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Sunday, 14 September 2008

Friday, 12 September 2008

  • Currently Reading
    Kockroach: A Novel (P.S.)
    By Tyler Knox
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    What's up, you ask?

    Well...there's not a whole lot new going on at the time being.  I should hear something from the church I had the phone interview with in a week or so.  They were having the other candidate in last weekend or this weekend for an actual interview, so they said they would let me know what was going on when that was all through.  I've sent some other resumes as well to other churches, so we'll see what happens.

    Next weekend, I preach my second wedding.  This one is a bit more formal than the last one I did, and so it is taking a lot more work to put together.  I am pretty much done, though.  Just fine-tuning some things.

    That's about it really...

Tuesday, 09 September 2008

Sunday, 07 September 2008

  • Currently Reading
    Jesus for President: Politics for Ordinary Radicals
    By Shane Claiborne, Chris Haw
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    A quote from "Jesus for President" by Shane Clairborne and Chris Haw

    Today the logic goes something like this: "Calling a ruler 'Son of God' is out of style.  No one really does that nowadays.  We can support a president while also worshiping Jesus as the Son of God."  But how is this possible?  For one says that we must love our enemies, and the other says we must kill them; one promotes the economics of competition, while the other admonishes the forgiveness of debts.  To which do we pledge allegiance?  Surely, one of them must have the wrong idea of how to move history.  Can a servant serve two masters?  To say that we must kill our enemies and join the popular project  to "rid the world of evil" is to call Jesus unrealistic.  And that is possible desirable for many; surely his ideas do not resonate with any common wisdom.  But can you call Jesus the Son of God and also say, "He just doesn't understand the world today?"  How ironic is it to see a bumper sticker that says "Jesus is the answer" next to a bumper sticker supporting the war in Iraq, as if to say, "Jesus is the answer - but not in the real world."  Remember, Jesus' followers were burned alive, beheaded, or fed to lions.  They knew evil and the "real world."  They would meet it face to face.  If there was anyone who tried to deal with evildoers and terrorists, it was certainly first-century Christians.

    When the church takes affairs of the state more seriously than they do Jesus, Pax Romana becomes its gospel and the president becomes the Son of God.  After all, what is the point in calling anything God if it does not also hold sway in every part of one's life...?
    (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan.  2008.  166)

  • Currently Reading
    Jesus for President: Politics for Ordinary Radicals
    By Shane Claiborne, Chris Haw
    see related

    Fact-Checking and Faith First (by Jim Wallis)

    Friday, September 05, 2008

    John McCain's acceptance speech last night sought to present him as a maverick and bipartisan reformer, in contrast to the total partisanship of Sarah Palin the night before. She clearly relishes her own self-description as a pit bull with lipstick who fires up the conservative base, while McCain wants to reach out to the independents he knows he needs to win. He told his story again of how capture and torture took him from a reckless and selfish young man to a deep love for his country.

    As I suggested after the first presidential primary many months ago, "change" has already won this election, given the deep unpopularity of George Bush and the many failures of his administration. Change is the theme of both Barack Obama's campaign and of John McCain's. Usually when voters want change, they change parties in the White House. But McCain has the difficult task of persuading voters that a different kind of Republican can do the job, while Obama will continue to ask him to explain why he voted with George Bush 90 percent of the time.

    But now the conventions are over and the fact-checking can begin. There were a lot of very partisan things said at both conventions (that is the reason for conventions), but now all those things should be tested. I hope those who say that this will be an election about "personalities" are wrong. It must instead be about the real issues facing the country and the world. Whose tax policies will benefit whom the most? Who offers the best hopes for poor and middle-class families? And who has the smartest policies to defeat the real threats of terrorism -- not whose rhetoric against Islamic fundamentalism is tougher? So let the fact-checking begin, and given the speeches we have just heard from some politicians, we will need full-time fact-checkers.

    But one other thing bothered me last night, and it did also at the Democratic Convention. It was all those signs that read "Country First" and all those chants of "USA, USA, USA!!" The high-powered and, frankly, militaristic rhetoric kept telling us that "country" should be put above everything else -- including family and friendship. But what about faith? Should country be put ahead of faith, too? I kept wanting to yell back at the people yelling at me about putting the country first and say, "No, not me, I'm a Christian." Because we as Christians simply can't put our country first, ahead of God, ahead of Jesus Christ, ahead of the body of Christ (remember the worldwide body of Christ), and even family and friendship. Especially when our country is wrong, and when most of the rest of the body of Christ around the world thinks so.

    "Country First" was the theme of John McCain's speech and night, and he asked us to "fight with him." Barack Obama also said in Denver that all Americans must put country first -- to counter the Republican exclusive claim on patriotism. Well, again, not all of us. I suppose people running for president have to say that, but Christian voters shouldn't go along with that. Can anybody imagine Jesus leading cheers shouting "USA!"?

    This morning I spoke to the annual Wheaton, Illinois, prayer breakfast. I was driven there by a local Christian leader who spends his days serving poor women and children along with troubled teenagers. When he told me he was Canadian, even though he had lived in the U.S. for years, I asked him if Canadian Christians would respond to the call to put country first. "No," he said, we are "world Christians." What a good thought and what a clear sense of Christian identity. It was a great way to begin the day after two weeks of political conventions. So let the fact-checking and the radical assertion of "faith first" begin in this political campaign.

    Source: http://blog.beliefnet.com/godspolitics/2008/09/fact-checking-and-faith-first.html

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