The Value of Community

UPDATE: Dan’s series is complete, the full list of links is here.
Dan at Cerulean Sanctum has a great series going on the value of Christian Community. I think his point is spot on, that community is a very low priority in many, if not most, churches.
He stated in the opening post he said:

The older I get, the more I see that nearly every problem in the American Church today can be traced to our damaged understanding of what it means to be self-less. Everything in our culture screams “Me, Myself, and I.” Our government documents assert the “rights of the individual” and we’ve taken that to the extreme, justifying the rights of the individual over community.

For me, his series is especially timely as my church clan is splintering over points of doctrine and practice and even over personality. We would rather be right than whole.

  • Kip continues to build his own kingdom (even makling it official), planing new churches along side those he once considered his own. Why? Because they aren’t doing church as he would do it. He’s toned down his rhetoric on the state of those churches he’s abandoning, yet he’s calling those who want to do it his way or who value the things he values to his new churches. And those churches are divided.
  • In response to Kip’s coming to Los Angeles to start a new church (along side the one he founded and once lead), the elders of the LA ICOC church have marked him and those in his new church, warning their members to stay away. They ironically “encourage everyone to work for the same unity for which Jesus prayed within hours of going to the cross” and then call their members respond to the new groups act of separation by separating themselves.
  • The folly is not limited to the ICOC, recently at Freed-Hardeman University, an historic meeting took place between the conservative, non-instrumental FU president and the president of Cincinnati Christian University of the instrumental Independent Christian Churches. The purpose of the meeting was to discuss the issues that have divided these two groups for over 100 years. Reading the report of the meeting, what is revealed is two groups entrenched in their positions, neither willing to budge for the sake of fellowship:

    Gilmore begged Faust to “lay aside the instrument” for the sake of unity.
    But Faust said that would require Christian Church members to give up convictions and freedom in Christ.

    Now, the meeting itself was historic, yet I can’t help being saddened by two groups who won’t lay down their pet practices for the sake of becomeing a community.

Of course, we in the ICOC sprang from the ‘mainline’ COC over issues similar to this. They called us radical and we dismissed them as lukewarm. We didn’t like how ‘they’ did church, and they didn’t like how ‘we’ did it. So we went our separate ways, and the church was divided. Over the past 100+ years, the restoration movement has splintered and fractured into countless subgroups over dozens of trivialities. Musical instruments in worship, kitchens in the church building, the number of cups for communion, Sunday school classes and on and on. We have valued being right over being together.
Division is certainly not a restoration movement only thing, although we’ve gotten pretty good at it. Last week’s The Week Magazine contained an article about the Amish community.. This group, known for it’s close knit community and separation from broader society, is evidently subdivided itself.

Since the 19th century, Amish fellowships have divided over the interpretation of Romans 12:2—”Be ye not conformed to this world.” In recent years, that has brought splits over the use of mechanized farm equipment and large cooling tanks for milk. At the liberal extreme, the “black bumper” Beachy Amish drive chromeless cars and are rejected as non-Amish by the others. At the conservative end, fellowships disagree violently over the number of pleats there should be in a bonnet, the width of a hat brim, or whether rubber tires should be allowed on buggies. Groups with similar policies are held to be “in fellowship,” and they can visit and even marry among one another. But minor disagreements over, say, phones, can create more splinter fellowships.

Sound familiar? And how many flavors of Baptist are there? Methodists? Presbyterians? And on and on. We’ve been slicing up God’s church for hundreds of years.
The apostle Paul repeatedly calls the Church Christ’s body and in 1 Corinthians 12 he goes into detail on what that means. We are all different for a reason, “so that there should be no division in the body, but that its parts should have equal concern for each other.” (1 Corinthians 12:25) But, like some crazed mass murderer with a freezer full of severed hands in one corner, another freezer of feet in the opposite corner, and bins of arms, ears, noses, torsos etc in other places, we have cut the body of Christ into pieces, putting like items in their own boxes. Hands never meet feet, eyes don’t see ears. And separated from each other, not only can they not learn from one another, but alone they cannot even do what they were created for. What good is a severed hand?
All of these things make me sad, angry, convicted and determined. I want to do more to champion the cause of unifying God’s people and to promote real community in my own church and with churches around us. More so, I refuse to be part of any effort to prevent members of one group of God’s church from even meeting with members of another. One thing we in the ICOC did pretty well at one time was become a real community. We felt different than the rest of the world, we were called out, separate, holy. Of course, it was a forced community, built on too much pride, accountability and coercion, but nonetheless, that’s what we were. Now, it seems, much of that distinctive camaraderie is dissipating, and continues to do so, at least from where I sit. And we continue to try to recreate it by division and fence building. Will we not learn from our past?
Go read Dan’s series (and the articles in between, which have touched on it as well), it’s real good. And then go about finding ways of building community in your churches and with the churches around you.

German Hybrid, Part 2


So, I know many readers looked at that Benz El and thought, “Sure, I appreciate the unprecedented combination of big sporty German sedan and pickup utility, but what I really need is a crew cab. I’m a family man, you know.
And, frankly, the loads of mulch to do my yard really requires dual rear wheels. Yep, I need double the doors and double the rear tires.
Oh, and if it had a matching land speed racer, that would be sweet.”
Your wish is my command. I present a BMW 3 series, 4 door truck. Why? I dunno.
HT: Jalopnik

Unity Proposal Stuff

Back in September the UP folk announced their work was done and it’s on to the next step for the UP. (Yeah, I’m late on this, it’s been in draft on my blog for around a month. Sorry.) If you care about that, go read Alan’s or Pinakidion’s posts, they state my reaction better that I could have. Of course, if you read this blog and care about the UP, you probably read their blogs too and already saw their comments back in September. Did I mention I was a little late?
Since then, the first delegate meetings have happened, a new gang of nine has been chosen and yada yada yada. For now I’m content for them to do ther thing as long as we can do ours here in Columbus without distraction. So far, so good.
Anyway, none of that is not the real reason for this post, I just wanted to throw it out there so the following wasn’t completely self serving. 🙂 Just for giggles, go to Google and search for “Unity Proposal”. The actual UP is link #1, but this little ol’ blog is #2. Why? Well, other than my need to write about it at every oppportunity (like this one), who knows. Certainly others have written as much and better stuff, but for some reason, one of my posts has made it to the #2 spot on Google.
So, for all you ariving here from The Google looking for Unity Proposal stuff, I give you linkage to all my UP blatherings. Try to contain yourself.

Spam

You may have noticed, some rather, uh, specific, spam comments have been getting through the last few days. I’ve been using the Weblog Defense Grid, a combination of anti-spam plugins combined with a comprehensive set of filters for MT’s Spamlookup that has been quite effective until now.
However, some rather determined spammers have found a way around those filters and plugins, so a little tweaking was required. Hopefully that will keep them at bay for a while.
Sorry to anyone who was exposed to some of the more, uh, specific spam. Yuck.

More Geeky Goodess

Keeping with my earlier theme, I thought I’d share some other geek fun I had this weekend.
I found, via the Total Choice Forums, a nifty little script called dbsender. What it does is create a dump of any MySQL database, gzip’s it and emails it to you. By setting it up as a cron job, I can now automate backups of the database that runs this blog. Now, each night at 3:00 AM, I get a backup of my site via email. Cool!
What’s even cooler is that a year ago there’s now way I could have understood that last paragraph, let alone write it!
Secondly, my Palm Treo 600 phone had developed this rather nasty buzz that had rendered it nearly unusable. I really want to replace it with a nice, new Treo 700p, but alas I have 6 months left on my Cingular contract. There was no way I was going to get through 6 months of talking through a swarm of honey bees, so I Googled “treo buzz fix“.
Link #1 on that list pointed to a simple solution that involved a T6 Torx screwdriver and a small piece of aluminum foil. It goes like this:

  1. Sync your treo to back up you data.
  2. Open the Treo case (that’s where the T6 driver comes in).
  3. Unplug the battery wire and wrap it in foil (seriously).
  4. Close the case.
  5. Re-sync to restore your data.

Sounded to good to be true, but there were a bunch of comments testifying to it’s accuracy, so I dove in. I now have a buzz free Treo.
A little aluminum foil, who knew?
More substantial posts to come this week.

Google, RSS & Tags, Oh My!

It’s a weekend of tech goodness & tech questions.
Google
First, I discovered that my favorite browser, Maxthon, now works with the latest version of the Google toolbar. The only thing I missed from IE and the one thing that temped me to use FF, now available in Maxthon. Sweet.
For you guys, the big thing is that the Google Toolbar has a built in spell checker, so that should mean less typos. We’ll see.
RSS
Second, I’ve discovered RSS. Since I began blogging 2.5 years ago, I thought that RSS was something that that I ought to figure out. I’ve tried a couple of times, but it never clicked with me. Now, I’ve got more blogs that I want to track than I can keep up with, so I’ve revisited RSS.
I’ve decided that I wanted to go with an online readers and I think I’ve settled on Bloglines, but I’d love to know what others are using. I like the Google Reader too, especially the cleaner interface. What are you using?
I’m still finding my way around using RSS, but I like being able to see what’s new quickly in one window. What I don’t like is seeing all the blogs in the same, simple mostly text interface. I miss seeing the layout and look of the blogs I visit. That was one of the main reasons I didn’t start using RSS earlier, I like the experience & look of each blog. The convenience of easy access to the latest posts is worth the compromise now, and the actual site is only a click away.
The other question I have is about the feeds on my site. MT generates 3 feeds out of the box, Atom, RSS 1.0 and RSS 2.0. Do I need to keep all 3? The RSS 1.0 feed seems the best to eliminate as it doesn’t show the entire posts. What do you think?
Tagging
The last thing is tagging. Huh? Can someone ‘splain this to me? I just don’t get it at all. The new version of MT I just upgraded to has tag support built in and I’m not sure what, if anything, to do with it. So what is tagging and why should I care?

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