Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Spontaneous Earth...


I know I shouldn't like the old pagan e.e. cummings, but I do, I do...

O sweet spontaneous
earth how often have
the
doting

fingers of
prurient philosophers pinched
and
poked

thee
, has the naughty thumb
of science prodded
thy

beauty, how
often have religions taken
thee upon their scraggy knees
squeezing and

buffeting thee that thou mightest conceive
gods
(but
true

to the incomparable
couch of death thy
rhythmic
lover

thou answerest

them only with

spring)

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Overload


The Lord is my rock and my fortress and my deliverer; My God, my strength, in whom I will trust; my shield and the horn of my salvation, my stronghold.

It may be an unwise time to blog. My health has been in grumpy mode since the pollen began. We are changing our computer system at work, with the attendant frustrations and loss of time. Our "clients" are increasingly rude, hostile, or stoned. And my Facebook/ meta-church/ electronic family has become so diverse that my inner world is expanding more quickly than I can process ideas. I am mentally tired. I am suffering from what I hope is a passing case of overload.

But the stress has had one interesting effect. I have seen Jesus through so many perspectives lately, that in frustration I've asked, "Who are you, Lord?" "I mean, really, Who are you?" My mind has become so encrusted with Christ as a theological concept, that I am again forced to the Center. And I don't mean "who are you to me." That would involve a conceptual definition. I mean, "who are you for me?" God made flesh, Man in the eternal Trinity, God suffering, God condescending, God loving, God broken, God not just giving life but giving himself as life--what does that have to do with my rising from my bed tomorrow?

I desire the trust that moves beyond knowledge, to not "concern myself with great matters, nor with things too profound for me;" to sit at his feet for a season.

Saturday, March 20, 2010

"His desire is toward me..."


The church has historically thought of the Song of Songs as an allegory of Christ and his church, or of Christ and the individual soul. More recent commentators, who feel that the allegorical approach is a cover up for the church's embarrassment about all things sexual, exalt the Song as a story of two lovers, no more, no less. Delitzsch strikes a middle ground: the Song is a love story, but because all love stories are reflections of The Love Story, it can be considered a type of the greater. So far I hold with Delitzsch.

Interpretive issues aside, no Christian who repeatedly reads the Song can escape finding himself in the narrative. In this entry I want to look especially at the three confessions made by the Shulamite--confessions that are the result of the actions of her lover.

The first confession is "My beloved is mine, and I am his." It follows two opposite experiences: first, disenchantment with serving in the vineyards for her brothers (religious experience defined by someone else--legalism),and, second, the giddy awareness of being in love. She is feeling both the relief of being loved, but also the fear of going back to what she came out of. Note the order of the confession: "he is mine" is spoken first. The relationship depends on her capacity to hold on. She is tenacious out of desperation and fear. While that is a mark of a new Christian fresh from the bondage of the world, it will eventually block maturity.

Her lover does not deal with this fear by consolation. Rather, he creates situations in which she must choose between her fear and her desire for him. She prefers the safety of their country home. But he comes and calls her away--and at least one time mentions the dreaded vineyards. When she disobeys, he withdraws his presence. In two instances he does this, and both times her love for him overcomes her reticence to follow. In one case she is abused by the "watchmen on the walls," the keepers of the status quo who do not believe it is proper for a young lady to demonstrate too much exuberance about her lover.

It is impossible to read these passages and not think of the "dark night of the soul" or the kataphatic/apophatic tension I mentioned in "Boxes," March 6. Most of us spend a long time in this phase. Notice the confession at the end of this process: "I am my beloved's, and my beloved is mine." It is the reverse of the first. It is spoken by one who has learned the joy of obedience.

But it is not the last word. The third confession is "I am my beloved's, and his desire is toward me." The very words create a yearning in the heart, so close and packed with meaning, and yet so far away--causing one to stretch to hear it. This confession is not brought about by withdrawal and discipline. It is preceded by some of the most intense love poetry in any language. It is spoken out of intimacy; it is purely relational. It does not come from external experience, but from direct knowledge of the character of a person.

It is a statement of absolute rest, not lethargy; peace, not timidity; trust, not fatalism. She loves him because she knows the depth and security of his love. She returns to the vineyard, not out of obligation, but because it is where he is. May God bring us all to such a place before we die.

(Picture: 12th Century cover of a manuscript of the Song)

Saturday, March 13, 2010

A Sevier Cynicism


The Sevier County Commission has the 10 Commandments posted on its wall, and opens its meetings with the Lord's Prayer. Recently the Americans United for Separation of Church and State (AU) have raised objections and will probably take legal action. The County Mayor has dug in and will keep the Commandments on the wall and will continue the Prayer until forced to change. The next Commission meeting will be packed with church folks and some folks from the other side, and we will have, no doubt, another American Circus, with a lot of smoke and very little clarity.

I wish I could hide somewhere and wait this one out, but my job throws me into contact every day with local government folks who are choosing sides, and want to know what I think. So I want to offer my own muddle of perceptions and presuppositions, so when someone asks me what I think, I can refer them to this blog. Most of them won't take the trouble to click this and that, so I can continue to shrug the whole thing off, knowing that my opinions are available to anyone willing to take the trouble. Here are some pretty traditional thoughts, which may or may not be inter-related or even worthy.

1) Speaking culturally, religion is the over-arching worldview that holds a culture together. That can include anything from Christianity to humanism to syncretism. There is no such thing as neutrality by that definition, because neutrality is itself a religious concept. If the American religion is syncretistic humanism, then the Christian either has to tip his hat to a higher power than Christ, perceive Christ as the archetypal syncretistic humanist, or be recalcitrant. Anyone who wants to touch this, have at it.

2) I can see that the Lord's Prayer is uniquely Christian, though the need to forgive and have daily bread are common to all men. But what's the issue with the 10 Commandments? The three great monotheistic religions of the world base their moralities on them. And I can't imagine a Buddhist or Confucian having issues with them. CS Lewis included them in what he called the Tao--the basic values common to all cultures. They are culturally fairly syncretistic. Or is the AU suggesting that blasphemy, murder, adultery, theft, and lying are valid moral options? OK. Cheap shot.

3) Gary North once did a tongue-in-cheek piece on how a group of Presbyterians could steal a Baptist church building. The Presbyterians could find a little Baptist congregation, join the church in numbers, call a congregational meeting, vote to join the local Presbytery, and deliver the congregation to the Stated Clerk, building and all. His point was that democracy cuts its own throat. Being sweet to everybody doesn’t mean everybody is sweet. Treating everyone democratically means opening the door to a lot of undemocratic folk. See Europe.

4) Calvin believed in separation of church and state. The Founding Fathers believed in separation of church and state. I believe in separation of church and state. It is a principle in the Constitution. No argument. When the mantra is quoted today it really means separation of a transcendent God and state, a whole different animal. Without the Commandments, or the Tao, or some higher absolute, the state fills the void and becomes answerable to nothing beyond itself. All humanistic societies, from Rome to modern China, are statist to the core. America has been lusting after statism since (forgive me) 1865. Whatever. None of this is new--even boring in its repetitiveness.

5) I have a prophecy about this coming meeting. The AU will have cogent, pre-planned arguments backed by the power of law. They will look, well, cool. The church will be angry and frustrated, have no cogent argument, and have no power but that of a discredited tradition. It will back down and grumble for a few more years. I just don’t think I can stand it. I hope I’m wrong.

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Boxes



Let us, then, go to him outside the camp....

I believe it was CS Lewis who called God the great iconoclast. He was not speaking of the destruction of natural or sacramental symbols of God in the earth, but of our propensity to shape God in our own minds based on what we are taught, or even on our own experience of him. Inevitably our inner concept is smaller than the Person himself, and as we grow as Christians, our concept has to break in order for God to carry us to a new and broader understanding of him and of ourselves in relation to him. The fathers spoke of this process as the kataphatic/apophatic tension. We are much simpler—we use the term “think (or live) outside the box.”

That’s a wide topic, one that affects all age groups. I want to apply this to the group I know the best: older people. I am grieved at how people in their sixties plus not only live in unperceived boxes but have developed “life boxes”—what I like to call “baptized neuroses.” Timid, fearful folks are “peacemakers,” lifelong control freaks are “prophetic,” etc. I know too many of my peers who are stuck in some box, and can’t see their position. I am angry at the lack of growth in people that by now should be models of Christian experience. But of course I am really angry because I’ve struggled with my own box and the fear of dying in it.

My box is shared by a lot of Christian men my age: “th’Ministry.” It was a standard joke in Seminary that we all wanted to become “a world famous, humble country preacher.” Funny, yes, but true. That’s exactly what I wanted—to be like the pastors I revered as a child.

Evangelicals can revile the Roman hierarchy all they want, but there is no group that separates the “religious” from the “secular” more than they. To be a pastor or missionary is the apex of God’s approval. To fail in either is to be out from under that approval. With all our mantras about varieties of gifts, and blossoming where you’re planted, we still know there’s “something wrong” with the guy who used to be in th’Ministry. The evangelical world is full of a whole class of men who in their own minds bear the stigma of being less than something.

Of course, I just described a box. Younger people have the advantage of larger boxes to help them out of their smaller ones. We call it vision. A vision for a greater project, a different and more challenging ministry, makes it easier to leave the old one behind. But the older guy isn’t quite so visionary. I am not going to be an apostle to East Tennessee or take Sevier County for Jesus. There are younger men who can beat their heads against those dreams.

So, are the old guys left out where vision is concerned? In a way, yes. The vision for projects dies. But it is replaced by a Person. When I drove away from my last pastorate, my mind was full of anger, resignation, self-recrimination, and fear. But my heart was full of such an exhilarating freedom that I was afraid I was lapsing into licentious paganism. It took an effort to look solemn and not burst out laughing. I kept thinking of B’rer Rabbit: “Please don’t throw me into the briar patch….” Somehow I knew, along with the author of Hebrews, that there was something exciting out there--outside the camp.

Older guys finally have the opportunity to throw themselves on the breast of Jesus and let it all go—th’Ministry, the failures, the visions, the projects, the BOX—and come to Christ without encumbrance. And out of that comes life. Nature reveals God again. Love can flow because there’s nothing to lose. A man ceases to do things for God and simply walks with him. Funny. That’s what I was looking for in the first place.