Archive for the ‘Explorations’ Category

Nightline Puts Spotlight on Mars Hill in Seattle

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

Nightline is one of few mainstream news shows that fairly portrays religious life in America.  This week the spotlight is put on Mark Driscoll, pastor of Mars Hill in Seattle.  Reaching over 8,000 on a weekend, he is delivering a message that is reaching young people in an area of the country that has the lowest worship attentance in the nation. 

One of the more controversial comments from the show states the following: 

Driscoll calls the mainstream church’s portrayal of Jesus “a hippie-Christ. A neutered and limp-wristed popular sky fairy of popular culture that would never talk about sin or send anyone to hell.” According to Driscoll, Jesus was an outcast who didn’t play by the rules.

“Jesus is typically portrayed as very effeminate guy, kind of long, flowing hair wearing a dress, always smiling, [making] pithy Zen statements that read like fortune cookies at a Chinese restaurant,” he said. “And the truth is that he was a construction worker. He was very controversial and got murdered.”

The image of Jesus as a rebel seems to strike a chord because the Mars Hill Church isn’t just growing by leaps and bounds — which it is — but it’s drawing in people who otherwise didn’t have much interest in organized religion.

Discoll’s comments is a challenge to mainstream congregations who are aging and losing young people rather than attracting them.  One thing that comes through loud and clear that what many might see as edgy comes off as “real” to those who are coming to his church.

So what do you think?  Link up to Nightline and watch the interview.  Then come back here and offer a comment.

Link to Nightline: http://abcnews.go.com/Nightline/FaithMatters/Story?id=6711206&page=2

Secrets of the Songwriters

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

Last nights CMA Awards, broadcast live on ABC, is Country Music’s night to shine. It’s by no accident that many of the award winners thanked the songwriters.  For the singers know, without the songwriter there is no song to sing.

Over the last couple of months I have been privileged to take a songwriters class at the Blair School of Music in Nashville.  Each week a songwriter shares his or her story and helps the class look at the craft of songwriting.  Most of the members of the class are songwriters themselves and in many of the sessions they share their music for critique by the speaker and the class.

This last week Laynge Martin, who has written songs like Elvis Presley’s “Way down” and Trisha Yearwood’s, “I Wanna Go Too Far,” was our speaker.

What impressed me about Laynge was his passion for his craft and his desire to be heard.  Some of his advice could be applied to us all.

About music itself he noted that in movies, music is always used to bring the message home.  At the most dramatic point in the story people sing.  For Layne, “songs are really accelerated meaning.”  This reminds us that unlike any other form of communication, music goes straight to the heart.  Lyrics, melody, and rhythm combine to take the listener to a different place of understanding and insight.  The best song becomes your song because it opens a window into what is really important in life.   

Another comment by Layne has importance for us in everyday communication, that “everything we say has a melody and a rhythm.”  The cadence of our speech is really music without the notes.  The tone of our voice, the words we emphasize, and our inflection constantly tells others the state of our emotions, what is important to us, and where our passion lies.

Daniel J. Levitin, author of The World in Six Songs: How the Musical Brain Created Human Nature says the following: “Music, I argue, is not simply a distraction or a pastime, but a core element of our identity as a species, an activity that paved the ways for more complex behaviors such as language, large-scale cooperative undertakings, and the passing down of important information from one generation to the next.”  In his book he says there are basically six types of songs that have formed who we are as humans: songs of friendship, joy, comfort, knowledge, religion, and love.

I might add to this the following thought: before there was speech, culture, and civilization there was music.  Too radical for you.  If you are a parent, my guess is the first form of communication you formed with your infant child was a song.  Maybe it was a coo or a soft hum.  Whatever it was it made a connection that soothed and comforted.  In a sense you became the songwriter as you formed a bond with your child.

 

 Songs then are not simply noise to fill up time as we drive to work or crunch numbers on our computer.  They are the stuff of life.  They help us articulate who we are.  They help us discover what is most important to us. The songwriter’s gift is the ability to listen to the sorrows and joys of daily existence to distill meaning into a phrase. “I did it my way.” “Love the one your with.”  “Staying alive.” “Ain’t no mountain high enough.” “Amazing Grace.”  

 

Layne made another comment during our time together that really stuck, “what you do everyday becomes your life.”  Days turn to weeks which turn into months which becomes years.  What you do each day has great implications for what you will become in the future.  What you do each moment matters. 

So the next time you listen to a song remember the muse that lurks in the shadow, for if you listen closely the secret of the songwriter will be revealed.

Four Weeks To the School: Read This

Thursday, July 3rd, 2008

In preparation for this year’s School of Congregational Development here is a list of books from some of our leaders that you might want to read:

7 Myths of the United Methodist Church

 

Written by Craig Kennet Miller and with contributions from leading edge pastors 7 Myths talks about the things we say to ourselves that keeps us from growing.  This is a must read for anyone who wants to get a fresh look at the current state of the United Methodist Church or who wants to lead a study in his or her local church to see their church in a whole new light.

Go to www.gbod.org\7myths for more information.  You also can download presentations to share with your congregation.

http://www.upperroom.org/bookstore/description.asp?item_id=541308

Deeping Your Effectiveness

Dan Glover and Claudia Lavey

 

This is has been a best seller at the School of Congregational Development since it came out.  It gives great insights of how to develop a discipleship system for your local church in a way that allows you to impliment its principles in your congregational setting.

http://www.upperroom.org/bookstore/description.asp?item_id=343629 

Touch

Rudy Rasmus

TOUCH: Pressing Against the Wounds of a Broken World

Touch tells the story of St. John’s United Methodist Church in Houston, a once dying church that is now one of the largest churches in the country.  As Rudy tells his story of redemption you can’t help but be encouraged to take a new look at your ministry and to view the people in your community as God’s gift to your church.

http://www.amazon.com/TOUCH-Pressing-Against-Wounds-Broken/dp/0849919851/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1215114547&sr=8-1

Dirty Word: The Vulgar, Offensive Language of the Kingdom of God

Jim Walker

Dirty Word is an honest and sometime raw theological story of church mission and ministry with people who are turned off by the practices and appearances of the traditional church.

http://www.upperroom.org/bookstore/description.asp?item_id=564487

Mr. Bubbles

Friday, May 30th, 2008

On Tuesday I had one of those road warrior days where I pushed it on the edge of my travel schedule.  It started at 5:00 am with my drive to the airport in Nashville to get my flight to Chicago.  Once I arrived at Midway I had 90 minutes to get to the location for my meeting but I did not factor in the long line at the car rental counter.  Forty minutes later I was on my way and ended up 35 minutes late.  The meeting went well but being late is never a good idea. 

After a dinner meeting I headed back towards Midway and 90 minutes later found the hotel after a nail biting drive through unfamiliar freeways and city streets.  By end of the day, I was a frazzled, road weary traveler who was a victim of his own folly of putting too much into one day.

Finally, I got to my room only to find out it was occupied by another being.  At first I was startled — this had never happened to me before but then I saw the note.  It explained that Mr. Bubbles, a little gold fish swimming in a standard gold fish bowl, would be spending the night with me.  I was not to do anything for the fish as he had already been fed; I was just to enjoy his company. Strangely it worked.  Mr. Bubbles calm nature as he casually swam back and forth was a blessing. 

This week’s scripture reading has to do the Noah and the Ark.  While children think its a great story about animals and such, a careful  reading of the text points to its focus on obedience.  On the one hand there were those who had strayed so far from God that their every thought was immersed in violence and retribution.  Noah, on the other hand, was found to be a person of God and in the midst of the chaos of the world around him he listened to God and did as he was asked.  The ark saved his family and the animals that came aboard.  A new covenant was established and a new era of God’s relationship to humanity was begun.  In that story there is something to be said about our connection to nature — in our increasingly urban enviornments it seems we become too disconnected to the land and the world upon which we live.  Mr. Bubbles was a gentle reminder to me to give myself a break, to calm down, and to look at those things that both bring beauty into my life and connect me to God’s creation.  I hope some day when you are on  the road a Mr. Bubbles will remind you that God is with you, no matter where your feet may trod.

College Rejection Season

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

Its the week that High Seniors and their parents both anticipate and dread — they find out the colleges where they are accepted.  And for many more than in the past, who were rejected. 

A recent report in the NY Times says this year the elite colleges received the most applications in their history.  For example, the applications at Yale went from 12,000 in 1998 to over 22,000 in 2008.  As a result it accepted only 8.3 of its applications.  Harvard’s rate of acceptance was 7.1 or to put it another way, they rejected 93 out 100 applications.

Why the high numbers?  Because we are now entering the third year of the Youth Boom years of the Millennial Generation.  Millennials, born from 1982 to 1999, form our largest generation and next year the number of high school seniors will peak.  Today there are more children and youth in K-12 than at any time in our nation’s history.  As a result colleges are now reaching a numbers crunch when it comes to meeting the needs of this population.  In an ironic twist, the same thing is also happening in our prisons, as record numbers of young people under the age of 25 are now incarcerated in overpopulated jails and prisons.

While the mainline church as a whole is aging, a focus on ministry to young people and their families is essential as this new youth boom reaches its full bloom.  For its during youth booms that each new generation finds its voice and has great influence over the whole culture. 

If our passion is to create faith communities where people can discover the joy of following Jesus, we must engage our young people with the message of God’s redeeming grace and love.  Most people make decisions about faith and practice before the age of twenty-five.  This is not about saving the church, this is about connecting with a generation that is struggling with its place in our world and with individuals who find themselves devalued by institutions who are not equipped to meet their needs.  There is little time to waste.  Let us hope that it is not said in the future that in the first decade of the 21st Century the church rejected a whole generation at its greatest time of potential and opportunity.