Christmas For Beginners: Michael’s sermon for the first Sunday in Advent (Text: John 1:1-18)

I am a preacher, and I enjoy it. I enjoy Advent and Christmas preaching most of all. Here’s the first sermon in an Advent series called “Christmas for Beginners.” If you use it, give me credit and Santa will take note.

Christmas doesn’t begin in Bethlehem. All you have to do is pick up the Bible and see how far into the story the birth of Jesus occurs to know that the beginning is elsewhere. But where? Where does it begin?
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Take it easy on that spiritual warfare stuff

luther.jpgSpiritual warfare is a topic that occasionally raises its controversial head at my on-line tavern, but I’ll admit to ducking like a coward when it comes to saying what I think. Since BHT fellow J.S. Bangs tossed this rock at the window, I’ll stick my head outside and yell for a few moments. Then I’ll wait and see what happens.

A few preliminary comments. I think I know my way around this subject. I’ve read the requisite books, and even spent more than a few dollars on Neil Anderson tapes. The evangelicals I grew up with and work for are quite enthusiastic about the devil. The ministry where I work regularly cites the devil as the reason for student behavior problems, adversity, mischief, annoyance and serious illness. I’ve spent more than twelve years here being known for having little agreement with this emphasis, and more than once I have ignited the ire of good people who found me to be a liberal blasphemer. I may be. I’ll let you make up your own mind.
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A guide to my issues with Rick Warren

Saw Rick Warren on Larry King tonight. (Gee, Larry. Time to hang it up. Your comments sound demented.) Rick was everything I know and shake my head over. Mediocre. Full of cliches. Muddled about the Gospel, but mostly sorta kinda right. I found myself thinking I was watching the natural progression from Wesley to Finney to Graham to Bright and now to Warren. You can’t be a reformation Christian and feel good about this.

OTOH people constantly send me critiques of Warren that are loopy. KJV only fundamentalists ranting about Warren using paraphrases and such. That’s not me. Just what are my issues? Here’s a brief interview.

You just don’t like him, do you?

I think if he worked here at OBI, I’d like him. I think if he were my pastor, I’d probably be in his corner on most things, but in his office on a lot of others. If he were my neighbor I’m sure we’d be on friendly terms. But we would have some matters to debate.
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Better to be an honest unbeliever than pretending it’s easy to believe: Spencer’s Ten Point Argument for Faith Revisited

atheist.gifA few days ago, I received an 81 page manuscript from a person who reads my work, describing his recent conversion to atheism and how my writing played a role in his “de-conversion” from Christianity. This is the second time an atheist has told me I’ve played some part in his desertion of Christianity. I have another e-mail in the box right now telling me that the writer is flirting with abandoning the faith and believing nothing.
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Sin to spite the devil

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“Whenever the devil harasses you, seek the company of men or drink more, or joke and talk nonsense, or do some other merry thing. Sometimes we must drink more, sport, recreate ourselves, and even sin a little to spite the devil, so that we leave him no place for troubling our consciences with trifles. We are conquered if we try too conscientiously not to sin at all. So when the devil says to you: do not drink, answer him: I will drink, and right freely, just because you tell me not to.” -Martin Luther

Martin Luther is certainly my favorite person in church history. Time and again his grasp of the Gospel and unabashed honest humanity have come to my rescue. Luther has an ability to make the Gospel as outrageous as possible, and to chase the rats of legalism out of the attic before they make a nest.

The above quote is a good example. Luther recommending sin? Well…he doesn’t mean adultery or stealing. What Luther is talking about here is something C.S. Lewis talks about in Chapter 14 of The Screwtape Letters: the particular temptations that come to the person who is aware of his/her own righteousness. Even if it is an awareness of love, forgiveness or humility– all bring the possibility of self-centeredness and pride. But Lewis (and Luther) were especially aware of the spiritual dangers of trying to not sin. Yes…trying to not sin.

Since encouraging people to try and not sin is a major occupation of confused evangelicalism, Luther sounds strange. But it’s clear what he means: we can’t get caught in the trap of trying to generate our own righteousness, even in the name of obedience. Luther’s encouragement to sin just to spite the devil is his provocative way of suggesting a Christian TRUST CHRIST and have confidence in justification by faith. So much so, that instead of living in a state of perpetual self-examination, we live with the freedom to be less than perfect.

Isn’t sinning intentionally a really bad thing? A Christian’s attitude toward sin must be based on a thorough acceptance of the fact that our depravity isn’t going to be erased by efforts. Even our righteousness and obedience are thoroughly tainted with sin. Luther says we need to take the sting out of the devil’s condemnation with a willingness to be human, and rejoice that God loves us and Christ died for us.

Let Luther bother you a bit. Particularly if you are starting to get miserable in this Christian life, and wonder where the laughter and honesty are among Christians. We can find it again, but it comes with embracing justification by faith existentially, and not just as a doctrine. In other words, have a drink on Dr. Martin.

Derek Webb and Band: The Dame, Lexington, Ky, 11/14/04

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Derek Webb and his new band brought the “I See Things Upside Down” tour to a small bar/club in Lexington, Kentucky on Sunday night, and I was fortunate to be there for a wonderful show.

Webb is a former singer/songwriter in Caedmon’s Call, leaving last year to make his own harder-edged, more theologically “out front” music. His debut album, She Must and Shall Go Free, may be the freshest, most confrontative Christian music since Keith Green. Webb followed that record with a house tour…..that is, a real tour of living rooms across America. The results are available in The House Show, which gives a great glimpse into Derek Webb the performer and prophet.
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Ted Rall: Answering questions no one is asking

I’m just curious. When I read a piece like Ted Rall’s anti-red state, anti-middle of the country, anti-populist, pro-elitist, pro-east coast liberal manifesto, did I , uh….miss something?

Listen to this:

So our guy lost the election. Why shouldn’t those of us on the coasts feel superior? We eat better, travel more, dress better, watch cooler movies, earn better salaries, meet more interesting people, listen to better music and know more about what’s going on in the world. If you voted for Bush, we accept that we have to share the country with you. We’re adjusting to the possibility that there may be more of you than there are of us. But don’t demand our respect. You lost it on November 2.

Did someone out here start a campaign on the superiority of Arkansas to San Francisco, and I missed it?

Who stirred Ted up? What is he responding to? The challenge of red state superiority in cusine? Laundries? Coffee shops? Operas? News networks? Is someone claiming that the ballet in rural Kentucky is the best?

Is someone out here in the heartland saying we’re smarter? Better looking? Better educated? More accepting of various sexual lifestyles? Because…hey…if someone is claiming all that, then I missed it.

I thought we just voted for Bush because we’d rather have him as President. Little did I know every vote was a rejection of the superiority of East Coast music, clothing and food. Forgive us, Ted. I’m sorry we hurt your feelings. We promise not to do it again.

Now, if you don’t mind, I’ll get back to the trailer park and my possum sandwich. What’s that you’re mumbling?

“Must be the victim. Must be the victim. Must be the victim….”

Beyond the bizarre and the arbitrary: How I became pro-life

“Doctors should not be aborting fetuses at a stage at which another doctor “operating under a different set of instructions” could give that same baby a reasonable chance of leading a full and healthy life.”
Charlotte Edwardes, undercover reporter for the London Telegraph, who revealed how the British Pregnancy Advisory Service, the U.K.’s largest abortion provider, was circumventing late-term abortion laws in that country by sending women to a Spanish clinic that falsely certifies that every woman who comes to the clinic is in grave danger.

Ahh…the world has finally caught up with me 🙂 Here’s the story.

I was somewhere in the later stages of my liberalism, maybe about 1985, when I went to Boston the first time. While I never toured a hospital while I was there, I was around the medical centers several times. Plenty impressive. And somewhere in the neighborhood, I saw a “Women’s Clinic.” A clinic where abortions were performed. This pairing of technologies and decisions made an impression on me.
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A Secular Victory for Religious Fundamentalists: Chris Hitchens gets it right

Glory Hallelujah. Pass the offering plate and someone say “Help me, Jesus!” Revival has arrived, and the evangelist is my favorite atheist, Christopher Hitchens.

So here is what I want to say on the absolutely crucial matter of secularism. Only one faction in American politics has found itself able to make excuses for the kind of religious fanaticism that immediately menaces us in the here and now. And that faction, I am sorry and furious to say, is the left. From the first day of the immolation of the World Trade Center, right down to the present moment, a gallery of pseudointellectuals has been willing to represent the worst face of Islam as the voice of the oppressed. How can these people bear to reread their own propaganda? Suicide murderers in Palestine “disowned and denounced by the new leader of the PLO” described as the victims of “despair.” The forces of al-Qaida and the Taliban represented as misguided spokespeople for antiglobalization. The blood-maddened thugs in Iraq, who would rather bring down the roof on a suffering people than allow them to vote, pictured prettily as “insurgents” or even, by Michael Moore, as the moral equivalent of our Founding Fathers. If this is liberal secularism, I’ll take a modest, God-fearing, deer-hunting Baptist from Kentucky every time, as long as he didn’t want to impose his principles on me (which our Constitution forbids him to do).

(Yes, it was the Kentucky reference. Give me a break.)
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