Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Competing Sanctities?

The elections results are like a piercing light. When there's a sudden change from low light to bright light in a room, everything in the room comes into clear view. Christians in America are spinning from the changes. I've had conversations with people "confessing" they voted for Obama and others with people who seem to think that our pro-life cause is helped by dismissing anything positive about the election to presidency of an African-American. In some cases, abortion just doesn't matter anymore to people. I couldn't object more in my spirit to this than I do. In other cases, Christians seem to be wondering if embracing a new racism makes them more Christian. Ridiculous. The sanctities of life, marriage, and personhood are not in competition. Pro-life, pro-family, and racial reconciliation efforts are all part of a larger effort: that of obeying God. Political arenas - like all our horizontal arenas - reveal our vertical priorities. 

One of the things I've noticed this last week is the weakness of the pro-life convictions of many Christians. And I'm not talking about those who voted for Obama. I'm talking about those who see themselves as faithful to the pro-life cause. Their words, thoughts, and votes all line up, but ... they really don't seem to care about children. They embrace an issue, and that from safe distance. The weakness of the pro-life movement is that most involved are unwilling to offer more than token support: their liability is limited. Bring up adoption, and this becomes clear. I pray for a change of heart for the church of Christ ... for the sake of children ... whose welfare is the point of the abortion debate.

Competing sanctities show that expressed values may not be authentic. In the case of the church of Jesus Christ in America, it is clear that we've allowed our opponents in the critical culture debates to remove God from the conversation. Once God is not the issue, anything goes, and sanctities end up competing with one another because they do not have God behind them. 

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

The Joy of Voting

I'm an American today. I voted. 

Saturday I watched - from the commander's window overlooking the base - a hearse carry home the remains of Marine Captain Trevor J. Yurista. It brought back, with more force and suddenness than I was ready for, memories of my years as a chaplain at Dover AFB, working in the mortuary and praying for families over flag-draped coffins. Thoughts of Capt. Yurista's family and the apparently great life he lived combine with hundreds of versions of the same story where I played a role greater than that of observer. These memories force me to vote. To not vote would be to personally dishonor every fallen soldier our country ever lost. Our right to vote is protected and provided by God through our military, that and every other aspect of American life covered by the Constitution. No military, no vote, no America. I'm sure not everyone feels this way, but I can't help it. I am reassured by the fact that Jesus Himself held military members in such high regard, as they did Him. As I voted and then watched Shannon vote, I held Kelsie (soon 3 years old), who watched in wonder. I told her how important it all was, and that she was an American. Voting would someday be her privilege and responsibility. Her attention was then captured by the playground she saw through the window of the polling station and there we went. 

God bless America. 

Monday, October 27, 2008

The White House

Five years ago this week, I spoke at the White House Christian Fellowship. It is the flagship Bible study of the White House, one of seven they had back then, one of 25 within the administration. I spoke about Acts 15 - the study was titled "The Good Fight." The end of the hour featured White House staffers asking me a lot of questions about my work at Dover Air Force Base and about the war. They asked me outright if I thought the troops were behind the war. Shannon and I were given a little tour of parts of the administration that most folks don't get to see. 

One thing is for sure: no one back then could have predicted the state of the world and the nation today. The war continues. We are still in Iraq! The presidential election campaign is what no one ever thought it would or could be. Barak Who? The world economy is melting like the witch at the end of The Wizard of Oz. Wow, it's something to look back at yesterday's future and compare it to the reality of today. 

I wonder how many Bible studies there are now, or will be next year at this time? 

Friday, October 24, 2008

Politics and Wilberforce, a bit of a rant

Think Wilberforce. This is what I have to remind myself of. 

Politics are dirty. The candidates I see are patchworks of media. I don't know them. I must pray for every single one. The Christian way of influence is to love all, especially via prayer. I pray for each one. 

Politics are confusing. Who knows who will stand. If the "wrong one" gets into office, who knows he or she is really the "wrong one." People change. God says so. Prayer is the key. God is in charge. 

Politics are pointless. What good is my vote? Well, the problem with our nation and our world is not a problem of politics, but a problem of heart. Generally speaking, abortion, among other leading social problems, is a problem because people - incredibly selfish, animalistic people - want sex when they want it and on their own terms. It's not that people want the right to abort. They want the right to ... well, you know. And by people, I mean every last single one of us. Go through the catalog of ALL our other social problems and you will find that they are ALL rooted in personal sin as the Bible defines it. People want what they want. They have since Genesis 3. God help people. 

Slavery existed because it could. There's less of it now, certainly around these parts. This must mean one last thing: politics are spiritual! Ultimately, God is the issue. We can't call a nation or a world who doesn't believe in Him to honor Him. Our first task as Christians is to offer faith, as instruments in God's hands, to a world dying to hear ... literally. William Wilberforce said, "when we think of eternity, and of the consequences of all human conduct, what is there in this life that should make any man contradict the dictates of his conscience, the principle of justice, the laws of religion, and of God?"

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

A New President

Whether you know it or not, whether you accept it or not, a new president will bring change to your personal life. The questions surrounding this are questions of degree only. Leadership creates environments. History has us at a strange juncture due to the downturn of not just the world economy, but human culture itself. This means that the environment created by a new president and all those who fall in under him will be that much more immediate. A few of the things I think you will notice changes in:
1) What is on your televisions and computers. Everything media, from situation-comedies to blogs will be different. In the case of this election, what amounts to drama will shift from stories about individuals to stories about groups and communities at a higher rate than we're already experiencing. There will be less about conflicts between people and more about conflicts between people and climate, poverty, disease, and the like. In other words, the human story itself will change in narrative content from Cain vs. Abel stories to Noah vs. the flood stories.
2) What you find on the shelves of your stores. The buying habits of America flow from the leadership habits in Washington. If this recession is teaching us anything, it is that government and business are really one and the same. It doesn't matter anymore if one philosophically objects to this. Conservatism is dead at the hands of those elected as conservatives. Every purchase is a vote and every vote has a price tag and is for a product. The green movement will show up in our homes and on our tables like never before. People will forego items that promise luxury for items that promise survival and - the new big word - sustainability.
3) What is preached from all pulpits of all monotheistic religions. The messages of faith will turn from self-actualization to community authenticity. Christians, I think, will especially notice the trend away from personal development spirituality toward community involvement spirituality. In fact, I wonder if some of our giant personal development ministries will have to close or retool. I think difficult times will do two things to "name-it-and-claim-it" preaching and theology: 1) make it more offensive to more people and 2) make it more audacious for those who stick with it. I've seen both first hand in Africa.

I'm not sure how good or bad such changes are. Many of them may be better in hindsight a century from now than they are to live through in the next years. I'm not certain about how my thoughts here will match up with the actual future, but I am certain that change - so promised in this election cycle - is, in fact, exactly what we're going to get with a new president. 

Thursday, October 9, 2008

The Great Depression?

Many have been comparing our world's present financial troubles with the "Great Depression" of the 30's. It's interesting how we're always trying to define our present with the past. I, for one, think the comparison is a stretch. It's like comparing America's military experience of the war in Iraq with Vietnam. In Iraq, we're in between 4,000 and 5,000 of our military dead in a war that is now past 5 years old. We lost 10 times this many in Vietnam, maybe more. The comparison between them is thin. The other major 20th Century wars count their dead in the millions. The other day I read that Greenwich, CT, the home of many Wall Street types who may now be trying to wear disguises if they go out in public, is referring to the present financial turmoil as their 9/11, their Katrina, their Tsunami. Wow. Talk about a stretch. As I look over the landscape of our present woes, I sense something different than tragedy. I sense the truth. The truth is coming out. Financial lies are being exposed. They say it's all about confidence. Much of what people are losing confidence in is ... fraud. Maybe this is a good thing to lose confidence in. In John 8, Jesus says that the truth will set us free. I wonder if freedom will be an unexpected fruit of the declining stock market. I wonder how many people may actually live better lives, now that the money game they were investing themselves in has run out of gas. I wonder how many children will have parents again. I wonder how many neighbors will start caring for each other again. I wonder how many people will start living for what matters. I wonder how full the churches will get, if things get really bad. I wonder how many people will - upon losing what they see as everything - find faith in Christ. I wonder. What some say will be another Great Depression maybe actually be a great revival. We'll see.   

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Manage Energy, Not Time

I've heard and read much about time management. I wish I could say I've been helped by it. I really haven't. I recently saw this title: "Manage Your Energy, Not Your Time," on a list of books I should buy or borrow. Though I eventually got into the material and it was valuable, the title alone helped me immensely. Manage your energy. not your time. This is exactly right. It's not just physical energy either. It's creative energy and, for lack of a better word, "thinking" energy. Mental energy is what I mean. The things that drain it are everywhere. Checking the news on the Internet more than 5 times a day will do this. So will living through days that are repeats of prior days. If you are living a "Groundhog Day" life, you are losing energy. Boredom is exhausting. This is probably why traditional time management techniques are so limited in their outcomes. They are industrial and mechanical in their approach. They might save time on paper, but they do not save what makes time valuable. The key is to live an interesting life. It is our responsibility to make sure we do.  A safe, predictable, risk-free life often turns out to be an unproductive life. Worse yet is a life aiming for these things. When we call Jesus our Lord, we mean to call Him our manager. Pray that He will manage and redeem your time and your energy, so that you live a life that is interesting to Him and because of Him.

Friday, September 19, 2008

Rejections and Creativity

So, if this book of mine ever gets published, it looks like I'll have that typical testimony. I'll be able to tell people not to give up when they get down. I'll be able to list the number of rejections I received before I got my first contract. Right now, I'm resubmitting more material to one publisher, so that's not quite a rejection, but I do also have nine big, fat, juicy, confirmed rejections from some of the best known Christian publishers in the world. I know it's not enough for a good, tear-jerking story yet, but each one stinks. As I drink the cup of each rejection, I remind myself of one universal, undeniable truth: nothing of value is ever done outside the reach of rejection. From politics to art, from ministry to literature, rejection is nothing less than the soul-carving force of God. It, and sometimes I think it alone, is responsible for the best work that people anywhere ever do. The sting of rejection is necessary. Without it, there is no spark of creative excellence. This truth is more than something we tell ourselves when we fail. It is a barometer of how clear our view of reality is. If I somehow believe, because of my faith or some other distinguishing characteristic, that I have immunity from rejection, I am fooling myself. Ironically, I am also setting myself up for more and deeper rejection. Let me accept the rejection I have. Let me own it, so I don't sow the seeds for more of it. How about you? Rejection (or any other kind of failure) is in the eye of the rejected. What are being called to own?    

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Currents

Soon, my sister Kathleen will be embarking on a round-the-world sailing adventure. Winds and currents are not things she and her sailing partner can take lightly. The winds and currents of life are the same. In my case, lately, the winds and currents have pushed the boat of my life in some interesting places. I won't write about the details, but some reading this who know me and know what's going on in our church know some of them. They involve expectations and plans. For example, I expected some new staff members in our church and some old ones to stay, but our staff is much smaller today than it was 6 months ago. This changes things. At the same time, I have more opportunities than I have ever had. All of it adds up to more work ... unless I step back. And here's the key. It's the key for me and anyone else going through something similar. A poor sailor fights the winds and currents; a skilled one harnesses them. In the days to come, I cannot decide to work harder or more. This will surely wear me out. I have to prayerfully interpret the currents in my life. God is sovereign after all. He directs the winds and currents at sea and in life. What does He want me do? The answer is not more. It might actually be less. If more is all I come up with, then I haven't prayed or thought enough about my situation. Ask the same question for yourself if winds and currents are playing strange tricks on your life. Lord, what do you want me to do now?  
 

Monday, September 8, 2008

Corners

Life sometimes feels like a series of surprises. We walk forward, turn the corner, and see something unexpected. My Caribbean cruise ended up in Newport, Rhode Island to avoid a hurricane. Sarah Palin is John McCain's running mate. The government now owns and runs Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Unrelated to all this is the local news that Goodwill Church's building project is now funded. Hindsight sees the logic and even the predictability of changes, both in the news and in our personal lives, but living through them is always surprising. Who knows what's around the next corner? Whatever changes come can be described factually. The surprise comes in how they feel. Change is emotional. When Jesus was telling his disciples about his upcoming death, and it was days away instead of off in the future, it seems like they balked emotionally. It was supposed to be good news. He was going to "prepare a place" for us (John 14), but the feel of it was confusing. For many of us, navigating the emotions tied to change is tough. It doesn't matter if the changes are good or bad. The dialogs in John 14 and in other parts of the gospels give us clues as to how to deal with change emotionally. The disciples asked Jesus questions. We can do the same. If you struggle with change today, ask Jesus about it. With an open Bible in front of you, listen for the voice of God in the Word of God. In John 14, Jesus said, "Do not let your hearts be troubled." Change, good and bad, troubles our hearts. God knows it and comforts us with His Word.