Thursday, June 17, 2010

warning: dangerous book

jesus for president was actually on my reading list for last summer, i ordered it from a third party through amazon and it never came, so i made a point to get through it this summer.

this was a book i had trouble putting down, but at times had to because it became too "heavy". it certainly is "a book to provoke the christian political imagination" and i would recommend it to christians who are willing to be challenged on their view of america and to all people who are not a follower of jesus for some great insight on what christian politics might actually look like from the perspective of jesus and the bible and not the perspective of "christian" politicians.

just a couple excerpts that stuck out:

"jesus is ready to set us free from the heavy yoke of an oppressive way of life. plenty of wealthy christians are suffocating from the weight of the american dream, heavily burdened by the lifeless toil and consumption we embrace. this is the yoke from which we are being set free."

"is it possible we can't see the destructiveness of our economy not because we don't know it's terrible but because deep down we feel that it's necessary and that therefore it's hopeless to criticize it?""

"is it possible to submit and to subvert? paul's life gives a clear yes, as does jesus' crucifixion...we find that paul offered a biting critique of pers are a creative path of revolutionary love. we might remember paul urging his friend philemon to illegally welcome back home a fugitive slave."

"christianity is at its best when it is peculiar, marginalized, suffering, and it is at its worst when it is popular, credible, triumphal, and powerful."

"to say that we must kill or enemies and join the popular project to 'rid the world of evil' is to call jesus unrealistic."

"as the parable of the weeds and wheat illustrates, jesus understood the destruction of evil to be not in human hands but in God's hands.

"the best way to defeat the kingdom of God is to empower the church to rule the world with the sword."

"the u.s. is arming over 75 percent of the world, while it tells folks to disarm, which is like handing out guns to kids in our neighborhood and telling them not to shoot each other."

"the danger is that we can begin to read the bible through the eyes of america rather than read america through the eyes of the bible. we just want jesus to be a good american."

"evangelicals are getting divorced, and gay folks are wanting to get married, and religionists keep accusing homosexuals of destroying the family."

"it's easy to have political views--that's what politicians do. but it's much harder to embody a political alternative--that's what saints do."

"every culture has a particular way of eating. some folks eat with chopsticks; others sit on the floor. in india we ate with our right hands. how do christians eat? christians eat with poor folks, with the outcasts, the marginalized."

"trusting God made jesus nonviolent"

"i heard iraqi people, even iraqi christians, call the leaders of the u.s. 'christian extremists...one iraqi woman said, with tears in her eyes, 'your government is declaring war and asking for god's blessing, and that is the exact same thing that my government is doing."

"the kingdom of God is not just something we hope for when we die bur something we live "on earth as it is in heaven".

"what the world needs is people who believe so much in another world that they cannot help but enact it."

Sunday, June 13, 2010

unstoppable courage

my church is taking part in this one prayer series in which thousands of churches are preaching the same messages to over 700,000 people. for our speaker this week we piped in craig groeschel the pastor of livechurch.tv. he spoke on courage and used this guy named benaiah as his example. so, if you are interested, check out some of the history and motivation for our sons name below.

about halfway in there is a moment in this sermon, one of the most real moment i have seen a pastor have...very exciting.

watch the sermon here.

Saturday, June 12, 2010

two years and counting...

wednesday marked two years of the lions den. therefore, along with a new look we honor the "tradition" of our first birthday seen here, with 12 of our favorite posts over the last year.

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

the best documentarites you have never seen

energy:
a crude awakening - the name says it all
who killed the electric car? - interestingly enough the electric car is coming back...like 20 years later
war:
why we fight - love the connection to history
iraq for sale - war profiteering anyone?
business:
enron: the smartest people in the room - ah yes, evil corporations
wal-mart: the high cost of low prices - and yet another
the yes men - not a great film, but a funny concept
debt:
maxed out - serious issue that effects most of us
i.o.u.s.a - usa! usa! usa!
political campaigns:
can mr. smith get to washington anymore? - it was fun to see my government students get into this one last year
street fight - more corruption in politics? cory booker is amazing.
food:
food inc. - this will change the way you see your food.
beer wars - one of my personal favorites
all of the above:
blue gold - maybe the most important issue to confront concerning the future of the world a must see.
the story of stuff - i think this is a must see and at only 2o minutes long, well worth your time. watch it here.

on my "to see" list:
the thin blue line
born into brothels
guns,germs and steel
manufacturing consent
crumb
when we were kings

anyone got other suggestions?


Wednesday, June 2, 2010

building a city within a city: discovering sabbath

the sabbath was not a topic i was initially excited about preaching on, due mostly to my own misconceptions about the day, but the more i learned and the more i implemented into my own weekly routine, the more i got excited about sharing.

due to high demand :-), you can listen to my most recent sermon here. but before you listen check out the teaser video we played before i spoke below, and in my music playlist to the right you can give a listen the song i will possess your heart -by death cab for cutie, our band nailed this cover, it was awesome, they even played the four minute intro during our "countdown" to the start of service.

all in all, i felt pretty good about it, i went in about as comfortable as i ever have before, yet i left the stage about as stressed as i ever have. i actually couldn't sleep saturday night until about 2:30am, that may have had to do a little with how long it was, anyway always a blast!