Blog
an advent celebration
December 7th, 2006

There are some of us that share life together, as followers of Christ, in homes spread throughout the valley. We are all gathering together in anticipation of the eternally significant birth that we, as Christians, commemorate on every 25th of December. If you are one of those, please join us. If you are not, join us as well, as fellow brothers and sisters in Christ.
Tag: the Churcha cause of atheism
October 20th, 2006
“The greatest single cause of atheism in the world today is Christians who acknowledge Jesus with their lips, and walk out the door, and deny him with their life style. That is what an unbelieving world simply finds unbelievable.” (Brennan Manning)
Tag: the Churchdid Jesus advocate torture?
September 19th, 2006
According to my interpretation of the scriptures he did not. In fact, he stated quite the opposite as recorded in Matthew 5:43-48 and in Luke 6:27-30. Do these statements relate to torture specifically. Absolutely not. However, they do relate to our relationships with our enemies. Deductively I reason the following: If terror is conducted by our enemies, then our role as Christians (followers of Christ, not the neo-political religious affiliation) is not to war with, to torture, to slander, to prejudice against, but to love our enemies — to love those that conduct terror.
But “America is not a Christian nation anymore” one might argue, and I would agree. We never have been, nor are now, a Christian nation. Founded on a smattering of Christian and masonic principles? - Yes. Looked upon by the rest of the world as a “Christian nation”? - Yes. But Christian we are? - No (see above argument alone for support - or take a moment and look around at the culture we live in). So then, if we are not a Christian nation one could argue that we are not bound by these statements made by Jesus, and I would agree. However, our country is currently headed by a President that very explicitly stamps himself with the Christian moniker. And though President of the United States he may be, his relationship with Jesus Christ should take precident over his role as Chief of State. As our relationship with the Christ should take precident over our role as citizens of the United States.
Do we live in the United States? - Yes. Are we safe and secure because of our government’s current war on terror? - We can believe so, yes. However, those of us who call Jesus our Lord, must follow the example laid before us–even if that means risking alienation and ridicule for our stance against torture. We are Christian Americans, not American Christians (more on that later).
Zach at Finding Rhythm has a great commentary on the recent torture legalization issue and provides a link to the website of the National Religious Campaign Against Torture (NRCAT) with the hope that his readers will sign their Statement of Conscience:
Torture violates the basic dignity of the human person that all religions hold dear. It degrades everyone involved –policy-makers, perpetrators and victims. It contradicts our nation’s most cherished ideals. Any policies that permit torture and inhumane treatment are shocking and morally intolerable.
Torture and inhumane treatment have long been banned by U.S. treaty obligations, and are punishable by criminal statute. Recent developments, however, have created new uncertainties. By reaffirming the ban on cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment as well as torture, the McCain amendment, now signed into law, is a step in the right direction. Yet its implementation remains unclear.
The President’s signing statement, which he issued when he signed the McCain Amendment into law, implies that the President does not believe he is bound by the amendment in his role as commander in chief. The possibility remains open that inhumane methods of interrogation will continue.
Furthermore, in a troubling development, for the first time in our nation’s history, legislation has now been signed into law that effectively permits evidence obtained by torture to be used in a court of law. The military tribunals that are trying some terrorist suspects are now expressly permitted to consider information obtained under coercive interrogation techniques, including degrading and inhumane techniques and torture.
We urge Congress and the President to remove all ambiguities by prohibiting:
- Exemptions from the human rights standards of international law for any arm of our government.
- The practice of extraordinary rendition, whereby suspects are apprehended and flown to countries that use torture as a means of interrogation.
- Any disconnection of “cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment” from the ban against “torture” so as to permit inhumane interrogation.
- The existence of secret U.S. prisons around the world.
- Any denial of Red Cross access to detainees held by our government overseas.
We also call for an independent investigation of the severe human rights abuses at U.S. installations like Guantanamo, Abu Ghraib, and Bagram Air Force Base in Afghanistan.
Nothing less is at stake in the torture abuse crisis than the soul of our nation. What does it signify if torture is condemned in word but allowed in deed? Let America abolish torture now –without exceptions.
I have signed my name to this and if their Statement so moves you, I encourage you to do the same as well. Torture in most religions/cultures is perceived inhumane and it sickens me to know that our “Christian” legislators and President would endorse anything that goes against the love of our enemies that Jesus Christ taught while on this Earth–even under the guise of national security.
Tags: anti terror, discipleship, Jesus, the Church, torture, warBilly Graham in twilight
September 6th, 2006
An article titled “Pilgrim’s Progress” occupies some serious space in the middle of Newsweek’s August issue. The title is fitting, if you’ve read the book, as Billy Graham “shares what he’s learned in reflecting on politics and Scripture, old age and death, mysteries and moderation.”
This article was touching and cast a humble light onto the man who “was consumed with preaching and with presidents” and how age, experience, and wisdom have changed his perspective on life and faith. The author quotes his daughter:
The lesson of age, Anne says, is this: “When you get older, secondary things, like politics, begin to fall away, and the primary thing becomes primary again—and for Daddy, the primary thing is, as Jesus said, to try to love God totally, and to love our neighbor as ourselves.”
May we learn this lesson before we reach our twilight. May we learn from his experience, placing secondary things far from those that truly matter.
Read the article here.
Tags: epistles, Gospel, Jesus, the Churchgrieving or celebrating
July 26th, 2006
I recently read the article Are Churches Good Neighbors in the East Valley Tribune and it brought to memory a scrap that I scribbled while on my Pacific Northwest roadtrip with my wife. The basis comes from a conversation with an old friend regarding a quote from one of the authors of the book, The Shaping of Things to Come:
Would your community grieve your loss?
Or to expound, is your church so entrenched in its surrounding culture, that if it were to disappear it would leave a gaping hole of need–that the surrounding community would truly desire for the church to return because of the loving, compassionate, creative, faith-driven influence that the church had on it. Sadly, this is not the case for many metropolitan churches. Instead we find churches suing city governments and neighbors rallying against multi-use permit requests (see above article).
The problem and the solution comes down to love. Do neighbors complain when the church feeds the homeless? When it takes care of widows, the elderly, orphans? No. Neighbors complain when the church begins to assume a position of superiority–that the people in the surrounding community should have to bow to its whims and wishes. But if I remember the scripture properly, Jesus’ second greatest commandment is to “love your neighbor as yourself” (Matt. 22:39). And since so many churches love themselves so much, then there should be plenty of neighborly love to go around. That is, if those same churches are wholeheartedly following Jesus’ commandments.
So the next time you or your church decides to pursue an avenue of ministry, I implore you to discern whether your community would grieve the potential loss of your ministry or celebrate it.

And on an unrelated note and in my usual rant style:
Please do not wear the One Campaign bracelet (*note the yuppy reverend in the center) unless you truly support the movement either physically, monetarily, foundationally. Because if you only wear it because it’s the trendy, hip, Christiany, I-care-about-social-justice-issues thing to do, you would do more good to the actual cause (i.e. the thousands that die from AIDS every day) if you were to cut off your hand at the wrist and donate it for AIDS research. And yes, we can smell your bleeding insincerity from miles away.
Tags: discipleship, injustice, Jesus, the ChurchLeft Behind Video Game
April 28th, 2006
**Rant - proceed with caution**
I’m not a gamer. And this utter piece of unrighteous anti-what-Jesus-would-have-preached-if-He-were-here garbage is precisely the reason why. It is also why I have never endorsed the gimongous cash cow that is the Left Behind series and grow ever increasingly tired of Christian-marketed products — usually marketed by nominal, pew-sitting Christians looking for a way to tap into the enormous pool of wealth that is the also-nominal American Christian market (and yes, many of them vote Republican and voted for Bush and support the war on terror — or at least Iraqi-grown terror — and support the death penalty and anything else that doesn’t involve turning the other cheek and loving one’s enemies).
Players participate in “battles raging in the streets of New York,” according to the game’s fact sheet. They engage in “physical and spiritual warfare: using the power of prayer to strengthen your troops in combat and wield modern military weaponry throughout the game world.”
Prayer and weaponry? Do the Crusades and the Inquisition ring a bell? Humanity has tried prayer and weaponry and they don’t work. Ever wonder why? Because they’re polar opposites. Prayer is humility. Weaponry is superiority. If the Gospels aren’t enough evidence for that fact, at least look at human history. *Blah.* I’m tired of the dogmatic religion that is Christianity. I’m tired of the historical baggage and of the baggage that is added day after day by numerous wolves in sheep’s clothing. I’m tired of having to defend the Christian name, and tired of the need to dance around the negative connotations crafted by temple-peddlers making money from ignorant and naive, propoganda-swallowing “Christians” that eat up the latest trend and marketing craze like a cookie fresh from the oven.
Oh, and read this article in the Christian Post if you want a less blatantly opinionated viewpoint.
via Inbreaking.com
*Post Rant*
And yet I am called to love the temple-peddlers and the pew-sitting “Christians” as much as the streetperson and the orphan and the widow. And so I do. I merely get frustrated the way a parent does when his/her child goes astray. I forgive them and plead for their forgiveness before the Judge of humanity, even as I plead for my own. I love Jesus and I love his Church and the people that are humbly seeking a life that reflects Jesus’ and I will never give up on the vast, untapped potential that the Church has to minister to this dying, lost world. I am here to stay, Church, and I will see You move into the future a vibrant, colorful, holy, humble, loving, salty, light-giving estranged presence in this world. Amen.
Tags: gaming, rant, sin, the ChurchPaul — not an apostle?
March 31st, 2006
Jennifer over at Idle Rambling Thoughts has some interesting thoughts on Paul as a potentially self-proclaimed apostle. As I delve into this concept more myself, I have to wonder what this possible paradigm shift could mean for the Church and for its perspective and reliabilty on the epistles. In any case, I believe it is always healthy to challenge one’s own perspectives — but more on that later.
Tags: apostle, epistles, Paul, the Churchsacred and secular no more
March 25th, 2006
As I learn and study and pray and grow, the defining line that has traditionally divided sacred from secular in my life is slowly, but consistently diminishing.
At first assumption, some may fret at this astonishing realization and fear that I am becoming worldy, compromising, overly secularized, or even overtly relevant. If that is the case, let me offer some clarification. While the line that separates sacred from secular grows thinner, the line that separates sin from righteousness is undoubtedly growing thicker. By thinking outside of currently accepted paradigms, I find I am no longer able to distinctly associate sinfulness with the secular and righteousness with the sacred. For you see, every day I find sin in that which has been called sacred and I find righteousness in that which has been deemed secular.
However, while sin and righteousness claim elements of both the sacred and secular, they cannot overlap. They cannot coexist. They are polar opposites. They are as Yin and Yang. They are of two seperate desires — one born of selfishness, the other of selflessness.
Sin is a permanent quality of this world as it currently exists — a world tainted by the Morning Star’s self-love and Adam & Eve’s desire for a knowledge equal to that of their Creator. Righteousness, while always vividly visible through the elements of nature and the relationship between God and His Chosen, was publicly and humanly embraced in the human/divine form of Jesus Christ and now continues in the human/spiritual form of the Church.
No longer can I place sacred and secular on opposite scales — for both are cultural gauges set within the bounds of this world and of this age. At the same time I am unable to allow sin to taint that which is righteous. I am a citizen of this world — born of this Earth and thus both elementally sacred and secular — but I am also a citizen of another world — born as a child of God and as such cannot be both sinful and righteous.
Thus if the righteous and sinful cannot co-exist, and if I am a citizen of the Kingdom of Heaven, and the Kingdom is the dwelling place of the righteousness, then I must embrace all that is righteous and cast off all that is sinful. And if I am also a citizen of Earth then I must embrace all that is righteous within the sacred and secular — henceforth disavowing any segregation between the two and embracing all of the righteous qualities of sacred and secular humanity.
Tags: Jesus, sacred, secular, sin, the Church











