Saturday, May 30, 2009

THE SPIRIT OF THE LORD BEING PRESENT

Was Pentecost truly the birth of the Church? What about the "church in the wilderness" spoken of by Stephen in Acts? It was the Spirit of the LORD being present that let it be known that God favored the congregation of Israel, distinguishing them from all the other people on the face of the earth. The LORD promised, "My presence will go with you, and I will give you rest." The echo of this promise can be heard in the call of our Lord Jesus for all to come find rest in Him.

How must we consider the significance of such continuity? Consider this - restlessness may be a sign of absence, not presence. As Augustine confessed in Book 1, "You have made us for yourself and our hearts find no peace until they rest in you." Jesus is Immanuel, God with us. The rock upon which the church is built follows God's people from age to age; on that solid rock we stand or stumble. Eating the same spiritual food, drinking the same spiritual drink, let us become the Body through which God's glory, expressed perfectly in Christ Jesus, is made manifest.

Speaking of being made manifest, it is interesting to note, in 1Co 12:7, that Paul writes that "a manifestation of the Spirit is given to each person to produce what is beneficial ...." This verse is why I resist speaking of manifestations of the Spirit and prefer to emphasize one manifestation - the Lord Jesus Christ. It seems to me that whatever the form such a manifestation takes, the function is the same - to reveal the Lordship of Jesus Christ. The several gifts are singular in what is made manifest. Unity in diversity is the hallmark of the True Church.

Some thoughts on Pentecost Sunday

[The following essay was posted to our discussion group by a pastor in our group. 
I am reposting the pastor's comments here with his permission.]

The most neglected Sunday of the year is Pentecost Sunday, according to David Bratcher, who leads a service that assists churches in preparing liturgies for worship.  While arguments could be made that post-Lent and Holy Week fatigue have a role in this effect in some places, the absence of emphasis in Pentecostal churches is inexplicable. The very churches that exist to bring renewed emphasis to the present day ministry of the Holy Spirit equally neglect the importance of this Sunday on the Church's calendar.

This year [2007] with Pentecost Sunday coming on Memorial Day weekend found more emphasis on the latter than the former. Add to this the fact that few Pentecostal churches preach on the Baptism in the Holy Spirit nor give any opportunity within their services for receiving this biblical experience there can be little doubt as to the reason for a quickly declining number of Christians who testify of this experience or practice praying in tongues. George Barna recently reported that only 18% within Pentecostal churches report that they pray in tongues. In many places it has become an embarrassment, and this practice is either greatly limited or forbidden.

The reason for this is clear. There is a lack of conviction on the part of the current generation of pastors. The pulpit is devoid of biblical preaching in general and on this experience in particular. Instead of deep personal conviction that "the promise is to you and your children, and to as many as the Lord our God shall call" the old non-pentecostal view of "seek not forbid not" is in vogue.

The leading influences within the evangelical churches are non-pentecostal highly visible personalities. Growing the church, which is God's work, has been usurped as the church's work, and the teaching of the observation of all Jesus commanded, which is our work, is neglected.

When God's people are filled with the Spirit, when all of the Gifts of the Spirit are fully functioning, and the life of the Risen Lord is evident the sought-for evangelism will be explosive. After all, didn't Jesus promise that believers would receive power and be witnesses to the ends of the earth when the Spirit came upon them? Just a brief period after John Chrysostom wrote in the late 4th century that the church no longer expected converts to speak in tongues when hands were laid on them to receive the Spirit, the Church along with culture tumbled into the Dark Ages.

Today there is a fear that disorder will occur and leaders are uncertain as to how to handle such situations. There is a greater effort to make sure that nothing untoward will happen than a burning desire that the Spirit will have His rightful place to be manifest among God's people.

One of the reasons for this is the rearrangement of the Church's life. Sunday morning historically was the gathering of believers for worship and Sunday evening was viewed as evangelistic. With Sunday evening nearly gone Sunday morning has become more and more geared toward unbelievers, and there is no specific gathering for believers except in small classes. I Corinthians 14 is referred to as a relevant teaching on order which of course it is. However, Paul treats the situation as a believers meeting and gives instruction on comportment should unbelievers come into it.

Today Pentecostal emphasis is kept alive by Youth Pastors. This occurrence would be almost totally missing if it were not for retreats, camps, and all-night prayer meetings in which young people receive the Baptism in the Hold Spirit, and smaller churches that still have altar times.  Because of my present malady, I have been out of the pulpit for 5 years. I have not heard a message on the Baptism in the Holy Spirit, since the last time that I preached on it myself.

Jesus said that these signs would follow believers. The question we must ask is do we believe this? Are we ready to practice it?

Friday, May 29, 2009

... every imagination of the thoughts of one's heart ...

Humans experience all reality through their imagination. It is not either/or.

True, reality is not a personal construct. However, our perception of reality is - constructed by means of imagination. All sensation feeds imagination which translates that sensation into images that interpret what is sensed. Reality is not imagination but human sense of reality is.

I do not distinguish between imagination and perception. One's imagination is the instrument of perception. I do not know how to explain it otherwise. Imagination may be prior to awareness, for some things are perceived without one being aware that such perception is taking place. We are created in such a way that our access to reality occurs as a function of imagination. Disciplined imagination orders perception, undisciplined imagination is ordered by perception.

Imagination contains intellect, memory and will. That is why creativity is possible in anything a human does, whether intellectually, physically (muscle memory comes to mind), meditatively, or spiritually. Understanding imagination in this way explains humanity profoundly. It is, I think, quite consistent with humans being created in the image of God, and underscores how Jesus Christ is the express image of God.

Imagination is the nexus between the real and the ideal. When one's imagination is grounded in reality, then any ideas one may have will have more possibility; this may explain how, with God, all things are possible, because God's creativity defines what is real. Thinking God's thoughts after him is the goal of any creative Christian thinker.

The Scripture that has most influenced my thinking about this is found in Genesis 6:5 –
"And God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually."
And Genesis 8:21 –
"And the LORD smelled a sweet savor; and the LORD said in his heart, I will not again curse the ground any more for man's sake; for the imagination of man's heart is evil from his youth; neither will I again smite any more every thing living, as I have done."
This juxtaposed with Romans 12:2 –
"... be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God."
And, of course, Philippians 4:8 –
"Finally, brethren, whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report; if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things."

[In Genesis 6:5, the Hebrew word translated as imagination is yetzer; eikasia, the near equivalent Greek word, is not found in the New Testament as far as I can find, but is a major concept in Platonic thought (Aristotle preferred phantasia).]

I may be making the word "imagination" work harder than others tend to, but it makes sense to me to use "imagination" in this way that I do. Though influenced by a number of other thinkers – for example, a book which seems to discuss imagination in the way I am using the word is THE WAKE OF IMAGINATION: Toward a Postmodern Culture (Routledge, 1998) by Richard Kearney – what I have written is my own thought.

My thinking is framed by my personal preference for intuitivity; I think this is why improvisatory theatre appeals to me so much - it takes intuition very seriously. Being a Christian, I must be careful to submit my own intuitivity to the discipline of the Spirit's leading, guided by the Word of God revealed in Scripture and confirmed by Christian community.

One must imagine what is True in order to know the Truth. In reference to this, I am studying 2 Thessalonians 2:1-16, the following verses in particular:
"... they received not the love of the truth, that they might be saved. And for this cause God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie: That they all might be damned who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness.
But we are bound to give thanks always to God for you, brethren beloved of the Lord, because God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth."

My father taught me that faith begins in one's imagination. Without faith, one cannot even begin to believe what is true. Renewal of the mind happens in the realm of imagination; one who is willing to submit to God's Spirit of Truth can expect true transformation to take place. Contrary to godless philosophers who claim all religion is delusional, the Word of God destroys delusion by revealing Truth. Really.

Monday, May 18, 2009

ON HEARING FAURE'S REQUIEM SUNG

by The Valley Forge Choir of Men & Boys
at Washington Memorial Chapel on February 29, 2003.

Silence.
Boys proceed with folded hands,
their fingers intertwined.
Men follow,
young, old, faithful, faint.
Others watch
and wait,
sitting in the wooden pews
or on stone benches
set along the chapel walls,
(some, having arrived late,
on folding chairs set up front),
all now a sudden congregation
set to hear a service sung -
an invocation to our God
that He
would grant eternal rest.
.
Requiem aeturnam ...
Organ chord sounds loudly first,
and startles some
who sit not knowing
what they should expect.
Rest eternal ...
sung in Latin verse,
the Lord beseeched with music,
God in Zion praised,
and we,
reminded that all flesh
shall die,
seek God's face
to favor us with mercy
in that coming moment.
.
Kyrie eleison ...
Lord Christ have mercy.
Surely you are able, Lord;
we pray that you be willing.
.
Rex glorie ... libera animas ...
From death deliver souls.
Oh Lord!
Is not the promise of the King of Glory sure?
Surely shall all faithful souls be saved
from being swallowed up
in deepest darkness,
from falling down forever
into abysmal obscurity.
Make those souls pass from death, O Lord;
deliver souls from death
to pass instead
to life.
.
Sanctus, sanctus, sanctus ...
Thrice holy God, Lord Sabaoth,
hear blessing from trebled voices
as organ plays with harp;
the highest hosannas sung
to the One who comes,
full of glory,
in the holy Name,
I AM.
.
Pie Jesu Domine ...
Please, Lord,
hear our prayer,
and, in your mercy,
grant eternal rest.
.
Agnus Dei, qui tollis peccata mundi ...
the world ... the sins ...
who takes sin away?
There is no one else
who can, who has, who sacrificed for us.
who ... who has mercy?
Only you, Lord Jesus Christ!
Oh, God ... like a slaughtered lamb you lay,
stretched out on a cross,
striped with bloody marks of malice,
miserable, suffering like we do,
and more,
and more,
and more ...
.
Libera me, Domine ...
lux perpetua luceat
Liberty! (Deliver me.)
Liberty? (Deliver me.)
From eternal death, deliver me.
Don't let death be dominant.
That fearful day approaches quickly
when all liberty proclaimed
in vain and bloody revolution
shall come to naught;
the wrathful truth is a bitter judge.
I tremble to consider the desolation of that day.
Those whose fantasy of perpetual luxury
will instead
be shut forever out
of Paradise,
suffering a second death.
.
in paradisum ...
In your coming ... be with us in your coming.
Be with us, Lord,
be with us now,
so that in Paradise we may be with you.
Help us find our rest, O Lord,
in you.
.
Requiem ...
requium aeturnam, dona nobis.
My heart, my flesh rejoice in God.
.
... exultaverant in Deum vivum!
To dwell with you, as you have come to dwell with us,
is bliss beyond imagination.
.
Laus et Jubilato ...
Hidden in your heart is home.
How dear your dwelling is, O Lord.
How delightful is your rest.

Friday, May 15, 2009

FROM FRACTURE TO FULFILLMENT

A Clinically Proven and Therapeutically Practical Concept of Marriage


* In March 1992, I edited this essay from excerpts of my father's unpublished monograph, "Towards an Operational Definition of Marriage and Its Implications for Divorce and Remarriage." It was his contribution to a committee of the General Council of the Assemblies of God who were commissioned to consider the credentialing of married ministers who have a living spouse; that committee, chaired by Glen D. Cole, published its report on March 30, 1990.

What is marriage?
There really is no definitive agreement
on the nature of marriage.
We simply assume that, since we all use the term "marriage," there exists a common meaning. As long as we are not confronted by problems related to its meaning, these remain confused and confounding issues. The consequences are severe. If the validity of a marriage cannot clearly be articulated, there will be both uncertainty and disagreement about what divorce is and how the dissolution of a marriage actually comes about. How can any clear guidelines be provided for the role of persons bogged down in such a quagmire?

A simple conceptual definition is inadequate.
In order to identify a valid marriage, we must progress to an operational definition to describe the composite reality we call "marriage." This beginning point is what is to be established. An operational definition is necessary for marriage so that we can measure the components of this phenomenon which we treat as a single entity. This will help us in determining the time when a marriage indeed exists, as well as the factors which can disintegrate the marital relationship.

The model developed embodies what is asserted to be
universally characteristic of marriage
in both recorded human history and myriad cultural settings.
Identified in this model are three components - coitus, commitment and culture. These components are in dynamic relation to each other through their paired elements: in coitus are the elements of procreation and pleasure; the elements of commitment are word and work; and in the cultural component we have elements that are regulatory and religious.

BIOLOGICAL: Coitus (procreation & pleasure)
interfaces with Culture & Commitment
PSYCHOLOGICAL: Commitment (word & work)
interfaces with Coitus & Culture
SOCIAL: Culture (regulatory & religious)
interfaces with Commitment & Coitus
(CHRISTIAN MARRIAGE)
When these elements are rightly related
to Jesus Christ
for the glory of God
Flowing from this model is the operational definition which establishes a basis for determining a valid marriage. A usual, normal marriage is one in which a man and a woman exchange verbal and behavioral commitment to each other, who meet the requirements of their culture, and who share sexual relations with one another. Elements of this dyad may be missing, deviant, or otherwise different due to cultural diversity. However, we still have a marriage. It may be fractured, yes, but still a marriage. With this established, the marital dyad can be assessed as whole, or, if deteriorating, as fractured, and with continued deterioration, as disintegrated.
A usual, normal marriage =
a relationship in which
a man and a woman exchange
verbal and behavioral commitment to each other,
who meet the requirements of their culture,
and who share sexual relations with one another.
It should be self-evident that we are all born strangers. We hold the power to modify that initial relationship through communication. From stranger, we may go on to acquaintance to casual friend and on to close friend. Out of nothing we create a unique relationship. Just as we can create and nurture our social relationships, we also can act to dissolve those very same relationships. After creating a close friend relationship, we can use our decision-making capability to modify it, and, instead of cultivating the friendship, cause it to deteriorate, even going on to change the relationship to enemy. But we can never be a stranger to that other one ever again.
Fractures are characteristic of,
not the exception to, all human systems.
Theoretically,
all fractures in these human social systems
can be healed.
In practice, this rarely occurs.
The dissolution of a relationship does not include being relieved from the responsibility that goes with the privilege of exercisin the power to establish the relationship in the first place. For example, with the privilege of creating a friendship come the responsibility that makes it impossible to ignore the other's person without consequently fracturing that friendship. Fractures are characteristic of, not the exception to, all human systems. Theoretically, all fractures in these human social systems can be healed. In practice, this rarely occurs. Some continue to worsen until the system no longer holds together and the relationships no longer continue to contribute to the cohesion of the group. This process of "ungluing" is the reverse of that which brought the relationship together. It accounts for a human condition that does not occur suddenly but is instead drawn out over time.
Hardness of heart begins when bitterness,
however slight, whatever its form,
is allowed to take root within a person.
Attitudinal and behavioral rather than physical, this condition involves spiritual, psychological and social factors. One might describe it as "growing cold." The biblical label is "hardness of heart." In fact, Jesus himself taught that provision was made for divorce on account of "hardness of heart." Hardness of heart begins when bitterness, however slight, whatever its form, is allowed to take root within a person. The longer the bitterness is nurtured, the colder the heart gets, until one becomes afflicted with "hardness of heart." When this process occurs and is allowed to continue in a marriage relationship, the elements of the marital dyad become anemic and weak. Such a marriage is in trouble to the point of deterioration. Trifle by trifle, in one element after another, the marital dyad becomes unglued. The process that brought it together has reversed itself. This is what conventionally is meant when we say "their marriage is falling apart."
It is possible, and preferable,
that a couple stay together
and work out their problems together.
Coming upon hard times is no ground to say a marriage is fractured beyond repair. Despite that such circumstances are often bitter and frustrating as well as emotionally and intellectually exhausting, a fractured marriage is still a valid marriage. A valid marriage constrains the pair to maintain their responsibilities towards one another so that each may derive the privileges therefrom. A spouse who is committed to the marriage relationship imagines, thinks, and behaves in a covenantal way. Relationships are created and maintained by two persons. It is doubtful that there are very many marital problems in which one party is totally innocent, that is, one did not contribute in any way to the delinquency of the mate. If both parties "will to do the will" of the laws involved in creating productive relationships, disintegration of a union may be stopped and reversed.
Marriage vows are sacred
to self and society.
In being committed to maintaing their marriage, a husband and wife must continually seek how they may enrich, encourage, enjoy and enhance one another. While it only takes one spouse to ruin the marriage, it takes both to maintain a healthy and holy marital relationship. This model has proven to be a practical clinical tool for diagnosing a developing, healthy or troubled relationship. Especially helpful is its usefulness for developing a comprehensive therapy to maintain ro restore an adequate and successful marriage. Marriage vows are sacred to self and society. Using this conceptual model of marriage may help husbands and wives facing struggle, strain and separation to keep honoring their vows together.
A man and woman, as husband and wife,
commit themselves
to maintaining their marriage
by continually seeking how they may
enrich, encourage, enjoy and enhance
one another.
While it only takes one spouse
to ruin a marriage,
it takes both to maintain
a healthy and holy marital relationship.

THE PROCESS OF INTERPRETATION ...

... is a circular one
calling for a movement
from a part to whole
and back to the part.

The paradigm
for this hermeneutical circle,
or, better, helix,
is the understanding of a sentence.

This requires
an understanding of individual words
which requires
an understanding of the sentence
which requires
an understanding of the paragraph
which requires
an understanding of individual sentences
which requires
an understanding of the language and social practices
with which it is interwoven.

Coming to understand a text
is a process of temporarily progressive feedback.
I understand the first word in a sentence
in the light of an expectation
regarding what kind of word will follow,
and likewise
for the words that do follow.
But
my expectations are not always fulfilled,
and they are usually fairly general.
By the time I have reached the full stop
or the end of the paragraph,
hitherto possible meanings
of later sentences or paragraphs
may have surprises in store for me
that will call for a revision
in my understanding of the text so far.
This is why
the so-called
hermeneutical circle
is really a spiral ....
adapted from John Llwelyn , Beyond Metaphysics?
The Hermeneutic Circle in Contemporary Continental Philosophy,
Alantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities, 1985.

Theology of Pentecostal liturgy

The following is my replay to someone who challenged me to explain what I meant by the phrase "theology of the Pentecostal liturgy."

Let me begin with what I do not mean - the theology of Pentecostal liturgy is not some carefully systematized formulation of religious ritual. When I use the term "theology," I know others will probably understand me to mean something more systematic than I intend. For me, theology is an account of encountering or attempting to encounter God - "this is my story, this is my song ..."

In referring to "those more experienced in the theology of Pentecostal liturgy" I am thinking specifically of the congregation in which my family worshipped when I was growing up and the larger fellowship of the Assemblies of God with whom we were affliliated. "Liturgy" can be translated as "the work/duty of the people" and that is the meaning I intend. By Pentecostal liturgy I mean what people led by the Holy Spirit do when gathered together in the name of Jesus - this is called worship.

The theology of Pentecostal liturgy, then, is one's understanding of Pentecostal liturgy (Sprit-led public worship) in reference to one's own considered experience of encountering God. And since all understanding is socially contextualized, the theology of Pentecostal liturgy is not some individual fancy but the common reflection of one's community.

In seminary I took part in a student/faculty seminar in which the topic of discussion was Pentecostal worship. My contribution was to consider the impact of the Pentecostal and Charismatic movements on Worship. I entitled my presentation "Immediate Encounter With God." The following is an excerpt from that presentation:

This [my title] reflects first Rudolph Schnakenburg's definition of worship as being "an encounter with God for which God must make man capable by his grace." It also is influenced by Peter Hocken's repeated references to immediacy in speaking of what the grace of Pentecost brings. The challenge of discussing the impact of something on worship is that the word impact implies that worship has somehow been shaped by this thing. One may recall Dom Gregory Dix's classic study, THE SHAPE OF THE LITURGY, in which he ostensibly examines the history of Christian worship by reviewing various liturgical approaches throughout Church history. Is the question then, "How has 'the Liturgy" been reshaped by the Pentecostal and Charismatic movements?" I hope not because that question demands a complex answer which is beyond the scope of this forum. A simpler answer may be given if one were to ask how worship has been affected by the Pentecostal and Charismatic movements.

I offer than a tentative definition of worship: True worship is faithful response to an immediate encounter with God. A response because God is gracious to initiate such encounter; immediate because worship is no mere memorial service but a realization of the shekinah Presence of God. When God's presence is made manifest, things happen! Look at Pentecost in Acts 2; look at the Pentecostals in Azuza Street. Perhaps this is why initial evidence is still such a significant concern of our Movement. How does one know whether this is that which was prophesied? The charismata manifest God's grace and God's grace is uniquely revealed in Jesus Christ.

Our liturgies must allow for this great truth. When Spirit-filled people are involved in Christ-centered liturgy, God Almighty makes Himself manifest and worship happens. We see this in Acts 13:2 when, in the midst of some Christian liturgy (NRSV translates leitourgounton as "worshipping"), the Holy Spirit spoke. What that liturgy was is unknown to us except that it involved fasting and prayer. What we do know is that those liturgical participants did not resent the Spirit's interference but rather responded in obedience.

So one may hope that this is the legacy bequeathed by the Pentecostal and Charismatic movements to the Church at large, that Christians faithfully involved in whatever liturgical form of worship will welcome the "interference" of God's Holy Spirit and be willing to respond obediently to His voice. ....

WISDOM FROM WAY BACK WHEN

God does things His own way 
and we would be wise to follow His way of doing things; 
it may seem to someone to be a bit foolish at the time, 
but He is God. 
We may think that there is a wiser way
to do what God is doing,
but what we think about what God does
is not as important as what God actually does.

Sometimes 
what God has done makes us laugh,  sometimes cry, 
sometimes jump, sometimes fall down, 
sometimes run, sometimes stand still, 
and sometimes what God does makes us wonder 
what in the world is going on? 
The Bible is full of stories
of people wondering about what God is doing.

Adam was tickled to find Eve when he woke up,
then both giggled to find themselves alive
in such a Garden full of life.
although they wondered
why they couldn't have what they thought they wanted
rather than thinking about what God wanted them to have.

Their own "wisdom" made them act like fools;
instead of living in the Garden,
they had to leave to go out on the ground
and begin to die.

But
through their children
God began to work out a way for life to conquer death. 
First was Cain and Abel,
offering to God
the best of what their own work had produced.
Cain wondered why Abel pleased God,
then got mad when God wouldn't tell him;
after killing Abel,
Cain kept on wondering
as he wandered farther and farther away.

Civilization was built in cities full of questions Cain kept asking, 
but the answer could be found 
only in the son born after Cain was gone. 
Adam knew the third son born to Eve
would take the empty place left by Cain,
and many generations followed,
fruitfully fulfilling God's funny way of wisdom.

Noah built an Ark in the middle of the desert
just in time before the rain came
to float away to safety in his two-by-two waterproof zoo.

Abraham was very, very old, as was Sarah, the wife he loved;
both of them just had to laugh
when God promised they would have a son!

But that is just what happened,
and the laughter went on and on.

The son had sons and they had sons and their sons had sons, too.

Like grains of sand on the ground,
or stars up in the sky,
the sons and daughters that were born
became more than could be counted!

Some were good,
some were not,
but still God's promise was fulfilled
that His way of Life
would remain open
for those who would be willing
to follow faithfully.

One son of the many sons of Abraham
was David
and he became a king!
He danced in front of everybody
and sang about how wonderful was God's way.

Loving God like he did, 
David, though not perfect, 
became known, 
not just for what he did, 
but for the reason why he did it - to please God. 
The prophets all agree
that pleasing God is what counts,
come Judgment Day,
not sacrifices or services
or such silly stuff
as smoking up a room with smelly incense.

Jesus, son of David, said,
Serving God first means 
loving God 
the way 
He wants us to love Him, 
with all our heart 
and all our mind and all our strength. 
"Wisdom is proved right by all her children." 

Faithfully following God 
even when it seems foolish to follow where He leads 
that is wisdom.

Musings on the EMERGENT church

I have not, as of yet, visited with any group that identifies themselves as "emergent."  Perhaps the following impressions, formed by reading about the so-called "emerging church" movement, will provoke some emergent reader to invite me to a local meeting to experience emergence for myself.  The notion of "emergent Christianity" seems to me so much like the same-ol' same ol' buzzword-crazed faddishness that ignores the truth that God's Spirit has continually been moving in and among the Body of Christ since the promise of Pentecost was fulfilled.  It is disturbing when those who should know better jump on the bandwagon and begin declaring the news of the most recently perceived revolution rather than moving to help poor faddish fools discern what God already has always been doing now. What I have read of emergent literature makes me want to lump the whole movement in with those who speak of holiness but settle for hip-ness as their standard of discernment.  According to Phyllis Tickle (The Great Emergence: How Christianity Is Changing and Why): "These emergent folks are enthusiastically steering toward the middle and embracing the whole post-denominational world."  If God is not steering the good ship EMERGENCE, that boat is a Ship of Fools; saintly sailors would be better off letting the Spirit blow them toward, not the middle with its middling theology, but the Center of all things, Jesus Christ, in order to be embraced in His ever-open arms.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

I hear it when the window's open

Music is not morally neutral. Sound waves are morally neutral. But only moral creatures - humans - can appreciate those sound waves in a way called music; only humans can turn a physical acoustic phenomenon into the profound experience of music. Music is defined as much by what it does to you as how it reaches you. Music can assault the senses or soothe them; it can be literally violent, as the "experimental" music of the radical early 70's explored. My cutting edge professor (who possessed and demonstrated one of the first MOOG Synthesizers in class and also shared the musical Jesus Christ Superstar before it went public) gave us a book (printed in the underground street radical style in vogue back in the day) which contained a chapter on ways music could induce or actually cause violence, including "killer frequencies, painful volumes and jarring rhythms meant to disrupt the social order. (One author recommended researching how to use telephones to kill whoever put the receiver to their ear. And that does not include the lyrics. Thankfully, such efforts were vastly over-rated and much of it debunked, according to my son about to graduate from conservatory with a music degree. Still, the potential of music as a social force is undeniable, as anyone living through, and since, the sixties knows. I remember reading a blue paperback my grandmother had called "Rhythm, Riots and Revolution" when I was younger. Not until my college course did I take it seriously, although I must admit, the book gave me a creepy weird feeling just reading it. As did much of the music back then.

Music is physical and physiological in the same way as drugs, drink and getting socked in the stomach- or pasta, latte and getting kissed - these are neither analogies nor metaphors. Music is a total body experience engaging the emotions, imagination and even mind, in profound and varied ways. It is the unique art in this respect, I think, for the listener. The physical effect of our sound production, especially the harmonies and rhythms, upon our audiences was dwelt on at length by choral conductors in choruses I sang in, both sacred and secular. Yes, music as music is potent in and of itself. It is both physics and physical. But that is not what makes it morally charged. It is that music is inextricably bound to it's recipient - humans. No other audience, except probably angels (and God), can perceive it as such - although I think animals, especially dolphins and other species, might pick up on the harmonics involved.

There is a notion circulating that no music is inherently evil. The kernel of truth contained in this statement is trumped by the moral nature of both the human realm which it entails and the realm of evil which presently exists. "Cultural conditioning" does not provide an adequate way out either, for one must ask, "why did such and a such a culture choose or produce such a music to begin with?". Aha! Then you will begin to discern the real roots of music. For starters, try jazz and gospel. (Hope you're not too easily scandalized.) Classical music is not exempt and may, in fact, be the sublest sorcerer of all. In the performing arts today, humanism reigns. What I am saying is this - one may analyze music in terms of it's components, one of which is it's cultural context. This, I believe, applies to all music, even that produced by computers which themselves are the products of high-tech culture. It always goes back to man, not God. To get the divine connection one must probe the composer himself or herself; yet, God can use anything and turn it for His glory. But, not so fast! The human factor will always be there, at both ends - in composition/production and in reception/appreciation.

Before air-conditioning, praises wafted into the street through open church windows. My son makes an excellent point when he says "I believe the Holy Spirit makes a uniquely beautiful connection to each listener's soul when music is played, letting them glimpse one facet of the diamond that is musical beauty. I also believe that some pieces are more beautiful, pleasing, or artistically effective than others. But let this be an aesthetic distinction, not a moral one!" If only we could be so abstract in real life! But the problem is, the necessary human involved is a moral creature - not just an aesthetic one! The distinction is purely analytical. Is there music in heaven? I like to think so. Perhaps angelic song does resemble ours. But even tongues of angels come from human lips. We don't have biblical scores but we do have psalms. A bottomless well for composers, glorious sound and song has been drawn from this songbook for millenia. (And it's not always been "pretty" - I remember some people, purists of a sort, I suppose, opted out of an Asaph Ensemble performance of Stravinsky's jarringly beautiful Symphony of Psalms when we sang it at the Kennedy Center.) Music may seem heavenly. But it may be more relevant to cite heaven as the source of inspiration which must first pass through the human composer before being realized and, like everything else we do, is therefore subject to - some might say marred with - our nature. Music does open a window, some wider than others, to a nature beyond our own, a supernatural realm in which many an audiophile, like myself, can dwell by merely...listening.

Music is a manifestation of the spirit realm and, as such, will reflect the spirit war as well. Here is the rub - if you believe in such things (and I do), then music might be looked at as one does a shadow of dancers or boxers where the real entities are not directly in our realm. But the music is. And in this war, there is no DMZ, no neutral ground. Because we are in the battle, like it or not. In fact, the war is being fought over us and never stops not even for a truce. It comes as no surprise to me that spiritual renewal, including the gifts of the Spirit about which we have spoken elsewhere, arrive on the wings of music - some of it, quite simple (the little charismatic melody "Hallelujah" or children's "Yes, Jesus Loves Me") or profoundly complex (JSBach, symphonies) or in between (hymns, spiritual songs) - even without the words. And how about ancient chant? Sacred sound which breaks down walls of inhibition and allows to rush in the Spirit of the Lord Jesus in all of His beauty and holiness. And it is uttered, plucked, bowed and breathed by human beings, themselves become the instruments. To clap, to dance, to sing, to play - these things are not merely of this earth you know. But they happen on this earth, and that is the miracle of art. It is for this we long, when indeed we do long, for times of refreshing from God. It is at once soul cleansing and empowering.

Music incarnates truth in ways that propositions can only, well, propose. Music embodies the phrase "to come alive".. If I was forced to choose between the screen and soundtrack of my favorite movies, I would choose the soundtrack. Ever watch a scene with the sound turned off - what a disappointment. But it is rarely disappointing the other way - in fact, with music, I can imagine my own movie...just like whoever wrote the filmscore. I actually have imagined what music must be playing in the background of my mundane little life..and it is sometimes grand and often, quite beautiful. Sometimes, I hear it....

And so this great conflict which rent the heavens is relentless as the rhythms of nature, that natural music which, to me, is of the purest sort because man, not creation, is fallen. The cosmos rings with overtones on every scale. Overtones of creation. Our universe is subject to the law of decay because God fixed it so as to drive the great engine of nature, including our bodies and brains. Though demon hordes may infest the stage of human perception (save those believers shielded by the blood of Christ Jesus), they don't infest the literal skies. From the humming of an atom to the throbbing galaxy; the chirping of a cricket to the crashing storm; the whisper of a flower to the lion's great roar; and the deep voice of the whale and delicate song of the woodthrush, and the sound of space itself - these all sings the praises of the great Creator who sustains His handiwork lovingly, both Artist and Engineer. As the celebration choir sings in our sanctuary, "but His favorite song of all, is the song of the redeemed". That's us, baby. We need to join the dawn chorus more often. Fairest Lord Jesus, Ruler of all Nature....That realm is solely God's, and is in play solely to fulfill His purposes in making us more and more in His Image until that day of future glory - a day of song and music, forever.

Saturday, May 9, 2009

Mark Cartledge's "The Gift of Speaking in Tongues"

In conjunction with my Spirituality class I would like to begin reviewing the book in this blog as a a possible hand-out for the class.

Hold to Christ,
Charlie

Friday, May 8, 2009

OBSERVED IN PASSING

A two year old accompanying his older brother for a clinic visit today admonished him: "You better behave or you will be swallowed by a whale!" Most of us get hung up on the fish story part. This kid gets the real story. That's the Kingdom of God. Mark ten fifteen.

JESHUA jogulatore

THE FOURTH GOSPEL

presented spoudogeloically*

I am the way.
True,
this life is full of folly,
but
I am wise to it.
Come and eat,
come, drink.
Hunger and thirst after righteousness.
Bless you!
Breathe from your belly;
feel the Spirit
spring up from within you.

*from Greek spoudogeloisos ("serious-smiling"):
serio-comical genre of ancient theatre.

The serio-comical possesses the unique and transforming vitality of laughter that can unify culture because it is accessible to everyone.  Serio-comico theatre undermines the serious, unmediated discourse of power & authority in humorous, ironic, and satiric accents through the voices of rogues, clowns, or fools.  Such marginal characters decenter the ideological world of other characters.

... piercing even to the division of ... joints & marrow

I think it prudent to recall from where the name MARROW was derived. Such recollection calls for due diligence in logging our thoughts on the web and responding to the thoughts of others as they join our conversation.
In the Epistle to the Hebrews, 4:2-12, we read:

For indeed the gospel was preached to us as well as to them; but the word which they heard did not profit them, not being mixed with faith in those who heard it. ... Let us therefore be diligent to enter that rest, lest anyone fall according to the same example of disobedience. 

For the word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the division of soul and spirit, and of joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart. And there is no creature hidden from His sight, but all things are naked and open to the eyes of Him to whom we must give account. 

I pray we welcome God's word as the discerner of the thoughts and intention of our hearts. 

ALTRUISM - fatally flawed?

Is altruism ultimately a fatally flawed idea? 

I learned from my father that the word "altruism" was coined by Comte to avoid having to use the God-laden word "agape." Bad move because such love is impossible without God's empowering grace. 

Loving others as oneself is fully possible only as one fully loves God with one's whole self, body and mind and soul and strength. Loving others is our response to God first loving us; we become imitators of God by depending on God's grace to help us act towards others for their good without no reciprocal demand, just as Christ loved us and gave himself for us. 

Acting altruistically rather than graciously will lead to frustration, resentment, and worse. Without God, we will end up saying with Cain, who killed his brother, "Am I my brother's keeper?" Altruism's appeal is that it appears to agree that I am my brother's keeper, yet it offers no way to overcome the sinful drive to favor oneself first. 

Altruism is a lie that depends on appearing to be like agape yet really being so only superficially. Such a masquerade, typical of the work of the Father of Lies, is exposed when one walks in the light of truth that is the way of Jesus Christ, begotten of God, the Father of Lights.

SUBJECT/OBJECT & SUBJECTIVITY/OBJECTIVITY

In our recent discussions, subjectivity keeps coming up, especially in regard to hermeneutics.  As the blurb on the back of Slavoj Zizek's book, THE TICKLISH SUBJECT, puts it: "A spectre is haunting Western academia, the spectre of the Cartesian subject."  His book is subtitled, "The Absent Centre of Political Ontology."  In his introduction, Zizek writes, "All academic powers have entered into a holy alliance to exorcize this spectre ..."  Having just read my son's paper on HEARING PARABLES, I now revel in the possibilities of subjective reading that can be trusted when rightly (objectively?) related to the Person of Jesus Christ, Himself the Parable par excellence.  

In Christ Jesus, God subjected Himself to the confines of creation, the object of His own powerful Word. In following Christ, that Word become flesh, we, no longer objects of God's wrath but rather the objects of God's love in Christ, subject ourselves to God.  In another post someone wondered about the subject of creation - is it Man?  The first Man fell (a phrase which recalls the title of another paper my son Vincent wrote a while ago, "The Man Fell In"), the Second Man fulfilled what the first Man failed to do; the reconciliation of all Mankind has been accomplished in this faithful act.  It does indeed seem that Man is the subject of Creation. The subject of every story relates in some way to this one Story - thus history is indeed His Story.

" Objective" cosmology (and any other -ology) ignores the person making the observations, but in doing so, becomes blind to the Person who, having created the Cosmos, continues to observe the observer.  Putting oneself into the perspective of that Person's observation will surely recalibrate how one measures what appears in one's observations.  Hermeneutical subjectivity must always consider the perspective of this Other Person.  The Greek word for reading is anagnosko, "knowing again."  This concept of recognition is highlighted by Gadamer and others.  I think it is significant in that recognition of Jesus Christ as the Lord of History will faithfully subject our perspective to become calibrated by the Author Himself whose intent is revealed in the call and response each of us experience through the Holy Spirit, Giver of Life.

The great hermeneutical question remains: where does meaning reside?  In the intention of the author? in the content of the text? in the retention of the reader?  Perhaps the genius of teaching in parables is that the answer is "yes" to the question.  "For the Son of God, Christ Jesus, ... was not yes and no, but yes in Him" (2 Corinthians 1:19).  Jesus tells the tale of Himself to those united with him in the telling.  Jesus is "the way, the truth and the life." Jesus was, is, and will be.  Jesus is the stillpoint making history move.  Objecting to this Subject subjects one to become the object of God's wrath.  Let us rather subject ourselves to this Objective Truth: Christ died, Christ lived, Christ will come again.

Introducing BOTH JOINT & MARROW

This weblog is intended to be a site where discussion happens.  You are invited to join an on-going conversation with a diverse group of people who have been talking with one another for some time already.  We call ourselves MARROW.