Showcase: Assorted Treats

  • Where do I Find Myself? +

    All I Can Do Is Be Me -Whoever That IsBob Dylan Who are we? Do we follow the motivations of Read More
  • Forgiveness: Desmond Tutu +

    Nobel Peace Prize Winner Desmond Tutu explains how love and forgiveness kept post-apartheid South Africa from tumbling into anarchy. Read More
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Publications

The American Dream

branches2I was reminded of this speech when reading Tim Keller's book, Generous Justice. This speech is one that every Christian should read and meditate on.

"The American Dream" A speech given by The Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. February 5, 1964 Drew University Madison, New Jersey

President Oxnam, members of the faculty, and members of the student body of this great institution of learning, ladies and gentlemen. I need not pause to say how very delighted and honored I am to be with you tonight and to be a part of your lecture series. It is always a very rich and rewarding experience when I can take a brief break from the day-to-day demands of our struggle in the South and discuss the issues involved in that struggle with college and university students.

Read more: The American Dream

Christian Charity by Jonathan Edwards

branches2Christian Charity, or, The Duty of Charity to the Poor, Explained and Enforced, by Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758)

Dated January 1732

"If there be among you a poor man of one of thy brethren within any of thy gates in thy land which the Lord thy God giveth thee, thou shalt not harden thine heart, nor shut thine hand from thy poor brother: but thou shalt open thine hand wide unto him, and shalt surely lend him sufficient for his need, in that which he wanteth.

Read more: Christian Charity by Jonathan Edwards

Christians and Culture: Tim Keller

japanese__maple1A society's 'culture' is a set of shared practices, attitudes, values, and beliefs which are
rooted in common understandings of 'the big questions'--where life comes from, what life
means, who we are, and what is important to spend our time doing in the years allotted to
us. No one can live without some assumed answers to these questions, and every set of
answers shapes culture:

  • the way we treat the material world,
  • the way we relate the individual to the group and family,
  • the way groups and classes relate to one another,
  • the way we handle sex, money, and power,
  • the way we make decisions and set priorities, and the way we regard death,
time, art, government, and physical space.
Today an astonishing array of movements, political action groups, social activist networks,
foundations, think tanks, experts, writers, artists, as well as religious leaders are all
intentionally working for cultural change--and working in extremely different and often
contradictory directions. Christians, of course, would love to see their society reflect more
and more of the Father's justice, of the Son's sacrificial love, and of the Spirit's life-giving
power. How exactly should Christians 'relate Christ to culture' so this happens?
Historically, Christians have adopted three classic approaches that are still in use today. We
could call "the conversionist", "the political", and "the separatist" ways.
  • The conversionist - On the one hand, many believe that the way to change a
culture is to change enough individual hearts through personal conversion. Then, supposedly, the culture would change automatically.
  • The political - At the other end of the spectrum there have been believers over
the centuries who wanted to use political power to enact laws that were directly based on Christian theology.
  • The separatist - A third approach rejects any idea of Christians trying to

influence culture. It insists that we should reflect Christian values within our own churches, but we should not try to influence society in any particularly Christian direction.


In such a brief paper, we can not hope to do justice to these three approaches. Each of
them provides such telling critiques of its rival views that we must conclude there is no
utopian way to create a Christian society. You could certainly make a case that there has
never been a Christian society (even though many have claimed to be) and there never will
be.

And yet, Christians cannot simply rest satisfied with individual conversions or separated
enclaves when they discern the central plot-line of the Bible:


A) God created a world of peace and life;


B) The world has fallen into a state of injustice and brokenness;


C) God has determined to redeem this world through the work of his Son and the
creation of a new humanity; until


D) eventually the world is renewed and restored to being the way that he made it and
the way we all want.


In short, the purpose of redemption is not to help individuals escape the world. It is about the coming of God's kingdom to renew it. God's purpose is not only to save individuals, but
also to make a new world based on justice, peace, and love, rather than on power, strife,
and selfishness. If God is so committed to this that he suffered and died, surely Christians
should also seek a society based on God's peace and love.


How should we go about it? At Redeemer we have learned something from all the approaches mentioned above, and yet we have struck a somewhat different path. We wouldn't dream of claiming that we have the answer, but our way of seeking to relate Christians and culture is, we believe, extremely promising (though its results to date are only embryonic).

The following is a sketch:


1. Christians should live long-term in the city. The city is an intense crucible of cultureformation.
Cultural trends tend to be generated in the city and flow outward into the rest of society. Therefore, people who live in the large urban cultural centers (working in their institutions, taking jobs in the arts, business, academia, the helping professions, and the media) tend to have greater impact on how things are done in a
culture. If a far greater percentage of the people living in cities long-term were Christians, Christ's values would have a greater influence on the culture.


2. Christians should be a dynamic counter-culture in the city. It will not be enough for Christians to simply live as individuals in the city. They must live as a particular kind of community.
The Bible tells us that the history of the world is a 'tale of two cities.' The 'city of man' is built on the principle of individual self-aggrandizement (Gen 11:1-4- "Let us make a name for ourselves"). What God wants is different. "In the city of our God, his holy mountain is beautiful in  elevation--the joy of the whole earth" (Psalm 48:2). In other words, the urban society God wants is based on service rather than selfishness, and on bringing joy to the whole world, not just to the individuals within it.

Jesus probably had Psalm 48:2 in mind when he told his disciples that they were 'a city on a hill' whose life and action showed God's glory to the world (Matt 5:14- 17). That is us! We Christians are called to be an alternate city within every earthly city, an alternate human culture within every human culture, to show how sex, money, and power can be used in non-destructive ways; to show how classes and races who cannot get along outside of Christ can get along in him; and to show how
it is possible to produce art that brings hope rather than despair or titillation.

3. Christians should be a community radically committed to the good of the city as a whole. It is insufficient for Christians to form a culture that only 'counters' the values of the city. We must then turn, with all the resources of our faith and life, to sacrificially serve the good of the whole city, and especially the poor.

Christians work for the peace, security, justice, and prosperity of their neighbors, loving them in word and deed, whether they believe what we do or not. In Jeremiah 29:7, the Jews were called not just to live in the city but to love it and work for it's 'shalom'--its economic, social, and spiritual flourishing. Christians are, indeed, citizens of God's heavenly city. But the citizens of God's city are always the best possible citizens of their earthly city. They walk in the steps of the One who laid down his life for his opponents.


In the end, Christians will not be attractive within our culture through power plays and coercion, but through sacrificial service to people regardless of their beliefs. We do not live here simply to increase the prosperity of our own tribe and group, but for the good of all the peoples of the city.


4. Christians should be a people who integrate their faith with their work. There is a fourth, crucial component to our plan for relating Christians to culture. As we said above, all work proceeds from beliefs about the 'big questions' regarding what life means, what human beings are, and what are the most important things in life. We call the answers to these big questions a 'worldview.' Most fields of work today are
dominated by very different worldviews than that of Christianity.


However, when most Christians enter a vocational field today, they either a) seal off their faith from their work and simply work like everyone else around them, or b) simply spout Bible verses at people to get their faith across. We simply do not know how to think out the implications of the Christian view of reality for the shape of everything we do in our professions. We do not know how to persuade people by showing them the faith-based, world-view roots of everyone's work.

We do not know how to attract people to Christianity by persuasively showing the resources of Christ for resolving baseline cultural problems and for fulfilling baseline cultural hopes. The Christian church has only done embryonic thinking in this area. When it comes to culture, most Christians know nothing but a privatized faith or a militant, belligerent faith. Redeemer wants to be part of the coming renaissance of Christian cultural engagement in New York City.


James Boice lays out a very similar cultural renewal strategy, based on city-living,
distinct Christian community, humble service to the common good, and faith-work integration, in his book Two Cities, Two Loves (IVP, 1996,) pp. 166ff. A good place to start thinking about faith-work integration is the book by Mark Noll, The Scandal of the
Evangelical Mind (Eerdmans, 1994.)

http://www.monergism.com/thethreshold/articles/bio/timkeller.html

 

Redeemer Vision Paper #6

Work and Cultural Renewal: Tim Keller

shadowbench1The following is an article by Tim Keller, pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian, from January 2010


I am often asked: "Should  Christians be involved in shaping culture?" My answer is that we can't not be involved in shaping culture. To illustrate this, I offer a very sad example. In the years leading up to the Civil War many southerners resented the interference of the abolitionists, who were calling on Christians to stamp out the sin of slavery. In response, some churches began to assert that it was not the church's (nor Christians') job to try to 'change culture' but only to preach the gospel and see souls saved.

The tragic irony was that these churches were shaping culture. Their very insistence that Christians should not be changing culture meant that those churches were supporting the social status quo. They were defacto endorsing the cultural arrangements of the Old South. (For more on this chapter in American history, see Mark Noll, The Civil War as a Theological Crisis.)

This is an extreme example, but it makes the point that when Christians work in the world, they will either assimilate into their culture and support the status quo or they will be agents of change. This is especially true in the area of work. Every culture works on the basis of a 'map' of what is considered most important. If God and his grace are not at the center of a culture, then other things will be substituted as ultimate values. So every vocational field is distorted by idolatry.   Christian medical professionals will soon see that some practices make money for them but don't add value to patients' lives.

Christians in marketing and business will discern accepted patterns of communication that distort reality or which play to and stir up the worst aspects of the human heart. Christians in business will often see among their colleagues' behavior that which seeks short-term financial profit at the expense the company's long-term health, or practices that put financial profit ahead the good of employees, customers, or others in the community. Christians in the arts live and work in a culture in which self-expression is an end in itself. And in most vocational fields, believers face work-worlds in which ruthless, competitive behavior is the norm.

There are two opposite mistakes that a Christian can make in addressing the idols of their vocational field. On the one hand they can seal off their faith from their work, laboring according to the same values and practices that everyone else uses. Or they may loudly and clumsily declare their Christian faith to their co-workers, often without showing any grace and wisdom in the way they relate to people on the job.

At Redeemer, especially through the Center for Faith and Work, we seek to help believers think out the implications of the gospel for art, business, government, media, entertainment, scholarship. We teach that excellence in work is a crucial means to gain credibility for our faith. If our work is shoddy, our verbal witness only leads listeners to despise our beliefs. If Christians live in major cultural centers and simply do their work in an excellent but distinctive manner it will ultimately produce a different kind of culture than the one in which we live now.

But I like the term 'cultural renewal' better than 'culture shaping' or 'culture changing/transforming.' The most powerful way to show people the truth of Christianity is to serve the common good. The monks in the Middle Ages moved out through pagan Europe, inventing and establishing academies, universities, and hospitals. They transformed local economies and cared for the weak through these new institutions. They didn't set out to 'get control' of a pagan culture. They let the gospel change how they did their work and that meant they worked for others rather than for themselves. Christians today should be aiming for the same thing.

As Roman society was collapsing, St Augustine wrote The City of God to remind believers that in the world there are always two 'cities', two alternate 'kingdoms.' One is a human society based on selfishness and gaining power. God's kingdom is the human society based on giving up power in order to serve. Christians live in both kingdoms, and although that is the reason for much conflict and tension, it also is our hope and assurance. The kingdom of God is the permanent reality, while the kingdom of this world will eventually fade away.

The Smart Shepherd: Tim Keller article

biggreentree1Below is an article from Newsweek on  Tim Keller, pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in NYC.

The Smart Shepherd

A New York pastor who says he thinks too much wants to bring his Christian message to the world.

Place: New York City. Time: 9 o'clock on a Sunday morning. It's fair to say that many, if not most, of the inhabitants of Manhattan -mostly single, professional, well educated and young-are sleeping it off somewhere. Half of America has roused itself by now and is heading off to church, but in the city that never sleeps, the Sabbath is a time for slumber.

Read more: The Smart Shepherd: Tim Keller article

Reflections to Consider

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Publications

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Music

  • River of Love

    There's a river of love that runs through all timeBut there's a river of grief that floods through our livesIt Read More
  • I Am Nothing

    I stutter when I tryTo speak the language of lifeI want to shout out loudBut I just cry insideSometimes it Read More
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Audio & Video

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Favorites

  • Transforming this World: The Hope of Glory by NT Wright +

    Wright confronts the perspective that this world doesn’t matter, and that we live only to be in heaven. He shows Read More
  • What is Good in a World that Defies Hope: a talk by NT Wright +

    This is the second part of three talks by NT Wright at Harvard University in November, 2008 on the topic Read More
  • The Stream, the Lake and the River: NT Wright +

      Acts 2.1-21; John 7.37-39; a sermon at the Eucharist on the Feast of Pentecost, 11 May 2008, by the Read More
  • Jesus in the Perfect Storm by NT Wright +

    Zechariah 9.9-17; Luke 19.28-48; A sermon for Palm Sunday, April 17, 2011, In the University Chapel of St Salvator, St Read More
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Hidden Blessings

  • Christ is a Great Savior: a review of the movie Amazing Grace +

    Amazing Grace is a historical drama about William Wilberforce who was elected to British Parliament at the age of 21 Read More
  • Wilberforce, Hollywood's Amazing Grace, Charlotte Allen +

    William Wilberforce's relentless campaign eventually led the British Parliament to ban the slave trade, in 1807, and to pass a Read More
  • Making Beauty out of Ugly Things: Grace by U2 +

    Grace, she takes the blame She covers the shame Removes the stain It could be her name Grace, she carries Read More
  • The True Nature of Grace and Love: a movie review of the Soloist +

    The 2009 movie The Soloist is based on a book by the same name, written by Los Angeles Times columnist Read More
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