Archive for April, 2006

Pepperdine Convo

Yesterday I spoke at Pepperdine’s convocation (chapel). I think that’s the fourth time I’ve done it. Every time it’s been such a positive experience. The main session was in Firestone Fieldhouse; that was followed by a smaller meeting (200-300) in the chapel.

I’m so impressed with the direction of the school under Andy Benton’s leadership (along with, of course, the wise guidance of their provost, Darryl Tippens).

Traveling back home early this morning in time for a baseball game tonight.

Jim Wallis on the Wider Call of Being Pro-Life

From Jim Wallis at sojo.net:

For more than a decade, a series of environmental initiatives have been coming from an unexpected source - a new generation of young evangelical activists. Mostly under the public radar screen, they were covered in places such as Sojourners and Prism, the magazine of Evangelicals for Social Action. There were new and creative projects such as the Evangelical Environmental Network and Creation Care magazine. In November, 2002, one of these initiatives got some national attention - a campaign called “What Would Jesus Drive?” complete with fact sheets, church resources, and bumper stickers. The campaign was launched with a Detroit press conference and meetings with automotive executives.

Recently, more establishment evangelical groups, especially the National Association of Evangelicals, also began to speak up on the issue of creation care. Leading the way was Rich Cizik, NAE Vice President for Governmental Affairs, who, on issues like environmental concern and global poverty reduction, began to sound like the biblical prophet Amos. Cizik and NAE President Ted Haggard, a megachurch pastor in Colorado Springs, were attending critical seminars on the environment and climate change in particular and describing their experiences of “epiphany” and “conversion” on the issue. Cizik was quoted by The New York Times as saying, “I don’t think God is going to ask us how he created the earth, but he will ask us what we did with what he created.” In 2004, the NAE adopted a new policy statement, “For the Health of the Nation: An Evangelical Call to Civic Responsibility,” which included a principle titled “We labor to protect God’s creation.”

When the same New York Times article, written in March 2005 by Laurie Goodstein, noted that “A core group of influential evangelical leaders has put its considerable political power behind a cause that has barely registered on the evangelical agenda, fighting global warming,” the politics of global warming changed overnight in Washington, D.C. Previously, advocates around climate change and other environmental issues were simply not a part of George Bush’s political base and their concerns were not on Washington’s political agenda. But the NAE constituency is mostly part of the Republican base and the new environmental concern was not unnoticed by the White House - the very day the article came out the White House called the NAE to ask what policies they were most concerned about.

The next year saw NAE participation at many major climate change and environmental meetings - both domestically and internationally - and a series of press stories about the new evangelical environmentalists, including a full page interview with Rich Cizik in The New York Times Magazine.

In January, the Religious Right reared its head. In a letter addressed to the NAE - signed by 22 of the Right’s prominent leaders, including James Dobson, Charles Colson, Richard Land, and Louis Sheldon - they said, “We have appreciated the bold stance that the National Association of Evangelicals has taken on controversial issues like embracing a culture of life, protecting traditional marriage and family.” They then went on to say, “We respectfully request, however, that the NAE not adopt any official position on the issue of global climate change. Global warming is not a consensus issue.” It was a clear effort to prevent the NAE from taking a stand on environmental issues and even to veto the whole effort. Stick to our core issues they implied - meaning abortion and gay marriage. Five years ago, so powerful a group of conservative Christian leaders probably could have tamped down this new evangelical effort that served to broaden the range of moral values and issues of biblical concern. But not this time.

A month later, on Feb. 9, a full page ad appeared in The New York Times with the headline: “Our commitment to Jesus Christ compels us to solve the global warming crisis.” The striking ad announced the Evangelical Climate Initiative, and was signed by 86 prominent evangelical leaders, including the presidents of 39 Christian colleges. I was speaking at one of those schools shortly after the ad came out and talked to their president who was one of the signers. “I’m tired of those old white guys telling us what to think and do,” he said. He is a younger white man who decided to take a stand, even if it was against the old guard of the Religious Right.

The Evangelical Climate Initiative is of enormous importance and could be a tipping point in the climate change debate, according to one secular environmental leader I talked to. But of even wider importance, these events signal a sea change in evangelical Christian politics: The Religious Right is losing control. They have now lost control on the environmental issue - caring for God’s creation is now a mainstream evangelical issue, especially for a new generation of evangelicals. But now so is sex trafficking, the genocide in Darfur, the pandemic of HIV/AIDS and, of course, global and domestic poverty. The call to overcome extreme poverty abroad and at home, in the world’s richest nation, is becoming a new altar call around the world - a principal way Christians are deciding to put their faith into practice.

In places such as the U.K., Christians are rallying around the call to “Make Poverty History.” Many are comparing that call to the cry of British Parliamentarian William Wilberforce and an earlier generation of evangelical revivalists in the 18th and 19th centuries who changed history in England and America by their steadfast commitment to end slavery. For many, poverty is the new slavery. Again, this is especially true for a new generation of Christians. The connection between poverty and all the other key issues - the environment, HIV/AIDS, and violent conflicts around the world are increasingly clear for many people of faith.

The sacredness of life and family values are deeply important to these Christians as well - yet too important to be used as partisan wedge issues that call for single issue voting patterns that ignore other critical biblical matters. The Religious Right has been able to win when they have been able to maintain and control a monologue on the relationship between faith and politics. But when a dialogue begins about the extent of moral values issues and what biblically-faithful Christians should care about, the Religious Right begins to lose. The best news of all for the American church and society is this: The monologue of the Religious Right is over, and a new dialogue has just begun.

Baseball

1. The Rangers are just a game out of first!

2. Pujols in on pace to hit 324 home runs this year. (Two in the first game.)

3. It’ll be a rematch of the ‘64 Series. I promise not to make the same mistake by rooting for the Evil Empire–who will likely be in the Series because their payroll is larger than the GNP of several countries. I was young (eight) and thought the world revolved around Mickey Mantle. Now, it’s last year’s NL Cy Young winner (Carpenter) and the best player in baseball (the Mighty Pujols) leading the Cards to a world championship.

4. Most importantly, the BayBears are 1-0. It was so nice, after sitting out a year because of the wreck, to be back in the dugout coaching and to have my son back on the field.

Loving a Flawed Heritage

As we’ve thought about the charges leveled against Churches of Christ by a minister on the Nancy Grace show, we’ve had to face the truth: there is much in our heritage that is honorable (and that makes us want to scream “that’s not fair!”) and much that isn’t. (For example, is it any wonder that some consider us exclusivistic?)

We’re learning how to love a flawed heritage.

We don’t want to love our heritage like a two year old loves his parents: “Mommy and Daddy are perfect.” Nor do we want to respond like some adolescents: “My parents are mindless aliens.” But we want to respond as mature adults, recognizing both the strengths and the flaws of those who came before us.

I like these words from N. T. Wright:

“Paying attention to tradition means listening carefully (humbly but not uncritically) to how the church has read and lived scripture in the past. We must be constantly aware of our responsibility in the Communion of Saints, without giving our honored predecessors the final say or making them an ‘alternative source,’ independent of scripture itself. When they speak with one voice, we should listen very carefully. They may be wrong. They sometimes are. But we ignore them at our peril. . . .

“It is important for Christians today to be aware of the tradition(s) within which they themselves stand. Each tradition has much about it for which its adherents can be thankful. None is complete in itself — including those . . . that pride themselves on being ‘biblical.’ A way of assessing how valuable, and how incomplete, any tradition may be is to discern the extent to which each tradition can find itself at home in both public reading and private study of the scriptures, without resort to selective readings and exegetical trickery. That is precisely where the proper task of historical exegesis (as opposed to the improper one of trying to undermine Christian faith altogether) needs to make itself felt again and again. The challenge of living with tradition is not so much, as in official Roman Catholic understandings, that one should let tradition and scripture flow together straightforwardly into a single stream, but that trradition should be allowed to be itself; that is, the living voice of the very human church as it struggles with scripture, sometimes misunderstanding it and sometimes gloriously getting it right. That is why the challenge comes fresh to each generation. Traditions tell us where we have come from. Scriture itself is a better guide as to where we should now be going.”

(Taken from The Last Word, pp. 117ff.)

Salt and Light

I saw a comedian spotlighting a Fox News report earlier this week. It was on a stalker in Florida who’s killing prostitutes. But the whole time a serious discussion was going on about murder and rape, Fox had 2/3 of the screen showing salacious close-ups of young women in bikinis on spring break. The comedian said that a good bit of advice for young women going on spring break is that if you see a cameraman crawling down your cleavage you should perhaps move along. It reminded me of the time a while back when Fox News was on at the health club and they were doing the weather with bikini-clad Playboy playmates washing cars behind them.

So much of television is just for ratings. Bill O’Reilly can’t be that obnoxious, can he? Do you suppose Nancy Grace cuts people off like that at home? (How do her antics we witnessed with Rubel this week fit with the piece about her in Guideposts that a reader linked in a comment?)

I’m very thankful for Christ-followers who are seeping into areas of media–internet, newspaper, television, radio. What a great opportunity to be salt and light. I think, e.g., of Lester Holt, a weekend anchor of the Today Show and a member of the Manhattan Church of Christ. And I think of Sarah, who participates in this blog, who’s working at CNN.

Who are some others you know of — people who are living out their calling to follow Jesus in the world of news and entertainment? (Grant, are you reading today? Can you tell a little about traveling as an anchor for the Golf Channel?)