Being fed

I posted this nearly a year ago. I’m re-blogging myself (is that okay? probably not). And yet I’m doing it anyways, because:

a) I don’t even think my wife was reading when I posted this. So it’s new content for all but three of you out there.

b) I’ve realized how much I’ve written since that is trying to do the same thing — combat the notion of church and Christianity as a consumer spectacle, and instead encourage us to see Christianity – and our participation in the church – as a participation in the life of God. When we come to the faith and the church as selfish consumers, I think we’ll come away empty in the long run. That means church leaders need to be doing anything we can to help people participate in the life of Christ, not just come and consume a good show/program/event/service. That makes it messier. But it’s also real food.

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feed me“My food,” said Jesus, “is to do the will of him who sent me and to finish his work.” John 4:34

“I’m just not being fed.” You’ve heard the cliché. It tends to mean that someone isn’t hearing things that are comforting, challenging, enlightening, or motivating. Or perhaps that they aren’t enjoying something enough. At its base, it expects a passive reception of something that a church leader or church program should be providing.

What if “our food” were the food Jesus speaks of? If our food, like Jesus’, is to do the will of the Father, “being fed” ceases to be a passive reception and becomes an active involvement in God’s mission. It transforms our understanding of Christianity from a focus on prosperity (“What am I getting?”) to a focus on participation in the will of God (“How am I participating?”).

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Multi-site ministry done differently

The United Methodist Reporter just posted an article I wrote on how and why First UMC Lexington is doing multi-site ministry. See it here.

That article is an adaptation of the letter I wrote to our congregation about our structure. Several people asked good questions about other parts of that structure. I plan to write more about it soon.

Christians, Capitalism, and Ayn Rand

This post has just gotten a lot of hits, apparently from a prominent Facebook share. It (and Jesus and Politics) seemed especially appropriate four days before election, so I’m re-blogging.

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cap-socIf you pay any attention to politics, you’ve been deluged with economic talk for the past, oh, four years. We’ve seen the rise of the Tea Party, Occupy Wall Street, the return of Gordon Gekko, and polarized political views about how to fix a slumping economy. And that barely scratched the surface of what you’ll get in the next three months.

In the midst of it all, I’ve spent a lot of time wondering what is an appropriate Christian stance and response.

Capitalism and Christian Economics

Let’s look first at the ardent capitalists. Ayn Rand’s fame has soared in the past few years. People like Edward Conard are writing about how growing income inequality is a sign that our economy is working (see this long but interesting interview with him).

So far as the goal is to increase the number of middle-class people and to increase their purchasing power, I…

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