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Monthly archive: March, 2011

Review: Couples Who Pray

March 31, 2011, by Doug No comments yet

Books that promise to change your life are myriad. Books that actually help accomplish that task are few. Couples Who Pray may be one of the easiest to assume would really change a marriage. So while I’m normally very skeptical of such books that espouse a formulaic do-this-and-this-will-happen promise, I expect good results from taking the 40 Day Prayer Challenge with my wife.

The book is broken down into three sections. The first is convincing the reader (or readers, since this is meant for married couples) why praying daily together will change their marriage. They cite research data, anecdotes from famous couples like Denzel and Pauletta Washington and other “normal” people, as well as providing Scriptural support to bolster the claims made by the studies and stories. They make a bold claim: lovemaking will get better, communication will get better, and hearts will be softened. Lives will be changed.

The second sections explains the 40 Day Prayer Challenge, both in its scope and practical tips on what to expect during the challenge. It is, after all, a challenge to pray a minimum 5 minutes every day as husband and wife. This section ends with a chapter on the power of prayer, with stories bolstered by much Scripture as support.

Finally the authors end with explaining how such an initiative to change a marriage will be met with challenges from the Devil, the one who wants to “dis” everything in our lives: discontent, disgust, disfunction. They also describe many specific positive outcomes that will result such as better financial habits, more giving, and how joy will overtake marriage your in general.

Does this book “work”? I guess that depends on your expectations, but if there is anything formulaic about Christian principles, it’s very clear that when we open up and become vulnerable with God in the presence of our lover, we become closer. “Love covers a multitude of sins,” and if we’re all sinners, we need much love.

Whether you should buy this book is up to whether you think you need to be convinced that prayer will work in your marriage. If you already believe it, then skim through this book at the library or on Amazon.com’s previews. If you don’t, perhaps this book can help you overcome some strongholds in your life that keep you from wanting to pray with your spouse. But I recommend this book only if you intend to take the 40 Day Prayer Challenge. Otherwise it’s a waste of time and a few bucks.

Now… guess I better take that challenge, eh?!

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from the publisher through the BookSneeze®.com <http://BookSneeze®.com> book review bloggers program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255 <http://www.access.gpo.gov/nara/cfr/waisidx_03/16cfr255_03.html> : “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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Thoughts on the word “We”

March 29, 2011, by Doug No comments yet

Progressive Christians deride libertarian individualism as contrary to the value system of the Kingdom of God. In their minds, to start with society, rather than the individual, is a morally superior way of looking at the world, especially if Christians should be seeking justice and peace. “Community first,” or “People before profits,” are common phrases use to promote this ethic. Progressives believe that since individuals live and operate within society, the common good limits individual freedom.

Impressively positive ideas such as “social responsibility,” “fairness,” “the public good,” and “equality” that nobody would ever oppose are used to attract people to give up their rights for the Progressive agendas. Slippery definitions of “common good” or “human rights” (their favorite phrase) justify usurping power from individuals to help “the most vulnerable among us”—the elderly, poor, unhealthy, or immigrant. Since Jesus sacrificed his life for the good of the world, we are to do the same. A society built on this principle of love for one’s neighbor is the only way to create a just society. And, so the argument goes, sacrifice is the best, or only, way to abide by this principle.

This is a savvy way to win the hearts and minds of Christians (and non-Christians) who desire justice. The invitation to “think beyond ourselves” is attractive to those who preach self-sacrifice as the ultimate way to love for one’s neighbor. In a politicized society where democracy is among the highest ideals, people feel warm and fuzzy about collective solutions to the world’s problems. Acting together is better than acting alone, and statements like the following are common:

“We need to fight terrorism.”

“We need comprehensive immigration reform.”

“We need to have a social safety net.”

“We need to stop people from doing drugs.”

“We need to provide health care for everyone.”

Phrases like these abound each day, if not coming from our friends or coworkers, then on the news. Everyone wants to live in a better world. Everyone has an opinion (or three). Everyone wants solutions. Yet Progressives relish a grandiose politically-defined collective called “we,” where power and authority reside at the top. Attaching the sentiments of democracy doesn’t negate the inherent pyramid structure of their arrangement. Even the most purely moral society cannot be arranged this way because those at the top will lack the sufficient knowledge necessary to successfully meet society’s needs. It can only produce an imitation because people become arbitrarily grouped and defined by the supposed “experts” influencing those in power. Individual rights are subsumed under the banner of social justice.

“We” is a loaded word with multiple meanings that can be used to satisfy both cooperative and coercive efforts. It can be delineated in various ways. “We” could be the people of a county, a state, a nation, or a continent. “We” could be the people of a racial segment of society. “We” could be the people of the Gulf States, or the East Coast, or the West Coast. Less geographically, “we” can be a little league, a country club, or a church. Americans are accustomed to thinking about “we” in terms of national identity, in part because since early childhood government schools have conditioned us to think in terms of national boundaries. But the scope of 300 million people make the term “we” a precious entity when the hands of power are concentrated at the top.

But is there a better way to achieve a just society than to define the word “we” by geopolitical identities? Is there a more ethical way for individuals to associate that not only respects their unique differences, but also allows for unity within the diversity of voices? Is there a peaceful way to come together for a common effort toward social justice? And if we find better ways to define “we,” can these groups be based on love and cooperation rather than on power and coercion in order to improve society effectively?

To answer this question, the Christian must think about how he regards his neighbor. Does he believe her to be a free and unique individual created to reflect one of the many diverse qualities of God’s image here on earth? If so, he must then respect her diverse and unique gifts and talents as complements to the rest of society, and permit her to associate with whomever she pleases. He cannot regard her as merely a single unit made to fit into the larger entity called “society” so that “society” can succeed? For him to scheme grandiose social arrangements by starting with “society” violates her by robbing her of respect and individuality.

The early church movement described in Acts 2 has been falsely labeled “Christian socialism.” What is ignored is the obvious point that the success of this new movement was due to the voluntary nature of the collective the early believers were placing themselves within. The Spirit of God guided them, to be sure, but there was nothing coercive about the movement. Everyone’s needs were met not because those involved had to but because everyone involved wanted to. In this way, doing justice is about more than good outcomes, it is about the ways in which those outcomes are brought about.

It is not a Christian duty to ensure that our subjective preferences are imposed upon those around us who may and do have very different preferences. It is our Christian duty to love our neighbor and fight injustice. To seek a just society means we must advocate for a free society where individuals are embraced as unique and worthy of being handed the power to their own lives. We must oppose a planned social order and seeking a free one because we know that groups that emerge spontaneously through free association are likelier to provide a social benefit because people are free to participate. Their benefit to the individual and to society depends largely on the extent to which these groups are joined voluntarily. Forcing people to belong to and identify with the collective effort of seeking social justice will create a society that is neither social nor just.

(This was cross-posted at LibertarianChristians.com.)

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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Environmentalist Hell

March 28, 2011, by Doug No comments yet

(The following is about the tactical use of the idea of hell that I believe is shared by conservative-fundamentalists as well as progressive-environmentalists. It is adapted from a letter I wrote to Brian McLaren.)

Fundamentalism makes hell the core issue in salvation, and the fear of hell was one of the core driving forces behind evangelism. “Without hell,” a preacher would say, “There’s be no reason to evangelize.” Hell is the destructive and damning result of people ignoring the warning and refuse to join Christianity.

From where I sit, environmentalists do the same thing with respect to Creation care. It seems as though catastrophic effects of global warming seem to be the driving force behind encouraging people to join the cause. Perhaps you see it as a necessary warning (as do fundamentalists with hell), but most of us who are unconvinced of the problem see it as a fear-based tactic. I’ve done plenty of research from both sides, and to the best of my understanding, I’m not convinced global warming is as problematic as you believe it to be. I’m even less convinced in the so-called “solutions” to the problem.

If I didn’t believe in the traditional view of hell, that still doesn’t change my commitment to a missional lifestyle and evangelism. In fact, in many ways a new view on judgment and restoration means an even deeper commitment to sharing my faith with others. Likewise with Creation care, I see the threats of global destruction and catastrophic calamity as functionally “hell” for environmentalists, and I’m equally disturbed by the tactic.

Regardless of my position on the global warming debate, I’m still adamantly committed to care for the creation. We don’t do enough nor do we think of this as a Christian responsibility. But I think the “hellish nightmare” scenario that global warming advocates depict should be abandoned with haste in favor of a more restorative and biblical call for the care of our environment. I think you’ll find that those Christians who are skeptical of global warming will be unable to use what they see as a fear-mongering lie as an excuse to do nothing. Instead they might feel compelled to listen.

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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Love Wins: Informal Comments, Part 2

March 20, 2011, by Doug No comments yet

The style and rhythm of Love Wins is so beautiful because Rob Bell has caught a vision for what God is doing from the beginning of the world through to the end.

Which makes me wonder: why do some Christians hold on to hell for “unbelievers”? What is attractive about a god who tortures people?

It seems to me that if Christians want to remain convinced in eternal conscious torment for the damned, they must do so reluctantly, against their own natural love for all peoples, and only through a great amount of wrestling, understanding that such a horrible truth must be embraced with great hesitation.

Nothing less comes very close to relishing the fate of “those other people.”

20110320-094616.jpg

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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Love Wins: Informal Comments, Part 1

March 17, 2011, by Doug No comments yet

(NOTE: I will post a formal review when I’ve finished the book. For now I will simply share my thoughts as I go along. If others are also reading through the book, please join the conversation by sharing your feelings in the comments below.)

Love Wins is beautiful. Literarily.

Nobody wants to read a “book about hell.” I’ve read at least a dozen books about the afterlife, some technical, some deeply theological, some narrative or conversational.

None of them is poetic.

After reading the first chapter with all of the reflective questions and rhetorical “what ifs” that Rob Bell has been sharing in all of the promotional material leading to the release of Love Wins, I’m reading the chapter about heaven.

Heaven is captivating. Rob Bell explains with poetic beauty what N.T. Wright says in Surprised by Hope with more biblical exposition and theological reflection. But Bell does so in a way that energizes our emotions toward a vision for what God is doing on earth in preparation for “the age to come.”

If you’re looking for a taste of what heaven will be like, look no further than Rob Bell’s expressive question and response chapter in Love Wins. It may lead to further reading, but it may also enthrall you enough to act within this present age with the creative expression we are to expect in the age to come.

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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The Bleeding Heart Conversation

March 13, 2011, by Doug No comments yet

I couldn’t be more excited about the conversation going on at the Bleeding Heart Libertarians blog. The BHL blog is an ongoing conversation between libertarians who share many of the same social concerns with those on the Progressive Left. So far the conversation has been lively and engaging.

I’m excited because my own spiritual and ideological journey has taken me down a path that has led to a very interesting dichotomy. Eight years ago I was being drawn toward and have affirmed some progressive theology. But when it came to the social policies advocated by many social justice Christians, there seemed to be a disconnect. I soon realized that in order to assess ways to achieve socially just outcomes, the key is to develop an economic way of thinking.

I discovered that the Austrian school was not only engaging in its style and presentation, they carried with them the necessary skills to assess the social concerns I had. Austrian economists (and libertarian economists in general) have the verbal acuity to explain the makeup of our social DNA.

Art Carden is one of the most penetrating writers in the Austrian school. Art makes easy that which is often difficult to wrap one’s brain around, with fewer words and elegant prose. This week he wrote a piece called “Libertarian Compassionomics?” in his Forbes.com column which was picked up and responded to my Matt Zwolinski at BHL. I heartily recommend reading Art’s piece, then Matt’s, then Art’s response, and join the conversation.

Conversations are journeys. They lead us to truth, not because truth is the destination, but because it is found in the ongoing process that takes place among those who are passionately committed to the truth and to the conversation.

Sometimes the point of the journey isn’t the destination.

Doug

Doug Stuart is a committed follower of Jesus and passionate about building for the Kingdom of God through education and mobilization. He is a regular writer at LibertarianChristians.com as well as the founder of Living Loud.

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