ie:missional teaching. glocalizing. living. serving. repenting. incarnating. loving. repeating.

November 30, 2007

Freaky Friday, November 30, 2007

Filed under: Misc — Marty Duren @ 1:00 am

So my daughter says to me, “I’ve been thinking of this TV show for kids. It’s going to be about water and its various stages: vapor, liquid and solid. It’s going to be called, ‘So You Think You Condense?'”

Rimshot.

[…]

My son does scarily good impressions of Frank Caliendo’s impressions, especially Terry Bradshaw and Al Pacino.

[…]

A 70+ year old man in our church has been after me to preach a series on sex. He’s convinced that it will be interesting to unchurched people (or so he says). So, in August I’m preaching a series called, “Your Best Sex Now.”

Sonya is scared to death…

(To avoid any “YouTube moments” I’ll probably just use a complete manuscript each week. Yeah, that’ll be best…)

[…]

Michael Vick makes news again. Besides reporting for jail early, he’s setting aside $928,073 to care for 54 pit bulls involved in his dog fighting operation, Bad Newz Kennels. My smart as a fifth grader education tells me that is $17,186.53 per critter. Dang. They’ll be living the life of Trouble Helmsley–for a while at least.

[…]

Oh, to live in Sudan where it is perfectly okay to have genocide but, God forbid, you’d better not let your school kids name a teddy bear Muhammad.

[…]

I’ve been to see Enchanted. Twice. It’s a smart movie–not hilarious, but pretty funny and with a couple of really unexpected thought provoking moments. If Amy Adams does not win an Oscar, close the stinkin’ Academy.

[…]

Shalom.

November 27, 2007

A Christmas Tale

Filed under: Culture,Gospel,Missional,Music — Marty Duren @ 12:10 pm

Each year the resort known as Lake Lanier Islands, which is a mere 1 mile from our campus, hosts a very popular Christmas attraction called, “The Magical Nights of Lights.” Thousands upon thousands of people pack into cars, vans and buses and pay a hefty amount to drive through a million light display commemorating partridges in pear trees, elves, and the birth of Christ among other things. One feature of recent years has been a living Nativity Scene sponsored by a local church about 10 miles from us. I think that they do it nightly for about 3 weeks leading up to Christmas.

Last year for our New Bethany Christmas presentation, we did a musical drama called, A Christmas Tale, which won rave reviews from our church. The house was pretty full for the three nights that we held it. This year, as a result of the vision of our Worship Pastor, Dan Brothers, we will be doing 24 performances of A Christmas Tale at the Magical Nights of Lights–four performances a night for two consecutive Fri-Sun weekends. A total of three casts, a choir and live band (not to mention sound and lighting personnel and more than 30 volunteers for greeting and inviting). Our performance area will be across from the area known as, Santa’s Workshop, the home of shops, eats and the Holiday Carnival which is a small amusement ride area. Performances have been promoted both in the local news paper and yesterday on the morning show of on of the major Atlanta news channels.

This type of ministry opportunity is exactly what we are regularly hoping to do–it’s outside the walls, it’s different from what people expect and it speaks the cultural language.  We really don’t have any idea what to expect as far as crowds go; we could play for as few as 25 or to a full house (about 300 portable chairs) at each performance.  Our hope is that by being where people are that the glory of God will be displayed and the gospel declared in a way that breaks down barriers, overcomes disillusionment and plants seeds in the lives of many.  Who knows, we might even get to experience a harvest!

November 24, 2007

god is not Great, Book Review

Filed under: Books,Culture — Marty Duren @ 12:20 pm

[This is the first in a series of reviews of books in the recent New Atheism controversy as well as responses to these books. I hope, at a rate of one every 1-2 weeks, to review The End of Faith, by the philosopher/skeptic Sam Harris, Breaking the Spell, by author and professor Daniel C. Dennett, and The GOD Delusion, by the British Darwinist, Richard Dawkins. On the opposing side of the debate, I’ll look at What’s So Great About Christianity, by author and former Reagan staffer, Dinesh D’Souza, The Spiritual Brain, by Mario Beauregard and Denyse O’Leary, and the oldest of this list, A Shattered Visage: The Real Face of Atheism, by philosopher and lecturer Ravi Zacharias.]

Christopher Hitchens is, quoting the inside cover of god is not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything: “a contributing editor to Vanity Fair and a visiting professor of liberal studies at the New School…He was named, to his own amusement, number five on a list of ‘Top 100 Public Intellectuals’ by Foreign Policy and Britain’s Prospect.” The New Yorker calls him, “An intellectual willing to show his teeth in the cause for righteousness” (the last being an odd choice of terms to say the least), while the Village Voice lauds Hitchens as “American’s foremost rhetorical pugilist.”

The best place to summarize this book is by beginning with a quote from its final two pages:

Religion has run out of justification. Thanks to the teleschope and the microscope, it no longer offers an explanation of anything important….Confronted with undreamed-of vistas inside our own evolving cortex, in the farthest reaches of the known universe, and in the proteins and acids which constitute our nature, religion offers either annihilation in the name of god, or else the false promise that if we take a knife to our foreskins, or pray in the right direction, or ingest pieces of wafer, we shall be “saved.” If is as if someone, offered a delicious and fragrant out-of-season fruit, matured in a painstakingly and lovingly designed hothouse, should throw away the flesh and the pulp and gnaw moodily on the pit.

Then, pining for a renewed Enlightenment, he closes:

Only the most naive utopian can believe that this new humane civilization will develop, like some dream of “progress,” in a straight line. We have first to transcend our prehistory, and escape the gnarled hands which reach out to drag us back to the catacombs and the reeking altars and the guilty pleasures of subjection and abjection. “Know yourself,” said the Greeks, gently suggesting the consolations of philosophy. To clear the mind for this project, it has become necessary to know the enemy, and to prepare to fight it. [Emphasis mine.]

god is not Great is a call to philosophical war by a man who is not himself unprepared to wage it in the public arena. Hitchens does not write as a intellectually doughy, scholastically lacking philosophical pit bulldog. On the contrary, he has seen the world and is convinced that religion is the primary cause of the woes observed there. Attacking the three dominant monotheisms, Judaism, Christianity and Islam (but with a little Hinduism thrown in for good measure) he attributes nearly every single problem in the known universe to mankind’s stubborn belief in the supernatural and argumentation over the right way to serve God, who Hitchens regards as a “totalitarian.”

Drawing from his personal experiences, this outspoken representative of positive atheism (or, even further, “anti-theism”) relates stories from “Belfast, Beirut, Bombay, Belgrade, Bethlehem and Baghdad.” Each gives a different perspective of his thesis that religion is the problem and rationalism is the solution. He states over and over again that religion (and thus God) is “man-made,” a leftover relic from the infancy of our “species” that awaits eradication as soon as we evolve past our, using Freud’s concepts, fear of death and proneness to wishful thinking. In fact, Hitchens lists, as his “irreducible objections to religious faith:”

That it wholly misrepresents the origins of man and the cosmos, that because of this original error it manages to combine the maximum of servility with the maximum of solipsism, that it is both the result and the cause of dangerous sexual repression, and that it is ultimately grounded on wish-thinking.”

Thus chapters such as, “A Note on Health, to Which Religion Can Be Hazardous,” “The Metaphysical Claims of Religion Are False,” “Revelation: The Nightmare of the ‘Old’ Testament,” and “The ‘New Testament Exceeds the Evil of the ‘Old’ One.” It bears remembering that Christopher Hitchens writes, not as a sniper who never knows or interacts with his victims, but as a ground soldier who has read the Bible, the Koran, the Bhagavad Gita, the Book of Mormon and each of the other “holy books.” And yet…

In reading Hitchens, and in listening to his public debates there simply seems to be a disconnect between his reading of the Bible and his grasp on what it actually says. It is as if he’s merely looking for any connection no matter how tenuous between it and other practices whether those be Judaistic, Islamic or Aztec, so that he might trash them all as fruit from the same tree with the titular poison. Any Old Testament tie to Christ seems lost on him or characterized as a scheme, a la the theory of the passover plot. His critique of “contradictions” in the gospels is below elementary and, while he is more than willing to allow for the ultimate progress of science and reason, he will not even concede the possibility that future excavations or historical research will confirm currently problematic interpretive challenges (as in Luke’s census dating). Another oft lodged complaint is that the entire biblical doctrine of hell came from “gentle Jesus, meek and mild,” to use his non-biblical phrasing, while he is seemingly ignorant of the perfectly clear statement of Isaiah 66:24 which Jesus references.

[To hear Hitchens in action is to hear the fire and brimstone that he brings to this “discussion.” One has only to listen to the multi-part debate with Dinesh D’Souza (beginning here. It will reaffirm Hitchens practice of referencing scripture when it helps prove his point, yet ignoring it when challenges his stance.]

In the end, it is Hitchens himself who gives all the clue that anyone needs to determine his motivation: self-determination (including repeated assertions of sexual freedom) without the interference of any outside being, and certainly not a “totalitarian god” who he had no say in electing. Hitchens, as all anti-theists, wants nothing to do with a fixed, objective morality that is the product of a Creator. Romans 1 continues to raise itself in my head as if Darwinism and materialism were anticipated long ago, “They turned the glory of God into four footed beasts and creeping things,” then reaching that haunting conclusion, “Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools.”

It is with no small amount of frustration that I must, however, admit agreement with much of Hitchens rant. Religion does poison everything, most of all blocking the possibility of a genuine reconciliation to and relationship with God since man, not God, is the actual center of religion, while God, not man, is the center of redemption. His primary disagreements with Christianity stem from the preponderance of misbegotten and unbiblical actions of the Roman Catholic institution–not so much its adherents as its leaders. Leading the way are its 1940’s friendliness with fascism in both Italy and Germany, the Inquisition and its active cover-up in the “child rape” scandal of the last 20 or so years. (Hitchens coarsely and straightforwardly calls this “no child’s behind left.”)

It is difficult, as it always has been, to distinguish for some the difference between the kingdom of God, with those attempting to live under its rule and reign as actually proposed by Jesus, and the RCC which is commonly and errantly referred to as “the Church,” inclusive of all its theological and historical absurdities. Thus, readers of the book will note that, despite his disagreement with the Bible itself, Hitchens’ (other than an occasional slap at ready targets Robertson and Falwell) primary identification of Christianity is with the RCC. This is both unfortunate and inaccurate. Frankly, he should know better.

November 22, 2007

Happy Thanksgiving Everyone!

Filed under: Humor — Marty Duren @ 7:20 am

TDay Cartoon

See more here.

November 20, 2007

Just a little change

Filed under: Misc — Marty Duren @ 11:18 pm

To see what this theme looks like.

November 19, 2007

Kudos

Filed under: Culture,Mission,Missional,News — Marty Duren @ 11:12 am

If you haven’t read Art Rogers’ post today entitled, Maybe this will help…, I would encourage you to do so. Good job, Art.

November 14, 2007

Great Mission Conference

Filed under: Gospel,Mission — Marty Duren @ 10:18 am

I returned Tuesday afternoon from dropping of one of our M’s at the airport, which was the official close of our Mission Conference on Sunday. Our first one that we have done during my pastorate, we did a simple all day Sunday meeting with lunch provided and breakout sessions. We were blessed to have Joe and Linda from Townsend, TN, who are resort M’s with NAMB, Tara Jonick and Cheryl Elkins both of whom minister in “inner city” areas of Atlanta, Pastor Jay Juan (and his family) from 1st Papago Baptist Church in Sells, AZ, Joe W who lives in Belarus and Jim Capaldo and Scott Gilbert from T–a.

Jim brought our message on Sunday AM, beginning by quoting the book of Titus.  The then elaborated on holistic evangelism using Paul’s emphasis on “good works” throughout the book as a basis.  It was exceptional.  Our meal and afternoon breakout sessions were well attended and I’ve heard nothing but good things in response.  A relatively new believer said to me this morning, “I’ve never really thought about the fact that there are people in the world who don’t even know who God is.  I just took it for granted that everyone knew something about Him.”

Our adoption of the T—n people is moving forward and gaining speed.  We now have two churches partnering with us and I am talking with another pastor in a couple of weeks.  If you would like to discuss your church being a part of this network of churches, please let me know.  Ten to fifteen churches partnering together will make a difference in this entire people group.

November 12, 2007

Slaughterhouse Five, Book Review

Filed under: Books — Marty Duren @ 11:29 pm

Slaughterhouse-Five is absolutely the worst book I’ve ever read, if not the worst one ever written. I wonder if I can sue to get that time back.

According to the 639 reviews at Amazon, however, mine is a minority opinion.

November 8, 2007

Prayer Request [Updated]

Filed under: Mission,Prayer — Marty Duren @ 9:32 am

I have the opportunity to address a group of pastors today regarding adoption of Unreached People Groups. If God brings it to your mind to pray around 2:40 Central Time, it would be greatly appreciated.

Update: Thank you those who prayed. Our trip, though long, was smooth and safe and the speaking opportunity was very well received. We were in Brentwood, TN, just south of Nashville. I was able to share both on how our church understood the biblical philosophy of mission and how we came adopt the T—n people, while encouraging those from various churches to make UPG adoption a priority. This is the simple outline that I used:

Basis- The missio dei is the basis for every church’s mission.

Availability- A defining characteristic of a UPG is the limited availability of the gospel.

Sacrifice- It does take sacrifices of time, money and effort to engage unreached peoples.

Intentionality- You can’t get 8-12 time zones away by accident.

Church- Local churches can and must engage unreached peoples.

Soli Deo Gloria

November 3, 2007

Water, water nowhere and fewer drops to drink…

Filed under: Georgia,God,News,Prayer — Marty Duren @ 1:22 pm

In case you don’t live in the southeast and, therefore, may not have heard, it hasn’t rained much here in a while. At a time of year when Atlanta would have normally received 50 inches of rain, we are some 26 inches shy of average. In fact, almost all of north Georgia, over 50% of Alabama, about 50% of Tennessee and parts of North Carolina are in the midst of an “exceptional drought,” the most dire category in the annals of weather prognosticators, meteorologists and other record keeping peoples. With a warm, dry winter predicted for the upcoming season, things are not looking any wetter…or better.

If it were a lack of rain alone, then it might not be a story. But, Atlanta is the largest metropolitan area in the US being served by a watershed area as small as the Chattahoochee River Basin. Combine that with the lack of planning by state and local municipalities who have issued building permits like there is no tomorrow and we have a situation in which the primary energy and drinking water source for the city of Atlanta, Lake Sidney Lanier, has dropped to near (if not to) an all time low and continues to drop at an alarming rate. Entire marinas are nothing but mud, surrounded by boats having no chance of floating.

As if this weren’t enough, the Corps of Engineers which is in charge of releasing water through Buford Dam is charged by the EPA with releasing about 3,000,000 gallons of water each day more than is necessary to support the continued life of freshwater mussels in the Appalachicola River. (See info about the Apalachicola, Flint, Chattahoochee basins.) Add to that the ongoing GA-ALA water dispute and you have the makings of a real crisis, which is what we are facing.

Enter the leadership of Georgia churches. During our periodic drought times, which have been increasing both in length and in frequency, area pastors always call for prayer that God might intervene and send rain to our parched earth, both providing replenishment for our drinking, car washing and bathing supplies and to help our already federally subsidized peanut farmers. This year our Governor, Sonny Perdue, himself a believer joined in the call. News reports mentioned 300 people gathered to pray on the Barrow County Courthouse steps, which was followed by a steady drizzle and then two days of precipitation. The leaders of the Georgia Baptist Convention have joined in citing a tie between repentance and physical blessing as observed in 2 Chronicles 7:14.

In times such as this, my question has always been, “Should we pray for rain? We pray and pray and pray for God to intervene in people’s lives, to bring revival to ‘the land’ and cause spiritual awakening, what if the drought is His way of getting the attention of people who should acknowledge their dependence on Him. Are we praying against the very method that God is using to answer our first prayer?”  I don’t know, so I join in prayer with everyone else.

This is what I’d like to see: during one week of November, the Muslims implore Allah for seven days of rain. During a second week, the Hindus talk to Krishna about the crisis, during a third week the Jews pray and during the final week, Christians pray and the God who answers by a seven day period of steady rain is the true God. We could even allow the atheists to assign the weeks to ensure no cheating or advantage.

Yeah, I know, but at least my idea is biblical (1 Kings 18).

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