquiries from people wanting to become a consultant and others who are actively coaching other leaders, inside their context and outside of it. There is a kind of experienced leader that few folks are equipping in the church.
We've developed a process exclusively for these folks.

You'd love these kind of experience if:
• you are looking to better understand your role as a church leader
• you re good at what you do, but deep down question if it's a vocational fit for you long term.
• church leaders from other churches call you for advice or input
• you've attended the big conventions in the past for yourself, but now you take your team and skip the sessions yourself.
• you are tired of conferences and seminars where 95% of the content is based on the latest game, or simply a further diagnosis of the problems in the church.
You know there's a problem and you are ready to join God in creating a new future.• you're serious about the future of youth ministry in your church, and in other churches
• you are looking for an alternative future for youth ministry in the church
• you are looking for an alternative view of pastor in the church
• you are a senior pastor who wants to create new culture for healthy ministry
• are a veteran pastor and you'd like to refine the skill of consulting to coach other congregations
• you wake up at night thinking about the future of ministry and how to lead people into it.
• you want to take your extensive experience and gain the skills to become a ministry consultant yourself

More information is to come:
Leading Church B
April 27-29
Agora in Tulsa, OK.

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Questions, doubt and Consumerism Part 2

As the "Savage Baptist" aptly points out in the comments of the last post, it takes two to tango. Yes, the leader gladly takes power from others when it comes to people's faith often to the point of discouraging hard questions. But the community member often gladly hands this power over to the leader. You might call this a transaction. Each has something to benefit from the transaction. In fact both have something to loose as well.

We talked about this at eikon on Sunday night.

Responsibilities church leaders and community members exchange.
- Roles as leaders (there is a distinction between clergy and laity right?)
- evangelism (Bring your friends to church we'll share the gospel with them)
- missional living (We'll advertise and new people will come)
- meaningful service (fill a slot for us everyone once in while)
- discipleship of their children (what parent's have time to do this really?)
- ministry to neighbors (fall festival anyone?)
- community (we'll introduce you to the people who will be your best friends in a small group)

to name a few.

When the church says they want to make disciples, but then systematically removes the responsiblity for leadership, evangelism, missional living, meaningful services, discipleship of their children, ministry to their neighbors, and transformative community how do we expect to accomplish this?

then answer shows our cards regarding how wholistic we are when it comes to what it means to follow Jesus. We mean listen to sermons and agree with them. Everything else is gravy in this mentality.

For me, and my friends, it's all gospel. In fact, one might argue, that one learns what it means to be a disciple, not from hearing a sermon by by engaging in the very things we take away from our community.

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Monday, October 06, 2008

Questions, doubt and Consumerism

Dino inquired about what I meant by consumer in a previous post so I want to answer him over a series of posts on consumerism.

People ask questions. At least people ask me questions. I'm not sure why this is, but I do know that I ask a lot of questions myself. Years ago, in the days nintendo 64, I wasproud to provide a lot of answers. A few years later, I discovered it made more sense to ask question to people who asked me questions and they often found more satisfying answers. I'm still not good at this. (ask my friends) but leading someone to discover something will make a much bigger difference in their lives than simply giving answers. Still years later, it occurred to me that Jesus was asked a lot of questions and he often returned the favor.

To me this was a practical matter, not so much theological.

I also discovered that while I invited and encouraged questions on everything, there were parts of the churches I was working within that were, shall we say, less encouraging and open for questions.

Theology is often autobiographical. Our story, is inextricably connected to what we believe about God. This is good theology if you ask me. It's earthy, dirty, real and meaningful, not sterile, pat, or clean.

Asking questions is the act of a person who holds power. (this is a good thing.) It means that the person might be taking responsibility for their faith.

In the church people who stop asking questions have given away their power and their relationship to God over to someone else to make those decisions for them.

In that sense, often the most consumeristic churches are the churches in which no questions can be asked.

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Friday, October 03, 2008

XDR-TB

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Quote

Chris Folmsbee mentioned Thomas Merton today in his facebook status and it reminded me of this Merton quote.


A life is either all spiritual or not spiritual at all. No man can serve two masters. Your life is shaped by the end you live for. You are made in the image of what you desire.
Thomas Merton

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