The Simple Woman’s Daybook: March 12, 2012

Simple Woman's Daybook

FOR TODAY

Outside my window… sunny and probably in the 50’s or 60’s. Apparently, this equals rain in the eyes of Sacramento weather people. Umm… yeah.

I am thinking… that my little bear should hopefully be going to sleep soon given that I gave him some Benadryl and have changed his diaper a few times.

I am thankful… that the Girl Scouts are going strong 100 years after their founding. I’m also thankful for the cookie program, especially for Samoas which are making me happy (and we’re not going to talk about their effect on my waistline).

In the kitchen… probably heating some Bertolli’s soup or something.

I am wearing… my black Arabic shirt and Jon’s navy “Left Behind” shorts.

I am creating… this entry and pondering ideas for Lenten ones so I can stay with my Lenten discipline.

I am going… to Bible study tonight while Jon stays with Daniel.

I am wondering… how people can claim President Obama is a Muslim when there was the grumping about Pastor Jeremiah Wright in the 2008 election — you know Obama’s PASTOR?!?!?!?!? (“Obama is Muslim” was trending on Twitter today.)

I am reading… Fearless by Max Lucado.

I am hoping… Daniel takes a good nap and goes down easily tonight.

I am looking forward to… various things this week.

I am pondering… things for Lenten writings this week.

A favorite quote for today… “If we discover a desire within us that nothing in this world can satisfy, also we should begin to wonder if perhaps we were created for another world.” — C.S. Lewis

One of my favorite things… Samoas!

A few plans for the rest of the week: Bible study and “Hart of Dixie” tonight, PT tomorrow, speech and mid-week Lenten stuff on Wednesday, OT on Thursday, possibly Confession and dinner with Dean and Kym on Friday, and family gathering for my dad’s birthday on Saturday at my evil twin’s house.

Hosted by The Simple Woman’s Daybook

Lenten Hymn Sunday (III)

This hymn is one that I love and that is truly an American one as it rose out of shape note singing. Chanticleer released a CD of international music which had this for its title piece. I think I’ve sung it in every church I’ve been part of — it’s a wonderful hymn for Lent because it is in a minor key and it talks about Christ’s death on the Cross.

What wondrous love is this, O my soul, O my soul!
What wondrous love is this, O my soul!
What wondrous love is this that caused the Lord of bliss
To bear the dreadful curse for my soul, for my soul,
To bear the dreadful curse for my soul.

When I was sinking down, sinking down, sinking down,
When I was sinking down, sinking down,
When I was sinking down beneath God??s righteous frown,
Christ laid aside His crown for my soul, for my soul,
Christ laid aside His crown for my soul.

To God and to the Lamb, I will sing, I will sing;
To God and to the Lamb, I will sing.
To God and to the Lamb Who is the great ??I Am??;
While millions join the theme, I will sing, I will sing;
While millions join the theme, I will sing.

And when from death I??m free, I??ll sing on, I??ll sing on;
And when from death I??m free, I??ll sing on.
And when from death I??m free, I??ll sing and joyful be;
And through eternity, I??ll sing on, I??ll sing on;
And through eternity, I??ll sing on.

(HT: Net Hymnal for the lyrics)

So that people can hear the wonderfulness of the hymn, I have the Chanticleer arrangement from YouTube. It includes a verse that I haven’t found in any hymnals and omits the last verse listed here. I’m a huge fan of Chanticleer to begin with so of course I love this arrangement. Another beautiful one is done by Fernando Ortega.

Blessings

Mi amiga Kate, who is working this Lent to “be as tame as other household kates” (sorry… couldn’t resist the temptation!), posted about the “blessings” in her life for her Quick Takes this week. (Check out her “Hey Girl” pic which features her hilarious and holy husband Adam who is seriously tatted out in a way that makes his job as a youth minister amusing.) After realizing that I had completely forgotten to put something in the queue last night to post today, I thought I would give you some Laura Story as well as counting my blessings.

On to my blessings (in no particular order):

-being saved by grace through faith in Jesus Christ
-God’s love
-Jon
-Daniel
-my cats
-multiple boxes of Samoas in the house
-a roof over my head
-Internet
-food to eat
-Daniel taking a nap right now so I can blog and answer emails
-a college degree
-a library card
-my NOOK and books to read on it
-a sushi place nearby
-Daniel’s smile
-friends online and in real life
-access to medical care
-a Trader Joe’s within reasonable driving distance
-an orange tabby with an excellent motor and a nice belleh
-a beautiful house panther (even if she is incredibly needy)

For All the Faithful Women

It’s International Women’s Day today so I thought I would talk about some of the faithful women I’ve encountered in my travels of faith.

Deborah, judge of Israel
Hannah, mother of Samuel
Mary, the Theotokos (God bearer)
Priscilla, tentmaker with Paul
Lydia, seller of purple dye
Perpetua and Felicitas, martyrs
Macrina, abbess and saint
Clothilde, wife of Clovis and Catholic saint
Julian of Norwich, mystic
Hildegard von Bingen, mystic and musician
Anne Bradstreet, Puritan poetess
Emily Dickinson, poetess
Lou Ellyn Griffin, neighbor of mine who introduced me to Jesus when I was 6
Joan Smith/Kathy Hardin/Laurie Herlich, leaders of the College Group of my church in Santa Cruz
all my female friends who serve in ministry

Using Our Tongues Appropriately

We’ve all heard the firestorm over Rush Limbaugh calling law student Sandra Fluke a “slut” and claiming that she pays for sex because she testified in favor of birth control pills. I’ve seen various commentaries on this including this one from Sandi Villareal, the associate web editor for Sojourners.

I also saw this piece of news on Twitter last night. Summing it up, Bill Maher called Sarah Palin a “cunt” in his comedic routine and apparently “the left” let it slide even though it’s equally as offensive as Rush Limbaugh’s remarks.

Can I speak as one of the “left” in calling Bill Maher out for saying it? I mean, I’m not one of the “left” per se (I want to say that I’m “the center”) but I still think it was wrong of him.

My question is why we’re coming down like a ton of bricks on Limbaugh for what he said while we’re effectively giving Maher a free pass? Is it because it was said in the context of a “comedy routine” which Limbaugh’s rantings could argued be classified as being? We’ve gotten all hot and bothered about other comedians making racist remarks in their sets before so why is this any different? I am no fan of Sarah Palin and would love it if she disappeared from the public sphere but I still cannot think that Maher’s comments were acceptable. Is it because Maher has a beef with religion and Limbaugh professes to believe in something that we’re holding Limbaugh to a higher standard?

James 3 yields some interesting wisdom:

My brethren, let not many of you become teachers, knowing that we shall receive a stricter judgment. For we all stumble in many things. If anyone does not stumble in word, he is a perfect man, able also to bridle the whole body. Indeed, we put bits in horses?? mouths that they may obey us, and we turn their whole body. Look also at ships: although they are so large and are driven by fierce winds, they are turned by a very small rudder wherever the pilot desires. Even so the tongue is a little member and boasts great things.

See how great a forest a little fire kindles! And the tongue is a fire, a world of iniquity. The tongue is so set among our members that it defiles the whole body, and sets on fire the course of nature; and it is set on fire by hell. For every kind of beast and bird, of reptile and creature of the sea, is tamed and has been tamed by mankind. But no man can tame the tongue. It is an unruly evil, full of deadly poison. With it we bless our God and Father, and with it we curse men, who have been made in the similitude of God. Out of the same mouth proceed blessing and cursing. My brethren, these things ought not to be so. Does a spring send forth fresh water and bitter from the same opening? Can a fig tree, my brethren, bear olives, or a grapevine bear figs? Thus no spring yields both salt water and fresh.
–James 3:1-12 (NJKV) emphasis mine.

Our tongues enable us to speak out against injustice but they can also land us in hot water as we make snide and unnecessary comments about people. Verses 8-10 are the ones I emphasized in the passage because our tongues are full of deadly poison (v.8), we use it for two diametrically-opposed purposes of blessing God and cursing others (v.9), and that it should not be so (v.10). I understand that this is politics and that trash talk is the norm but it should not be acceptable to demean each other in this way.

Tim King ended his article (my fodder for discussion yesterday) by telling the politicos to “stop talking … Spend some time in prayer and think about what you say before you say it. Ask yourself, is the political gain, the next spot on cable news or the notoriety I can achieve really worth the damage to the church?” Sandi Villareal ends hers very simply with this quotation from Psalm 19:

Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart
Be acceptable in Your sight,
O Lord, my strength and my Redeemer.
–Psalm 19:14 (NKJV)

I think both serve as a reminder to consider that what we say has a power that transcends mere words, especially if we happen to be a public figure.

Hypocrisy: Killing the Faith One Example at a Time

Soujourners Magazine: Don’t Blame College for Young People Leaving the Church

I saw a link to this on Facebook on Wednesday and thought it might be interesting. It definitely was very eye-opening and affirms the trend I saw in college — young people leaving the church because of hypocrisy on the part of its members. Tim King, Director of Communications for Sojourners and author of the article has this to say:

An entire generation, my generation, is leaving the church. What??s the cause? Santorum blames higher education, telling Glenn Beck last week that “62 percent of kids who go into college with a faith commitment leave without it.”

The ??war on religion?? has become a frequent bogeyman among Christian and political leaders. But the reason church leaders have failed to stem the tide of a generation heading for the exit door is that they keep looking for an outside enemy to blame when the biggest problems are inside the church.

The years young adults spend in college aren??t causing them to leave their faith; those college years are exposing the problems with the faith they grew up with.

The exodus has little to do with liberal college professors, which insurance plans should cover contraception, where mosques are being built, or whether or not the Ten Commandments are hanging in courtrooms, even if many religious leaders act as if these are the greatest Christian ??battles?? of our lifetime.

In doing so, they are actively pushing young people away from religion.

Don??t get me wrong. I don??t think young people are leaving the church in record numbers just because some Christians are Republicans. There are a lot of wonderful Christians who happen to be conservative and who are great witnesses for the faith. Many of them are in my family.

Rather, the exodus is about hypocrisy.

Last year, we saw Christian leaders raising the alarm about the encroachment of ??radical Islamists.?? They call for the restriction of Muslims religious liberties to practice their faith and build houses of worship. But this year, when it comes to contraception, the rallying cry is religious freedom.

Last week, Franklin Graham was asked whether or not he believed President Obama was a Christian. He gave a fair answer when he said it wasn??t his place to judge.

But when asked the same question about the faith of Santorum and Newt Gingrich, Graham??s standards changed. He answered that yes, he did think those men were Christian because of ??political interests?? and ??spiritual interests.?? Graham later backtracked, but the message was already out.

What did a lot of young people hear? To be a Christian you need to look like, talk like and vote like Franklin Graham?? Oh, and something about sinners and grace.

What King neglected to add was that Franklin Graham said that President Obama could be a Muslim because “Muslims have gotten a free pass under his administration”. Has everyone forgotten Obama’s “pastor problem” in 2008? Does the name Jeremiah Wright ring a bell?

I have said that I would keep my mouth shut regarding the president’s GOP challengers and I will just say that Obama’s moral character has not been called into question the same way that former Speaker Gingrich’s character has.

Anyway, it is a valid point that it fails to keep young people in the church when they hear nothing but trash talk from their church members and then the pastor who has been engaging in the trash talk preaches them a sermon on Romans 13:1. It states: “Let every soul be subject to the governing authorities. For there is no authority except from God, and the authorities that exist are appointed by God.”

King has more to say:

Such political spectacles are driving a generation away from faith. It almost did for me, an evangelical Christian in my 20s who attends church on an almost weekly basis.

Most of my life I went to private Christian schools or was homeschooled. I had some wonderful examples of faith that inspired me. But as soon as I heard Christians on the radio or saw them on TV, I was ashamed to call myself a Christian.

The Jesus I read about in Scriptures taught love, acceptance, peace and concern for the poor, but the Christian leaders on TV and radio always seemed to be pro-rich, pro-white, pro-America and anti-gay.

By college I was getting ready to leave it all behind.

Thankfully, I had found meaning in work with the homeless and tutoring refugees. I heard Jim Wallis, for whom I now work, speak about God??s heart for the poor and oppressed. I sat in Scot McKnight??s North Park University classes in Chicago and learned about a Jesus who didn??t think like me, talk like me or live like me but who presented a radical challenge to be a disciple of this one they call Christ.

By 2004, I realized that the highest Christian calling in my life might not be to vote Republican. I still casted my ballot, but what was most significant to me that November was inviting 15 homeless men and women into my campus apartment to celebrate Thanksgiving with some other students and spend the night indoors.

I like politics. I think it??s important. Public policy matters because it affects people??s lives every day in ways we often don??t realize. But my primary concern for it comes because it affects the people Jesus called me to love and that the Bible tells me to be a voice for. This is why the use and abuse of religion during this election season is so troubling.

When Franklin Graham sets up double standards of faith for Republicans and Democrats, when Pat Robertson intones about a coming ??secular atheist dictatorship,?? when the Family Research Council??s Tony Perkins goes off about the dangers of repealing Don??t Ask Don??t Tell and other ??anti-family, anti-religious, anti-Christian policies,?? when the great test for the next President of our country is who has ??real?? theology and who has ??phony?? theology, it might make for good sound bites.

But it??s bad faith.

Blaming colleges, like Santorum did, is a lot easier than reforming the church. Finding an enemy outside of your religious faith might keep some young people in line for a little while and is probably great for fundraising. Heck, it might even mobilize an important voting bloc and win a few elections.

But it??s hastening the decline of Christianity for an entire generation.

I’ve heard it said that Christianity is one generation away from extinction. I also deal with the assumption that all young people want is contemporary music and entertainment. I have news for you: what young people want is something that is genuine and real. Yes, something from Hillsong might sound nice but a church with childcare so that parents can attend worship says a lot more. A church that genuinely loves EVERY generation and gives a voice to everyone is a lot more real than a mega-church like Joel Osteen’s where it’s just people worshipping a cult of personality.

What does it say about peoples’ perspective of the Christian faith when I mentally have to prepare to explain that I’m “not like _________ who just appeared on the Sunday morning political shows and talked about how __________ is waging a war on religion and the American identity”? What does it say when my tongue is bleeding because someone at church is going off on how evil [insert group of people] are when in reality I have friends from that culture but it would be inadvisable for me to speak up and risk offending one of the people who are responsible for my husband’s paycheck?

I love King’s closing:

I have a simple request for our nation??s religious leaders who keep finding ??enemies of the faith?? at every turn without ever looking inward. For Christ??s sake, stop talking.

Spend some time in prayer and think about what you say before you say it. Ask yourself, is the political gain, the next spot on cable news or the notoriety I can achieve really worth the damage to the church?

Well played. Perhaps if people realized the power of their words, their speech might be more measured.