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the rearview mirror v

1. The Pope is at it again. This time he says, “more fine art, less Paste.” I will say this was a bit more balanced than his music style talk last year. See my post about it here.

2. David Fitch waxes about the danger of mission statements and why he believes ‘value’ adjectives better serve the mission of God through the local church.

3. Some keen observations from the JollyBlogger himself, David Wayne, on the underlying communication brilliance the Hillary camp used in officially entering the presidential race for 2008 last week.

4. Speaking of Hillary, someone get her some voice lessons. Ouch!

5. Max Hsu, ‘off the hook’ photographer/artist, shows us the difference between creating and doing art by reminding us of Scooby Doo.

6. Pinch me. According to Pitchfork, The Police and The Smashing Pumpkins to reunite for appearances in upcoming months. In other news, the David Lee Roth version of Van Halen to reunite. Sorry Dave, no one cares.

7. Speaking of The Police and Van Halen, Dan Kimball debates who is the more exciting reunion of 2007. Come on, Dan, remember the reggae…

8. Interesting news item lost in the shuffle last week: Mike Jones, the male prostitute whose accusations against New Life Church founder Ted Haggard led to Haggard’s dismissal as pastor visits Haggard’s old church, …to “get some perpective” and to research a project on evangelicals with a New York-based theater troupe.

9. Ron Martoia reminds us of the importance of the catalyzing question. Isn’t that WJDid?

10. Nashville’s Tennessean reports piracy to blame for recent job cuts at Brentwood-based EMI Christian Music Group. But is piracy to blame for the downturn in CD sales in all genres? Felix Oberholzer-Gee of Harvard Business School in Massachusetts and Koleman Strumpf of the University of North Carolina don’t think so.

11. Can the E-word be saved? USA today looks at the ‘misunderstood, misappropriated and maligned’ term, evangelical, and if it can regain its ground as label of choice for Christians.


the rearview mirror iv

1. Alan Hirsch says it is futile trying to revitalize the church, or a denomination, without first changing the system. And that system should be organic

2. The president of the university I graduated from-Missouri Baptist University-reflects on how the recent Missouri ice storm affected him and how cavalier the unaffected can be when the roles are reversed.

3. Say what? Jimmy Swaggart, yes that Jimmy Swaggart, says God won’t be displeased to see the Saints win the Super Bowl [via the Bible Belt Blogger]. Yesterday’s score: Chicago 39, New Orleans 19. Sorry Jimmy…

4. The Klouda debacle rages on the blogosphere here, here, here, here, and here.

5. Are we lying to God when our heart doesn’t line up with the lyrics we are singing? Bob Kauflin weighs in

6. Was it just me or was this a weird post from Challies, our friend up north? I couldn’t figure out if he was just joking or sarcastically serious…

7. Underage drinking and communion. Sign of the times example #1.

8. If these walls could speak… Church advertising, literally. Sign of the times example #2.

9. Blinging Tim Hughes. Sign of the times example #3.

10. The new trend in the technological church…the internet church. Will it catch on?

11. At a comedy club near you, Jerry Seinfeld says: What’s up with real estate agents who won’t work on the Sabbath?

12. Ellen Laverty waxes philosophic on the ‘Midworst’ American Idol auditions and America’s addiction to schadenfreude. Great article!

13. When does conversation cease to become conversation? Thoughs from Dr. McKnight.

14. Dan Kimball takes us a deeper level and turns our thoughts on church models on its head when he looks at the Chinese Christian culture.

15. The laugh-out-loud video of the week: Conan’s iPhone commercial.


Via Dallas Morning News writer Jeffery Weiss:

With all due respect to Dr. Wade…

Say this big meeting comes off and 20,000 Baptists come together next year. And several autonomous Baptists organizations decide to cooperate and pool resources to achieve specific common goals. How exactly is that different from the organization of the SBC?

There are symbolic reasons why this new body would never call itself a convention or a denomination. But Dr. Wade says he wants the new whatever-it-is to “express the heart of the Baptist vision” And Bill Underwood, president of Mercer University in Georgia, said that “North America desperately needs a true Baptist witness.”

Call it a convention, a covenant or a convocation. Call it a duck, if you like. How would it not be competing with the SBC?

On the other hand, if all that happens next year is a meeting — with no plans, cooperations or consequences emerging — then it won’t be a convention or a duck…

True: The resulting fruits of this meeting could be a more organized effort among a swath of Baptists-namely the North American Baptist Fellowship-to tackle issues of social justice.

True: By outward appearances, this potential of pooled resources could look alot like the SBC. But looks and officialism are two very different things. If they say they have no desire to be a convention, let’s take them at their word.

True: Not becoming a convention may be symbolic. Sometimes symbolism is good…

False: The idea that this convocation will compete with the SBC is a false assumption. How could a meeting that is designed to address poverty, the environment and global conflicts be considered competition to any organization?

So what is going on here?

It is as if Weiss thinks this is just window-dressing to a more subversive attempt to wrangle political power from the SBC. If that is true, he is walking on the thin ice of assumption.

I think we need to be careful of the verbiage. Again, let’s use a wait-and-see approach…


Clinton and Baptist. Those are two words I thought I’d never hear in the same sentence…

The blogosphere is rife with the story of former U.S. presidents Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton joining leaders of 40 Baptist organizations to announce a major meeting called Celebration of a New Baptist Covenant, tentatively scheduled for Jan. 30-Feb. 1, 2008 at the Georgia World Congress Center in Atlanta.

For this announcement, Carter and Clinton met with groups aligned with the North American Baptist Fellowship at the Carter Center in Atlanta. This meeting in early 2008 is being touted as an attempt to offer an alternative Baptist voice to what they are claiming is often-negative messages of the Religious Right [i.e. Southern Baptists]

A little background: The North American Baptist Fellowship is one of six regional fellowships that are part of the Baptist World Alliance, which is made up of 214 Baptist unions and conventions comprising a membership of more than 34 million baptized believers.

Here’s the rub: This organization doesn’t include the 16-million-member Southern Baptist Convention, which dropped out of BWA in 2004, alleging a drift toward liberalism in the global fellowship. And some of SBC’s leading voices are taking issue with remarks apparently aimed at their convention.

Here’s Frank Page, president of the Southern Baptist Convention and pastor of First Baptist Church in Taylors, S.C. from the Baptist Press:

Instead of engaging in a war of words, let’s do a reality check. Word games are fine, but reality says Southern Baptists are presenting a positive life-changing message, impacting our culture with our ministries and sharing the Good News of Jesus Christ.

Here’s Morris H. Chapman, president of the Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee from the Baptist Press on Carter:

He has been one of the most vocal critics of Southern Baptists, using ‘fundamentalist’ as a pejorative and drawing a caustic comparison between Ayatollah Khomeini’s rise to power in Iran and the resurgence of conservative leadership being elected in the SBC.

It makes sense that there would some ‘towing’ from the upper leadership in the SBC, but their comments come off somewhat defensive. There is no doubt that the SBC is addressing world hunger, as well as bringing the Gospel to many people, but this seems to be very reactionary.

The subtlety to me is, according to Charle Wade, executive director of the Baptist General Convention of Texas, this meeting does not amount to an effort to start a new Baptist convention that would compete with the Southern Baptist Convention.

We have no intention of starting a new convention. We do need a new opportunity to express the heart of the Baptist vision.

I think it is too early to make sweeping statements about this meeting. Anyone that takes the time to address poverty, the environment and global conflicts deserves the chance to be heard. Even if Clinton is involved.

What I think is most important for evangelicals to do in light of this meeting is to be careful not to pass judgement too soon. I prefer to align myself with folks like Ben Cole, pastor of Parkview Baptist in Arlington, Texas:

Southern Baptists had better be careful when it comes to criticizing efforts to unite people of faith who seek social justice for the poor and oppressed. The role of the Levite or the priest in Christ’s parable of the Good Samaritan is not one to be preferred. It could be that men whom the Southern Baptist fundamentalist elites regard as undesirable are the very ones who gain heaven’s blessing in their efforts to bind up the wounds of those in our society who have fallen among thieves.

…and Wade Burleson, pastor of Emmanuel Baptist Church in Enid, Oklahoma,:

I am not familiar with ‘The Baptist Covenant,’ nor am I acquainted with the leaders of the 2008 convocation in Atlanta. However, it would be difficult for me to criticize any evangelical Christian movement whose stated goals are to live out the gospel through doing justice and loving mercy. There comes a time when we as Southern Baptists should simply remain silent if we cannot say anything supportive of other Baptist attempts at addressing pressing social and cultural issues in a prophetic manner. To provide a public defense of our convention’s record, while at the same time criticizing others, seems to be acting in a manner contrary to the spirit of our Lord and the good of His kingdom at large. I wish nothing but success for all Baptists who seek to live out the gospel for a world in need of a Savior.

I think Cole and Burleson are bold and balanced in their assessments. Bold, in that they are willing to challenge what is considered to be the ‘establishment.’ Balanced, in that they are willing to withhold judgment until the other side has had an opportunity to pursue their efforts.

Perception is everything. The SBC’s leaders had a chance to improve the perception that most have of their convention on issues of social justice. Taken at face value, they fell short.

Sometimes, when you come off defensive, it can be interpreted that you feel threatened. And when that happens, it can be perceived as battle you are already losing.


Here is this week’s edition of The Rearview Mirror, where we peruse the past week’s best of the best in the blogosphere. Enjoy!

1. Bob Hyatt ruminates on the church’s simul justus et peccator.

2. Talking about worship aesthetics usually polarizes people. But Frank Burch Brown shows us it doesn’t have to.

3. Challies writes a letter to The Learning Channel. He has a new idea to offer ‘theological assistance’ to a particular group within evangelicalism…

4. The cross comes down from William & Mary’s Wren Chapel. And all heck breaks loose…

5. David Crowder Band wins MSN’s Artist of the Year. But not without a little controversy involving some ‘robots.’

6. Is Christian music getting out of the ghetto? MSN Music News thinks so

7. Podcasts, Slate, and RSS Feeds. These are how young consumers consume the news according to the Online News Association via cyberjournalist.net. Maybe TV Guide Canada and CBS Evening News with Katie Couric aren’t crazy after all…

8. I was born in 1976. That same year, Gerald R. Ford spoke at the Southern Baptist Convention. Here were his words. R.I.P.

9. America’s first Muslim congressman is using an interpretation of the Koran owned by a man who sliced up the Bible for his swearing-in ceremony. Except that he isn’t. Terry Mattingly weighs in

10. Activists Shane Claireborne and Brian McLaren remind us that grace is hard to communicate with a noose.

11. Steve McKoy vacates his position on vacations as times of renewal…and as he realizes they are not enough, he sees that being blessed is.

12. Do we need a greener Gospel? Lead Pastor of Blue Sky Church, Joe Schimmels, thinks so…

13. Lessons in blogging from Dr. McKnight and tips on blogging from the Tall one.

14. Dan Kimball tells us why it’s hard for him to listen to Christian music.

15. The best Christian on TV. No, really.


pat, please be quiet

From FoxNews.com:

VIRGINIA BEACH, Virginia — Religious broadcaster Pat Robertson predicted Tuesday a horrific terrorist act on the United States that will result in “mass killing” late in 2007.

“I’m not necessarily saying it’s going to be nuclear,” he said during his news-and-talk television show “The 700 Club” on the Christian Broadcasting Network. “The Lord didn’t say nuclear. But I do believe it will be something like that.”

Robertson said God told him during a recent prayer retreat that major cities and possibly millions of people will be affected by the attack, which should take place sometime after September.”

And commentary from Melinda Penner from the Stand to Reason blog:

He’s at it again. Pat Robertson is making his prophetic predictions that he claims God has told him. I’ve written before that Pat Robertson speaking for God is actually taking God’s name in vain. He’s speaking in God’s stead without adequate justification for why we should believe he is. Sure, there were and might still be prophets. Prophets speak for God and the standard in the Old Testament was so high for those who claimed to speak for God that the penalty for a false prophet was the death penalty. It’s a serious thing to speak for God, in His name, because it either carries enormous authority that people should pay attention to or it brings shame on God’s reputation among men.

The issue with Robertson is not whether he’s convinced he’s heard form God. I’m sure he is confident of that. The Biblical standard is whether we, the church, have any reason to believe he is a prophet speaking for God. Robertson has given us no reason to believe that he is – especially given the poor track record of his past prophetic utterances.

Many Christians do this kind of thing in their own arenas. They claim God has spoken to them. The sorry and shameful fact is that many times, as in Robertson’s case, what results is ridicule – not of the person themself, but of God. That is why it’s a serious thing to speak for God and take His name in vain.

The Old Testament doesn’t even use God’s name because Israel felt it was a very serious thing to use His name. Perhaps that’s a legalistic rule we’ve grown beyond because we know also that God is our father we can approach. But very often I think modern Christians have moved to the opposite extreme, blithely claiming God’s authority, which is what His name represents, with no good reason for the rest of us to take their claim seriously.

When we use God’s name, we should evaluate whether it will bring God honor or ridicule, whether we have the proper authority to use it.


Here is this week’s edition of “The Rearview Mirror,” where we peruse the past week’s best of the best in the blogosphere. Enjoy!

1. Online video becomes a real business. What does this mean for the church?

2. Missional churches, Epiphany, and squatters.

3. The history of religion in 90 seconds. Intriguing…

4. UNC-Wilmington criminology professor, Mike Adams, gives one of his students a lesson in integrity.

5. The ESV blog helps us visualize one-year Bible reading plans. Who knew there were this many ways to read the Scriptures?

6. Pamela Durso, associate executive director of the Baptist History and Heritage Society, writes on what we can learn from the long history of Baptist worship wars.

7. The recent Knicks/Nuggets brawl at Madison Square Garden was no doubt a black eye for the NBA. But ESPN Page 2′s Jemele Hill says don’t blame “thugs.” Blame false bravado, machismo and stupidity.

8. Get Religion’s Terry Mattingly voices his thoughts on the little semi-story The Greenville (S.C.) News missed last week and if experience matters when it comes to writing for the religion beat of a major newspaper.

9. The German Opera’s controversial production of Mozart’s Idomeneo went on in Berlin last week without incident, although it was two months late and with more than 100 German cops on hand. Paul O’Donnell of Beliefnet.com’s Idol Chatter discusses that though there is a controversial scene that is a protest against “any form of organized religion or its founders,” opera and organized religion face many of the same challenges

10. It’s hard to believe that Mary was just a teenager [anywhere from 12 to 17 on who you talk to] when Jesus was conceived by the Holy Spirit in her womb. Scot McKnight “pushes back” Marko on the adolescent implications that Mary might have faced [or not faced].

11. The untold story of Southern Baptist Clarence Jordan via iMonk and the Bible Belt Blogger.

12. London, the new Jerusalem via Jonny Baker.

13. Moby tries to tells us the real meaning of Christmas. Nice try Mr. Hall, but there’s more to the Story: redemption of sin.

14. Shaun Groves lets us in on what happens when CPAs and artists breed together…hilarious!


the rearview mirror i

Last Sunday, I started a feature called “The Week in Review,” where I highlighted my favorite blog entries of the week.

But here is the big question about the feature: Isn’t that title boring? I though so too. It’s like a bad, recurring article in a stodgy news journal. Stodgy I am not.

So I thought long and hard about a really smart, creative title and I came up with [drum roll please...] “The Rearview Mirror.” Okay, it’s nothing revolutionary, just an attempt to be a little more clever than the next guy.

With that aside, be sure to check in each Sunday as we peruse [IMHO] the past week’s best of the best in the blogosphere on the “The Rearview Mirror.” Here is this week’s edition:

1. So why did The Nativity Story fail at the box office? It didn’t follow the ‘Passion’ Playbook a.k.a. the 10+ commandments of the new Hollywood.

2. Maybe numbers in church aren’t bad after all. Fuller’s Ryan Bolger ruminates

3. Refuting the myth of guilt only for particular sins.

4. Crunchy Con balks at a couple of things that have been on my mind lately: the pursuit for homogeneity in public schools and yes, Bratz.

5. Cage match: Wal-Mart vs. Kentucky Baptists.

6. The Bible Belt Blogger tells us how a TV evangelist sent him money.

7. Jesus Christ, Cover Star.

8. Is advocating gay rights replacing advocating abortion rights as the new standard by which Republicans are measured by? Terry Mattingly weighs in

9. The solution to permanently solving the issue of substance in new worship songs: Evangelical Mad Libs.

10. What are your boundaries in movies and TV? Over 200 people voted on this issue over at philcooke.com. You may the results surprising…

11. DJ Chuang notes a new study from the Pew Internet & American Life Project that says blogging is gaining in its popularity, especially for those under 30. Blogging is a fad no more..

12. Are ‘seekers’ poor judges of their needs? Oldtruth.com quotes the late Ichabod Spencer…

13. The venerable Jeff Tweedy is not ready to take a break from the road. Via Pitchfork, Mr. T announces a solo tour

14. Common grace in the form of the best music video of the year. Well said Steve!


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