Archive for September, 2008
I just heard the whole new Zoe CD for the first time. Love it! Thanks so much, gang, for your hard work.
The name of the CD and of our conference (still time to come join us — I understand there is now gas in Nashville!!) is “Fearless.” Who could have known when the planning began just how pertinent that theme would be: fears of terrorism . . . fears of economic collapse . . . fear of political change . . . .
Wait until you hear “We Are Not Afraid (Fearless for You),” written and arranged by Randy Gill!
- - - -
A friend of mine told me that his best investment so far this year has been the coffee jar where he tosses his loose change. It has held it’s own. It hasn’t made anything, of course; but it also hasn’t lost anything. So that’s his best investment!
- - - -
I think you might want to mark Mudd In Your Eye. Larry Mudd, the worship minister for the wonderful Manhattan Church of Christ, recently performed “Swine Song” at Highland. And I’ve seen the DVD of “Untouchable” (a rather, ummm, unique telling of the story of Paul’s conversion). This is great, create stuff. Visit his website. So glad he’ll be at our Zoe conference.
“The fall will probably kill you.” The immortal words of Butch Cassidy (one of the great performances of Paul Newman, who died yesterday).
“I’ll put it simple: if you’re going hard enough left, you’ll find yourself turning right.” Doc Hudson (Newman’s voice in “Cars”).
- - - -
Thanks to my buddy Jim for this link to Scot McKnight’s article in CT, “The Ironic Faith of Emergents.” (Some of you will get to hear McKnight in a few days at the Zoe Conference.) His eight catalysts are illuminating.
- - - -
When Senator McCain selected Sarah Palin as his running mate, I linked to two columns from Washington Post editorial writers to give two views. I didn’t know much about her and was trying to keep an open mind and hear two sides. The positive view was by conservative columnist Kathleen Parker.
Now, I could just have linked to Kathleen Parker: pro (9/5/08) and con (9/26/08).
In her newest column, Parker asks Palin to step out of the race for the good of the country: If BS were currency, Palin could bail out Wall Street herself. . . . Only Palin can save McCain, her party and the country she loves. She can bow out for personal reasons, perhaps because she wants to spend more time with her newborn. No one would criticize a mother who puts her family first. Do it for your country.
Maybe Sally Quinn (the “con” in my original two articles) will now come out in support of Governor Palin.
- - - -
I watched the first debate with a roomful of friends. I think the general consensus was that it was a draw.
I’ll let the financial experts figure this one out. But, like you, I find it irritating that we are going to get stuck with the bill for financial greed and excesses by Wall Street. I hope the debate takes place tomorrow night (or at least soon thereafter). This is just the time we need to hear potential leaders talk about how the crisis came, whether or not regulations are appropriate, and what the way forward is.
- - - -
I’ve been catching up a bit from comments over the past few weeks. Oh, my! The post with over 200 comments has to be the most comments for the least amount written (in the original blog post) I’ve ever had in the 5+ years.
Some of the fun is fading from blogging. It’s been a good five year run. Let’s try it just a bit more.
- - - -
It’s almost play-off time, and two of my four teams (Angels, Red Sox . . . not the Cardinals or Rangers) are in. Part of me would like to see one of them face the Cubs in the World Series.
The Eagle has landed! Which means that Romans 9-11 is Randy Harris’s problem, not mine. (However, stay tuned here and I’ll give you the correct meaning of “all Israel shall be saved” in 11:26!)
Here are a few highlights so far:
Brian McLaren was, well, vintage Brian McLaren. He spoke to hundreds of students (and the rest of us) yesterday afternoon at 3:00. He talked about the difference it makes to remember that Jesus told us to make disciples instead of members of a new religion (Christianity) and encouraged us to remember that his central message was the kingdom (i.e., the reign of God) and not the church. It makes all the difference in the world as to the priorities of the people of God. After he spoke about half an hour, students texted him questions to answer. I loved that format. Very conversational. I’m impressed again with his vision for what following Jesus looks like in this world.
I’ve also been going to a class called “Olive Trees and Cyborgs: Christian Identity in Paul’s Letter to the Romans,” taught by Jennifer Thweatt-Bates. She’s an engaging and very knowledgeable teacher — combining her doctoral work in cyborgs (and theology!) with the important work on Romans by James Walters. I know it’s hard to imagine how cyborgs and Romans 11 fit together. But read verses 11:17ff — and get the tapes if you can. It’s a powerful metaphor of Paul’s vision for the people of God.
Here are a couple pics I snapped with my iPhone.
The first one is Jeff Walling. Just what you’d expect: fun, insightful, and interactive. (By the way, someone at Harding told me that he’s finally been asked to come back on campus to speak in chapel. Kudos to my alma mater.)

And here — if you’ll use your binoculars — is McLaren speaking in Moody.

Today I’m praying for Randy Harris and his family as they have the funeral for his stepmother, Melba Harris, following a difficult battle with ALS.
Tomorrow I’ll be praying for American Eagle. If Randy gets back, he’ll be doing the evening keynote at ACU’s Summit on Romans 9-11.
Want to guess what Plan B is if he doesn’t get back?
Now you know why I’m praying for American Eagle tomorrow. (But I have a black t-shirt, black jeans, and N. T. Wright’s book on Paul laid out — just in case.)
We’re looking forward to having Brian McLaren on ACU campus next week to speak for Summit (the event formerly known as lectureship). He’s doing some sessions for undergrad and graduate ministry majors and then a couple sessions that are open to everyone.
Someone just pointed me to this insightful piece of his from 2000, called “Dorothy Leadership”:
Okay, I admit it. I spent most of the ’80s and early ’90s wishing I could be just like Bill Hybels, Rick Warren, or John Maxwell. They were successful. They appeared unflinchingly confident. They were powerful, knowledgeable, and larger than life. I’d go to their seminars and return home feeling wildly inspired and mildly depressed. How could I feel those two things at the same time? If you’ve attended their seminars, you probably don’t need me to explain.
But if you do need me to explain, think back to the biblical story of David, when he tried to wear Saul’s armor for his battle with Goliath. Imagine that he actually wore armor that was XXL when he was a regular M (or even S) guy. He would’ve come back looking like a partially opened — and partially eaten — can of sardines.
I realize I wasn’t the only one who thought that the best image of the successful pastor was the CEO, the alpha male, the armored knight, or the corporate hero. Thousands of us tried on that armor, and the results — in our churches and in our personal lives — weren’t pretty. Of course, the suit fit some of us (for example, I think that Hybels, Warren, and Maxwell really are XXL’s), but most of us eventually realized that if we were going to be of any use to God, we’d better be ourselves. What a novel idea!
About the time I was reaching that conclusion, I was going through my “postmodern conversion.” I was seeing the pattern or matrix of modernity giving way to a new pattern, and I was beginning to see how my whole understanding of Christianity fit snugly within the modern matrix. I wondered how ministry, theology, spirituality, and evangelism would change as the matrix changed. And I wondered how leadership would change, too.
Somewhere in the middle of these musings, a strange memory returned — the scene in The Wizard of Oz when little Toto pulls back the curtain to reveal that the great wizard of Oz is a rather normal guy hiding behind an imposing image. It struck me that the 1940s world that produced the film was in many ways a world at the height of modernity, a world enamored with Superman, the Lone Ranger, and other great men. It also struck me that by exposing the wizard as a fraud, the film was probing an unexpressed cultural doubt, giving voice to a rising misgiving, displaying an early pang of discontent with its dominant model of larger-than-life leadership. And it made me wonder what image of leadership would replace the great wizard.
The answer, of course, appeared in the next scene. No, it wasn’t the lion, the scarecrow, or the tin man. It was Dorothy.
At first glance Dorothy is all wrong as a model of leadership for that era. She was the wrong gender (female) and the wrong age (young). Rather than being a person with all the answers, who knows what’s up, where to go, and what’s what, she’s lost, a seeker, often bewildered, and vulnerable. These characteristics would disqualify her from modern leadership. But they serve as her best credentials for postmodern leadership.
In the world of Christian ministry, we can identify 10 wizardly characteristics of modern leadership. (You’ll notice the masculine pronoun used exclusively here.)
Bible analyst: The modern Christian leader dissects the Bible like a scientist dissects a fetal pig, to gain knowledge through analysis. And in modernity, knowledge is power.
Broadcaster: Somehow when one amplifies his voice electronically and adds a little reverb, his power quotient goes up in modernity. Being slick, being smooth, being big, being “on the air” — that’s what makes you a leader.
Objective technician: The organization — church or ministry — is a machine, and the leader knows how to work the machine, how to make it run, how to tweak it, and how to engineer (or re-engineer) it. It’s the object, and he’s the subject.
Warrior/salesman: Modern leadership is about conquest — “winning” souls, launching “crusades,” “taking” this city (country, whatever) for Jesus. And it’s about marketing, getting, buying, and selling (and sometimes selling out).
Careerist: The modern leader earns credentials, grasps the bottom rung of the ladder, and climbs, climbs, climbs — whether he’s a stock boy who would be CEO or a young preacher on the rise.
Problem-solver: Come to him, and he’ll fix you.
Apologist: Come to him, and he’ll tell you why he’s right and your doubt or skepticism is wrong.
Threat: One of the most powerful and underrated weapons of the modern Christian leader has been the threat of exclusion. The sword is normally kept in its sheath, but through mocking caricatures and other forms of rhetorical demonization, a gifted orator can make you fear that if you don’t agree with/follow/submit to his leadership, you’ll be banished — like the wizard bellowing threats from behind his curtain.
Knower: The modern Christian leader is — or appears — supremely confident in his opinions, perspectives, beliefs, systems, and formulations. While the rest of us question and doubt, he’s the answer man who knows.
Solo act: There’s only room for one in the wizard’s control booth, and there’s only room for one at the top of the church organizational chart.
When you think of Dorothy, the picture’s extremely different. Instead of sitting pretty in a control booth, she’s stuck in a predicament — still a little dizzy from the tornado, lost, far from home, and needing to find the way. As she sets out on her journey, she finds other needy people (not people exactly, but you get the point). One in need of courage, another in need of intelligence, and another in need of a heart. She believes that their varying needs can be fulfilled on a common quest, and her earnestness, her compassion, her determination, and her youthful spunk galvanize them into a foursome — five, with Toto — singing and travelling down the yellow brick road — together. Dorothy doesn’t have the knowledge to help them avoid all problems and dangers; she doesn’t protect them from all threats and temptations. But she doesn’t give up, and her passion holds strong. And in the end, they all get what they need.
Maybe one of the film’s many enduring delights is hidden in Dorothy’s unwizardly leadership charisma. Maybe people in the 1940s were just beginning to yearn for a way of leadership that now is becoming ascendant — a post-wizard, postmodern kind of leadership. (And you’ll notice pronouns for both genders here.)
Spiritual sage instead of Bible analyst: As we move beyond modernity, we lose our infatuation with analysis, knowledge, information, facts, and belief systems — and those who traffic in them. Instead, we’re attracted to leaders who possess that elusive quality of wisdom (think of James 3:13), who practice spiritual disciplines, and whose lives are characterized by depth of spiritual practice (not just by tightness of belief system). These leaders possess a moral authority more closely linked to character than intellectual credentials; they’re more sages than technicians. It’s their slow, thoughtful, considered answer that convinces, not the snap-your-fingers-I-know-that-kind-of-answer-man-know-it-all-ness. Dorothy has this “softer” authority, a reflection of her earnestness and kindness as much as her intellectual acumen.
Listener instead of broadcaster: In the postmodern world, it’s not how loudly you shout; it’s how deeply you listen that counts. Just as Dorothy engages her traveling companions by listening to their stories and evoking their needs, the postmodern leader creates a safe place that attracts a team, and then she empowers them with the amazing power of a listening heart.
Spiritual friend instead of objective technician: Think of the difference between a scientist objectively studying chimpanzees and a crusader dedicated to saving them from extinction. In modernity a leader loves his organization and loves his ambition, his strategic plan, his goals; but on this side of the transition, leaders love their teams, and those to whom their teams are sent. Or more perversely put — in modernity, I Corinthians 13 would read, “If I have all love and would lay down my life for my friends, but have not knowledge, I am a wispy wimp and a poor excuse for a leader.” Beyond modernity we return to Paul’s original meaning.
Dancer instead of warrior/salesman: In a world plagued by ethnic hatred and telemarketers, every voice adding stridency and sales pressure to the world is one voice too many. Nobody wants to be “won to Christ” or “taken for Jesus” in one of our “crusades,” nor do they want to be subjected to a sales pitch for heaven that sounds for all the world like an invitation to check out a time-share vacation resort. A presentation of the gospel that sounds like a military ultimatum or like a slick sales pitch will dishonor the gospel for postmodern people. Instead think of leadership — and especially evangelism — as a dance. You hear the music that I don’t hear, and you know how to move to its rhythm. Gently you help me begin to hear its music, feel its rhythm, and learn to move to it with grace and joy. A very different kind of leadership, don’t you agree?
Amateur instead of careerist: The root of the word “amateur” is “amar” — to love. Most of us in Christian leadership know that seeing ministry as a career can quickly quench the motivation of love. How can we keep that higher motivation alive? How can Christian leadership be for us less like the drudgery of a job and more like the joy of a day golfing, or fishing, or playing soccer, or whatever…not something we have to do, but something we get to do? The professionalization of ministry will be one of the harmful legacies of modernity, I believe.
Quest creator instead of problem-solver: The man at the top of modern leadership is the guy you go to for answers and solutions. No doubt there are times when that’s what we need now, too. But postmodern leaders will be as interested in creating new problems, in setting new challenges, in launching new adventures…as in solving, finishing, or facilitating old ones. Dorothy does this: She helps her companions trade their old problems (birds landing on the scarecrow, the tin man being paralyzed by rust, the lion faking bravado) for a new quest. Of course this is what Jesus does, too. He doesn’t solve the problems of the Pharisees. (How can we get these stupid crowds to know and obey the law as we do?) He creates new ones. (Seek first the kingdom of God.)
Apologizer instead of apologist: Instead of defending old answers, the new kind of leader will often apologize for how inadequate he is. In modernity you gained credibility by always being right; in postmodernity you gain authority by admitting when you’re wrong (think of the Pope’s visit to the Middle East in early 2000) and apologizing humbly. That kind of humility, that vulnerability, was one of Dorothy’s most winsome — and leaderlike — characteristics.
Includer instead of threat: The only threat Dorothy poses is the threat of inclusion, not exclusion. She basically threatens you with acceptance; you’re part of her journey, a member of her team, unless you refuse and walk away. That kind of leadership strikes me as gospel leadership, and it reminds me of someone else — Jesus.
Seeker instead of knower: Oddly, Dorothy’s appeal as a leader arises from being lost and being passionate about seeking a way home. Does it ever strike you as odd in contemporary Christian jargon that it’s the pre-Christians who are called seekers? Where does that leave the Christians? Shouldn’t the Christian leader be the lead seeker?
Team builder instead of solo act: All along her journey, Dorothy welcomed company. She was glad for a team. By the end of their journey, the lion, the scarecrow, and the tin man have joined Dorothy as peers, partners, and friends. Her style of leadership was empowering and ennobling, not patronizing, paternalistic, and dependency-creating. So effective was her empowering of them that they were able to say a tearful goodbye and move on to their own adventures.
I know, you’re thinking, Why take a silly movie so seriously? You’re right — it’s just a movie. But I find the film’s repudiation of more traditional modern leadership to be fascinating, maybe an early expression of a cultural shift that we’re more fully experiencing today. And ultimately, of course, I find in Dorothy’s way of leadership many echoes of our Lord’s leadership teachings. After all, you can never imagine the great Oz washing his subjects’ feet or booming out, “I no longer call you servants, but friends.”
Maybe some of us are trying hard to be something we’re not. Maybe we’re imitating styles of leadership that are becoming outdated and inappropriate. That’s not to say we don’t have a lot to learn, but maybe the best thing that could happen to us would be to have the curtain pulled back to reveal us not as XXL superheroes, but regular size M men and women. Maybe then, with the amplifiers turned off and the images dropped, we’ll hear Jesus inviting us to learn new ways of leading for his cause.
Don’t miss my brother’s most recent post, “Emmanuel Has Been Rescued.” You have to love the title, don’t you? Pretty fitting since the original Emmanuel applied this scripture to his mission:
The Spirit of the Lord is on me,
because he has anointed me
to preach good news to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners
and recovery of sight for the blind,
to release the oppressed,
to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.
My nephew, Van, just made the trip with his mom and dad to Village of Hope. He got roped into an art and music workshop. You can read the excitement on his face.

Most of us are familiar with Matthew’s account of Jesus’ baptism. In his gospel, God makes a public announcement: “This is my son, whom I love. I am well pleased with him.”
But in Mark and Luke, these words come not so much as a public proclamation but as an affirmation and blessing from Father to Son: “You are my son. I love you. I am so pleased with you.”
I love N. T. Wright’s insights about this blessing:
“The whole Christian gospel could be summed up in this point: that when the living God looks at us, at every baptized and believing Christian, he says to us what he said to Jesus on that day. He sees us, not as we are in ourselves, but as we are in Jesus Christ. It sometimes seems impossible, especially to people who have never had this kind of support from their earthly parents, but it’s true: God looks at us, and says, ‘You are my dear, dear child; I’m delighted with you.’ Try reading that sentence slowly, with your own name at the start, and reflect quietly on God saying that to you, both at your baptism and every day since.”
(Repeated here from 2006 because my students are assigned to read it! Note to students: you can also find it as a .pdf file under course documents on your iPhones/iTouches.)
The primary message of Jesus of Nazareth was the kingdom of God. It lies right at the heart of what his life and his message were about, according to the gospels. As his public ministry was launched he said, “The time has come. The kingdom of God has come near. Repent and believe the good news!” Many of the stories he told were introduced with these words: “The kingdom of God is like . . . .”
Those words undoubtedly got the attention of his listeners. Most of the Jewish sects were eagerly awaiting the kingdom of God, though they were conceiving of it in very different ways. They anticipated the day when God would break in, defeat the hated Romans, and restore the land to his people.
The framework for this teaching goes back to the Old Testament, of course. There we learn that God is the King of the universe.
For the Lord Most High is awesome,
the great King over all the earth. . . .
God is the King of all the earth;
sing to him a psalm of praise.
(Psalm 47:2, 7)
For the Lord is the great God,
the great King above all gods.
In his hand are the depths of the earth,
and the mountain peaks belong to him.
The sea is his, for he made it,
and his hands formed the dry land.
Come, let us bow down in worship,
let us kneel before the Lord our Maker.
(Psalm 95:3-6)
The Lord has established his throne in heaven,
and his kingdom rules over all.
(Psalm 103:19)
This God who created everything is the King of kings. No wonder so many of the prophetic visions anticipate a day when his rule will extend throughout the world. (See, e.g., Isaiah 11:6-9; Micah 4:1-4; Isaiah 65:17-25; and Daniel 7:13-14.)
What hope! A day is coming when the wolf and lamb will feed together, when infants will not die, when weeping and crying will be heard no more. The Shalom of God in its fulness!
Then John the Baptist comes announcing the nearness of the kingdom (Matthew 3:2 - “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near.”). And Jesus builds his teaching around that conviction.
The kingdom, we learn, isn’t what many of the Jews thought. It isn’t a political kingdom (John 18:36). Rather, it is the dynamic presence of God in Jesus Christ. “Kingdom” refers to the rule of God, to his sovereign reign in this world.
And in Jesus this kingdom was (is) present. He healed the sick, saved the lost, gave sight to the blind, and invited the poor. The reign of God was breaking in. The future had arrived to reverse the curse and to set the world right as God had intended it through the life and ministry of Jesus.
His stories and teaching pointed to a very different kind of kingdom than most of the Jews expected — a kingdom that was inverted, where the poor are blessed, the sinners are received, the dead are made alive, and the last will be first.
They shouldn’t look for armies and thrones and political borders, he told them. “The coming of the kingdom of God is not something that can be observed, nor will people say, ‘Here it is,’ or ‘There it is,’ because the kingdom of God is in your midst” (Luke 17:21).
He came reversing the curse and taking the world back to the way God intended in creation. That’s the kingdom, or rule of God. So he taught his disciples to live with the perspective of the kingdom. That’s what the Sermon on the Mount is: living in light of the inbreaking reign of God. Living in harmony with God and with others and with the world God created and blessed.
He taught them (and us) to pray: “Thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.” It’s been widely recognized that these are parallel requests. He’s praying for the kingdom to come — or in other words, for God’s will to be done in this realm called earth just as it is in God’s realm called heaven. We’re praying for the rule of God to come more and more and, in essence, we’re reporting for duty to be a part of this. We’re offering our lives in confession, repentence, faith, and mission.
Some have thought we should no longer pray the Lord’s Prayer because the church has been established. But to reduce the dynamic concept of kingdom to the church is a serious mistake. The church enters the kingdom of God; the church receives the kingdom of God; and the church announces the kingdom of God. But the church doesn’t exhaust the kingdom of God! So we continue praying as Jesus taught us for the kingdom to come, for God’s will to be done on earth as it is in heaven. As long as there is evidence of the curse, as long as the wolf and lamb aren’t feeding together, as long as infants are still dying, as long as there is weeping and crying, as long as there is war, as long as there is hatred, bitterness, and resentment — it’s still safe to pray this prayer.
The future reign of God has broken in through the presence of Jesus. And yet . . . it hasn’t arrived in its fullness. We are living “between the times” — between the incarnation/death/resurrection of Jesus and the coming consummation that we await.
Paul’s writings carry that important tension concerning the rule of God. Sometimes when he refers to the kingdom he’s talking about a present reality (Romans 14:17; 1 Corinthians 4:20), while at other times he’s referring to a future hope (1 Thessalonians 2:12; 2 Thessalonians 1:5; 1 Corinthians 15:24, 50).
Meanwhile, we continue to yield our lives to the reign of God. We seek to be used by him as lights in the world. We wait, hope, long, groan, pray, and work. We keep one eye on the task before us, knowing that the reign of God is present in Jesus Christ, and we keep one eye peeled for the future act of God when the dead will be raised, all tears will be wiped away, and God himself will be in our midst (Revelation 21-22).
Finally, these words from William Willimon and Stanley Hauerwas’s book Lord Teach Us: The Lord’s Prayer & the Christian Life:
The kingdom of God that is coming, here, not here, present, not fully present, is a banquet, a great party thrown for outsiders who, before Jesus, had no place in the promises of God to Israel. By an amazing act of generosity, Jesus has made possible a party to which even Gentiles like us have been invited. The kingdom of God is a party to which all of the good people refused the invitation so the host went out and invited all of the bad people. The kingdom of God is a party for a bunch of people with whom we wouldn’t be caught dead spending a Saturday night, had we not also been invited.
This is one of the reasons why being in the church can be a real pain, considering the sort of reprobates Jesus has invited to the party, the party that is called kingdom of God.
We are able to live hopefully in a fallen-yet-being-redeemed world because of the One who has taught us to pray “this way.” As Christians, to us has been given the grace to know that we live between the times, having seen the fullness of God in Jesus Christ, yet also knowing that all the world is not yet fulfilled as God’s world. That tension, stretched as we are between what is ours now in Christ and that which is yet promised, is our role as God’s people. We, you and I, are living, breathing evidence that God has not abandoned the world. We are able continually and fervently to pray that God’s kingdom come because we know that God’s will has been done. We are able to be honest about all the ways in which this world is not the kingdom of God in its fullness and to hope for more because we know that God’s will has yet to be done, God’s kingdom has yet to come. We are able to live without despair in the world’s present situation because, even in us, God has claimed a bit of enemy territory, has wrestled something from the forces of evil and death. That reclaimed, renovated territory is us.





