(Thanks Colson for the link)
Monday, June 30, 2014
Sunday, June 29, 2014
Friday, June 27, 2014
Mayflies
Monroe, Michigan (where I live) is a small community. Proof of this is the headline on our newspaper, which reads: "Monroe Invaded by Mayflies." In contrast, the New York Times headline reads "Iran Fractures." While the world is crumbling around us our greatest concern in Monroe in mayflies.
Mayflies live near water - they are aquatic insects. Monroe is on Lake Erie. Therefore...
Mayflies live near water - they are aquatic insects. Monroe is on Lake Erie. Therefore...
Once, years ago, my son Josh and some of his friends were camping at Sterling State Park, on the shores of Lake Erie. That night the mayflies hatched. Billions of them. Josh described the mayfly invasion as descending in biblical (Exodus-like) proportions. Mayflies landed upon them like a plague. One of Josh's friends resorted to punching them with his fists. One good strike on a mayfly's jaw and the thing is down for the count. Unfortunately, the deceased mayfly has a million siblings, and you've just killed their brother.
The lifespan of a mayfly varies from 30 minutes to one day. People who hate mayflies can take comfort in this, The mayfly that now irritates them will soon be lying in a coffin, mourned by its one billion dying siblings. "The primary function of the adult is reproduction; the mouthparts are vestigial, and the digestive system is filled with air." (See here, if you want to study mayflies.)
If, during the Great Mayfly Hatch Moses-esque Plague, you drive at night in downtown Monroe or, worse yet, in Luna Pier, the mayflies are as thick as snow. People literally shovel them off the sidewalks. Some years ago, feeling bored on a summer night, I asked Linda, "Want to go downtown and watch the mayflies?" She said, "No."
If, during the Great Mayfly Hatch Moses-esque Plague, you drive at night in downtown Monroe or, worse yet, in Luna Pier, the mayflies are as thick as snow. People literally shovel them off the sidewalks. Some years ago, feeling bored on a summer night, I asked Linda, "Want to go downtown and watch the mayflies?" She said, "No."
If you were a bug and had a day to live what would you do? A mayfly heads for a gas station and spends its life there, on the outside, looking in. Some get up close and personal with street lights. For a mayfly this defines "freedom." A mayfly's bucket list contains only one item: light.
Franz Kafka would love this. In Kafka's The Metamorphosis Gregor Samsa wakes up one morning to find out that he has morphed into a big bug. His parents freak out. Gregor's presence inspires disgust and fear. Gregor is confined to his room and eventually dies there. If you are an insect you do not fit in.
Franz Kafka would love this. In Kafka's The Metamorphosis Gregor Samsa wakes up one morning to find out that he has morphed into a big bug. His parents freak out. Gregor's presence inspires disgust and fear. Gregor is confined to his room and eventually dies there. If you are an insect you do not fit in.
Some people's lives are, by their own choosing, the social equivalent of an insect's.
- Brief.
- Asocial.
- Monomaniacal
- Obsessive
- Irrelevant.
- Primary function: reproduction.
Thursday, June 26, 2014
Praying to an Everlasting God (Prayer Summer 2014)
Petal in a can of paint |
When I pray I am addressing an all-powerful (omnipotent) being. (See here.)
I am known by an all-knowing (omniscient) being. (See here.)
I am being spoken to by an all-loving (omnibenevolent) being. (See here.)
When I pray I am conferencing with a necessarily existent (everlasting) being.
God cannot not-exist. Existence is of God's essence. This gives God an ontological stability nothing else has.
God's everlastingness means that God never began to exist and will never cease to exist. God never came into being, because God IS.
When Moses asked God "Who are you? What is your name?" God responded by using the verb "to be."
God said to Moses, “I am who I am. This is what you are to say to the Israelites:
‘I am has sent me to you.’”
Exodus 3:14
God said to Moses, "My name is I IS."
I'm not forcing Greek philosophy onto the Hebrew text. The Hebrew hayah is hard to translate. It could mean "I will be who I will be." It's a form of the verb "to be." God is BEING.
No wonder God has no fear. Nothing could ever, in principle, harm God. In this way God is like a rock, except more solid.
This morning I am conferencing (= praying) with an all-powerful, all-knowing, all-loving, everlasting, necessarily existent God. I am dialoguing with a quite-secure Person. This gives me confidence and strength, to think and thank that such a God loves me as well.
Realizing this, who wouldn't have time to pray?
***
BTW...
Occasionally I hear someone who thinks they have come up with a trick question ask "If God made the universe, who made God?" The answer, of course, is that this is a nonsense question. For if God is necessarily existent than God never began to exist. Only things that begin to exist have a cause. God is a Uncaused Being (in this sense akin to Aristotle's metaphysically necessary "Unmoved Mover."
Wednesday, June 25, 2014
Tuesday, June 24, 2014
Jesus-Followers & Culture Wars (Notes)
Here are notes I'm using for my presentation today on "Jesus-Followers & Culture Wars." (In our HSRM conference.)
***
JESUS-FOLLOWERS &
CULTURE WARS: In
this workshop I will share how I respond to “culture wars.” How do we respond
when the surrounding culture threatens to steamroller over us with values that
are antithetical to those of Jesus? I will identify some of the existing,
emerging, and to-come cultural battles we are facing, and especially share how
I am responding to the matter of gay marriage.
Led
by John Piippo.
*****
Culture defined:
Culture is the secondary environment that humanity
builds upon the creation, to include: language, habits, ideas, beliefs,
customs, social organization, inherited artifacts, technical processes, and
values.
*****
When Jesus arrived on the scene there was a
clash of cultures.
Jesus’ kingdom is “not of this world!”
So there were culture wars. (In the OT as well.)
Jesus-Followers have always had culture wars.
Biblically, culture is
“the world.”
Rom. 12:1 – Do not be conformed to the standards of this world/age…
αἰών,n \{ahee-ohn'}
1) for ever, an unbroken age, perpetuity of time, eternity 2) the worlds, universe 3) period of time, age
1) for ever, an unbroken age, perpetuity of time, eternity 2) the worlds, universe 3) period of time, age
In this sense we’ve
always had “culture wars.”
A clash of kingdoms. Kingdoms in conflict.
BTW: Christianity in the 1950s was NOT
exemplary of God’s kingdom in many ways.
I’m not at all interested in going back to
“the way things were,” unless you mean by that Acts chs. 1 & 2.
EXAMPLE: African American Christianity faced
hundreds of years of culture wars.
From the beginning of the Church until the present, J-F-ers have
wrestled with a fundamental
problem: how to relate to the world and its culture.
How do we act in and interact with the society
which surrounds them, and of which they are a part?
Have you heard the saying:
Christians are to be in the world, but not of it. But what does
that really mean?
Today it seems that many believers are of
the world, and not in it.
If you are “of” something, then you are not
“in” it.
E.g.,
There is coffee in this coffee.
That is, many Christians are identical w.
culture…,
We are more like our surrounding culture than
ever before, though we don’t realize it or think so.
The Church then gets contaminated with our
unconscious worldliness.
We have this problem
of “Christ and culture.” (H. Richard Niebuhr, Christ and Culture)
This problem is created, at least in part, by
New Testament warnings against
worldliness, and by its simultaneous exhortation to have an impact upon
the world for the gospel.
Regarding warnings
about worldliness, note these admonitions:
Rom. 12:2 - And do not be conformed to this world [aion; age], but be transformed by the renewing of your
mind, that you may prove what the will of God is, that which is good and
acceptable and perfect.
2 Cor. 6:14-17 - 14 Do not be yoked
together with unbelievers. For what do righteousness and wickedness
have in common? Or what fellowship can light have with darkness? 15 What
harmony is there between Christ and Belial[b]? Or what does a
believer have in common with an unbeliever? 16 What
agreement is there between the temple of God and idols? For we are the
temple of the living God…. “Come out from among them and be separate”…”
“Belial” is a Hebrew word meaning “worthlessness.” In the
Intertestamental period this word was used to refer to Satan. (David Garland)
Col. 2:8 - 8 See to it that no one takes you captive through
hollow and deceptive philosophy, which depends on human tradition and the
elemental spiritual forces of this world rather than on
Christ. [Lit. “the elements of this world.”]
James 1:27 - Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and
faultless is this: to look after orphans
and widows in their distress and
to keep oneself from being polluted by the world.
κόσμος,n \{kos'-mos}
1) an apt and harmonious arrangement or constitution, order, government 2) ornament, decoration, adornment, i.e. the arrangement of the stars, 'the heavenly hosts', as the ornament of the heavens. 1 Pet. 3:3 3) the world, the universe 4) the circle of the earth, the earth 5) the inhabitants of the earth, men, the human family 6) the ungodly multitude; the whole mass of men alienated from God, and therefore hostile to the cause of Christ 7) world affairs, the aggregate of things earthly 7a) the whole circle of earthly goods, endowments riches, advantages, pleasures, etc, which although hollow and frail and fleeting, stir desire, seduce from God and are obstacles to the cause of Christ 8) any aggregate or general collection of particulars of any sort 8a) the Gentiles as contrasted to the Jews (Rom. 11:12 etc) 8b) of believers only, John 1:29; 3:16; 3:17; 6:33; 12:47 1 Cor. 4:9; 2 Cor. 5:19
1) an apt and harmonious arrangement or constitution, order, government 2) ornament, decoration, adornment, i.e. the arrangement of the stars, 'the heavenly hosts', as the ornament of the heavens. 1 Pet. 3:3 3) the world, the universe 4) the circle of the earth, the earth 5) the inhabitants of the earth, men, the human family 6) the ungodly multitude; the whole mass of men alienated from God, and therefore hostile to the cause of Christ 7) world affairs, the aggregate of things earthly 7a) the whole circle of earthly goods, endowments riches, advantages, pleasures, etc, which although hollow and frail and fleeting, stir desire, seduce from God and are obstacles to the cause of Christ 8) any aggregate or general collection of particulars of any sort 8a) the Gentiles as contrasted to the Jews (Rom. 11:12 etc) 8b) of believers only, John 1:29; 3:16; 3:17; 6:33; 12:47 1 Cor. 4:9; 2 Cor. 5:19
1 John 2:15 - Do not love the world [kosmos]
or anything in the world. If
anyone loves the world, love for the
Father is not in them.
On the other hand, the
New Testament commands us to engage culture:
Matt. 5:13-16 - You are the salt of the earth… 14 “You are
the light of the world. A town built on a hill cannot be hidden. 15 Neither do people light a lamp
and put it under a bowl. Instead they put it on its stand, and it gives light
to everyone in the house.16 In the same way, let your
light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in heaven.
Matt. 28:19-20 - 19 Therefore go and
make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of
the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20 and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And
surely I am with you always, to the
very end of the age.”
John 17:15-16 - 15 My prayer is not
that you take them out of the world [kosmos] but that you
protect them from the evil one.16 They are not of the
world, even as I am not of it.
2 Cor. 5:20 - 20 We are therefore Christ’s ambassadors, as though God were making his appeal
through us.
Col. 4:5 - Be wise in
the way you act toward outsiders; make
the most of every opportunity.
*****
SO… Culture is not an unqualified evil.
We are to incarnate ourselves in
culture.
John 1- the Word became flesh and
dwelt among us.
Kosmos is used in John 1 – the Word was in the
world but the world did not know him.
1
Corinthians 9:20-23
20 To
the Jews I became like a Jew, to win the Jews. To those under the law I
became like one under the law (though I myself am not under the law), so
as to win those under the law. 21 To those not
having the law I became like one not having the law (though I am not free
from God’s law but am under Christ’s law), so as to win those not having
the law.22 To the weak I became weak, to win the
weak. I have become all things to all people so that by all possible
means I might save some. 23 I do all this for the
sake of the gospel, that I may share in its blessings.
There are good godly things in pagans, or in other
religions.
Romans
2:14-15 – here is
the idea that even non-J-F-ers have a God-consciousness.
14 (Indeed, when Gentiles, who do not
have the law, do by nature things required by the law, they are a law for
themselves, even though they do not have the law. 15 They
show that the requirements of the law are written on their hearts, their
consciences also bearing witness, and their thoughts sometimes accusing them
and at other times even defending them.)
Romans
13:3-4
3 For rulers hold no terror for those
who do right, but for those who do wrong. Do you want to be free from fear of
the one in authority? Then do what is right and you will be commended. 4 For
the one in authority is God’s servant for your good. But if you do wrong, be
afraid, for rulers do not bear the sword for no reason. They are God’s
servants, agents of wrath to bring punishment on the wrongdoer.
The
Roman Empire allowed Paul religious freedom to spread the Good News about
Jesus.
*****
JESUS AND CULTURE: Our relationship to Culture
3
Possible Christian attitudes toward culture:
1)
We should reject and/or
condemn the culture.
2)
We should accommodate
ourselves to the culture as much as possible.
3)
We should seek to
transform the culture with Christian principles.
I think… We should seek to transform the culture with
Christian principles.
1)
What is the church's
role as an institution?
i. 2 Corinthians 5:18-20 – God was in Christ
reconciling the world to himself. We are
Christ’s ambassadors.
1.
E.g. – Islam.
a.
Note: the cultural air
we breathe is pluralism.
2.
I prayed for Eide
Alawan.
ii. 2 Corinthians 10:3-5
1. 3 For though we live in the
world, we do not wage war as the world does. 4 The weapons we
fight with are not the
weapons of the world. On the contrary, they have divine power to demolish strongholds. 5 We demolish
arguments and every pretension that sets itself up against the knowledge of
God, and we take captive every
thought to make it obedient to Christ.
2)
What is our role as J-F-ers?
i. Matthew 5:13-14
1. 13 “You are
the salt of the earth. But if the salt loses its saltiness, how can it be made
salty again? It is no longer good for anything, except to be thrown out and
trampled underfoot. 14 “You are the light of the
world. A town built on a hill cannot be hidden.
2.
NOTE: For me, in some
ways these are exciting times to live in.
*****
THE SECULARIZING OF CULTURE – 3 kinds of
“secular”
(A Secular Age;
‘secular’ = temporal, rather than eternal)
Immanent, rather than transcendent.
How deep this thing is.
Charles
Taylor – 3 kinds of “secular.”
Secular1 – E.g., when a pastor pursues a religion vocation, while
an auto mechanic pursues a “secular” vocation.
This is the so-called
“sacred/secular” divide.
‘Religious’ – in the
church, but not in the workplace.
“Secular” here means something like “temporal.” Or, perhaps, “worldly”
as opposed to “spiritual.”
Here we have the withdrawal of the religious worldview from the public
sphere. The move from enchanted reality to de-enchanted reality.
This is the disenchantment of the cosmos.
Secular2 –
Having no religious affiliation or “religious” beliefs.
A-religious.
The second stage is seen in the decline in personal religious practice
and commitment.
This is different from secular1 – In secular2 there is no religious sphere
at all, for the individual who is secularized in this way.
This is an individual's withdrawal from the community. People shift the
source of meaning away from external 'eternal' sources to more personal
choices.
The world becomes more and more disenchanted.
According to secularism, political spaces (and the constitutions that
create them) should carve out a realm purified of the contingency,
particularity, and irrationality of religious belief and instead be governed by
universal, neutral rationality. Secularism is always secularism2. And
secularization theory is usually a confident expectation that societies will be
become secular2 — that is, characterized by decreasing religious belief and
participation.
People who self-identify as “secular” are usually identifying as
areligious.
-
Smith, James
K. A. (2014-05-01). How (Not) to Be Secular (Kindle Locations 467-473). Wm. B.
Eerdmans Publishing Company. Kindle Edition.
Secular3 - society is secular3 insofar as religious belief or
belief in God is understood to be one option among others, and thus contestable
(and contested).
This is the most recent
development.
This is the shift in the culture away from assuming Religious Faith is the
norm, or the default expectation of how to live your life. Faith is now one
option among many. This is society living in a universe which has no central
point around which it revolves.
We live in a society where belief in God is unchallenged and indeed,
unproblematic, to someone in whom it is understood to be one option among
others, and frequently not the easiest to embrace” (p. 3). It is in this sense
that we live in a “secular age” even if religious participation might be
visible and fervent. (Smith, 478-480)
Taylor writes: “For the first time in history a purely
self-sufficient humanism came to be a widely available option. I mean by
this a humanism accepting no final
goals beyond human flourishing, nor
any allegiance to anything else beyond this flourishing. Of no previous society
was this true” (Secular Age,
p. 18).
Terry Eagleton – “SOCIETIES
BECOME SECULAR not when they dispense with religion altogether, but when they
are no longer especially agitated by it.” Eagleton, Terry (2014-02-01). Culture
and the Death of God (Kindle Locations 53-54). Yale University Press. Kindle
Edition.
Your “secular” neighbors
aren’t looking for “answers” — for some bit of information that is missing from
their mental maps.
To the contrary, they have completely different maps.
You’ve realized that instead of nagging questions about God or the
afterlife, your neighbors are oriented by all sorts of longings and “projects”
and quests for significance.
There doesn’t seem to be anything “missing” from their lives — so you
can’t just come proclaiming the good news of a Jesus who fills their
“God-shaped hole.” They don’t have any sense that the “secular” lives they’ve
constructed are missing a second floor.
In many ways, they have constructed webs of meaning that provide almost
all the significance they need in their lives (though a lot hinges on that
“almost”). (JKA Smith)
This isn’t like the Mars Hill of Saint Paul’s experience (in Acts 17)
where people are devoted to all kinds of deities and you get to add to their
pantheon by talking about the one, true God. No, it seems that many have
managed to construct a world of significance that isn’t at all bothered by
questions of the divine — though that
world might still be haunted in some ways, haunted by that “almost.” Your
neighbors inhabit what Charles Taylor calls an “immanent frame”; they are no
longer bothered by “the God question” as a question because they are devotees
of “exclusive humanism” — a way of being-in-the -world that offers significance without transcendence. They don’t feel like anything is missing.
So what does it look
like to bear witness in a secular age? Here is what I am doing.
1.
Abide in
Christ.
a.
This brings
discernment.
i. Discernment is a function of intimacy.
b.
I am being
led by God re. culture.
2.
One thing
that happened to me is: I was led, by God, to teach at MCCC.
3.
I have found
that a number of students have echoes of transcendence in them.
a.
They want to
talk about God and God-things.
b.
I teach; and
leave the results to God.
c.
I still
“witness” to the reality of God.
d.
I have had
atheists become God-believers.
4.
JKA Smith
says that people today live in a “cross-pressured” situation — suspended
between the malaise of immanence and the memory of transcendence…” Smith, James
K. A. (2014-05-01). How (Not) to Be Secular (Kindle Locations 88-89). Wm. B.
Eerdmans Publishing Company. Kindle Edition.
5.
JKA Smith -
It is my sense that more of us live in worlds like those portrayed by David
Foster Wallace than those mapped by either new atheists or religious
fundamentalists. It is this sort of contested, cross-pressured, haunted world
that is “secular” — not a world sanitized of faith and transcendence, flattened
to the empirical. (How (Not) to Be Secular, Kindle Locations 416-418)
6.
This, BTW,
is why I am Pentecostal. What can be convincing is: heaven invading earth.
a.
Power.
b.
More than
apologetics?
7.
Love will win
the day.
8.
9.
A
10.
a
*****
Secular3 – this is the
soil in which the gay marriage idea is flourishing.
HOW TO RESPOND TO THE
ISSUE OF GAY MARRIAGE
Love… always.
Don’t succumb to the
“appeal to popularity” (“Everyone is accepting this idea.”)
A two-fold approach:
For Jesus-followers.
What does
Scripture say?
Of critical importance
in determining the relevance of 1 Cor 6: 9 and 1 Tim 1: 10 for contemporary
discussions of same-sex intercourse is the meaning of the terms arsenokoitai
and malakoi. Some scholars argue that the meaning of these terms cannot be
known, or that they refer to something other than participants in same-sex
intercourse, or that they designate only distinct types of homosexuals that
bear little resemblance to contemporary expressions of homosexuality. If any of
these positions were true, it might discredit their use by those opposed to
homosexual practice. Gagnon, Robert A (2010-10-01). The Bible and Homosexual
Practice: Texts and Hermeneutics (Kindle Locations 5671-5675). Abingdon Press.
Kindle Edition.
1 Tim. 1:9-11 - arsenokoitais
9 We also know that the law is made not
for the righteous but for lawbreakers and rebels, the ungodly and sinful, the
unholy and irreligious, for those who kill their fathers or mothers, for murderers, 10 for
the sexually immoral, for those practicing homosexuality, for slave
traders and liars and perjurers—and for whatever else is contrary to the sound
doctrine 11 that conforms to the gospel concerning
the glory of the blessed God, which he entrusted to me.
The Greek word translated here as
"homosexuality" is arsenokoitais (ἀρσενοκοίταις). In
the Christian theological discussion about homosexuality there is debate over
the meaning of this word.
1
Cor. 6:9 - malakoi
… do you not know that wrongdoers will not
inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived: Neither the sexually
immoral nor idolaters nor adulterers nor men who have sex with men
9ἢ οὐκ οἴδατε ὅτι ἄδικοι θεοῦ βασιλείαν οὐκληρονομήσουσιν; μὴ πλανᾶσθε: οὔτε πόρνοι οὔτε εἰδωλολάτραι οὔτε μοιχοὶ οὔτεμαλακοὶ οὔτε ἀρσενοκοῖται
In the vice list of 1
Cor 6: 9-10, I have translated malakoi, which literally means "the soft
ones," as "effeminate males who play the sexual role of
females"; and arsenokoitai, which literally means "malebedders,"
as "males who take other males to bed." Advocates of homosexuality
among Christians offer other readings. Some narrow the meaning and others
expand it. - Gagnon, Robert A (2010-10-01). The Bible and Homosexual Practice:
Texts and Hermeneutics (Kindle Locations 5677-5680). Abingdon Press. Kindle
Edition.
For secular3-ists.
The core issue is the
definition and proposed redefinition of “marriage.”
Advocates of redefining marriage to
include same-sex relationships appeal to the principle of equality.
We cannot, however, understand what equality does and does
not require without first determining what marriage is. (Robert George)
The discussion of “marriage
equality” cannot logically happen until we agree on the definition of
“marriage.”
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