Category: DOC Thoughts
Wednesday Devotion
Each week the Oklahoma Regional Church staff gather for a brief devotion. One of us is responsible for the experience. Today, I led the devotion with the words below.
Center your being in whatever poster suites you in silence or with music.
Words to Ponder
As we gather let us claim
some stillness,
some silence.
A space and time to wonder…
The curious thing about wonder is that it sets human beings
apart from all other life forms.
Wonder gives us not only the capacity
to enjoy and respect nature, but also
the sense that we are part of a wider world.
Wonder excites us to look beyond immediate survival needs
to broader and far reaching contexts.(1)
Centering in the Text
Mark’s 1st century story may have offered us some indicators – even resources –
for our 21st century struggle to be disciples, to be the church, in our time.
But in reality we will have to work it out for ourselves, together.
That’s the challenge and the blessing of discipleship.(2)
Read Aloud Mark 8: 27-38
Two Reflections on the Scripture
Mark’s Jesus insists that to be authentically human is to be willing to suffer, to be rejected, even to die, in order to take the side of the oppressed and abused. There is no glorious rescue from beyond. There is only the human work of restoring to the human family those who have been dehumanized for the profit of the rulers, the religious, and the bureaucratic task-masters. Mark’s Jesus insists that the only way to truly live, to be immortal, is to give oneself completely over to that cause. Paradoxically, fitting in, going along to get along, failing to stand up to the powers of oppression inevitably lead to an inauthentic unsustainable humanity. For Mark’s Jesus, authenticity is life, in-authenticity is death.(4)
So if Jesus does anything for us (and I do believe he does) he doesn’t take on the burden of his cross to save us from ours. He does just the opposite. He takes on the burden of his cross so we can take on ours. He makes the hard life of faithfulness possible and less lonely. He blazes the trail for us to follow. He creates a truly human life possible, lived under the mercy of God, blood, tears, death, and all.(5)
Many to Remember in Prayer or Meditation
A time to speak or write names to hold in prayer or meditation this day.
Departing in Prayer
Those who want to save their lives have good health insurance,
pay their bills on time,
exercise and eat right…
Those who want to save their lives
will lose them.
Those who lose their lives
in pursuit of God
who abandon the world’s values,
who live generously and faithfully,
who listen to a voice beyond…
Those who lose their lives
in pursuit of God
will find life.
May we learn the value of loss.
May we know the value of life.
Amen.(6)
Be well and centered this day and the next.
Notes
1.ILawton/C3E
2. Rex A E Hunt, “Discipleship: Lent 2B”, Mar 4, 2012
3. Image from Vanderbilt Online Library, “Get Behind Me Satan”, Tissot, James Jacques Joseph, 1836-1902.
4. Casper Green, “Not a Super Hero, But an Authentic Human,” Scarlet Letter Bible – Scripture Without the Blinders, Mar 4, 2012.
5. Michael Coffey, “Oops! Wrong Savior,” Feb. 27, 2012.
6. Katherine Hawker, “Lent 2B: Based upon Matthew 16:25, Mark 8:35”, Liturgy Outside the Box, 2009.
the Latest Sightings
Protestant Accommodation
— Martin E. Marty | 2/13/12Keeping an eye and ear on hourly, daily, and weekly incidents and trends in zones where “religion and public life” intersect is one thing. Taking looks at such incidents and trends in half-century cycles is another. These longer-range surveys provide perspective. A Rip van Winkle returning from 1965 days to the scene this month would not have been surprised to hear of the Catholic bishops’ blast at the Health and Human Services birth control initiatives. Catholic leaders have reacted thus for almost a century. Picture the surprise of an awakened van Winkle, however, as he saw the radical embrace of raw political power by Evangelical pastors massed in militancy to join Catholics in reaction.
“Evangelical” in this case has become the code word for the ever-expanding population of conservative Protestants who joined and join some Catholics on the front lines of Cultural Warfare. They may be great-great-great grandchildren of nineteenth-century Protestant activists, but in most of the twentieth century such activists had backed off and changed their mission. In 1970 in Righteous Empire I could speak of Evangelicalism as largely “Private Protestantism,” which “accented individual salvation out of the world” over against what latter came to be called “Mainline.” It had been “‘Public’ Protestantism,” which was more exposed to the social order and the social destinies of citizens. Note: there remain plenty of ‘Mainline’ and ‘Public’ Protestant Activists in action today, but the cameras and microphones have turned attention from them. What is going on and what has gone on with the Mainliners, who have left a cultural niche or a political canyon to be occupied by activist “Public Evangelicals?” In one word, “Accommodation,” specifically “The Accommodation of Protsstant Christianity with the Enlightenment.” The title of a Daedalus article by Berkeley professor David A. Hollinger, who tutors me and so many others.
Hollinger argues that two main trends led to shifts of accent in “Public” Protestantism. It “accommodated” to the heritage of the Enlightenment, the movement of ideas which characterized the ideological outlook and practice of most of the national founders—no fundamentalists they!—and eventually of most academic and literary heirs of those founders. The accommodation to Darwinian Evolution and many other scientific challenges came more easily to Mainliners, who performed many kinds of services in cultural life. But these occurred at expense to their institutional power, the loyalty of church members, and much of their hold on cultural and political life.
The heirs of Fundamentalism and other now-Evangelicals may have accommodated to other “worldly” influences—I’d list “the market” and “nationalism” etc.–but they held the line on many intellectual and cultural trends. Hollinger adds: mark the change in political power when, thanks to Civil Rights legislation, the Mainline mainly lost the South. He also points to the drastic demographic shifts beyond the move to the South. The change in immigration laws in 1965 robbed the northern “white-ethnic” liberal accommodators of their former hegemonic position. The election of Catholic John Kennedy was another symbol of this shift.
How Evangelicals, often rejecters of the Enlightenment in the name of the heritage of partly-putative “Christian America” founders, will use their power will be fateful for the American future. But these now-“Public Protestant” Evangelicals are here to stay. For younger and newer interpreters of culture, as Hollinger sees it, they are virtually the only game in town, in the consciousness of post-1965 Americans.
References
David A. Hollinger, “The Concept of Post-Racial: How Its Easy Dismissal Obscures Important Questions,”Daedalus (Winter) 2011, 174-182.
— . “From Identity to Solidarity, ”Daedalus (Fall 2006), 23-31.
— .“The One Drop Rule and the One Hate Rule, ” Daedalus (Winter 2005), 18-28.