The Great Awakening – By Jim Wallis

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Jim Wallis, the founder of Sojourners and author of God’s Politics and several other books, has made an important contribution to the conversation about the role that evangelicals should play in politics in his newest book: The Great Awakening:Reviving Faith and Politics in a Post-Religious Right America.

Wallis believes that it is “revival time” because young Americans are connecting faith with a desire to work for social justice. In The Great Awakening, Wallis seeks to carve out a niche that is evangelical at the same time that it is strongly progressive. In many ways, Wallis seems to be trying to fill the gap that is left by increasing dissatisfaction with the religious right and their myopic focus on the issues of abortion and homosexuality.

The Great Awakening begins by discussing what Wallis sees going on currently in American society and culture. He discusses the climate that has made revival possible. He then provides guidelines for “How to Change the World, and Why” and argues for an approach to politics that operates not from the far left or the far right, but from the “moral center.” In chapter 4, he lays the groundwork for an argument for “politics for the common good.” Wallis argues, “What we need most are people rooted in ‘conservative’ values and commitments but willing to be ‘radical’ enough to apply those very values in the real world” (101).

After discussing the context and trying to establish some ground rules, the remainder of The Great Awakening deals with seven specific areas that a politics for the common good will address. These areas are revealed in each of the chapter titles that deals with them; Inclusion and Opportunity: The Welcome Table, Stewardship and Renewal: The Earth Is the Lord’s, Equality and Diversity: The Race to Unity, Life and Dignity: Critical Choices, Family and Community: The False Choice, Nonviolent Realism: Resolving Our Conflicts, Integrity and Accountability: Doing the Right Thing and the Question of Leadership.

The chapter of these that hit me the hardest was the chapter dealing with equality and diversity. My eyes have been opened, maybe they are continuing to be opened, to the realities of racial discrimination in the United States. In the past year I have had two friends from different racial backgrounds rattle off a list of ways that they had been discriminated against (things like having a friend who was jumped on the beach and urinated on, having someone drive by and yell a racial slur at you as they drive by, and the ultimate injustice was when someone was arrested, charged, and prosecuted for more than six months for a crime that he did not commit). I also recently read Blood Done Sign My Name by Timothy Tyson, which describes the murder of a black man in broad daylight by white men who were not convicted. This happened in the early 1970s! So, having this in the back of my mind, I really resonated with Wallis comment that “the idea that our racial sins are mostly behind us and that we have no systematic racism anymore is simply a denial of the truth that betrays a lack of serious relationship to communities of color… most people of color in the United States can still tell person stories of racial discrimination. The question still for white Americans is, Are we listening? (187)

In the next chapter, “Life and Dignity” Wallis endorses the consistent ethic of life argument, revealing much of the inconsistency in the right and left’s approach to life. “If I were an unborn child and wanted the support of the far right, it would be better for me to stay unborn as long as possible, because once I was born, I would be off its radar screen – no child care, no health care, nothing. Nor should I expect support from the far left, which speaks so much about human rights, because I won’t have any until after my birth” (214).

Wallis brings The Great Awakening to a close by encouraging his readers, especially his younger readers, to “No longer accept the unacceptable. Change what is believed to be possible. And always make the choice for hope” (297).

This book is definitely worth the read. While I didn’t agree with everything Wallis said, I felt like he was asking the right questions. I also felt like he was on the right track as far as discerning where the next generation of Christians seem to be headed. Perhaps due to my own ignorance, I was surprised to hear of Wallis’ identification with Red-letter Christians. And I was even more surprised to hear that the term came from a conversation he had with someone. I have been very interested in the alliance that seems to be strengthening between folks like Wallis, Tony Campolo, and Ron Sider. I will be hopefully praying for an awakening that links faith in Jesus Christ to good works done in his name. If this book helps wake up to the reality of who God is and the difference God is calling them to make, it will make a contribution that is far more important than simply writing an insightful book about Christians and politics. Here’s hoping.

March Madness Key (Day 4)

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Something much more important than March Madness happens today. We celebrate Jesus’ resurrection from the dead.

Keeping in mind that Christ has defeated the power of sin and death and that He is risen, indeed! Here are the answers for the second half of the second round:

East: North Carolina, Oklahoma, and Butler win

Midwest: Vanderbilt, and Georgetown win (obviously Vandy cannot win because they lost in the first round… but that is who I originally picked. I like Villanova to win this game.)

South: Memphis and Texas win

West: Western Kentucky wins

March Madness Key (Day 2)

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I was 12 for 16 yesterday. Here are the answers for the second day of madness:

East: North Carolina, Indiana, University of Oklahoma, Louisville, Butler, and Tennessee win

Midwest: Villanova, Vanderbilt, Gonzaga, and Georgetown win

South: Memphis, Mississippi State, St. Mary’s, and Texas win.

West: Western Kentucky, and Connecticut win.

Am I right?

March Madness Key

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The NCAA Tournament will begin minutes of my starting this post. And the best thing about the “dance” is its accessibility, anyone can fill out a bracket. You don’t have to know anything about the teams (I’m still not sure if knowing the teams helps me or hurts me) you can go with the seeding, or ignore it completely. Some years your gut makes you look like a genius (like the year I picked Missouri and Kent State, who were both 12 seeds to go to the elite 8 and I was right about both of them!) and other years it makes you look like an idiot, like my upset picks every other year.

I would like to combine the ability that the bracket brings to make anyone an expert with blogging’s ability to allow anyone to have a platform to pretend to be an expert. Today I am going to post the winners of all 16 games today, and I will timestamp my picks for each day. We’ll see if the picks I make in the later rounds are teams that are even still playing!

The other great thing about blogging is that it is interactive. So, feel free to tell me where you disagree and who you like.

Ok, so here are my picks for Thursday March 20th:

In the East: George Mason and Washington State win

In the Midwest: Kansas, Kent State, Kansas State, and Wisconsin win

In the South: Michigan State, Oral Roberts, Marquette, and Stanford win

In the West: UCLA, Texas A&M, Baylor, Xavier, West Virginia, and Duke win

Let the games begin!

Computer Elitists – Hillarious!

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Goodness gracious, do we care too much about our computer loyalties! Check out the comments that Tony Jones got on his blog when he posted about his new Mac and missing the right click. Some of them are helpful and some are hillarious (my favorite was comment #23)! But what struck me is that Tony writes some insightful and thought-provoking stuff, but it is the mundane post about missing the right-click on his new Mac that gets a quick 23 comments!

Brand loyalty among Mac owners is almost ridiculous. I finally bought the hype last February and bought a MacBook when my PC laptop’s screen would no longer work. I like the Mac very much, I think I would buy another one, but I am definitely not as hardcore as many of the people posting at Tony Jones’ blog. But, I had not figured out that you could change a setting on the trackpad and be able to use a two finger click to replace the PC right-click.

You learn something new everyday.

Everything Must Change – Brian D. McLaren

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I have seemed to enjoy each one of Brian McLaren’s new books more than his last. It was, therefore, with great anticipation that I began to read his latest book: Everything Must Change: Jesus, Global Crises, and a Revolution of Hope.

McLaren seeks to address two preoccupying questions in Everything Must Change; What are the biggest problems in the world? And, What doe Jesus have to say about these global problems? These questions led to further questions like “Why hasn’t the Christian religion made a difference commensurate with its message, size, and resources? What would need to happen for followers of Jesus to become a greater force for good in relation to the world’s top problems? How could we make a positive difference (12)?”

Everything Must Change is carefully organized in order to address these questions. The book is organized into eight parts that each consist of around four very short chapters. The first four parts discuss McLaren’s “preoccupying questions,” the problem as he sees it and how Jesus relates to the questions and problems. The next three parts of the book discuss the three primary parts of what McLaren refers to as the “Societal Machine.” These parts are the Security System, the Prosperity System, and the Equity System. McLaren argues that the Societal Machine has gone suicidal. McLaren writes: “Eventually, you’d have to agree, the societal machine could grow to a size where it demanded more resources than the environment could provide and produce more wastes than the environment could absorb. At that point, the machine would go suicidal” (63). McLaren’s argument is that the Security System, Prosperity System, and Equity System are all dysfunctional and unless we find a way to reframe the story, the machine will go suicidal.

One of the major strengths of Everything Must Change is McLaren’s boldness in drawing attention to some of the ways that American culture is dysfunctional and ultimately self-defeating (or suicidal). Everything Must Change offers a needed critique of the culture of comfort and security that has proliferated without a critique from the American Church for far too long. While McLaren is certainly not the first person to offer such a critique, his growing popularity as the bearded grandfather of Emergent places him in a situation where he is able to speak to a larger and larger audience.

The ideas in this book are already put into practice in subtle ways. For example, the book itself is “green” as the dust jacket testifies that it is printed on “acid-free, environmentally friendly paper using approved green printing standards.” The copyright page further mentions that the paper is from “well-managed forests, controlled sources and recycled wood or fiber.”

McLaren mentions in a footnote that his prior book, The Secret Message of Jesus: Uncovering the Truth That Could Change Everything, should be seen as a companion volume to Everything Must Change. I would actually say that it is essential to read The Secret Message of Jesus before reading Everything Must Change because I often felt that McLaren’s discussion assumed familiarity with the arguments and information presented in The Secret Message of Jesus. In other words, the explicitly Christ-centered material is not as obviously present in Everything Must Change.

My other thought, which I touched on in my review of Tony JonesThe New Christians, is that Brian McLaren is famous! I have been amazed at the amount of publicity surrounding this book; book displays at Barnes and Noble that John Grisham would envy, a book tour, and I even got a random email asking me to pass out fliers before a book tour stop (that was actually nowhere near where I live). It seems to me that many people who have responded to McLaren’s message are fairly cynical of celebrities and people who seem to be larger than life. Brian McLaren is coming very close to becoming a celebrity, if he is not already one. I am interested to see how folks in Emergent respond to his increasing popularity, and what would seem to be a corresponding inaccessibility. Emergent seems to really be gaining a lot of momentum, and I will be watching to see what it does with it. Is this just the beginning, or is Emergent already peaking?

Ultimately, Brian McLaren raises some very important questions in Everything Must Change. I hope this book inspires the people who claim to be followers of Jesus Christ to examine more closely their allegiance to the kingdom of comfort and security in relationship to their allegiance to the kingdom of God. In as much as McLaren encourages followers of Jesus to bring hope into a world that is on the verge of going suicidal, this book is well worth the read and promises to stimulate much needed conversations about what it means to be a follower of Jesus Christ in the twenty-first century.

The New Christians – Tony Jones

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This weekend I was in Norman and I found myself in a Barnes and Noble with a 15% off coupon (plus another 10% off for the membership discount) and a $25 gift card all burning a hole in my pocket. The combination of these things meant that I was a man in need of a new book. The book I picked up, and ended up purchasing was The New Christians: Dispatches from the Emergent Frontier by Tony Jones. I found myself with some unexpected, but very much appreciated, down time on Friday and read a large chunk of this book in one sitting.

The New Christians is an engaging book that provides a helpful introduction to Emergent, from a few different angles. Jones, who is the national coordinator for Emergent Village, is ideally situated to provide many of these perspectives.

In the first chapter Jones discusses problems with the “Old Country.” One of the things that I appreciated about this chapter was that he critiqued both the problem on the left and right. The next chapter, “Dispatches from the Frontier of the American Church” is probably my favorite of the book. Jones gives a sort of insiders narrative description of how Emergent came to be. He is honest about disagreements and points of departure (particularly with Mark Driscoll) with others in the movement, especially as it has developed. In the books that I have read about Emergent, I had not previously read a narrative chronology of the development of the movement that was as helpful as this chapter.

Jones also focuses quite a bit of energy discussing the primary role that theology plays among Emergents. Jones writes:

As I looked back on my experiences in college, both at the liberal Congregational church and in the conservative campus ministry, I came to terms with the fact that these weren’t malicious people. Instead, the ways they lived out their faith were a natural response to the theologies they held. It was the theology that was broken. I’ll put it this way: theology begets a way of life. The better the theology, the better the way of life. Therefore, I claim:

Good theology begets beautiful Christianity.

And so it follows that

Bad theology begets ugly Christianity (103).

Jones concludes the book with case studies of several Emergent congregations, which helps to provide a glimpse in the variety and breadth of Emergent practice.

As I read the book I had three, not necessarily related, thoughts:

  1. It is amazing how many of the folks in Emergent are becoming celebrities! One of the hallmarks of Emergent, from my understanding, has been how the accessibility of the leadership. Even as recently as three years ago, a friend of mine was periodically having lunch with Brian McLaren. My guess is that folks like him are becoming less and less accessible somewhat in proportion to the rate at which they become better and better known. It kind of reminds me of what happens with mega church pastors. Someone starts a church and has deep relationships with the founding members, but over time many of them have to get used to having much less access to them as other things occupy more and more of their time. I wonder how Emergent has, or will, respond to this challenge. (This is not a criticism, just a question.)
  2. I have been happy to gain a deeper appreciation of how much these people care about and are committed to the Christian faith. I don’t sense that they are trying to lead people away from Christianity, but simply speak a language that other people can relate to. I think they are meeting a real need and creating the space for people to hear and respond to the gospel. Many Emergent Christians are living much more committed and dedicated lives than many of the conservative Christians who criticize them. I have especially appreciated Dan Kimball‘s theology, the more I have been exposed to it.

So, what are your thoughts? I am particularly interested in what ways you think Wesleyans can respond to or be a part of the Emergent conversation. What contribution do you think Emergent has to make to Wesleyan practice, or how could Wesleyan theology/practice inform Emergent?

A Methodist/Wesleyan Blueprint for Becoming Disciples (Part 7)

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The seventh sermon “Watching Over One Another in Love” in the “Blueprint for Becoming Disciples” sermon series is now up. You can listen to it on my podcast here.

This sermon discusses the Wesleyan practice of “watching over one another in love” through small group accountability. One of the central arguments of the sermon is that you will either move forward or fall backward in your faith. John Wesley understood this and used small group accountability as a way to help Christians keep their faith in its proper place as the number one priority in their lives. When Christians have gathered together in order to “watch over one another in love” both communities of faith and individual Christians have tended to grow in their love of God and neighbor. Especially for Methodists, when we discontinued this practice we began to decline and lose our zeal.

Have you had any experiences with “watching over one another in love?” How did it help you in your growth as a Christian? What are other thoughts or reactions to this sermon?

A Methodist/Wesleyan Blueprint for Becoming Disciples (Part 6)

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The sixth sermon “Finding the Balance” in the “Blueprint for Becoming Disciples” sermon series is now up. You can listen to it on my podcast here.This sermon discusses several different ways that the Wesleyan method helps us to find the balance in our lives with God. Christians have often tried to choose between faith or works, acts of piety or acts of mercy, or love of God or love of neighbor. Wesley helps us to find a balance that helps us to avoid an either/or approach in favor of a both/and approach.

One word of warning: I caught whatever has been going around just before I preached this sermon. I did the very best I could under the circumstances, but I felt terrible. I am afraid that shows a bit in this sermon. So, I apologize in advance.

Again, I would love to hear your reactions to this sermon!