Why Obama? July 19, 2008
Posted by Alien Drums in Politics.Tags: Abortion, Democrats, Obama, Politics, Republicans
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I generally wait later in the election process to make my decision, but I’m pretty sure this time that I’m going with Barack Obama. Why? I’m not totally sure. Something is special about this man, and some things have changed inside me.
As for him, it’s not just how he speaks; it’s what he says. The stuff about change does not grab me at all. Change is neither good nor bad in and of itself. There is good change and there is bad change, and sometimes we can’t provide the proper anaylsis regarding the goodness or badness of a change until after some time has passed.
I do resonate with bringing hope to people who have little hope on the economic or social side of things. As a spiritual person, I find my greatest and most lasting hope beyond the realm of the political and believe that is where all genuine hope is found. But our government should provide a sense of hope within its realm of influence. We should have reason to hope that wars can be avoided if at all possible. We should have reason to hope that we can improve our personal or family economic position if we work hard and are frugal. We should have reason to hope that the judicial system will, in fact, be just. The most economically and socially deprived should, in the United States, be able to have hope in a better tomorrow.
And now about the change inside of me. I’m officially a Republican; I believe in individual freedom and in the importance of a free-market system. I also believe in government restraint; that it cannot solve every problem, that individual responsibility is important. That has not changed. But I also care deeply about the down and outs of society; I care because Jesus cared. I thought a “compassionate conservativism” could deliver on all fronts; I am now having my doubts. Caring for the least of these is more important than caring for the rich and richer.
Another thing also has happened; I’ve realized that my pro-life position isn’t being advanced by electing so-called pro-life candidates. I haven’t made abortion a trump issue in my choices, but it has been very important; and it hasn’t made any difference. I’ve sacrificed a lot of other caring and life-honoring positions in my desire to drastically limit abortions. It simply hasn’t mattered much, so it doesn’t make sense to make that the most important issue in making my choice of candidates. I’m still pro-life and believe a woman’s right to an abortion should be more severely limited in order to protect the rights of the child, especially those that have reached the stage of sustainable life.
So, enough said of a general sort. I recognize that I need to get specific about issues so that I can either better explain for support for Obama or change to support McCain.
Loving Gore’s challenge July 18, 2008
Posted by Alien Drums in Environment.Tags: Al Gore, Environment
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“We’re borrowing money from China to buy oil from the Persian Gulf to burn it in ways that destroy the planet. Every bit of that has to change.” — Al Gore, quoted in The New York Times
Mr. Gore is doing our political system a great service. He is standing apart from the campaign battle in order to raise broader issues. His latest challenge is commendable — to move the entire U.S. energy grid to a carbon-free approach in 10 years. Even supporters of the direction question the timetable, but it conveys the urgency of this need for change.
There are two basic challenges–technological and political. I suspect the latter is the bigger.
Here are a couple of paragraphs from The New York Times story that I loved:
Like a modern Jeremiah, Mr. Gore called down thunder to justify the spending of trillions of dollars to remake the American power system, a plan fraught with technological and political challenges that goes far beyond the changes recently debated in Congress and by world leaders.
“The survival of the United States of America as we know it is at risk,” he said in a midday speech to a friendly crowd of mostly young supporters in Washington. “And even more — if more should be required — the future of human civilization is at stake.”
God comes to Arkansas June 20, 2008
Posted by Alien Drums in Christianity.Tags: Faith, Religion, Spirituality
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God is on Interstate 30 in southwest Arkansas tonight. Of course, He’s in other places, as well; but I met him in Arkansas.
We are driving south back to Texas. My wife is driving, and I’m now typing. The magic of an air card gives me Internet connection as we drive, although somewhat intermittently in Arkansa.
This encounter has been building. Let me work backwards.
About dark, my wife took over the driving, and I reclined in the passenger’s seat. Casting Crowns played in the stereo. As their CD “Lifesongs” came to the end, my wife said she wanted to listen again. Then the second song came up again, “Praise You in This Storm.” An hour earlier, when I was driving and it played, I told my wife that I would like this song played at my funeral; she said she wanted the same thing. The second time around, this song just grabbed me again. It always does; it’s just one of those songs that connects.
Now, let me go back a few of hours. After an afternoon of strolling around Memphis, we returned to our downtown hotel only to learn the car had been towed. It was complicated; but the hotel had parked it illegally but gave me the key. I tried to be kind but firm, and eventually they paid the $135 to get it out of the city pound. Frustrating, but not a freak-out time.
Back a little further, my youngest son and I sat at an outdoor table and enjoyed some Ben and Jerry’s ice cream after visiting the famous ducks at The Peabody. Several times he said how much fun he had with just the two of us spending time together.
Back another step, my son and I visited The Lorraine Hotel where Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated. The National Civil Rights Museum is attached. It reflects the history of African Americans in America–an excruciatingly sad and disturbing tale. The first part of the museum ends in the room adjacent to where Dr. King spent his last night. The wall between the two rooms has been replaced with glass. It’s like being a voyeur into the past of 40 years ago–the bed covers disturbed and used cigarettes snuffed out in an ashtray. To think back to what lay on the other side of the door–death–the end of one life, but the beginning of the impact of a martyr.
Back to the night before, a woman at the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship General Assembly spoke about ministry to prostitutes and strippers in Europe. She spoke of just loving them in the name of Christ and seeing how God touched them, healed them, changed them gradually, not always perfectly.
Back to the dinner before hosted by Associated Baptist Press and reminders of the impact for good of a free press in America, specifically in the civil rights movement. It made me proud that I had been a journalist, even though I no longer practice the art; and it reminded me of why I became a journalist in the first place. Kate Campbell sang an amazing song, “Freedom Train.” Moved; I was moved.
One more step back, I heard John Killinger speak about salvation. His view is not a common view among Baptists; it is a more open, freer way of understanding salvation.
Enough backward looking. It all built up in me, so that as God turned out the heavenly lights and my wife took the wheel of the car, I had time to think. I believe God told me something, but I’m going to sleep on it before I share it.
No, wait. I must give the nutshell now before new light scares the thought away.
I think conservative, so-called Bible-believing Christianity has gotten it all wrong, which means I have gotten it wrong for so long, way too long. I simply think real faith in Christ should produce more people who are really like Christ. It’s time to really get serious about loving God and loving people. And doing that, I suspect, is going to mean that I’m going to have to get more serious about putting Christ at the center of my faith and interpret all of the other parts of Scripture, including Paul, by what Christ said and did.
I need night to think; but there it is in a nutshell. Nothing drastic for me; but it is for me.
So long away May 12, 2008
Posted by Alien Drums in Uncategorized.add a comment
It has been so long since I have written. The busy-ness of life has taken over. I blog some as part of my job; and, as so often is the case, job takes over. It’s amazing to me that people still find things I wrote months ago and comment; I, however, have not been a good conversationalist. Maybe I can return.
Quote search – Worldview August 30, 2007
Posted by Alien Drums in Uncategorized.Tags: Worldview
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Today’s topic: Worldview.
I have a number of quotes from one wonderful article in First Things journal, but I’ll share only one here:
“First Things means, first, that the first thing to be said about public life is that public life is not the first thing. First Things means, second, that there are first things, in the sense of first principles, for the right ordering of public life.” (Editors, “Putting First Things First,” First Things, Mach 2000, p. 11)
Quote search – Philosophy August 29, 2007
Posted by Alien Drums in Philosophy.add a comment
Another quote search: Philosophy.
If you don’t know what this is about, look back a couple of entries.
Here’s what I have so far on Philosophy, and it even includes one of my own:
“I have at times feared philosophy, but I love it — what little I have dabbled in it. It is about knowing, and knowing can be scary, but it is also rewarding.” (Ferrell Foster, “Overwhelming Importance” blog, Sept. 6, 2006)
Philosophy “builds cathedrals before the workmen have moved a stone, and it destroys them before the elements have worn down their arches. It is the architect of the buildings of the spirit, and it is also their solvent: –and the spiritual precedes the material.” (Alfred North Whitehead, Science and the Modern World, 1925, pp. viii-ix)
Quote search – Spirituality August 28, 2007
Posted by Alien Drums in Spirituality.add a comment
Same search as yesterday, just a different topic — Spirituality.
Here’s what I have so far:
“[T]he spiritual precedes the material.” (Alfred North Whitehead, Science and the Modern World, 1925, pp. ix)
Quote search – Religion August 27, 2007
Posted by Alien Drums in Buddhism, Christianity, Islam, Religion.Tags: Judaism
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I’m asking for your help — the help of anyone reading this. I would like for you to share some of your favorite quotes. Let me explain.
I’m trying to do something that may seem a bit over the top. I’m trying to outline what I believe about this and that, about everything from Spirituality to War, from Angels to Psychology. You get the picture.
I’m 52 years old, and I can see more clearly that there is an end to all of this material world living. For some ridiculous reason, I would like my children to be able to find out what Dad thought about some of the big issues of life and some of the not-so-big ones, as well.
Here’s how I’m doing it: If you have read this blog before, you know I like to quote people. I figure if someone else said something really well, why do I need to try to say it really average. So I have decided to start organizing quotes with which I agree — emphasis on “agree.” For example: here’s entries to this point under Religion:
“Religion points us to the last things, framing the final direction that informs our decisions about life, both personal and public. The chief service of religion, then, is to teach us that the first things are the last things.” (Editors, “Putting First Things First,” First Things, Mach 2000, p. 12)
“[G]reat religions in their crusading youth spread through the nations the peace of Heaven and the sword of the Lord.” (Alfred North Whitehead, Science and the Modern World, 1925, p. 1)
“Judaism and Christianity—unlike Buddhism, Islam, and other traditions—understand creation and redemption in historical continuity; the accent of hope is not on salvation from the world but on the salvation of the world.” (Richard John Neuhaus, “The Public Square: A Pope of the First Millennium at the Threshold of the Third,” First Things, January 1995, No. 49, p. 84)
You get the idea. (By the way, I’m a Christian, but I think truth is revealed in other faiths, as well.) Now, I would like to expand on each of those thoughts, but right now I’m just collecting and organizing.
So here’s how I would like your help: Share with me your favorite quotes about Religion. It may be really profound or really funny or really sad; most importantly, it should be something you think is true about religion in general.
Missing in Sunday School August 26, 2007
Posted by Alien Drums in Bible, Christianity, Church, Spirituality.Tags: Sunday School
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This morning I taught my Sunday School class like I do almost every week of the year. It’s a wonderful group of people, and I’ve had the privilege to teach the class for more than six years. The average age of the class is probably a little older than me, about 58-60 probably — men and women.
Usually we have about 30 people in our class but sometimes we reach as high as 40 or more. Earlier this year, the church finally moved us into a larger room that was more fitting to our size, and the attendance promptly decreased. We had about 20 this morning, only 12 last week. Some would say it’s just a summer slump, but I wonder.
I know I shouldn’t care how many people I teach, but I do. It’s not, however, just the numbers that bother me. I get the sneaking suspicion that nothing that Scripture is saying is making a difference — that all of us middle-agers are already pretty set in our ways — and even when we learn something new, it doesn’t matter in how we live.
As in most things spiritual, I do not have a firm and easy answer. I will continue on for now, but I do not want to just say that’s the way it is, get used to it. I don’t want to get used to low living; I want to pursue high living, and I don’t mean what the Miller High Life commercials put forth.
System of belief vs. redemptive life July 26, 2007
Posted by Alien Drums in Bible, Christianity, Emerging church, Postmodern, Scripture, Theology.7 comments
I sent this quote to a family member recently:
Brian McLaren:
“When Christian faith presents itself as a system of belief, postmodern people are often skeptical. But when it presents itself as a redemptive way of life within human history, they see something unique and hopeful.”
He responded with the following:
“Our Christian faith is both a system of beliefs and a way of life. My question for Maclaren is this: Is it not our beliefs that determine how we live and think and act? Postmodern people, including myself at times, tend to believe in all sorts of things that are contrary to the word of God. And at the same time they (we) try to live a “redemptive life” that will hopefully, in the end, outweigh a life of unbelief. Redemptive living cannot be a substitue for a right believing in, and knowing of, God.
“Redemptive living is a necessary result of walking and talking and trusting Jesus and His word.”
And here’s my response:
I think the problem is not “belief,” it’s “system.” Modern, rationalistic man has done something that Christ, a premodern, did not seek to do; modern man sought to systematize belief, to construct a logical system of A+B=C. This systematizing effort actually began much before modernity but Jesus did not do it. He almost completely used story (his own and the one’s he told). Story is a great way to convey truth but it is not a systematized way of conveying truth. When you start to try to organize and systematize you almost invariably change it because you are trying to connect dots that previously were not connected. Not systemization can be helpful because it helps us organize our thinking, but we need to recognize that the act of putting it into a system changes the message.
Regarding your question: “Is it not our beliefs that determine how we live and think and act?” Here’s how I would approach it: Some would say how you live and think and act actually reflect what you believe. That is true in a sense, but I’m reminded of Paul in Romans saying that he did what he did not want to do and didn’t do the things he wanted to. I believe the Fall has produced an inconsistency within men and women that distorts the easy connection between beliefs and actions. Most believers would affirm that believers do in fact still sin. In other words, even though they believe it’s wrong to sin, they (we) still sin. If their actions reflect what they truly believe, then they’re not a Christian because they did not trust Christ in that circumstance. As a result, you cannot be absolute about that. I think you can say that the difference between your beliefs and your actions create a discontinuity in life that causes great spiritual and mental discomfort. Which reminds me of the old quote about not resting until we rest in Thee.
You said postmodern people tend to believe in all sorts of things that are contrary to the Word of God. Of course, that is not isolated to postmodern people; modernists are just as contrary. But the difficulty is the “contrary to the Word of God” part. That is stated as if it is an established fact. The reality is not so simple. Many believing modernists and postmodernists disagree on what the Word of God teaches. For instance, people used to use that very phrase to justify slavery and then racial discrimination. Now, we think that is ridiculous, but those Christians who once believed that thought Scripture was clear in that regard. It’s because they looked at Scripture through a cultural window and found what they wanted to find. That tendency has been there throughout the history of the church, and so I suspect that you and I are susceptible to that same tendency. What seems obvious to us is not so obvious to people of other times, places or cultural perspectives.
Now, we can take Jesus’ words to the bank: “For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten son. …” But we still have to interpret what that means to us today. That may seem easy, but it’s not. The first step is trying to understand what the original Greek words that were written down mean because, as you know, every translation is an interpretation. (Plus there’s another translation that has taken place — Aramaic to Greek — that scholars can only speculate about.) To understand the words requires comparisons to other texts, biblical and non-bibilical, that use the words. Once you have a pretty good grasp of what the words and phrases and sentences mean, then you start having to compare them with the other words of Christ to see how they might work together; then you compare them with other scriptural teachings on the same topic and again try to understand how they relate. Of course, there are seeming contradictions. Well, in fact, there are some genuine contradictions but they are not that critical. In trying to deal with the seeming contradictions you must employ another level of interpretation. And then you look at what other Christians have said through history and how they have interpreted those passages. More interpretation.
So, while it’s easy to say “contrary to the Word of God,” that’s a really fuzzy statement; and well-meaning, “orthodox,” believing experts and spiritual giants through the years have interpreted Scripture differently. While I might say that some things McLaren and other postmodernists might believe appear to be contrary to Scripture, I could say the same thing about any Christian thinker. I am using my interpretation of Scripture to say that.
Of course, this doesn’t even begin to deal with one’s basic approach to Scripture. Everything I just said can be said about people who approach Scripture as God’s unique, authoritative, even inerrant Word of God. If you don’t say any or all of those things then you open yourself to even more possible interpretations.
I don’t think McLaren is saying that redemptive living is a substitute for belief; he’s saying that redemptive living is what attracts others to our Savior. If faith in Christ has changed us, redeemed our lives, then others have hope that it can redeem their lives, as well. As in the early church, what really attracted people to Christ was the fact that believers loved one another and that it showed itself in outward ways.
Short question, long response. Great to hear from you. I pray for you every day because, like Christ, I love you. Blessings.