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  • Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that. Hate multiplies hate, violence multiplies violence, and toughness multiplies toughness in a descending spiral of destruction.... The chain reaction of evil - hate begetting hate, wars producing more wars - must be broken, or we shall be plunged into the dark abyss of annihilation.
    - Martin Luther King, Jr., from Sojourners, Verse & Voice

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June 27, 2007

Profile: Senate Chaplain Barry Black

Barryblack_2 In case you missed last week's profile of Senate Chaplain Barry Black on PBS's Religion & Ethics Newsweekly, you can watch it online (you need a high speed internet connection). You may know that Barry Black is the first African-American and the first Seventh-day Adventist to ever be the Senate Chaplain.

I am one who feels that military chaplaincy is inconsistent with the witness Christians should be giving about the gospel of peace. I also have very serious reservations about a Christian chaplain in the Senate.

However, all that being said, I was very impressed with this expose. It packs a lot in a small time frame, showing how he grew up in the housing projects and was raised in the church. I have no doubt that God is working through him in the Senate. The world is a complicated place and some are called to minister in some very unique places.

May God continue to bless you, Pastor Black!

January 01, 2007

A Tangible Example of Missional Engagement

I am so excited to share this YouTube video with you! This 6 minute video documents the recent events in the life of a small missional Adventist community in the community of Carnegie in Greater Pittsburgh. The pastor in this video, Andrew Clark, is a friend of mine and we pastored together in Pennsylvania for a short time before I moved to L.A. Later this year I'll be spending some time talking with these guys about their community's life and future, but as you can see from this video, they are well on their way.

Andrew writes:
As many of you know, we have been searching for a home for two years in the Pittsburgh Metro area.  Although we found a place to set up shop, our whole project in Pittsburgh hinged on small-town politics, and it did not look good for us.  So we asked our supporters to come to borough council and speak on our behalf to see if we could put the decision in God's hands through the voice of the community He has been speaking to through our mingling, sympathy and meeting needs. Not only did the community show up in droves, but they made a short film of it.  A friend of our makes commercials for Comcast and regularly films town meetings.  After the meeting, I asked him if he could turn a three-hour meeting into a 5 minute short to help our friends get the gist of what went down!  The result is a secular view of not only the meeting, but of Adventist Community Services Greater Pittsburgh.  The film has NO Adventists involved in the production, make-up, or action in the film, other than a few clips of what I said at council.  It is my desire to show our church that we can be the difference we want to see in our communities, and that at least in our small corner of Metro Pittsburgh where Adventism was unheard of two years ago and no Adventist has ever set foot in our community prior to our arrival; regardless, the community gets us, whether the traditional churches looking on do or not.  I hope films like this can bridge that gap.

Also, click here to read the article in the local paper (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette) about this hearing. Way to go guys! You inspire us!

June 15, 2006

Intersections

Intersections2_1 As the title of my blog indicates, I am fascinated by the intersection of things that modern life has typically preferred to keep separate, like church and culture, religion and politics, faith and public life. So, I am naturally attracted to news stories and other media that highlight these amazing intersections. I believe these interesections represent opportunities for Christians to be aware of the the way God's reign is breaking into our world and cooperate with God's Spirit. The following are a number of articles I have discovered recently or were brought to my attention by friends.

STAUBLOG: Facing the Giants of Bad Art & Bad Theology

Dick Staub on living "in a culture that loves art but not Jesus and in a Christian sub-culture dominated by a Christianity that loves Jesus, but not good art."

The Barna Update - Has Faith Greatly Transformed Your Life?
Here, well known Christian researcher, George Barna, asks Christians whether faith as transformed their lives. He makes some observations that probalby serve to solidify many people's assumptions about liberal vs. conservative Christians. But what does Barna mean by "greatly transformed?" How would Barna's observations stack up against those made by Ron Sider in The Scandal of the Evangelical Conscience? (Kudos to John Anthony for pointing out this article).

Speaking of Faith on Deciphering the Da Vinci Code
This is a weekly radio program put out by American Public Media, self-dubbed, public radio's conversation about religion, meaning, ethics, and ideas. You can subscribe to a free podcast. I have found this programm to be an amazing resource. This issue was a very thoughtful look at the issues behind the Da Vinci Code without obsessing about the novel/film directly.

God and Gays, from USA Today
A short piece on the recent struggles of some denominations to come to terms with the place of homosexuals in the church, especially the clergy. What of Adventist Churches that are explicitly welcoming? Can we even have an open conversation in our denomination about this? I have my doubts.

May 26, 2006

Is church passé?

Cell_phone Here's an article I've been wanting to write about since I first read it early last week. It ran on the front page of the LA Times under the headline, "God's Call Comes by Cell Phone." The opening line of the article reads as follows:

A recent national poll found just 17% of adults view the local church as essential for developing faith.

I was stunned by this statistic. (It turns out this research was done by Barna Group. You might find our more about this at Barna's website). I guess I shouldn't be so shocked. I'm always talking about how we live in a post-Christian society, but America has always been the bizzare exception. Christian faith is still a huge part of our culture (reduce and domesticated though it is).

So, if this survey is to be believed, the local church is diminishing in importance in people's lives. In it's place? You guessed it...technology! The kind of technology that makes it so simple for me to put this message on my website in a few minutes before I fall off to sleep. The same technology allows me to have a nice looking church website and even podcast my sermons. But it is not just the rise of technology that has contributed to the obsolescence of the local church. I think the local church is to blame as well.

Continue reading "Is church passé?" »

May 10, 2006

Is the moral values debate shifting?

10poll_chart_lg2_1 I'm not sure how much stock to place in this, but today's New York Times/CBS News poll (conducted May 4-8) reports that 50% of Americans believe the Democrats "come closer to sharing [their] moral values." That is compared to only 37% who believe the Republican's are closer to sharing their values. Maybe the big loser is the "Neither" category which only got 5%. This is an amazing change in American public opinion after the 2004 election just two-and-a-half years ago when all the news outlets were saying that religious values tipped the scales toward George W. Bush.

Is this merely a temporary reaction to all the scandals plauging the Republican party or is that people like Rabbi Michael Lerner, Rev. Jim Wallis, Sojourners, Call to Renewal and the Network of Spiritual Progressives are beginning to make an impact on the conversation. Could it be that the discussion of what "moral values" are is widening to include concern for the poor, immoral wars, foreign policy decisions, global warming and the enviroment, genocides around the world, HIV/AIDS, and other vital issues? I hardly dare hope....

May 03, 2006

The Real News

Therealnews_2 This seems like something to keep an eye on. To learn more visit their website. If you're anything like me, you find the reporting of Jon Stewart (on Comedy Central's, The Daily Show) to be more incisive and truthful than the major news networks. You've probably also gotten the feeling that the news we hear is very carefully scripted and filtered. Serving a multi-cultural church makes me realize how little I know about the life & death issues of other countries. I hear more about Tom and Katie's new baby than the fact that today, around the world, more than 20,000 people will die, simply because they are too poor to stay alive (living on $1 a day or less).*

*The End of Poverty, by Jeffrey Sachs, p. 1. Visit the Millennium Promise website.

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