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

February 6, 2009

Random Ramblings, 02.06.09

Filed under: Humor,Life — Tags: , , — Marty Duren @ 6:27 am

The more global warming conferences we have, the colder it seems to get. Keep it up guys!

Michael Phelps smoked some expensive weed. Losing endorsements: Drugs are like that, too!!

RE: problems face by President Obama’s nominees. Trying to find a politician that does not have a questionable background is like trying to find a woman in the cathouse who hasn’t had the clap.

If I ever ran for POTUS, Ben Cole would be my campaign manager (chief of staff if I won) and Brett Compton would be my press secretary (on both counts). After that, the rest would be a piece of cake. I can assure you that my administration would be “of the people, by the people and for the people.”

Some people will spend any and all amounts of money to keep their pet alive. I am not one of those people.

I wonder if Chesley Sullenberger can pilot all my flights from now on?

Facebook and Twitter seem to be putting a crimp into the blogosphere.

Who cares whether or not Jessica Simpson gains 1 pound or 100? Besides Tony Romo, I mean…

Every TV show I watch with my son turns into a live action Mystery Science Theater 3000.

My two oldest children have my sense of humor and my third is getting it. The world is not ready.

My Mom is in her mid 60’s and has virtually no gray hair. Where in the world did that gene go?? It sure didn’t come to me.

Any of you pastors ever notice that the person/people who know the most about how to spend money in the budget are the people who give the least?

Google is starting to be omnipresent. Cue the new mark of the beast theories.

February 4, 2009

Happy 25th Anniversary to my amazing wife, Sonya

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

Twenty five years ago today, I walked down the aisle an unsuspecting young man of 20 years who was thrilled to the core to be marrying Sonya Edwards, who I had been dating for two years. As we have discussed many times since neither one of us had the slightest idea what we were doing, only that we truly and deeply loved each other and wanted to spend our lives together.

Two weeks before our first anniversary, our first child was born (yeah, do the math), a girl, Beth, now married herself. When Beth was about 18 months old, Sonya was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s disease about which we knew virtually nothing other than it was a type of cancer. A surgery and lots of radiation later, we held on for the wild ride of CT scans for the next two years until we would know whether all those shadows were something scary or just scar tissue. Thankfully she was pronounced clean and we could start trying to have children again.

It was a while, but in 1991, just over six years since Beth’s arrival, Timothy was born. We’ve always considered him a miracle in the sense that we did not know for sure if Sonya would be able to become pregnant again. If you’ve ever met Timothy, you’ll probably not be surprised to find out that radiation was somehow involved, though you would likely have been thinking more along the line of Three Mile Island.

In 1995, quite unexpectedly, we found that we were expecting a third child who entered this world in December of that year, Abigail is, as her name suggests, a source of joy. After that blessing, Sonya was pretty insistent that I visit a particular doctor about a particular procedure. Using some pretty colorful language she…uhm…convinced me to go.

When I talked to my Dad about getting married, I was making $6.00 or so an hour working at a pest control company. He said it wasn’t enough to live on, so I asked my boss if I could get a raise up to $7.00 so “I can ask Sonya to marry me.” With complete disregard to my impact on Sonya’s future, he agreed to give me a raise. So, we married with making just over today’s minimum wage and her making more per hour but only working 30 hours or so a week. When the aforementioned unexpected first child was born, Sonya quit her job and I got a new job (delivery courier) making $310 a week. The young Bill Gates was getting a run for his money.

I eventually lost that job due to various off the job injuries that caused me to miss work for extended periods of time. So, after getting inspiration from the movie Baby Boom with Diane Keaton, we started working from our basement making decorative crafts both to wholesale to stores and retail at various shows around our area. I wielded a mean hot glue gun in those days. It goes without saying that Sonya’s unending work ethic drove our income as I was mostly useless with a leg length, post surgical cast while being intimate with my new best friend, Percocet.

After than episode, I was called to pastor a small family owned and operated church well south of Atlanta. For two years we ministered together and she was my biggest cheerleader even when things fell apart. She stood with me as we started a new church in a skating rink, even when we had to set up our Sunday morning chairs beside Saturday night’s wrestling ring. After our subsequent departure they bought property and continue to meet until this day, some 16 years later.

She stood with me as we could not afford to continue to pay rent and have to move back home: her to her parents and me to mine as neither home was big enough for our family of four. She waited patiently as my Mom used it as an excuse to enclose their garage, something she’d always wanted to do, so that we could move there together for the few months it took to find another ministry position.

She labored through a mission church assignment where she was the only nursery worker and the setting was truly a challenge. She gained poise and confidence as I served with a great staff at an Atlanta area mega church, always providing the balance I needed and warnings about who was legit and who was out to get me.

After God began to wrestle with me about leading a local church again, she prayed and partnered in another new adventure that brought us to New Bethany in 1998. She’s home-schooled all three of our children: Beth to scholarship and a graduation Cum Laude with distinction, Timothy to his recent acceptance to college to begin in the fall and Abigail who is now in middle school. In the midst of this she’s become an amazing home decor person, furniture recoverer, greeting card designer, costume maker, home organizer, horticultural practitioner, cook extraordinaire, Ebay seller and more other things than I can bring to mind.

She has provided more wisdom, encouragement and love to me than I could ever have been able to imagine coming from one person. She has read the Bible through more times than I’ve thought about doing it. She’s respected by everyone who has ever met her and the model for pastor’s wives: just be yourself and don’t worry about it. If you want to wear a skirt, wear a skirt. If you want to wear jeans, wear jeans. If you want to sit on the back row instead of the front one, then sit there every week. Make your husband your first priority after Christ and who cares if you play the piano, direct VBS or sing solos. Guide your own children to Godliness and shrug off the expectations of others.

In those melancholy moments I wonder what I would do if Sonya were to die. The only answer I can come up with is that I’d probably die too. I cannot imagine the poor woman who would have to measure up to the standard bearer and I hope I never have to find out. I really and truly hope that February 4, 2009 is the anniversary of our first twenty five years, not just twenty five years.

For whoever is reading, I love Sonya Duren like I love no one else. I would marry her over again, every single time. She’s everything I never knew I wanted and more.

I love you, honey. God is glorified in your life and both He and I are pleased.

I can’t wait for BC…

January 8, 2009

Absolutely amazing video: wing suits

Filed under: Life — Tags: , , — Marty Duren @ 8:36 am

I got this on Facebook from my son-in-law and my son. It’s about “wing suits” and is related to base jumping. If you haven’t seen it, prepare to feel your heart race. If you are an adrenaline junkie, here’s your fix. Watch it in full screen. (Parents, I think the “s” word is said in the background once.)

See more funny videos and Technology Videos at Today’s Big Thing.

January 7, 2009

Trophy

Filed under: Bible,Church,God,Gospel,Life,Missional — Tags: , , , , , — Marty Duren @ 10:06 am

Every Wednesday I meet at the local Waffle House with some guys for discipleship and encouragement. My first meeting is at 5:00 AM and we are always the first, if not only, customers for a while so I was surprised to see a girl parked in the spot right where I normally park. She looked kind of agitated, or even distraught, speaking on the phone, looking around the inside of her car, holding her face in her hands, back to the phone.

Just as I got parked and making up my mind as to whether to tap on her window or not, her car alarm started complete with headlights and horn. Then she’s out of the car, no shoes, looking around and not finding what it is she’s looking for. When I asked, “Hey, do you need some help?” she responded that she had lost her car keys. Perhaps they are in the restaurant, I asked, but she had not been in the restaurant.

Just then the cook came out for a smoke; he’s a guy we talk to weekly and have ministered to some as well. He affirmed that she had not been in the restaurant, so I’m like, “How do you lose your keys inside the car while you’re sitting in the car?”

Epiphany.

There was an unopened 12 pack in the passenger floorboard as she told of going out partying last night, passing out and winding up in her car in the Waffle House parking lot. She didn’t know where she left her keys, who brought her to the car or much else. Turns out she spent the wee hours at a bar near NB, so I went over there to see if her keys were in the parking lot; they weren’t. (We now figure her friend locked her in the car and took her keys for her own protection.)

Just before I left I told the cook to give her some coffee and I would pay for it when I came back for my “second shift.” He was cool with it.

At 7:00 I took one of my gathered group, Tean Phillips (who’s also our drummer), and sat with her just behind our other guys. We talked to her for about a half-hour about her life, choices, decisions and where, exactly, God was playing into her life. She committed to attend our Celebrate Recovery ministry tomorrow night (and called the leader while we were at the table). Another one of our ladies picked her up from Waffle House, took her home to get the spare keys and brought her back to her car. She told me that she really did want to stop drinking, so I asked if I could have the 12 pack in her car; she said “yes.” It’s the trophy of grace pictured above. Our pastoral team is debating communion right now ;^)

If you get a chance, pray for her. People in need are all around us. Sometimes it’s subtle and sometimes it hits us in the face. I’m glad to be in a church where multiple people are willing to get involved in one person’s life on the spur of the moment because they realize that a young girl, five sheets to the wind is not the enemy-she’s a victim of the enemy and she needs the Savior.

December 4, 2008

Georgia pastor found murdered

Filed under: Church,Georgia,Life,News — Tags: , , , — Marty Duren @ 8:15 am

Baptist youth pastor, Frank Harris, Jr. was found murdered around 4:00 am on Monday morning in the small north Georgia town of Cleveland.  On Sunday evening, he had phoned his wife to inform her that he was giving a ride to a “some stranded folks,” apparently somewhere along GA 129.  A 29 year old woman and a 20 year old man are facing felony murder charges, while the man is also charged with armed robbery.  Harris leaves behind a wife, Tami, and three teen aged children.

(From the Atlanta Journal-Constitution or from Access North Georgia)

Cards or other encouragement can be sent to:

The Harris Family
c/o Pendergrass Baptist Church
105 Church Street
Pendergrass, GA 30567

November 10, 2008

Remembering Kristallnacht

Crystal Night. The Night of Broken Glass.

October 1938 saw the forced deportation of thousands of German Jews to the Polish border where some were allowed immigration but many waited. All were uprooted from their homes and dispossessed, many traveled penniless. This deportation was an inevitable result of the cumulative 90 discriminatory, anti-Jewish laws passed in Germany from 1933 to 1935.

Living in Paris was the seventeen year old son of two of the displaced, Herschel Grynszpan. From his sister, who was with their parents, he had received a post card telling him of their plight and asking for any money he could spare. The family had lived in Hanover for twenty seven years. After receiving the post card, Grynszpan purchased a newspaper where he read in graphic detail of the deportations from Germany. On Monday, November 7, he took a loaded pistol to the German embassy where, “in the name of 12,000 persecuted Jews,” he shot Ernst vom Rath, fatally wounding him.

Not wanting to miss a golden opportunity to further their warped agenda, during the night and morning of November 9 and 10, 1938 (seventy years ago today), Nazi goons all over Germany set fire to more than 200 Jewish synagogues and smashed the windows of 7,500 of Jewish owned stores and businesses. One writer called it,

the crowning moment in the wild domestic terror that Germans perpetrated upon Jews.

In villages, towns and cities across Germany, Jewish residents were awakened to the sounds of shattering glass and beaten flesh. Around 100 were killed and some 30,000 taken to concentration camps. A picture from the day shows German citizens lining a street while Nazi policemen march Jewish men toward a transport to Dachau. A Bible twisting sign held in the crowd reads, “Exodus of the Jews.”

It bears remembering that Hitler did not come into power by a coup, but by the will of the people of Germany. Runaway inflation, national shame and the loathed Treaty of Versailles primed the country to listen to the pseudo psychological babblings of the mustachioed madman. The primary motivation that prepared ordinary Germans to accept the leadership of a man who was obviously either crazy, demon possessed or both was not reason; what Hitler believed did not make sense and was against any real science. It was not based on history; Jews had been in Germany, and Europe, for generations. It was not based on parasitism; Jews contributed greatly to the German economy, being hardworking business people.

It was based on fear. German nationalistic pride was in shambles. The German economy was suffering from runaway inflation. The German military forces were supposed to be severely curtailed and military aircraft non-existent. The German people lived in fear of the future and into the leadership void stepped Adolph Hitler, who was welcomed with open arms and admired with open hearts.

About a month ago, we had the opportunity to go to a nearby town and hear a presentation by Holocaust survivor, Eugen Shoenfeld, retired professor from Georgia State University and author of My Reconstructed Life. He recounted his story from the age of 17 when he boarded a crowded train car with scores of other Jews where they rode four days with virtually no food and only a bucket for a toilet. Upon finally arriving at the destination, they began disembarking into two lines at the heads of which stood a man in a leather jacket who was motioning some people to the right and others to the left.

The place was Auschwitz.

The man was Dr. Joseph Mengele.

Many of Schoenfeld’s family were unwittingly condemned on the spot, while he and other family members joined the hundreds of Jews already in laborious, sickening captivity. Schoenfeld lived until he and the remaining survivors were liberated by American soldiers. The irony of being freed by American Lt. Schwartz was not lost on the young man.

Following the story of his life, the retired professor reminded us of the emotion that drove virtually an entire country to support Hitler: fear. He reminded us that fear causes otherwise rational people to do completely irrational things. At that moment in our country, we were just in the beginning of the economic meltdown from the mortgage crisis. Wall Street was in a panic and it seemed that decision after decision was being made as a result of fear, whether a hastily conceived bailout or 401(k) owners selling out stocks and moving into cash. Fear is not a link to wisdom or patience.

Fear, no matter what the “boogie man” behind it, causes people to willingly, and often eagerly, sell their future for a “mess of pottage.” It happens over and over again in our world. Fear of one government causes submission to a war lord. Fear of liberalism causes conservatives to make bad decisions. Fear of another terrorist attack, well, interpret events as you will. Fear war and you vote for Barack Obama. Fear Barack Obama and you vote for anyone else. Regardless of who is president, we can never allow fear to lead us to willingly give up our basic rights. Once given, they are rarely returned. Just ask the Germans. Wearing the cloak of fear, the Reichstag gave unfettered authority to Hitler, making themselves puppets in his dictatorship.

Leadership is forged in time of crisis to be sure, but the hammer of the molding is never fear. Life leadership has to be from faith, wisdom and boldness, never from fear, uncertainty and weakness. If there are any citizens that live free from fear and exhibit the patience to evaluate circumstances based on the truths of God, it ought to be His people. Let it be so.

November 4, 2008

An election day prayer

Father,

On this important day for American society, I pray that we would not forget you. Your word says that you set up kings and you take down kings, so surely that includes our president, whether it be Barack Obama or John McCain.

Father, I pray that we would not forget your kingdom. In a day when fervent patriotism and divided politics carry most every conversation, help your children to remember that we have been called to a higher allegiance and that what happens in America does not equate to what happens in your kingdom. Forgive those of us in the United States that have convinced ourselves that your eternal plans ride on decisions that we make, forgetting that your kingdom was expanding centuries before 1776 and will continue eternally after the last copy of our constitution has disintegrated.

I ask that you would forgive us for making political preferences a basis for fellowship. If you can break down the walls between Jew and Gentile, can we not imagine that you have done so between Democrats and Republicans? Many of us know people who, if they don’t outright despise people who hold to different politics, find it extremely difficult to carry on conversations that don’t degenerate into political wrangling. May we never forget that Jesus set the pattern for us by choosing among his disciples one zealot, whose goal was to extricate Israel from Roman domination, and one tax collector, whose job was in league with the oppressors. Let us love, love all and love well.

Please forgive us for putting our hope in a political party or a president, when our hope should ever and only be in you.

Father I pray for Barack Obama, a man who seems to have no conscience toward the unborn. In his very stance on the abortion issue he betrays himself as a man not of your word, regardless of his claims of salvation. If elected, I pray that he would humble himself under your mighty hand and that you would use him, turning his heart wherever you will.

Father I pray for John McCain, a man who seems to be running on a platform he doesn’t completely believe. I do not believe that he understands the complexities facing our nation and have no hope that he would pick anyone other than “good old boys” to be around him if elected. He has no plan to stop the slaughter of the innocents. If elected, I pray that he would humble himself under your mighty hand and that you would use him, turning his heart wherever you will.

Father, I pray for the mostly unknown others who are on ballots for president across America. It is my earnest prayer that, beginning in this election and at all levels, we would begin to see the end of the two party dominant system that has polarized this country. Allow third, fourth, fifth party candidates and independents to be elected to force more reasonable and workable solutions to the problems we face.

I pray for the salvation of those who are in congress or who will be going there after this election. Place someone around them with the message of the gospel that they might come to know you and govern with wisdom.

Above all, that we your people might demonstrate the righteousness that we have received from you in every conversation we engage. The kingdoms of this world are fallen and corrupt; help us to promote the one, eternal King and the plan that he has instituted.

I ask this in the mighty name of Jesus Christ, your son.

Amen.

November 3, 2008

If Obama wins, then Republicans have only themselves to blame

I have a good friend who simply cannot believe that any clear thinking American would vote for Barack Obama for president. In fact, he issued a challenge for someone–anyone–to give him a convincing reason to vote for the Illinois senator. Few took him up on the offer.

I first called this election for Obama well before the primaries were over. Not because I planned to vote for him, not because I think he’d make the best president, not because I shuddered at the thought of another Clinton in the White House, but because seemed obvious to me he would win it in a walk. Here are the reasons in no particular order:

1. Because of the last two elections. Those residents of America that call themselves liberal have been steamed in the last two presidential elections since they feel they have been ripped off. Bush’s 2000 win over Gore through the electoral college (via the Supreme Court) and the Swift Boating of John Kerry (with proclaimed voting irregularities all over the place) have motivated them to get out the vote even if some of those voters are dead or sharing a ballot. Supposedly 105% of the population of Indiana (correction: Indianapolis) have now registered to vote. What happens if a state has more people vote than are on the registered voter list? Can they withhold their electors? Who knows, but it is obvious that far left liberals really do not care as long as Obama is in the White House.

2. Because of George W. Bush. Any Republican nominee was to be running against two opponents-the Democratic nominee and the immensely unpopular sitting president. Only if McCain (or Romney, Huckabee or whoever) had immediately drawn a stark line of distinction between himself and Bush would they have had a good chance. McCain’s late effort to do so only gives the appearance of desperation. In fact, one of the primary reasons that Democrats are on the verge of a filibuster proof majority in the senate and gaining as many as 30 seats in the house is because Republicans have not stood down the president at more turns.

The recent Wall Street cave in bail out put front and center the problems of the current administration. The over-simplified “It’s a big solution ’cause its a big problem” kind of talk from the president reflected badly on McCain if for no other reason because he’s a Republican. He chose to support the almost universally loathed bailout plan, rather than strongly oppose it and thus appeared as socialistic as Obama. To show true leadership and ingenuity, McCain should have been critical of the rush to judgment. Instead, he proposed a delayed “solution” that was easily and quickly dismissed.

3. Because he is black. Barack Obama is appealing to the African American community because he is perceived as one of them, even though he is of mixed heritage. It’s the same reason that McCain would be appealing to veterans or Romney to Mormons or Clinton (either one) to women. There is a strong identification factor because of his race. But, for the Democrats, it goes deeper.

During the primaries, the only diversity at all was on the Democratic side. There was an African American and a woman included in the running. The Republican ticket was white bread America (please people, Alan Keyes just does not count). McCain and Paul, the “old white guys,” Huckabee the “funny white guy,” Romney the “white rich guy,” Thompson the “white actor guy,” etc. Republicans don’t appeal to minorities because the Republican party is primarily about lip service. Did anybody see the crowd shots at the RNC? It looked like a snow storm. We have millions of immigrants who come to this country (legally) for the opportunities that the free market system affords them and Republicans, the party of opportunity, can’t even lock up that vote?

4. Because of big business interests. For better or for worse, Republicans are seen as business friendly to the extreme. They like to think of their party and the one that is good for business and that helps business to flourish thereby allowing the rising of all boats in society. This is well and good, but it does nothing if it isn’t communicated to and understood by Americans and it actually is harmful when you have a few companies reaping record breaking profits (Exxon Mobil, Shell, Chevron Texaco) from Americans who are given little real choice (we’ve got to drive gas vehicles since there are so few viable alternatives).

Republicans have done a terrible job of demonstrating how the growth of business drives the growth of the economy and have allowed their party to be pigeon holed as the one that only cares about creating wealth for the already wealthy. Even the founding fathers warned about the centralization of wealth in the hands of a few because of the corrupting nature of it.

5. Because he’s a socialist. The difference between Obama and the Republicans is that he is open about his socialistic beliefs while they are still in the closet. Socialism is not simply a belief in the redistribution of wealth; it is the belief that the vague entity known as “the government” knows better how to run the people’s lives than the people do including how they should use their money. Socialism puts the interest of the structure above the interest of the citizens. By this measure Republicans (at least the ones in DC) are as socialist as any Democrat, including Barack Obama. Our sitting president has expanded government to the point that true Republicans are repulsed by it, while he pushed for a growing amount of executive power to the point that constitutionalists are repulsed by it. It seems obvious that Republicans are very content with big government as long as they are in control of expanding it. They now are surprised by the embracing of it by the average American? They have fomented the mindset and now will live with the consequences and potentially without the power to do anything about it.

So, if Senator Obama becomes President-elect Obama sometime tomorrow evening, and the Republicans begin to whine about ACORN, the media, campaign finance reform and all the other post-Halloween ghouls, just remember: they have only themselves to blame.

October 1, 2008

We Are Not As Dumb As Washington Thinks We Are

Like we don’t get it.

Tonight Senator Kit Bond on Fox News “Nightly Scoreboard” gave as his examples of the “credit market being locked up” the fact that the states of Maine and Missouri could not sell bonds to build highways. Is he serious? We need for congress to pass a $700B package so that a couple of states can repave some roads and build a few more? These cannot wait a couple of years? Please.

Dave Ramsey, on the same show, said that there are three tiers of credit: The top tier is the major players, LIBOR and such, which have slowed considerably. The second tier is the average Joe with excellent credit, who wants a mortgage or a car. That money is available. I should know: I bought a used car in July with no problem and while in a bank yesterday the offer of a home equity loan at prime+0% was still in full swing. The last tier was the poor credit folks that were involved in the sub-prime crisis to begin with. That market, of course, is gone. The reality is that there is credit, not a “seize up” like is talked about by every talking head.

The government has already approved $29B for Bear Stearns, $85B for AIG, and $200B for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, none of which has solved the problem. Washington, which gets virtually nothing right, now wants to print up more cash to make the American citizen the biggest owner of bad mortgages in the world. In addition to the aforementioned $300+B, the Federal Reserve has released, just this week, more than $600B of cash into the system. The taking over of Fannie and Freddie added $5T to your balance sheet and mine, or subtracted from, as the case may be. We are smelling the Fed’s printing presses burn up printing all the money being injected into the system which, as smart people know, causes inflation. Inflation is a hidden tax that affects everyone by reducing the buying power of your dollar and the value of your dollars in your savings account and 401(k) or 403(b).

The fear of the market has already been exposed. Mad Money’s Jim Cramer believes that “no bailout” will bring the DOW down to 8,800 or so. My retirement has already taken a hit in the order of 20%. The market wants money and probably will not be satisfied with less that a few more hundred billion put into the system. I’m patient enough to wait (but I have learned a little about how to plan when I’m sixty). Of course, the market is due for a correction. The DOW components might get shuffled around a little, but there will be new stars that shine in the shakeout. If Warren Buffet can find deals, so can we. Or we can buy Berkshire Hathaway-B shares and make money with him ;^)

If credit tightens for Main Street, as Princeton’s Paul Krugman said on MSNBC, then that means credit card interest rates could go up and credit limits could go down. And this is bad how? The fact that Americans are too far in debt is standard fare for the business pages. A lid on credit is just what some Americans need. If, as Donald Trump has mused, the price of oil will fall up to 70% with a large stock market correction, then we will all have saved enough money on gas to offset some of the credit we were having to use. If, that is, we can get the oil companies to acknowledge that the price of oil has indeed fallen and quit making up excuses to keep prices high.

The bad bill that was surprisingly defeated in the house of representatives has taken on a new life and new form in the senate. As is usually the case, add-ons now include energy tax breaks, movie tax credits, wooden arrows for children and mining subsidies or credits. Some think those add-ons will not be approved, but that the original bill will be passed. We’ll see.

My point is this: Those of us who are paying attention know that doing nothing is probably going to bring some rough times. We believe that we are ready to endure it. We know that both Washington and Wall Street are thoroughly screwed up and delaying the needed fix is not the answer. There is nothing to gain by continuing to buoy bad business decisions. The reality is that not passing the bill is not the same as “doing nothing.” Not passing the bill is saying that the market can work it out, though some will fail. Socialism is not the way to go. We can exercise patience.

If Americans are anything, they are these two things: creative and resilient. We are resilient enough to endure and creative enough to overcome it.

September 30, 2008

Thoughts on “Pulpit Freedom Sunday”

In his thought provoking book, Exiles, Michael Frost writes concerning the demise of Christendom in the West,

Although the Christendom story no longer defines Western culture in general, it remains the primary definer of the church’s self-understanding in almost every Western nation, including, and perhaps especially, the United States. (emphasis added)

From the misguided efforts of the two Southern Baptist “Justice Sundays” to influence the nominations of supreme court justices, to the feeling that churches ought to get a discount at the local hardware store, to “Pulpit Freedom Sunday,” the cries for the return of Christendom resound throughout evangelical life.  For anyone alive today in the United State who was born before the 1970’s, the most thorough indoctrination that we have imbibed is not fundamentalism, but Christendom.  We have imbibed it because it was all we had to drink. Indeed, until the last couple of decades it would have been as impossible for American Christians to imagine life without our worldview as predominant as it would have been for a 14th century farmer imagining that the pope was not involved in politics.

From the turbulence of the 1960’s in America with free love, free drugs, radical music, the Vietnam war’s impact on society and other culture shaking changes (most neatly bound together at Woodstock) through the fall of modernity near the end of the 20th century, to the rise of postmodern thought, Christendom in the U. S. teetered, tottered and then collapsed. That collapse has reverberated through evangelicalism though many evangelicals didn’t feel it as a collapse; it was only felt as varying salvos in the various skirmishes in the culture wars.

Organizations like the Moral Majority came into existence ostensibly to “return America to God,” never successfully defining what that meant and whether it was even possible. Prayer for “revival in America” was, for many, little more than a cry for Christendom’s return…the Christendom where we were revered, taken seriously, respected, influential in communities and had prayer in schools. The Christendom where “One nation under God” was believed, even if not biblically supported.

In an article on Fox News, Erik Stanley, Senior Legal Counsel for the Alliance Defense Fund, an Arizona anti-ACLU legal consortium, regarding “Pulpit Freedom Sunday,” had this to say:

Pastors have a right to speak about Biblical truths from the pulpit without fear of punishment. No one should be able to use the government to intimidate pastors into giving up their constitutional rights.

Fair enough. Now if Mr. Stanley could be so kind as to show us where the Bible says “Vote for John McCain” or “Vote for Barack Obama” then we can get on down the road. Of course, as we all know, there is no “biblical truth” having to do with the public endorsement of a candidate in a church. Which “constitutional right,” exactly, has been given up? Were they preaching on the blood atonement? Against hatred of our brothers in Christ? Were they preaching against injustice? Doing an exegesis of 1 Corinthians 13 when IRS agents burst through the door waving tax-exempt revocation paperwork? Of course not.

The simple fact is that these thirty-three pastors, representing maybe a 100th of a percent of America’s pastors were doing absolutely nothing that the Bible requires pastors to do. I’m not saying that they did not feel very compelled to do it. One pastor, however, left little doubt as to why he participated: “Well I’m doing what I’m doing because I’m angry, I’m mad.” And there it is. Why in the world would a pastor get mad because he cannot say, “I endorse John McCain for President” in the course of a Sunday morning message? Churches can hold voter drives, pass out voter information, take people to the polls to vote and serve as voting precincts (ours does). After the service, any pastor can tell any member of his congregation, or all of them, “I intend to vote for Barack Obama or John McCain (or Bob Barr or Chuck Baldwin or *snicker* Cynthia McKinney) and encourage you do to the same” without violating any IRS regulation. One Georgia pastor had also been very involved in the big save the 10 Commandments drive related to Judge Roy Moore’s Alabama efforts a few years back. All this, to me, smacks of a desire to return to Christendom, which, for most of us is a return to that with which we are comfortable.

The truth is that for many American Christians our issue is lack of comfort at not being the top dog religion anymore. We don’t know how to respond to tolerance and pluralism and we fear that which we do not understand. I recently read a person who said that America should hold Christian values since the majority are Christians. (Besides the issue that this is probably not accurate, if that is prevailing opinion then we really have not argument against sharia law.) A dufus Georgia lawmaker recently said that the majority should rule in a certain legal quandry. So much for the republic and the rule of law. This is all a clamoring for Christendom.

Churches have spent so much time trying to reinstate Christendom that they have missed the opportunity to reach those who have gown up apart from Christendom or, indeed, grew up in post-Christendom. The strategies needed to reach those born into Christendom are radically different than those born into a time the the Christian worldview no longer dominates. I shudder to think how much energy has been spent in “evangelizing” people who are at a completely different starting place with no frame of reference for our Admit, Believe, Confess, 3-steps-to-salvation presentation leaving us shaking our heads at their “lack of faith.”

Here is my take on our current situation: There is going to be no third Great Awakening in the United States. Christendom has fallen and it can’t get up and, frankly, Christians should be standing on it to keep it down. The church has always done better on the fringe and the fringe is where we are headed. Local churches have a great opportunity to minister in the vacuum left behind by the collapse of Christendom–an opportunity to big to miss.

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