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Homebrewed Christianity

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

You are here: Home / 2011 / Archives for May 2011

War and Weight Watchers

May 30, 2011 by Bo Sanders 6 Comments

On this holiday when we remember those who served and died, there are so many interesting things that get presented and portrayed in regards to our national storyline. Some of them are valiant and deep, others are pithy and cliched. There is one, however, that gets used pretty flippantly and after I hear it a dozen times or so, it starts to grate on me a little bit.

“Freedom isn’t free”. You see on T-shirts, bumper stickers and hear it is discussions about past wars. I get it. I see what is behind the saying.
No, freedom isn’t free – not in this world of selfish sin (on a small scale) and dominating Empire (on a big scale) but I think that it is important to make two clarifications about this saying.

Freedom is not solely the result of our military – and freedom is not all our military does.

  • The first one is important to clarify because in our Military Industrial Complex (Dwight Eisenhower warned of it and those who profit from it in his farewell speech), our the freedom that we enjoy is not bestowed  by military action. That is not the source of our freedoms.
  • The second one is important to clarify because freedom is not the only business that America’s foreign policy participates in. The US involvement in S. America, Asia, Africa and Europe is not simply explained as a ‘force for freedom’. There is a lot more going on than just a heart for global democracy.

I think this is appropriate to address on occasions like Memorial Day. It is not dishonoring to those who served and died to use our freedoms in order to call for accountability for America’s addiction to militarism or to examine America’s foreign policy.

In fact, seen from my point of view – it is downright honoring to utilize my freedom this way and it demonstrates an appreciation for the exact freedom that allows me to spend time on this day off to do so.

It seems more essential than ever in the current budget crisis.

Gareth Higgins said in his interview (Homebrewed  102) that looking at the budget and not accounting for the (untouchable) military expenditure is like being on weight watcher and not counting any of the points of an unhealthy breakfast and wondering why the program isn’t working.

It is one thing to say that our freedom comes at a price. No one is debating that. But to not count the cost and then wonder why we are flirting with bankruptcy is just foolishness disguised as patriotism.

On this Memorial Day, I am already dreading September 11th – the Ten year celebrations and the unquestioned, unchallenged national story.

What we need is theological examination of where freedom comes from and what is the real price.

Filed Under: engaging, latest, news, politics, post-something, thinking Tagged With: 9/11, Budget, Freedom, Gareth Higgins, Memorial Day, Military, September 11th, War

Žižek and Evangelical Christianity–The End of Evangelicalism?

May 27, 2011 by Tripp Fuller 4 Comments

- From Deacon Fackenthal

David E. Fitch’s new book, The End of Evangelicalism?, brings together about the two most unlikely conversation partners I could imagine–Slavoj Žižek and American Evangelicalism.  And it does so with surprisingly good results.  I have to admit, since I don’t really consider myself an evangelical and don’t generally accept the major tenets of evangelical theology (Biblical inerrancy or substitutionary atonement), I approached Fitch’s book with high intrigue and moderate expectations.  But I can honestly say that every expectation was greatly exceeded.

The End of Evangelicalism? begins with the premise that evangelicalism in North America has experienced a crisis.  Fitch agrees that we may well be living in what can more appropriately be called a post-evangelical age.  In order to diagnose this crisis (and death?) of evangelicalism, Fitch employs the critical theory of Slavoj Žižek, the left-wing Hegelian, Lacanian, atheist who has in recent years become the rock star of postmodern philosophy.  Fitch examines three dearly held convictions among evangelicals–belief in the inerrant Bible, the decision for Christ, and belief in the Christian nation–using Žižekian analysis to demonstrate through each how evangelicalism has devolved into a set of beliefs that are empty at the core.  In his analysis Fitch is clear to say that, unlike Žižek, he does not believe that Christianity itself is empty at the core.  He does not think that Christian beliefs “are somehow necessarily false or illusory,” but he argues that the way in which evangelicals voice and practiced them leads toward a reified set of beliefs which then become ideology.  For both Žižek and Fitch, it is this ideology that is truly empty at its core.

If you have read only a bit of Žižek or are completely intimidated by Žižek, fear not.  Fitch takes some difficult concepts and makes them easily accessible to those uninitiated in contemporary critical theory.  The first chapter of the book provides some background into Žižek’s social critique and draws out the concepts that Fitch employs in the next three chapters, which deal with the three beliefs he sees as signaling the devolution of evangelicalism into ideology.  The most important Žižekian concept for Fitch is that of the master signifier–”a conceptual object around which people give their allegiance thereby enabling a political group to form.”  Yet master signifiers don’t actually stand for anything concrete, and hence they are “empty signifiers.”

Fitch argues that Biblical inerrancy, the decision for Christ, and the Christian nation are all master signifiers, since they shape an ideology around which evangelicals organize themselves and their witness in the world.  Biblical inerrancy becomes nothing more than an identifier or a “badge” to prove one’s evangelical standing, since it doesn’t actually say anything about what a given church or organization believes regarding Biblical interpretation.  In fact, what the master signifier of Biblical inerrancy does (and what each of these master signifiers do) is allow us “to believe without believing.”  Each of these master signifiers organizes people’s allegiance and belief around an idea that remains empty at the core.

What Fitch suggests instead is that these empty signifiers be replaced with beliefs and practices informed by the fullness of Christ.  Out of this will come a politic of mission that adopts “a posture that embodies socially the incarnate presence of God in Christ that participates in his mission in the world.”  The important word here is “participation.”  It is only when evangelicals (or Christians of any stripe) embody the gospel, embody what it means to be a follower of Christ, and live out a Christ-centered politic in the world that empty-at-the-core ideology will be replaced with the fullness of an incarnational theology.  The last chapter of the book articulates exactly how this might happen, taking again each of the three beliefs in turn.

In the epilogue, Fitch looks briefly at four evangelicals who are practicing the sort of politic of mission described here:  Peter Rollins, Brian McClaren , and Alan Hirsch and Michael Frost.  While Fitch has points of contention with each of these authors, he sees in them promise for the future of the post-evangelical world.

Whether you are an evangelical, a progressive, or a progressive evangelical, I highly recommend reading Fitch’s book and grappling with his critiques.  The fun thing about master signifiers is that we all eventually fall into their trap.

 

Filed Under: books, emergent, philosophy, thinking Tagged With: david fitch, evangelicalism, zizek

Understanding Religion in America with David Campbell: Homebrewed Christianity 103

May 25, 2011 by Tripp Fuller 1 Comment

Did you know…

Between one third and one half of all American marriages are interfaith

Roughly one third of Americans have switched religions at some point in their lives

Young people are more opposed to abortion than their parents but more accepting of gay marriage

Even fervently religious Americans believe that people in other faiths can get to heaven

Religious Americans are better neighbors than secular Americans, more generous with their time and treasure, even for secular causes, but the explanation has less to do with faith than with communities of faith

David Campbell & Robert Putnam discuss this and more in their newest book American Grace.  This interview is different than most because we are talking to a real deal political scientist. Unlike a theologian, philosopher, or activist he is not arguing for a particular position but attempting to describe the present situation.  Now I tried hard a couple times to get him to pontificate but it didn’t happen…..so…..you will have to do that part.

Hope you enjoy the episode!

Understanding Religion in America with David Campbell: Homebrewed Christianity 103 [ 52:40 ] Play Now | Play in Popup | Download
Filed Under: podcast

Sojourners, Identity Politics, & Justice: RATT 3

May 24, 2011 by Tripp Fuller 5 Comments

Sojourners caused a stir when they wouldn’t publish a “Believe Out Loud” ad. Jim Wallis attempted to explain the decision but it didn’t ease the tension for everyone.  When I saw Tony Jones, Brian McLaren, First Things, Christianity Today, Peter, David Henson, Chad Holtz, & (my favorite post) Nadia Bolz-Weber all in my RSS feed talking about it I started to blog about it and then I went on a trip with my youth over the weekend.  When I got back one of my awesome youth had changed my mind on the issue (she is uber-brilliant….a junior in High School who loves Kierkegaard!). So here is Rachel Held Evans and I talking about Sojourners, identity politics, the sexuality conversation in the church, justice, and other such stuff in the third episode of RATT!  Enjoy!!

Sojourners, Identity Politics, & Justice: RATT 3 from tripp fuller on Vimeo.

* To be clear I am Welcoming and Embracing of all people and Rachel has NOT said the same thing as me.

Filed Under: engaging, latest, media, news, politics

Hangover: waking up from the rapture

May 23, 2011 by Bo Sanders Leave a Comment

Here is a newspaper report and interview with Harold Camping: Washington Post article

The thing that people seem to be feeling bad about is that some gullible individuals got duped. I am sympathetic with the mild compassion…but I think that there is something far more sinister and devastating that we should be piping mad about and are justified in mocking (or at least being cynical about).

I remember in 1988 and 1991 people dropping out of the Bible College that my dad taught at to go home and ‘save’ their family and friends…. also no sense in racking up credits for a degree you are never going to finish!  Look – until we stop all this mumbo jumbo stuff, the newer folks are going to continue to get duped.

I was shocked last week at how many Christians said things like “well – Camping is mostly right, this stuff will all happen, its just that we don’t know the day or hour.”

SO basically (as it has been presented to me)

  • Thinking all this stuff will happen on May 21 = crazy.
  • Thinking all this will happen but we don’t know when = acceptable.

I was raised to read the Bible the fantastic way. But  knowing a even a little bit about the 5 centuries before Christ and the 2 centuries after quickly made reading the Bible that way impossible.

Reading the Bible in this ‘dispensational’ way – or what is called the “mountain tops” view of history – is not really faithful to the text or historically accurate. It is based on linear view of time, a literal reading of the text, and sketchy view of history.

The simple fact is that Apocalyptic literature is not to be read like a newspaper or a contract. It is a different genre. If we don’t know how to read the Apocalyptic narrative then we do odd things with the details of the text in Daniel, Matthew 24 and the book of Revelation.

If we have hope for the future, if we believe that Jesus is ‘coming back’ – for me, it has far more to do with the resurrection than it does with the prophecy passages of Scripture.

Check out Tripp Fuller’s video about the resurrection.

Here is N.T. Wright in a 2001 article “Farewell to the Rapture” where he says:

“Paul’s mixed metaphors of trumpets blowing and the living being snatched into heaven to meet the Lord are not to be understood as literal truth, but as a vivid and biblically allusive description of the great transformation of the present world of which he speaks elsewhere.”

Filed Under: bible stuff, engaging, latest, news, thinking Tagged With: Harold Camping, May 21, Rapture

Left behind.

May 21, 2011 by Chad Crawford Leave a Comment

Welp, today is the rapture. And I got left behind. It seems all my friends did too. If we’re going to live here together, let’s try to fix this place up — shall we, roomies?

Here’s a good read from my and Tripp’s former professor, Dr. Bill Leonard.

Tomorrow I’m posting audio from my sermon entitled, “The Day After the Rapture.” Until then, are there going to be zombies, or what? This apocolypse is pretty lame.

 

Filed Under: latest, living

Theology Nerd Book Survey

May 19, 2011 by Tripp Fuller 29 Comments

Theology nerds unite!  I know you love books but which ones?  I am totally interested in your answers so post them here, facebook, or link to the post. My wish-list is ready…..

1. A book you get excited just looking at

2. Your favorite book by your favorite living theologian

3. A classic you can’t leave behind

4. Best book to cross your eyes in 2011

5. Favorite book to give a budding theology nerd

6. A book you can’t wait for!

Here’s my response…..

1. Wolfhart Pannenberg’s Theology and the Kingdom of God

2. John Cobb’s Transforming Christianity and the World: A Way Beyond Absolutism and Relativism

3. Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s Discipleship (or the Cost of Discipleship)

4. Terrence Tilley’s The Disciples’ Jesus: Christology as Reconciling Practice

5. Elizabeth A. Johnson’s Quest for the Living God: Mapping Frontiers in the Theology of God

6. Philip Clayton & Steven Knapp’s The Predicament of Belief: Science, Philosophy, and Faith


HT: Rachel who reads books normal people read….

Filed Under: books, latest, thinking

The Goose is Loose with Gareth Higgins: Homebrewed Christianity 102

May 18, 2011 by Tripp Fuller 6 Comments

Gareth Higgins is one cool dude.  He is a film rocking, Irish politico, & grassroots festival organizing theological stud with a sweet accent.  On top of sharing a bit about the upcoming Wild Goose Festival (June 23-26 in North Carolina!) we discuss justice, art, politics, and the polarizing discourse that so often dominates the airwaves.  The highlight for me was Gareth sharing his observations about the current American situation as an Irish peace activist in the religious conflict back home.

Be awesome and check out Gareth on Twitter, facebook, his Blog, his Podcast, SoJo page, and Huffington Post page.

The Goose is Loose with Gareth Higgins: Homebrewed Christianity 102 [ 1:01:59 ] Play Now | Play in Popup | Download
Filed Under: podcast

Why the Resurrection Matters….

May 18, 2011 by Tripp Fuller 7 Comments

The resurrection matters.  Sometimes I make my progressive theological friends anxious when I get going on about it.  A friend told me last week, “Tripp your Christology is so high it might as well come from Venice Beach.” While I am not sure about the comparison (p.s. non-LAites Venice has a high concentration of medicinal herb patients) I have moved over the last 8 years from having a hard-core Jesus Seminar style demythologized existential Christology to whatever you get when Process theology goes proleptic (Pannenberg + Cobb).  Any way, here’s a sweet video that Travis Reed made from me rambling about it in a hotel room. You should subscribe to Alter for even more sweet videos.

 

Filed Under: engaging, latest, media Tagged With: christology, resurrection

Grace

May 17, 2011 by Chad Crawford 2 Comments


This was my meditation for our church email this week. For Youth Sunday, I’m preaching on the Good Samaritan.

There’s a woman named Grace who lives on my street in the Tenderloin District, San Francisco. When I say she lives on my street, I mean that literally — she’s homeless. I pass her almost every day on my walk to work in the Financial District. Sometimes we exchange hellos. Sometimes I ask her how she’s doing. I call her “Neighbor.” Sometimes she lets me pray for her…right there on Ellis Street. Sometimes I let her pray for me and my church.

The parable of the Good Samaritan has taught me to expand my definition of neighbor — to slow down and chat with folks around me. And sometimes to go above and beyond expectations when someone is in need.

More often than not though, I’m too focused on my destination to pause and say hello. I fall short of the example of the Good Samaritan. We all do. But Grace is there anyway.

Filed Under: latest, living
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