journal : : field notes

Aww....

28 December 2006


I'm in Indianapolis, visiting my folks, so blogging has taken a backseat for a few days. But I had to pull out my wallet unsolicited and shove a few pics in front of your face.




My daughter is cute. Can't wait to hold her...

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Do The Jesus Walk....

21 December 2006

Regardless of what you may think about the cultural critique of adbusters magazine (I like most of it), you have to love their relentless commitment, passion, and innovation. They are offering an ethic that starkly contrasts the mindless greed that pervades our culture. One example: The Art of Slow Protest.

You can read more HERE, but here's the bottom line tease:
  • Our greed and materialism so often ruins Christmas
  • What would Jesus say and do if he showed up at a shopping mall on the Saturday before Christmas?
  • In light of this, the people at Adbusters thought that cutting out images of Jesus' face, using them as masks, and walking through the mall in extremely slow motion would get the message across.
What happened? You'll have to read their response...hilarious!

(caveat: I'm not an advocate of buying 'nothing' for Christmas. I believe that there is miraculous power in giving, so long as it is proper giving. I do, however, agree that much of our Christmas giving is wasteful, and perpetuates some serious ills of our culture. So, please, I implore you...give generously this Christmas. But do it with thought, with love, with conscience, seeking justice, and without maxing out your credit card.)

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Vocational Angst and a Much Needed Reality Check...

(update: 'vocational angst' is not my creation. Hat tip to Jami for the phrase...I like it)

I stumbled across a couple of thoughts online that I thought would be interested to mesh together and see what bubbles to the surface. First, Stephen Shields over at FaithMaps Blog wrote of 'emergers in non-emerging church contexts'. He asks: "How many (of his readers) would consider themselves emergers in emerging churches and how many would consider themselves emergers in non-emerging contexts?"

I certainly fall into the latter category, as an emerger-y-ish-ite-ent-whatever Christian working in a non-emerging church context. As you can imagine, it can be an interesting relationship. The church in which I work recently celebrated 135 yrs of ministry, is in a rural context, and could be described as conservative to very conservative in terms of theology and politics. In recent years, the leadership of the church has seen its congregation age, and its younger generations graduate high school and plummet into that ever difficult demographic of 'de-churched'.

The church hired me to be their outreach/young adult/overall emerging guy to impact this trend. I knew coming in that it would be a nearly impossible role to play, yet I'm a glutton for punishment, I suppose. A church can't simply bring in one person and then 'poof!', said church becomes emerging and forward thinking. Churches just don't work that way. So I find myself often grateful at the opportunity to work in the context that I do. I'm compensated fairly, and I've been given a chance to do some experimenting and tweaking in terms of ministry.

But it also, inevitably, has been, at times, a source of vocational angst. I often feel like a fish out of water, wondering what I'm doing in such a context. Don't get me wrong. I love the people here. They are fantastic. Generous. And they Love God. I have learned so much from the people here. I sometimes just feel that my calling, my training, and my thinking would be better applied to a different context.

This past week was one of those periods where I was seriously questioning my role and purpose. Is the church practicing good stewardship in paying me? Should the funds be better served elsewhere? Am I making a difference? I believe there's nothing wrong at all with introspection, questioning, and even doubt. But such instances can easily slide into the realm of self-pity, woe-is-me garbage.

Fortunately, two days later, Seth Godin, marketing guru and bestselling author, posted excerpts from gapingvoid's article, "The Career Manifesto". (the e-trail of finding the origin of the manifesto is ridiculously long...I'll stop here) It has proved a good reality check for me. My responses are in italics.

1. Unless you're working in a coal mine, an emergency ward, or their equivalent, spare us the sad stories about your tough job. The biggest risk most of us face in the course of a day is a paper cut. So true. I am so blessed. Good reminder.

4. Although your title may be the same, the job that you were hired to do three years ago is probably not the job you have now. When you are just coasting and not thinking several steps ahead of your responsibilities, you are in dinosaur territory and a meteor is coming. So true. The very broad hats that I wear (outreach and young adult ministry) remain, but both look and play out very differently than when I started here. I have felt the temptation to coast at times, and I look around at pastors all over the country, and I see way too many 'coasters', ripping off sermons from the internet, playing golf a few times a week, and gladhanding their congregation on Sunday morning.

6. Your technical skills may impress the other geeks, but if you can't get along with your co-workers, you're a litigation breeder. Don't be surprised if management regards you as an expensive risk. My technical skills aren't very, um, skilled. But this does bring up a good point regarding mult-staffed churches. So many of today's churched are niched. We have the youth pastor, the childrens pastor, the worship pastor, etc. Each can potentially go through an entire week's worth of ministry and have minimal interaction with another staff member. Is this healthy? I think not. I applaud recent efforts to integrate the generations in worship. We're a family people!

8. Don't believe what the organization says it does. Its practices are its real policies. Study what is rewarded and what is punished and you'll have a better clue as to what's going on. Wow, this is incredibly true in the church context, and a helpful reminder to me. There's been a lot of huffing and puffing about emergent churches not placing doctrinal statements on websites, literature etc. (a gross, and largely untrue caricaturization) . Churches practices are its real policy, it's doctrine lived out. Doctrinal statements are worthless if they are not believed enough to be lived out in everyday life.

10.If you plan on showing them what you're capable of only after you get promoted, you need to reverse your thinking. This one doesn't apply to me, but I'm sure in some megachurch contexts, this is a helpful reminder to many pastors seeking to climb the megachurch ladder (one I will not be climbing). This isn't a slam on megachurches (my feelings are mixed and for another day), but rather a slam on abusing the megachurch structure.

In sum: I love being a pastor, but it's (incredibly) challenging at times. I'm grateful for my job, in spite of the unique challenges. . . and I need to avoid self-pity at all costs. I have so much to be thankful for.

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Newbigin on 'Kingdom'...

20 December 2006

"Kingdom" is a relatively new, hip, buzzword for framing the discussion on the church here, now, and into the future. How do we live in the call of the Lord's prayer, "May your will be done on earth AS IT IS in heaven?" Leslie Newbigin, in his stunning book, Foolishness to the Greeks: The Gospel and Western Culture, has some wise words to help form the discussion of the role of the kingdom on earth:

"The project of bringing heaven down to earth always results in bringing hell up from below. The full revelation of the heavenly city lies beyond the horizon of earthly history. But the vision of it must control Christian action within history, and such action can admit no separation of private from public life. While the church can never identify itself with the with the kingdom and must seek only the role of a servant, witness, and sign of the kingdom, yet the church can never admit any limitation of its role to the private sector." p. 117

  • What do you think?
  • Can the church never identify itself with the kingdom, and instead be only a servant, witness, and sign of the kingdom?
  • How does this play out in practice?

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A 6 Billion-Way Tie...

18 December 2006


Congratulations to you, and you, and you, and you...Time's Person of the Year is You. The information age has been couped by you. Blogging, YouTube, MySpace, Facebook, and the other facets of Web 2.0 are all driven by YOU. It's a populist information revolution.

What will the ripple effects be of a user controlled information age? Will the revolution carry over to other aspects of life? Business? Politics? (Dare I say...) Church?

We've already seen the impact of Web 2.0 on theological formulation. Blogs, Online Collaboration, and Open Source Theology are verifiable proof that theology is becoming (it still has a ways to go) a grassroots discipline. I wrote an article for The Next Wave on the subject a while back, called "Power to the People". You can find it HERE.

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One of the best music videos I've ever seen...

14 December 2006

Sigur Ros: Compelling, Inspiring, Breathtaking...

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Distractions Abound....

One of the nice perks of my job is that I'm encouraged to take planning days every few months (ideally, every month, but I can only seem to find the time to get away once a quarter). These are days to escape from the office, and plan ahead, pray refresh, and for me caffeinate. I love these days. They're refreshing, and they keep some of my vocational angst at bay (which someday I will write about). So I drove Bekah to school (massage therapy school, 50 minutes away), and now I'm parked at a Beaner's Coffee. It's a nice little shop. I ordered a latte, and it came into my hands with near perfect latte art (in the likeness of a leaf). It's the first latte art I've seen in NW Ohio since moving here. Nice work...

Beaner's also has free wireless, unlike Starbucks, {cough, cough}, so of course, distractions abound.

Here's what's distracting me:

1. www.newbigin.net. It's no secret that I'm a fan of Newbigin's writings. He's been a mentor through his writings in this season of my life. I'm writing a paper on Newbigin's voice for the church in today's postmodern culture for a missiology class I'm taking through Gordon Conwell, and I keep wandering over to this site, which has virtually every article and lecture transcript ever penned by the brilliant scholar.
2. Google Analytics--Google owns me; plain and simple. I just discovered their Analytics service, which tracks my site with frightening detail and precision. I'm just amazed at what google can do with a simple HTML embed in my blog template. (Which reminds me...Scot McKnight as Jesus Creed is solely responsible for 8% of the traffic on this site. Thanks, Scot.)
3. This blog. Which probably means I should get focused...

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That sweet, sweet sound of Christmas...

12 December 2006

I've been listening to Sufjan Stevens Songs for Christmas Singalong Album. It's 42 tracks of Christmas bliss, and you can get it on iTunes for only $15.99 (quite a deal, considering the quality AND quantity).

The album is a compilation of many years' worth of little EPs (mix tapes, if you will) that Sufjan would record for Christmas and pass along to his friends and family 'to make himself appreciate Christmas a little more'.

It's glorious. And sparkling...

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Article Alert!

11 December 2006

My blog post entitled "The Books that Have Ruined Me..." has found its way to the December issue of The Next Wave Ezine.

You can find the article HERE.

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IM Language and the Emerging Church

10 December 2006

It's no secret that the emerging church has its critics, many of them leaders of modern evangelical churches that are wary of all things new. Dan Kimball has a long, but thoughtful post directed to many critics. The title: "Please Don't Stereotype The Emerging Church." Evangelical sluggers such as John MacArther and D.A. Carson have written books critiquing the emerging movement.

Much of the criticism is like throwing stones at an unfamiliar sound in the woods. You hear that it's different, but you don't know what it is. It might be good. But it might be dangerous. Better to be safe than sorry...so throw stones in the general direction of the sound.

These critics simply haven't spent the time and energy to truly research the movement. Rather, they cling to a few fringe views within the broad (trust me, it's broad) movement of all that is 'emerging' in the church today.

This is the fertile fields of stereotypes...born out of a lack of deep understanding, settling for surface level observations.

My hunch is that much of the problem lies in broken communication. The U.S. emerging church and the modern, evangelical church in the U.S. share a geographic space, yet they speak a different language.

A recent poll on CNN reveals that significant language barriers exist between teens and adults. Teenagers today are well versed in IM (instant messsaging) language. Their parents are left scratching their heads at the new contractions, abbreviations, and phraseology. It reminds me a lot of the emerging church and the parent church that birthed her. As a new language structure is being formed, the church of yesterday is confused...and frustrated. Also, the emerging church of today/tomorrow is often found exasperated at the continual need to explain itself over, and over, and over....

As the dust settles, patience is paramount, yet often so fleeting.

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Back in the Saddle...

06 December 2006

I had a college professor who, at the end of a week, would close her class with the following saying. "Work hard, pray hard, and play hard this weekend. Have a great one..."

It pretty much sums up my life now. I have worked, prayed, and played harder than ever. I've crammed about a month's worth of work, a week's worth of vacation, and more prayer than normal (which isn't enough) into the past 10 days. A trip to Texas, a trip to Colorado, an increase in commitments at work, and a host of adoption deadlines all have created perfect storm of fatigue. Oh, and somewhere in there, my work computer crashed. Fun.

Don't get me wrong; it's all been great. Our travels were fantastic, our adoption experience has been amazing (in a challenging, stretching way), and work has been fine. . . but throw it all together, and human cloning begins to sound like a not so bad option.

Now that the dust is settling a bit, I can get back to things like blogging, reading, and sleeping. So more meaningful posts are forthcoming. In the meantime enjoy this 'mug shot' of Eloisa (the Guatemalan baby girl we are adopting):


Name: Eloisa Tut (It will become Eloisa Joy Moser)
Birthdate (11-8-2006)

And down in the right hand corner....

'minor' (no joke)

Such a cute lil' troublemaker...

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