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Homebrewed Christianity

Equipping grassroots theologians for creative thinking, engaging, and living.

You are here: Home / 2009 / Archives for January 2009

5 Unorthodox Super Bowl XLIII Predictions

January 30, 2009 by Chad Crawford Leave a Comment

This is going to be the most exciting Super Bowl ever. OK, not really, but I read this Forbes article on wild bets going on this year in Vegas that got me excited to watch the game.

(The following predictions are not from an expert. They are just for fun and not intended to be used for gambling. But if you win, send a thank you check or money order to: PO Box 344, San Francisco, CA 94104)

    point-to-the-sky

  1. First commercial: This is a tough one. They don’t release any hints ahead of time as far as I know. I guess the lack of surprise means less people will be paying attention. Beer is the odds-on favorite, followed by trucks, online stock trading, and wireless gadgets. I thought about calling a baby driving a truck while buying stocks using a smart phone. Then I decided to stay safe and go with GoDaddy.com, last year’s opener.
  2. First TD celebration: I’ll be slightly less safe here. I don’t want to be boring and call a spike. I’m going to say it will be the less common ‘shout out to Super Bowl gods,’ seen right.
  3. What song Springsteen will sing first: The Boss is going to stick to the basics. These unstable times in our country call for familiar and rock solid tunes. I’m going with ‘Born in the U.S.A’ hands down.
  4. Gatorade color with which the winning coach gets showered: Vegas gives 3-1 odds on Yellow. I can picture the scene going down. I can’t quite make out the team colors, but I can see the Gatorade color vividly – Orange.
  5. President Obama will bring back the tradition of calling the winning team before broadcast ends: You bet, and he’ll call from his Blackberry.

How would you call these?

(And for the record: Cardinals 26-21)

Filed Under: living, media Tagged With: Blackberry, Bruce Springsteen, Obama, Super Bowl

God Hates Shrimp!

January 23, 2009 by Chad Crawford 1 Comment

godhatesshrimp

Shrimp, crab, lobster, clams, mussels, all these are an abomination before the Lord, just as gays are an abomination. Why stop at protesting gay marriage? Bring all of God’s law unto the heathens and the sodomites. We call upon all Christians to join the crusade against Long John Silver’s and Red Lobster. Yea, even Popeye’s shall be cleansed. The name of Bubba shall be anathema. We must stop the unbelievers from destroying the sanctity of our restaurants.

GodHatesShrimp.com

Facebook Group

ht: Bobby Hopkins

Filed Under: engaging Tagged With: homosexuality, Leviticus, LGBT

Why God is Against Playing Video Games

January 23, 2009 by Tripp Fuller Leave a Comment

It appears even the scientists performing the study were disapointed to find out that those who play video games regularly have poor relationships with their family and friends.  Assuming the accuracy of this study it kind of makes the completion of the 16 year in my Madden dynasty an ethcial predicament.  I am sure John Madden is saddened by this news and will hault production of next year’s installment to start a campaigin for family flag football leauges.  Now all video games are going to be rated RD for relationally destructive.  RD is bit more catchy than SIN.

Filed Under: engaging

Deacon Jo Ann on “A Heretic’s Guide to Eternity”

January 22, 2009 by Tripp Fuller 2 Comments

I sent a dear friend, Homebrewed Christianity Deacon, and regular blog comment author Jo Ann Goodson a copy of ‘A Heretic’s Guide to Eternity‘ and she sent me her response to the book.  Since I enjoyed the book when it came out and never blogged about it I thought I would share her comments with permission.  Jo Ann has a keen spiritual ear, loving heart, and intuits great theology.  I learned more from her in small groups at church in Divinity school than many classes, so I hope you enjoy her observations.  Without further ado, Jo Ann……..

Heretic: A church member who holds beliefs opposed to church dogma.

“Everywhere you turn you hear the call for change, and it is not just a call from the margins of society, but from the mainstream. The title “A Heretic’s Guide to Eternity” was chosen as a provocative title because the authors wanted to signal their belief that these are times that call for radical revision and not simply cosmetic  adjustments when it comes to Christian Faith. This choice was an intentional attempt to redeem a word and a way of approaching Faith.”

The authors have a conviction that there are other ways to look at the Christian story, other ways to approach the Christian Life, and other ways to offer the Gospel to the world. A way of life that will challenge some of the basic assumptions of the modern Church. This is a book particularly for those who dream of a world filled with the beauty of God’s grace, whose greatest desire is to see humans flourish under the reign of God’s Love.

The root of Christian Faith is Jesus’ call to Love passionately and Radically. One heretical thought is the authors no longer believe that evangelism means the arguing of propositional ideas of God but rather that it is the telling of one’s story.

Mystical responsibility is a term used throughout the book. Their theory is that it is not about merely adopting theories about God; but it is about living in sync and in tune with the sacred rhythm of Grace.

Burke and Taylor prove their case by revisiting the scriptures and giving us a fresh new way of seeing and thinking through these stories. It is important in doing this that we use our God given imagination, review our history, remind ourselves of new information that was not available to the writers of scriptures. We must not just search for information but we must seek wisdom. Information about God is helpful for belief systems, but it is wisdom that transforms.

“Mystical responsibility” seeks to recover all of life for God. It is a theology of the marketplace, not just the sanctuary. It is a theology that’s available to everyone regardless of race, color or creed.

Anger – even so called “righteous anger”- will never change the world. It takes a different kind of Power to do that. Only the Power of radical Love and Grace can accomplish the change we seek. Jesus said “I am the way.” We are asked to revisit these words. Most orthodox Churches interpret this to mean that you must believe in Jesus and obey all laws to gain an entry into Heaven. Burke and Taylor see this as a call for a fresh new interpretation.

See this as “I am the Life.” Jesus Life, not just His acts on our behalf but the life he lived on earth, is “The Life.” Living a life like Jesus is what it truly means to live. Jesus declared His life to be the way to choose, not the way of Zealotry or organism or compromise, but a life committed to God, committed to God’s way, and committed Grace.

Our challenge is to find the sacred in simple, mundane moments of today – not the past or the future, but TODAY.

If we want Love and Grace to abound, then we must look at ourselves, others, the world and our churches differently and make the necessary changes to work with God in transforming this world. Then we must live our life as Jesus did. He was our example.

Some cannot find these changes taking place in our Churches and they have left. They left the Church not God and are finding new ways to live out God’s call in small groups, banding together for worship and ministry. Examples are given throughout this book for our understanding and challenge.

Christian churches were not available when Jesus was living. They were established later. Therefore I must agree that what Jesus said must be interpreted in such a way that we see Jesus speaking to a person or people not “the Church.” This makes a huge difference in my estimation.

I have always known my “call” was to be a lay minister in the “marketplace” and I must be involved in peacemaking, reconciliation and transformation. I think this fits well with the concepts I found in “A Heretic’s Guide to Eternity.” It is more about what we do on a daily basis living our lives than it is in “doing church.”

I remain in my church as I think it is unique and attempting to live out what I have learned from this book. For me I want my church to be transformed from within and I work towards that end.

Filed Under: books, emergent, engaging

Bloggers, We Want YOU!!!!!

January 22, 2009 by Tripp Fuller 20 Comments

Are you a blogger?

Are you interested in theology?

Do you think theology should transform the life of Christians, Churches, and Creation?

Do you like reading books that make you think about these questions?

Do you like FREE books?

If you are still with me and would be willing to blog about a book then let me know via email. tripp.fuller at gmail.com

I am helping to organize a series of conferences as part of a grant at school called Transforming Theology.  We will have a conference with three different groups, theologians, national denomination leaders, and seminary and divinity school deans from across the country.  Because we share the conviction that Theology Matters, this diverse group of mainline Christians and emerging church folk, progressive Evangelicals and old-fashioned liberals, seekers and settled folks will gather to imagine a theological vision with intellectual integrity for progressive Christianity that is communicable and challenging for the church.

A huge number of America’s best theologians are coming to the conference and as we move towards their arrival and the dialouge with the denominations we want to get the online community involved in the discussion.  The first way is to get books by these theologians in bloggers hands so they can begin to engage the ideas.  Engaging them is what we want, not just an affirmative pat on the back, a summary, or a all out rejection, but engagement in whatever your attention is drawn to.  Your post(s) on the book will be featured on the Transforming Theology website and your questions and push backs will form the backgroud to an online component of the conference.

Since I am involved and invested in transfomring the common theology in more progressive circles and having a theology that transforms the Christian comunity’s life together you will be hearing more about this in the future, but for now consider being part of Transforming Theology Theo-Blogger Consortium.   See that sounds prestigous and you can tell your friends how you worked on a grant with Harvey Cox, Emilie Townes, and Tony Jones.

Sign Up HERE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Filed Under: books

Richard Rohr on Action and Contemplation: Homebrewed Christianity 41

January 22, 2009 by Chad Crawford 5 Comments

rohrThis week on Homebrewed Christianity, Fr. Richard Rohr discusses the Emerging Church, and the upcoming conference with Brian McLaren, Phyllis Tickle, and Shane Claiborne at his Center for Contemplation and Action.

We talk about the relationship between contemplation and action. Fr. Rohr says that the most important word in The Center for Action and Contemplation isn’t ‘action’ or ‘contemplation’. It’s the word ‘and’. We talk about his book Things Hidden: Scripture as Spirituality and the balance between internal and external authority when interpreting scripture.

Ryan Parker at PopTheology.com shares another couple of film reviews: Slumdog Millionaire and Happy Go Lucky.

For information on the Emerging Church Conference, ‘the first large gathering of Roman Catholic, Mainline Protestant, Evangelical, and other Christians seeking to explore this emergence and convergence together,’ visit CACRadicalGrace.org.

‘Utterly Humbled by Mystery‘, Fr. Rohr’s ‘This I Believe’ Essay on NPR.

Next week on Homebrewed Christianity is singer/songwriter Bill Mallonee and in the month of February, we’ll be looking at different perspectives on evolution.

Be sure and check out Become a Deacon and put the deacon badge on your blog or website.

Tripp and Jesus like birds.

Richard Rohr on Action and Contemplation: Homebrewed Christianity 41 [ 44:30 ] Play Now | Play in Popup | Download
Filed Under: podcast Tagged With: Brian McLaren, Center for Action and Contemplation, emerging church, Happy Go Lucky, NPR, Phyllis Tickle, Richard Rohr, Shane Claiborne, Slumdog Millionaire, This I Believe

Permission granted

January 21, 2009 by Chad Crawford Leave a Comment

Here is a quote from Pastor Joel Hunter in the latest episode of This American Life: The Inauguration Show. I first heard about Joel because his church in Florida started a few ‘creation care’ programs that ruffled some feathers among evangelicals. He has partnered with Interfaith Power & Light before. This (paraphrased) quote is about evangelicals supporting a broader political agenda:

Anytime you try to go to new territory there’s resistance, but there’s also a whole line of people hoping you make it.

And I think that’s what we’re seeing right now. People are waiting for permission to think that way…to love that way…permission to walk out their faith that way.

That’s what our hope is: this growing constituency of people who want to be cooperative.

Joel Hunter has a book out called ‘A New Kind of Conservative.’

Tripp mentioned he wants to get some more conservative voices on the podcast. How about a new kind of conservative?

Filed Under: engaging Tagged With: Joel Hunter, This American Life

Really?

January 20, 2009 by Chad Crawford 3 Comments

What an amazing performance. But I was floored by this comment.

‘On this spot where we’re standing 46 years ago Dr King had a dream. On Tuesday, that dream comes to pass.’

This was an unbelievably important step for race reconciliation in America…but, really?

Filed Under: engaging Tagged With: Bono, Inauguration, Obama

Bishop Robinson’s Invocation

January 19, 2009 by Chad Crawford 7 Comments

Invocations are a touchy subject these days.

Here’s Bishop Gene Robinson in the NY Times on the subject of prayer at inaugural events:

Bishop Robinson said he had been rereading inaugural prayers through history and was “horrified” at how “specifically and aggressively Christian they were.”

Bishop Robinson said, “I am very clear that this will not be a Christian prayer, and I won’t be quoting Scripture or anything like that. The texts that I hold as sacred are not sacred texts for all Americans, and I want all people to feel that this is their prayer.”

I share Robinson’s sympathy about Christian hegemony in America, but I don’t share his conclusions. I’ve been asked to do some invoking at public assemblies, and work for an interfaith organization that sometimes prays together, and I’ve thought a little about this.

My problem with Robinson’s approach is that he thinks it’s possible for ‘all people to feel that this is their prayer.’ It assumes objectivity is obtainable. It’s not, especially in something as personal and intimate as prayer. We kid ourselves if we think we can write without our experiences oozing out through the words we type.

If Bishop Robinson acknowledged that his prayer on Sunday was coming from his experience as an openly gay bishop in a country that denies same-sex couples equal rights, it would have been much more honest and meaningful, and the kind of balance that Obama might have been looking for when he invited him to kick off inauguration week. Instead Robinson assumed he was crafting a one-size-fits-all message that anyone could apply to his/her own tradition?

I realize saying this will shock a few people but I actually like a Fox News article’s take on this. Please don’t delete this rss feed from Google Reader. Hear me out.

Even though, true to Fox News form, Lauren Green displays just enough homophobia to let the reader know where she’s really coming from, she makes some decent points in this commentary.

She points out that one can boldly display one’s faith and respect diversity, quoting Rev. Kirbyjon Caldwell’s benediction at Bush’s second inauguration.

“Respecting persons of all faiths, I humbly submit this prayer in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen”.

I like this point Green makes too:

‘Is Islam the Truth? Is Judaism the Truth?  Is the gospel of Jesus Christ the Truth? Is Secular Humanism the Truth? Decide for yourself. Then represent that Truth honorably.’

I would add humbly.

I have to say that I think the invocation was very good. ‘Bless this nation with anger against discrimination at home and abroad.’

But ‘God of our many understandings’? Does he really think he’s written a prayer that encompasses all faiths? Quit pulling everyone’s leg and just say ‘God of my understanding.’ I like your understanding just fine. That’s why you were asked to do this.

Interreligious dialogue is entirely more beneficial when the parties involved don’t hold back any of the partiularities of their religous traditions. Prayer is different because it’s an actual sacred leitourgia. But I still think it’s important to use particular expressions of faith in prayer for no other reason than authenticity.

Dr. King had a certain way of using explicitly Christian ideas and concepts that anyone could get on board with (except for people hell-bent on spreading violence and hate). It’s not easy to do effectively, but you can feel it when someone hits that chord. I think people heard that chord being struck when Obama channelled Dr. King in his speeches.

If you have been asked to pray at a public event with mixed faith representation, what have you done? Or if you ever get asked, what would you do? Would you respectfully decline the invitation, go the Robinson route, or not hold back your tradition’s particularities?

Filed Under: thinking Tagged With: Barack Obama, Fox News, Gene Robinson, Inauguration, Invocation, Rick Warren

Meet Elder Napoleon

January 18, 2009 by Chad Crawford 2 Comments

eldernapoleonDeacon Elder Napoleon first contacted us on New Year’s Eve via the call-in line (678-590-BREW), and we played it on Episode 39 with Marjorie Suchocki to wrap up Season 1. Well, rest assured, as I will, that our Mormomergent friend wasn’t just a flash in the pan.

We got this email from him this week, sent from his new Elder Napoleon gmail account:

Hey guys,

I called on New Years Eve. I hope you remember me. I’m gonna call again soon to explain the glories of mormomergence.

I attached a sweet pic so you know how awesome I am.

Elder Napoleon

Filed Under: living Tagged With: Elder Napoleon, Mormomergence
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