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The Shack

the shack

I recently finished The Shack by William Young. A viral best seller, I would describe it as the heart of Mitch Albon (Five People You Will Meet in Heaven) and the offbeat, relational faith of Don Miller (Blue Like Jazz) with a Christian core that would make sense to an Greek Orthodox Christian. Weird, I know. At the heart of the story is one of the best portrayals of the doctrine of the Trinity that I have ever come across. Frankly, it makes the ancient creed make sense in that the Triune God is not a matter of semantics but a finite attempt to convey the relational nature of the infinite God.

I’m working on a podcast on it right now as we get ready conclude an interview process for a new call to a church, move my oldest son to college, and then look toward moving ourselves. More on that once everything is finalized but hope to have the podcast by Friday.

In the meantime, check out the book. The Shack is an easy, engrossing read that may offend strict literalists but open the door to those searching for a real, living God.

tombstone

I just found this article online from First Things: The Journal of Religion, Culture, and Public Life. The death of the mainline, highlighted by the aging of its members and of its clergy, has been much talked about but this is an exceptionally good evaluation of the situation.

At 44, I’m still young by my tribe’s standards – the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. Top that off that less than 20% of us pastors are under the age of 45 (at least the last figure I saw), and that’s pretty scary.

If denominations are dying and increasingly irrelevant, then it opens the opportunity for local congregations to become more relevant and real, if people realize that they have a choice to live faith in a whole new way.

bourdain
I’m a foodie and as I said back in Podcast #36, one of my favorite shows to watch is No Reservations wtih Anthony Bourdain, who has that wonderful real edge in exploring culture and food. He strikes me as the guy who does for food shows what Leonard Cohen does for music – an injection of real soul into food and life that seems lacking in his own named anti-christ, Rachael Ray.

Even though its a year old, I just came across it recently after my wife and I tried to watch Sandra Lee’s Semi-Homemade show on Food Network. We had never watched her before and she did a rack of lamb recipe that looked interesting. When I looked it up on the net, not only were the reviews of the recipe awful, somewhat akin to the rape of a fine piece of meat, but also a great deal of commentary that her show is more about her cleavage than cooking.

So here is Tony’s take on it all from Michael Ruhlman’s food blog. After watching the recent group of “Become A [Food/Design/Dance/Idol] Star”, I would agree that shows are less about good chefs who know food, cooking, and culture and more about good looking amateurs working to make home cooks feel good about themselves.

Have fun!

By the way, the next No Reservations is Anthony touring the Southwest with Ted Nugent. That will rock in so many ways!
+++++++++++++++++++++++

NOBODY ASKED ME, BUT……
By Anthony Bourdain

P1010073 I actually WATCH Food Network now and again, more often than not drawn in by the progressive horrors on screen. I find myself riveted by its awfulness, like watching a multi-car accident in slow motion. Mesmerized at the ascent of the Ready-Made bobblehead personalities, and the not-so-subtle shunting aside of the Old School chefs, I find myself de-constructing the not-terrible shows, imagining behind the scenes struggles and frustrations, and obsessing unhealthily on the Truly Awful ones. Screaming out loud at Sandra Lee in disbelief as she massacres another dish, then sits grinning, her face stretched into a terrifying rictus of faux cheer for the final triumphant presentation. I mourn for Mario..and Alton…Bobby and yes–even Emeril, nobly holding the fort while the TV empire he helped build crumbles like undercooked Bundt cake into a goo of Cheez Wiz around him.

Some thoughts on the Newer, Younger, More Male-Oriented, More Dumb-Ass Food Network:

ALTON BROWN: How did Alton slip inside the wire–and stay there all these years? He must have something on them. He’s smart. You actually learn something from his commentary. And I’ll admit it: I watch and enjoy Iron Chef America-in all its cheesy glory. Absolutely SHOCKED and thrilled when guys like Homaru Cantu show up as contestants–and delighted when Mario wins–again and again, forestalling his secretly long-planned execution. His commentary is mostly good. And that collar-bone snapping fall off the motorcycle on Feasting On Asphalt? Good television!

EMERIL: I’m actually grateful when I channel surf across his show. He’s STILL there–the original Behemoth. And I STILL find him unwatchable. As much mileage as I’ve gotten over the years, making fun of Emeril; he deserves a lot more respect than I’ve given him. He does run a very successful and very decent restaurant group. He is–in fact–a really nice guy. And-as much as I hate the show– compared to the current crop of culinary non-entities, he looks like Escoffier. He will probably be the last of the Real Chefs. I’m sure they’re growing future replacement options in petrie dishes somewhere, conducting Top Secret focus groups at suburban malls with their latest Bright Young Hopeful. I’m just glad he’s still there–a rebuke to the geniuses who brought us such Great Ideas as Dweezil and Lisa.

BOBBY FLAY: They seem to have noticed Bobby’s strong “negatives” among some viewer responses during focus groups–and decided to respond by subjecting poor Bobby to THROWDOWN; the object of which is to allow every web-fingered geek with a backyard grill–or half-mad muffin maker to proclaim, “I beat Bobby Flay at makin’ barbeque!” at the heart-warming end of show–before returning to tend their meth labs.. I watched poor Bobby battle to a draw recently in some bogus Southwestern “Chili Face-Off.” Now…does ANYONE actually believe that Bobby Flay can’t make a better chili than a supermarket ground beef bearing amateur? I don’t. It’s a cruel exercise in humiliation. A variation on “Dunk Bozo” or “Shoot The Geek,” at the carnival. And whatever I might have thought of Flay’s previous TV efforts, I find the network’s misuse of one of their founding chefs to be nauseatingly cynical. The conspiratorial-minded might be tempted to suspect this as yet another part of the Secret Plan to rid themselves of the annoyingly big ticket chefs–by driving Bobby to quit–or insane with misery. He may not be Mr. Cuddlesworth, but he’s a successful businessman and a good chef–and he doesn’t, after all, need this shit.

MARIO!
Oh, Mario! Oh great one! They shut down Molto Mario–only the smartest and best of the stand-up cooking shows. Is there any more egregiously under-used, criminally mishandled, dismissively treated chef on television? Relegated to the circus of Iron Chef America, where–like a great, toothless lion, fouling his cage, he hangs on–and on–a major draw (and often the only reason to watch the show). How I would like to see him unchained, free to make the television shows he’s capable of, the Real Mario–in all his Rabelasian brilliance. How I would love to hear the snapping bones of his cruel FN ringmasters, crunching between his mighty jaws! Let us see the cloven hooves beneath those cheery clogs! Let Mario be Mario!

THAT ACE OF CAKES GUY: Hey…He’s got talent! And..he seems to be a trained chef! And he’s really making food–and selling it in a real business! I think…I like it! If I have one reservation, it’s that I have no idea if the stuff actually TASTES good. It LOOKS really creative and quirky–and I’m interested but…I mean…it’s like construction going on over there from what we’re told and shown. One suspects that the producers don’t want to waste valuable time talking about anything so technical as food–on “Food” Network. I mean…what’s in those cakes, beneath the icing and marzipan and fondant? That said, it’s the only “kicky, new, cutting edge, in-your-face” hopeful they’ve managed to trot out of any quality in memory. Hope it lasts. Wait till they try and put the poor bastard on a pony–or do a “Tailgate Special” with the usual suspects. Or a “Thanksgiving Special” where he has to sit down with the bobbleheads and pretend to like it. On balance, it’s still probably the best new project they’ve come up with in a long, long time.

GIADA: What’s going on here!? Giada can actually cook! She was robbed in her bout versus Rachael Ray on ICA. ROBBED! And Food Net seems more interested in her enormous head (big head equals big ratings. Really!) and her cleavage–than the fact that she’s likeable, knows what she’s doing in an Italian kitchen–and makes food you’d actually want to eat. The new high concept Weekend Getaway show is a horrible, tired re-cap of the cheap-ass “Best Of” and “40 Dollar a Day” formula. Send host to empty restaurant. Watch them make crappy food for her. Have her take a few lonely, awkward stabs at the plate, then feign enjoyment with appropriately orgasmic eye-closing and moaning..Before spitting it out and rushing to the trailer. Send her to Italy and let her cook. She’s good at it.

RACHAEL: Complain all you want. It’s like railing against the pounding surf. She only grows stronger and more powerful. Her ear-shattering tones louder and louder. We KNOW she can’t cook. She shrewdly tells us so. So…what is she selling us? Really? She’s selling us satisfaction, the smug reassurance that mediocrity is quite enough. She’s a friendly, familiar face who appears regularly on our screens to tell us that “Even your dumb, lazy ass can cook this!” Wallowing in your own crapulence on your Cheeto-littered couch you watch her and think, “Hell…I could do that. I ain’t gonna…but I could–if I wanted! Now where’s my damn jug a Diet Pepsi?” Where the saintly Julia Child sought to raise expectations, to enlighten us, make us better–teach us–and in fact, did, Rachael uses her strange and terrible powers to narcotize her public with her hypnotic mantra of Yummo and Evoo and Sammys. “You’re doing just fine. You don’t even have to chop an onion–you can buy it already chopped. Aspire to nothing…Just sit there. Have another Triscuit…Sleep….sleep….”

PAULA DEEN: I’m reluctant to bash what seems to be a nice old lady. Even if her supporting cast is beginning to look like the Hills Have Eyes–and her food a True Buffet of Horrors. A recent Hawaii show was indistinguishable from an early John Waters film. And the food on a par with the last scene of Pink Flamingos. But I’d like to see her mad. Like her look-alike, Divine in the classic, “Female Trouble.“ Paula Deen on a Baltimore Killing Spree would be something to see. Let her get Rachael in a headlock–and it’s all over.

SANDRA LEE: Pure evil. This frightening Hell Spawn of Kathie Lee and Betty Crocker seems on a mission to kill her fans, one meal at a time. She Must Be Stopped. Her death-dealing can-opening ways will cut a swath of destruction through the world if not contained. I would likely be arrested if I suggested on television that any children watching should promptly go to a wooded area with a gun and harm themselves. What’s the difference between that and Sandra suggesting we fill our mouths with Ritz Crackers, jam a can of Cheez Wiz in after and press hard? None that I can see. This is simply irresponsible programming. Its only possible use might be as a psychological warfare strategy against the resurgent Taliban–or dangerous insurgent groups. A large-racked blonde repeatedly urging Afghans and angry Iraqis to stuff themseles with fatty, processed American foods might be just the weapon we need to win the war on terror.

AND FINALLY: Some IRON CHEF AMERICA match-ups I’d REALLY like to see:

* Mario Batali (with one arm tied behind his back–and drunk) vs. Regina Schrambling
* Michael Ruhlman, swacked on Ripple, vs. John Mariani– in a Charcuterie Challenge
* Grant Achatz vs. That Guy In Australia Who Ripped off his recipes as his own
* Marco Pierre White vs. Gordon Ramsay
* Charlie Trotter vs. Martin Picard (Chicken Livers vs. Foie Gras)
* Chris Cosentino, Fergus Henderson, Martin Picard vs. Alain Passard, Roxanne Klein and Charlie Trotter (Cooked vs. Raw Challenge)
* Martha Stewart vs. Rachael Ray (bare knuckle cage match)
* Ducasse vs. Robuchon
* “Mikey” from Top Chef vs. Sandra Lee

Video Gold!

starbucks
There is was this morning, Starbucks is closing 600 stores due to the economy and overexpansion.

I almost felt like a prophet when I read this in a Bloomberg story this morning.

Most of the 600 stores set to close were opened in late 2005 and 2006, Bocian said on the call with investors and analysts. During that time, more than 50 percent of the new stores had drive-through service, he said.

Consumers are driving less because of gasoline prices that have soared to more than $4 a gallon, according to separate surveys in the past two weeks by Mastercard Advisors analyst Michael McNamara and JPMorgan Securities Inc. analyst Himanshu Patel. (Full Article)

While the price of gas is certainly a factor, the drive thru customer base, I would argue, are not the people who are invested in the Starbucks vision or community. The drive thru undermined the core value of the coffee experience and now they are having to do what mainline churches have been doing for the last 20 years – too many locations too close in the same community to be sustainable. Downsize, close, merge, and see if you can recover your mission.
church for sale

Interesting times we live in. It seems that the corporations that learned so well from the best of the church regarding evangelism, stewardship, and community are now reaping what went wrong in the church when it became “successful.”

starbucks church

I had a bad day today. The reasons aren’t important and some very good and hopeful things happened later in the day that I’m glad about.

But I was still cranky.

Until my friend Gene wrote this on my facebook wall.

It was the laugh I needed. I’ll sleep well tonight with a much better attitude.

pomo

Here’s the long awaited #43. I apologize for the sound quality – I had the air conditioner running and it was louder than what I realized.

Recently I have been pondering the rise and decling of Starbucks and their efforts to reconnect with their core values. What I see happening is their origins of offering a coffee experience in community has given way to selling a coffee product for corporate profit. While they are trying to make a turnaround, I see the same thing happening in the church, not just now but throughout its history. This is just my wired take on the situation.

No featured congregation with this podcast – just a little too much going on today to get that done too.

Enjoy!

Download the podcast here.

Links:

The Gospel According to Starbucks by Leonard Sweet

Know Magazine – Creating Passionate Consumers

Seattle Times – Starbucks Contrite, Ready For Comeback

Pop Goes The Gospel

One part of my wired wanderings that I have come to appreciate are the people who take the time to explore wired jesus to learn more about the postmodern journey of faith and my take on it. This includes some saavy call committees who have come here to get a better idea about who I am and how Wired Jesus reflects one aspect of my understanding of ministry.

One item that tends to come up is my preaching style. Aside from one odd congregation that fixed on equating having a manuscript handy with an inability to preach (the congregations I have served and the seminary I have taught preaching at would disagree), most ask about how I approach connecting real life with Scripture.

One recent call committee read my last post and found that their worship and music director has similar sensibilities of using pop music in worship. While the term pop music sounds kind of crass, I agree with Martin Luther when he said, “Why let the devil have all the best music?”

I contend that many of the best poets who write on the human condition and the search for faith are found on the radio and Itunes and I have made liberal use of both songs and music videos in worship when it made sense with the theme for the day. So, since some have asked and its just fun for discussion, here are some songs/videos I have used in worship before.

Bat Out of Hell II by Meatloaf (Lyrics by Jim Steinman – He rocks!)
“I’d Do Anything For Love But I Won’t Do That”
“It Just Won’t Quit”
“Objects in the Rear View Mirrior May Appear Closer Than They Really Are”

“What If God Were One of Us” by Joan Osbourne

“The Power of Love” by Frankie Goes To Hollywood
The song is incredible but the video is perfect for Christmas Eve.

“Only Love Remains” by Griffin House

“Nothing Else Matters” by Metallica

“Human Touch” by Bruce Springsteen – The video works great to talk about healing, community or incarnation.

“Hurt” by Johnny Cash – One of the best videos ever! It screams Ash Wednesday or Maundy Thursday.

“If Everyone Cared” by Nickelback

Some that I still want to use

Dig by Incubus – The video and song together would make a perfect Lent/repentence theme link.

The better video is here – This video is all animation and would be the preferred version. However, Sony has disabled embedding via You Tube, so you have to go there on your own. Bummer.

“Lost Highway” by Bon Jovi – ’nuff said

“New Soul” by Nael Yaim – Okay, its been overplayed but it would be a good song for the start of the school year.

“Samson” by Regina Spektor – If you ever preach on Samson, its an interesting take. Would work best if you had a soloist who could do it in house with an inhouse set images rather than the video.

The thing about using video that I have told my preaching classes is that just like the sermon itself, the video is not the point. Every element of worship serves as an experiential door to encounter the living Christ. As soon as its “cool” factor outweighs the experience of the worshipper and the presence of God, you have slipped into gimmickry. I have usually found that balance over the years. The issue for me is not pop or “christian” but how the words speak to our spiritual yearnings and our ultimate connections to God through Jesus, adding to a worship experience.

Now if I can just figure out how to use The Jedi Drinking Song…

Yesterday I was supply preaching at a church in Aurora, IL, a far west suburb of Chicago and the Gospel for the day was the call of Matthew to be a disciple of Jesus. Now this was a fairly traditional congregation but good folks that I enjoyed worshipping with but I would have liked to have had a projection system. I’m a product of my generation – I tend to think visually rather than in text and this story about Matthew begs for some images.

As Jesus went on from there, he saw a man named Matthew sitting at the tax collector’s booth. “Follow me,” he told him, and Matthew got up and followed him. While Jesus was having dinner at Matthew’s house, many tax collectors and “sinners” came and ate with him and his disciples. When the Pharisees saw this, they asked his disciples, “Why does your teacher eat with tax collectors and ‘sinners’?” On hearing this, Jesus said, “It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. 13But go and learn what this means: ‘I desire mercy, not sacrifice.'[a] For I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners.”

The way that I went with the sermon was our natural tendency to fall into us/them catagories, in this case Us = Pharisees/Church Members/Good People/God Approved vs. Them = Tax Collectors/Sinners/Non-Christians/Bad People/The Damned. What we forget is that Jesus came for “them”, not “us”, and if you begin to think of yourself as the preferred “us”, you’ve lost touch with the mission of Jesus.

My wife is a bigtime BonJovi fan and she turned me on to “Lost Highway”, which ties into some of this, since I see Matthew as something of the patron saint of lost souls.

In my rearview mirror
My life is getting clearer
The sunset sighs and slowly disappears
These trinkets once were treasure
Life changes like the weather
You grow up, grow old, or you hit the road ’round here
So I drive (drive drive)
Watching white lines passing by
My plastic dashboard Jesus
Waiting there to greet us

Hey Hey I finally found my way
Said goodbye to yesterday
Hit the gas, there ain’t no brakes on this lost highway
Yeah, I’m busting loose, I’m lettin go
Out on this open road
It’s independence day on this lost highway
Hey hey, hey hey

Don’t know where I’m going
But I know where I’ve been
I’m afraid of going back again
So I drive (drive drive)
Years and miles are flying by
And waiting there to greet us
Is my plastic dashboard Jesus

Hey Hey
Hey Hey I finally found my way
Said goodbye to yesterday
Hit the gas, there ain’t no brakes on this lost highway
Hell, I’m busting loose, I’m lettin go
Out on this open road
It’s independence day on this lost highway
Hey hey
Hey, hey

Oh patron saint of lonely souls
Tell this boy which way to go
Guide the car, you’ve got the keys
Farewell to mediocrity
Kicking off the cruise control
And turning up the radio
Got just enough religion
And a half a tank of gas
Come on
Let’s go

Sometimes we settle for mediocrity in our churches and worship, have too much religion and not enough Jesus, and way too certain about where we are going. Matthew had no clue and got up and went – a feeling I can really relate to right now. Jesus got into the midst of the real people, all the “thems” and spoke their language, ate their food, lived where they were, and invited them to bust loose for the journey, an independence day from sin to something new with him.

Like I said, I wish I had a projector but here it is for you.

My Facebook page had been dormant for awhile, so I did some updating this past few days.

In honor of that, here is the Facebook Song.

I don’t know if this means I have discovered a new means of creative expression or that I am on the road to having no life.

wandering

May and June have been absolutely nuts but the good news is that our transition continues. We have moved in our apartment and closed on our house despite my wife nearly breaking her ankle and ending up on crutches (not to get out of helping with the move 🙂 ). So once we get things unpacked into the apartment, we wait to see what the Spirit has in mind for our next move where I can get back into the pastor groove and we can settle down as a family. Right now I feel a transition coming from feeling like Job into a life more like Abraham – on the journey to a promised land that I don’t know, can’t see, and God won’t say until we get there.

wandering lost
I have a couple of preaching gigs here in the Chicago area this summer filling in for pastors on vacation and a new worship project for our tribal publishing house – Augsburg Fortress. So a podcast may happen here before June is out – I have the outlines – but first I have to get the apartment in order and get my oldest son off to college orientation.

Hang in there, I know we are, and I’ll keep you up to date.

However, I did have time to finally do some updating last night to my Facebook page, so feel free to drop by there for more info.

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