Archive for February, 2005

On this Day in History

Posted in Uncategorized on February 21, 2005 by pilgrimramblings


1997: Dolly the sheep is cloned
A sheep named Dolly is cloned by scientists in Edinburgh and is being hailed as one of the most significant breakthroughs of the decade.

1972: IRA bomb kills six at Aldershot barracks
Five women and an army priest are killed in an IRA bomb attack on army premises in Surrey.

1991: Bush threatens Iraq with land war
The US President, George Bush, gives Iraq until 1700 GMT tomorrow to pull out of Kuwait or face the full force of the allies. (Amazing how history repeats itself, and quickly too)

Hotel Rwanda…

Posted in Uncategorized on February 18, 2005 by pilgrimramblings

Everyone should see this film. It chronicles the 1994 genocide of over 800,000 Tutsis at the hands of the Hutu majority. It will leave you speechless, especially concerning the lack of involvement on behalf of the West, not least the United States and the Clinton administration. Check out the trailer here:

http://www.apple.com/trailers/mgm/hotel_rwanda/

I have lent…

Posted in Uncategorized on February 17, 2005 by pilgrimramblings

I was telling someone the other day that I was observing lent and in trying to articulate this I began by saying, “I have lent.” My friend was perplexed and intrigued all at once. I am trying to get myself off my addiction to regular soda so I am abstaining from all sugar water. It is a little rough but I hope that God will reward me with new taste buds or self-control. Maybe that is some form of retribution theology but I am tempted to believe it in this drastic period of my life! I do have to say that Diet Dr. Pepper and Diet Coke have kept me company and I am forever indebted, so thank you to them. Surprisingly, Diet Coke and Rum is not as bad as I thought it would be. Anyone else practicing lent? What are your thoughts?

P.S. Here are a couple of links to friends with good blogs.

theparish.typepad.com
wilcosong.blogspot.com
delladawn.blogspot.com
j-do.blogspot.com

Valentine’s Day Massacre

Posted in Uncategorized on February 14, 2005 by pilgrimramblings

I think Valentine’s day is from the devil. Seriously, there is no other holiday that makes people feel more lonely and unloved (even more than christmas) than this day. I will admit it, I have celebrated in the past and most of my life this day has never been too much of a problem. But here is my question: Why do we take one day out of the year to show how much we care for someone else? Maybe we should try to make our lives like Valentine’s day everyday. Same goes for christmas. I am not saying give gifts everyday (though the economy would soar), but let us try to make everyday special for someone else. I know, that is some of the most idealistic and naive jargon you have ever heard, but I need to believe it or I am turning to nihilism. I can’t do it perfectly, but I don’t think that is the point. What do you think?

Fellow heretics unite!

Posted in Uncategorized on February 5, 2005 by pilgrimramblings

“In one sense all theologies are heresies.” – Tony Campolo

Any time we begin to talk about God, no matter who it is or how it is being said (from a pulpit or on a front porch), we must realize that we are not speaking about a reality that any one of us has truly known or seen. I know people will say that you can see God’s action in the world or that we need something sovereign beyond us, therefore God is there. I am not talking about that. I believe God is out there, in me (though I seem to miss Him), and in the world. Simply I am just talking about the language and the metaphors we attribute to God when we talk about Him. Even when I use the masculine “He” that does not incapsulate who God is or begin to explain Him at all. C.S. Lewis in a poem-prayer says this,

“He whom I bow to only knows to whom I bow
When I attempt the ineffable Name, murmering Thou…”

He proceeds to acknowledge that when he says the Name of God, his best thoughts are mere fancies and symbols, which he knows “cannot be the thing thou art.” I can know God in relationship, begin to know more about Him, and be in awe of the things He has done and what He is doing now, but I cannot hope to explain Him and believe I have got it all right. Erwin Raphael McManus says that we will spend the rest of eternity trying to figure out who God is. He will always be a mystery. For some reason, that is one of the most comforting ideas I have ever heard.

Evangelism, What Now?

Posted in Uncategorized on February 4, 2005 by pilgrimramblings

Here is a post from Tony Jones. I thought that it was very thought-provoking.

American Evangelicalism

One of the biggest problems facing contemporary sociologists, especially since the collapse of the secularization thesis, has been if and how religion can survive in a pluralistic/postmodern context. Several theses have been proposed, including 1) the sheltered enclave or “sacred canopy theory” (Peter Berger, James Davidson Hunter), 2) status discontent theory (Richard Hofstadter, Joseph Gusfield), 3) strictness theory (Dean Kelly, Laurence Iannaccone), and 4) competitive marketing theory (Roger Finke, Rodney Stark).In his excellent 1998 book, American Evangelicalism: Embattled and Thriving Christian Smith offers a look at the one strand American religion that seems to be vibrant in the pluralistic American context, and that is evangelicalism.

The Good
By a set of six sociological measurements (including robustness of faith, saliency of faith, and participation), evangelicalism is indeed thriving. Smith and his team performed the most massive empirical study of evangelicalism ever done, including 2,591 telephone surveys, followed up by hundreds of face-to-face interviews and dozens of church visits. The results show conclusively that evangelicalism is doing well in America — that is, its adherents are committed to it, and it is growing.

The Bad
The reason that evangelicalism is thriving is that it has, since the evangelical-fundamentalist split of the 1940s, developed a relationship of “difference, engagement, tension, conflict, and threat.” One one end of the spectrum, fundamentalists have withdrawn from culture, developed a retreatist attitude (see comments on homeschooling post below), and are have not negotiated a sustaining relationship with culture. Mainline and liberal Christians (Protestant and Catholic alike) are accomodationist, and there is simply not enough difference between them and culture to make a difference to much of anyone. In other words, why join something that looks exactly like what you’re already a part of. All three — fundamentalists, liberals, and mainliners — scored significantly lower that evangelicals in all six characteristics of strength.Smith then proposes a subcultural identity theory of religious strength in the face of pluralism. “In a pluralistic society, those religious groups will be relatively stronger which better possess and employ the cultural tools needed to create both clear distinction from and significant engagement and tension with other relevant outgroups, short of becoming genuinely countercultural.” Those are the very tools that evangelicalism has employed, and this has led to a love-hate relationship with culture.For instance, evangelicals rail against the secular media, and yet they relish every possibility to get a major evangelical figure on Larry King Live. They repudiate modern rock and rap music, yet they relish contemporary Christian music which is wholly owned by the same mammoth corporations that own the secular labels. I think you get the picture.

The Ugly
Smith goes on to conclude that the very thing which makes evangelicalism strong in a pluralistic society also dooms it to failure in making any kind of positive change in that society. That is, evangelicalism will never achieve its goals for the redemption of society because the tools in its toolkit don’t work on societies.For example, evangelicals have an atomistic view of society. In other words, they see society as nothing more than the sum of the individuals who make it up. When asked about social problems, evangelicals overwhelmingly state the answer to these problems is personal relationship. Here’s the theory: if a father is beating his kids, a Christian man should befriend that man, and lead him to Christ, then he’ll stop beating his kids; and once we do that with every child abuser, then the problem of child abuse will vanish from our society. One of the obvious problems with this line of reasoning is that child abuse, alcoholism, divorce, etc. are just as prevalent (or more) among evangelicals as among any other group.When confronted with the obvious lunacy of this logic, the evangelicals interviewed had a hard time seeing that it was a problem, and when they did, they were often left speechless as to any other response to a social problem (several interviews are printed in the book).For another example, when polled, the very things that evangelicals are most proud of about evangelicalism are the things most hated by non-evangelicals — not a ringing endorsement from those the evangelicals are trying to convince.Finally, it actually serves evangelicalism’s purposes to have this conflictual relationship with culture. If culture gets more and more evangelical, then evangelicalism will no longer be a distinct sub-group and, like mainliners and liberals did a couple decades ago, they would gradually lose their identity.

So What?
The emerging church has clearly been attempting to negotiate a different kind of relationship with culture than evangelicalism has. Some have claimed that we’re nothing but accomodationist liberals, while others have said that we’re nothing but evangelicals with soul patches. The fact is, we’re hoping to be Christian in a new way in this pluralistic context — maybe to remain in the tension but lose the conflict. To have our eyes open about the cultural forces that shape us, and to realize that electing a Christian individual to a political office, for instance, actually does little to effect social change.

On this day…

Posted in Uncategorized on February 1, 2005 by pilgrimramblings

2003: Columbia shuttle disintegrates killing seven
*Seven astronauts die as Columbia breaks up on re-entry into the Earth’s atmosphere leaving Nasa and the world in a state of shock and disbelief.

1979: Exiled Ayatollah Khomeini returns to Iran
*Religious leader Ayatollah Khomeini makes a triumphant return to Iran after 14 years in exile.

There are more, check it out…

http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/