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John H Armstrong : Is It Necessary to Be Sexually Active to Order to Be a Healthy, Flourishing Person?.

I saw this segment entirely by accident earlier this week as my gracious host was searching for what is to be a new favorite series, Sherlock, by the BBC. But his was playing in the background and at first I thought Tim was talking about beating cancer or something. When we did a rewind on the DVR, he was talking about his own sex life, or lack thereof. But despite the shocked faces of the other hosts, he didn’t see it or was willing to accept this as a “lack” or “problem” on his part.

My friend and mentor, John Armstrong did a blog on this and posted the video and John is spot on in his blog reflections. Tim Gunn is one of the best teacher/coaches I have seen on TV and I was amazed by his honesty. As John says, Tim doesn’t address morality but speaks instead to our humanity and what should ultimately define it. Everyone should take the time to watch the video and read John’s post.

A Squeakier Patches and Stumpy – YouTube.

Here is a reposting of a classic reflection on the dangers and inadequacies of strict Biblical literalism and inerrancy. Biblical interpretation is not about getting the words and rules right, its about encountering the living God active in our lives now. But let’s just say the position “The Bible said it, I believe it, and that settles it” has some unexpected consequences, which can leave us blind and crippled in more than just a literal way.

Now don’t get me wrong. I love band led worship that can rock the house. I also have a very deep snarky streak that loves good satire. This clip is just brilliant and is in the style of DaVinci’s Notebook satire of boy bands, Title of the Song. Like anything, Emergent/Pomo/Alternative worship can become just as predictable and tiring as traditional liturgy done badly.

I just had to share this as a follow up to the last podcast.

And “Title of the Song” as performed on the Bob and Tom Show.

give up

Finally, back in the groove and starting the year with a new podcast. It follows up on a post from last year about the Crystal Cathedral going bankrupt and being sold after being one of the Boomer flagships of the megachurch movement. Now its dead and people are fighting over the corpse. Its sad in one sense and its a sign of the times if you look beyond into the world of politics and economics. We are in the midst of a generational shift and Boomers are not handling it well. As a generation defined as the “Me Generation”, their legacy is increasing defined by what they lost or misused for future generation – the economy, job markets, working governments, and declining churches – all co-opted by Boomer values. The pushback now from GenXers and Millenials is largely an abandonment of Boomer ways for something new and its a different future for everyone, including the church.

Its my first podcast with my new microphone and overall I’m pleased with it. However, there is a rubbing sound from my collar that I’ll try and avoid next time. Also, forgive my weird pronunciation of “Cartman” at the end of the podcast. Not enough caffeine. Just respect my authoratay!

Links:
Here are a variety of links, starting with Rachel’s great blog on being an uncool church. The others are some fascinating examples of Boomer rage and blame. To be clear, Boomers are not the source of all evil and destruction in the world. But to not acknowledge the current generational gap as to be at least as polarizing as that in the 60s (I think it will be judged greater by history), is to ignore reality.

Rachel Held Evans blog – “Blessed are the uncool.”

Die Boomer Die Blog

Australian Article on Boomer Greed and the Financial Crisis

Sobering article imploring the Church to for emerging generations to forgive the Boomers rather than euthanizing them.

15 faith-based predictions for 2012 – CNN Belief Blog – CNN.com Blogs.

Everyone has ideas of what we will see in 2012, from apocalypse to renewal to decline. This is an interesting list.

penguins

27 worst nativity sets: the annual, growing list!.

Words cannot describe the pictures in this collection, ranging from the silly to kinds sure to send biblical fundamentalists running to shower or cast out the spirit of blasphemy. Just goes to show that there is a line between trying to be relevant (the veggie tales nativity) to the just plain wrong (the flogging of Jesus Christmas yard display). Sometimes the trite saying “Jesus is the reason for the season” with the Santa kneeling before Jesus doesn’t seem to be the zenith of American bad taste and marketing.

flogging

meat nativity
Yes, its a sausage, bacon, and sauerkraut nativity. Not exactly kosher. Not time to shrink the photo down so check the link to see it in all its porky glory.

New Mass, same spirit | The Columbus Dispatch.

Well, this should be interesting. When I think about us Lutheran types changing worship services/hymnals, it rarely is a happy transition. However, more and more of us don’t use hymnals – opting for customized bulletins or projection.

crystal cathedral

The Associated Press: Crystal Cathedral sees risky future without church.

Well, the end is near for a very sad story, and fodder for a podcast I’m writing this morning. I think this quote by a congregation member at the bankruptcy hearing says it all about what this ministry and a significant stream of boomer Christianity came to be about:

“People think the ministry isn’t about a building. Usually they’re right. But that one represents Jesus Christ, positive thinking, and if you believe in yourself and believe in the Lord there isn’t anything you can’t do,” Sherwood Oklejas, a congregant who opposed the diocese’s bid, told a federal bankruptcy court judge at a hearing on the church’s future. “If the ministry no longer has the Crystal Cathedral to operate from, in my opinion, it will not last at all.”

Now Robert Schuller said this to the in a statement afterward: “We all know that a church is not a building, “The church is you, and it’s me. And that’s why we will always be here for you.”

No. Maybe at one time the church wasn’t a building but it became that. Being “church” became all about the building – the glitz, the glory, the bigger is best mentality and they ended up serving a debt rather than Jesus. And now it is dead.

In fact, Schuller is probably right when he says the church is you and me. In the best sense, the church is the people. In the realistic sense, Crystal Cathedral as church became Schuller, his generation, and his fans.

Rather sad. My mom and my aunt have been Schuller fans for decades and when he started out with his drive in ministry, it was innovative evangelism the likes of which had not been seen before. But (and I confess my generational bias here, if you haven’t picked up on it before), it stayed focused on a single generation and ultimately absorbed its values and made them normative for faith. So what started out as a young congregation in the 50s and 60s became a television sea of gray by 2000 – no different from many mainline denominational congregations. You could see it in their TV broadcasts – self help boomers who believed everything you want is possible if you believe in Jesus, yourself, and positive thinking. A beautiful monument but it had died inside.

For me, it points to what is happening in society and the church in general with the Occupy Wall Street movement. Exclusive of its dark turnings (the crimes and anarchist elements), it does point to a new understanding that buildings and place take a back seat to relationship and shared values. The Crystal Cathedral became a dinosaur that couldn’t/wouldn’t embrace generations that didn’t believe in the power of positive thinking or in building expensive monuments you can’t afford to your own egos – all under the guise to the greatness of God.

As I’ve said and others have as well, God is up to something in the big C Church, and its going to be a painful reformation in North America for the next decade or so. Boomer spirituality and its monuments of denominationalism and megachurches are crumbling and something new is going to take its place. Just not clear if it will look more like Europe today or the First Century. Either way, hang on for a bumpy ride.

crystal cathedral

Bidding intensifies for Calif. megachurch – Yahoo! News.

The story continues. Mismanagement, not cultivating outreach to younger generations, and cult of personality. For me, not only is it evidence of the death of the megachurch as boomer phenom, but also points to the decline of mainline denominations. We grew with the boomer wave and catering to them. Now we are dying with them and the secular and religious survivors will fight over our valuables and leave the rest to decay.

Sad, it doesn’t have to be this way but in some cases, like the Crystal Cathedral, the patient is already brain dead. It will make a fine university campus, new Roman Catholic cathedral, or museum to how an effective form of evangelism led by a creative boomer turned off their kids and fulfilled the seven last words of the church “we have never done it that way before.”

Cinema Stunt by Carlsberg | THEINSPIRATION.COM l THIS IS WHâ–²T INSPIRES US.

Few places are as intimidating as this movie theater, but Christian congregations on Sunday mornings can be nearly as scary for first time worshippers. If only we could be as welcoming to those who risk staying. Once again, advertisers get it right when the church gets it wrong. My denomination should be using this company for its advertising, not the bozos we have now.

Want to know what a real welcoming congregation should look like, this is it. This is the kind of church we should all be aiming for… and the beer wouldn’t hurt anything either.

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