Sorry for the long absence.
I posted a response today to a recent article defending the institutional church, at Christianity Today's website. I think the article is anecdotal and misguided on key points. However, it did give me the opportunity to pen some thoughts I've been mulling over with friends lately. I had to be terse (they have a 1000 character limit) and so recommend reading the article first, but it's not necessary.
From the back of a pizza box, shortened:
"The CEO says to the teacher: 'Teaching. Ha. What sort of a person becomes a teacher, thinks their best option in life is to teach. Pathetic. You're a teacher, so tell me, What do you make?"
"The teacher to the CEO: 'I make students sit up in class, make them pay attention when they don't want to, make them achieve more than they thought possible etc, etc. In short, I make a difference.'"
Nice, oh so nice to see a young person up front leading worship
-and not part of a 'youth nite'-
-and not playing a special instrument-
-and not for an offertory-
-and not with a special introduction-
but just up front and that without commentary because why would we comment, because, of course people of all ages are going to lead, because,
This is the Church.
A whole generation of women rose up and declared 'We will not be dictated to' - and they became typists (G.K. Chesterton)
All my batteries are failing ever faster falling farther
The stuff I used to know is ailing -
Whither my recharger?
"Let a collection of yahoos but take of their clothes and trounce around stage shouting obscenities, and a breakthrough in dramatic art is announced and applauded." -Malcolm Muggeridge
I made my a second pilgrimage to MoMA, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, over Christmas Break.
I love modern art. I love abstract expressionism, and concrete music. I love when things are hinted at, not said explicitly, when the listener, or viewer, is challenged to put things together for herself. So I went, expecting a fine meal.