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Blethering anew

Chances are, if you’re reading this, you’re enjoying my new blog design from Press75.com.  This design would not have been possible without the help of my buddy, Adam Walker Cleaveland at Pomomusings.com, who rescued me from the muck and mire of a badly orchestrated switch from WordPress.com to WordPress.org.  Suffice it to say: I screwed things up pretty royally and Adam, in the manner of a superfast emailing web-designing Superman, saved my blog from oblivion.  So, a huge web thanks goes out to Adam Walker Cleaveland.  He’s a gem.
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A few things about the new A Wee Blether:

  • Note the super-cool new button up top for “Sermons”
  • Let me know what you think, but I’m leaning towards having only 5-6 of the most recent posts on the main page.  Featured popular posts will appear on the right sidebar.  Also, I’m planning on having fewer full post on the main page, and more “continue reading….” links halfway through articles.  If this bothers you, I’d be interested to know.
  • If you follow the blog in a RSS Reader, it’d be good to double-check the feed is correct.  It should be: http://adamjcopeland.com (or really, http://adamjcopeland.com/feed)
While I’m blethering about myself, I’ll let folks know a new piece of mine went up recently at ThePresbyterianLeader.com.  I wrote “Setting Priorities as a Leader” in the Leading Voices series of monthly essays from Presbyterian Leaders.  If you aren’t familiar with PresbyterianLeader.com, check it out.  If you’re lazy and just want my piece, click here and then check them out.
image by Raja R
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GA BLOG: Wrap Up & Pack Up

(This post will go up soon on The Outlook website, but I’m traveling so can’t link there immediately.  Feel free to read and comment here, but also check out all the awesome General Assembly coverage over at The Presbyterian Outlook.)

And Friday night, at the General Assembly, the commissioners were tired, the energy level was low, and the most controversial items had already been considered. So, first a few funny recollections from the week:

  • The Stated Clerk, Gradye Parson, has a suave-looking John Calvin bobble-head on his desk. I covet.
  • Moderator Cynthia Bolbach’s fun sense of humor kept the assembly in good spirits throughout the week. Perhaps her best crack cams during the moderator election when she, and elder said, “Ministers going on tangents…who knew?”
  • The chairs in the assembly hall, when scooted back or forth, sound like vuvuzelas. It’s hilarious.

More seriously, my read of the assembly is that it was a perfectly fine one, one that wrestled with tough issues conscientiously and sought the Spirit in its work. Many hugely important changes are proposed to the PC(USA) constitution, including the addition of the Belhar Confession to our Book of Confessions.

But, as I prepare to go back home, I’m also struck with a questioning sense about whether this formal, costly, somewhat unwieldy church structure is the most faithful way of conducting business at a national level. At 27, I’m too young to be a hardened cynic, but many times this week I thought, after a beautiful policy statement or theological document passed the assembly, “How much did we spend per word to make that document? And, how many Presbyterians – let alone others – will ever read it?” When I closed my eyes and listened to debate on the plenary floor, I wondered how much —really, how little— the basic way we govern ourselves has changed in fifty years. … Continue Reading

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Review: Brian McLaren’s “A New Kind of Christianity”

A New Kind of Christianity

I’m a Brian McLaren fan. Not quite a fan boy, but an eager reader and admirer. So I when I got his newest book A New Kind of Christianity: Ten Questions that are Transforming the Faith (site here) I read it hoping to lead a book group discussion in my congregation. Though I enjoyed the book and recommend it overall, it didn’t fit the small church book group niche. And the more I think about it, I’m not actually sure it really breaks much new ground for me. McLaren is eloquent as usual (though a bit verbose at times), and I appreciate his perspective. Perhaps this is a case of unfair expectations — Minnesotans might call it “Joe Mauer syndrome” — but while I enjoyed the work, I finished wanting more.

The book is in ten parts, or ten questions. A few examples: What is the overarching story line of the Bible? Is God violent? What do we do about the church? Can we find a way to address human sexuality? How can we translate our quest into action?

McLaren believes the Christian faith is in the midst of a major overhaul. Perhaps every generation believes this, but I agree with McLaren that we are in a particularly transformative time. McLaren approaches his ten questions with a mix of his own intense and impressive Biblical exegesis and a grounding in what I would call the mainline progressive Biblical scholars. McLaren is one of these great authors that defies easy description. He’s a scholar for sure, but also an anti-establishment guy, an Evangelical who is excoriated by the right, a teacher and a pastor. Mostly, though, I think of McLaren as a communicator. He’s skilled at cutting through the rhetoric and getting his point across.

For instance, his chapter on the questions of the overarching storyline of the Bible does a splendid job of describing the problems of reading the Bible through the eyes of the Roman Empire and overly-simplified protestant theology. McLaren discusses the “six-line narrative” of Eden, Fall, Condemnation, Heaven, Salvation or Hell/Damnation and blows it out of the water as a faithful way to read the Bible. Quite right. But, to be honest, McLaren’s next chapter basically on what’s next, could basically be described as what I took from a center left Presbyterian seminary — the challenge to read the Bible on its own terms, the challenge to appreciate the non-literal intent of many of the writers and take them even more seriously “because they distill time-tested, multilayered wisdom — though deep mythic language — about how our world came to be what it has become (48). McLaren does a great job of expanding the Biblical approach he took as a young man, but to be honest, I don’t read his current approach as anything hugely new. Perhaps that’s because I’m only 27, so what McLaren is writing about is just sort of the water I’ve always drank.

Here’s a good snippet of what McLaren’s about:

Although few of us today are tempted to freeze our understanding of God in graven images, we may too quickly freeze our understanding in printed images, rigid conceptual ideals not chiseled in wood or stone but printed on paper in books, housed not in temples but in seminaries and denominational headquarters, worshiped not through ancient ceremonies and rituals but through contemporary sermons and songs (111).

McLaren’s big metaphors for the Bible that he uses in the work are the Bible as not a constitution, set and rigid with one meaning, but the Bible as community library where the community gathers its wisdom, discusses its future, centers its soul. Though I think some lawyers would quibble with his understanding of the constitution, the point is taken. The Bible is not and never has been about rigidity and simple “yes” and “no” directives, but it’s a book of books around which we gather, in which we rest and play, from which we live and serve.

McLaren concludes the book with a call to a final quest, the “quest to heal what we have so disastrously broken, the quest to unify and liberate what we’ve tragically divided and conquered, the quest to rediscover a larger more beautiful whole rather than pit part against part in deadly conflict” (232). This is not a small ball work, but a big honking call for a new kind of Christianity, heck a new kind of living and being with one another in creation. I’m all for it. I hope McLaren keeps the conversation going, for its the conversation on-going for practically all of my young adult life.

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Cutting the Automatic Crosspost: The Different Genre of Facebook and Blogging

As technology changes, Facebook continues to grow and blogs seem in somewhat of a decline. You’ll hear no worries from this blogger — that’s the point, technology and social media changes. That’s why it’s fun and works so well.

Related to all this, though, I am strongly considering disconnecting my blog from my facebook page. As I have it set up now, every post I put up here at A Wee Blether is automatically posted on my facebook wall as a note. Sometimes this is fine, but often the different genres bother me.

Sure, it’s subtle, but facebook is a way of connecting that I view as much quicker and more superficial than blogging. I’ll plop stuff on my facebook page without thinking twice, but I reflect a little longer before I post on the blog. I think of facebook as the conversation you have out the car window to someone walking by: “hi,” “beautiful day,” “how’s it going?” And blogging is like the conversations you have with more time and a more relational setting.

Originally, I think I connected the blog to facebook purely because I wanted the hits it might bring me. But, after blogging for going on three years, I’ve realized it’s not about the hits. Mostly, I blog for the positive personal gains — I do think it makes me a better person — but I do love comments too. And, actually, I think the facebook note feature of the blog actually cuts down the number of comments I receive on the blog. In a weird way, facebooking blog posts dumbs them down.

So, unless your comments change my mind, I think I’ll disconnect the connection from WordPress to Facebook. I may still put a link to particular posts on my facebook page, but I won’t automatically crosspost everything. Oh how the world is ever-changing.

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Postscript: To Post a Sermon Online, or Just Move On?

Hallock Pulpit

To make a sermon manuscript public, or not, that is the question. I’ve had this blog for about two years now, and I’m still of two minds when posting my sermon manuscripts. For one, my sermons are so contextual that it feels weird to post them on the internets where they roam free without context or explanation. By posting them, it almost feels like I’m inviting a kind of voyeurism. These manuscripts are not written for the whole world, but for one particular community in a certain time with certain concerns in mind. A north Florida congregation would not understand the point of an Ole and Lena reference (to use an example from my most recent sermon), but such a joke in a northwestern Minnesota congregation might serve quite well. So, when I post, I always want to fill in the context, to type parenthetical notes — that line is for ______, I looked at so and so during this part.

But, then, I’m not naive (or faithless) enough to think the Holy Spirit does not take my preached words and do much more with them than I could ever do on my own. And I’m certainly not going to limit the Spirit’s movement to corporate worship. If I can post a sermon to WordPress, I bet God has WordPress scoped out pretty well. Also, several people just yesterday told me that they couldn’t attend last week’s service and enjoyed reading the sermon online. And a few students and relatives connected to the congregation can stay more connected still by reading posted sermons.

Since FPC Hallock doesn’t have a website as of now, my blog seems as appropriate a place as any to post them. (Though I’m never thrilled when they muck up my facebook page since I have wordpress and facebook connected.)

Posting sermons also brings both an intellectual honesty, and opens the door to intellectual dishonesty. By posting, I’m fully aware that any pastor joe blow anywhere preaching on the same texts can google a sermon and steal it — change it a bit, or not, and preach it in his congregation. Sadly, since there are too many instances of this going on even before google, one can only assume such intellectual and theological sinfulness is even more rampant today. On the other hand, posting sermons holds me to public account beyond our congregation. If I use an unattributed story, or preach less than my best, the account is out there for all to see. I also enjoy reading friends’ sermons and wrestlings with the texts I’ve worked with, so it’s only nice to return the favor.

So there’s that stated publicly now. I’m not sure I’ll feel any better before posting next week, but at least I’ve given a bit of a disclaimer. It was written for this context alone; please use it for study purposes only.