For example, you might not be interested in the story of how I became a preacher but would prefer to go right to my suggestions of rethinking the role of the pastor. If so, you can skip point number five and go right to point 23.I was really intrigued by this and found myself flipping through the book to figure out how this actually works. Doug explains that his reasons for this is because he wanted to write a book that felt more like a conversation rather that a "stagnate place of information" (my words). In this first section he shares a few phrases that seemingly elude to phrases that will become a foundation to the book: "progressional dialogue" (a phrase that he made up), and "speaching" (also made up, to refer to "the style of preaching that's hardly distinguishable from a one-way speech.")
I'm an underliner, a margin-writer, and a dog-earer, and Doug encourages this. He writes that the "book should not be left in its impersonal, published form. If it is, then it hasn't done its job of engaging you in the conversation." I like that. I can handle that.
Here's some things that I underlined and bracketed:
I find myself wanting to live life with the people of my community where I can preach-along with the other preachers of our community-but not allow that to become an act of speech making. Instead I want it to be a living interaction of the story of GOD and the story of our community being connected by our truth telling, our vulnerability, and our open minds, ears, and eyes-all brought together by the active work of the Spirit of GOD as we "Let the message of Christ dwell among (us) richly as (we) teach and admonish one another with all wisdom through psalms, hymns and songs from the Spirit, singing to GOD with gratitude in (our) hearts." (Colossians 3:16)These words remind me about the desire I have to be apart of a community that doesn't just rely on the history of faith to give us something to sing about, but creates expressions based out of our own personal history. I love the phrase "living interaction of the story of GOD and the story of our community... ." It reminds me that the purpose of the community is to find it's place within the redemptive story of GOD, and if the community isn't doing that, then it isn't doing what it is supposed to be doing. Here's one more quote:
The church is best understood not as the exclusive proprietor of all the things of GOD, but rather as the home base for those committed to living in rhythm with GOD. It is a means by which we extend GOD's hopes, dreams, and agenda in the world, not an end goal in itself. Nor is preaching an end in itself but one of the many ways we as Christians ought to seek to tend to the things of GOD.
These two paragraphs have given me much to think about within the past day and a half. Let me know your thought if you have any. I think I'm off to bed and on to Section 2.
3 comments:
mostly, when you're done can i borrow it?
he (you) hit on something that bugs me significantly about the church.
"the desire I have to be apart of a community that doesn't just rely on the history of faith to give us something to sing about, but creates expressions based out of our own personal history."
mostly the part about creating expressions from our own personal history. it's always bugged me that churches just use the same old hymns and choruses and blah blah blah, and no one ever creates something to personify that group. that's always been a factor in my struggle with worship. then people will excuse it in any number of ways (it's a small church, they're elderly, there's nothing wrong with it, whatever), when really, no! you should be defining yourselves, producing things that act as statements of the group.
that's sort of all i've got f'now.
I agree that a community should have things (art, music, poetry, etc.)that represent their own personality, however I think that it is still important for a community to see a broader picture of a greater community that they attach them to. While I'm not a huge fan of denominationalism it offers me a good example. If you spend any length of time with a particular denomination you become familiar with hymns and liturgy that are specific to that denomination. And if you then move to a different denomination you will soon hear different songs and liturgy. You will start to hear song that were written by people who attach themselves to X denomination. After a while you start to comment to your self, "That there's a Baptist song."
If you're familiar with any of the Psalms, you'll know that each of them were psalms that were written out of a specific event, or in memory of something particular. Why don't we do this more? Although the more pointing question is: What am I doing to change this?
dammit. i hate the internet. this page errored when i posted my last gigantic post. ugh.
essentially, i'm not advocating (not that you were claiming i was) throwing the baby out with the bathwater. it's important to "know your roots," and have a sense of yourself in the larger picture. at the same time, i think it'd be pretty important for a community to want to define itself and create something for you to know them by.
as for what i'm doing? nothing, yet. that's gonna change soon, especially because i think i landed myself in a community that has a drive to want to define itself.
also, pray that i find my birth certificate. i need it, and i can't find it. unless you know where it is, you bastard. always hiding stuff from me.
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