Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Epimenides, Bill Withers, and I

For years after becoming a Christian I struggled with justifying my appreciation for art, music, literature and film that was, and still is, considered by some in the church as secular or worldly. Rarely would I ever go so far as to admit that by ‘appreciation’ I really meant, ‘spiritually stimulating’!

For some time now I have come to understand this appreciation as a correspondence to truth. This is what happens when something that a person does, without necessary intentionality, has a particular similarity to biblical truth.
Consider the lyrics to Bill Wither’s Number One Hit, Lean on Me:

Sometimes in our lives 
We all have pain 
We all have sorrow 
But if we are wise 
We know that there's always tomorrow 

Lean on me, when you're not strong 
And I'll be your friend 
I'll help you carry on 
For it won't be long 
'Til I'm gonna need 
Somebody to lean on

Please swallow your pride 
If I have things you need to borrow 
For no one can fill those of your needs 
That you won't let show

You just call on me brother, when you need a hand (Chorus)
We all need somebody to lean on 
I just might have a problem that you'd understand 
We all need somebody to lean on

Now I already have a category for friendship from the Bible which tells me to love my neighbor as myself and that we all are to be our brother’s keeper. That is the sacred, gospel truth. So when I have occasion to hear ‘secular’ music that corresponds with this truth—like Lean On Me—my heart and mind are not pulled into the profane but toward my calling.

Now certainly there are some (perhaps many) disciples who are too immature to appreciate the harmonics between the sacred and secular, and we have to be careful here, but there are also disciples who sincerely believe that certain foods are forbidden—and the Bible says that they are wrong, not right, about that. Some go so far as to say that most anything secular is forbidden to the Christian and yet the apostle Paul outed himself as being conversant with the secular when, speaking to the Greeks at Athens, he quoted two pagan philosophers to make a biblical point. That point, driven home by quoting the pagan philosopher Epimenides to witness of God’s nature and attributes, was far more substantial than Withers singing about human camaraderie. 

Of course the intention of the unbeliever in painting, writing or composing is never to bolster the faith of Christians by corresponding to sacred subjects. But being made in the image of God they sometimes cannot help themselves. And here is where being the spiritual comes into play. We as new creations in Christ should naturally go beyond critique of the secular to harmonic appreciation and application. This is another way in which the Egyptians are plundered…and their gold does have value.

Shouldn’t I convey to my Christian brother that he can ‘lean on me’ and that ‘I’ll help you carry on’? Doesn’t that type of language really only belong to us? Just like the truth that, “in Him we live and move and have our being” was an idea stolen from our treasury and then reclaimed for all time by Paul?

And yes, there is a danger here. We do not want to become worldly.
On the other hand, how worldly was Paul the apostle? His sermons and lectures included quotes and references from secular cultural and yet he was in the world but not of the world.
He wasn’t being careful; he was being spiritual. He was bringing every musical, artistic, philosophic, and literary thought captive so that he could revel and rejoice in it


And that is the difference between spirituality and just wanting to keep your old vinyl.   

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Giving Life


Angela & I have received a few gifts of late; coffee, wine, books, cookies, selections from a garden, and a cigar. The cigar I did not share.

Presents always make me feel a little awkward—especially the ones mentioned above for they are Life, they are what the givers enjoy. So when the exchange is made, the gift and then the Thank you…my cup runs over.  

Perhaps the reason that it is better to give than to receive is that the level of emotion that accompanies the reception is not near as weighty to the giver. The giver walks away (certainly happier) but the ones gifted have to stand there and deal with all of that love. And that is not easy.

Friday, August 29, 2014

Perhaps THE Most Dangerous Website Ever

Check these out at your own risk (sorry, don't know how to do links yet)

http://www.chefsteps.com/activities/roasted-cocoa-gelato

http://www.chefsteps.com/activities/nacho-cheese

A Place To Belong

When we first moved to southwest Virginia 18 years ago, nothing here was familiar to us except the hearts of our friends; RC and Denise Sproul.
The grocery stores had different names, cell phone reception depended on what road you were on and, unless you told them different, every sandwich you ordered at any of the Mom & Pop grills around here came with lettuce, tomato, and mayonnaise.

We arrived with our two little girls, ages 2 & 3, our newborn son, a modest debt and no job. All we had was a vision and a prayer.

I remembered an old Time Magazine article on city-dwellers moving to the country. What they found was that in some of the small towns the locals resented the influx of wannabe farmers and culture shifting ideologues. Thankfully, that was not the case here in Bristol. The natives are just curious about where you are from and a little suspicious of why you would want to move here. The only problem associated with that is sometimes you get into long conversations that are hard to politely get out of. “Hey, thanks for the directions…and the coffee, no, really gotta run, thanks again, bye now!”

So, we found the land good for farming and raising a few animals. Unlike our last residence in Florida, there are actually four seasons here and all are usually very moderate. The entire area of Virginia, Tennessee, and the Carolinas have more hiking trails, rivers, trout streams, mountains, and wild raspberries than we can ever get to.

When our children got old enough we started home-schooling and discovered that there were families indigenous to this area that had been doing that here for years. The local attitude toward home-schooling runs from indifference to admiration.

We came here to begin a new life, a life that could be shared by others; and more families and individuals have come and are still coming.

Over the years, I have visited the areas where I have lived before. The rural road of my early childhood is now a congested neighborhood. I drove by the homes where my friends use to dwell; all the mail boxes have different last names now. The sleepy little beach community where I moved to when I was in my 20’s is all neon and sprawl. And the town where I lived in Texas has lost all of its definition, being swallowed up by larger cities.

When I am there and not here my spirit is disturbed and troubled. I fight the tears that want to flow…and sometimes lose. But the anguish isn’t caused by the loss of what was once familiar; it is a remembrance of how things were.

What a difference the Gospel would have made. What if my parents had known what living in a covenant community was like? I think of my precious little cousins, girls whose beauty at the earliest age was gloriously undeniable—now disfigured by the use and abuse of a life outside of Christ. Friendships, the strongest of them were weak without the bond formed by vows and the keeping of oaths.
No heroes lived on our street. Life was dark even in the daytime.  

And so very many of those with whom I attended church with after my conversion at 17; they have never known what a sacred community was like. The paradigm for covenant living has been shape-shifted from the security and joy of being tribal and organic into something industrial and disposable, and their lives reflect the loss.

I moved to Virginia to start something marvelous, to share in something potent. And I was so not the right person for the job. Being a refugee and a vagabond, a thief, a liar, and a taker of life; who was I to hope and pray for something so special and so undeserved?

I realize now that I came from a long line of villains, bad guys and dumb guys, that end up converted, living by word and sacrament. The grace of God does amazing things. You stumble and fall backwards into aspects of true life that others credit you for discovering!

This world is wicked and fallen. Though in ruins, that is not to say that it lies in dormant. The world is plagued and diseased and all of us have been infected. The only cure is Christ. This world is under siege by a heartless demon bent on destroying all who are made in the image of God. Most of his victims are deceived into existing rather than living. The only shelter and protection from him is Christ.
But what if your “cure” is watered down? What if your “shelter” is papier-mâché?  What if what you really have is different than what you think that you have?
Have you noticed that anytime a group of Christians “got real” that amazing things happened. Campouts, ski retreats, road trips all facilitated this. Really; just time, the Word, a few songs and a little honesty often combine to transport people into a dimension of spiritual life that was always there but rarely entered into. Ask someone and they will tell you the last “experience” that they had

So, what if times like that could be perpetuated? What if that way of life could be the norm? Instead of all the evangelism, quiet-times, discipleship, bible study, church services, and camp fires just being so many compartmentalized attachments to a busy, worldly life; the effects of the world allowing only glimpses and shadows of a glorious reality of a kingdom and a King. 

I needed a place to belong. My family needed a place where the landscape may change but where the eyes of the people say—‘you are mine and I am yours’. I looked for a church where there were no peripheral people and where the desire of one and all was to fervently live for Christ.

Am I selfish, idealistic or just a lunatic? Yes, I am a crazy enough to believe that this is possible. And I have found asylum.  

And though I’m crazy, I am not stupid. The village isn’t sinless. When we came, we all brought enough sin with us to destroy the universe many times over. So, when others think that we think of ourselves as perfect or having arrived well, that idea is hilarious.

And lest we deceive ourselves, let it be known that we confess the truth that we are not the best of Christians. There will always be those who shame us, and for that we are grateful. Anything and anyone that humbles us is a boon, for it helps us strive to be better for our Lord.
             
And in this, what we have found is that a little goes a long way. Speaking communally, regular increments of family worship, singing the songs that we have, teaching our children at home, maintaining the primary relational standard that we will love one another, dancing and feasting, these and other facets of the sacred community; of kingdom life, gives us joy and gladness.


We, by God’s grace, are living the cure. 

Thursday, August 28, 2014

'Uh, Rhoda, Honey…the door is still locked...'

‘And as Peter knocked at the door of the gate, a girl named Rhoda came to answer. When she recognized Peter’s voice, because of her gladness she did not open the gate, but ran in…’   
         

Seriously, we should listen to children when they speak. Here is a young girl whose heart is about to burst with joy. She cannot wait to tell the good news of Peter’s deliverance. Yes, it is funny that Peter went through all he did, to then, be left outside knocking. But who can be angry with Rhoda? She delights in the answered prayers of the church. We should hope that here are many little maidens like her among us. 

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Whetstone



Whetstone

Heavy in my hand
Like a sure responsibility and
A wisdom you can hold

Knife, shears, hoe…
None return the same.
Like men around my father.

Sharper and…ready.
Here is a debt owed,
Not by fools.

With all the present flack concerning 'Courtship'…factor this in.