Culturally Relevant

here are some questions that a friend of mine sent a couple of weeks ago:

So, some questions:

What does it mean to be culturally relevant?  If you are actively engaged in the culture, how do you distinguish yourself while you are blending in?  How would this not be confusing to a non-believer?

I understand Paul saying I have become all things to all people so some might be saved . . . but in your words, Keith, what does that look like?

Where do you draw the line?  Ok to open a Christian bar?  Have a Christian rave?  

Does tradition not have a place at the table??  This is all very interesting indeed.
  

I am not sure exactly what “culturally relevant” means. 

To me what it means is taking people as you find them and not as you want them to be. In other words going where they are, loving them and speaking their language. That is why the term missional is important. Being a missionary here where we live.

I used to live in Algeria and we knew missionaries to the Algerians from England. They spoke French and some Arabic. They knew Islam’s tenets very well. They understood that when they asked someone to place their faith in Christ, they were asking that person to embark on a life of ostracism and danger from their family and friends. They loved the Algerian people, mixed with them, made friends with them, worked with them (several of the missionaries were nurses working at hospitals) and spoke about what God had done for them as they had opportunity. Always aware that the Algerians they were living among needed Jesus and trying in every way possible to show His love for them. These English missionaries were culturally relevant to the Algerians.

By contrast, there seemed to be an atmosphere in some of the churches I have gone to of wondering why people were on the lake enjoying themselves on Sunday rather than in church.  It seemed to me that we would sit huddled in our box with a steeple wondering why those heathen didn’t get it and come to church.

I am not sure what being culturally relevant looks like. That uncertainty has been my problem and now I am in the middle of the journey anyway. Not having a positive vision of what else to do has been my reason for staying put. I do know that what it looks like is not about line drawing. It is about serving and loving people as they are where they are. Beyond that, I just don’t know.

Whether or not tradition has a place at the table depends on what you mean by tradition. I think that any new incarnation of the church is building on what came before. Thus tradition will inevitably play a major role. I think that too many smart people who loved God with all their heart have looked at these questions to throw out history in the hubris of the present.

However, if tradition means allowing non-biblical customs and practices to hold sway over the pattern of worship and more particularly over what we expect people to do and be if they come to Christ, then God willing, it will have no role.

Really good questions. I just don’t know is the real answer.

Posted in church | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

A Mustard Seed Church

Here is John Chandler’s post containing a link to his paper regarding a possible model for a replicating church. I love the idea that Jesus was telling them that the church was like a weed planted in a garden. Luke 13:18-19

In the same way, I love the one verse parable in Matthew 13:33 where Jesus said the kingdom of heaven is like a measure of yeast that gets spread through the whole batch of flour.

Posted in church | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Julie as the hair returns

ain’t she pretty?

Julie as the hair returns

I am a lucky man indeed.

Posted in family, photography | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Mark 15:34

Randy Alcorn has posted a letter that he wrote to C.J. Mahaney and John Piper after their messages at the Resolved 2008 conference.  Frank Weldon pointed me to it yesterday.  Here is an excerpt:

The unrighteous damned have no right to ask God why He has forsaken them (the reasons are self-evident to all who understand His holiness and our sin), but God’s Son the Beloved One had the right to ask, even knowing the answer and having participated in eternity past in the damning decision. He is the Lamb damned before the foundation of the world. So while the (lower case) damned will scream forever, ultimately there is only one Scream of the (upper case) Damned. Unthinkable. Inconceivable. And yet it happened…for us.

I am looking forward to hearing the messages Randy was talking about.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Todd Bumgarner

Todd has an excellent quote from Michael Green today.  Here is a taste:

And [people] will continue to believe that the Church is an introverted society composed of ‘respectable’ people and bent on its own preservation until they see in church groupings and individual Christians the caring, the joy, the fellowship, the self-sacrifice and the openness which marked the early Church at its best.

but you have to go read the whole quote.
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Hiestand

Todd Hiestand has an interesting and useful take on missional in this post.  Download and read his notes.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

a perspective on persuasion

 II Corinthians 5:11 says that since we know the fear of the Lord we persuade others. Most of the church isn’t persuading others (myself included) so why not? Because we don’t really fear the Lord? Just asking the question.

Posted in bible, teaching | Tagged , | Leave a comment

fascinating

this is a fascinating article about the Obama phenomenon.  

It is long, but you have to read the whole thing.  Notice the juxtaposition of a charismatic leader who is going to heal all of our wounds through politics against traditional morality.

Fascinating.

UPDATE:

you really have to read this article.  Here is an excerpt to get you over there.

But Obama’s rhetoric encompasses more than a promise of racial healing. He is not the first politician to argue that politics can redeem us, but in posing as the Adonis who will turn winter into spring, he revives one of the more pernicious political swindles: the belief that a charismatic leader can ordain a civic happy hour and give a people a sense of community that will make them feel less bad.

Posted in politics | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

test of photo posting

tighter on the bee

Posted in photography | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Importance of reading the Bible

I grew up in a Bible believing, Bible teaching church. I am grateful for parents that took me every Sunday.

I began teaching young adult sunday school when I was 25 or so and taught classes in two churches for the next ten years. I am ashamed to admit that even then, I had never read the Bible through from cover to cover.

Finally in 2004 when I was 36 years old, I undertook on February 1, to read the Bible through. I was a month behind on my preacher’s reading schedule so I had to read more to catch up. I soon realized it wouldn’t take a full year to read it through. I made a goal to do it in six months. I then realized this was too long as well and I decided I would do it in a month. My competitive juices were flowing at that point and I finished the whole thing in 21 days.

Of course, to read the Bible through in 21 days that had to be all that I did. I read nothing else and I watched no T.V. I ate a sandwich at my desk at lunch with my Bible in the other hand.

It was a life changing experience. I saw the whole picture in a way that I had never seen before. I haven’t gotten over it.

In 2006, I read it again in four months, and I did it again from 8/14/07 to 2/14/08.

I love, Love, LOVE the Bible. I love the God of the Bible and spending time with scripture allows me the opportunity to experience communion and fellowship with God.

I say all this to say that I know this topic from both sides and I am so grateful to the Holy Spirit for convicting me of my need to read the whole thing through.

Keith

cross posted as a comment on this blog:


Posted in bible | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

test

this is a test of the blog broadcast system.  this is only a test.  if this had been a real post, the attention signal you just heard would have been followed by an erudite yet pithy observation on christianity, religion, politics or pop culture.  you may now resume your normal activity.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment