The Most Discussed Posts on IM in 2011

I have said it before and will keep on saying it because I’ve learned I can count on our faithful IM community:

YOU make Internet Monk the great conversation that it has become.

We had 17 posts that generated over 200 comments each this year. Of course, not every post gets that much discussion. Some are written primarily as meditations or studies. We hope those articles are read carefully and that they will be an encouragement to those who digest them. We also know that they don’t usually provoke a lot of controversy and debate.

But there are other posts — yes, those posts! — that prompt conversations in which we are able to have lively dialogue, debate, and agreeable disagreement; discussion which can help us discern how to think more clearly and develop a better understanding of some aspect of life and faith. That’s when it gets fun.

So, without further ado, here are the posts that generated 200 or more responses in 2011.

• • •

200 Comments. “Worship Music: A Further Discussion” (7/6, Chaplain Mike)

After running Michael Spencer’s classic series on “Worship, CCM, and the Worship Music Revolution,” we built upon his insights and brought the discussion up to date, looking at the CCLI Top 25 worship songs churches are singing and making some general observations about the state of music in evangelical churches today.

201 Comments. “Welcome to This World” (10/19, Craig Bubeck)

While I was on sabbatical, IM welcomed Craig Bubeck as a contributor. He made a big splash right away, posting a video that has been making the rounds on the internet characterizing the Christian worldview as a cruel message to those entering the human family. Craig gave his own thoughtful response and you joined in with enthusiasm.

204 Comments. “Works-Righteousness by Any Other Name Still Stinks” (1/3, Chaplain Mike)

We got off to a strong start last January. Four of our most discussed posts ran during that first month. This one was a rant against the assurance-destroying sermonizing of Mike Bickle at the International House of Prayer. He recounted a dream in which he stood ashamed before Christ, filled with regret for not being totally sold-out to him. Brother, if it depends on our commitment, we’re all sunk. “It is finished!” is good enough for me.

Continue reading “The Most Discussed Posts on IM in 2011”

Frederick Buechner: “Christmas Itself Is by Grace”

Some writers take my breath away.

Whenever I read Frederick Buechner, I can’t stop gasping for air.

Buechner is simply one of our best American authors. You can see his biography HERE, at the Buechner Institute’s website. Born in 1926, young Frederick experienced a tragic and profoundly formative event when his father committed suicide. After graduating from Princeton, he moved to New York to become a writer, but instead found himself called into the ministry. He served in George Buttrick’s church in NYC and then as school minister at Phillips Exeter Academy. He wrote during those years, but it wasn’t until 1967 that his family moved to Vermont where he took up the craft full time. Over the course of his career Buechner has published more than 30 works of fiction, nonfiction, memoir, and spiritual reflection.

When I read Buechner, I feel as though I have passed into a realm where everything superficial and secondary has been stripped away. All I see is the true nature of things. The foundations are laid bare. I see an ancient, tested way stretch forth before me. My stomach knots. This is honest. This is raw. This is real.

Take these beautiful words, for example,

“Listen to your life. See it for the fathomless mystery it is. In the boredom and pain of it, no less than in the excitement and gladness: touch, taste, smell your way to the holy and hidden heart of it, because in the last analysis all moments are key moments, and life itself is grace.” (Now and Then: A Memoir of Vocation)

Or this punchy reminder: “Doubts are the ants in the pants of faith. They keep it awake and moving.”

You will be hearing a lot more from Frederick Buechner in 2012 here on Internet Monk. It’s one of my New Year’s resolutions. For today, I’d like us to ponder and discuss what he has to say about Christmas.

The following passage is from Whistling in the Dark: A Doubter’s Dictionary.

A Flock of Sheep in a Barn, Jacque

CHRISTMAS

The lovely old carols played and replayed till their effect is like a dentist’s drill or a jack hammer, the bathetic banalities of the pulpit and the chilling commercialism of almost everything else, people spending money they can’t afford on presents you neither need nor want, “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer,” the plastic tree, the cornball crèche, the Hallmark Virgin. Yet for all our efforts, we’ve never quite managed to ruin it. That in itself is part of the miracle, a part you can see. Most of the miracle you can’t see, or don’t.

The young clergyman and his wife do all the things you do on Christmas Eve. They string the lights and hang the ornaments. They supervise the hanging of the stockings. They tuck in the children. They lug the presents down out of hiding and pile them under the tree. Just as they’re about to fall exhausted into bed, the husband remembers his neighbor’s sheep. The man asked him to feed them for him while he was away, and in the press of other matters that night he forgot all about them. So down the hill he goes through knee-deep snow. He gets two bales of hay from the barn and carries them out to the shed. There’s a forty-watt bulb hanging by its cord from the low roof, and he lights it. The sheep huddle in a corner watching as he snaps the baling twine, shakes the squares of hay apart and starts scattering it. Then they come bumbling and shoving to get at it with their foolish, mild faces, the puffs of their breath showing in the air. He is reaching to turn off the bulb and leave when suddenly he realizes where he is. The winter darkness. The glimmer of light. The smell of the hay and the sound of the animals eating. Where he is, of course, is the manger.

He only just saw it. He whose business it is above everything else to have an eye for such things is all but blind in that eye. He who on his best days believes that everything that is most precious anywhere comes from that manger might easily have gone home to bed never knowing that he had himself just been in the manger. The world is the manger. It is only by grace that he happens to see this other part of the miracle.

Christmas itself is by grace. It could never have survived our own blindness and depredations otherwise. It could never have happened otherwise. Perhaps it is the very wildness and strangeness of the grace that has led us to try to tame it. We have tried to make it habitable. We have roofed it in and furnished it. We have reduced it to an occasion we feel at home with, at best a touching and beautiful occasion, at worst a trite and cloying one. But if the Christmas event in itself is indeed—as a matter of cold, hard fact—all it’s cracked up to be, then even at best our efforts are misleading.

The Word become flesh. Ultimate Mystery born with a skull you could crush one-handed. Incarnation. It is not tame. It is not touching. It is not beautiful. It is uninhabitable terror. It is unthinkable darkness riven with unbearable light. Agonized laboring led to it, vast upheavals of intergalactic space, time split apart, a wrenching and tearing of the very sinews of reality itself. You can only cover your eyes and shudder before it, before this: “God of God, Light of Light, very God of very God…who for us and for our salvation,” as the Nicene Creed puts it, “came down from heaven.”

Came down. Only then do we dare uncover our eyes and see what we can see. It is the Resurrection and the Life she holds in her arms. It is the bitterness of death he takes at her breast.

David Lose on “The Absurdity of Christmas”

David Lose holds The Marbury E. Anderson Chair in Biblical Preaching at Luther Seminary, where he also serves as the Director of the Center for Biblical Preaching. David led the creative team that developed Working Preacher, one of my favorite resources on the Internet. There he writes a weekly column on the upcoming lectionary texts. He also appears regularly as a columnist at the Huffington Post.

• • •

I love the Christmas message David Lose wrote for his HP column this week, “The Absurdity of Christmas.” In it, he reflects on the growing public voice of atheism, reflected in various advertisements and billboards posted during the holiday season.

The gist of the advertisements is essentially that there is little to no proof that Christmas — either as we imagine it or as narrated in the New Testament — ever happened and that, further, belief in God in general, let alone God incarnate in a baby born in Bethlehem, is foolish at best and more likely downright absurd. And here’s the thing that strikes me: They may be right.

He then chronicles several reasons why people find it hard to believe the Christmas story. First, the four Gospels themselves don’t set forth a unified, consistent account of Jesus’ birth. But before and beyond that Enlightenment-style criticism of the text, earlier skeptics found the concept of Incarnation fantastic, even unseemly. As far back as the second century, gnostics like Marcion found Jesus’ full humanity a difficult concept to square with their idea of God. Apologists like Tertullian responded by saying things like, “You repudiate such veneration of nature, do you, but how were you born?” In other words, if God is put off by such things as the messy birth of a baby, what makes us think he cares about real people at all?

Today, David Lose notes, it isn’t so much the philosophical/theological argument about God’s nature and relation to his creation that is the issue. The whole idea of an infinite-personal God to those who live in a secularized, materialist world is preposterous. Furthermore, if God does exist, what evidence is there that he gives a damn about us, given the horrific things that happen every day?

It is precisely at this point that Lose agrees with the atheists. The evidence is not strong in our favor. He quotes from W.H. Auden’s “Shepherd’s Carol” — “Nothing can save us that is possible: We who must die demand a miracle.” And is this not the very point of God’s own outrageous, absurd act — to be born a baby in this world?

Nativity, Schongauer

Faced with cancer, or hunger, or loneliness, or disappointment, or depression, or any of the host of other things that on any given day threaten to overwhelm us, some have perceived, or at least dared to hope, that there is a reality beyond this one, that there is a God who created, cares for, and promises to redeem us and the whole creation. While some look upon this kind of desperate faith as part wishful thinking and part emotional crutch, others perceive, with Auden, that “nothing can save us that is possible” and so look with longing and hope to what Karl Barth once named “the impossible possibility.”

Which is why, I think, the billboards opposing Christmas don’t really offend me. For Christians like me, you see, atheism isn’t so much an offense as an understandable and occasionally tempting alternative in light of our circumstances. In an age when absolute certainty seems to be the goal, many Christians (and some atheists as well, I suspect) will likely dismiss this kind of tentative faith as weak or tepid. Yet a more temperate approach to questions of faith and doubt seems somehow to accord better with the story of a helpless babe born to a teenage mother and placed in a feeding trough. This is a story not of strength but weakness, not of certainty but of courage, not of power but of utter vulnerability.

So is the Christmas story unlikely, improbable, even absurd? Perhaps. But some of us think that the world needs such a story and is, indeed, a better place for its telling. And so we believe. We do not know for certain, but we believe…

There is something so winsome and utterly human in David Lose’s words. I don’t have to have all the answers. I don’t have to be afraid of doubting. I don’t need to fear when things don’t make complete sense, when I can’t explain everything. “I believe; help my unbelief” has always been the most honest prayer, I think.

We have common ground with our neighbors, even the most unbelieving of them. This world and what happens in it makes believing hard. A story about an infinite God being conceived in a young girl’s womb and “brought into the world together with its after birth” (Tertullian) doesn’t really make things any easier, now does it?

Missing Church

I confess: we missed going to church yesterday on Christmas.

Despite my strong opinions that churches should have services on Christmas whether it falls on Sunday or not, and that when it is on a Sunday churches should not cancel services, we didn’t make it yesterday.

We had the best intentions and planned to go — but it didn’t happen.

I suppose I could make excuses, or give what some would consider legitimate reasons. We were there for three hours on Saturday night, preparing for and participating in Christmas Eve services. And it wasn’t just singing Christmas carols and lighting candles. We heard the Word and met Christ at the Table. I suppose it would be legitimate to say we took part in our weekly worship, and that we should not have felt obligated to attend on Christmas morning.

We had ten people at our house celebrating Christmas, including three young grandchildren. Our family has always opened presents on Christmas morning and as we’ve grown the process has become more lengthy and involved. As it was, we weren’t done with our festivities until after noon. Plus, not everyone was eager to attend church — some are not in the habit of doing so regularly, and some go to other churches (and also had long Christmas Eve service commitments).

Our plan was not to make a big deal out of expecting others to go with us — it would just be Gail and I. If anyone else wanted to come, they were welcome but all were free to make their own decisions.

In the end it got too complicated to work out, so we stayed home with the family. If something must be blamed, it would be our planning and execution. We should have recognized the additional issues the rare Sunday Christmas schedule presented, prepared for them more fully, and communicated our plans to all concerned more clearly.

Don’t get me wrong. I think regular readers know I’m no legalist or religionist. I don’t think God is upset or angry with me for missing a Sunday morning worship service. If we practiced confession, I would not feel the need to bring this up to my pastor. I do wonder how many others showed up. I regret not joining the faithful few to show support for my brothers and sisters and our pastor on a morning that must have been a challenge for him.

In fact, that may be where some of my angst is coming from. Having been a pastor, and having had the duty of leading services at times when cultural practices made them inconvenient, I have a deep sympathy for pastors and want them to know that I am on their side. I support them. I value the work they do when it seems like everyone else is focused on other priorities. I have tried to speak for them here on Internet Monk again and again, and it’s a bit embarrassing to admit I didn’t live up to my words yesterday.

I still think the Church should worship on Christmas morning, Sunday morning or not. When Christmas is on Sunday, congregations definitely should not cancel services. God’s people should come together to celebrate Christ’s birth in the same way we celebrate the resurrection on Easter. These are still my strong opinions.

But our cultural habits are deep, our family patterns too. We didn’t do enough to modify them so that we could include going to church on Christmas in our observance yesterday.

I feel a little sad about that.

Merry Christmas!

Merry Christmas from all here at the iMonastery: First Lady Denise Spencer, Chaplain Mike, Damaris Zehner, Lisa Dye, Martha of Ireland, Joe Stallard, Adam Palmer, Joe Spann, Craig Bubeck, and your grateful publisher. We extend glad tidings to one and all. Thank you for making InternetMonk your home for great conversation, encouraging words, and the love of Love Himself.

If we could give each of you a gift today, it would be this: A heart hungry for Jesus in a greater way than ever before.

For behold, on this day a savior is born.

Amen.

Merry Christmas!

Christmas Day

Birth of Christ, Albertinelli

Nativity of Our Lord — Christmas Day
December 25, 2011

Isaiah 62:6-12
Psalm 97
Titus 3:4-7
Luke 2:1-20

Prayer of the Day
All-powerful and unseen God, the coming of your light into our world has brightened weary hearts with peace. Call us out of darkness, and empower us to proclaim the birth of your Son, Jesus Christ, our Savior and Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.

• • •

A baby is a harmless thing
And wins our hearts with one accord,
And Flower of Babies was their King,
Jesus Christ our Lord:
Lily of lilies He
Upon His Mother’s knee;
Rose of roses, soon to be
Crowned with thorns on leafless tree.

A lamb is innocent and mild
And merry on the soft green sod;
And Jesus Christ, the Undefiled,
Is the Lamb of God:
Only spotless He
Upon his Mother’s knee;
White and ruddy, soon to be
Sacrificed for you and me.

Nay, lamb is not so sweet a word,
Nor lily half so pure a name;
Another name our hearts hath stirred,
Kindling them to flame:
‘Jesus’ certainly
Is music and melody!
Heart with heart in harmony
Carol we and worship we!

Christina Rosetti, before 1886

Nativity

Adoration of Shepherds, Bronzino

Nativity of Our Lord — Christmas Eve
December 24, 2011

Isaiah 9:2-7
Psalm 96 (11)
Titus 2:11-14
Luke 2:1-14 [15-20]

Prayer of the Day
Almighty God, you made this holy night shine with the brightness of the true Light. Grant that here on earth we may walk in the light of Jesus’ presence and in the last day wake to the brightness of his glory; through your Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.

• • •

See amid the winter’s snow,
born for us on earth below,
see, the gentle Lamb appears,
promised from eternal years.

Lo, within a manger lies
he who built the starry skies;
he who, throned in height sublime,
sits amid the cherubim.

Sacred Infant, all divine,
what a tender love was thine,
thus to come from highest bliss
down to such a world as this!

Hail thou ever blessèd morn,
hail redemption’s happy dawn,
sing through all Jerusalem:
Christ is born in Bethlehem!

Edward Caswall, 1851

Saturday Ramblings 12.24.11

Merry Christmas Eve, iMonks! Lisa has put out the milk and cookies for Santa, Martha and Damaris have hung the stockings by the chimney with care, and the Synonymous Rambler is playing carols on the harpsichord. Meanwhile, Chaplain Mike and Adam are trying to remember all of the reindeers’ names, and Joe Stallard is still trying to untangle those Christmas lights. I, meanwhile, have been sweeping up the scraps we didn’t get to this week. The pile of scraps is what we call Saturday Ramblings.

Done with all of your shopping? If you didn’t pick up any frankincense, it may be too late. As in forever too late. Seems that the trees that produce the resin that is made into the fragrance are dying off. It’s not too late to run out to Yankee Candle for a frankincense-scented candle in a jar …

Perhaps you have all the smelly stuff you need, and what you really want is a good book or two to read. Good news! James Dobson—he of Focus on the Family—is getting set to write some novels. Novels about good families and bad families. By the way, when a celebrity signs a deal to “write” a novel, what that really means is he will come up with an idea he wants conveyed in the form of fiction, and then a hired hand—in this case, Kurt Bruner—will actually come up with the plot and characters and adjectives and all that. Oh, and nothing makes for duller reading than someone trying to convey an idea through fiction. See Dan Brown as exhibit A.

Continue reading “Saturday Ramblings 12.24.11”

The Magnificat vs. Today’s Gospel (3)

Madonna of the Magnificat, Botticelli

Today we conclude our posts on Mary’s Magnificat.

In the first post, we contrasted Mary’s song with the “soterian” gospel that focuses primarily (if not solely) on personal salvation. In contrast, we affirmed that in the Magnificat, “Mary proclaims the Gospel. As we will see, it is no mere ‘personal plan of salvation,’ no ‘steps’ by which we find peace with God, no ‘bridge’ to reconciliation with God, no set of ‘laws’ or principles by which we must make a decision. Mary’s song proclaims the climactic moment in a Story, the resolution of issues larger than my personal sin, a hope that stretches beyond the bliss of heaven.”

In our second post, we looked at how Mary’s Magnificat announces the climactic movement of the entire Biblical Story and the answer to the laments and cries of God’s people. This is no mere personal testimony, but a song raised up by an Israelite who recognizes her people are in spiritual exile, under the dominion of their enemies. Like Hannah, whose son Samuel introduced King David, Mary sings a “glad song of gratitude that she has been given a key role in God’s story, and proclaims that this story is reaching its climax in her own day. God’s promises are coming to pass. His King will be enthroned. God’s enemies will fall. His people will be gathered. God will put things right. All is being made new.”

Today, we’ll look at the text of the Magnificat itself. I will make four statements that summarize my observations of what this song teaches and how it relates to the Gospel. Then I will draw out several implications for today. What implications does Mary’s song have for the way we understand and communicate the Gospel in our generation?

Continue reading “The Magnificat vs. Today’s Gospel (3)”

Candy Canes

I often hear the phrase “the reason for the season” at this time of year. In case you are wondering what the reason for this season is, I can tell you in one five-letter word.

Sugar.

Pure, one hundred percent cane sugar, and lots of it. To quote that great keeper of Christmas, Buddy the Elf, when asked if he liked syrup, “Is there sugar in syrup? Then yes!”

You can’t have Christmas fudge and Christmas cookies and Christmas cake without Christmas sugar. And I’m not talking the manmade kind, the high fructose chemical concoction. Or the fake sugar that has become so popular because it has fewer calories. When it comes to sugar, I’ll trust God over scientists, thank you.

(Adam Palmer and his family spent a year in Uganda. He once wrote to me, “You’ve got to come over here. They have Coke made with real cane sugar!” Alas, I never quite made it to Uganda to tip a Coke or three with Adam.)

The essence of sugar at this time of year has to be the candy cane. The striped candy cane with plastic protecting it until you are ready to let it melt in your mouth.  No caramel filling, no chocolate coating. Just pure sugar. Hung on the tree just waiting to ruin someone’s meal.

Continue reading “Candy Canes”