Tuesday, December 05, 2006

03159

here are a few quotes that have been pushing my thinking lately...

1) this is from an interview with kieran kelly, a music producer who's worked with the likes of sufjan stevens and others in the indie rock scene...he's talking about how his faith informs his work and how easy it is for him to turn conversations to the spiritual.

"That is one of the great things that music does to people; it tends to be a much more open environment to be able to have discussions. As opposed to working in an office where if someone was a drug addict or had some sort of extreme lifestyle, it'd be hidden from public view, in a rock 'n' roll setting, everything goes."

i love this quote and it's implications for our church...i hope ctk-durango will always be more rock 'n' roll than stuffy office.

2) if i could i would probably quote shane claiborne's entire book (the irresistible revolution), but here's something i've definitely been experiencing...shane writes: "it is a beautiful thing when folks in poverty are no longer just a missions project but become genuine friends with whom we laugh, cry, dream, and struggle."

this really hit home for me last week. we've been serving at the manna house (the local soup kitchen) and making a lot of friends with some of the "regulars." last tuesday there was a going away party for one of the employees, and i was invited, but couldn't come until about half an hour into the festivities. when i walked in i was immediately confronted with an interesting scenario. the party had naturally organized itself into four groups. one group was comprised of well dressed older gentlemen (i learned that this was the board of directors)...another was a group of older retired couples, sweet people who serve regularly at the kitchen...the third group was made up of a few middle aged folks, again faithful volunteers...

and then the fourth group was jim, james, randall, and two other "clients" sitting by themselves in the corner. i went and sat with them and was simultaneously welcomed and chastised..."what are you doing hanging out with us?" "don't you realize this isn't the happening social scene." they gave me a hard time, but also expressed genuine gratefulness that someone came and sat and ate with them.

i couldn't help thinking that these guys were the only people in the room i would call friends...what other circle of people was i really going to sit down with.

i share this story not to pat myself on the back, or to say that everyone else there was lame, but to show the reality i see behind shane's quote. it really is a beautiful thing. i didn't sit with those guys because i felt sorry for them, because i am such a great guy, or even because of some holy/guilty compulsion. plain and simple, they were the people in the room i know and who know me. beautiful.

i know a lot of church planting manuals will tell you about how to be strategic and find all these successful people to join your church and tithe big and be your elders, but somehow that seems wierd when Jesus says stuff like: "those who are last will be first...everyone who exalts himself will be humbled...when you give a banquet invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, the blind." (see Luke 12-19).

my two deep thoughts for the week. here's to a rock 'n' roll church and jim, james, and randall.

peace

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

i think that there was at least one other person in the room that was your friend......

Anonymous said...

It is, of course, "a beautiful thing when folks ... become genuine friends" whatever their respective position in the social pecking order... but if serving the poor authentically were contingent upon friendship between the server and the served, very few people would be helped. And who is casting a vision for a better kind of service to the "faithful volunteers" who, I gather, segregated themselves from jim, james, and randall?

Anonymous said...

If the segregation only happened at soup kitchens, I'd be a lot less frustrated.

If the purpose of the soup kitchen is to serve soup, well done. But if the purpose is to show Christ, even a glimmer of glory, well, the body sure isn't coming together.

But Steve, we've talked long and hard about this. The church segregates. Hey, we have the single groups with the single Bible studies and the marrieds and never the twain shall meet. We have marriage sermons ("my" church (oh so loosely because I'm about to step out) just finished a 12 week series on marriage which told us singles, hey you get three months to figure it out. And I love the "you can use the information later" response which is like eating supper for "later".)

We sit in our church cubicles and we sing about the body.

How I would long to be in a Bible study that is about the Bible and not my: age, single/married status, etc.

Whew. That was a rant. Uh. . . .Go Jesus!

Anonymous said...

I think it is when people of any kind (be they rich, poor, young, old, single, married, christian or...not) become a project that we lose sight of true ministry. We are called to feed the hungry and comfort the lonely, but we are called to do it out of love. A wise (or rather inspired) man named John once wrote; "He who loves not knows not God." It doesn't matter who we serve if it is simply a project... Ministry should address all types of need, physical, emotional, and spiritual. Jesus did all three.