Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Writing From the Sky

I remember sitting in my sixth grade classroom, going through the morning routine that we followed every day at the evangelical Christian school that I attended.  We would start off with the pledge of allegiance, and then sing that grand, old song, “My Country, ‘Tis of Thee.”  This was followed by the pledge to the Christian flag (yes, there is a Christian flag) and the singing of “Onward Christian Soldiers.”  All of this was rounded out with the pledge to the Bible (notice this was last in the routine) and “Thy Word is a Lamp unto My Feet,” or something like that.  I’m not kidding.  You can’t make this stuff up.  And despite my parenthetical sarcasm, I took this introduction to the school day pretty seriously.  With my hand firmly placed over my heart, I would proudly declare my undying devotion to the United States, the cross, and God’s Word, in that order.
What I remember most vividly is the image evoked in my mind during the final pledge and song.  I would picture one of the Bible-writers sitting up against a rock, stylus in hand and papyrus on lap, scribbling words that were epically and mysteriously spoken through a booming voice coming from the sky.  (The nice thing about this vision is the ease with which you can switch writers.  All you have to do is picture an old man in a robe with a long beard, and you can readily swap Moses for Solomon, Paul for Peter.)  Now, I had always been taught that the Bible is the infallible, inspired Word of God.  The forty-or-so dudes who penned these sixty-six books were simply writing down teachings that were dictated to them by the very mouth of God.  Such ideas come largely from 1 Timothy 3:16-17:  “All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, so that the servant of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work.”
The Greek used for “God-breathed” here is theopneustos, a word that very well may have been coined by Paul in this text.  It combines the words for God and spirit; the last is also understood as breath.  Interestingly enough, when Paul writes about Scripture, he refers not to the four Gospels, or the writings of his contemporaries, and certainly not his own letters, which comprise most of what we now call the New Testament.  In fact, it’s hard to believe that Paul or any of his buddies had the slightest idea that the words they were writing would have any significance 2000 years later on the other side of the world.
Scripture, to them, is rooted in what we call the Old Testament or the Hebrew Bible.  It’s the Torah, or books of law, that give the history of Israel as a people and the strict regulations they followed to set themselves apart from the rest of the world.  It’s the Nevi’im, or the prophets, that spoke out against the idolatry and injustice that Israel fell into and then submitted to.  It’s the Ketuvim, or the writings, that teach wisdom and principled living as God’s people.  These were the Scriptures that Paul grew up studying, memorizing, mulling over, chewing on, and living by.
And this story—the one that starts with Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, moves through Father Abraham as the patriarch of the nation of Israel, continues on to Moses delivering that nation out of slavery and towards the Promised Land, reaches its climax at the height of the reigns of David and Solomon, and winds up with God’s chosen people being continually conquered and ruled by the dominating empires of each passing age—this story contains just about everything that a story can have.  And it’s expressed just about every way that a story can be expressed.  There are ups and downs, victories and losses, Godly-living and horrific sin.  Through it all, the people of Israel are trying to figure out how to live as a people who are set apart from those who don’t know God.  They turn their backs on God over and over again, and they return to God over and over again.
These writers seem to realize the vast significance of story-telling.  Of learning from the past.  So they write it all down.  Some, like Moses, record the oral traditions that had been passed down for many generations and the history of Israel as a people.  Others, like David, capture their joys and struggles in worshipful poetry.  Still others, like Jeremiah, seem to vent through their telling of their own attempts to bridge the gap between God and people.
What if there was no voice booming from heaven as their pens scribbles across the scrolls?  What if God-inspired means that the search for God undergone by these writers led them to create the scriptures we now hold so dearly?  More, what if Paul and the other writers of the New Testament realized this, that God was still in the inspiration business?  That the story continued with them.  And with us.  One more thing:  what if we would understand that God didn’t stop inspiring people after John wrote Revelation—that we have power to continue telling the story today?  I think that would change the world.

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Happy MLK Day


Maps are subjective.  I learned that in my college geography course.  It’s an interesting concept for a small-town boy to wrap his mind around:  those rectangular and spherical portraits that I’ve always been told are accurate pictures of the world are in fact mere sketches of someone’s interpretation of what the world looks like.  They’re not satellite photos; they’re drawings.  And they can be contorted too.  They have maps that portray certain countries or parts of the world in all different shapes and sizes to illustrate all kinds of things.  I could draw a map that says pretty much whatever I want to say about the world.  It’s all about perspective.
In teaching literature to Baltimore City students, I’m faced with teenagers who have a very small perspective of the world.  Baltimore is their world, and many of them haven’t gone too far outside of the city.  So when they look at the map of the Charm City hanging in my classroom, they see their entire reality, broken down into the very diverse neighborhoods around the city.  My plan is to direct their gaze to the map hanging right beside this one, a world map.  On the first map, Baltimore fills the whole poster.  It’s massive, and it contains everything the students know—the affluence of Fells Point and Federal Hill and the poverty of Cherry Hill and Sandtown.  On the second, Baltimore is an itsy-bitsy, teensy-weensy dot in the small state of Maryland in the country of the United States in the continent of North America on the half of the map called the Western Hemisphere on the entire map of the world as we know it—or at least as Rand McNally knows it.  Perspective.

I find that my perspective is usually quite a lot smaller than I realize.  My world is not the world, it’s just the world that I’ve experienced.  When I read a book, or travel to a new place, or meet someone with a story unlike my own, my perspective grows.  Borders widen.  The map of my existence gets a little less fuzzy.  And things start to make a little more sense.  Of course, I’m still faced with the crazy obstacle that the way I encounter that new book, place, or person is shaped entirely by my growing but still limited perspective.  As I learn new things, I have to find a place to fit them within my current understanding of the world.
I’d guess that before 2006, most people wouldn’t have questioned the qualification of a planet.  Pluto apparently doesn’t cut it anymore.  This change hasn’t been accepted by everyone (http://www.zazzle.co.uk/boycott_pluto_bumper_sticker-128251195418510190).  Stuff like this can really mess with the way we think about things, and some people don’t handle that mess very well.  My very educated mother just served us nine what?!  Several legislators in California dismissed Pluto’s change in status as “scientific heresy” (http://www.space.com/2855-planetary-politics-protecting-pluto.html).
The funny thing is that nothing really changed except some words in a book somewhere.  Pluto is still the same as it always was.  We just look at it differently now.  And while it’s weird to us that our solar system only has eight planets, the next generation won’t think anything of it.  No harm done.
Once in a while, an idea comes along that doesn’t fit anywhere in my chaotic box of knowledge and wisdom.  Try as I might, it just won’t work within the framework that has been set up over time in my mind.  This calls for a paradigm shift.  The borders that have been put into place must fall.  Walls of reason and logic have to be torn down to fit this new understanding of reality, and any time walls start falling, there is resistance.  The fact that there is an opposition doesn’t detract from the authenticity of the message.
Martin Luther King, Jr. changed our perspective on race, equality, and humanity.  Not everyone was on board; in fact, someone was enough against Dr. King’s message to force an early end to his campaign and his life.  Yet, tomorrow I don’t have to go to work because it’s the guy’s birthday.
I hope we never stop drawing new maps.  I hope we keep asking the questions that make people mad.  Shift your paradigm.  It’s the only way we’ll find the Truth.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

No More Yellow Stars

I spent the last several weeks teaching a book called Night.  This is a book that I staunchly believe everyone on this planet should read.  It's a memoir written by Elie Wiesel, a survivor of the tragedy we call the Holocaust.  Wiesel takes the reader on a numbing journey from his hometown in Hungary to Auschwitz, and beyond, revealing what went on inside of him.

He had a yellow star slapped onto his arm to show everyone that he was a Jew--that he was one of the "others."  He was forced into a tight little section of town called a ghetto, cast out of society.  He was thrown like an animal into a cattle car, where he spent days with other Jews, packed so tightly that few people could even take a seat.  And these things only scratch the surface.  They are only the introduction to this saddening and maddening story.  My students and I talked about humanity and the ways that these people slowly, systematically had theirs stripped from them.  By the time the Allied troops reached the camp, the few who survived were skinny shadows of their former selves--they barely looked like people.

There's a really little letter in the New Testament that Paul wrote to a friend and fellow Christian named Philemon.  The backstory:  Philemon had a slave whose name is Onesimus, who had run away and at some point, became a Christian, and found Paul.  Paul writes to Philemon to tell him that he has sent the slave back and implores Philemon to not only forgive him, but welcome him as a brother.

Paul's letters often display their author's literary prowess, as when Paul tells Philemon that Onesimus once was useless, but now is useful.  We understand this play on words when we learn that the name Onesimus is Greek for the word useful.  Slaves were commonplace in first-century Rome.  To have a slave, essentially, would be like having a piece of machinery that does work for you.  To be useful in completing tasks is the sole purpose of a slave's existence.  Humanity is out of the question when all you do is complete tasks.

But Paul asserts here that Onesimus was useless as a slave under the dominion of Philemon--such a role is not a use for a human being.  It is now that Onesimus, having pledged himself to Christ, is useful to Philemon, but not as a tool.  As a brother.  An equal.  A human.

This is why the Hebrew creation story is so significant.  Amidst so many other cultures with creation stories that paint our beginning as the product of some kind of divine conflict, Adam is carefully formed out of dust, then given a breath of life.  In the words of songwriter John Mark McMillan, "heaven meets earth with a sloppy wet kiss."  To be human means to be created in the image of a god who is love, and to have that breath flowing through our lungs.  So Onesimus is human, not because Paul tells him so or because Philemon accepts his return as a brother, but because of this act by God, represented in Genesis.

Yet, in both much more subtle and just as strong ways as the Nazis did, people strip others of their humanity every day.  The way we live has power to affirm others' humanity.  It also has power to tear it down.  So which way do we live?  Whose humanity are we affirming?  Whose are we denying?  And what are we doing to put an end to the dehumanization that is suffered today in our world?

Monday, January 2, 2012

What is church?

A friend of mine asked me recently how I define church.  Shortly after this conversation, my friend asked me for a written response to the same question.  This is a simple question . . . yet, at the same time, it’s not simple at all.  Writing allows me to sort through my thoughts and reflect as I formulate a response, and I’ve been thinking quite a bit about it.  Let me share with you the way I envision this thing we call church:
Most importantly, church is community.  It’s the collective people of God, coming together to form a unit that has been given the metaphors of a body, a family, a tree.  These images all represent small parts that each have a specific niche within a larger organism.  So the Church is a bunch of unique individuals who are trying to follow Jesus that meet in a common place in space and time and commit to follow Jesus together.  I know that my neighbor has something to offer me and I have something to offer my neighbor.  The point is not where you go to church, but what church you are a part of.  This way of looking at church membership assumes each person’s role in the community she or he is surrounded by, instead of just a service that is being attended.
The Church is intently focused on meeting the needs—physical, spiritual, emotional, whatever—within the church and in  the surrounding area.  In his account of the formation of the Church, Luke tells of a community that has no need because as soon as a need arises, it is met.  And not only is each need immediately met, it is met from within the community, and in a way that requires sacrifice.  People are selling land and using the money to feed, clothe, and shelter those who can’t provide for themselves.  My dad has a friend who served as a leader in the Salvation Army.  Despite his affiliation with this organization, he often lamented that such things ought not exist—if the Church would live like this, there would be no need.
The Church proclaims a message called the Good News that comforts the disturbed and disturbs the comfortable.  This message implies sacrifice, yet is captivating enough to constantly attract others to take hold of its transformative power and become part of the community.  This message isn’t always preached at people, but is often weaved into lifestyle choices that are visible both to the surrounding public and, in a more intimate way, to those with a relational connection.  It is because of this message of hope in Jesus that those within the Church become so focused on meeting the needs of others, and there is no distinction between spiritual and physical needs.  Borrowing imagery from Shane Hipps, the end goal of church is not to simply move as many people as possible from the “unsaved” column to the “saved” column in God’s ledger; the ongoing and ever-evolving goal is centered on emulating Jesus where the church is located. 
The Church is terribly broken.  Not only is this fact readily accepted within the Church, it is actually celebrated that everyone involved is a broken person, made whole in Jesus through a relationship with him that is manifested in our brothers and sisters that make up our church.  As a body, a family, a tree, we grow together, fail together, succeed together, laugh together, cry together, and live life together as long as we are here.
There are mistakes and regrets, but there are also healings and reconciliations, and we share in both lament and praise—this is what makes it beautiful.
Church, then, may take place in a sanctuary or a living room, we may hold services or coffee dates, we may recite liturgy or share what is on our heart—these things are the variables.  The given element is us, the people.
I can’t think of a better way to sum this up than by quoting a beautiful piece of Rob Bell’s parting message to the community that he is leaving.  This, essentially, is his advice for how to do church:

     take out a cup 
     and some bread 
     and put it in the middle of the table, 
     and say a prayer and examine yourselves 
     and then make sure everybody's rent is paid and there's food in their fridge and          
          clothes on their backs 
     and then invite everybody to say 'yes' to the resurrected Christ with whatever 'yes'   
          they can muster in the moment 
  and then you take that bread and you dip it in that cup in the ancient/future hope   
  and trust that there is a new creation bursting forth right here right now and then     
          together taste that new life and liberation and forgiveness and as you look those    
          people in the eyes gathered around that table from all walks of life 
  and you see the new humanity, sinners saved by grace, beggars who have found  
          bread showing the others beggars where they found it 
     and in that moment 
  space
place 
remind yourselves that 
this 
is 
what 
you 
believe.

That’s what church looks like.