This is Lawrence Rast's blog. It deals with stuff that interests him--especially American Religious history, Lutheranism, the Pennsylvania Railroad, obscure music, and Africa.
Saturday, June 30, 2012
Friday, June 29, 2012
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Friday, June 01, 2012
Midwestern Muslims
I grew up in the cornfields of Northern Illinois. During my youth ethnic diversity still tended to be defined in terms of different Western European language groups (we had lots of Scandinavians and Germans in our area) and religious diversity was largely limited to varieties of Christianity.
Lots of folks seem to think that's still the case. Things are so different here in __________ (fill in with West Coast, East Coast, South, etc.), you Midwesterners wouldn't understand.
That's why the following from ENI caught my eye.
Chicago (ENInews)--Mohammed Labadi had a lot at stake when the DeKalb City Council voted 29 May on a request from the Islamic Society of Northern Illinois University to build a two-story mosque. Labadi, a businessman and Islamic Society board member, said a bigger mosque was needed to replace the small house where local Muslims now worship. He also was hoping for affirmation that his neighbors and city officials have no fear of the Muslim community, Religion News Service reports via USA Today. "Don't look at me just as a Muslim, look at me as an American," Labadi said. The City Council unanimously approved the plan. However, in the decade since the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks, animosity toward Muslims sometimes has taken the form of opposition to construction of mosques and other Islamic facilities. National debate erupted over plans for an Islamic community center that became known as the "Ground Zero mosque" in Lower Manhattan. [766 words, ENI-12-0315]
Chicago (ENInews)--Mohammed Labadi had a lot at stake when the DeKalb City Council voted 29 May on a request from the Islamic Society of Northern Illinois University to build a two-story mosque. Labadi, a businessman and Islamic Society board member, said a bigger mosque was needed to replace the small house where local Muslims now worship. He also was hoping for affirmation that his neighbors and city officials have no fear of the Muslim community, Religion News Service reports via USA Today. "Don't look at me just as a Muslim, look at me as an American," Labadi said. The City Council unanimously approved the plan. However, in the decade since the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks, animosity toward Muslims sometimes has taken the form of opposition to construction of mosques and other Islamic facilities. National debate erupted over plans for an Islamic community center that became known as the "Ground Zero mosque" in Lower Manhattan. [766 words, ENI-12-0315]
Searching for the Ultimate Sermon
Good preaching was certainly central to the Reformation and has remained so in Protestantism. However, one hears increasing complaints about contemporary sermonizing, leading some to claim that there is a crisis in preaching. Here is a take on that particular issue, from the Wall Street Journal. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303674004577434773260323812.html?fbresult=add#&mg=id-wsj
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The Hunt for the Good Sermon
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The Hunt for the Good Sermon
Are American churches really suffering a crisis of bad preaching?
By John Wilson
Is
preaching in America in a particularly bad state?
Several
commentators have recently raised the question, yet it has a long history. “It
has become an impertinent Vein among People of all Sorts,” wrote Jonathan Swift
in the 1720s, “to hunt after what they call a good Sermon, as if it were a
Matter of Pastime or Diversion.”
And
often those on the hunt declare their disappointment, as when Britain’s Lord
Hugh Cecil said in the mid-20th century that “the two dangers which beset the
Church of England are good music and bad preaching.”
Today’s
complainers include Ross Douthat, whose recently published “Bad Religion: How
We Became a Nation of Heretics” describes churches whose preachers promise
prosperity to the faithful or dispense the gospel of narcissism. Others wonder
about a pulpit presence so charismatic that it draws more attention to the
preacher than to his message.
And
yet, on the basis of a lifetime of churchgoing, I have to report that week
after week, year after year, I have heard the Word of God faithfully preached.
And I am particularly skeptical of sweeping claims, as by the Barna Group’s
David Kinnaman, that the upcoming generation of churchgoers has tastes and
needs radically different from those of any previous generation in human
history.
So
what explains the recently announced million-dollar grant from the Lilly
Foundation “to cultivate excellence in preaching” at Calvin College’s Institute
of Christian Worship? Does this eye-catching grant suggest that worship is on
perilous ground?
It
doesn’t. Preaching—and worship—is in need of renewal because it is always in
need of renewal. No pastor, congregation or denomination will ever get it right
once and for all.
At
the Lilly-funded program, pastors—men and women from various denominational
backgrounds—will study together in “Micah Groups,” named for the biblical
passage that has become a touchstone for many Christians of this generation: “He
has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you?
To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God” (Micah 6:8).
The goal of the program, says director Mark Labberton, is “the convergence of
worship, preaching, and justice.”
“Justice”
(a notoriously elusive concept) wouldn’t have defined a comparable program in
the 1950s, especially not in evangelical circles, where the accent would have
been on saving souls. To put “preaching” and “justice” together doesn’t imply
indifference to the eternal fate of our souls, but it does propose a
corrective—a stress on realizing the Kingdom of God here and now. The history
of the church is made up of moves like this.
Consider the alleged exodus of young people
from the church. “We won’t lose students because we didn’t entertain them,”
said the dreadlocked Philadelphia activist and preacher Shane Claiborne on
Twitter. “We will lose them because we haven’t given the FULL gospel.” Mr.
Claiborne’s comment made me think of another gifted preacher, Jesus, who also
met with a mixed reception. “From that moment,” we read in the sixth chapter of
John’s gospel—after Jesus said that “Unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man
and drink his blood, you have no life in you”—”many of his disciples drew back
and no longer went about with him.”
Why
did some disciples draw back while others continued to follow Jesus? Why does
the church surge to life here or there, while at the same moment, across the
street or across the ocean, it seems to be increasingly moribund? Can’t we find
a method—underwritten by neuroscience and evolutionary psychology—to guarantee
successful preaching? To ask the question is to answer it.
In his memoir “The Pastor” (2011), Eugene Peterson
identifies one of the most serious threats to biblical preaching—a “pragmatic
vocational embrace of American technology and consumerism that promised to
rescue congregations from ineffective obscurity” but that “violated
everything—scriptural, theological, experiential—that had formed my identity as
a follower of Jesus and a pastor.”
The
obsession with measurable “results,” the rebranded promise of some technique or
strategy: Preachers are bombarded with this stuff every day (four keys to
success, six marks of a healthy church, seven principles of growth). Many
ignore it and get on with their work in “scripture, sermon, and sacrament.”
Praise God for that.
Mr.
Wilson is the editor of Books & Culture, a bimonthly review.
A
version of this article appeared June 1, 2012, on page A11 in the U.S. edition
of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: The Hunt for the Good Sermon.
- HOUSES OF WORSHIP
- May 31, 2012, 7:06 p.m. ET
Thursday, May 31, 2012
Soccer Evangelism
Things are goofy all over. From ENI.
Polish churches seek to win fans at June soccer tournamentWarsaw, Poland (ENInews)--Poland's churches are hoping to win fans for God as they launched a welcoming program for June's Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) championship. "Let's show nobility of heart, a Polish hospitality shaped by the Gospel and an example of Christian openness to visitors," the Roman Catholic Bishops Conference said on 28 May. Poland's predominant church has unveiled a series of pastoral initiatives for the championship, which is being co-hosted with neighboring Ukraine. The 8 June-1 July tournament is the first major international football event to be hosted by post-Communist countries. [418 words, ENI-12-0311]
Thursday, May 24, 2012
AMPS!
I've played electric guitar for many, many years. I chased particular guitars for many years in search of a particular tone. I only found it when I finally realized that whatever amplifier I was using was as important as the guitar.
So, axes aside, here's what my son, Karl, and I were working with today. My AB 763 Showman will rejoin the rest of the crew very soon. Karl's Blackstar is AWESOME--beautiful tone shaping character. But nothing--NOTHING--beats the cathode-biased sound of my little blackface Princeton Reverb.
n.b. the red "Divine Noise" cable. It is very nice. Thanks to Grant Knepper for putting me on to Pro Guitar in Portland for it. http://proguitarshop.com/about-pro-guitar-shop
So, axes aside, here's what my son, Karl, and I were working with today. My AB 763 Showman will rejoin the rest of the crew very soon. Karl's Blackstar is AWESOME--beautiful tone shaping character. But nothing--NOTHING--beats the cathode-biased sound of my little blackface Princeton Reverb.
n.b. the red "Divine Noise" cable. It is very nice. Thanks to Grant Knepper for putting me on to Pro Guitar in Portland for it. http://proguitarshop.com/about-pro-guitar-shop
Amtrak at Steamer's Cafe in Tacoma Narrows, Washington
A quick little video I shot today on the way out of Steamer's Cafe in Tacoma Narrows, Washington.
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
Ελληνική Ευαγγελική Εκκλησία
From Ecumenical News International:
Here is a link to the church's website (all in Greek): http://www.gec.gr/index.php/en
"Greek churches 'face disaster' as crisis
deepens"
(ENInews)--A senior Greek Protestant has warned that minority denominations "face disaster" due to the country's worsening economic crisis. "Heavy taxation, high unemployment and all our other difficulties are fast-forwarding us to collapse," said Dimitrios Boukis, general secretary of the Greek Evangelical church, which has 29 congregations in two regional synods in Greece and other communities abroad. "We receive no state support and are fully dependent on our members, and we're already short of pastors because we can't afford them. The pastors we have are having to handle everything because we can't employ staff, so some congregations will end up without any spiritual care," he said. [463 words, ENI-12-0275]
(ENInews)--A senior Greek Protestant has warned that minority denominations "face disaster" due to the country's worsening economic crisis. "Heavy taxation, high unemployment and all our other difficulties are fast-forwarding us to collapse," said Dimitrios Boukis, general secretary of the Greek Evangelical church, which has 29 congregations in two regional synods in Greece and other communities abroad. "We receive no state support and are fully dependent on our members, and we're already short of pastors because we can't afford them. The pastors we have are having to handle everything because we can't employ staff, so some congregations will end up without any spiritual care," he said. [463 words, ENI-12-0275]
Here is a link to the church's website (all in Greek): http://www.gec.gr/index.php/en
Saturday, May 12, 2012
Concordia Saint Paul Commencement
This evening I had the distinct honor of addressing the undergraduate class of 2012 at Concordia University, Saint Paul, Minnesota. President Thomas Ries, the Regents, the faculty and the staff were wonderfully welcoming. Click here for a link to the CSP website.
Here's a portion of the program.
Here's the commencement address itself.
Here's a portion of the program.
Here's the commencement address itself.
Thursday, May 03, 2012
The 2010 U.S. Religion Census
Just this week I was showing students here at the seminary the maps of
the 2000 census. I was hoping to have updated materials. Now they're
out.
The 2010 U.S. Religion Census: Religious Congregations & Membership Study (RCMS) is a county-by-county examination of the various religious traditions and confessions of the United States. It is utterly fascinating stuff. WARNING: If you're a map nerd like I am, this may gobble up a good portion of your day.
Thursday, April 19, 2012
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Norfolk Southern 8102 in Pennsy Paint
Norfolk Southern has a whole series of locomotives that it is painting in "heritage" schemes. The above is the scheme for the Pennsylvania Railroad. You can be sure to find me along the tracks here in Fort Wayne (and maybe Altoona!) in the hopes of seeing this one--and any of the others--soon!
Here are a couple of links to more information:
http://www.nscorp.com/nscportal/nscorp/Media/News%20Releases/2012/ns_heritage.html
http://www.nscorp.com/nscportal/nscorp/Media/News%20Releases/2012/ns_heritage_roll_out.html
Here are a couple of links to more information:
http://www.nscorp.com/nscportal/nscorp/Media/News%20Releases/2012/ns_heritage.html
http://www.nscorp.com/nscportal/nscorp/Media/News%20Releases/2012/ns_heritage_roll_out.html
Friday, February 24, 2012
CTS Faculty Response to Healthcare Mandate
FORT WAYNE, IN (CTS)—On Thursday, February 16, 2012, several clergy
members were invited to respond to the Health and Human Services (HHS) recent
mandate requiring employers to provide access to health insurance that covers
most forms of birth control, as well as drugs that induce abortion. Click
here to read a response to the mandate from the faculty of Concordia
Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne.
The Rev.
John T. Pless, Assistant Professor of Pastoral Ministry and Missions, Concordia
Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne, accompanied Dr. Matthew C. Harrison,
President, The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod, to Washington D.C. as he
testified in front of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee
concerning the mandate.
“The
HHS health care plan over reaches the divide of separation of church and state
and President Harrison did a wonderful job of articulating our Synod's
opposition to the HHS policy on the basis of the Lutheran understanding of the
Two Kingdoms,” commented Prof. Pless. “Lutherans have no choice but to resist
this intrusion of the government into the internal life of religious
communities. Rehearsing LCMS contributions to the welfare of our nation,
Harrison noted that the HHS would impair this involvement to the detriment of
our nation's citizens.”
In
a previous statement President Harrison said, “This action by HHS will have the
effect of forcing many religious organizations to choose between following the
letter of the law and operating within the framework of their religious tenets.
We add our voice to the long list of those championing for the continued
ability to act according to the dictates of their faith, and provide
compassionate care and clear Christian witness to society's most vulnerable,
without being discriminated against by government."
CTS
President, Dr. Lawrence R. Rast Jr., acknowledges this issue will certainly
affect the seminary’s students as they prepare to minister to those in need
across the world. Further, he stated, “We Americans have been blessed from our
beginnings with freedom from government intrusion into our religious
expression. We deeply appreciate the firm stand and bold witness of President
Harrison and look forward to a continuing partnership with the President’s
Office as we address matters crucial to the church and its mission.”
Tuesday, February 07, 2012
High-Speed Rail a Reality in the Midwest
Does this suggest a possible future? Kazoo to Porter is a great little run. I'd love to see them work the old Pere Marquette (the line that runs up to Grand Rapids in the map above) into a high-speed line--something like the old days when the PM streamliners were the running this route.
Here's the full story from the Chicago Tribune (http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/ct-met-amtrak-high-speed-0208-20120208,0,3868789.story):
Amtrak at 110 mph in western Mich., northern Ind.
But rail crossings lack safety mechanisms planned for Illinois route
By Jon Hilkevitch, TRIBUNE REPORTER
February 8, 2012
Amtrak passenger trains sped up to 110 mph for the first time Tuesday in western Michigan and northern Indiana on two routes serving Chicago, officials announced.
But the railroad crossings lack safety mechanisms that will be installed on Illinois' high-speed corridor to prevent vehicle-train collisions.
The faster service, which is the first expansion of regional high-speed trains outside the northeastern U.S., is occurring on about 80 miles of a 97-mile stretch of Amtrak-owned track between Kalamazoo, Mich., and Porter, Ind.
Trains operating on the corridor are the Amtrak Wolverine Service between Pontiac, Mich., and Chicago via Detroit and Ann Arbor, and the Amtrak Blue Water between Port Huron, Mich., and Chicago via East Lansing.
The increase in speed from 95 mph to 110 mph followed the Federal Railroad Administration's approval of a positive train control system. The technology provides safeguards to override human error and prevent train-to-train collisions, speed-related derailments and accidents caused by track-switching errors or malfunctions, according to the agency.
But the positive train control system installed by the Michigan Department of Transportation does not include vehicle-detection technology to alert train crews about a vehicle stopped on the tracks at a crossing or additional protections, including four-quadrant gates, to prevent vehicles from snaking around lowered crossing gates. It does, however, monitor whether the crossing gates, flashing lights and bells are working, officials said.
Crossings on the system being installed in Illinois on the Chicago-to-St. Louis 110 mph corridor will be outfitted with full four-quadrant gates and an obstacle-intrusion detection system to tell locomotive engineers about vehicles on the tracks with enough advance warning so that the train can stop before the crossing, according to the Illinois Department of Transportation. Amtrak service at up to 110 mph is scheduled to begin in 2014 on part of the route, IDOT said. The current top speed is 79 mph.
Using a less-robust crossing system not only increases the risk to vehicle drivers and their passengers, but also to the riders aboard high-speed trains involved in a collision at a crossing, experts said.
On Feb. 1 at a crossing near Jackson, Mich., on the eastern end of Michigan's 110 mph rail corridor, an Amtrak train derailed when it struck a semitrailer truck that was stuck on the tracks. More than 10 people on board the Chicago-bound train were injured.
Federal railroad officials said the Michigan plan meets all regulations and that it is up to each state to decide on "an acceptable level of grade crossing risk.''
The Federal Railroad Administration "has every confidence in the Michigan Department of Transportation's and Amtrak's ability to determine the appropriate safety mechanisms at their grade crossings,'' said Mike England, a spokesman for the agency.
Michigan rail officials said the safety system they selected on the 110 mph corridor is the most cost-effective while also being safe.
"This was not a decision we made lightly,'' said Tim Hoeffner, director of the Office of Rail at the Michigan Department of Transportation. "What you put at the crossing is only one component of grade-crossing safety. You also must have police enforcement and the education piece to go along with the engineering.
"One of the most important factors is that we are dealing with the railroad in a part of the state where people understand the issues better and have a better grasp that when the flashing lights, bells and gates go on, the train is going to be there quickly and leave quickly,'' said Hoeffner, who rode aboard the 110 mph service on Tuesday.
Sustained operations at 110 mph on the 80-mile section in Michigan and Indiana will cut 10 minutes off the 95 mph schedules and about 20 minutes off the 79 mph speed that Amtrak trains operated at as recently as 2001, officials said.
Future steps include expanding 110 mph service from Kalamazoo to central and eastern Michigan, officials said.
jhilkevitch@tribune.com
Twitter @jhilkevitch
Sunday, February 05, 2012
"Take On Me" Accordion Style
Hopefully there's not a banjo version out there...
Wednesday, February 01, 2012
A Sermon in the Midst of Tragedy
Paul McCain posted this sermon on his blog. However, since Edward is my brother-in-law, and since this is such a wonderful sermon, I thought I would repost it (without Ed's permission) here. From it you'll see why Rev. Engelbrecht is truly a gift to our Synod.
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From Salina Journal, Monday, January 30th: “ ‘I saw a red car coming at us, and it was over,’ [a witness] said. According to the Kansas Highway Patrol, Steven Moore, 62, was driving a Dodge Challenger east on I-70, just west of Topeka, when he crossed the median into oncoming traffic [perhaps because of a medical condition], striking the Geske’s Ford Windstar van head-on.”
“The Rev. Jeffrey Geske and his 3-year-old son Jacob [were] hospitalized, and killed [were] Geske’s wife Laura, their daughter Joy, 3, and son Joshua, 8.”
This news story came to me with special prayer requests for our chapel service. I had planned to preach on the Gospel reading from Sunday but thought it would be better to talk a bit about this tragedy. This is the sort of story that shakes us hard, causes us to question the ways of God. We naturally wonder why these things happen and find ourselves picking through the wreckage looking for an answer. [Read Job 1:13–21; emphasis on v. 21.]
How often we hear miracle stories when there is an accident, where death is averted at the last moment. We hear these stories and say, “Blessed be the name of the Lord!” (Job 1:21). But in this case, there is less for us to celebrate and we find ourselves wondering why God allowed this to happen.
Poets say that we were born to die; philosophers agree that death is a natural part of life. But the Bible fights against these thoughts. It tells us that God created us for life, that death is unnatural, an intruder, the enemy of the children of God. When an older person dies, we don’t think too hard about it. It seems normal to us. The tragic events, like this one, cause us to question when death takes the young and the good, even those blessed and hallowed for God’s service. God calls us to grow less comfortable with death. If we mourn less when grandma dies than when a child dies, we should check our thoughts and consider whether we have grown too comfortable with death.
Our reason does a poor job at grasping tragedy. It is too heavy for our weak minds to hold. In such events, faith teaches us to expect a miracle; we naturally look for the miraculous in tragic events and hope to make sense of them. As I looked through the news reports about this accident, I did not find a miracle story. This is one of those times when the miracle comes after the event, perhaps long after. The miracle comes in seeing that God works in, with, and under tragedy, that He somehow accomplishes His good and gracious will not by averting tragedy but by working through it. Job responded in faith when everything was taken away from him, beginning with mourning and ending with praise for the One whose ways are beyond us. [Read 1:20–21.]
Today, we are like Mary and John at the foot of the cross, looking up with tear filled eyes and wondering, “Why?” And to us the Lord says as He did on the day of His crucifixion, “Behold, your son. . . . Behold, your mother” (John 19:26–27). In other words, “I am not coming down from this cross. It makes no sense and only causes you grief now. Take care of one another. Love one another until I turn this cross and this suffering into resurrection, ascension, and Pentecost for you.” Sisters, behold this morning your brothers in Christ. Brothers, this morning behold your sisters in Christ and care for them. This, too, is the way and the work of God who took away our sins by His Son’s cross and sustains us week by week in the Sacrament of His cross where in, with, and under the tragedy of death He brings to us the miracle of life and hope and peace. And so we say in faith, “The Lord gave, and the Lord has taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord” our only Savior. Amen.
We pray today for the Geske family as they mourn the loss of Laura, Joy, and Joshua. We ask that you would grant healing to Pastor Geske and to his son, Jacob. May they behold one another with your love and care as Christ taught us from the cross. We pray likewise for Pastor Geske that you would strengthen and sustain him as he cares for his Salina congregation, to which You recently called him. Help pastor and congregation to support one another through this tragedy. Look with mercy also upon Steven Moore, whose health condition led to this accident. Comfort him, O Lord, under the burden of this event and grant him your peace, which only Christ can give. O Lord, in Your mercy, hear our prayers. Amen.
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Supreme Court Rules on Religious Freedom
This was just sent my way moments ago. It is from a blog that may be found here (http://www.patheos.com/blogs/theanchoress/2012/01/11/scotus-unanimous-for-religious-freedom/). I offer it to you in full. The first sentence has a link to the entire opinion.
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SCOTUS Unanimous For Religious Freedom – UPDATED
Jan 11th, 2012 by Elizabeth Scalia
The Supreme Court of the United States has ruled unanimously in favor of a church’s right to be itself, and its freedom to assign its ministries:
This is an enormous and timely victory for religious freedom:
In a groundbreaking case, the Supreme Court on Wednesday held for the first time that religious employees of a church cannot sue for employment discrimination.But the court’s unanimous decision in a case from Michigan did not specify the distinction between a secular employee, who can take advantage of the government’s protection from discrimination and retaliation, and a religious employee, who can’t.It was, nevertheless, the first time the high court has acknowledged the existence of a “ministerial exception” to anti-discrimination laws — a doctrine developed in lower court rulings. This doctrine says the First Amendment’s guarantee of freedom of religion shields churches and their operations from the reach of such protective laws when the issue involves employees of these institutions.
At the time the SCOTUS heard the case, it was noted that both Justices Scalia and Kagan had reacted with something like shock at the government’s constitution-shredding argument:
President Obama’s Equal Employment Opportunity Commission claimed during oral arguments before the U.S. Supreme Court last week that it can order a church to restore a fired minister to a teaching position.But that was a claim not even the president’s handpicked appointee, the very liberal Justice Elena Kagan, could accept as she and her colleagues considered Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church and School v. EEOC. [...] The justices then rejected the argument of Leondra Kruger, Obama’s lawyer for the EEOC, who argued that there’s no ministerial exception in the Constitution, only the same rights that secular organizations possess to choose their own affiliations.At this, Scalia exploded. “That’s extraordinary! There, black on white in the text of the Constitution, are special protections for religion. And you say it makes no difference?”Kagan agreed with Scalia’s rejection of the argument that the First Amendment doesn’t protect churches from government ordering who they should hire as pastor or priest.
Given reports following the hearing, it’s not really shocking that the SCOTUS came down unanimously against the government’s case. But it’s reassuring, all the same.
Writing the court’s opinion, Chief Justice John Roberts said, “Allowing anti-discrimination lawsuits against religious organizations could end up forcing churches to take religious leaders they no longer want.”“Such action interferes with the internal governance of the church, depriving the church of control over the selection of those who will personify its beliefs,” Roberts said. “By imposing an unwanted minister, the state infringes the Free Exercise Clause, which protects a religious group’s right to shape its own faith and mission through its appointments.”But, Roberts said, since this was the first time the high court has ever considered the “ministerial exception,” it would not set hard and fast rules on who can be considered a religious employee of a religious organization.“We are reluctant … to adopt a rigid formula for deciding when an employee qualifies as a minister,” he said. “It is enough for us to conclude, in this, our first case involving the ministerial exception, that the exception covers (Cheryl) Perich, given all the circumstances of her employment.”
The Obama administration tested the waters with an extreme gambit. They’ve now established that this court, in its current make-up, will rule in favor of the churches against overt threats to the most fundamental of our religious freedoms. I expect that if Obama is re-elected, we’ll see continued–but measured–attempts to weaken religious freedoms, as it attempts to discern precisely where the lines are, and how they may be crossed. Chief Justice Roberts appears to acknowledge as much, in writing the opinion.
Meanwhile, this is very good–yes, reassuring–news.
Saturday, December 10, 2011
The Young Clergy Crisis in the Presbyterian Church
Borrowed from Incarnatus Est (Greg Alms), who found it on the Christian Century website (http://www.christiancentury.org/blogs/archive/2011-12/perspectives-young-clergy-crisis), this piece addresses a challenge that is facing many of the larger church bodies in the United States, particularly those in the "mainline." This brief piece is definitely worth reading.
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Perspectives on the young clergy crisis
Dec 10, 2011 by Carol Howard Merritt
Since I’ve been chairing a national Presbyterian Church (USA) committee on the Nature of the Church for the 21st century, I’ve been gaining a different perspective on many of the larger trends of our denomination. One thing that has been difficult to realize (and equally difficult to communicate to the larger church) is the young clergy crisis.
Why would I call it a crisis? We’ve known for a long time about the startling decline of young clergy. The drop-out rates don't help (I can't find hard and fast stats on this... but some claim that about 70% of young clergy drop out within the first five years of ministry, usually because of lack of support or financial reasons). The average age of a pastor in the PCUSA is 53. And I’ve realized that the age of our leadership might be much higher.
Over half of our congregations cannot afford a full-time pastor and many associate pastor positions were cut during the recent economic downturn. These are churches where seminary graduates would normally be heading, so what are the congregations doing instead? Many of them are hiring retired ministers or retired laypeople to serve these churches while our younger pastors remain unemployed.
Do I have something against people over 65? Of course not. I also have sympathy for people who have seen their retirement savings dwindle over the last four years. I know that many people have great energy well past the age of 65. So why would this situation be a problem?
Like all denominations, the age of our worshipers is increasing. The median age of a Presbyterian in the pew is 61. Half of our membership is over the age of 65, and four out of five worshipers are over the age of 45. Jackson Carroll points out that the age of a congregation will often reflect the age of its pastoral leadership.
So, if we’re trying to imagine a compelling vision for the church in the years to come, we'll need to reach the next generation. But that's hard to do when
•Half of our congregations may be served by pastors and laypeople who are 65 or older
•The other half of our congregations are being served by people who are about 53
•Younger pastors can’t find calls and are forced to take up other employment
•Many younger pastors who do get called to pastorates drop out within the first 5 years of ministry.
Thursday, December 08, 2011
What's in a Name?
This totally cracks me up!!!!
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Spurrier Urban Wiley seemed like a perfect name for a son.Until the man he was named for took a job at Ohio State.
University of Florida graduate Jen Wiley named her son for two of the most successful coaches in school history -- Steve Spurrier and Urban Meyer.
"My husband and I got married in 1996, when Spurrier won the championships," Wiley told reporter Chris Hopper of Bay News 9. "And then we conceived in 2006 when Urban Meyer won the championship."
Wiley said "I felt sick" when Meyer took the job in Columbus and now she wants to change her 4-year-old son's middle name but only if her husband agrees.
The name up for grabs? Tim as in Tebow.
From USA Today, December 8, 2011, p. 3C. http://content.usatoday.com/communities/gameon/post/2011/12/mom-no-longer-wants-son-named-after-urban-meyer/1
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Mom no longer wants son named after Urban Meyer
By Reid Cherner, USA TODAY
By Robert Hanashiro, USA TODAY
University of Florida graduate Jen Wiley named her son for two of the most successful coaches in school history -- Steve Spurrier and Urban Meyer.
"My husband and I got married in 1996, when Spurrier won the championships," Wiley told reporter Chris Hopper of Bay News 9. "And then we conceived in 2006 when Urban Meyer won the championship."
Wiley said "I felt sick" when Meyer took the job in Columbus and now she wants to change her 4-year-old son's middle name but only if her husband agrees.
The name up for grabs? Tim as in Tebow.
From USA Today, December 8, 2011, p. 3C. http://content.usatoday.com/communities/gameon/post/2011/12/mom-no-longer-wants-son-named-after-urban-meyer/1
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