"Religion" Says Do, Jesus Says Done.

I've been critical of Jeff's work on YouTube before. Namely, his "Why I Hate Religion" viral video.  I follow his channel on YouTube and came across this piece this morning.

Jeff's heart is in the right place and he has clearly heard and prayerfully considered the criticism that has come his way regarding his use of the term "religion." He's clear within the above video to point out that religion, in terms of community and church, is good. What he wants to make distinct here is the difference between earning your way to Heaven and Jesus doing the redeeming. This, so it seems, is what he refers to as the world's view of "religion."

In other words, he seems to insist that the way people think about religion is to, unsurprisingly, think about salvation.  How do I get to Heaven? Jeff asserts that other religions seek to require earning salvation; there are things you must do in order to be saved.

I disagree with Jeff in terms of his use of the word "religion" here, but agree with his premise that Jesus is the one who redeems and saves. Let us not forget, though, that many Christians not only assert that a personal commitment to Christ must be made in order to be saved ("When were you saved?  I was saved at 12 when I was baptized"), and many of these Christians attend the same church that Jeff does. Contrast that, perhaps, with my preferable answer to when one was saved, "I was saved 2000 years ago on the cross at Calvary."

All in all, I think, Jeff seems to get that. Jeff seems to get that what needed to be accomplished to save humanity was accomplished and that we are not saved of our own doing.  Or, as Paul wrote to the church in Ephesus, "It is by grace that you have been saved through faith, it is not of your own doing." 

Jeff's criticism of "religion" only seems to take into account justification, the act of being saved. Yes, Jesus does that. Wesleyans (and many others) believe that we can participate in our own salvation--in our sanctification, the act of growing into Christ's likeness.  This is why I refrain from applauding his use of "religion."

McCann to Boston

A star Brave considers the Sox: 

"Certainly Boston is a city that Brian likes, and he has always respected the organization and the front office," said B.B. Abbott, managing partner at Jet Sports Management. "Obviously, the coaching staff and clubhouse unity is attractive. He has also always been fascinated with the fan base, their support of the Red Sox and the history of the organization. Boston would certainly be a place that would be a consideration for Brian."

Color me interested. I liked Salty, so it's unfortunate that Boston doesn't want to play ball with him. One can't deny that his performance in the postseason was less than, uhhhh, stellar. Farrell decided to repeatedly play Ross in most of the postseason--who himself struggled endlessly at the plate--over Salty.

And...let's not forget Salty's disastrous throw to third that lost the game for the Sox and, perhaps, changed baseball rulebooks. 

Duke Calls for Boycott of Kanye West

Duke professor calls for a boycott of Kanye's tour merchandise which features a flag of the Confederacy.

The stars and bars is the iconic symbol of the Confederacy, which was formed to conduct a traitorous secession and to preserve slavery in America. Southern blacks, in particular, see this flag as a sign of both danger and degradation and have fought for many years to have it removed from public places. In "appropriating" this symbol, Kanye West is either naive, ignorant, or engaged in a cynical ploy to expand the market for his products. A boycott should be conducted against the Yeezus brand.

Kanye recently called himself a creative genius.  A racial and reconciling genius, though, he is not.

The Future of This Blog

Awhile ago I started a blog called "A Dovetailed Life" in which I rambled incessantly about what was going on in my mind via longform blogging.  Typically my posts would be/could be between 400-1000 words (that longer range of words is not recommended by most successful bloggers)  in length and, depending on the topic, would range substantially in amount of views.

That was the longform material.  Shortform stuff, however, I left to mostly sharing on Facebook, with my rants about why guns are bad or why Samsung felt the need to endlessly copy Apple. In my mind it served as a nice distinction between the two services.  I would rant on my "A Dovetailed Life"  blog in longer form and rant on my Facebook page in short form.  Two different forms, same types of ranting.  This, in turn, clogged up my Facebook page (and friends' newsfeeds) with countless comments about who knows what and, because of Facebook's notification system, such conversation threads would count to--easily--forty or fifty comments. The entire thread would be filled with jabs at my character, unbelievable shouting matches, and zero progress made.

It's time, I think, that that changes.

I bought this domain name (jamesbryant.me) sometime back with the hopes of one day figuring out how to rebrand myself.  I promised on this very blog not long ago that I would rebrand my Facebook page, too. While I've steadily become better at this "rebranding", I have not successfully or fully lived up to my promise.  Most of this is due, I'd imagine, to my failure to adequately understand the distinction between purposes of social media.  I have a Twitter account, for instance, and post regularly.  However, I post on Facebook far more often with short, pointed statements that would be better suited for Twitter. Why? I don't know, that's just what I do.  As a result of my lacking acknowledgment of social media distinctions, people's newsfeeds have been flooded with my nonsense, causing them to hide me from their feed on a regular basis or completely defriend me altogether.

It's time, I think, that that too changes.

All of these problems culminate into one larger question: What is Bryant Manning's social media strategy moving forward? I should first articulate my thoughts on sharing on the internet.

We've seen a boom in internet activity in the last 5 years of its existence.  This is in part due to social media networks working diligently to provide easy sharing mechanisms. Already it is possible to get online and be more familiar with the ongoings of today's news and be more informed about a topic of which you had no interest ten seconds prior.  This is due to sharing. Facebook and Twitter have become experts at this (many other networks, notably, are playing an insatiable game of catchup as a result) and have completely changed the way most people with a computer or a smartphone attach themselves to information and commentary on the information.  It's now literally possible for me to tell 2,500 people how I feel about any one topic all at one time And, I can do it in less than 5 seconds.  Sharing is the future of humanity and technology is aiding in this sharing endeavor.

That's mostly what I've done on Facebook.  If I read an article and have a reaction to it, I'll often post it on Facebook (they've made it so easy to share straight to Facebook from almost any page or app) with a bit of commentary.  That link (and a thumbnail preview) will instantly find its way onto the newsfeeds of anyone who hasn't blocked me and the ensuing conversation regarding the topic will take place on Facebook. This sounds great in principle; I can share information, provide commentary, and participate in discussion all in one place quickly and easily. In practice, however, it has some downsides.  Facebook is a proprietary platform that can take, parse, and use any information I willfully give it to their benefit, financial or otherwise.  I own nothing on that site.  If, for some reason, one might need to refer back to that at a later date, one is at the mercy of a company who doesn't really have your best wishes in mind.

So I am, today, beginning a new way of going about my social media extravaganza. This new process consists of several rules which intend to use the services as they are intended to be used.

  • This site:  This site will soon contain both longform and shortform commentary.  An example of a longform piece might be the piece you are currently reading. A shortform piece will likely consist of only a link, some quotable material, and a short bit of commentary on my part.  These will be posted far more often (several times a day?) on this site. I invite commentary here (comments now hosted by Disqus).
  • Twitter: Twitter can and should be used to provide relevant commentary to a specific moment in time and links for sharing.  Twitter does not naturally serve as a good conversational ground, although it can provide that service in a limited capacity in a pinch.  I will continue to tweet things that I find appropriate for Twitter and fall within Twitter's 140 character limit.  This includes short bits on my life and links I think are worth reading.
  • Facebook: Though I'm still up in the air with how to treat Facebook, I think I'm going to pull back the reigns on sharing links so frequently there, replacing it with the sharing of shortform commentary here. Any sort of commentary or bit about my life that may seem to fit in Facebook will go there, but my guess is that, as a whole, my sharing on Facebook will come (largely) to a hault.  For artciles that I think are worth a read but not commentary, I'll likely still share them on Facebook.
  • Sharing these posts: Posts on this page (both longform and shortform) will be shared on Twitter after every single post.  Longform posts will be posted on my Facebook page, while the shortform posts won't be seen from Facebook.  The intent here is to move the sharing of articles to a non-proprietary-me-controlled source which, at this time, is this site.  If you're interested in what I post (I don't see how in the world you are, but whatever...), you can subscribe to this site with an RSS reader.  I recommend Feedly.  Adding jamesbryant.me to your RSS reader will provide you will timely updates to every post of mine.

This may not work.  It probably won't.  But, in an effort to rebrand, it's worth a shot.  Thanks for keeping up with me.  You're far too kind to do so.

Don't worry.  The typos will still be here. 

-B

Mark Driscoll's Scholarship for Women in Ministry

Shane Claiborne, an inspirational and fully abandoned Christian, along with a few fellow event planners is starting a scholarship to support women in full-time ministry named, humorously, after Mark Driscoll. 

These guys don't mess around -- they love Jesus, and they have some serious imagination and edge. They'll be hosting a great event in May in Toronto with Stanley Hauerwas and Will Willimon...

It's quality work.  On a day in which I celebrate the life of a certain woman in ministry who helped to confirm my calling into ministry, I'm pleased to see this. If only I could be in Toronto to see this bit with Hauerwas and Willimon.

Knock to Unlock

I'm a sucker for great ideas with clever implementations involving an iPhone.  This is no exception and it alleviates one of the most annoying things about working on a computer.

Don't want to have to type in your password every time you sit down at your computer but want to retain the security of a locked Mac?  This literally solves the problem and utilizes low energy Bluetooth 4.0 to do it. 

Mac app is free.  iOS app (which currently only supports one Mac at a time) is $3.99.   Just get within close proximity of your computer, pick up your phone, and knock on it.  It will instantly unlock the computer.

Mac only, iOS only, for now.  Cool video.  Cool implementation.

 

The US Bullies Apple for Information

Apple released a report documenting just how much private customer information they've given to various governments: 

Like many companies, Apple receives requests from law enforcement agencies to provide customer information. As we have explained, any government agency demanding customer content from Apple must get a court order.1 When we receive such a demand, our legal team carefully reviews the order. If there is any question about the legitimacy or scope of the court order, we challenge it. Only when we are satisfied that the court order is valid and appropriate do we deliver the narrowest possible set of information responsive to the request.

There are probably a lot of things to glean from this work, but I focused on only one: the United States requests more information about private citizens from public companies than any other on the list.  China, by the way, is on that list.  There could be many reasons for this, not least of which is the fact that US citizens have a stronger addiction and more fluid supply to Apple's products and services. Enough, though, to have that large a distinction in numbers?

I doubt it.

 

666

High school runner refuses to run in race while wearing "666." 

"666" is, according the the bible, the mark of the beast. Thacker couldn't bring herself to run while wearing "666" because of her faith. So, she and her coach tried to get a different number. They asked three different officials. They were told no three different times.

"I didn't want to risk my relationship with God and try to take that number," said Thacker.

There's a lot of silliness going on here.

1)The school could have given her a new number and she'd have run. Instead, it blew up into a whole media extravaganza.

2) This is the sort of problem and (bad) publicity Christianity gets when Christians choose a literal interpretation of certain passages of Scripture and form an entire theological mindset from a misinterpretation and misunderstanding of biblical genre. Silliness abounds. 

If I were her, I'd have run with it upside down. 999, for the win.

Tim Cook: Workplace Equality Is Good for Business

Apple, always leading the way for progress: 

At Apple, we try to make sure people understand that they don't have to check their identity at the door. We're committed to creating a safe and welcoming workplace for all employees, regardless of their race, gender, nationality or sexual orientation.

As we see it, embracing people's individuality is a matter of basic human dignity and civil rights. It also turns out to be great for the creativity that drives our business. We've found that when people feel valued for who they are, they have the comfort and confidence to do the best work of their lives.

I appreciate Cook's piece here and, perhaps moreso, his drive for furthering equality through legislation. Why, though, can't we simply say "Workplace Equality is Good"? Why the necessity of framing it from a business perspective? It's perhaps a necessary evil of rhetoric to present it in this way, but in doing so I think it hurts the meaning of equality.

Equality is not good for a purpose.  Equality is good.  Period. 

The iPad 2 and Education

I predicted before last week's event that the iPad 2, after a long run and stellar sales that boosted interest in iPad, would retire.  Not only did Apple not retire the iPad 2, it didn't even lower the cost. Here's one reason: 

My daughters’ elementary school bought 40 iPad minis at the end of last year and those systems have mostly been used by the fourth and fifth grade classrooms. Realizing they could use about 10 more devices, the school moved forward with purchasing this fall. I advised the principal to wait until after the October 22 event, believing that retina iPads would replace non-retina iPads and be better bang for the buck, so to speak.

Our principal reminded me that that didn’t matter. What did matter is that all students were using the same devices, that teachers didn’t have to know one thing for one group of devices and another thing for another group of devices. Even more important, she didn’t want students fighting over who gets to use the nicer devices.

That last point, the fighting, surprised me but makes complete sense.

"I just wanted to get it out of the way"

SB Nation's Brandon Sneed interviewed the reluctant Andre Dawkins of Duke's backcourt regarding the unforeseen death of his sister and struggle to return to playing basketball competitively.

Just before the Ryan Kelly jokes, just before we parted ways, sitting at the black table where the guys usually sit for press conferences and across from the canvas of Andre playing basketball hanging on the wall, Andre said that he'd prefer to just keep his public life as a basketball player about basketball, and his personal life personal.

I asked him, "Why?" Why give an interview about this when he didn't want to?

He looked at me. He looked tired.

He cracked a half-smile.

He said, "I just wanted to get it out of the way."

Dre has been through more than I could imagine.  I'm just glad he's back on the court.

Outsourcing our self control

A former student of mine, a talented bright one at that, wrote this piece for the Duke Chronicle, the student-produced daily newspaper.

I fear a world in which we rely on the Internet for self-control as well as memory. Imagine your office in 2050. No one bothers to remember anything; coworkers have to Google “stapler” to figure out where they left the office stapler. Self-discipline is also gone; managers have to implement an automated system of minor electric shocks to condition people to stay off social media. Workplace productivity declines. Family ties suffer as parents answer emails on their smartphones rather than bonding with young children. I fear that technology could be our downfall.

While I don't ever see myself googling a stapler to see where I put mine (though wouldn't that just be the most convenient thing ever?),  I fear a world in which we no longer teach ourselves anything. We might simply teach the computer the skill we once were able to conquer ourselves.

The computer, of course, can become a giant crutch. 

Obstruction

I often find myself in the position of defending baseball as a sport. I get criticized for being a fan of such a boring sport and I find myself having to defend its virtue. During one of these sessions, I was explaining to the conversation partner that baseball is such a fantastic sport because of the dynamics of offense versus defense.   In how many other sports do you have nine members of the opposing team playing defense against (at most) four players of their opposing team? More often than not, nine players provide the defensive strategy against just one of the opposing players. I still hold that offense in baseball is one of the hardest things to accomplish in sports.

Because of that, the nature of the game, baseball’s official rules provide adequate protection for the members of the offense. On a force out, a tie between the ball’s arrival in the defenseman’s glove and the runner landing on the base will usually be awarded to the runner. Fielders cannot obstruct a runner’s path to advance to the next base, etc.

We found this all incredibly relevant last night at the end of World Series 2013 Game 3. After a bad throw from the Red Sox catcher, Jarrod Saltalamacchia, the Sox third baseman found himself lying on the ground in the way of the baserunner, called for obstruction of the baserunner awarding the baserunner home plate therefore losing the game for the Red Sox.  It was highly unfortunate, especially for Red Sox Nation.

Many articles and opinions have been written since last night, many of which were written by authors far more qualified to comment than I (me?). But whether it is appropriate or accurate or not, this is my perspective.

We’ve seen time and time again players running from first to second on a ground ball to the infield do all they can to obstruct the fielder from making the best double play he can.  Baserunners are taught to play mind games with the fielders, slide in hard, throw their hands up, and all kinds of crazy things that can prevent the defenseman making a double play attempt from doing so successfully.  You can see the results of this on almost any double play.  Typically the shortstop or second baseman making the play fall down over the baserunner, even though the force out has already been made.  As I see it, the baserunner has always had plenty of leeway in making obstruction part of the game. It is true that baserunners can be called for getting on the way, but more times than not it is simply seen as justpart of the game.

Take for instance last night’s play.  By most angles I saw it, Salty at home threw to Middlebrooks at third and did so a little wide.  Moving six inches to a foot would have solved this problem for Middlebrooks; he might have made the catch and saved the run. But he stayed on the bag and staying on the bag, and consequently NOT interfering with the baserunner reaching third, caused the ball to hit the baserunner, bounce off behind the bag and caused Middlebrooks to make a last minute jab at catching the ball.  As a result, Middlebrooks falls on the ground and the baserunner gets up from the slide and trips over Middlebrooks.

Technically, by MLB’s rules, obstruction isn’t something an offenseman can be guilty of. Obstruction is a different call than interference. But even with interference, if the offenseman whether intentionally or not interferes with the ball or the play, the ball is often called dead, bases are typically not awarded or taken away.  But this umpire last night, Jim Joyce, doesn’t (rightly) call interference; he lets play continue.

When Craig, the baserunner, gets up from the slide, he has an option to run to home if he thinks he can make it safely.  He does. But instead of getting up off the ground and running on the baseline chalk, he gets up and tries to go over Will Middlebrooks who is, remember, still on the ground.  Under a replay you can see that Middlebrooks makes the attempt to get up and is pushed back down by the runner.  Like normal in baseball, the runner has a right to do that.  But think about the runner’s choices here…

The runner could get up and run in a straight line on the baseline chalk, and wouldn’t had to have stepped over Middlebrooks at all.  He had a choice and chose to step over Middlebrooks.  As he does this, he pushes Middlebrooks down, “obstructing” Middlebrooks’s ability to 1) get out of the baserunner’s way and 2) field the ball (assuming outfield backup is unavailable).

 So Middlebrooks, who does not obstruct Craig, the runner, from reaching third falls over on a bad throw and is unable to move to avoid an obstruction call because the runner choose to step over him rather than running on the baseline and pushes him down in order to get over him, resulting in the runner’s tripping.

Jim Joyce is one of the best umpires in the business and I gained incredible respect for him when he apologized publicly for ruining Galarraga’s perfect game with a blown call at first base. I don’t doubt that Joyce knows the rulebook through and through and called the play according to the rulebook.

My argument is, and has been for a long time, that baserunners are on the borderline of having too much leeway because of the nature of the game.  The runners can make decisions that get an obstruction call on the defense, even if the defenseman doesn’t intend any such action (because intent isn’t factored into the call). We love a game that literally has everyone against you while you try to attack on offense.  As a means of making it easier for you, baseball rules that you’re given the tie and the right of way.  You get to make the decision you want to make, to a certain degree, even if that decision means that the defenseman is guilty of something he tried to avoid.

Last night ends differently if Salty holds the ball.  Last night ends differently if Middlebrooks comes off the base.  Last night ends differently if the runner runs in the basepath and avoids Middlebrooks’s useless body on the ground.

-B

God's Not Dead

Sometime soon a new movie will release. It's named after a song that originally held a different title and features a band that only licensed the song; they didn't write it.

The movie "God's Not Dead" is named after The Newsboys (but really, you can't have The Newsboys without Peter Furler, can you?) cover of a Daniel Bashta song which was actually made famous at Passion one year (I was in the room for its debut) by David Crowder. Crowder debuted it (if Daniel Bashta's twitter feed is to be believed, he was unaware of the song being used) as "Like a Lion." To the best of my knowledge, Bashta's recording of it wasn't even publicly released yet. He later came out with his own recording, but it was Crowder's use of the song that made it popular in worship circles. Our praise band did a tour of sorts in the summer of 2010 and we closed every night with the piece.

I say all that because The Newsboys changed the title of the song when they debuted it. Instead of "Like a Lion," they called the song "God's Not Dead" which, to be fair, is the prominent line in the piece.

But then they debuted a music video for the song which prominently featured newspapers with the headline "God is a Myth" changing to
"God's Not Dead" by the end of the video.  The song, once proclaiming a message of resurrection and revival within one's life of faith and using the helpful metaphor of Christ's resurrection from the dead to do so, has been repurposed by The Newsboys marketing team to stand for an argument for God's existence against those countering such existence. I like Michael Tait (and I was so glad they invited Kevin Max to provide vocals for the bridge...hearing Michael and Kevin's voices together is such a treat for a true dc Talk fan) a lot and his music has served as an inspiration to me for years, but this song has now been repurposed and this changes the implications.

Repurposing is ok, I suppose. After all, there are many within the world who do claim that the existence of God is folly and that faith in something that doesn't exist is a waste. There are voices among us that claim that Christianity is all made up. So, the necessity of fighting against those voices is easy to see for an Evangelical; the voices threaten my very reality.

But there's a trend here and I think the use of language is dangerous. Within the very-well-produced-for-a-Christian-movie's trailer, appearances are made by actors like Dean Cain and TV personalities like Willie from Duck Dynasty. The trailer portrays a student whose philosophy professor makes him write a paper presupposing the deadness of God. As a Christian, the student is forced to defend his faith within the classroom by putting God on trial because he, as a Christian, must prove God's existence. He, as a Christian, is being persecuted by the professor.

Persecution is the point here, isn't it? If you read through the film's Facebook page, you'll get that feeling. "Share to prove them wrong" or "Share if you're not ashamed" light up the main feed. Of course, like sheep, the film's many fans share and share and share and share. Because the liberal world is trying to tell us that God doesn't exist. Because we are being persecuted.

The problem with this is that this language is difficult to repurpose without consequence. Philosophers and theologians HAVE put God on trial before. Some posited that God died in Auschwitz. Blacks in America doubted the reality of a good God because the white plantation owners understood the slaves as being provided BY God. Many many bad things have happened in God's name since Christ's resurrection including persecution after persecution.

And so, if persecution is the point, what does it mean to portray that in a film with a bunch of white middle class Americans trying to fight the liberal academy by proving God's existence? Who do we think we are to even come close to knowing what TRUE Christian persecution is? We can't. We can't. We can't.

So the song "Like a Lion", intended (clued in by its naming by Crowder and Bashta) to serve as a recognition for an inner revival for the soul gets repurposed by the Evangelicals to prove God's existence and in the meantime shows the Evangelicals cards completely.

The song begins, "Let hope arise and make the darkness hide." This hope, as we understand it in Christ Jesus, is a hope that defeats death and sin. The darkness to be hidden is the sinfulness of our own actions.

But in this film, in the Newsboys interpretation of the song, and in the Evangelical mindset, the darkness is the Liberal Left.

The cards are completely exposed.

-B

What Cory Monteith Means To The World

Warning: Details about tonight's (10/10/13) Glee episode appear in this post.

On the outside looking in, perhaps Cory Monteith's untimely death appears as just another celebrity death; a rich white kid addicted to and with access to too many drugs for their own good. That's the outside perspective of a man who was had it all going for him and found himself in the wrong situation.

Perhaps those on the outside consider the enabling factors of such a death. Perhaps they consider the free lifestyle Hollywood allows its members. Perhaps they consider the problematic lifestyle encourages by celebrity. Those who assume this perspective and cast judgment without hope for change catch the trees but miss the forest.

Finn Hudson, Monteith's character on Fox's Glee, plays the jock who starts as the star quarterback in his waning high school years and is discovered to be a talented singer in the school locker room. From that point on, Finn Hudson in many ways single handedly, completely, and dramatically changed the way the lines between jock and nerd were drawn. The star quarterback became the lead singer. He went from being in love with the star cheerleader to falling for the star diva. When he accepted his new gay brother-by-marriage, he proved to the school that even beyond the walls of high school cliques, prejudice was not something necessary for the "cool kids" to exhibit.

As cheesy and stereotypical as it may be, Finn Hudson blurred lines. His charismatic smile and genuine good looks changed the way students at the fictional McKinley High School understood stereotypes. Given his looks, his attitude, his talent, and his loving spirit, Cory's Glee character changed things.

Cory's death (a deadly and seemingly accidental mixture of heroine and alcohol) does very much the same thing for the outside world. A good looking 30-something with incredible talent and a hit TV show dies of an overdose? That's not the drug addict we've been bred to recognize. The drug addicts our society regrettably pokes fun at look nothing like Cory. Cory has money. Cory has style. Cory has looks. Cory has success. Cory has talent. That's not the druggie we recognize. It can't be. It's something else.

But the truth is, that is our drug society. That is a large part of our drug culture. Celebrities' struggle with drugs can often be exponentially worse than the common man's struggle simple because of availability. And though the good looking happy go lucky kid always seems to have his head on his shoulders, he may be struggling with a real problem we might never have considered because of his looks or his success or his talent or whatever.

At the end of tonight's episode of Glee in which most of the show's popular cast members returned to remember Finn through song, their beloved teacher cries at home on top of Finn's letterman jacket, a piece that had been passed around through the show. In that moment I realized all that that letterman jacket meant to McKinley High. That letterman jacket, worn by Finn the football player, made its way on his back to be worn by Finn the glee club member. If any piece reminded us of and symbolized the paradigmatic shift in culture at McKinley High, it was that letterman jacket.

As I watched Mr. Schuester bawl over the symbolic piece that saved his glee club and shifted the ever-walled and prejudiced high school campus, I realized that Cory's death is our world's letterman jacket. Cory's death symbolizes the change in our culture where we not only pay attention and seek help for the obvious drug addict, we pay attention and seek help for anyone in any need, no matter their appearance.

There are likely many many around you on a daily basis struggling with some sort of addiction that is controlling them, weighing them down, and perhaps even killing them. Let's learn from Cory, recognize the importance of that jacket, and use this as an opportunity to care more for those around us.

Even if they look like they have it all together. Perhaps especially so.

-B

Thoughts on the Tampa Bay Rays and their need for more fans

I have every logical reason to like the Rays.

  • I was born and raised in Central Florida.
  • I went to grad school in Durham, where the Durham Bulls play. The Durham Bulls have a great history of Minor League baseball.  They are currently the Triple-A affiliate of the Tampa Bay Rays and I was fortunate enough to watch influential players for the Bulls rise to fame in the Tampa Bay organization (I have a Durham Bulls souvenir cup stored in my closet with David Price--the all-star pitcher for the Rays--on it). I literally watched Alex Cobb pitch live in Durham at the beginning of the week earlier this season and in Tampa Bay at the end of the same week. Last night he started a playoff game for the Rays.
  • I'm mostly against the money game played in baseball, though I'm cognizant of the necessity of it.  The Rays found a way to, at least currently, defeat it.
  • I went to school in Lakeland, FL (an hour from the St. Pete stadium in which the Rays play) and made the trek to the Gulf Coast many a time in college to watch the Rays play the beloved Red Sox (the cheap seats were $13 before they went to the World Series).
  • I now again live in the greater Tampa area and can find a Rays game on television in this market easier than I can any other team's game. 
  • I was a child when the franchise started. 
  • Matt Joyce, the Rays' star designated hitter, played baseball for the National Championship team of my alma mater and current employer, Florida Southern College.

But I'm not a Rays fan. 

I was not a lifelong Red Sox fan either. I was an Atlanta Braves fan from my early childhood years because of an obsession I had with Chipper Jones (Chipper was from my hometown--the field where I played Little League now bears his name--and his father was a pitching coach for the Stetson Hatters...the university my parents attended). I saw Bobby Cox thrown out in Yankee Stadium (is there a stadium of which he hasn't been thrown out?) and was made fun of as a child in a bathroom in Yankee Stadium.  From then on, I hated the New York Yankees with a passion.

I crossed over to paying attention the the Red Sox in late high school, they won the World Series and broke the great curse in 2004, and I connected with a few fraternity brothers whom I would not have otherwise connected with regarding the Red Sox. I met some pretty great friends who were Red Sox fans as well. From them on, I considered myself a Red Sox fan. And hey, they hated the Yankees too. Always a plus. 

Before we get to the Rays, something ought to be made clear.  I'm painfully aware that the Red Sox have in many ways become the new Yankees.  Boston fans are known nationwide for being obnoxious. Boston was recently the victim of a terrorist attack (though admittedly not of the level of 9/11).  Boston was taught by the work of Steinbrenner and New York to pay out the wazoo for players to get them to stay with your ball club (although can we talk about how different this team is than either championship team?).  Boston now has the fourth highest payroll in MLB (two of the three above them are not playing in the playoffs: New York and Philadelphia). Boston has payed the Major League Baseball game and they've played it well. It's fun to watch them win but at times painful because of the way I know it happened.

Back to Tampa now. 

Tampa Bay has combated the stereotypes of baseball.  Since Maddon came on board, the Rays have remained competitive at least in the AL East.  And they've done it with one of the lowest salaried payrolls in baseball. Just to make clear just how well they've pulled this off, it's important to see the records of those surrounding them.  The two teams with lower salaries, the Houston Astros and Miami Marlins, have 51-111 and 62-100 records respectively.  Not only are the Rays over .500 this season, they're holding onto a slim change of getting to the pennant series.  They're playing in October with the third lowest salary in MLB. If professional baseball is a money game, and it has been since the Yankees bought the Babe from his original home, the Rays are defeating this game over and over and over again. It's respectable and inspiring to say the least.

So the Rays,  now only 15 years old, are competing in a state known only for spring training in baseball and filling their relatively small stadium as we move into October.  They're competing against the best team in the nation and surprising them in key moments with quality pitching and well-placed hits by talented and somewhat underpaid batters. The Rays are doing what the rules to this money-based game should not be permitting.  The Rays are winning.

As a Red Sox fan who loves exciting baseball and lives in Florida, how could one not like the Rays?  The stadium.  Yeah, I got that.  Tropicana Field is a piece of crap. But other than their sad excuse for a baseball stadium, what is there not to like about the Rays? Despite having a short, and albeit rough, history the Rays are inspiring more and more central Floridians to care about baseball.  In case you were wondering, the Buccaneers in Tampa haven't really done that for football. In a state where clear-cut identity and even accurate state-wide stereotypes basically don't exist (Florida), the Rays are commandeering a following.  It's kind of special, really. But unfortunately it's only in October.

I made a comment on Facebook last night that spurred some controversy (surprise) about the level of fan attention after the Rays literally squeaked by a sweep of the division series against the Red Sox (Jose Lobaton hit a homerun in the bottom of the ninth--the game had been tied at 4--to win the game).  If the Rays had lost last night, I would have likely seen two or three posts like "Great season Rays! Get them next year!" or "Rays gave it all they had!"  Two or three posts, maybe a few more (this is based off past years observations). Instead I was met with "YEAHHHHHHH!!! GO RAYS!!!!" or "WALKOFF BABY!!!!  YEAH LOBATON!!!" over and over and over and over again.  The loyal fans came out, sure.  But so did the locals who weren't aware of much of anything before the last few nights.

Unsurprisingly, the Rays fans on my Facebook wall came out in droves to call me a "typical Boston fan" or "that guy" or whatever.   This is inspiring to me in that it shows that the Rays really DO have a loyal following despite the lack of ticket sales in Tropicana.  I'm grateful for their friendship and accountability. My comment was really to remark that given the amount of tickets I've purchased to Rays games, I've supported the organization more than many many of its fans.  This is my point.

Given their salary, the Rays can afford (right now) to have a lack of loyal fans.  In the long run, I'm hoping this will remain the same.  I fear that a new stadium's cost, years of ALMOST winning the pennant, and the persistent reminder of that World Series ring that is just beyond grasp might change the organization.  Let's be clear: I hope it does not. But I fear it might.  This might require a raise in salary (again, I hope not...) and it might cause the organization to market itself more fans. Fans in October matter, but they don't matter as much as season-long fans.

I don't wish to troll the Rays or their loyal fans much at all except for a little playful banter here and there.  I have a lot of respect for them; they were able to be fans of a team when I just couldn't. What I think the Rays need is more fans.  They'll get there.

And MY GOD do I hope they do because they're not going to be able to afford a new stadium without them.

-B

 

Change, Community, Communion, and Curation

It often seems unnecessarily radical to change one's ways of doing things.  When systematic ways are changed, either by brute force or previous failure, many many react negatively.  This is happening in Congress as the GOP-controlled House fights against the already-lawful-and-upheld-by-the-Supreme-Court-as-constitutional Affordable Care Act (Obamacare). It's something different, very different, being treated with hostility because of its difference and perceived (and somewhat realistic) hardships.  

Difference and change are difficult for so many to comprehend.

There are viable reasons for this. Many arguments made against Obamacare are valid and backed up by numbers and inevitable cost to typical Americans. In many ways Obama will take more money from each American in order to make health insurance for all Americans a reality.  It is very different from how America has traditionally treated her citizens since her beginning.  Valid concerns are heard, but change keeps on trucking.

The thing about change, historically, is that it is easily delayed but essentially unavoidable.  It only can be re-steered to go in the "proper" direction. Change is inevitable; direction of that change is somewhat controllable.

[Quick change of scene.] 

As a United Methodist, I have a common joke I make about our church: we are always 20 years behind.  It's only a joke but it strikes a strong chord on the reality guitar.  Take contemporary worship music for example.  Simply put, the United Methodist Church, for better or for worse, ignored the contemporary worship scene for years upon years.  "Contemporary" worship music pushed through the evangelical and hippie-ish movements in the late 60s and early 70s and began to refine itself in the mid-late 80s and early 90s.  Evangelical churches (read: non-United Methodist churches) were often the first to jump on board.  There might be many reasons for this, of which the fact that many of those churches do not submit to any larger governing body ought to be at the top, but evangelical churches by and large beat Methodists to this punch. United Methodists have moaned and groaned about how badly the music is written and how non-theological the lyricism is ever since, but the general public has seen some churches grow and some die.  United Methodist churches have been on the dying side of things far too often.

We are late to the game and they seem to be "winning." How to combat this then? Well, of course: We have to raise our numbers so that our church doesn't die! We must start a contemporary worship service! How then do we do that?  Well let's look at some resources.  Where are these resources?  Oh great, there are tons of resources available!  There is tons of music available! Who is providing this music? Oh! The Evangelicals. Great!  Let's hire a worship leader!  Great! Most of the good worship leaders are at the evangelical churches, so we'll get the pretty-good ones.  They should be able to lead the United Methodist Church into the next generation of worship! Great! This is going to be so great! 

And, what do we end up with?  We end up with a church whose tradition of well-written, theological singing is nearly lost because in the switch to the new medium/genre, we picked up someone else's tradition and theology simply because it was already there for us. We blindly took the cookie left for us without considering the consequences. Change came and we got on board and took the road-too-often-traveled without considering where it was taking us.

20 years behind, then, may mean that we need to curate a bit more than we'd expect.  What's the trade-off of simply using someone else's work?  What's the trade-off for our congregations and disciple-building? Have we fully examined this change, its constant insistence upon itself, and where our destination lies?

The same has happened in online communities.  Online communities, if you can believe it, are old now.  They began, essentially, with the advent of email and have continued to be refined and refined over time. What one sees in Facebook, and all Facebook is meant to be, is simply and refinement (albeit a very well done refinement with its share of quality innovations) of the original idea of communicating and communing online. Online communities may seem like a new thing to people (and maybe especially to United Methodists) but they're simply not.  Hey, United Methodists, you're late again.

And so we pick up where we left off. Many non-UMC churches are offering well-done online churches in which a church attendee can log on, converse with a online pastor, watch the worship service, and even pray online with the guidance of the pastor.  The difference is, of course, one doesn't feel the pastor's hand on your back as you pray; she's generally miles away from you.  This sort of idea isn't new, it's simply new to United Methodists.  A popular church in Florida is doing just that (a high school friend of mine is heading it up...you can check it out at www.engagemenow.net).  

The new conversation (happening right now in Nashville, TN) is whether or not United Methodists ought to offer the sacrament of Holy Communion over the internet.  Practically speaking, it's exactly as it sounds.  The viewer (and I use that term intentionally) provides their own bread and grape juice (or wine), while the pastor blesses the elements through your computer or TV screen.  It's along the same lines as that pastor praying over you but without being able to physically feel their presence...except it's with the sacrament of communion.

Perhaps this is an controversial concept to speak about because many of the other churches don't hold communion (Eucharist) in the same regard as United Methodists (or, if we're speaking honestly, maybe many of them actually hold it in HIGHER regard simply due to their insistence on the frequency of participation in Eucharist) . In other words, maybe Methodists are trying to graft United Methodism onto a medium and evangelism technique that someone else, someone different than us, already created. The difference is that the penalty for moving in that direction on that road of change is a loss of traditional practice that has been important to Methodism. In my mind, it's not much different than us trying to sing that one song and trying to change the lyrics because the song is so...like...Calvinist. We couldn't write a comparable one!  We just have to graft Wesleyan theology onto whatever trends come because we were late to the game and not innovative enough to pull ourselves out of the hole.

Goodbye, Wesleyan sense of community.  Goodbye, Wesleyan understanding of Jesus's presence in the Eucharist and the necessity of physicality for incarnation to be experienced.  Goodbye, sung Wesleyan theology with an emphasis on the unending and unchanging love and grace of God. 

I'll maintain until I die that change is inevitable and good in this world.  But, change comes with responsibility.  Change comes with the need for curation.  Change also comes with the need for innovation and outside-of-the-box mentalities. And, while all those seem so poorly connected, it is indeed necessary that they all work together cohesively so that the good parts of what we have are not lost. The danger of Calvinistic theology creeping into Wesleyan churches--even if only through the music--is, and has been, upon us.  The danger of cultural definitions of "community" and "experience" is creeping in on us and our livelihood is at stake.

Online communities are coming.  The challenge and calling is there for churches to attend to.  People want religion and they want to be online.  Ignoring it seems silly and simply jumping on the bandwagon blindly seems sillier. Change is necessary and inevitable.  Curation and innovation are necessary and often forgotten.

Let us not be so persuaded by a new movement that we forget who we are.  Maybe, just maybe, we can feed a need within our society in a new and better way.

-B

 

On Labeling Someone "Hateful"

If you're not up to speed on seminary nerdery, you probably aren't aware of the controversy going on at Candler School of Theology, Emory University. Sadly, I am and can fill you in.

The drama is quite simple really.  The Rev. Dr. Eddie Fox, a United Methodist pastor currently serving as the World Director for the World Methodist Evangelism Council (or some mixture of those words) is an alum of Candler School of Theology (CST).  CST, a part of Emory University, has elected to reward Rev. Dr. Fox with a Distinguished Alumni award.  Being a successful pastor with an immensely successful ministry, Rev. Fox is being honored for his service to Christ throughout his life. (It's worth pointing out that he's receiving an award for his ministry and notably not that website I linked above.  Hello, Eddie...1995 called and they want their website design back).

The drama?  Candler students are angry about the award. The part I didn't mention is that Rev. Dr. Fox has been an adamant supporter of maintaining the current language in the United Methodist Book of Discipline that states that "homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching."  The General Conference of the United Methodist Church, the top body enabled and empowered to speak on behalf of the denomination, has voted year after year to maintain the language within the Book of Discipline (for lack of better language, the UMC's book of law).

Eddie, and many on his "side" have affirmed in their language that all people are of sacred worth and children of God but that Scripture holds that homosexuality is incompatible with Christian teaching. Anecdotally, this language has affected the ways in which gays and lesbians feel comfortable in United Methodist churches.

Oh yeah, the drama.  Candler School of Theology, a school whose student body is leaning more and more to the "left" every year, is awarding Rev. Dr. Eddie Fox (I keep switching up my naming system for him just to keep it exciting for you) this award.  Many loud voices within CST's student body are holding that this man's work has sought to exclude them from the churches they feel called to serve (an openly gay or lesbian individual is unable to be ordained as a pastor within the United Methodist Church according to the Book of Discipline). Therein lies the drama.

As any good controversy does in 2013, this drama is playing out on Facebook and Twitter.  Eddie has been called, among many other things, a hater, a bigot, and anti-gay.

There's some sense to this.  Many within the LGBTQIA community feel unsupported by our culture and more specifically our churches.  They feel unprotected and denied of basic human freedoms.  They feel as if they actually can continue to serve God in spite of their sexuality...in fact many argue that they can serve God to a fuller extent because of their recognition of and comfort with their sexuality.   It's hard to miss the fact that life has been different for gay and lesbian people in our culture.  It is, in my mind and many others' minds, undoubtedly the new oppression of modern times.

Unfortunately, most of the conversing I see on the internet about this CST issue in particular is filled with rude and offensive language to describe those in opposition to much of CST's student body. Eddie's work has been labeled as bigoted hate speech by many, as an example.

I don't know Eddie personally. But I know and love many people who find themselves called to understand homosexuality as wrong in God's eyes. I'd guess that most all of them would still welcome an LGBTQIA person into their church, while still understanding their actions to be sinful. The Roman Catholic Church is a good example of an organization who thinks and behaves in this way. Many many of these people understand sin to be something that we are all caught in and many many understand sinful behavior to be something God's grace can rescue us from. They understand all sin to be equal in God's eyes and that God is saddened by the gay person as well as the obese person as well as the liar. When many many of these people go to represent their understandings of Scripture within the pages of church discipline, they intend to represent these interpretations and understandings as best they can. After all, it is the goal and mission of the church to see God's will done on earth.

That image, the one I just attempted to portray of that side, is not the image one might get if you talked to their opposition. Those who fight for full inclusion and justice for an oppressed people label those against them as haters. They label them as bigots. They label them as scum. Attempting to be honest and forthright about ways in which you understand God to be revealing God's self to you through Scripture and trying hard to follow in the path God is calling you to is bigotry and hate.

This isn't fair.

Are there some conservative voices within the church who are homophobic or bigoted? Of course. Are there some voices within the church that preach hate? Sure. But not all are this way.

Many many years ago the church labeled certain theologians as heretics. These heretics preached and taught a gospel that was incompatible with much of the church's teachings about who God was. Heretics were more or less proven through Scripture to be wrong headed and many of them were excommunicated from the church. These people did damage to the orthodox understandings of God. They were labeled heretics.

Given America's history with hate speech and hate crime, the term "hate" carries much of the same connotation as the term heretic. Because of that, I think, the term "hate" ought to carry a gravity with it that it currently lacks.

The church didn't joke about labeling one another heretics. These cases were well evidenced, often prayerfully considered, and argued and argued. The term heretic doesn't and shouldn't get thrown around without gigantic consequences. The word "hate," given our story, ought to be treated with the same gravity.

If we are to move forward, we must watch what we say to one another.

-B

 

UPDATE: As a note of inclusion, I've changed "LGBTQ" within the post to "LGBTQIA." 

Also, I'll include this article which features selections from an interview with The Rev. Dr. Eddie Fox. In it, Fox states, "I am not alright with being called ‘anti-gay’ at all, I don’t accept it.”  Whether Fox is or isn't a hater, a bigot, anti-gay, or scum is always in the eye of the name-caller. Of course bigots never see themselves rightly as bigots. But Fox's statement above reminds us of the positive language about sacred worth that Fox has worked to retain within the UMC Book of Discipline.

 

We Run Things, Things Don't Run We

I'd say that in general I care very little about Miley Cyrus's life.  I suppose I'd like to see her be a positive role model on my future children but because that isn't a current reality of mine, I generally don't care much about her. Her new song, "We Can't Stop" has a catchy hook though so I turned up Spotify when it came on.  So that you don't get bogged down in the disgrace that is the song, I'll sum it up for you: Miley owns the world and she doesn't care if you care. 

I'll say it: Hannah Montana is creating a whole new persona and its first name is "badass." But what do I care?  She has friends, they like to party, they're poorly influencing America's youth, and they have poor grammar.   As a concerned citizen with children I'd care, but I reiterate: Miley's life really doesn't concern me much.

But then I heard these lines:  

To my homegirls here with the big butt
Shaking it like we at a strip club
Remember only God can judge ya
Forget the haters, cause somebody loves ya

Oh! Miley's a theologian now. Now her life concerns me.

I've been bothered recently with liberal America's approach to ethics and morality.  Actually, that's not quite accurate, I've been bothered with liberal Christian America's approach to ethics and morality.  Given that Miley is a baptized Southern Baptist and is outspoken about her support for gay marriage, I'll assume that she's part of that club.

In liberal Christianity, the jump to "Only God can judge ya" is, in my opinion, made far too hastily.  The line is often used to justify our earthly actions that society may deem as "wrong."  Because the Bible, as many people read it, is inconsistent about exact sins, those arguing for progress in America often fall to this simplistic thinking and when those people are Christians the situation gets messier.  It's reactionary too.  Conservatives tell a gay couple that their actions are sinful in the eyes of God but it feels natural and right to the gay couple so they result to "Only God can judge us."  It's a decent starting point maybe but the line is unhelpful in continuing a theological conversation about a very important topic.

When I read Scripture and hear it proclaimed in worship, I don't understand God to be one who calls for a world in which people do whatever they want however they want whenever they want and just wait for judgement day to find out if they were on the right path or not.  There's no participation in salvation in that scenario and there is certainly no growth into holiness.  This runs along neo-Reformed thinking and scares a disciple like me who longs for the world to move in a holier way and requires action (due to God's grace) on the part of the Christian. There is perhaps "progress" there, but it doesn't seem to be holy progress.

If one wants to argue for things like gay marriage in the church, the conversation (at least in the Wesleyan tradition) must be framed theologically and, along with that, within the realm of holiness and salvation.  In the VERY least, the argument about the sinfulness of homosexuality ought to be centered around how we are created and not that we can "just do whatever we want." The Scriptures must be wrestled with for liberal Christians.  The teachings of the Church throughout time must be wrestled with.  But everything, no matter the direction of the conversation, must be contained within a framework appropriate for the conversation.  Otherwise, we Christians that seek inclusion and equality are faced with a temptation to leave the Christian framework completely.  That's a no-no.

So Miley is encouraging this "No one owns me and I can do whatever I want" attitude.  Fine.  It's not ideal for the youngsters of America (frankly, it's downright terrible) and her culture writing insists on a degradation of our youth.  Fine.  I could approach that another time (and we should).  But, it seems to me that Miley is perpetuating a mindset that is unhelpful for Wesleyan Christians.  If we insist and believe that we can (by the grace of God) participate in our own salvation, we must reject the simplistic and unhelpful line, "Only God can judge me." Judgement and accountability by the community (the church) are integral parts of discipleship. 

Miley, put on some clothes.  Your dad watched that video. 

-B