When I turned 40, I began waking up at 5am for no good reason. Most days I’m awake at that hour, though I don’t always get out of bed and stay awake. I’ve begun starting my Monday morning reading. I do this most days, as well as a bit of writing on whatever project is on the list, but I’m giving Monday morning more time. I am a bit dyslexic so I read slowly. Some of my reading are books. I’m currently working through these:
Most of my reading each day, probably like you, is my feed silo of news sources via Internet Sites on my computer, my Twitter feed, or pushed from sites to the device I’m carrying. A new feature of my blog for 2017 is the short list of articles I’ve read, Monday Morning Reading.
Rev. Dr. William Tucker was the Chancellor at Texas Christian University when I was a student. It seems like a long time ago now. Anyway, during his commencement address the year I graduated he reminded students that we had been educated to “know how to ask questions” and to “read many sources of information” on our way to making decisions about life and our lives in community. That is sage advice for every generation and particularly for a time such as this. So, here is the first edition of Monday Morning Reading. This is the list of articles I completely read and does not include those I skimmed.
The title is the link.
The Provocative Faith of Lady Gaga
By Guthrie Graves-Fitzsimmons, The Washington Post
10 Journalism brands where you will find real facts rather than alternative-facts
By Paul Glader, Forbes
4 Ideas Changing the Church for the Better
Growing Young, Relevant
Trump, Clinton Voters Divided In Their Main Source for Election News
By Jefferey Gottfried, Michael Barthel, and Amy Mitchell, Pew Research Center
I Am a Priest, and This Is Why I am Pro-Choice
By Reverend Broderick L. Greer, teenVogue
My dad predicted Trump in 1985 — it’s not Orwell, he warned, it’s Brave New World
By Andrew Postman, the guardian
A Return to National Greatness
By David Brooks, New York Times Opinion
and finally, for anyone in Oklahoma (though I trust you are keeping up with your State legislators)
What Your Legislators Think Is Important
Tulsa World
I serve in Christian ministry. Many that read this blog know that. This post is specifically for people that claim Christian faith, but I think it is applicable to all humans no matter one’s religious faith or no faith. Given the new overt nationalism that is sweeping across Europe, and now in the United States, it seems to me more important than ever that people of good will find connections at a root level so that early 20th century history doesn’t repeat itself. Nuclear weapons exist now. Those seeking the rapture, no matter the term for the apocalypse in their religion, are embedded in government institutions in our Republic, in Western liberal democracies, and in secular governments that tolerate the practice of religion inside their borders. Apocalyptic nihilism, and those that would profit from it, is alive and well no matter your class, caste, religion, or race. Buyer beware.
This year we meet Jesus through the experiences of Matthew. He probably used a few of the letters of Paul and the Gospel of Mark as his source material filling in the details that Mark leaves out. Yes, the author of Matthew may have embellished a bit based on his experiences and the time he lived. All the gospels and epistles do it. You may think that n
ever happens today, but well, you know different. A couple of weeks ago we met the first disciples (Matthew 4:18-23) that Jesus called: Simon Peter, Andrew, James, and John. It was the beginning of their disciple story. Have you ever thought about how your disciple story begins?
Did it begin with a parable? Try this to begin remembering. “Look in a mirror and see if you can see yourself without seeing your eyes seeing yourself.”(1)
The parables that Jesus told flip our thinking and our vision. New Testament scholar John Dominic Crossan notes, “First, parable is story, that is, a tensive sequence of beginning, middle, and end in a narrative that lures you into its plotted micro world to participate as an outsider-insider in its ongoing adventure.”(2) The parables describe the world, relationships, and community as the way it could be, should be, would be, might be were those that believe in the God that Jesus proclaimed experiencing good news; and being living good news. Often, it takes walking around in another person’s shoes to see the world through another lens. Yes, that takes a lot of work. My guess is your disciple story begins with you seeing or experiencing God differently, and that there is something more to your story than accepting Christ as your savior and being baptized.
Maybe one or two of the parables can connect us as followers of Jesus. Which one or two of the parables best frame the good news of God or describe the kindom of God? Which parable provides connections to community and to practicing the way of Jesus which, in our current context, might be different than what is called Christianity.
I think the parables have the power to connect us, we disciples of Jesus, because they work on us and help us be better people. Many of the people I know, non-Christian and Christian alike, work a parable or two every day. Most often without any thought. So, I’ll be thinking about the parables this spring, with a few colleagues and friends, trying to choose one or two that connect us and our discipleship following Jesus, whom we call Christ. I look forward to the journey. Join us. I’ll be posting the conversations here.
——
Note
1. John Dominic Crossan, The Power of Parable: How Fiction by Jesus Became Fiction About Jesus (New York: HarperOne, 2012), 243.
2. Crossan, The Power of Parable, 243.