Does Jesus bind himself to Christianity?

Last week I posted the trailer for the new book Selling Water by the River by Shane Hipps, former teaching pastor at Mars Hill Bible Church in Michigan. In the video (view it here), Hipps provocatively states that Jesus does not bind himself to any one religion—every religion erects its own sail, and Jesus, the wind, blows life into those sails indiscriminately (he “shows no favoritism or loyalty”). And although Christianity loudly and proudly paints the word “JESUS” on its sail, claiming him as its own, Jesus does not claim Christianity as his own.

Such claims are just false. Jesus did bind himself to religion—to a re-envisioned Judaism, which essentially became Christianity. Jesus is the Messiah whom God promised to Israel many centuries back, and he came to them as a rabbi who taught from the Torah but who also had some pretty radical interpretations that angered the Jewish authorities of his day. The message he preached—that God had sent him to bring salvation not just to Israel, but to the whole world, and that that salvation would come through his death on a cross and subsequent resurrection—confused his original hearers as much as it confuses people today.  Continue reading

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Tee Time: Jesus 2012

Jesus for PresidentFound at spreadshirt.com.

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“Instrument for You” by The Vespers

Nature praises God so purely, so wondrously. Oh that we would join its song.

 

“The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands.Day after day they pour forth speech; night after night they reveal knowledge. They have no speech, they use no words; no sound is heard from them.Yet their voice goes out into all the earth, their words to the ends of the world.”—Psalm 19:1-4a

The above song appears on The Vespers’ 2012 album, The Fourth Wall. To view the lyrics, click the “Show more” tab on the video’s YouTube page.

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Tee Time: Jesus Skid

Jesus SkidApparently this is the name of a bike trick.

Found at jesusskid.bigcartel.com.

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What’s wrong with this picture?

In the book trailer below for Selling Water by the River, author Shane Hipps offers an analogy that seems lovely at first and does have some truth in it but which I believe is problematic in several ways.

 

The trailer echoes a very popular idea these days: that Jesus does not belong to Christianity alone, that his spirit can live in non-Christians, that he can be known and experienced outside the church. This all stems from a belief that Jesus did not intend to establish a new religion, that Christianity was invented after his death by a group of people who did not understand his message and who wanted to claim him as their exclusive possession.

I think some people wonder why I post controversial videos like this, or art pieces, or quotations. “You’re just giving him the publicity he wants and contributing to higher book sales,” people say. It’s because I like to engage with the culture, and culture manifests itself strongly in books and art. When a publisher pays money to acquire, develop, and produce a book, it’s because they know that it will have an audience—it’s relevant, it addresses questions that people are asking. I don’t like to shrink away from ideas that I disagree with; I like to consider them—critically, of course, but with an open mind—and use them as an opportunity to deepen my own thoughts on the given topic, so that if and when others confront me directly with these ideas, I will have a response to give. It doesn’t bother me at all that so-called “heretics” profit from the conversation that springs up about their latest work. Because it is in the marketplace of ideas that truth will emerge.

So, what are your thoughts on the wind analogy and its implications? Perhaps you could respond to some of the questions Hipps poses in the trailer: “Where do we get the idea that Jesus binds himself to a religion?” “What if Jesus could do his work with or without a religion?” Does Jesus regard Christians with special favor?

I’ll share my thoughts in a later post.

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Two 2012 Election Season Initiatives

#JesusIsMyCandidate: This meme started as a sermon series at Burke United Methodist Church in Burke, Virginia, last month.

The rules: Every evening at 9 p.m. until Election Day, share a personal testimony or prophetic statement about Jesus with the hashtag #JesusIsMyCandidate. Don’t be sarcastic or hateful, and don’t be concerned with winning arguments—just take a half hour to reflect on who you are and who Jesus is and what his vision is for this earth, what his values and his promises are, and affirm your allegiance to him, your commitment to his platform, which unifies rather than divides. Consider how what he gives is better and truer than what our government ever could. And consider the degree and the nature of your involvement in that gift, that vision.

Morgan Guyton, associate pastor of Burke United Methodist, wrote regarding the meme,

It’s not slacktivism. It’s a 21st century act of prayer and resistance against the designs of Satan to use this presidential election to pummel American Christianity. . . . This is not about refusing to vote for either Barack Obama or Mitt Romney. Neither is this about finding all the Bible verses that support Republican talking points and all the verses that support Democratic ones and stacking them against each other to see whose stack is taller. This is about forcing ourselves to see the evidence of what a strange, beautifully big tent the body of Christ is.

Here are some of the tweets so far:

#JesusIsMyCandidate because He never tried to take Caesar’s throne; He ruled over Caesar from the cross.  Continue reading

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Tee Time: Jesus votes . . .

Jesus is a RepublicanJesus is a Democrat

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Found here and here, at zazzle.com.

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How to read a book of meditations

“The purpose of a book of meditations is to teach you how to think and not to do your thinking for you. Consequently if you pick up such a book and simply read it through, you are wasting your time. As soon as any thought stimulates your mind or your heart you can put the book down because your meditation has begun. To think that you are somehow obliged to follow the author of the book to his own particular conclusion would be a great mistake. It may happen that his conclusion does not apply to you. God may want you to end up somewhere else. He may have planned to give you quite a different grace than the one the author suggest you might be needing.”

—Thomas Merton, from New Seeds of Contemplation

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Tee Time: Lucha Libre Jesus

Lucha Libre Jesus

Found at acmetrendz.com.

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Roundup: Being Christlike in political discourse; polygamy in the OT; Indian depictions of Christ; how to be a good neighbor

“7 Things Christians Need to Remember About Politics” by Bryan Roberts: “Political discourse is the Las Vegas of Christianity—the environment in which our sin is excused. Hate is winked at, fear is perpetuated and strife is applauded. Go wild, Christ-follower. Your words have no consequences here. Jesus doesn’t live in Vegas.”

“Polygamy in the Bible: A Sordid Tale” by Lionel Windsor: “A large number of people (maybe as a result of ineffectual communication by Christian teachers) think the Bible—and especially the Old Testament—is just a list of moral commandments, along with some stories to give us examples of how to be good.” Not so.

“A Brief History of Visual Contextualization in India: A.D. Thomas”: “Thomas’ portrayals of Christ generated a lot of debate within Indian Christian circles. The debates revolved around whether his depictions of Christ were ‘too Hindu, or Buddhist, or even effeminate’ (Butler, p. 130). What ‘too Hindu or Buddhist’ meant was that Thomas’ depictions of Jesus were too peaceful, showing no hint of emotional struggle or disharmony. In this sense, Jesus appeared too much like the Buddha, who emphasized detachment from worldly desires.”

“Book Review: The Art of Neighboring” by Tim Challies: Ouch—I’ve been living in the same house for the last fifteen months, and I failed this test miserably. “Jay Pathak and Dave Runyon . . . premise their book upon this simple question: When Jesus told us love our neighbors, what if he meant our actual neighbors, the people who live closest to us? They explain that Christians have long been making ‘neighbor’ into a safe metaphor that allows us to believe we are carrying out the Lord’s command when we visit soup kitchens and do acts of kindness to complete strangers. The problem, as they explain it, is that ‘when we aim for everything, we hit nothing.’”

Unlike Christ:  See video below.

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