10.26.06

New Moniker

Posted in UU at 17:11 by jehovahsfitness

I’ve come up with the name Brother Damocles for myself. I still like Jehovah’s Fitness, but it seems a name more suited to the actual blog than its author. This new nom de clavier, as it were, seems appropriate in several ways. I was trying to come up with a new Unitarian Jihadesque name, but was having trouble deciding what weapon was symbolically apt when I recalled the Sword of Damocles. As I’ve been lately trying to consider the potential difficulties as well as the potential joys of UU ministry, it seems just right. Plus, it fits right in with Philocrites and Pericles, if I may flatter myself by the association.

10.17.06

Putting the Christ back in Christian?

Posted in Religious Right at 17:55 by jehovahsfitness

The Christian Coalition of America is known by most Americans as being one of the first large and highly visible organizations in the Religious Right. Past leaders have included Pat Robertson and Ralph Reed. Recently secularists have been cheering the Christian Coalition’s fall from power, though many other Religious Right groups have since steadily increased in power and visibility. Until recently I was among them.

So why am I hoping the Christian Coalition will make a resurgence among conservative Christians? The organization once helped set the Religious Right’s narrow focus of issues concerned with (what we on the Left consider to be) issues of restrictions. Namely abortion, homosexuality, private schools vs. public schools, increased presence of Evangelical Christianity in the public sphere, and so forth. But I believe the leadership of the Christian Coalition has finally realized just how narrow this focus is and the stagnation it to which it has led.

Something that may shock those on the Left is that the state chapters of the Coalition in Alabama, Georgia and Iowa have pulled away from the national organization, citing a supposed left-leaning trend in the national organization. Some basis for this argument is that the Coalition has teamed up with MoveOn.org on the issue of network neutrality. Here’s the kicker: on the first of the month Rev. Dr. Joel C. Hunter was appointed as the Coalition’s new chairman starting next year. I had not heard of Hunter before his interview on last week’s State of Belief, but he is known among Evangelicals as a vocal voice in the growing movement to stop global warming. Hunter sees the maintenance of the climate as a Biblical imperative. Hunter has also authored a book I am interested in reading entitled Right Wing, Wrong Bird on the topic of political involvement of conservative Christians. Just from listening to his interview on State of Belief and the brief podcasts on his website I can tell that Rev. Hunter is an intelligent, humble, compassionate and forward-thinking person.

I never thought I’d say that about a self-avowed member of the Religious Right. He might seem liberal to both conservatives and liberals, but it is quite important for everyone to remember that he is not. He is conservative. The Christian Coalition is a conservative organization. It is for exactly this reason that I am so excited about his appointment. The aforementioned characteristics I used to describe Rev. Hunter are characteristics that will be needed for those on the Left and the Right if we hope to get anywhere.

I think that Rev. Hunter will be open to dialogue with liberals. Too many leaders of the Religious Right have not sought dialogue. They are firebrands that just want to yell so only they get heard. But this is not how democracy works, and I’m sure Rev. Hunter and those like him realize this. Democracy is about nothing if not discussion. Though I suspect that many in the Religious Right don’t really care for democracy at all. Not only committed to democracy, Hunter makes a corollary to Jesus’ command to love one’s neighbour on The Leadership Blog, “[My goal is] to impact the world for Christ in a way that non-Christians are thankful.”

Another hope I have for the refocused Christian Coalition is that it will help conservative Christians to see beyond a black and white worldview. The Christian Coalition might be able to offer them a new vision of what can be achieved. I also hope that this will help those that are anti-Christian or anti-religion to also move beyond black and white views of Christianity/religion. Though we may disagree on issues of human sexuality and reproductive health and education, I am confident that we can make progress on the environment, poverty and other “compassion issues” as Rev. Hunter calls them. To use his own words, “Unless Christians can explain their values and their voting decisions in an intellectually credible way to those who disagree, we will not create understanding … or make headway on the issues most important to us.” So while I won’t be contributing money or volunteer hours to the Christian Coalition anytime soon, I will be glad to know that they will be actually acting in a way that is based on what Jesus taught.

10.16.06

Pious Unitarian Universalist

Posted in UU at 15:01 by jehovahsfitness

I discovered something at church yesterday; I’ve become a pious Unitarian Universalist. What does that mean? How can a UU be pious?

Somehow, over the past ten years of my life, I’ve become addicted to going to church. The Sunday before last was the first Sunday in a very long time that I hadn’t gone to church at all. Even during the Summer recess during which my church did not have services, I attended various other groups on Sunday. This summer my Christian Friend and I went to Catholic Mass, a Quaker meeting, services at a church that belongs to both the United Church of Christ and the Presbyterian Church and a Unity service. For as far back as I can remember now, I’ve gone to a church service at least three out of four Sundays a month. I’ve even managed to catch some Friday night services at local synagogues.

I’ve become a keen observer of every detail of a service. The manner in which the ministers speak, and act, the topics and literary style of their sermons, the mood of the music and the instruments used to play them, the order of service and attention payed by the congregants to each have all proven to be very interesting things for me to observe. But they’re not just interesting. Interesting isn’t enough to get up up and out of the door on a weekend morning.

Something about services even made me a bit disappointed to have missed church last Sunday. What was it? What is it about going to church that draws me in? Certainly the group aspect of it is part of it. The emerging experiential aspect of my spirituality also forces me to admit that the sheer experience of something new every Sunday is also part of it. There is also the certainty that each time I’m bound to take something away from it, whether intellectual or emotional, or both.

To be brief this is only part of why I go. There is a great part of it I can’t really put into words. Suffice it to say, what happens is religion. Religion happens.

10.03.06

Abstaining from Asceticism

Posted in Theological at 22:54 by jehovahsfitness

Lately I have been studying various esoteric groups that believe that you are not your body. Everytime I come across this concept I nearly wince. All of my life I abstracted my mind from my body. I didn’t pay much attention to my body until puberty when hair started sprouting everywhere. Even then my lump of flesh was no different than all the other lumps of flesh, except that I could chose to shave it or pierce it or tattoo it or whatever else I wanted to do with it because it was my property. But now I know my body is not my property. My body is me. My mind is the processes of my brain. Emotions and thoughts are chemical reactions. But the whole is more than the sum of its parts. Those that say we should pay more attention to the spiritual than the material create a false dichotomy. It’s quite possible (and I’m very open to the idea) that the material world is only an emanation of the higher worlds, but that does not mean it is an abberant world. Often the language of giving into the temptations of the flesh is used. I think this misses the mark. Gluttony, lust and sloth all seem to happen to me when I’m not paying attention to my body. We humans like to kid ourselves into thinking we’re so much different than other animals, that “bestial” things are beneath us. Man may not live by bread alone, but bread is still a prerequisite. One must be attentive to the things of the material world as well as of the world of ideas. To be attentive to the body is a supremly spiritual thing to do.