August 30th, 2010
Headline: “In the Latest Religious Battle, A Call to Arms for Mother Theresa.” Some Christians wanted the Empire State building to honor Mother Theresa’s 100th birthday by displaying white and blue lights on the building. The building managers said, “We don’t do that for religious figures.” The Catholic Anti-Defamation League called for a public protest. And this honored Mother Theresa? Shall we get a grip? It’s time to move beyond the communal instinct to “defend the faith” against the “attacks” of outsiders, and humbly consider what we’re doing to besmirch the gospel. What are we doing to place a millstone ’round the neck of those who might otherwise find their way to faith?
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Tags: augustine, Barna Group, billy graham, climate change, evolution, UnCristian
Posted in advice to young pastors | 22 Comments »
August 3rd, 2010
Even though I live in Ann Arbor I know many people who are skeptical about the climate science that says human activity is heating the planet. Invariably, they are also devout Catholic Christians or Evangelical Christians–these friends of mine.
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Tags: acid rain, atmosphere, climate, climate change, global warming, ozone hole
Posted in environment | 27 Comments »
December 15th, 2009
Climate change is testing us–the global human family, that is. That’s what I think. Obviously, you don’t have to agree with me. But climate change is also testing the American church, in particular. Tests on a global scale are promised in Scripture. ” I will keep you safe in the time of trial coming on the whole world, to put the people of the world to the test.” (Rev. 3:10)
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Tags: book of revelation, christopher htichens, climate change, enviornment, Jesus, peter, richard dawkins, sam harris, science, the american dream, united nations
Posted in environment | 19 Comments »
December 8th, 2009
It’s truly amazing how the mere mention of climate change in a blog post stirs up objections from believers. I’m guessing that three-quarters of those who read this blog think climate change is a hoax.
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Tags: climate change, come Holy Spirit, global warming, Holy Spirit, love, science
Posted in environment | 55 Comments »
June 4th, 2009
Many of you are cringing. Not to worry, this post won’t be a laundry list of American evangelicals at our worst. There’s only one thing worth mentioning and it trumps all the others: at our worst, we’re more concerned with being right than being evangelical. It’s the saddest thing about American evangelicalism today, how much passion we have for being right and how little for being evangelical. Don’t get me wrong, there’s nothing wrong with being right, unless it keeps you from being what you are meant to be. And in this case it does.
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Tags: abortion, christian worldview, climate change, evangelical, evolution, gay marriage, objective truth, right, the Bible, wrong
Posted in jesus brand spirituality | 33 Comments »
March 9th, 2009
If I were a thoughtful reader of this blog, I could imagine being annoyed by the message coming through. What’s got this guy so hot and bothered? Why does he even bother to identify as evangelical if he’s got such a withering critique of American evangelicalism? He talks as if he’s a Jesus freak, but most of the time (lately) he’s talking about issues: climate change, birth control, Darwin, and the rest. Why doesn’t he just listen to NPR instead of criticizing evangelicals for tuning in to Rush so often? I can imagine being annoyed by this, not because I have such empathy skills, but because I have dear friends who wonder about me. People I respect and have the highest regard for. So here’s what’s bothering me: I think without really intending to, American evangelicals, as a movement, have turned half the country into the new Samaritans.
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Tags: abortion, birth control, climate change, condoms, culture, culture wars, darwin, evolution, gospel, homosexuality, Jesus, NPR, rush limbaug, samaritans, unchristian
Posted in jesus brand spirituality | 71 Comments »
February 21st, 2009
Something’s happening in American Evangelicalism. We are waking up from a stupor. We are attempting to fear our founder more than we fear our movement’s group think. Because He is asserting his proprietary rights over His brand–a brand which has been the subject of trademark infringement for too long. We are standing up to be counted as conscientious objectors to the evangelical culture war that has been distracting us from the evangelical mission.
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Tags: abortion, Adam Smith, apology, birth control, bulbar wheat, climate change, conscientious objectors, culture war, culture warriors, darwin, domestic violence, environment, environmental whacko, evangelical, evangelicalism, gay marriage, good news, gospel, Jesus Movement, Karl Marx, missionaries, missions, no-fault divorce, religious right, Y2K
Posted in jesus brand spirituality, lectio (meditative prayer), thinking out loud | 62 Comments »
January 19th, 2009
I stumbled into a concern for the environment. It’s not something I sought out. It was thrust upon me. And my interest in this topic is fueled by my concern for the gospel, which has been getting a bad name of late. For good reason. Because we pastors have allowed the gospel to become polluted by political ideology.
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Tags: babel, climate change, environment, flood, genesis, Hal Lindsey, Jesus Movement, Late Great Planet Earth, natural law, noah, politics, pope, rush limbaugh
Posted in Uncategorized, environment | 16 Comments »
January 1st, 2009
Nine years ago today we were all breathing a sigh of relief about the Y2K disaster that didn’t materialize. Evangelicals more than most. Because for some reason many evangelicals and fundamentalists bought the idea that the world was headed for a techno-cataclysm. Why would we be so alarmed by Y2K and so apathetic about the environmental crisis we are facing, including climate change?
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Tags: apocalyptic, bulbar wheat, climate change, climatologists, enviornment, evangelicals, evolution, I.P.C.C., media, meterologists, science, thomas friedman, Y2K
Posted in environment | 29 Comments »
September 1st, 2008
Man, do I feel optimistic lately. Why? Because of my kids. They have a different take on the world, and it’s a take the world is due. We baby boomers have taken things as far as we can with our current Oldsmobile. Our battles lines are firmly fixed, but from their perspective, wearing thin. Now it’s time for us to listen to their take on the world as much as we’ve been yammering on about ours. Then, having listened and learned, we’ll be able to see what we’ve been through in a new light and offer, not more information (they can get it faster than we can generate it) but what they actually crave from us: wisdom, the one thing it takes time and experience and trial and error to gain.
The culture wars are boomer wars. We inherited them from our fathers who lived in a binary world of good and evil neatly separated by geographic boundaries. The evil empire was over there, far away from our fields of presumed good. I actually played cowboys and Indians assuming the cowboys were the good guys. Pick up sides and duke it out; we boomers did it every day all summer long playing baseball in the streets. May the best side win. One side fits all. Side in. Side out. Are you on our side or the side of our enemies? Neither, says this newer take on the world before us. Maybe it’s time for us boomers to sit down, shut up, and take off our shoes.
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Tags: AARP, abortion, al franken, boomers, climate change, culture war, debt, divorce, environment, gay marriage, pro-choice, pro-life, rush limbaugh
Posted in beyond conservative-liberal | 16 Comments »