Thursday, February 19, 2009

hello again! re:Jubilee

So!  This past weekend was Jubilee 2009 at the Westin in Pittsburgh.  It was a fantastic time of personal renewal for me.  The theme for the weekend was the same as the title of my bi-monthly CCO Ministry Newsletter:  Every Square Inch.

Some of the Keynote Speakers included:
Gabe Lyons: co-founder of the Fermi Project and co-author of UNChristian
Bill Strickland:  founder of Manchester Craftsman Guild and winner of MacArthur Fellowship "Genius award."
Leroy Barber:  Presider of Mission Year.
and Lauren Winner:  Prof. at Duke Divinity School and author of several books....

But one of my favorites was Andy Crouch:  author of Culture Making: Recovering Our Creative Calling.

I've started to read his book now, and so far it's really good!  What do you think when you hear "the Culture"?  After only two chapters, this book has helped redefine culture for me. 
During one of the Plenary Sessions, Andy talked about 4 "Postures" the Church has taken toward cultures during the past century (i.e. the 20th Century).  The Postures are to:
Condemn
Critique
Copy
or Consume.

Andy postulates that all of these are reactionary.  They are reactions to a certain "culture."  However, the Cultural Mandate (Gen. 1:26-28, see also 2:15&19) precludes these reactionary postures though sometimes they are appropriate gestures (i.e. we should never be stuck or bent in any of those positions, but sometimes make those temporary motions).  Instead, there are only two appropriate postures for the people of God which leave us free to make the above gestures appropriately:
Cultivating
and
Creating.

Andy says that cultivation is taking what is already good in the world, and passing it along in at least as good of a condition as it was before!
Creating is asking what is missing, and creating what is missing!  This is NOT a blasphemous statement, rather embracing the creative nature which is an aspect of being made in the image and likeness of God: The Creator.  

I'm still mulling over these things, and I'm digging deeper as I continue to read his book.  But I am attempting to seriously ask myself if I am stuck in one of the above problematic postures rather than in one of biblical postures....


Anyhoo...
practically speaking, at the end of the conference, Andy Crouch asked everybody two questions:

1) What one thing do you want to start doing in response to this weekend?  (note: you cannot say "Change the world," that's too broad.  What can you practically start doing.)

2) What one thing do you want to stop doing in response to this weekend? 


I immediately thought of something to the second question.

Kelly and I choose not to have internet in our home, for many reasons, in order to be faithful to Christ.  Some of the reasons include cost, when we get free internet just down the road at Kenyon, and also the distraction it can cause at home instead of focusing on our own family when home, as well as being able to in part "disconnect" while with our family.  Anyhoo...

Because we don't have internet at home, and because I have an iPod touch, and because Kenyon has wifi almost everywhere, I have tried to "spend" my time well by checking email while walking from place to place on campus.  However, in so doing, I have woefully been ignorant of those around me.  The people Jesus informs me are my neighbors!  Leroy Barber, earlier at Jubilee, discussed the need for Christians to be good neighbors.  The Church at times has skipped over the Greatest Commandments to get to the Great Commission.   It is a problem when Christians essentially say, "God loves you and wants to have a relationship with you--that's why Jesus came and died for your sins--but I don't really want to be friends with you.  I don't want to know you, so if you don't agree with me, I'm moving on to the next person."  
THIS SHOULD NOT BE!!!

Wow, anyway, I'm getting pretty long-winded here, but I felt convicted that I was not "neighboring" well.  
Something I've told my students before is that love is not efficient.
While I believe that, I was idolizing the efficiency afforded me by wifi and the iPod touch...and ignoring my neighbors passing by all around me.  I was seeking efficiency rather than love.
Forgive me Father.

So, my response to the second question, is "stop doing email while walking around."

And I've started to notice soooo many things in the short 4 days I've been practicing that!  For one thing, God's creation is soooo beautiful!!!  I had gotten so ingrained and myopic that I was losing the joy of seeing God's goodness all about me!

I'm still not 100% sure what my response is to the first question, but one of the things I've thought about doing is blogging more often!  Just sharing my thoughts, and "thinking out loud" if you will.  So I've finally gotten rid of a few sections of this blog that have not been used, and perhaps I'll add some other sections later.

I hope that you'll join the discussion.  I don't want blogging to become a soapbox, but rather a place of dialogue.   Won't you join me?


Shalom to you!

1 comment:

seb said...

I distinctly remember the "Culture Making" plenary session and recall a similar reaction and decision that I needed to be engaged in what was around me rather than being 'efficient' moving 'through' places. The 4 C's were so... captivating! I don't think I read his book, though, so after I finish my current one I may start looking for a copy- I'd love to hear more about what you think!