Thursday, March 20, 2008

Perchance to Dream

This is the email that I addressed to Richard Roeper and Mary Mitchell, two columnists for the Chicago Sun-Times, who today addressed race, hope, and Obama in two telling columns that portray a nation divided:


Dear Mary and Richard,

Thank you for your respective articles in Thursday's Chicago Sun-Times. I was really encouraged by Richard's column on vision, dreams and the importance of Mr. Obama's oratory of hope. It amazes me that many people in our nation have forgotten how to dream. It was America's dream to rocket into space. It happened. I know that it is not that simple, and in fact many of the dreams of those who have traditionally been marginalized and minimalized have yet to come to fruition: dreams of access to quality health care, quality education, and quality employment; dreams of safety and peace in down-trodden communities entrenched with violence, blight, and drugs; dreams of financial peace and reconciliation for families who have experienced varied forms of brokenness; and dreams of equal justice under the law. Vision without mission, however, is only a pipe dream. Hence, we the people "who are darker than blue" (not just black folk) need to covenant with each other and collaboratively ensure that the hopes and dreams of countless numbers of gentrified and disenfranchised Americans can become a reality.

I grew up, Mary, in a black Baptist church in Detroit. It was under the leadership of Dr. Frederick G. Sampson at Tabernacle Missionary Baptist Church that I learned about the human struggles that were important to the black community. It was here that we missioned together to address these struggles with the Gospel of Jesus Christ. As I've written elsewhere "The same biblical truth that formed the backdrop of the Civil Rights movement, is the same biblical truth that felled the walls of Jericho." It saddens me that the rhetoric and deep emotion of the collective hurt of the black community has now been used to divide the nation even further in a presidential race that becomes more polarized every day.

In many ways it has been the local, visible, and vocal churches of the urban center, like Armitage Baptist Church where my wife and I serve here in Chicago, that have intentionally sought to address both the human struggle and mankind's need for a Savior; to become churches of such size and strength that we can impact the city of Chicago and the cities of the world. And yet the culture of religion is polarizing in this country. As we've heard even unto cliche, 11 o'clock on Sunday is the most segregated hour in America. I believe that along with being intentional, incarnational, and personal, the ministries of the church should seek to be cross-cultural (not assimilationist) as well as supernatural. Perhaps this can happen. Perchance to dream.

Sincerely,

Michael


Read their columns in the Chicago Sun-times here via the following links:

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Living and Breathing Out Loud, and not Just Blowing Smoke


I am currently reading what I believe to be an awesome, "memoiresque" book written by Donald Miller called Blue Like Jazz. In the book, Miller shares his life experiences in his personal walk with Jesus Christ through writing that seems to be down to earth and genuine. As I am reading this book and identifying with many of his own experiences as a Christian, I am burdened with the question: how should my living out what I believe about Jesus really look like and am I passionately doing that? Here is an excerpt from the book that we should give thought to:

"A friend of mine, a young pastor who recently started a church, talks to me from time to time about the new face of church in America - about the postmodern church. He says the new church will be different from the old one, that we will be relevant to culture and the human struggle. I don't think any church has ever been relevant to culture, to the human struggle, unless it believed in Jesus and the power of His gospel. If the supposed new church believes in trendy music and cool Web pages, then it is not relevant to culture either. It is just another tool of Satan to get people to be passionate about nothing" (111).

If we are personally living out loud what we believe about Jesus, living out loud biblical Christianity, then shouldn't the outflow of this Chrisitianiy impact our "broken" communities through the work of our local churches? What should this really look like?

Saturday, February 2, 2008

Nehemiah 2: 17

You see the distress that we are in, how Jerusalem lies waste, and its gates are burned with fire. Come and let us build the wall of Jerusalem, that we may no longer be a reproach. These are the words of Nehemiah at the onset of rebuilding the walls of Jerusalem upon his return from exile. His heart's burden was for Jerusalem, for a city that was broken by persecution and captivity. I grew up in Detroit: a city whose heart I believe is "broken" and whose soul is persecuted by a statewide, even national rhetoric that typifies prejudice. It doesn't help matters when the city is caught up in scandal. Failing schools, economic crisis, unemployment, high crime: these are all the chronic symptoms of a city on the beyond the brink of a nervous breakdown. In the eyes of America, Detroit is a "reproach".

However, hope did not come in an economic stimulus package when Nehemiah returned to Jerusalem. As his contemporary would write in Ezra 8: 22-23, "[he] prepared his heart to seek the Law of the Lord, and to do it, and to teach statutes and ordinances in Israel." As we all know, programs are not going to save our hurting cities. As the Church of God in our cities, we must return to biblical Christianity, return to biblical discipleship as the impetus for real change. Social gospel ain't no Gospel. Emergent talk does not walk very far without biblical spiritual transformation and discipleship. Racial reconciliation efforts run into identity crises. Nehemiah did not return with his own agenda, his own plan, his own way. His way was found in the Lord.

3000 plus years of biblical truth still apply. God is still the same yesterday, today, and forever. God did not entrust us with biblical truth to then deconstruct it and remold it upon the framework of man's philosophy. When we overpoliticize Jesus, the Savior becomes a poster child for the type of revolution aiken to Che Guevara (notice the Jesus t-shirts). However, God heals our brokeness through nothing but the blood of Jesus Christ.

The same biblical truth that formed the backdrop of the Civil Rights movement, is the same biblical truth that felled the walls of Jericho. It is biblical truth that defeats giants. And as those entrusted with biblical truth it is our privilege and responsibility to take biblical truth at its word, to repair the walls, and to no longer be a reproach. As hearts respond to the voice of Jesus Christ, as hearts relinquish control to the Savior, as hearts humble themselves and pray and seek God's face and turn from their wicked ways, then will God bring about healing and forgiveness. Then we will witness a community of God loving God and loving neighbor.

Requiem for a Dream 2008

As we stand at a very pivotal point in American history, I thought it would be appropriate to reflect on the legacy and significance of the upcoming 45th anniversary of the March on Washington, particularly as it relates to the 2008 Democratic bid for the presidential nomination. The intent of this video is to highlight the historical importance of Barack Obama at this point in time, not to endorse him over the other candidates, Democrat, Republican, or Independent. Be careful not to vote because Barack Obama is black or because Hillary Clinton is a woman, or because Mike Huckabee is an evangelical. Listen to their politics and weigh them against the truth of God's Word, the only standard whose foundation is firm. Remember, it will not be programs or presidents, politics or passionate hope that will bring about real change in our country. However, real change comes first through faith, prayer, and a genuinely, Spirit-filled relationship with Jesus Christ as Lord, Savior, and Friend. He is our Hope. God bless.

Additionally, the video highlights the chronology of freedom, justice, and equality for black people in America with the emphasis that there is "still more work to do" for all people.