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Doing the “Gospel” Thing vs. Doing the “Success” Thing

Those who know me well will be amazed at how little I am about to say on this particular subject.  (Don’t get used to it!)  I’m very interested in what others think about this topic that continues to escape our public attention.  Note that I said, “public” attention.  You see, Rev. Doug Bowling (retired UM pastor from South [...]

Aren’t You Glad MLK Didn’t Have a Twitter Feed?

“… (social media) makes it easier for activists to express themselves, and harder for that expression to have any impact.” -Malcomb Gladwell [...]

Civility in Churches

Civility. That is the topic of the week following the tragic and very disturbing senseless public shootings and murders in Tucson this week.

What you are about to read, unfortunately, is not just my story. This is the story of more than one pastor and dignified church members around the country.

Civility and dignity are both born and nurtured in the church or sometimes the church itself, in the name of religion, becomes the source of great hatred and vitriolic moments…all in the Name of Love.

Monday night in Phoenix much of the world (at least the world I operate within!) was glued to the Auburn/Oregon Ducks game. I was. My daughter and her fiancé from Auburn were at that game. My daughter, in the nose bleed seats at one end of the field behind a goal post, said that an Oregon Ducks fan sitting and standing by her the entire game cried after the game which Auburn won 22-19 on a field goal with the clock expired. The girl cried for several reasons including 1) her Ducks lost a great game 2) she then realized she could have sold her $300 ticket for $4000 prior to the game but instead she forfeited the $3600 profit just to see her team lose!

Civility. Yeah, it really is easier for me to talk and write about the Auburn game then it is to talk or write about civility or the lack of it in our lives.

People have asked me to write a book about the lack of civility in our society and I have refused to do it. I tell people “If I wrote a book on the lack of civility in some Christian churches and the presence of very angry and vitriolic tones in some Christian churches that NO ONE would believe me. They would think I was writing fiction if I told my story and the story of so many others in Christian churches in the United States.”

You see, I am a pastor. A shepherd of the Flock. Leader of the Gentle lambs.

After serving 31 years in the Air Force (20 years as a chaplain), I retired from the chaplain service to accept the call to serve a church in Texas.

Lynchings still happen in churches. I do not use that word lynching lightly. Mob mentality. The point at which the targeted people become less than human. The targeted person or persons becomes a non-human which the mob can then hit, smack, target, taunt, attack, and eventually just throw the rope over the largest limb and raise him or her up as the crowd laughs.

You see, I told you that people would not believe this. This is the horrible stuff that fiction stems from in life. But it was 2003 and a public lynching took place on February 14, 2003. In a church. A church in a university town with university professors helping to lead the mob. Continue reading Civility in Churches

State of disUnion: A Civility War

…a prominent evangelical Christian, threw in the towel on the “Civility Project”. DeMoss runs a PR firm in Atlanta, and in an earlier life was an aide to Jerry Falwell; more recently he was an unpaid campaign advisor to Mitt Romney. After spending about $30,000 and well over a year of his time in trying to promote the basic concept of civility in our national discourse, he simply gave up. [...]

Letter to Preacher

Helping clean up the sacristy a few days after Christmas, I saw a couple notes on the writing desk.  Probably shouldn’t have, but couldn’t help but read a few paragraphs.  OK, OK, got a pretty good look. This is how I recall what I read:

Dear Pastor,

It was a good service preacher, in fact, a wonderful Christmas season. You really know how to bring it home on Chrismas Eve; all the candles, and the choir was really on it this year!  Kids in the nativity scene were just as cute as can be, as always.

I just wanted to mention some things that I think are really, really important to the church that I don’t hear you say enough, and it’s beginning to concern me.  I know there’s a lot of division in our wider society, and I think it’s been creeping into the church itself, and it makes me grieve.

I think you need to take a stronger and more vocal leadership stance in making sure that  the real Gospel of Jesus Christ is heard in our church.  Too often it seems that in the interest of reaching out “across the aisle”, you equivocate on issues like the love and care for immigrants, LGBT persons, the personal study of Scripture, and the overall love and dedication for the least among us.  It seems that you tiptoe around these issues; you seem afraid to confront them in an honest, Biblically authentic way for fear of offending the richer and more powerful members of our church.  I guess the Faux News religious right set just scream too loud for some of us that don’t feel like arguing in church.

Preacher, surely you took an oath of some kind to maintain a faithful witness for our Lord, Jesus Christ? Surely your attention to the “other”, — the weak, the helpless, the poor, the outcast trumps making some wealthy, well connected church members happy?  So many times when current events beg for a comment regarding the correct Christian response, you tiptoe around and act like doing the right thing is an option, not a witness. Continue reading Letter to Preacher

Bloody Hands-Bully Pulpit: Following Up

Our “Does the UMC have blood on it’s hands?… From the bully pulpit…” post drew a lot of discussion.

But we weren’t the only ones seeing the connection between messages coming from the church and teen suicide related to LGBT bullying.  A few days after our post, this poll from the Public Religion Research [...]