See full list on Listly
When it comes to the "Culture Wars" there seem to be only hawks and no doves. The battle lines are always between Christians and Secularists. Well, I choose to be a Christian Dove calling for a truce. If the rhetoric could be toned down, other voices could be heard. I'd like to be one of them
Saturday, August 24, 2013
Promoting the Darkwood Brew message
If Darkwood Brew can move into the top 25 on this list by Sunday, more people will be exposed to the message we are trying to spread. Simply clicking on the arrow in the lower left corner below the DWB logo will "vote up" the blog. Thank you very much.
Thursday, August 22, 2013
Recalculating
A wonderful part of my spiritual journey over the past few years has been my increasing involvement with Darkwood Brew and in particular the ability to engage with the sharp mind of Eric Elnes. He has helped me both to find a label that fit where I am on the journey (post-Liberal) and also to challenge it. In an interview by Christian Piatt, Eric suggests that labels describing where we have been are insufficient to describe where we are. He has been consistently using an Exodus metaphor of tribes of refugees in the wilderness to describe the Convergence that is happening. If you aren't familiar with what he's been saying read the the blog at Sojourner's first then come back. I'll wait.
Hey, thanks for coming back.
Part of my experience at the Wild Goose Festival this year was telling my story and hearing others tell their stories about where they've been and how they got into this wilderness where we are converging. That caused me to develop a modified version of the Exodus metaphor for Convergence that goes something like this:
There were a number of tribes in bondage in the land of exile. Among them were those called Evangelical and those called Liberal. The sad truth was that the bondage was self-inflicted. When some of the Evangelicals realized this, they left for the Promised Land knowing that that would mean a long trek across the wilderness. These post-Evangelicals were most severely criticized by that part of their tribe that stayed behind. Those who stayed behind believed beyond a shadow of a doubt that the only way to be truly free was to remain shackled to beliefs about the way to read scripture and judgments about sexuality even if that came at the cost of limiting their response to God's call to do justice. They made sure that the post-Evangelicals knew it and that they would pay a price for their bold push to new understandings. Thus while some paid the price of lost jobs and status to seek the Promised Land, others remained locked within closets of silence though they knew the path they were called to walk.
Similarly some Liberals longed for the passion of knowing God and understood that God's Spirit is like a wild goose: untamed and unpredictable, yet calling us to leaps of faith. They remembered that there was a baby in the bath water that was thrown out when the tribe chose to stop looking to the scriptures for inspiration and quit leaving room for mystery. The price post-Liberals paid in leaving their tribe behind was disdain and pity from those who clung to the crumbling institutions for their salvation.
As these two tribes have begun to meet and exchange the gifts of what each has brought along that the other lacked, they are also discovering that they have not been alone in the wilderness. There are also those Charismatic free spirits who have always been open to the wild, unpredictable movement of the Spirit. There are also those who always understood that structures like liturgy and doctrine are more spacious than rigid thus always have room for mystery. The fact is that there have always been desert dwellers who are now welcoming the self-freed refugees from the former tribes. Some found the wilderness not because they rejected or were rejected by religious institutions but because their life journeys, either through painful events or intentional exploration brought them here.
And now, regardless of prior path, a new tribe of Wild Goose Christians is forming with the understanding that they will best find the Promised Land together. Of course, these wanderers are those who appreciate that the journey is the destination. They also understand that they make the path by walking it. In this new Exodus they hear the voice of Jesus teaching them that God dwells not simply among them, but in them. There will be no flame nor pillar to lead them. God will not be dwelling in a Tabernacle that the people will carry, God is dwelling in the people. Therefore they must look within and to each other to find direction.
In this new Exodus there is a gentle computer-generated voice speaking from a built-in GPS unit. As the tribe moves along the way this voice confirms the path and when they are lost it simply says "recalculating." As with all GPS units, there is no judgment. The voice doesn't scold or correct, it simply recalculates. There are many paths to the Promised Land and there is also much room to wander, so recalculating is more the rule than the exception.
And those who have chosen to remain in bondage also hear the voice of the GPS constantly repeating "recalculating" though they alternately ignore and explain it away. One of the challenges for the Wild Goose Tribe is to find ways to help the ones left behind in bondage to free themselves.
We can't promise them soft landings for it is likely that they don't exist, this is a wilderness we are in after all. But even though we are not yet in the Promised Land (and if we are to learn from history, odds are that we won't be the generation that gets there) we do know that the wilderness is better than the bondage. Thus we have an obligation to speak truth to power and call out to Pharaoh to let our people go. Or more accurately, we need to speak the truth in love to our tribal kinfolk that they are their own Pharaoh's and they should break the shackles and join us in the wilderness.
Monday, August 19, 2013
Our New Testament Best
©2013 Scott Griessel/Creatista |
My Wild Goose journey
began last year at the festival where I spent most of my time quite
intentionally seeking encounters with Evangelical and Charismatic
Christians in order to begin the healing of my past where I had
rejected my connection to each of those streams of Christianity. The
experience was powerful and transformative. It was also the point I
started my personal journey into Convergence Christianity since it
was there that I “met” Eric Elnes, Scott Griessel and Dinah Gomez
of Darkwood Brew three dimensionally (they having been
two-dimensional acquaintances previously). It has been liberating tojump into the flow of the wild spirit of God moving among people
moving beyond labels. My deepening involvement in Darkwood Brew
(including a sabbatical trip to Omaha to peek behind the curtain) has
helped to frame that exploration and at this year's Wild Goose
Festival opened avenues for conversation.
One gift of
experiencing a second Wild Goose Festival is the hindsight to see how
the Wild Goose spirit has been alive in my journey between festivals.
One prime example is seeing my friend Kimberly Knight bravely
encounter a theological foe in Billy Humphrey and come away with a
personal encounter that didn't change either one's position but left
both of them genuinely loving the other. The day before I left for
this year's festival I received my copy of the new Daniel Amos CD
that includes a song with the lyrics, “Could take an eye for an
eye, drown in a big blood bath; That fast (Crash!) and baby, we’re
a sad aftermath, but we thought better of it. Our love had mercy on
us. We got dressed in our New Testament best and thought better of
it.” Looking forward to seeing Kimberly and the author of those
words, Terry Scott Taylor, I set off for North Carolina expecting to
meet lots of folks dressed up in their New Testament best.
I met Kimberly just as
she was arriving with a group of folks who had traveled with her from
Atlanta. When I commended (OK, shilled) the Darkwood Brew DVD on homosexuality and the Bible I had the odd experience of having push
back from her friends fearing I was part of a group who might use the
Bible to bash. They clearly didn't see that I was dressed in my New
Testament best and forgot the over-the-top warm greeting Kimberly and
I had exchanged (they can be forgiven for not knowing that I was the
officiant at Kimberly and LeAnn's wedding in Second Life). By the
time I had this encounter I was already well into my experience of
this year's festival, which had a different tone to it for me. I was
a wandering ambassador for Darkwood Brew in particular and
Convergence Christianity in general. This year, as I encountered
post-Evangelicals I was enthusiastically sharing the story of my
journey from Evangelical-attacking-Liberals to
Liberal-attacking-Evangelicals to
post-Liberal-big-tent-joyful-Convergent-Christian. As much as this
was a counterpoint to the healing that began a year before, it was
also a good news gift I was able to offer to those who cared to
listen.
Thankfully, many did
care to listen, and that's saying something since my come on was an
infomercial-worthy pitch for a punch card for coffee at the Darkwood
Brew tent (complete with a “but wait, there's more!”). Even
though I sold a good number of the cards, I was a pretty big failure
as a salesman since after I sealed the deal I would launch into
marvelous conversations with my new found friends. There was not one
of these conversations that was negative, a fact that filled me with
great hope for the future of the church. Sadly, not everyone got the
memo, as evidenced by the attack piece written by the Institute on Religion & Democracy in the American Spectator. It reminded me that
there is a price to be paid when exploring changes or possibly
leaving one's tradition. It gave me a deeper respect for those
coming to the Wild Goose from the right, knowing that it may be
costing them something.
Will, Brandan & Troy |
Terry Scott Taylor |
Throughout the
festival, my Darkwood Brew shirt gave me the confidence to feel
qualified to approach speakers and leaders (my problem, not theirs,
as the festival is truly a great equalizer). Still, I committed one
act of unadulterated fanboy stalking. I brought my copy of that
Daniel Amos CD I had just received as well as the liner notes from my
1981 Alarma! cassette (Google it youngins) for Terry Scott Taylor to
sign. When I saw him arrive prior to the Lost Dogs performance I
didn't let the semi-secluded “green room” stop me from sitting
next to him for a 20 minute talk about his career. Listening again
to his music that I had listened to in college, I realized that he
had been preaching a message of God as love instead of God as judge
during his entire career. Songs like I Love You #19 and Hit Them (I hit them too hard. I did it with a book. He had to take another look when I hit them with love) were swimming upstream against the Christian Music message of
the time. Talking with Terry I learned that he faced opposition from
the Evangelical mega-church establishment of the 80's when he
resisted being simply a tool for evangelism (he was kind enough not
to call it proselytizing) instead choosing to be an artist giving his
best for God. That conversation helped me to realize that the seeds
of my current belief system were planted way back then as part of his
musical witness.
The Wild Goose of the
Holy Spirit has been honking in the distance for a long time. I'm so
happy to now be among the many who have been chasing the call. Won't
you put on your New Testament best and join us?
Saturday, August 10, 2013
A Wild Goose in the Clouds
Traveling
through Virginia on my way to Hot Springs, North Carolina for the
Wild Goose Festival the landscape was alternately marked by
remembrances of war and crosses. Nearly every one of the early exits
pointed to the site of some Civil War battlefield. The ones that
didn't included the homes of war generals and the national D-Day
Memorial. Then there was the museum dedicated to the history of the
army with assault helicopters and tanks littering the lawn along the
highway. The numerous crosses along the way that ranged from actual
size to mammoth provided a counterpoint that was surprisingly not
comforting. Instead of the clearly intended message of God's
victory, I instead couldn't help thinking about the victim of that
extremely cruel implement of torture and the humans who used it to
kill Jesus. My perspective was influenced by the fact that it was
August 6, the anniversary of the day the United States dropped an
atomic bomb on Hiroshima. The words of one of the crew of the Enola
Gay later recorded in his diary echoed in my soul as I rolled down
Interstate 81, “My God, what have we done?”
At
my destination, the weather was overcast, but that didn't prevent
identifying an unseen Canada Goose as it honked its way across the
sky over my head. That got me thinking about the way that the Holy
Spirit, like a wild goose, shows up unseen but clearly present,
clearly moving, clearly calling us on even through the clouds. If I
continued to focus on the harm we humans are capable of and the
potential for inflicting suffering that we possess then I will remain
too heavy to fly to the places God is calling me. The Wild Goose
Festival is a gathering of a tribe that in many ways doesn't know it
even is a tribe yet. I know that my time here will be filled with
inspiration that many presenters have come to impart as well as
reconnecting with some of the people I have previously met on this
journey. It will also be a time when I can share the joys and
struggles of my story as an invitation to others to glean from it
anything that is useful to them. And though I cannot say what the
encounters or who the people will be that will become revelations to
me of the presence of the Wild Goose, I am equally sure that that
will happen. That is the manner in which faith assures us of God's
presence in the world. If we are to be Christ's body in the world
today we must expect that God is to be found in the other and that we
each are a vital, integral part, so be better be fully who God made
each of us to be.
So
that also means that the good folks of the Commonwealth of Virginia
who still study war or who plant huge crosses in their fields are
part of this broken body of Christ that we need to re-member. The
Wild Goose Festival is just a start. This glorious feeling we get in
knowing the blessing of coming together despite our past differences
and even coming to celebrate the diversity of opposites members that
make for a complete body is the fuel needed to complete the work set
before us by our wild and loving God. May we be those people we know
we can be and be the builders of the reign of God on earth as it is
in heaven. May we some day behold that fully alive, resurrected body
of Christ animate by the love we share and show and be able to
transform the lament of “my God, what have we done?” into the
celebration, “our God, look what we have done!”
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)