The WORD Became Flesh...

The WORD became flesh and moved into {our} neighborhood. That’s an exciting thought to consider, isn’t it? To think that God willfully stepped out of His kingdom and came to earth is an amazing thing. He came from a place of perfection that we can only imagine and entered into all of the goriness of life on earth. And in such an odd way. You would think that if God was going to visit earth and experience life as a human He start at a place of honor, born into royalty or wealth or something like that. But no — He forsook all of that, choosing the poverty of a voiceless Jewish family in the midst of imperial occupation. He chose to not even be born in a legitimate setting. Who of us in their right mind would say, “Yes! I want to be born next to donkeys and cows and sheep! Lay me in their feeding trough to rest!” What a choice this was.

This makes the words of Paul in Philippians striking:

Jesus existed in the form of God but emptied Himself of this. He took on the form of a slave. He looked just like you and me. He shared in our nature.

This WORD becoming flesh, this God becoming man, this incarnation — it’s not about who He was but about who He was becoming.

Jesus was God throughout His time on earth; if this wasn’t so, we wouldn’t have the cross and complete liberation from the works of evil in the world. What mattered though wasn’t that He was still God but that He became man. This identification is an incredible thing. It’s something I don’t currently fully understand and don’t think I (or anybody for that matter) ever will, fully. We like big words like incarnation and kenosis and theosis and the like to refer to doctrines that attempt to describe at least some of what is going on but I’m pretty sure there will always be something of a mystery surrounding it all.

And it’s well and good to sit and wonder and awe at the mystery of it all; that’s something I readily admit to doing. Recently though an element of sober reality has found itself intermixed in my wonders and awes. The WORD becoming flesh — the WORD emptying Himself of Himself and taking on the form of me, well as I said it’s incredible. It gets sobering now though: This WORD made flesh in inviting me to live as He made me to, has invited me to enter this incarnational kenosis as well: To empty myself of myself and what He has made me, and take on the form of the other.

What does that mean? Forsaking Jesus? No. Jesus emptying Himself of God didn’t mean He was any less God. God didn’t forsake God, so to speak. It does mean stepping outside the bounds of life He’s ushered me into. Jesus chose to leave heaven and enter our muck and mire — theologically speaking: kenosis. Taking up Jesus, we enter into heaven (at least metaphorically speaking; I suppose we could have theological discussion about the technicalities of this) which I find to be a form of Theosis — the filling of ourselves with what Jesus chose to leave. We are called to emulate Jesus though so kenosis must follow. Jesus set that aside, came as a man, called people into what He was (giving glimpses of it all along the way) and loved so much that He chose to die so that we might live.

That kenosis hits home to me now in ways it never did before. Life was comparatively easy back in Oklahoma. It didn’t take much effort to empty myself and become something other because the reality was that the other was more like me than I might care to admit. Now though — it’s something different. Not to long ago I found myself sitting on a wooden bench in a filthy concrete room full of junk that the attached Shebeen (illegitimate bar) didn’t have use for with my wife, teammate and the drunk homeless guy who slept there. He proceeded to spill His guts about all of life, culminating in his desire and plan to hang himself. He drank day in and day out to forget this pain he carried with him everywhere but it was getting to the point where the bottle could no longer numb him to it. Sitting there that day I experience incarnation as I’d never experienced it before. It was in love-driven desire to be somewhere I knew I didn’t belong. There it was, reaching out to someone who had drunk too many 40s to count. It was the willingness to enter his world and feel and understand and see as he did.

In an academic sense, I knew that coming here and living incarnationally would involve wading into deep and dark problems in the lives of people — issues and feelings and thoughts I’d probably never known existed before — but it wasn’t anything more than that academic sense.

And, I wouldn’t have it any other way. You see the incarnation produces something incredible. For where kenosis happens theosis is soon to follow. Jesus came as man and presented something more (His kingdom), and many back then, and you and me now, entered and where filled with something more. So to for people like this drunk homeless man who wanted to give up on life in the worst possible way. That day about a month ago was incredibly sober. Today though His story is something different. He’d never had someone tell him that they loved him. And for it to be a white guy from America — that blew his mind. It made him stop and think. And when he found out why (Jesus in me, my wife and teammate) it made him reach out for something more. We did a lot of sharing and a lot of praying with him that afternoon and God filled his heart with a joy and with a peace he had never known before. We came back the next week to find him sober and smiling. The next week he was outside playing soccer with kids. Two weeks ago he excitedly shared of his new job — something he hasn’t had in quite some time. Last week he brought us a friend who had seen his transformation and wanted it in his own life.

This has been long and rambling and probably won’t make much sense to anyone but me; I just needed to get the words down and the thoughts out, to be mulled over and considered further.

Freegaza - ISRAELI MILITARY FORCIBLY STOPS AID BOAT TO GAZA - AGAIN

Just before 9am GMT this morning, the Israeli military forcibly siezed the Irish-owned humanitarian relief ship, the MV Rachel Corrie, from delivering over 1000 tons of medical and construction supplies to besieged Gaza. For the second time in less then a week, Israeli naval commandos stormed an unarmed aid ship, brutally taking its passengers hostage and towing the ship toward Ashdod port in Southern Israel.  It is not yet known whether any of the Rachel Corrie's passengers were killed or injured during the attack, but they are believed to be unharmed.

The Corrie carried 11 passengers and 9 crew from 5 different countires, mostly Ireland and Malaysia. The passengers included Nobel Peace Prize laureate Mairead Maguire, Parit Member of the Malaysian Parliament Mohd Nizar Zakaria, and former UN Assistant Secretary General, Denis Halliday.  Nine international human rights workers were killed on Monday when Israeli commandos violently stormed the Turkish aid ship, Mavi Marmara and five other unarmed boats taking supplies to Gaza. Prior to being taken hostage by Israeli forces, Derek Graham, an Irish coordinator with the Free Gaza Movement, stated that: "Despite what happened on the Mavi Marmara earlier this week, we are not afraid.

This is sad to me. This aid is necessary for the people of Gaza and Israel refuses to let it through, and in the process is destroying their international relationships. If it's shaky in the US, imagine how it is in the rest of the world?

They really do need to end this illegal blockade. Legal blockades involve differing state territories. Gaza is not a state - it is occupied land. And because of that, no declaration of war has been made (that would be trouble for Israel - they'd then be culpable for their treatment and how it stands against the Geneva conventions).

Interested in some fun reading? Check out the San Remo Manual which spells out international law dealing with war on the seas.

PlusNews Global | UGANDA: When do we tell children they are HIV positive? | East Africa | Uganda | Children Care/Treatment - PlusNews Education HIV/AIDS (PlusNews) PWAs/ASOs - PlusNews Stigma/Human Rights/Law - PlusNews | Breaking News

Another study, in 2008, said stigma linked to HIV was one of the main reasons disclosure to children was so sensitive. Parents also feared disclosing their children's status to them because it meant disclosing their own.

A lack of clear guidelines was another problem. "Counselling policy directors confirmed the absence of policy and training guidelines on the subject of parent-child disclosure," the study said. "Counsellors reported improvising, and giving inconsistent advice on this common concern of clients."

Many service providers were hesitant about adopting the new policy. "It is not a good thing because of stigma; some of these children do not understand, and they may boldly announce, 'I am HIV positive', in public places. They are not like adults who can evaluate what to say and when," said Norah Namono, public relations officer for Mildmay Uganda, an HIV treatment centre in the capital.

 

"Why should they say that children need to know their status when there are adults [who do not], like men who do not tell their wives?" one mother at the Mildmay centre asked. "There is no policy on partner notification; why should we sacrifice the children first?"

 

 

 

An article about a very real and tragic issue facing Africa: How do you tell your child that they are HIV+?

Editor Laments Pentecostals' 'Epidemic Of Moral Failure'

After Ted Haggard confessed to a gay sex and drug scandal, he lost his Colorado Spring pulpit, his job as head of the National Association of Evangelicals and underwent a lengthy period of counseling and discipline.

For the most part, he hasn't been seen much since.

Other fallen charismatic/Pentecostal superstars, however, have rapidly reemerged into the spotlight with a new wife, a new church, new TV ministry or a new message from God that seems to dismiss the gravity of their sins.

Lee Grady has seen it all, and he's had enough.

Grady, a longtime editor of the widely read Charisma magazine, says the miraculous and transforming power of the Holy Spirit he and other charismatic/Pentecostal have experienced is under assault by the "epidemic of moral failure among our leaders."

"We can have the gifts of the Holy Spirit in operation without this circus sideshow going on," Grady said in an interview. "I'm waving my hands in the air because this is a huge problem, and we are going to experience even more serious problems in our churches if we don't know how to apply godly discipline to our wayward leaders."

Lee Grady's voice is much appreciated (and needed!). My hope is that there will be more and more like him and the shenanigans that have led to the *epidemic of moral failure* become a thing of the past.

Books

If you know me, you probably know my love of books. When looking at the prospect of moving across the world, what was going to happen to my library was the number one question on my mind (as far as material possessions go). When my wife asked what “comfort items” I’d want to bring for our new home, books were my first thought. The only problem with that is that they are heavy. And space and weight is a premium in air travel. Many failed to make the cut but many did make it with me. If you are curious which, ponder no longer!

  • The Renovare Spiritual Formation Study Bible: This is the best study Bible I’ve used (and I’ve had quite a few). I love the little devotional excerpts from people like Dallas Willard and Walter Brueggemann and the focus on spiritual formation above knowledge collection. It’s my primary devotional Bible now.

  • The Green Bible: The problem with the study Bible is that it is BIG (exasperated by the fact that it includes the apocrypha). This Bible is small and thin and is the perfect companion to take out and about.

  • The Politics of Discipleship by Graham Ward: I’m on my second reading of this and thoroughly enjoyed reading number one. I think it’s my favorite of the Church and Postmodern Culture series so far. It’s broken into two section: Discipleship and the world and Discipleship and the church. Highly recommended.

  • Linux Administration Handbook: Great little (well, quite big actually) handbook for all things system administration. Good to have on hand for those times you might need it.

  • The Coming of the Son of Man by Andrew Perriman: I used to never want to study eschatology. I found it creepy and somewhat nonsensical (from the, “how could we ever know?” sense). George Eldon Ladd got me interested in it and this book got me excited about it. Expands upon the partial preterism of someone like NT Wright and is a wonderful tour through the Biblical Apocalyptic.

  • Transforming Mission by David Bosch: The definitive missiology text. Plus, it’s written by a South African. You can’t go wrong in any respects.

  • From Eternity to Here by Frank Viola: This is another one I’d already read but just love. It opens you up to the beauty of the Biblical narrative and you can’t help but be changed by that.

  • Binding the Strong Man by Ched Myers: This is an important commentary on the book of Mark. I was in the middle of reading this when we left (still am actually) and decided to go ahead and bring it.

  • Reimagining Church by Frank Viola: Another by Viola, this one looking at ones ecclesiology. It follows hot on the heels of his Pagan Christianity and is much more accessible look at how we can do church in our modern era.

  • The Myth of Religious Violence by William Cavanaugh: This is one I need to read, hopefully soon. Cavanaugh is a favorite author of mine, and the concept of the book (dealing with religious violence) is intriguing. Hopefully it’ll be as good as it looks.

  • Surprised by Hope by NT Wright: This is a wonderful and accessible book I’d share with any one. NT Wright within it looks at heaven and the afterlife and everything involved in that. It is well worth your time to read.

  • The Justice Project: This one is a mixed bag of essays by various people dealing with “Justice” issues. I keep meaning to read more of it and give it a proper review but that has yet to happen.

  • ReJesus by Micheal Frost and Alan Hirsch: This is a Christology book for the missional church. I actually didn’t bring it on this trip; I brought it in May and left it with Floyd McClung to read as he didn’t yet have a copy. Got it back with notes and all so it’ll be an extra good read!

  • Torture and Eucharist by William Cavanaugh: This is an incredible look at theopolitical method. It traces the church under the dictatorship of Pinochet in Chile, juxtaposing the liturgy of the church, which centers on the Eucharist, with the liturgy of the state, torture. Excellent history and excellent thoughts. This may be the best book on this list (after the Bible of course).

  • Batman:Dark Victory: What can I say? This is my favorite of the Batman graphic novels. Sometimes you just need a relaxing no brainer read.

  • Shock Doctrine by Naomi Klein: An examination of “disaster capitalism” and all things neoliberal. Loved No Logo and this one too.

  • Anarchy and Christianity by Jacques Ellul: This is a classic of Christian anarchist literature, in the vein of Tolstoy’s The Kingdom of God is Within You. It’s thin and I wanted to read it on the plane.

I get to bring another round back with me this summer. We’ll see what makes that cut!

Sara Reef: How One Palestinian Village Started a Non-Violent Resistance Movement

Most of the media coverage surrounding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict focuses on stories of violence and despair. Little is known about the growing Palestinian-led non-violent movement that has united rival Palestinian factions, including Fatah and Hamas, and encouraged hundreds of Israelis to cross into the West Bank and Gaza for the first time to join this non-violent effort.

A new feature documentary film, Budrus, produced by the Washington, DC- and Jerusalem-based organisation Just Vision, documents non-violent Israeli and Palestinian civilian efforts to resolve the conflict. It tells the story of Budrus, the village where this movement was born.

Here is a documentary I'd really like to see...

PeterRollins.net » My Confession: I deny the Resurrection

Without equivocation or hesitation I fully and completely admit that I deny the resurrection of Christ. This is something that anyone who knows me could tell you, and I am not afraid to say it publicly, no matter what some people may think…

I deny the resurrection of Christ every time I do not serve at the feet of the oppressed, each day that I turn my back on the poor; I deny the resurrection of Christ when I close my ears to the cries of the downtrodden and lend my support to an unjust and corrupt system.

However there are moments when I affirm that resurrection, few and far between as they are. I affirm it when I stand up for those who are forced to live on their knees, when I speak for those who have had their tongues torn out, when I cry for those who have no more tears left to shed.

Amen. Recently read Matthew 25 again:

“Then he will say to those on his left, ‘Depart from me, you accursed, into the eternal fire that has been prepared for the devil and his angels! For I was hungry and you gave me nothing to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me nothing to drink. I was a stranger and you did not receive me as a guest, naked and you did not clothe me, sick and in prison and you did not visit me.’ Then they too will answer, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry or thirsty or a stranger or naked or sick or in prison, and did not give you whatever you needed?’ Then he will answer them, ‘I tell you the truth, just as you did not do it for one of the least of these, you did not do it for me.’ And these will depart into eternal punishment, but the righteous into eternal life.”

Report: Facebook caught sharing secret data with advertisers

A report in the Wall Street Journal indicates that the Facebook, along with MySpace, Digg, and a handful of other social-networking sites, have been sharing users' personal data with advertisers without users' knowledge or consent.

The data shared includes names, user IDs, and other information sufficient to enable ad companies such as the Google-owned DoubleClick to identify distinct user profiles.

If facebook weren't such a great tool to keep in contact with friends and family, I'd leave immediately. Even with that, I'm tempted more & more each day to migrate away from it. Their privacy record isn't something to be proud of...