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    January 07, 2009

    Religions Die

    Fascinating thoughts from an interview with Philip Jenkins regarding his latest book, The Lost History of Christianity: The Thousand-Year Golden Age of the Church in the Middle East, Africa, and Asia--and How It Died. (Fascinating particularly in light of the lastest comment I just added to my post Just What Exactly is Emerging? not 15 minutes ago.)

    Your book's first sentence is "Religions die," which is rather shocking to the way we see religions existing today: I think we expect cults to fade away, but not established religions. Why are you concerned, at this moment, to write about the vanishing of faith traditions?

    Religions really do die. We think of ancient religions like those of the Aztecs or Mayas, which had millions of followers, not to mention copious scriptures. Also, something like the Manichaean faith once stretched from France to China, but that is now extinct. The Zoroastrian religion is not exactly extinct, but it has gone from being a vast world religion to the creed of a few hundred thousand believers.

    But also, religions die in particular times and places, in the sense that they once dominated whole countries, but then cease to exist there. The religion is not dead in the sense that it still continues somewhere else, but that is a local kind of death. My book is mainly about Christianity in the Middle East, but I might also look at Islam in Spain, or Buddhism in most of India. Just within our lifetimes, we probably will see the extinction of Christianity in Iraq and probably Palestine.

    What interests me about the topic is that so little has ever been done on it. We really don't know why religions die, and if they do, in what sense they might leave ghosts. One thing that strikes me is how much a dead religion influences its successor - how for instance the old Christianity left its mark on the successor faith of Islam.

    Finally, there is a major theological issue that nobody addresses, the theology of extinction. How do Christians explain the death of their religion in a particular time and place? Is that really part of God's plan? Or maybe our time scale is just too short, and one day we will realize why this had to happen. But as I say, nobody is really discussing these questions.

    I don't see the statement "religions die" as shocking at all. However, the fact that it generally would be viewed as such is further evidence to me of the general confusion we have over the religion of Christianity vis-a-vis the faith/worldview/Godview/whatever you want to call the act of following Jesus.

    Fascinating. Read the rest of the interview here.

    A Speck on the Horizon

    Picture 1 Amazon lists the release date on U2's new disk No Line On The Horizon as March 3.

    Won't be long now!

    From Paul Mayers blog comes the image below. I'm not sure what magazine it's from, but if you click on the image and then squint, you might be able to make out the track listing and descriptions. (I'm sure this information is out there somewhere else, but this makes it all feel so much more clandestine!)

    6a00d8341c89c753ef010536ae1380970c-pi

    Missional Tribe

    -1

    Despite an ongoing suspicion of any group who would have me as a member, and an admitted apathy toward the word 'missional', the meaning of which seems to be the debate of the day, I went ahead yesterday and joined up with Missional Tribe.

    Contrary to my shortcomings listed above, I am a connector, so I'm interested in seeing where the conversations may lead. Besides, my regard for the folks behind this thing make it a no-brainer for me. Hopefully I don't get myself kicked out.

    January 06, 2009

    More 2009 Reading

    Picture 1 I received an Amazon gift certificate for Christmas, which I put to good and quick use. Just arrived today:

    Tribes: We Need You to Lead Us (Seth Godin)
    Outliers: The Story of Success (Malcolm Gladwell)
    The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable (Nassim Taleb)

    Due to be released next week is Jesus, the Final Days: What Really Happened from N.T. Wright and Craig Evans, so that's definitely  going on the Wish List.

    I think it's going to be a good year for books!

    Just What Exactly is Emerging?

    For those who have already read or are in the process of reading Phyllis Tickle's excellent book, The Great Emergence: How Christianity is Changing and Why...

    I'm sitting in Starbucks reading. I'm not finished the book yet--I happen to be on page 104 at the moment. This book is fantastic and very educational. That being said, I've got some questions. For example, I've just stopped and scribbled this down in my journal, and want to open it up for input:

    "Is The Great Emergence solely examining changes in the religion of Christianity (given my 'irreligious' stance) and neglecting the evolving/refining question of what does it really mean to follow Jesus?

    In other words, is the question focused too much on the social, and not enough on the spiritual?

    Anyone have any thoughts? (I'm really looking forward to hearing from Phyllis in March!)

    January 04, 2009

    Pete Rollins in Edmonton

    In response to my earlier post a friend has let me know that Pete Rollins will be in Edmonton for a few days next month. (I wonder if Pete has been there before. Seeing as he agreed to Edmonton in February, I'm guessing not!)

    Here are some details:

    Church Beyond Belief
    Edmonton unconference with Peter Rollins
    February 5-9, 2009
    Event blog
    Main events location: Taylor College Campus, & Deweys' Cafe on the U of A Campus

    Sounds like it'll be good. Pete, pack a couple of extra sweaters...

    Creativity

    And some people still can't see the value of Twitter...

    Somehow or other via a Twitter connection I came across David Armano, and followed his profile back to his blog. I've already borrowed liberally from his work... he's got a unique way of presenting processes in a visual way. I'm discovering that I'm a very visual learner, so these images have been very helpful. And some of them are hilarious too.

    2069966728_0d4f036cda_m Yesterday, initially via Twitter and then his blog David pointed us to Paul Hughes' Flickr photostream, which is a treasure trove of creativity, and also a great example of what I'm learning is called Design Thinking.

    A fantastic resource, and also a great use of Flickr.

    New Vision (For 2009)

    If we allow ourselves to stay at the lower level of consciousness; either/or, all or nothing thinking, we haven’t been taught how to pray. The reason some of us almost hesitate to use the word prayer is because it has become this practical, functional, making announcements to God. It is the very thing that Jesus told us not to do. "Why do you babble on like the pagans do?" God already knows.

    Prayer, which was a code word in the New Testament for this different consciousness, became pretty much a practical problem solving thing. It was not a new mind and a new heart with which you looked out at reality.

    (Richard Rohr, A New Way of Seeing / A New Way of Being; Jesus and Paul)

    Current Reading

    Books_glasses I can't avoid the truth any longer. This must be said: My reading tastes are truly bizarre.

    I'm reading Malcolm Muggeridge, Isaac Asimov, and Jane Austen (among others) at the same time.

    January 03, 2009

    Refuse to Lead

    A brief clip of some of Pete Rollins' thinking on Christian leadership, put together by the good folks at The Work of the People.
    (h/t to Steve McMillan)

    The Conversion Scale

    Another very useful and creative diagram, stripped unceremoniously from David Armano's excellent blog and twisted for my own purposes. David intended this to track the conversion of a new social media user. However, I think it has much broader implications, and can be applied to many different situations.

    I might have a specific scenario in mind where the only label that would require change is the title of the diagram, but I'll keep that to myself.

    6a00d8341bfa9853ef010536aac0f2970c-550wi

    January 01, 2009

    A Blessing for 2009

    I can't let the first day of the year close without posting this blessing, which has just arrived via email from Roddy Hamilton and his community in Clydebank, Scotland. (Mucky Paws is a monthly email that you won't find online.) I've been reading their stuff for a few years now... it's fantastic. Here we go:

    May the light draw us into life
    and stir a longing into our souls

    May the stars shine along our pathway
    and lighten the way with prophecy

    May the words of ancient promise
    echo in every word we speak

    May the sound of a baby crying
    haunt every silence born of apathy

    May incarnation be more than godly flesh
    but a fresh way of godly living

    May the Spirit of Christ be born in us
    and God make a home among us

    Amen

    December 31, 2008

    Book of the Year (This One, and Next?)

    No question, the book of the year for me in 2008 was N.T. Wright's Surprised by Hope: Rethinking Heaven, the Resurrection, and the Mission of the Church. There's that word again - Hope! I plan on reading that one again in 2009, but it looks like that won't be my only Wright reading next year.

    Over on Euangelion, Michael Bird has a post about his interaction with Wright's Justification: God's Plan and Paul's Vision, due to be published in the UK in February and the US in July. Apparently the book is written primarily as a response to those who have been critical of Wright's view of justification, particularly John Piper through his own The Future of Justification. Read more about it here.

    If nothing else--that's a figure of speech. I think there will be plenty 'else'--it looks like there's some rich reading ahead of us next year.

    The Career That is to Come? (Employment Opportunity)

    As long as we're staring a New Year in the face, why not think about a new career?!

    A friend of mine is looking to place someone in the role of Executive Director with Teen Challenge in Alberta. Teen Challenge is a worldwide not-for-profit organization that provides faith-based, one-year residential drug and alcohol rehabilitation programs for men and women, ages 18 and over.

    You can download the full position profile (pdf file) here. The three big requirements are a strong Christian background, excellent fundraising experience, and buy-in with the Teen Challenge mission. If you would like to look into this further, fire me an email (link on the left sidebar) and I'll connect you with the recruiter directly.

    This could be you.

    The Year That is to Come II

    Well, it's that time again.

    One year ago ago I said that action was going to be the word for 2008. For 2009, I'm going with hope. I could have just as easily gone with change, but that will be my runner-up word. In 2008 the word changed around us, and I believe that in 2009 we catch up, and our personal lives will change as a result of the cataclysmic global changes of 2008.

    So why hope then? Let's work it backwards: Everything must change if we are to truly get back onto the kingdom track. Change can be frightening, and change can be painful. But, there is no growth without pain. And there is no hope without growth.

    Nobody ever said this would be easy, but it will be worth it.

    I want to end this post (and invite your comments) with the same poem that I used last year:

    When the song of the angels is stilled,
    When the star in the sky is gone,
    When the kings and princes are home,
    When the shepherds are back with their flock,
    The work of Christmas begins:
    to find the lost,
    to heal the broken,
    to feed the hungry,
    to release the prisoner,
    to rebuild the nations,
    to bring peace among brothers,
    to make music in the heart.

    (Howard Thurman, The Work of Christmas
    A Grateful Heart p. 74)

    December 30, 2008

    Life on the Line

    (Love this. h/t to Don)

    Singing Canada's praises to Obama (UPDATED)

    (UPDATED with a few iTunes links. Some of you may need to switch to the iTunes Canada store to hear them.)

    DIANA MEHTA
    From Tuesday's Globe and Mail
    December 29, 2008 at 11:27 PM EST

    No, we're not all snowbirds, we don't spend all our time at the good ole hockey game, or searching for shipwrecks in the big lake they call Gitche Gumee.

    But Canadians have made some mighty distinctive music, and CBC wants Barack Obama to know it.

    Starting next week, Canadians will collect some choice homegrown songs for the new president to groove to as he takes office Jan. 20.

    CBC Radio 2 is calling on the public to take care of business, tune-wise – to help select 49 songs from north of the 49th parallel that best represent the northern nation.

    “We believe that a country is defined by its artistic expression. If you wanted to know about Canada you just close your eyes and listen to our songs,” said Denise Donlon, executive director of English Radio at CBC.

    The contest, which begins Jan. 5, gives Canadians a week to submit as many tunes as they like for “Obama's playlist.”

    Read the rest here

    The comments are open for suggestions!

    December 29, 2008

    The Year That is to Come, Or...

    ...Bill Shatner's New Year's Greeting

    Today I wrote a long post about why I'm a huge fan of William Shatner's. But, in the end I deleted it because it didn't say what I wanted it to. Instead, I'll simply pass along his Holiday Greeting, and say that one day I'd love to sit down and talk with the man.

    December 25, 2008

    Unto Us...

    Nativity2

    December 24, 2008

    Happy Birthday David!

    As well as Christmas Eve, today is also the birthday of photographer and friend David duChemin. Swing by his blog and wish him a happy one, or hit him up on Facebook. His good friend Matt Brandon also has a few photographs in a tribute, at least one of which I suspect you won't find on any of David's sites.

    Happy Birthday David!

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