Sunday, August 30, 2009

Educated Clergy

Something to ponder...


http://tribalchurch.org/?p=1064

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Cool Quote

Fellas,

I was preparing a sermon on 1 Peter 4:7-11, and came across a sweet quote from Calvin:

“Scripture…warns that whatever benefits we obtain from the Lord have been entrusted to us on this condition: that they be applied to the common good of the church. And therefore the lawful use of all benefits consists in a liberal and kindly sharing of them with others. No surer rule and no more valid exhortation to keep it could be devised than when we are taught that all the gifts we possess have been bestowed by God and entrusted to us on condition that they be distributed for our neighbors’ benefit.” (Institutes 3.7.5)

Things are going well here. I'm getting ordained on September 20th in Madison, GA. Find a cheap plane ticket and c'mon down!

C.B.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Interim Ministry

Greetings friends,

It appears just about everything is beginning well for us - 100 % of those named "Chris" have calls! Congrats guys; I know God will be using you in awesome ways in your respective locations. Also, I'm coming to "Hollywood"'s ordination service, so you better be ready for some "amen"s!

As I search for my own calling in the bay area, I feel called towards a particular side ministry during the interim period. My interest in national politics, social reform, socioeconomic injustice, racial tensions, etc. has been given some time to simmer and develop. Another passion you guys know I have is towards preaching the Word. I would love to begin writing sermons so that I am more prepared for a pastoral position, but I don't feel that I can faithfully craft a sermon for a generic audience. Preaching can never be objective, unless the preacher wishes to ignore each person of the Trinity! I feel the interim call to combine the two, in a series of sermons to be placed on either youtube or perhaps just on this blog, entitled "Sermons for America". The subject would not be particular individuals, but would be the structures, systems, cultures, ideas and constructs that help form (and perhaps de-form) this country.

So, got any ideas? :-) I obviously have a few, but would love to hear from you all about places where you see God speaking to some sort of systemic entity in the U.S. Or, give me general thoughts or stories of your experience regarding certain structures, movements, ideas in America.

RM

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

New Beginnings

Boys,

Yesterday was my first day at Grace Covenant. It consisted of meeting the staff, spending time talking with the pastor, Rusty, who's a great individual with a great vision for this congregation, and trying to get myself organized here. I have to admit, it doesn't feel real yet. Perhaps next week I will take a little more time and expound on my thoughts so far, but for now I just wanted to give a quick update.

Later,

Chris B.

Monday, June 29, 2009

Here I Am Lord

What's up all?

Just a few thoughts about transitioning to ministry.

After three years of intense, engaging (for the most part), and enlightening study and field work, I felt prepared to begin doing that which I was called to do - ministry in a congregation. I am ready, I am excited, and I am called. I am also very, very frustrated. After following God's call for Jessica and I to be in Oakland, I have found nothing but dead-ends everywhere I go. Because of the choppy economic conditions here in CA jobs of all kinds are sparse...and "pastor" is no exception. Despite our lengthy education and preparation for ministry, it appears that I am unqualified for many of the positions in the area. Though I know God is absolutely faithful, there certainly are times when my perception of that fact is lost amidst loneliness, boredom, financial worries, etc. This is one of those times.
There is only so much cleaning, preparing, reading, organizing, and unpacking one can do. Eventually everything becomes tidy, prepared, read, organized, and in its proper place, and then there is no more fooling yourself into keeping yourself busy while God leads a needy congregation right to your front door. It doesn't work like that, nor should it. Despite reaching out and announcing my intentions to a number of churches and church ruling bodies, the response has been very intriguing: silence. In a time of such social and economic distress as today, one would think that free, extra ministry help from someone passionate about it would be welcomed. Despite all my frustrations, questions, confusion regarding this issue, however, I always come back to the fact that God is indeed faithful....
As I was writing the above comments, my mind was quieted and I felt God nudging me from the deepest parts of my heart that sometimes receive a lower priority than they should. "If you are called to be a pastor and spend your life serving Me by serving My people, what is more beneficial than being able to truly identify with the stresses of joblessness?" "Perhaps you are not looking in the right places." "Who told you that you must work through pre-existing entities?" And finally, "Patience...."
Goodbye friends, I will blog again soon. Join in the fun.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Update on Russell

Hey friends,

Well it appears that only one of us is getting ordained straight out of seminary. Way to go Chris - I expect memorization of the Book of Order and its proposed amendments by Tuesday morning. You're gonna do great - say hi to the lady for me as well.

Since this blog is about ministry, I'll give you an update on my behalf, hopefully kicking off the blog for the second time since (other) Chris started posting in May. I am beginning to scope out a particular calling in Oakland, California. Since we're all trained to be Ministers of Word and Sacrament, I'm obviously looking for the communities in the area looking for someone of that nature. However, my ultimate calling is not to a position but to a life, and so the search for Oakland's needs begins. I must say that the presuppositions of mine towards the city were somewhat misguided, since much of what I knew of Oakland came from early '90s rap albums and recent news reports. It is a beautiful town with rich cultural and ethnic diversity, a pretty decent 20/30-something crowd, and a burgeoning hipster population.

I have sought out a location that fits my passions and calling for ministry in particular: between the hills and the flats. Oakland is generally (unfortunately) separated into these two sections, the former being stereotypically safer and wealthier, and the latter including a higher crime rate and poorer. I live somewhere in between. It was an intentional effort to live somewhere between those who have and those who need in an attempt to connect them at a deeper level than general assumption. An integral part of a vicious crime cycle, it occurred to me today, is revenge, which is exactly the opposite of empathy. If this sounds weird, comment and I'll explain further.

In any case, connecting different areas of society with each other for the purposes of mutual learning, friendship, brotherhood (sisterhood), sacrifice, faith, generosity, etc. is a calling of mine in Oakland (all in obedience to God, of course). Of course, there are many other needs in this time of economic despair, but that's where I feel God calling me particularly. Let's see how this ends up connecting with my other passion of college / young adult ministry. I'll keep you updated. There are some very interesting positions out there. Perhaps I'll make my own. Perhaps there will be no position. In any case, I'm stoked about actually doing ministry here instead of just learning about doing ministry. Always curious how that system came about....

Hope you guys are well. Keep posting sermons, thoughts, ideas, comments, etc. Make something up. Make something happen. Write a curriculum. Have fun with the site and make it your own. See you later friends; each of you is in my prayers.

Russell

Monday, May 18, 2009

Oh John!

John Calvin was a missionary idealist. In the two-plus decades he spent in Geneva, he sought to “Christianize” the populace, bringing to them the true faith that had been obscured by medieval Roman Catholicism. Geneva was to be laboratory for this project of cultivating true Christians, and its success would (or so Calvin hoped) expand and extend into the rest of Europe and ultimately the world. 

With this in view, Calvin and the Genevan consistory (think ’session’) left no aspect of their parishioners’ lives free from their purview. Moral regulations and standards of public conduct (manner of dress, speech) were strictly enforced. Church attendance was tracked. Children had no choice but to be catechized. Even saying the names of ’saints’ aloud was criminal. There’s a humorous account of a Genevan parent wanting to name his child Claude, but the consistory rejected that name in that a St. Claude was formerly a revered patron saint of the region. (The ministers pushed the family to name the child “Abraham”). Marriage proposals had to be approved; divorces were not easy to come by. (Only 26 divorces were registered in Geneva in Calvin’s 22 years there). The function of the consistory as Calvin set it up was to eliminate unchristian behavior and doctrine from Geneva.  

One wonders…did it work? Yes, according to some. John Knox in 1556 called Geneva “the most perfect school of Christ that was ever in the earth since the days of the Apostles.” But Calvin could not bring himself to agree. He suggested that only 5% of Genevans were serious about God’s word, and the rest seemed never to have even heard of it. And on his deathbed, he was still calling Geneva “a perverse and unhappy nation”. 

Lest anyone think I’m posting this to confirm the stereotype of Calvin as a rigid, stern, judgmental old curmudgeon, return to the first sentence of this post. His discontent had nothing to do with his personality or some latent misanthropy. It had everything to do with his audacious missionary aims. If Geneva was to be a laboratory for how to bring about and organize a society of true Christians, its success was paramount! Geneva had to “work” in order to be worthy of emulation. Calvin was forever an idealist, and his disappointment in Geneva’s failure to live up to his ideals was a constant source of consternation during his tenure there. 


Thursday, May 14, 2009

Breath of God (RM)

This sermon was preached for part of a three-hour Good Friday worship service. The service as a whole was probably the best worship experience of my life. Here was my short contribution, from Luke 23: 46.

“Father, into your hands I commit my spirit.” With these last words, Jesus entrusts his spirit, his soul, his life, and subsequently his death, to God, his Father. This passage is very special to us as Christians. God incarnate died in our stead. This is that very moment in the flow of time. That death for all deaths. That self-sacrifice of God. That death of one for the liberation of all.

The last breath of Jesus…gone.

Something spectacular and at the same time terrible is happening here with this passage. And it has to do with the word “breath.” The breath of Jesus is gone. In the original understanding, breath meant something like soul, or the person’s life force. But the word for breath meant so much more in the original language. The word used so often in the New Testament is pronounced “nooma.” It’s where we get the word pneumonia from. Breath, air, the thing that sustains life. But this word, nooma didn’t just mean breath, but wind, soul and … spirit. When Jesus yells “Father, into your hands I commit my spirit,” that word spirit is nooma. The same word used when the passage describes that Jesus took his last breath. Is Jesus entrusting God with his breath, signifying his dying, or is it something more? What is it about his spirit, his soul, that Jesus would find so important as to make that his last and final statement?

To understand the depth of what is happening here, we must look at what the word nooma is used for throughout the bible. As it turns out, it surfaces quite often. In the Greek translation of Genesis 1, Spirit, nooma, was with God at the creation of the earth. When God spoke, breathed upon the earth, creation simply WAS. In Genesis 2, God formed us from the dust of the ground and breathed into our nostrils the breath of life. Nooma – God’s breath. Even though we were formed, we did not truly exist until the breath of God entered us. This nooma is the essence of human beings. When the Lord saved Moses and the Israelites in the great Exodus, God provided a strong easterly wind, a nooma, to dry up the sea. God’s breath parted the waters. This nooma is the power of God.

Throughout the Old Testament we see the miraculous opening of the heavens so that God’s nooma, God’s spirit, God’s breath can impact human lives. Every once in awhile, God’s nooma is revealed for us to see and it signifies God reaching down, bringing the Godly essence upon us, sitting with us for a period of time and becoming part of us. But this in-breaking of heaven is revealed to us sporadically at best, and even then only for a short while, maybe only a matter of seconds.

And then, two thousand years ago there was a man named Jesus of Nazareth. Claimed by John to be the Word of God who was with God in creation, through whom all things were made, and who is, in essence, fully God. But Jesus was also fully human. Flesh and blood, born of a woman, sleeping, talking, eating, drinking, fully human. During his baptism, John the Baptist saw the spirit, the nooma of God descending upon Jesus…and remain. God’s spirit did not pass through, brush over, or swirl around Jesus – it stayed upon him. Jesus is the earthly incarnation of the breath of God. God’s very essence walking among us. Through this full endowment of the spirit, the nooma of God, the man Jesus heals the lame, cures the blind, resurrects the dead, and also washes feet. All the power, all the truth, all the comfort of God’s nooma not quickly manifesting itself on earth, but instead living upon it. The breath of God…here…in the flesh.

But some were threatened by God’s righteous power. Because sometimes the truth hurts. So again, [[vv. 44-46]].

“Father, here is your breath, here is your nooma. I give you back your Spirit. This world could not handle it.” When Jesus released his spirit, his nooma, it was not just Jesus entrusting his soul to God. It was an exhalation of the power it took to create a universe. It was the release of the breath that formed the human soul. That breath was the very same wind that parted the waters in front of Moses. That same spirit that walked the earth curing ailments, calming storms, offering forgiveness despite ourselves! Gone! His cry was our rejection of God on earth. And it was the giving back of God’s ultimate example of love, grace, and justice which we just couldn’t handle.

In his last moment on earth, Jesus gave back the breath of God.

New Directions

Hi friends.

This blog is going in a new direction, moving Barth aside (still here though!) for a prime focus on ministry. The blog is transforming into a resource for ministers, laypeople, and curious bloggers alike The authors of this post are recent graduates of Princeton Theological Seminary, and this blog will be a type of public communication for all. It will include ideas, discussions, challenges, calls to action, and thoughts from the authors, but anyone is welcome to comment and further discuss with us. The plan is also to place Bible study curricula, sermons, and other documents online to share. Christian ideas and ministry tools should never be hidden, protected, or copyrighted, as far as I am concerned (RM). Enjoy the new direction, pass the word along, and go read the old (and new) Barth posts!