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The Church and “The Man”

March 21st, 2010 by Amos | Posted in Guest Writers | 2 Comments »

The Church and “The Man”

March 20, 2010

It’s no secret that people of my generation are incredibly suspicious of the church. I’m not talking about the binge-drinking, drug-using, frat boys/sorority girls crowd who think they’re religious giants because they went to confession six months ago and fingered the rosary before their Chem 2A exam. I’m talking about those who were raised in Christian homes, served in the nursery, played piano for the hymnsing, and worked on the church with the men during the biannual maintenance workday but now feel rather disenfranchised and repressed by the church.

To put it simply, in their minds “The Church” has replaced “The Man.”

Like the anti-government, anti-establishment protestors of the 60s and 70s who viewed the government as an unassailable institution colluding together in dimly lit, smoke-filled rooms for their unhappiness and ruin, this current generation imagines their 40-60 year old pastors as having a specific agenda hatched over soda water and reruns of The Brady Bunch to keep topics such as social justice, globalism, profanity, and sexual expression out of their churches. And anyone who would dare violate the purity of the their church by having the audacity to suggest that such things might be good to talk about is immediately put on the pastoral hit-list to be ostracized and branded as a radical liberal who needs to be shunned or evangelized.

Every generation exalts some particular virtue. The Greatest Generation values work ethic and perseverance. Generation X values economic success. My generation values authenticity. People who are raw and unrestrained in their opinions. People who throw off cultural norms for the sake of individual expression. They are the heroes. Until someone can prove that they are authentic, content is irrelevant. Consequently, the chief evil of my generation is to come across as stiff and formal. If you’re going to try to convince us of something, don’t bother trying to reason with us until you’ve proved you’re not defined by other people’s expectations.
What could be less authentic than a bunch of older people (30+) getting together in a building to sing a bunch of songs that went out of style long before the iPod was even invented? And then, to top it off, the center point of the service is for a man to get up and deliver a public address from a manuscript that he’s spent the last week writing, looking down at his notes over and over to make sure that he’s gotten his prepared wording right and hasn’t skipped anything. [I hope it is clear already, but at the risk of sounding redundant, let me say that I completely disagree with this perception. This perception of the church is stilted, and is not my evaluation of my Cornerstone church family. After all, I am the man who looks down at his notes often to make sure he's got the prepared wording right!]

Whatever we may say, we don’t really care about authenticity. We care about style that masquerades as “authenticity.” After all, we’re the ones who buy jeans with the rips and stains already in them so we can look rugged and play Gears of War at the same time. We’re the ones who like indie music and indie movies because they’re unsullied by the machine. We’re the ones who couldn’t care less that Obama is reading from a teleprompter just like McCain, but think McCain is irrelevant because of how he reads the teleprompter.

And maybe when we view the church we’re a little surprised that there is an institution that continues to defy our preferences. After all, society worships youth. The worst felony someone could ever commit is growing old. When was the last time you saw a McDonald’s commercial starring a 5’7″, balding, slightly overweight white man dancing to Journey about how incredibly jazzed he was to pick up a Big Mac during his lunch break from his middle-management position at the local CPA firm?

When a generation that is used to being worshipped meets an institution requiring them to abandon their personal preferences for the sake of those they consider to be irrelevant (see Romans 14:1-15:6), the victim mindset takes root. Underlying this attitude is a hypersensitivity to anything that could ever be perceived as an insult or a slight. Any comment, silence, action, inaction, program, lack of a program, gratitude, ingratitude, joy, sorrow, offer to help, lack of offer to help, and everything else under the sun is suddenly perceived as an intentional personal attack upon their beliefs, dignity, and person.

In reality, while my generation will eagerly denounce “The church” as holding them down, their real beef is with the Word of God. Anyone who would confront them with Scripture is seen as a Bible-thumping, brainwashed, right-wing, starving-children-hating fundamentalist. Those who refuse to indulge in sexual humor are prudes. A man or woman who refuses to pepper his or her speech with profanities and curses is downright retrograde. Never mind that the Word specifically addresses all these issues–to have any kind of source outside of yourself is to become inauthentic, and therefore irrelevant.

No, the church is not afraid to talk about social justice, globalism, profanity, and sexual expression. No topic will ever be brought up that will overturn or threaten the truth of God’s Word. But we will not like what the Word says about some of these topics. That’s called our sinfulness meeting God’s holiness. And because the church exists to worship God by teaching the Word, we may not like what the church says about those issues. “The Church” isn’t the “The Man” who holds anyone down. Rather, God through His Word calls us to abandon pride and sinful ways of life. And if any of us ever find ourselves at odds with Him, it would be wise for us reevaluate our paradigms.

This article is not mine, a good friend and former schoolmate of mine, Nate Brooks, wrote it. Nate is a youth pastor at a church in Northern California and blogs semi-regurlarly over at Innocence Restored.

undated piece #1

March 5th, 2010 by Amos | Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

I found this ramble on a sheet of yellow legal notepad paper. I know I wrote it, I just dont know when . . . I can guess, but that would do no one any favors . . . its pretty raw . . . parts of it were hard to read, part of it took a while to decipher, I wasnt exactly paying attention to make sure I could understand it later when I found it again . . . but here it is . . .

I am nothing. Nothing at all.
And still I think I am, though time and time again I have been proven wrong.
I am a soul in conflict, nothing is quite what it seems.

The things I want, I do not need.
The things I need, I dont know I need.
The things I desire most are also the scariest.
Torment and torture of my body I can bear, there is only so much pain.
But the things in my head swing back and forth, wreaking havoc on my soul.

The battle within in the greatest fight ever fought, and I am losing BOTH sides.

The thoughts of my heart can barely even form on my tongue,
Before they are changed or countered or immediately second guessed.

philippians 4:11

February 24th, 2010 by Amos | Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Not that I am speaking of being in need, for I have learned in whatever situation I am to be content.

These words show us that contentment is not a natural propensity of man. ” Ill weeds grow apace.” Covetousness, discontent, and murmuring are as natural to man as thorns are to the soil. We need not sow thistles and brambles; they come up naturally enough, because they are indigenous to earth: and so, we need not teach men to complain; they complain fast enough without any education. But the precious things of the earth must be cultivated. If we would have wheat, we must plough and sow; if we want flowers, there must be the garden, and all the gardener’s care. Now, contentment is one of the flowers of heaven, and if we would have it, it must be cultivated; it will not grow in us by nature; it is the new nature alone that can produce it, and even then we must be specially careful and watchful that we maintain and cultivate the grace which God has sown in us. Paul says, “I have learned…to be content,” as much as to say, he did now know how at one time. It cost him some pains to attain to the mystery of that great truth. No doubt he sometimes thought he had learned, and then broke down. And when at last he had attained unto it, and could say, “I have learned in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content,” he was an old, grey-headed man, upon the borders of the grave – a poor prisoner shut up in Nero’s dungeon in Rome. We might be willing to endure Paul’s infirmities, and share the cold dungeon with him, if we too might by any means attain unto his good degree. Do not indulge the notion that you can be contented with learning, or learn without discipline. It is not a power that may be excercised naturally, but a science to be acquired gradually. We know this from experience. Brother, hush that murmur, natural though it be, and continue a diligent pupil in the College of Content.

- Charles Spurgeon “Morning by Morning Devotional”

please watch and listen…..

February 22nd, 2010 by Amos | Posted in news | 1 Comment »

Persecution in India: Francis Chan’s Response from Cornerstone Church on Vimeo.

and then it was February . . . well, almost . . .

January 28th, 2010 by Amos | Posted in news | 1 Comment »

I know its been a while. Things have been busy, hopping right along just as fast as they can. Its kinda scary that I wrote last in mid-November and here it is the beginning of January and I havent had a whole lot cross my mind here to post. But I guess in some ways thats a good thing, it means my life has reached that boring peak of predictibility and routine. Nothing new or crazy going on anymore, everything under control.

Hahaha, riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiight!

What it really means is that I have just been neglecting to write. Getting home from work and crashing before getting up and chasing my tail in circles and then heading back to work. Its not a good excuse, but it sure feels like it.  ;)

So, what HAVE I been up to?

I really dont know.

Ive been working, still with Security at Master’s, and I was taking a class this past semester. It basically kicked my butt, I was so confused with the assigned reading and even our ‘lectures’. But in the end, it made enough sense that I got an A- for the semester. I was happy. I was VERY happy. My cumulative GPA actually went UP!! It was nice.

Otherwise a lot of things were just status-quo. Work , sleep, groceries and all those normal sorts of things in life that seem to take over and run you out of time every day.

About 3 weeks ago, Jennica was able to go home with me! We had a pretty good time, there was a lot of snow thanks to a weather front that went through the day before we got there. But we had a good time nontheless. Jennica wasnt as frozen as she thought she was going to be, which is good, cause frozen girlfriend would have been terrible!!

She met way too many people to remember at our Open House, but she was glad to be there for it. I for one was also very glad that she got to come ;) My grandpa turned up and that was a surprise to everyone!! But a very good surprise, I counted back and it had been 5-6 years since I had seen him. So it was really good to see him and get to talk to him for a little bit.

There was of course the usual hodge-podge of people that came, family friends, extended family, neighbors, a few of my sister’s co-workers, and I dont know who all else. A lot of food was eaten and many stories told. It was a great afternoon!!

In other, other news . . . one of my roommates is getting married in April, so if you know of anyone out here in the greater Los Angeles area that is looking for somewhere to live, send him our way! We have an unfurnished room and are looking for a Christian guy to live with us . . . let me know!

the books of 2009

January 5th, 2010 by Amos | Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment »

I know Ive done this not all that long ago, but with the turning of the new year,  Ive decided to start this list over.  So you’ll find the various books Ive read in the last 7 months listed below . . . some of them were for school (since Im still working on actually getting my hands ON my degree) and the rest were mostly just for the sake of reading them . . . what other reason is there for reading??

 

The Sandstorm: The Arab-Israeli War of 1967: Prelude and Aftermath

- David Kimche and Dan Bawly

I, Robot

The Caves of Steel

The Naked Sun

The Robots of Dawn

- Isaac Asimov

The Hobbit

- J.R.R. Tolkien

The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge

- Jean-Francois Lyotard

Student Loan Debt – Get Out from Under Once and for All

- Brian O’Connell

Blue Like Jazz

- Donald Miller

Simulacra & Simulation

- Jean Baudrillard

The Surrogates

- Robert Venditti & Brett Weldele

The Total Money Makeover

- Dave Ramsey

Deal With Your Debt

- Liz Pulliam Weston 

 

and portions of:

Mere Christianity

- C.S. Lewis

Nine Marks of  a Healthy Church

- Mark Dever

Desiring God

- John Piper

Objectivity, Relativism and Truth

- Richard Rorty

Postmodern Theory

- Steven Best & Douglas Kellner

Postmodernism, or, The Logic of Late Capitalism

- Fredric Jameson