My Photo

« February 2007 | Main | April 2007 »

March 2007

31 March 2007

Art: Chocolate Jesus

By Sharon Fujimoto-Johnson

Chocolate The blog Iconia, "wherever faith meets art," has compiled a roundup of responses to the controversial sculpture of Jesus made from milk chocolate that has been all over the news. Here's what some bloggers and news outlets are saying about the cancellation of a Holy Week exhibition of Cosimo Cavallaro's "My Sweet Lord."

Blogger and art history professor at tesserae asks "Why should stone or paint be given more respect or priority than the use of plastics or in this case chocolate?" 

Joan Walsh on Salon says, "It's a bad day for the Jesus I personally believe in, the slightly swarthy, all-loving, hardworking guy who realizes he's going to have to spend yet another weekend not reading or playing golf or watching baseball, but trying to get Donohue to start acting like a good Christian, finally, and not a bully."

Journalist Michelle Malkin asks, "How would the MSM cover an artist exhibition of a 'Chocolate Mohammed"' timed to coincide with Ramadan? They wouldn't. But find an artist to mock Jesus at Easter with a chocolate sculpture, and you'll get wall-to-wall coverage."

University of Michigan student Todd shrugs: "I don't think it should have been as big of a fuss as it was."

At Daily Kos, frstewart says, "My first question was whether the figure was hollow or solid - I always felt cheated somehow when I got a hollow bunny" and responds to Michelle Malkin.

Read more at Iconia.

30 March 2007

Adventist Blog Potluck

Westbrookbig By Johnny A. Ramirez and Alexander Carpenter

The hot news around Adventism this week was the statement about Islam issued by the Trans-European Division to be considered by the world church:

"We believe that among peoples of all faiths, God has through history preserved a people of authentic submission in the face of apostasy, oppression and persecution. We acknowledge that within Islam there are such people ... Within this group of sincere believers we see potential partners for further exploring our spiritual understanding of the One true God."

The Wheeler Spin comments, "I dare say that there are people of all religions who are better Christians than I am, even if they don't know it yet." ProgressiveAdventism notes it here.

Adventist Historian hits pedant pay dirt while going through the pre-sale archives of Paradise Valley (former Adventist) Hospital. Findings include, "an original letter by Ellen White, and the original book with stock certificates that document people like Josephine Gotzian, John Burden, Ellen White, and many other early Adventists who sacrificially gave the funds to not only start an Adventist healthcare facility, but to advance the mission of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in San Diego."

Over at Adventist Gender Justice, guest blogger Victoria Bresee asks what can Lot can teach us?

The director of the North American Religious Liberty Association-West, Michael Peabody, Esq.,  does not mess around. Check a pdf of his Adventist Peace Fellowship essay, "At the Zenith of His Powers: The Unitary Executive and Inalienable Rights." Peabody writes,

"The transformation from a republic based on the concept of 'inalienable rights' of the citizens to a nation that depends upon the unitary power of the Executive which has risen in response to terrorism, may not yet affect the everyday lives of most Americans. However, though life may appear the same on the surface, if left unchecked, the emerging dominance of one branch over the others will undermine the rights of citizenship."

Speaking of hegemony and religious conscience, the Adventist News Network covered the brave folks who marched for peace.

Check it out y'all! The youth of the Nairobi Central SDA Church have a new blog and are embarking on "an online campaign called 'The Adventist Life'! They write,"Its gonna be some really tight stuff so keep on logging in and checking. Hopefully we'll begin towards the end of April or slightly before." It's a good thing they are not at this church. But this Ghana pastor sounds like a very wise man. 

In other news, James Dobson of Focus on the Family reads tea leaves- they tell him that only Evangelicals are Christians.

Speaking of defining Christianity, former Adventist, now Catholic blogger, Hugo reads the Adventist Review and expresses umbrage at George Reid's understanding of Easter. Hugo writes: "misinformation has been recycled once again."

Pastor Greg of Oregon Adventist Pastor wrote an article for da Gleaner on the role of the sermon in worship.

And that powerhouse of eclectic conversation, ProgressiveAdventism, brings up a new book on Waco and the Branch Davidians reviewed by the president of Fuller Theological Seminary. He writes that Adventist theologians need to take some time to reflect on the repercussions of their ideas. What say you?

29 March 2007

Francis Collins on 'The Language of God'

Geneticist Francis Collins is director of the National Human Genome Research Project. He is also an evangelical Christian, and author of the book The Language of God: A Scientist Presents Evidence for Belief.

Listen here (37 min.) to Dr. Collins talk about his secular upbringing, conversion to evangelical truth and why he finds evolution compatible with faith. (Thanks several of you who noted this.) If you want Richard Dawkins, he's here.

Higher IQ linked to vegetarians

Chickenslaughter01 By Alexander Carpenter

According to a study cited by BBC News, "Intelligent children are more likely to become vegetarians later in life."

A Southampton University team found those who were vegetarian by 30 had recorded five IQ points more on average at the age of 10. . . .Researchers said it could explain why people with higher IQ were healthier as a vegetarian diet was linked to lower heart disease and obesity rates. . . .Men who were vegetarian had an IQ score of 106, compared with 101 for non-vegetarians; while female vegetarians averaged 104, compared with 99 for non-vegetarians.

The study of 8,179 was reported in the British Medical Journal.

I'm not sure what all this means, but it can't be bad to be vegetarian.

"We've always known that vegetarianism is an intelligent, compassionate choice benefiting animals, people and the environment," says Liz O'Neill of the Vegetarian Society.

28 March 2007

Noam Chomsky and the terrors of the earth

By Alexander Carpenter

Noam Chomsky is the Institute Professor Emeritus of linguistics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Chomsky is credited with the creation of the theory of generative grammar, considered to be one of the most significant contributions to the field of linguistics made in the 20th Century.

In the BBC interview below, Chomsky discusses his thesis on terrorism, explicated in his book, Pirates and Emperors, Old and New: International Terrorism in the Real World.

This updated edition of Noam Chomsky's classic dissection of terrorism explores the role of the U.S. in the Middle East, and reveals how the media manipulates public opinion about what constitutes "terrorism."

Chomsky starts by tracing the changing meaning of "terrorism," examining how it originally referred to violent acts by "governments designed to ensure popular submission." He calls its current application "retail terrorism," practiced by "thieves who molest the powerful." Chomsky argues that appreciating the differences between state terror and nongovernmental terror is crucial to stopping terrorism, and understanding why atrocities like the bombing of the World Trade Center happen.

In comparing the "war on terror" launched by George W. Bush to that of his father and Ronald Reagan's administrations, Chomsky recalls Winston Churchill's summation of the terror by the powerful: "The rich and powerful have every right to demand that they be left in peace to enjoy what they have gained, often by violence and terror; the rest can be ignored as long as they suffer in silence, but if they interfere with the lives of those who rule the world by right, the 'terrors of the earth' will be visited upon them with righteous wrath, unless power is constrained from within."

27 March 2007

Unconcluding scientific postscript

Darwin_2 or a reading list for losing literal belief by finding generative faith.

By Alexander Carpenter

Recently that Adventist alembic, Cliff Goldstein, called for books that make the case for evolution without turning believers into Seventh-day Dawkinians.

Caveat emptor: I am not an evolutionary biologist nor am I trained in the history of science. Any cause for getting something right here comes from my good Scientific Reasoning profs at Andrews University and any poor thinking comes from my own wandering away from the Doe/Moffit stacks. Thus, this is not a comprehensive list. Rather, I'm interested in compiling readings for a journey of history and logic that attempts to make the case that one can read the creation story in Genesis non literally without losing ones personal faith. Or the sense that Adventist beliefs are worth acting on.

1. In the London Review of Books read Terry Eagleton thrash Dawkins for his "Lunging, Flailing, Mispunching" at religion. As is often noted, one of the dangers is that people, attracted to the popularized versions of evolution and religion, find easy dichotomies.  With the overwrought arguments of the literalists or the angry atheists of the world uniting to face off, it seems simple to just say either one or the other. But, in fact, that binary falls apart under Eagleton's scrutiny. If that's not enough here's Marilynne Robinson landing punches on Dawkins in Harpers (thanks Ron). Either one, the point should stick that it's not logic, but ignorance of good theology that leads to atheism.

2. I strongly recommend Stanford biology professor Joan Roughgarden's Evolution and Christian Faith, or former head of the Human Genome Project and evangelical Christian Francis Collins who believes in evolution or Harvard University astronomer and science historian Owen Gingerich's God's Universe. This should dispel the canard that there is some equality of evidence between evolutionary theory and creationism or intelligent design. Just in case there are some folks out there still watering down their creationism into intelligent design, or at least think that God runs genetic change I recommend these short, sharp essays from Natural History magazine. It even has short summaries by each paragraph for the busy people.

Behe's contention that each and every piece of a machine, mechanical or biochemical, must be assembled in its final form before anything useful can emerge is just plain wrong. Evolution produces complex biochemical machines by copying, modifying, and combining proteins previously used for other functions. Looking for examples? The systems in Behe's essay will do just fine. He writes that in the absence of "almost any" of its parts, the bacterial flagellum "does not work." But guess what? A small group of proteins from the flagellum does work without the rest of the machine -- it's used by many bacteria as a device for injecting poisons into other cells. Although the function performed by this small part when working alone is different, it nonetheless can be favored by natural selection. The key proteins that clot blood fit this pattern, too. They're actually modified versions of proteins used in the digestive system. The elegant work of Russell Doolittle has shown how evolution duplicated, retargeted, and modified these proteins to produce the vertebrate blood-clotting system.

For those who worry that belief in natural selection leads straight away from the supernatural, I recommend the engrossing critical review, "Missing Link: Alfred Russel Wallace, Charles Darwin's neglected double" in the February 12, 2007 issue of The New Yorker. Jonathan Rosen writes of the "greatest field biologist of the 19th century:

"He never renounced his evolutionary theory, but instead made it the cornerstone of a theistic explanation of the universe. . .He combines both halves of the debate over the meaning of evolution, coolly articulating the materialist mechanisms by which the simplest organisms morphed into human beings while arguing that our existence offers evidence of divine agency."

3. Now if Genesis is not necessary for telling us about species, what is its nature? Read Genesis: Translation and Commentary by Robert Alter. This should establish that we're talking about poetic, not scientific language. It seems that there are several concerns that arise over the issue. One is that accepting evolution will destroy faith in the bible. Well yes, if one reads the bible as literally true. Another of the big worries is that if one gives up faith in the literal reading of the beginning of the bible, than other scripture-based beliefs will slough off like last winter's snake's skin boots. Not so. In fact, the evidence of Adventist hermeneutics suggests a carefully articulated process of setting up parameters for when to and when to not read the words as literally true. (see Lev. 11, parts of Heb, later Dan, and parts of Rev. or better yet, here's the Rio doc.) Thus it's not a matter of all or nothing. The fact is that Ellen White employed others' written words and called them God's. And so did Bible writers, redactors, and copyists. The fact is that all understanding of the inexplicable is based on indeterminacy and misappropriation.

4. But what about God's work in the world. Here I recommend Chaos and Complexity: Scientific Perspectives on Divine Action edited by Robert John Russell, Nancey Murphy, and Arthur Peacocke. Particularly helpful are the essays on non-interventionist understandings of objectively special divine action.

5. But where's the meaning, the hope of in it all? Coming back full circle, Terry Eagleton has a little book out called The Meaning of Life. He writes: "The cosmos may not have been consciously designed and is almost certainly not struggling to say anything, but it is not just chaotic either." On the contrary, "its underlying laws reveal a beauty, a symmetry and economy which are capable of moving scientists to tears."

In his review of the book in the Guardian, Simon Jenkins writes:

"To Eagleton, just as the meaning in a poem is a conversation between the words on the page and the mind of the reader, so answers to questions about life must convey significance beyond the realm of the individual. The exercise is not solipsistic. The search for meaning is not something people do in a vacuum, but "in dialogue with a determinate world whose laws they did not invent ... If their meanings are to be valid, they must respect this world's grain and texture." Strip down the question as much as you like, but you must give an answer that signifies to others. This must be so, and is a forceful answer to all purveyors of meaninglessness. . . .He firmly rejects liberal individualism as nihilistic, the mere assertion that the meaning of life is me. "At the point of its supreme triumph, [individualism] is struck empty." The liberation of the self from the priesthood of religion or whatever becomes a black hole into which all meaning is sucked and destroyed.

Therefore, as we see in Alter, in the beginning was the created word. All we have are signs for trying to capture the ineffable. And words told in community give meaning. Perhaps the truth is not the literal meaning, but the meaning-making that we continue today. Our acts of explanation within community-- we once sat around a fire and did this and now we blog -- it's what we've always done. The alpha and the omega, God revealed is the first and last of language, our Word made flesh together.

We don't need a god who slays our enemies like our faithfathers believed, nor YHWH's demand of a visible shedding of blood to signify reconciliation, and we don't think that El controls the wind, the flu virus in our body, or the movement of the solar system. Do we still need the idea that God runs the macro-genetic mutation of species? Clearly we have more useful revelation.

Our best revelation of God lies in Jesus the Christ who changed the world by being the ultimate mutator of lives. In a world of greed-induced poverty, unnecessary military violence, environmental ignorance and difficult human relationships, I trust in a God who creates change in those who believe. Whether or not one believes in a literal creation won't change the millions of genetic shifts that just occurred, but believing in a God who literally changes lives might just save me, my relationship to other humans and the earth, and maybe even the world. And that requires the kind of faith that acts -- not to prove one true beyond doubt -- but to do the right though the heavens may fall.

26 March 2007

Art: Da Vinci Goes to the Dogs?

By Sharon Fujimoto-Johnson

Dindrinks

"Dinner and Drinks with the Son of Dog"
 © Ron Burns

In his new painting "Dinner and Drinks with the Son of Dog," Ron Burns re-creates Leonardo Da Vinci's masterpiece "The Last Supper," but replaces Jesus and his disciples with dogs. One gallery owner has already refused to carry the work. "'Maybe the world isn't ready for this. Truth is, I wasn't trying to be controversial with this one,' says pop artist Ron Burns. 'I love Da Vinci, I love dogs[,] and it seemed like a fun idea to bring the two together.'" (Press Release: PRweb.com)
 
Burns' specialty is portraits of dogs in vibrant neon colors. He has participated in charity functions for Animal Planet and Extreme Makeover: Home Edition and has also been named artist-in-residence with The Humane Society of the United States. View Ron Burns' gallery here.

What's your reaction to this artwork? Is it harmless? Offensive? Inconsequential?
 

24 March 2007

Looking for God

by Johnny A. Ramirez

Over at kgrp, a blog by a La Sierra University honors alum, you can journey with Kimi Puen as she asks the following-

so… there’s so many thoughts that i’ve been writing down and that have been on my mind lately, but i think it all boils down to this:

what type of relationship am I -supposed- to have with God?

i’ve been working on my definition of everything else, such as:

  • what role does attending church play in my relationship with God? (is it really that important to sit in a room for an hour to have my relationship with God grow?)

Read the post in its entirety- Looking for God

Read more of her posts on her religious walk.

There are a good number of our sons and daughters, bright and intelligent graduates of our Seventh-day Adventist colleges and universities, who question their faith, their walk with God and their relationship to our denomination.  Our families and church have invested care, time and money into their rearing and education.  If Adventism is unique in providing its members with a full-service society, then how well are we doing at equipping our children for life outside of the bubble? Many feel that we could do better in meeting the spiritual/ religious needs of current students and recent graduates as they encounter a world different than the one they grew up in.

I'm of the mind that what is needed isn't an answer to be delivered but rather for many of our recent graduates their faith is in process- I am glad that Kimi is sharing with us via her blog and I invite you to join with me in listening to her, and our other young people who open themselves up via their blogs, as she asks these questions. 

Happy Sabbath!

23 March 2007

It's Friday! Your random thoughts needed

Women_for_peace How was your week?

What are your Sabbath plans?

What are you reading these days?

If an Adventist was arrested, along with several hundred other Christians during a pro-peace march, would you think more or less of that person?

Ordination of Women in the Church

By Julie Smith

Why do we fear the ordination of women so much?  Fear is the only reason I can begin to think of that would keep us from recognizing the need for both men and women in spiritual ministry.  I find this fear somewhat odd considering our past.  One of our founding fathers, excuse me, founding mothers was a spirit-filled visionary.  How did we so easily slip back into the patriarchal traditions of the churches we left?

It’s a question we already know the answer to.  Tradition is strong.  Forging a new path is hard.  Unfortunately, we lost the opportunity to show the way in this regard and now other churches have taken the lead.  But it’s not too late!  We still have the chance to make new choices.

The reason most often given for not ordaining women is that, (of course we would in North America) the rest of the world is not ready to follow our lead.  This has always been the case, though.  It is really not the big problem we’re making it in to because in countries where women are not fully valued, the church there will continue to make choices that fit their existing paradigm.  They will not have women in ministry until basic changes take place in their culture first.

This leaves the obvious question of why we don’t honor the spiritual leadership through ordination (a sacred setting apart for ministry) of women.  It is the elephant in the room that leadership carefully dances around and pretends is not there.  The question is not only a problem with our leadership it is a problem with the layperson.  It is not only a problem with men it is a problem with women.  The reason we have difficulty with this is because the feminine aspect of our planet is wounded.  We are all wounded in this regard and so it is an issue for everyone.

The explanation of this wound, or separation is in the beginning of the Bible in the Genesis account of creation.  It explains God’s original plan, creating humans in His image—male and female.  It doesn’t take long before we see the consequences of our choice to follow the path of good and evil, that we are introduced to the evil of separation. God separates what He had so artfully created, making man and woman, male and female at odds with one another.

Redemption provided a path of healing for the sin problem, which at its core involves a tear between the Divine union of male/female.  Paul reminds us of this great restoration of what was once torn when he speaks of the cross and says, “Now there is neither male nor female”. When he talks about circumcision of our hearts he is referring to the cutting away of our sinful natures, which includes separation between one another and the sexes. 

What is required of us, what is most needed, is spiritual healing that reaches back to the very beginning of sin when we started seeing one another apart from God, the Male/Female Creator.  If you still have a problem with this, read the first few chapters of Genesis over again.

Spiritual healing always begins with submission to the Spirit.  Submission requires us to let go of our old way of being and thinking and allow the Spirit to make changes within us.  Letting go allows us to open our hearts and minds.  We have to be open in order to see things in a new way. When we stay closed, we are kept prisoner by our traditions, our past, and our prejudices.  This is not only true of an individual it is also true of an organization.

A new heart and a new mindset are continually needed in our lives and in our church.  We will die as an organization if we do not collectively make some new choices.

In closing, I would like to remind us all that the church is feminine.  We are the Bride in Revelation, adorned to meet her Redeemer.  If we are entering the kingdom as God’s Bride, maybe we should start giving some thought as to what we’re going to wear!

22 March 2007

Lessons from Ben Suc

The mendacity and criminality of the U.S. war on Vietnam are matters of historical record, yet easily forgotten is the role that so-called objective, balanced, and responsible language played to defend the indefensible. With today’s Washington planners attempting to disburse billions of dollars in “development and reconstruction aid” to Iraq in the midst of a heated war, the village of Ben Suc in Vietnam serves as a prescient reminder of what “aid,” “development,” and “humanitarianism” can mean in the context of an ongoing foreign invasion. Ben Suc also points toward an unsettling kinship between debased language, social sciences, and pathologies of technocratic control.

The use of technocratic doublespeak as a mask for violence is perhaps nowhere more incisively analyzed than in George Orwell’s essay, “Politics and the English Language”: “Defenseless villages are bombarded from the air, the inhabitants driven out into the countryside, the cattle machine-gunned, the huts set on fire with incendiary bullets: this is called pacification,” Orwell wrote in 1946. “Millions of peasants are robbed of their farms and sent trudging along the roads with no more than they can carry: this is called rectification of frontiers…. Such phraseology is needed if one wants to name things without calling up mental pictures of them.” Orwell identified four ways that truth is shrouded in cocoons of debased speech by the perpetrators of deadly political action: pretentious diction, verbal false limbs, dying metaphors, and meaningless vocabulary.

Continue reading this essay by Ron Osborn in Z Magazine.

Shall the fundamentalists win? Philip Jenkins on the future of Christendom

By Alexander Carpenter

Two years ago, the Association of Adventist Forums hosted professor Philip Jenkins at our annual conference. A polymath with an entertaining style, the conversations with Jenkins made for a great weekend. His travels around the 2/3rds world have given him an number of insights, not only about the emerging meaning of Christianity, but what it means to read scripture as a global community today. In fact, in the video below he shares an anecdote about an Adventist minister in Africa. It is well worth your time. . .

Graduate Theological Union (GTU) - Berkeley, CA

Philip Jenkins, distinguished professor of history and religious studies at Pennsylvania State University, delivers the GTU Fall 2006 Convocation address on Believing the Bible in a Global Context.

Philip Jenkins is a distinguished professor of history and religious studies at Pennsylvania State University. He received his PhD from the University of Cambridge in 1978. In his career he has published 20 books. He has written on some controversial subjects like pedophile priests, religious prejudice, cults, and terrorism.


21 March 2007

One Voice to End Slavery

by Johnny A. Ramirez

You know as an Adventist I just love the Sabbath.  And Jesus. In fact when Jesus came out to his hometown synagogue the scroll opened to a Sabbath text

He went to Nazareth, where he had been brought up, and on the Sabbath day he went into the synagogue, as was his custom. And he stood up to read. The scroll of the prophet Isaiah was handed to him. Unrolling it, he found the place where it is written:

The Spirit of the Lord is on me,
because he has anointed me
to preach good news to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners
and recovery of sight for the blind,
to release the oppressed
to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor.

Then he rolled up the scroll, gave it back to the attendant and sat down. The eyes of everyone in the synagogue were fastened on him,
Luke 4:16-20, Isaiah 61:1,2

Of the estimated 800,000 to 2 Million new victims trafficked annually around the globe, at least 17,500 are brought as slaves to the U.S. Orange County, Los Angeles, San Diego, and San Francisco are hotbeds of human slavery and the U.S. is one of the top three countries in the world for receiving (importing) human trafficking victims.  It is our culture of ignorance and tolerance for commercial sex that permits the injustice of human trafficking and sexual exploitation to persist.  As long as we believe it is not our problem, it will continue to be our problem and the U.S. will remain one of the three top destination countries of human trafficking in the world and one of the foremost abusers of children in child sex tourism.

Sabbath rest after a weary week is an appreciated respite.  Imagine how it must be for a slave to welcome Sabbath rest on the year of Jubilee! A year of Jubilee when we're all Gods chosen people. As a follower of Christ I am struck by the text providence had him read in his home town.  We can ask ourselves, what is our voice in our home town?   Freedom Day March 25, 2007 is the 200th anniversary of the end of the trans-Atlantic slave trade. Modern-day abolitionists will be using Freedom Day to bring awareness to the fact that slavery does still exist.

A coalition of university and college communities, NGOs, Human Trafficking Task forces, churches and citizens are planning a Freedom Day event in Southern California tentatively to be held on the campus of Vanguard University in Costa Mesa to raise awareness within our community that leads towards practical action steps to stop human trafficking and slavery.

The event will be a collaborative work with other campaigns and organizations including “Stop the Traffik” campaign, “Amazing Change” campaign, Sojourners magazine, the International Justice Mission, Hagar International, Free the Slaves, JustOne, Protest4, and other abolitionists and artists. The event will be a day of speakers, music, learning, networking, film viewing, resourcing, and one that leads participants to action and commitment to an abolitionist movement.

Many have called human trafficking the human rights issue of our time; it is an issue that will “explode” in the next few years as the world realizes the magnitude of the injustice.

It’s our problem, what will you do about it?  What will Adventists do about it?  Have we supported and joined with persons like our own Siroj Sorajjakool and his amazing work preventing child prostitution in Thailand?  Let's join together the Sunday after Sabbath and lets see if we can't make this a Sabbath year and together bring the Sabbath to those in bondage in our home town and around the world!

Visit: OneVoiceToEndSlavery.com.

Religious literacy

By Alexander Carpenter

I really enjoyed Stephen Prothero's American Jesus. Now he's back with another good book, Religious Literacy, in which he provides information and context for religious history and belief. The Washington Post writes:

"Prothero dates the beginning of the long decline in our religious literacy to the Second Great Awakening of the early 1800s. The fervor of America's periodic cycles of revivalism, rooted in a personal relationship with God rather than in theology handed down by learned clergy, has always had a strong anti-intellectual as well as spiritual component."

In this interview on the Daily Show, both Prothero, who chairs the religion dept at Boston University, and Stewart note a national problem that also plagues Adventism. The people talking the loudest know the least and are the farthest apart. To understand the integration of faith and evolutionary theory by reading Dawkins or thinking about human-caused climate change by reading Michael Crichton leaves the debate to the gadflys and the populists. An overarching skepticism is essential to a healthy epistemology, but learning must always be combined with a critical  framework that integrates information and prioritizes comparative analysis. There is no such thing as absolutely equal evidence, but unfortunately sometimes there exists equal understandings of information.

Christian Peace Witness for Iraq

In addition to the hundreds of MSM hits, there are over 270 blog hits for the Christian Peace Witness for Iraq.

Here's a sample from the people who went: Yet Another Unitarian Universalist shot this footage.

From at the crossroads' Karissa, an EMU student:

I went to a war protest this weekend. I know, I know. Me? I was surprised too. But don't worry. I didn't hold any angry signs or yell obscenities. All I had was a small electric candle, symbolizing the light of Christ and his call for peace. And all I said, aside from conversations with my friends and strangers along the 4-mile walk from the National Cathedral to the White House, was "Peace," which we chanted at the White House. . . .At any rate, it was a beautiful, worthwhile event, and I am glad I went. Even though I never thought I would go to a protest:

From the Back Pew writes, "Even the name -- the Christian Peace Witness for Iraq -- is a revolutionary act." On his MySpace blog, 28-year-old Hammer of Truth writes, "I felt the need to help sound the trumpet myself." Don't Eat Alone notes: "A significant part of the protest was the Christian Peace Witness for Iraq, the combined conspiracy of most everyone from Adventists to Catholics and Pentecostals to the UCC." And the restaurateur adds,

"One of the reasons it is significant to me that this particular protest was explicitly Christian is the justification of the war in Iraq often carries religious overtones, as if the war is Christian vs. Muslim. Bush intimates, often without much subtlety, that God is on our side because we are fighting for freedom and God is for freedom. I’m proud of the people who conspired to say God is for peace and so are many American Christians."

Speaking of eating, An Old Curmudgeon writes:

"We would need to be at the Cathedral at about 5:00pm and were not sure when we would have another opportunity to eat. When feeding times are not certain, the only logical thing to do is eat big when the opportunity presents itself. We sat down to a fantastic lunch at the Old Ebbitts Grill. After cups of seafood gumbo and a crab cake, we again considered the uncertainty of supper and decided it would only be prudent to have some pie and ice cream. In these uncertain times, one cannot be too careful."

Hoosier Daddy takes issue with the MSM coverage, noting the tendency for the media to lump the Christian Peace Witness for Iraq with the regular "anti" protests. He writes:

"However, this event Friday was in a whole different category of its own. It attracted no counterdemonstrators whatsoever. It was rooted and grounded in worship which filled the National Cathedral and in "divine obedience" in the middle of the night at the gates to the White House. It was definitely FOR something - for important and constructive goals that honor people, preserve life and work towards justice."

"President Bush is going to win this war come hell or high water. Maybe he's willing to forfeit his soul for his noble cause. He's not dragging me down with him," writes Les Enragés. Here's an audio recording of Jim Wallis' speech. Unexpectedly for herself,  Margaret feels patriotic: "It's a pretty incredible country that will allow several thousand Christians to process down Massachusetts Avenue in Washington, DC carrying electric candles and various banners." Texas-based Brains and Eggs notes that Bush has "lost the Christians." From the buckle of the bible belt, Presbyterian minister Shuck and Jive simply notes: "they need to know that we want it ended." On LiveJournal, thatjugglerguy writes: "It was an amazing experience to see people connected like that, taking a stand for what they believe."

20 March 2007

Asking President George H W Bush a Question

N2543925_33265606_109
by Michael Weismeyer
Written on March 12, 2007


Tonight I went to the Music Center in LA to hear the 41st President of the United States, George H. W. Bush speak. When you walked through the door, you could get a slip on which to ask a question that might be asked during the Q & A session after his talk. So I wrote one down. About half way through President Bush's speech, which was very interesting and funny, an usher came to me and said my question had been selected and to come with her. I was taken down from high in the balcony where I was sitting to outside the front of the auditorium. I was told that I would get to ask my question of the President. In the meantime, I got a much better seat near the front.

Finally, it was time for the questions. The first person asked his question and then it was my turn. I asked, "What advice would you give to young people who believe in their country but are in an environment filled with disillusionment?" He answered by saying to ignore the disillusionment. He said compare the US to other countries. People are lining up to come here, and the United States is the greatest country in the world. This got a lot of applause, including from me.

Unfortunately, I wasn't able to say thank you because as the applause died down, a man stood up and started yelling about why President Bush didn't pass on his values to the current President and essentially yelling about the Iraq War. The audience was not pleased with this outburst. The moderator, a NPR reporter, said this was a forum for asking questions not yelling. President Bush asked where his cane was (so he could whack the man I assume) and then gave a defense of his son by saying that the current President is a good and honest man who calls things as he sees them. Security came and took the yelling man out. Things proceeded for a few more minutes before another man started yelling. This time someone in the audience yelled out for the person to sit down and shut up, which got some applause. Security came and took this second yelling man out as well. President Bush was very classy throughout the whole thing as was the audience (except for those two men) and the NPR reporter.

Tonight on the news, the ABC, CBS, and NBC stations covered the speech with a clip from the beginning when President Bush described his fainting spell yesterday. He had been playing a little golf in the heat out in the desert and fainted at the house of a friend. He said the worst part was that when he came to, he was getting mouth-to-mouth from a male friend when there were six beautiful women standing around.

All in all, I'm very glad I went tonight, even if it didn't get me closer to finishing my 500+ page book that I have to read in the next couple of days. It was nice to be able to ask a question of the former President and get to hear one of our American heroes speak.
An alum of Southern Adventist University, La Sierra University and Loma Linda Academy, Michael is now pursuing a Ph.D. in History at UCLA.

19 March 2007

The hope of mankind

By Nathan Brown

Four years from the US-lead invasion of Iraq, serious questions remain about the justification and results of the military action.

But perhaps we could learn something from regime overthrow in the last century. Reflecting on the bloody course of the Russian revolution, Lenin made a startling admission with possibilities for contemporary analogy: “I made a mistake. Without doubt, an oppressed multitude had to be liberated. But our method only provoked further oppression and atrocious massacres. . . . It is too late now to alter the past, but what was needed to save Russia were ten Francis of Assisis” (Philip Yancey, Rumours of Another World).

Imagine what might have been achieved if—instead of hundreds of thousands of military personnel armed with millions of dollars worth of weaponry—thousands of missionaries, aid workers, teachers, doctors, nurses, and builders had been dispatched and equipped with the equivalent values of construction materials, medicines, and education supplies. How different a place would Iraq be? How different a place would the United States be? How different a place would the world be?

It’s not just a nice idea. Undoubtedly, there would have still been casualties; there always have been among those on the frontiers of Christianity—but perhaps they may have been less than those of the ceaseless violence of the past four years. If we are so confident in the rightness of our cause and the inherent strength of good, it’s not a risk. It’s even a way of living urged in the Bible: “If your enemies are hungry, feed them; if they are thirsty, give them something to drink. . . . Don’t let evil get the best of you, but conquer evil by doing good” (Romans 12:20, 21). It’s not our natural reaction but it can work.

In recent history, there have been more positive examples of regime change than Lenin’s regrets—or the US invasion of Iraq. Foremost among these is the role credited to Christian churches in the 1989 revolution spreading across 10 formerly Communist countries of Eastern Europe: “against all odds, when the decisive moment for change finally arrived in the Eastern Bloc, the church lead the way in a peaceful revolution. . . . Virtually, every protest demonstration began with worship. . . . Not a single life was lost as throngs of people marching with candles brought down a government” (Philip Yancey, “The Wall Comes Tumbling Down”). On a smaller scale are the stories of societies radically impacted by evangelistic efforts. For example, in 2001, following in a major evangelistic campaign held in Papua New Guinea, local politicians and newspapers noted “a dramatic decrease in major crime in the country.”

We hear much about the individual life-changing power of the gospel; perhaps we need to spend a little more time on the broader culture-changing possibilities.

Less than two weeks before the beginning of the Iraq war—in one of the most misplaced and poorly-timed uses of Adventist satellite technology—a globally-broadcast concert featured a pre-recorded message from President George W. Bush, in which he described America as “the hope of mankind” (“Spirit of Freedom” Family Reunion Concert, broadcast March 7 2003). How such a statement by-passed editing by broadcast directors is puzzling. But with four years of war and “peace” in Iraq as just another example of the bleakness of such human endeavour, we can surely recognise and must insist that the hope of mankind resides elsewhere.

Thankfully, the Bible offers a greater hope: “I wait quietly before God, for my hope is in him” (Psalm 62:5). He—and He alone—is the Hope of mankind, whatever Bush’s rhetorical excess might suggest. In fact, the danger is that of misplaced hope, even—intentionally or unintentionally—putting something else in the place of God. Yet “those who hope in the Lord will renew their strength” (Isaiah 40:31). It is this hope that can truly change the world for the better.

We need to renew our trust in the world-changing power of the gospel. Then perhaps we can invest more in saints, rather than soldiers.

18 March 2007

Billionaires for war

By Alexander Carpenter

16 March 2007

Failing America's Faithful

By Alexander Carpenter

"Two-term Maryland lieutenant governor Kathleen Kennedy Townsend makes a valid point: in America, faith is no longer about community. She longs for the Catholic Church of her youth, that "dealt with issues at the core of the Gospel—suffering, injustice, sickness, and poverty" rather than a Christianity influenced by a crop of preachers who seem to believe that 'Jesus healed the sick, fed the hungry and cared for the poor just so we don't have to." 

15 March 2007

Thank you for your call

By Pastor Greg Brothers [crossposted on his blog]

Ah, spring – that time of year when the phone begins to ring with calls to pastor other churches.

But how many times have you taken a call, only to find (as one of my friends put it) that “it may be a different can, but it’s the same old worms”?

That’s why I’m re-running this questionnaire -- one that I put together several years ago when a church and I were looking over each other. I then went on to post it on this blog . . . and the rest is history! Feel free to use it, adapt it, or . . .

Thank you for your interest in calling me to be your next pastor. In order to help us both make the right decision, please fill out this questionnaire and send it back to me ASAP.Thanks!

1. The last pastor of your church [circle all that apply]:
a. was a saint, no matter what the Grand Jury might have said.
b. retired, and now chairs the Church Board.
c. was doing fine, right up to the day he showed up at a Business Meeting wearing high heels and pearls.
d. disappeared – and while we don’t really miss him, we do wish he’d write and tell us how to run the church copier.

2. If your church was a TV show, which of the following would it be?
a. American Idol
b. Lost
c. Desperate Housewives
d. Gilligan's Island

3. Which statement best describes the way your church makes decisions?
a. We have a small group of key people who make all the decisions . . . whether the rest of us like it or not.
b. We like to wait until things reach a crisis, then panic.
c. We’ve formed a committee to answer this question – you should be hearing from it someone in the next month or so.
d. We favor an open and inclusive style of decision-making that doesn’t really accomplish anything, but does make us all feel included.

4. Based on the way your church spends money, what are its real priorities?

a. We’re a historical preservation society that’s dedicated to the maintenance of our church building.
b. We’ll get back to you on that just as soon as we finish this month’s fundraiser for our school.
c. Actually, we’re still trying to figure out where all the money went.
d. One of our previous pastors helped us develop a “mission and goals statement” that we used to set our financial priorities. Now if we could only remember where we put it . . .

5. The Youth of your church are:
a. Mainly attending another church.
b. The future of our church – but meanwhile, they need to learn the meaning of “reverence.”
c. The concern of an elderly couple who’ve been working in the Youth Department for 47-years, and have some real issues with co-dependency.
d. Let’s talk about this later.  In private.

6. When you hear the word “evangelism,” your first reaction is to:
a. Send money to 3ABN.
b. Take note of which evening they’ll talk about “the mark of the beast” so you can be sure to invite all of your Catholic relatives.
c. Suspect this is yet another attempt by the pastor to start a praise service.
d. Schedule a four-week vacation.

7. We hope that our new pastor:
a. Solves all of our problems.
b. Straightens out the following people [supply names here]:
c. Does not use phrases such as “paradigm shift,”  “emergent,” “purpose-driven,” or “post-modern.”
d. Doesn’t change a thing – in fact, we have a list of recent changes that we want him to un-do!

BONUS QUESTION:
When was the last time someone got food poisoning at one of your potlucks?

13 March 2007

Random thoughts: share whatever's on your fine mind

0106_sds2 By Alexander Carpenter

We've got some exciting things planned for the future of the Spectrum Blog and I thank everyone who reads and comments here. We're almost at 2000 comments and it looks like Elaine may be driving some of that. Did you know that she's somewhere around ninety? There's something to that Sevy lifestyle. . . Update: oops, as one can see I was wrong there, but I guess I was adding extra years of wisdom. . . You're a treasure Elaine!

Anyway, today's post is a place for your random thoughts -- props to Rochelle. What's on your mind this week besides hermeneutics, creation, and Adventism?

Feel free to drop a random comment below. I'm getting ready for my Masterpieces of Religious Art class tomorrow afternoon where we'll be studying Stephen de Staebler's Winged Figure.  I also had some good baked eggplant for dinner and a great Ben and Jerry's Half-baked ice cream bar. . .mmm.

12 March 2007

Art: Interview with John Hoyt

By Sharon Fujimoto-Johnson

Cover351small Subscribers, the newest issue of Spectrum is in the mail and will soon be arriving in your mailboxes. If you don’t yet subscribe to the magazine, why not start with this issue? It features pieces with intriguing titles like, “Cybersex, Solipsism, and Paul’s Notion of the Body,” “Dreams Come True in (Black and) Blue Hawaii,” “Invitation to a Christian Witness for Peace in Iraq,” and “Pork.”

The cover of this issue showcases an artwork titled The Mirror by Canadian artist John Hoyt. This is Hoyt’s third Spectrum cover. Here’s what he says about The Mirror: “This image is based on a Photoshop sketch/oil painting from 2003. The Mirror, or so it seemed to me at the time, is actually a ‘reflection’ on the idea of law as a revealer of personal defects. My paintings often draw on various fifteenth-century sources for their imagery. When using these sources, however (which I alter to varying degrees using Adobe Photoshop), I am working as an artist, rather than an art historian. In The Mirror, for example, The Tower of Babel is from Pieter Bruegel.”

I had the chance to exchange emails with John Hoyt to further discuss his art: 

SF-J
How would you describe your artwork? Is there a common theme connecting your body of work as a whole?

JH: My first response to people who ask this question is that the key to understanding my work is what I think of as a “deep-seated religious neurosis.” That seems to catch their attention. I have found other artists who share this condition—most of them now dead of course. Hieronymus Bosch might be an example, but of course there’s a whole corpus of “outsider art” that seems reasonably neurotic as well.

SF-J
Why do you make art? For whom do you create?

JH: I paint to work through my neurosis. Plus it’s something to do—go into the studio, put on headphones, and drop out of reality, so to speak. So it’s for me, I guess. Unapologetically self-centered. But I like showing on occasion as well—I just don’t like the pressure of an imminent show. OK . . . to be honest I really enjoy having a good show in a nice gallery—just so they don’t happen too often. Once every couple of years is often enough. And I really like it as well when people express some understanding of the work . . . though that happens rarely enough.

SF-J
I'm struck by the intricacy, vibrant colors, and surreal combination of elements in your artwork. What is your creation process like? What kind of physical space do you work in?

JH: The short answer to the first part is: I paint from photos, but I make the photos myself (i.e., I use Photoshop a lot.) It’s hard to talk about, but easy to show someone how it works. So the “sketching” (i.e., creating a detailed digital photo on which I can base a painting) takes weeks and weeks; I do it on a computer. Eventually a sketch feels “finished”—though I think of the digital photo as a “work” in itself of course. Then I spend at least an equal amount of time on the painting (a basement studio in my house)—just oil paint on canvas for the most part.

SF-J
What are some of your influences, artistic and otherwise?

JH: Northern European art of the 1400s and early 1500s—I have looked and looked at the work, made trips to Belgium and Germany to see it in situ, etc. Then there are the German Expressionists and the Surrealists . . . and of course I already mentioned outsider art (I love the Museum of Visionary Art in Baltimore).

SF-J
Would you care to comment on the state of art within Adventism, or Christianity? What are we doing right? Where is there room for improvement? In what direction should we be moving?

JH:  Adventist art—I think of this as an oxymoron. Protestantism never really knew quite what to do with art, and I think Adventists are solidly within that tradition. (Ironically, some of the art I like best was made in what came to be Protestant Europe . . . this interesting strain of art did not long survive the Reformation though, as far as I am concerned.)  So my advice is to compartmentalize—keep the art separate, let it live its life. If this leads to more neurosis . . . well, good painting is often the product of somewhat neurotic, dysfunctional spiritual environment, I find.

SF-J
For you, is there a struggle between being an artist and a spiritual person? How do you resolve the tension of being an artist creating edgy art and someone within the Adventist community?

JH: Between art and the “spiritual” side of my personality—no, there is no conflict; the two are really more or less one and the same. The struggle for me has been with religious ideology, if you see what I mean. Perhaps best not to pursue this thought too far . . . it leads me to bad places!  Very few people in the local “SDA” community ever see my work, for that matter. I had some bad experiences a number of years ago—I was invited to show work on campus a couple of times by administrators who did like my work, only to receive very negative responses from others who did not like it at all . . . eventually I realized there was no point.

SF-J
So, is the struggle external or internal? I think I hear you saying that it's imposed on the artist by external forces—but I suppose it ultimately becomes an internal struggle, because it remains up to the artist to figure out how to compartmentalize art and the community. Does the artist essentially end up maintaining dual identities then—the artist within the community and the artist outside the community?

JH: Firstly, I do see a lot of my peers struggling with their identity with respect to the community” (i.e. the SDA “family.” ) So it’s really nothing unique to artists. (Actually I think I see the biggest struggle within the group I think of as SDA “scientists.”)  I have heard such people acknowledge their attachment to the “family”—but then go on to express their frustration at the inability of the family to adjust to current “reality” (i.e. specific scientific/theological issues –presumably all of us have some sense of these issues and how the conversation gets bogged down). So yes, such issues do need to be resolved on a personal level. But I think I have moved beyond this stage. It does help a lot to have non-SDA friends who also have spiritual inclinations but come from a radically different tradition (Native spirituality, for example) and can help me see things from a different perspective.

SF-J
Have you explored spiritual themes in your artwork?

JH: I have always explored spiritual themes. For example—I find an entire alternate spiritual reality in the work of some outsider artists . . . I think of myself as exploring that sort of thing as well.

10 March 2007

Unity beyond pork

1554story32_1 By Alexander Carpenter

Over at the main Spectrum site Zane Yi writes:

Growing up attending Adventist churches, being educated mostly in Adventist schools, and even doing ministry for the Adventist Church, I had experienced most of my close interactions with, well, other Adventists. Working with and becoming friends with other Christians was something I appreciated in theory but found unnatural actually to put into practice.

[snip]

Reflections on this experience also have me wondering and dreaming. As Adventists, instead of focusing on the issues that differentiate and divide us from other believers, is it possible to emphasize what unites us, what we hold in common, and from this to unite in fellowship and practical ministry and action in our world?

What do you think are the great unifiers of Adventism? What holds us together? Beliefs? Duties? Cultures?  Both within our denominational community and Christendom, what do you see as the future unifiers of our faith community?

09 March 2007

Art of belief

Thanks to Graeme Sharrock

Belief

Is there anyone who
Ever remembers changing their mind from
The paint on a sign?
Is there anyone who really recalls
Ever breaking rank at all
For something someone yelled real loud one time

Everryone believes
In how they think it ought to be
Everyone believes
And they're not going easily

Belief is a beautiful armor
But makes for the heaviest sword
Like punching under water
You never can hit who you're trying for

Some need the exhibition
And some have to know they tried
It's the chemical weapon
For the war that's raging on inside

Everyone believes
From emptiness to everything
Everyone believes
And no one's going quietly

We're never gonna win the world
We're never gonna stop the war
We're never gonna beat this
If belief is what we're fighting for

What puts a hundred thousand children in the sand?

What put a folded flag inside his mother's hand?

John Mayer, "Belief" from Continuum (2006)

07 March 2007

Marcus Borg: the political passion of the Bible