Thursday, November 26, 2015

Thanksgiving: History & Myth (from November 22, 2015, UTR #46): a reflection on Urban Theologian Radio by Jennifer Bell

We have so many rituals, expectations, and illusions surrounding the holidays, don’t we? If we’re not talking turkey, we’re talking the Mayflower. Thanksgiving is actually pretty awesome for this reason, this fascinating aspect of being human: we love that repetition, that tradition, the story. We are storytellers, and we incorporate props into our tales. The props may vary. The construction paper turkeys made from the handprints of our children, the stuffing prepared “just so,” the dining room table itself. (When we violate the dictates of the narrative, the people freak: I’m thinking how my mom still hasn’t gotten over the time I ordered my whole meal from a BBQ joint instead of cooking it myself like a good wife and mother. I’m thinking about how when I lived in Manhattan, I went out for Chinese on Broadway with a friend—and the friend seriously asked our poor waiter, “Are there seconds?”) Our stories, real or imagined, are important to us.

But, really, it’s the psychology of story, the need for story: it’s how we make sense of things. Stories speak to our need for meaning. This is my all-time favorite essay on the human need for story, which ultimately harks back to our Thanksgiving celebrations. Read it. I love it every time I look at it. (I seriously do. Required reading for all writers.)

Thanksgiving is a great time to gather, to give thanks, to load up on cranberry sauce and sweet potatoes; these are good things. But we are really there for the story. Note and note hard: story is intrinsically, significantly, forever bonded with, history. History is story. A true story. We need to revel in, guard it, think on it. When we gather around the table at Thanksgiving, aren’t we ultimately saying, “This is our story”? We are celebrating our story.

This episode of Urban Theologian radio centers on an important, more basic question: What is a Christian view of history? Dr. Robert Tracy McKenzie, author of The First Thanksgiving: The Real Story & What It Can Teach Us and History Department Chair at Wheaton College, was the guest. His blog, which focuses on Christianity and history, sounds great to me. Like something to regularly read . . .

I would encourage you to listen to the show and read more on the topic. In answer to the above question, Dr. McKenzie notes a few principles: God has created us to live as historical beings, we live in historical contexts, God is the Lord of history, history is a kind of revelation, we can draw lessons from the past, and we can see the present more clearly.

The episode moves on to discuss the first Thanksgiving, which is clearly history and story. Suddenly, it’s not all about turkey anymore—not when one is thinking about a Christian perspective. I found some of the details very interesting. How had I missed the part where the pilgrims spent twelve years in Holland before coming to North America?

How, then, should churches be more historically aware? We might understand that we are, by definition, historians! (I would add storytellers.) There’s an “intentional forgetting” of the past that seems to accompany the secularizations of cultures—and the church should actively resist this. Claim history! This is a great episode to get one thinking about our understanding of history, of ritual, of myth. I’d use it as a way launch further study on history, on story, on our need for meaning. While revisionist history is anathema to many of us, our failure to grasp history might be just as bad. This must be part of dominion, right?

Happy Thanksgiving!



Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Two Poems by Rikki Willis

James 4:13-17
Come now, you who say, “Today or tomorrow we will go into such and such a town and spend a year there and trade and make a profit”— yet you do not know what tomorrow will bring. What is your life? For you are a mist that appears for a little time and then vanishes. Instead you ought to say, “If the Lord wills, we will live and do this or that.” As it is, you boast in your arrogance. All such boasting is evil. So whoever knows the right thing to do and fails to do it, for him it is sin.


Oceanside
The oceans remind me
That I am not in control.
Its vast and limitless and strong.
No one but God can tame it.
It's lovely and scary.
The sound of it is calming.

I am not in control.
Its beauty can be unspeakable.
I am overcome
Watching the sun disappear into it...
Overwhelming.






Loneliness can happen in the middle of a full room! I have been an island of one. Fighting a silent battle. Angry!

But God…

God sends peace.
God sends hope.
God sends love.
Through His people.

In my silence and distance I have observed that more people are flawed. I can’t handle it. I want to confront everyone that I find to be out of sync with God’s will.

But I am out of sync. Blessed are the peacemakers (Matthew 5:9) … I want to yell, fight, scream, say all the bad words with STRONG CONVICTION!

I am out of sync … and no one really cares! Loneliness.

My heart in the wrong place. I am broken. I am questioning myself and not trusting God. I am not being content, not thinking about God, and surely not loving His people.

But God …

God sends peace.
God sends hope.
God sends love.
Through His people.

I ignore them. I don’t like them. I am tired of their fake, pretending to care, “hi” on Sunday but not really concerned on Tuesday, I am so wrapped up in my own business. Impersonal. I am going to send you a text message instead of calling, I mean real calling, showing up to someone’s house to dig into their life, invade their space. Love them.

I have been out of sync … Yesterday morning God sent me great peace through His people via email (didn’t I just talk about invading people's space). I have been out of sync and in the wrong… I must apologize (repent) to a few for my action. (This reminds me of something I wrote a few years ago.)

But I have been out of sync… LIFE IS NOT ABOUT ME AND IT’S NOT ABOUT YOU!
Life is about GOD! God is holy. God is righteous. God is the great I AM!
I am just a vapor and shall get back to the Lord’s business.





Thursday, November 19, 2015

Pastor V’s Shout Outs by Vermon Pierre

Shout out to:

1. Dr. Patterson and his strong admonition to actually be sharing the Gospel with people and not just talking about it.

He’s right; in all our various conversations about the meaning and extent of the Gospel, let’s never forget that we must always be sure to be about the regular and intentional proclamation of the Gospel.

2. Historian Marcus MacArthur and his blog post, “5 Civil War Lessons for the Church.”

I love good history writing, and right now I’m particularly interested in good writing that reflects upon the Civil War. In this post, MacArthur offers the following helpful lessons for the church to learn from the civil war:

            1. Promote the sanctity of human life
            2. Be cautious about engaging in political preaching
            3. Don’t take religious liberty for granted

            4. Careless appeals to Scripture in cultural/political wars erode trust in the Bible.

            5. Inserting God into the Constitution does not make a nation “Christian.”

 

3. This crocodile! Those are some serious ups! I guess Crossfit really does work.