Monday, March 29, 2010

Sabbath

You know that post a few weeks back with a model for how I would attend to my spiritual life. It's not been something that I have done well at all. I am not good about meditation, although I think it is important. I'm not good about reading my Bible except to plan for lessons. I'm not good about setting aside time for prayer. I don't know why I struggle so much to get into this rhythm. This begs the question: Can I be holy?

The obvious assumption to this question is that setting aside sabbath consisting of the elements listed above is an attempt to be holy. Does prayer, fasting, Bible study, meditation, etc. make a person holy? This isn't usually the kind of question a protestant from the Mid-Western United States typically asks. But it is one that I am asking because quite simply holiness has alluded me my entire life.

The people that I look up to in my life; I wouldn't call holy. The pastors that I have met; I wouldn't call holy. The people who have impressed me by their convictions; I wouldn't call holy. Is holiness a term that can really be applied to humans?

My answer is yes. Humans are holy when they stop trying to be something they are not. People can be holy when they figure out who they are and stop trying to be perfect. People can be holy only when they stop trying to be like God, and acknowledge God for who God is and a person for who the person is. It's not about a mystical connection with the divine, although that doesn't hurt. It's not about the prayers and Bible study. It's not about Sabbath. Sabbath was made for us, not the other way around. Holiness has everything to do with living your life as a human. Recognizing that everyone else is living their lives as humans. Understanding that God is God, and we are not. Understanding that God loves us so much that God squeezed all of God's divinity into a human, so that God would know and understand what it was like to be human.

Being holy isn't about denying your humanness in hopes of becoming divine. Being holy is about embracing your humanness because God loved you so much that God is also embracing your humanness. Being holy is about living your life knowing exactly who you are in relationship to God and others. Embrace your holiness by being human in a world that tells you to be something else. Embrace your holiness by being embraced by God who knows exactly what it means to be holy. Embrace your holiness by seeing others as people who God is embracing out of love. Embrace holiness through prayer, Bible study, meditation, nature hikes, dance, play, lunch with friends, ____________...

How do you embrace holiness?

Shalom,
mark

Monday, March 08, 2010

Four Important Points

I was reading a book about youth ministry called "Starting Right: Thinking Theologically about Youth Ministry" edited by Kenda Creasy Dean, Chap Clark, and Dave Rahn. There is no disguising this book. It is a textbook. It looks like a textbook. It reads like a textbook. I feels like a textbook. It came from a class in Seminary, so really that's no surprise. There is an exercise that asks you to list the most important thing that you would want students to hear you say, or that they should learn from you about God. I decided to start that list.

  1. God is for all people, but works to expose the oppression and injustice in this world with love and peace. Although I sympathize with Liberation Theologies, I cannot say that God is only for the oppressed. God is for all people, but it is the oppressed who God reaches out to most. God calls us to engage in society to point out oppression and injustice to bring about God's kingdom here on earth. "Thy kingdom come!"
  2. God is always with you! There is no way to get away from God. God is always with you, caring for you, loving you, calling you. God is not passive in your lives, but you have to choose to listen to God's calling for you. This means that you have to spend time immersing yourself in God's very being, which is always around you. "In whom I live and move and have my being." Submerse yourself in this ever present love of God and know and grow in this relationship. Be intentional about diving into God and coming out reflecting God's image to all you meet!
  3. Jesus is God incarnate! This has several implication. First, God has been completely human while maintaining Godliness. God has faced everything you will face, temptation, disappointment, pain, suffering, celebration, joy, happiness, anger, etc. God understands what you are going through. Second, your bodies are important. If God cared enough for humanity to actually put on flesh, then your bodies have to be important. Jesus' resurrection was bodily. God didn't leave behind the body. Treat your bodies with care, and love the body type you have. Societal pressures about your body is not true. Be healthy not damaging to your body. Listen to your body. Rest.
  4. Through the Holy Spirit, God has uniquely gifted you to make this world a better place. You are called to be in ministry in the world, and you are gifted to do just that. Notice what things come easy to you, and do ministry using those abilities. You can do something others cannot do, so develop those gifts and impact this world in which you live! You can be the difference that this world needs!

This the start of my list. What's yours?

mark

Monday, March 01, 2010

Punk Rock and Christian Concerts

I got some buzz around the sabbath exploration, and I will have more to post on that. First though, I have a little bit of a weird connection between two elements of my life.

Some time late in high school early in college, I began to listen to punk rock. Mostly I listened to ska, but the ska scene of that day which was slowly fading away was merging with the punk rock scene. Thus, I began to listen to and enjoy both. Punk rock has such emotions and struggle with the political climate that they sing angrily about it. I could totally understand. It was a way to voice how helpless they felt in the current social and political climate. I listened to the "diet punk" stuff, which didn't have the same ire, and to the more "hardcore" stuff like Anti-flag.

I have seen Anti-flag twice, and was never very impressed. Here is why. Their music is alright. They aren't my favorite or anything. But they didn't play half their set. First I saw them open for a ska band called Less Than Jake (awesome show by the way). They were pretty alright, but I only heard a couple of their songs. They spent most of their time talking. They complained about the government. They yelled at a security guard for doing his job. They mostly preached to me, and tried to convert me to their ideas. Worse was when I saw them on the Warped Tour. They preached probably 20 minutes of their 30 minute set. It was horrible. I knew we helped trained Osama bin Laden, and I knew why. But I didn't come to the concert to hear about it. I can do my own research. It sucked.

Fast forward to the days of being a youth pastor, which by the way is today. I still enjoy a good angst ridden punk rock tune, but now I tend to go to shows with the teens in my church to contemporary Christian concerts. Here is what I have found. They are the same as an Anti-flag show. Here are a thousand people who came to a Christian show, and we have to do an altar call during and between each set. The people at this show already have done that. Please stop it. I go to a concert for music, which may lead me to live my life differently, not to be told to avoid hell by praying this prayer with the Brooklyn Evangelist. I don't want to be converted at a concert. I want my proverbial socks to be rocked off.

Here is the thing that I have to say to both punk rock bands like Anti-flag, and Christian bands like Third Day. Stop trying to get me to think the way you do with a sermon during the set. Instead, play the music and let it influence the way I see the world. Music is going to almost always be more powerful than simply talking. Write good songs that convey your message whether it is come to Jesus or f@#k the government and let your music do the talking for you.

Thanks and what a strange comparison I just made.

Peace,

mark