Archive for the tag 'Christianity'

Irrational belief in a creative God

D September 8th, 2009

I was recently asked what I thought the next phase of belief for the post-fundamentalist Christian would be.  My simplest answer being to walk away in disgust and declare themselves agnostic after witnessing the various abuses of God first hand. The more complex being to take the best parts of their experience and reconcile them with a more rational understanding of the world.

And here I am, actively choosing to not walk away, for various purposeful reasons:

  • If my perceptions are correct (and truly, that is all we have) I have experienced the influence of God, not necessarily ‘talking’ to me, but certainly directing me (only twice, and it had to do with pursuing after my wife, and having a child… no small things)
  • Christ was on to something. I can’t *prove* he was God, but I will make that leap of faith for someone who just *got it*. Again, choosing to believe in him. And yes, the bible is fallible, so the gospels might not be perfect. But the spirit of Christ is in there, and that’s what I’m following.
  • Do you remember the fundamentalist ‘tactic’ Christians could use for helping non-Christians understand the concept of God where:

    “Let’s say this whole chalk board is all knowledge possible. Now lets assume that this dot is the knowledge that you possess. Don’t you think you could have missed the knowledge of God’s existence?”

    The irony of this tactic is that the reverse is true:

    “Don’t you, Sir Christian, think you could have missed the knowledge that God doesn’t exist/doesn’t care?”

    And beyond that I realized that both are true: I just CAN’T know either way. My little febrile mind, and my limited capacity to understand all knowledge, space/time etc etc. It is beyond human grasp.

So I’ve reduced it to my experiences and a logic problem:

I’m relying on the infinite power and wisdom of God to catch my ultimate fall into the (possibility) of hell. I’m doing my best to understand something completely not understandable, and if I’m right and he exists, and he acknowledges my efforts, he may accept me. To follow the structure of that belief: he created me with the limited intelligence and capacity to understand him, so I rely on the fact that he knows I’m inherently flawed.

If I’m wrong, and somehow picked the wrong path, or God turns out to be a lot more diabolical that I hope him to be… well, its a Shakespearean tragedy at that point.

Or, it could be a gigantic cosmic joke. But that’s more Douglas Adams’ territory.

Essentially I’m a discriminating pluralist who is a Christian. There’s no way I can know with certainty that Christianity is ‘the one-truth’.  I’ve chosen to believe it because of my upbringing, personal experiences (‘Holy Spirit’ if you will) and the fact that Christ makes the most sense to me.

I irrationally believe in a God who threw this all together, and is watching us tear it apart.

Fear and Control

D August 12th, 2009

There is no end to the discussion on fear and its fabulous utility as a method to control people’s decisions and action. This post is just me brain dumping my experiences growing up ‘in the church’. As it is somewhat redundant for me to delve into the various uses of fear in control, I will attempt to compose a coherent opinion of this weaponized fear. This is all water under the bridge for me at this point, but worth me putting up my ideas to spark discussion regardless.

The new atheist movement (militant fundamentalist all-religions-must-die) has, being somewhat of an oxy-moron, illuminated the hypocrisies of my own religious past. Although I had long pulled myself from the denominational bubble, militant atheists like Dawkins finally gave me the lens with which to view the structure in which I had grown up. Using subtle phrases, an isolationist worldview was pushed on me all those years. I was ‘inside’ with the ‘one-truth’, much like the new atheists – convinced of their assertions and willing to aggressively defend them. To see such an approach being used by ‘the non-Christians’ gave me additional pause, and led me to the distinct possibility that it was unlikely I held the ‘one-truth’ – as taught by my former denominational leaders.

In the end, it was the us-vs-them attitude that introduced my doubt, and gradually demonstrated to me that really my church leaders were mouthpieces of the bible college they had attended and in turn the denominational industry it represented. If they had ideas outside that denominational box I never saw them discussed. The building of polemic arguments against the latest ‘threat’, be it a court decision, a rock band, television, dating, alcohol, homosexuality, and anything considered a remote threat was commonplace. I now think that the polemic approach was less necessary in regards of the arguments themselves, and served a better purpose of ‘uniting’ the group. We then had a common enemy that we could fight together, ignoring the sometimes shaky foundations of our theology – and certainly ignoring any sort of pragmatism or compromise that could have helped meet ‘the non-Christians’ where they were at.

There was a single overarching idea of ‘unity among the body’, which was a twisted way of saying ’stick to your denomination’. It was this imperialist mindset that gave unity its secondary meaning – the one pertaining to member retention and the guilt and fear associated with walking away from the ‘body’. I now look back astonished that I was always frustrated with our lack of ability to achieve ‘unity’ among believers, which I now attribute to the fact that they had an entirely different sort of isolationist unity in mind.

This brings me to their idea of self-control, their version of which took until much later in life for me to learn was actually repression, a repression borne through fear and negative reinforcement. I plan to write a much more detailed piece on the idea of the ‘dangers of repression as self-control’, but need to do more research into the psychology of these ideas (anyone have any pointers?).

However their biggest fear is that of ideas, and particularly ideas that challenge the denominational theology. There is no room for discussion, and no structure for conversation or debates involving derivations of the teachings. At this point, I believe that is because they were taught with certainty that they hold the ‘one-truth’, and therefore greatly fear (and have no need for) a clearinghouse of ideas. This is where the fear has become systemic, where leaders teach fear not out of some malicious intent, but because they are genuinely scared of being wrong themselves – and in order to protect themselves turn a blind eye to new ideas, interpretations and reason itself.

My emergence from fundamentalism has been refreshing and I feel more at peace with myself and God than ever. And so my persistent uncertainty dictates that I cannot run from ideas, only consume, evaluate and apply those that are sensible to my life as a human who identifies with Christ’s teachings.

Feel free to comment below…

We’re distracted by abortion

D February 19th, 2009

I most certainly believe that the act of an abortion is wrong.  I wouldn’t call myself a ‘pro-lifer’ because of the sheer volume of rhetoric that label entails – but I definitely can’t see aborting fetus’ as anything other than perverse.

With that in mind, I started to consider what our world would look like without abortion – simply as an exercise to consider what kind of social cost it has on our society.  Abortion will likely never again be illegal, possibly more regulated, but we won’t see any backtracking on this issue.  Abortion is here to stay, so we’d better learn what a Christ like response would be.

So I couple that idea with a hotly contested theory written by Steven D Levitt in his book Freakonomics:

From wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legalized_abortion_and_crime_effect)

Donohue and Levitt point to the fact that males aged 18 to 24 are most likely to commit crimes. Data indicates that crime in the United States started to decline in 1992.  Donohue and Levitt suggest that the absence of unwanted aborted children, following legalization in 1973, led to a reduction in crime 18 years later, starting in 1992 and dropping sharply in 1995. These would have been the peak crime-committing years of the unborn children.

Being an abortion linked theory, these studies will be contested for years to come.  Nevertheless the idea that people who would have been bad or neglectful parents produce misbehaving children stuck with me, and that often people deciding on an abortion are not in most productive of child rearing environments.  We don’t need an economist to tell us that if a parent is very weak on even basic discipline, or neglectful of their children, that kids tend to make bad choices and ‘misbehave’ in later life.

And sometimes, these neglected or abused kids end up in the care of our government’s social system, often at a young age.  The good people who work for the government and non-governmental agencies try to provide the best care possible in very difficult circumstances.

And then it struck me.  Who are we as Christians to look at women having abortions and say “shame on you”, when we are conveniently neglecting the children who were not aborted, but neglected?  If abortion was illegal how many of those unborn would be sitting in group homes, or foster care, without a permanent and loving family that is willing to commit to them?  How can we decry abortion when we don’t even help the kids who *are* alive, whose mothers may have made the harder choice not to terminate their life despite their circumstance?

What if every young Christ following couple who wants children included an adopted child in their family?

In my experience in mainstream protestant churches in Alberta, there are very few adoptive parents.  I can only speculate on why – insulated church culture, the “it’s not my problem” complex, fear of “the world”, stigma of being the “adoptive parents”.  But I certainly know this: Christ would have us look after orphans, regardless of our inconvenience.

What can we do about abortion?  Maybe some regulatory changes.  But until we have taken responsibility to help the thousands of kids that would be at risk if abortion was illegal, let’s get off our high-horse.

And don’t kid yourself, it is your responsibility.  Christ made that pretty clear.

Cardboard

D February 8th, 2009

Went to a church in a more southern Albertan city this weekend.  They ended the worship with this classy Amy Grant tune.

We believe in God
And we all need Jesus

‘Cause life is hard
And it might not get easier
But don’t be afraid
To know who you are
Don’t be afraid to show it

If you believe in God
If you say you need Jesus

He’ll be where you are
And he never will leave you
Sing to me now words that are true
So all in this place can know it…

Proof, Truth, and Faith

Em July 27th, 2008

I am a product of Sunday School. Every week, I would bring my Bible and book and memorize my verses (sometimes in the car) with the hope of getting stickers beside my name, inching ever closer to the prize at the end of the year. I was at the top of the verse-memorizing pile, but when it came to crafts, my cutting and pasting fell short of the expertly stretched cotton balls of some of my classmates. What really knocked down my sticker count, though, was forgetting my Bible and book. I was a forgetful kid who could memorize with the best.

At some point in every class, my flannelgraph-wielding teacher would tell the Bible story. Jesus, always in white with a blue or red sash-like-thing, stood with a gentle smile on his face, hand outstretched as if he were teaching something. Peter always looked a little rough, John fairly composed, Judas dark and brooding, and the rest of the disciples came in an undifferentiated crowd of three or four. The story was one of many from the gospels; turning the water into wine, healing a blind man, preaching to the 5000, and, of course, the crucifixion and ressurection. There were Old Testament stories too, most memorably Noah’s ark and Moses and the ten commandments. Sunday School lessons often focus on Bible stories that involve animals; I suppose because they look cute and most kids like them. My favourite image from Noah’s ark, however, was one book that had a picture of people preparing food for the trip. For some reason, the most memorable stories of my childhood involve food; Fantastic Mr. Fox, The Bearenstein Bears book where Brother and Sister get fat, and the Power Rangers episode where there’s a big round pink pig-like thing running around eating pretty much everything it sees.

However, I don’t remember any of those verses I memorized. Some I do; I’ve re-learned them since, but most were forgotten ten minutes after I recited them. I confess: I didn’t really care about the verses. I wanted the stickers. I’m slightly competetive, and there were people in my Sunday School class that I just had to beat. I often did, but the sweet taste of victory is long gone with both the stickers and the verses.

Where, exactly, is the value of my Sunday School years? How does all that reflect on me now? Though some of it may seem superficial, I know a few things stuck with me. It gave me a basic understanding of the Bible and Christian doctrine, one that now almost feels innate. I may not be able to recite the verses, but I do know that I can convey their meaning. In junior high and high school, we got into more serious stuff, but the one theme that resounded throughout the years was the absolute assertion that the Bible is beyond question, and if we could just get a chance to logically explain it to everyone, it would be so easy for them all to see that Jesus is the answer.

This made perfect sense in my bubble of Christianity. But then I went to university. There, I realized two things. First, not everyone is an atheist. From inside the bubble, it looked as if all the “non-Christians” on the outside didn’t believe in God. In fact, in my experience, atheists are a relatively small minority. The second thing I began to realize is that most people have their own ideas about God, based on their own logic. Their reasoning questioned mine, leaving me scrambling to find another bit of information that trumped theirs. I sometimes succeeded, and sometimes failed. I gradually began to realize that logically explaining Jesus just wasn’t going to cut it, and was left in a crisis of faith. Doubts began to creep into my innate, absolute knowledge of God. I had a lot of questions, but I was never quite satisfied with the answers. In my polarized world, there was a distant knowledge of the meaning of grey, and when placed in the middle of it I was at a total loss.

My first conclusion was that there are more than two religions in the world; Christians and non-Christians. This idea implies that only Christians have thought it through and know what they’re talking about, and puts everyone else in a homogenized group. If I wanted to relate to people outside of the bubble in any way, I would have to see them differently. I abandoned the term “non-Christian,” seeing as it had little meaning to anyone who was one, anyway. My second conclusion was that logic alone isn’t a strong enough base for Christianity. This is not to say that there is no reasoning in my faith or that it lacks plausibility, but that it is exactly that: faith. “Faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see, (Hebrews 11:1)” it is not a logical deduction based on the presenting evidence. In this, I discovered the difference between truth and proof. Someone can prove something, only to have it subjected to a series of rebuttals until some kind of conclusion is reached. But is that conclusion true? If you believe in relative truth, I suppose it could be argued, but I absolutely believe in absolute truth. Proof can be disproven, disproofs can be wrong, but the truth remains the same.

Standing in the middle of a thousand conflicting arguments, I had to choose. I could choose the uncertainty of ever-changing proof or an illogical faith in absolute truth. Illogical faith: a term that I had never before considered. It was a gradual yet conscious choice as I took that path, one that was hard-won in many situations. On some issues, I’ve had to concede that I don’t know the answer and trust that God knows what he’s doing. In others, like the evolution-creation debate, I’ve started to look deeper, hoping to find truth in a balance of proof and faith. Ultimately, I’ve come to believe the Sunday School message I heard through all those years; the Bible is the word of God, and Jesus is the Way, the Truth, and the Life. But logic alone will not suffice in the pursuit of God, and will never be enough to convince someone to become a Christian.

“And without faith it is imposible to please God, because anyone who comes to him must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who earnestly seek him.” Hebrews 11:6

Dominion is not found in grace

Em July 27th, 2008

Over the summer, my church has begun a series of discussions on topics of spiritual formation, based on the writings of classic authors. (If you’d like to hear them, we have podcasts! Search for Urban Bridge Church. It’s worth it just to hear the jingle.) My eyes have been opened to the wisdom of these foundational Christian writings, words that have shaped the church and the faith of many. My list of books to read gets longer every Sunday.

I love quotes. A couple stood out to me one week, so much that I emailed them to myself for later reference.

“The Church’s belief in Original Sin should make us intensely realistic and should free us from trying to create a Utopia. For there is no such thing as a Christian social ideal to which we should try to confrom the society we live in as closely as possible. After all, no one wants to live in “the ideal society” as depicted by anyone else. … Although Christianity supplies no ideal, it does supply something of far more value, namely, principles on which we can begin to act in every possible situation.” – William Temple, Christianity and Social Order

This was so freeing to me. It seems that many Christians are crusading to establish a safe, secure, family-based, Bible-based society. Like William Temple says, I don’t think that’s realistic or even Bible-based. We can’t control the society we live in, but we can control our reaction to it.

“Even to imagine that those who are not saved cannot teach you is a very great and serious mistake. Dominion is not found in grace. Not observing this has led some into many mistakes and certainly into pride. Beware even the appearance of pride! Let there be in you that lowly mind which was in Christ Jesus. Be clothed with humility. Let modesty appear in all your words and actions.” -John Wesley, Christian Perfection, emphasis mine.

This must seem so obvious to anyone who is not a Christian, but for me this quote, too, was freeing. It also means that I don’t have to force myself to be better than anyone; I accept the grace that God has given me and humbly learn from every circumstance. Ideally, that is.

A Quiet Misconception

Em July 27th, 2008

This weekend, I attended a Christian conference for the first time since 2002. I think it was as that conference so long ago that I first began to lose taste for them. Don’t get me wrong; God does powerful things at these conferences; many wise, studied men and women of God say many wise, studied things that make me think; I see more old friends than when I go to a wedding. I’ve just gradually moved away from a faith that is based on singing songs and hearing a sermon.

Any Christian girl I know shows no surprise at the statement that females, at least those who have reached sexual maturity, seem to vastly outnumber males in Christian circles. (I believe that this fact leads to sites like these, where pseudo-theology is grotesquely twisted around physical and emotional desire.) I am often puzzled as to why. Is there a church, a city, a nation somewhere where the ratio is reversed, a place anticipating the collision of my world with theirs so that there can be another wedding every weekend and a new baby every week? I used to think that was Millwoods, or possibly Evangel, but in nine provinces, the ratio seems consistent. There are simply more Christian women than there are men.

I am always aware of gender ratios and biases; the very idea of it fascinates me. And so, this weekend, I picked up on some very subtle clues to the mystery of this pervasive asymmetric gender distribution. One song in particular grabbed my attention:

She is yearning
For shelter and affection
That she never found at home
She is searching
For a hero to ride in
To ride in and save the day
And in walks her prince charming
And he knows just what to say
Momentary lapse of reason
And she gives herself away

- “Does Anybody Hear Her?” Casting Crowns

The song is about how we treat newcomers in our churches, and to our shame this pregnant girl was not accepted. But notice her position juxtaposed to the prince charming in the song. He seems to be in it only for the sex, whereas she is an innocent victim who made a bad decision. Throughout the song, she sins because she is the victim of her circumstances.

So he works and he builds with his own two hands
And he pours all he has in a castle made with sand
But the wind and the rain are comin’ crashing in
Time will tell just how long his kingdom stands
His kingdom stands

His American Dream is beginning to seem
More and more like a nightmare
With every passing day
“Daddy, can you come to my game?”
“Oh Baby, please don’t work late.”
Another wasted weekend
And they are slipping away

-”American Dream” Casting Crowns

Here, again, the woman (and child) are victims of the man’s doing. His sin is based on the work of his own two hands, his own selfish greed. There is no attempt to blame some smooth-talking woman who would work him into his grave for her own temporal pleasure.

Neither of these situations are wrong or unrealistic. But I feel that they open a tiny window into a quiet misconception that drives men from church; that, in addition to their own mistakes, they are responsible for the mistakes in the lives of the women closest to them. And this is not unique to Christians. Men are constantly put down in the media, contemptously stereotyped as slaves to their ravenous sex drive, stuck in ubiquitous immaturity, slowly dulling themselves through mindless consumption of beer, sports and porn. Women take the position that if the men would shape up, so many problems in our lives would be sorted out.

“A contest in my local paper invited war-of-the-sexes witticims, and as I read them over I realized that the ones aimed at women were all along the lines of ‘She sure likes chocolate!’ while the ones about men could be summarized ‘He’s a big boorish idiot!’ You might notice a difference there, and once you start noticing it, you see it everywhere. In general, anti-male humor has a bitter hostile edge lacking in even the dumbest dumb-blonde jokes. … Along the same lines, do you notice how many TV ads and sitcoms have this plotline: stupid guy gets his comeuppance from a tough woman? Does anyone ever see any plot that’s the reverse? Not on my TV.

…[G]uys are good sports, good at laughing at themselves, but I think there’s a more serious cost to all this hilarity. When all we see are dumb daddies, bad daddies, and absent daddies, there isn’t much for a little boy to aspire to. Movie heroes still follow the James Bond convention of carefree, commitment-free womanizing, and images of brave, steadfast family men are few.”

- “Flowers for the fellas,” Gender: Men, Women, Sex, and Feminism, Frederica Mathewes-Green.

Incredibly, we sometimes fail to realize is that women are indeed responsible for their own decisions. We have had permission to hide behind our husbands for so long throughout history that the pattern continues to this day, even in spiritual matters. And so the man is portrayed as the bad guy, the fallible one who messes things up for the poor girls.

Why would anyone want to be a part of something where, at any moment, he could be burdened with the sins of two genders?

Don’t be fooled. We women can mess things up just fine on our own.

Baaaa – Shleepie People

D July 25th, 2008

After writing the piece on Post-Denominational thinking, I had dinner with a good friend of mine.  He brought up an interesting rebuttal that somewhat deflates the ideas in that piece.  Essentially it comes down to this:

People like to be stupid.

Of course, taken factually this is untrue.  In a physiological sense most humans have the capability for great levels of thought.  However, the argument is that people would rather be told what to do, then think of a solution themselves.  This is visible in many many aspects of our society, and really has become entrenched into how we do things.

It’s just so much easier to be stupid.  Call it laziness or maybe apathy, but if we (the society) don’t have to read another article, or try another approach, or consider another solution to xyz problem – we don’t.  If there is a system in place that semi-functions, we often don’t even question its effectiveness or efficiency.

There are many examples of this.  Politics is the elephant in the room, but other examples include: cars (transportation in general), energy and environmental and economic policies, city design and infastructure, living and housing arrangements, materialism, and of course religious institutions.

If people don’t want to (and as a result of apathy – cannot) think critically, then truly a system where the congregation holds the pastor accountable will not work.  They will be sheep, listening, waiting, and eating when they are told to.

I still think these are great ideas, but they will only apply to a very small percentage of church attendees.

Post-Denominational

D July 25th, 2008

I talk a lot about the “corporate” Christian church. I want to define what I mean by this term. There are several different definitions of corporate, and the one most used is in reference to a Christian gathering:

2: of, relating to, or formed into a unified body of individuals

We would use this sometimes in the context of “corporate worship” or a “corporate service” where all are gathered together.

When I say the “corporate” Christian church, I am referring more to the business hierarchy that most denominations, sects, and groups employ. Closer to this definition:

1d: having qualities (as commercialism or lack of originality) associated with large corporations or attributed to their influence or control

I suppose the first task is to demonstrate why a large corporate approach is less similar than it should be to Christ’s original vision for the church. In order put these ideas into an appropriate context, we need to consider the backgrounds of the people that compose these churches. We need to understand their cultures, and frame our analysis appropriately. So, let’s start at North American culture.

Considering the wide breadth of known human history, modern North American culture is just about to enter its terrible two’s. We have only been relevant for the last 200 years, and this is the version of North American culture I will examine.[1] We have grown from a diverse group of immigrants into a democratic society, with aggressive capitalist tendencies. Without casting any larger-worldview judgment on capitalism, it has served us very well, and created great wealth for many people in our society. This approach to government and economy has largely affected our societal worldviews, and as such we have integrated it into our major religion – Christianity.

With the capitalist approach comes a commonly accepted business structure, with the central tenet being that the leaders are there to serve the owners. In a modern public company, the leadership is beholden to the shareholders – effectively to the stock price. This creates a form of checks-and-balances between the owners, but often does not address the concerns of those outside this system. It is an inward focused approach. Free market capitalism argues that the market will dynamically adjust itself to serve all people outside of these closed systems. Of course, there are government agencies that will enforce regulation to some degree to affect how these organizations operate, and lobbyists and activists that will attempt to use public opinion to push an organization in a particular direction, but the system largely is set up to cater to corporations.

This business structure and capitalist worldview has been integrated into most major North American church denominations. There are some differences in ownership (of church assets), and management, but largely they are based on the business models gleaned from capitalism. And, like its business-world cousins, it is a largely successful system that has generated a lot of wealth for these churches. And the denominational leadership serves as an oversight committee, or perhaps a trade group that is effectively monitoring and regulating the members of its industry.

So what’s wrong with that?

It places restrictions on visionary thinking within the denominational organization, creating a bureaucracy that can limit appropriate reactions to our ever-changing culture. Ideas that were established decades ago are still prevalent, despite them being largely (and sometimes laughably) obsolete. These entrenched ideas were once culturally influenced decisions that keep denominations stagnant in their approach to doctrine and theology. As such, it discourages out of box thinking and avoids reconsideration of the currently accepted interpretations of biblical texts. In a way, the denominational ‘law’ allows a large percentage of its membership to be apathetic to further questioning of their beliefs and approaches – avoid critical thinking.

In most cases, the only way to innovate within a denomination is at a grassroots level, and generally involves the members to act somewhat outside of the established norms of the denomination. And it can (and does) happen, and creates some fantastic communities. However, these communities are the exception as opposed to the rule within denominational structures.

Christian mass-market industry? Is that what Jesus was teaching?

Ultimately, I see a system that discourages personal growth by claiming to be an authority. I’m sure there is some sort of sociological explanation for this type of human behavior, but in a word: apathy. My opinion is that Christ’s teachings were for personal use, to be applied to a persons worldview and decision making process. Not for commercial use, with groups of ‘experts’ creating regulatory constructs under which the congregational members fall.

Post-Denomination

I am advocating a post-denominational approach to Christ’s teachings. A return to personal responsibility in discovering the truth’s of Christ’s message, and being honest with those who you are in fellowship as to where you are in your journey to emulate Christ. A climate that does not incite fear as a result of going against the status quo, but rather encourages theological and doctrinal discourse. And beyond that – tolerates differing viewpoints while maintaining critical thinking skills to protect the body at large. We need to teach ourselves to think, and to follow Christ – not the teachings of denominations and their leaders.

I see this post-denominational culture as having “service organizations” that provide liaison services between the government and the church for charity purposes. They will also provide financial service to small groups of churches that want to pool their resources to tackle larger projects, in their cities and elsewhere – to affect real change. And the service organizations will use a wider lens to include many Christ-following churches with different disciplines, encouraging unity between what used to be a very segregated group of churches. They will arbitrate the more complex disputes, and provide oversight to the resolution process. And finally, they will facilitate accountability between the leaders of the churches (not accountability with the organization itself), forcing them to constantly re-evaluate their ideas and practices before teaching them to their congregations.

One foreseeable objection is that pastors may still teach heretical or inaccurate messages to their congregations, and to that I say this: it shouldn’t matter. If the members of these churches are autonomous in their thinking, comparing, and discernment, they will be able to hold the pastor to account or at least hold a public discourse that brings everybody to a shared understanding of opinions.

We like to look at ‘mainline’ denominations, in all their varying degrees of doctrines and theology, and generally accept that this corporate business model is “the best way to do things”. I am beginning to question (and hopefully eventually challenge) that idea. And of course, as would be appropriate to some of the ideas presented above, I welcome constructive criticism – which I will analyze earnestly, and perhaps integrate into my understanding of Christ’s church and how that looks in our culture.


1. [As an aside, I am aware there is a rich Aboriginal culture that dominated the North American continent prior to colonization, however it has been largely washed away over the last 200 years. Such cultural extermination is a huge subject that is entirely out of the scope of this essay.]
2. The primary reason democratic capitalism works so well is that it forces us to leverage our greed against each other prevent any one person from becoming the dictator. This turns our human nature from resolving things with violence to resolving things with money. Of course, the gap between rich an poor will likely continue to grow in this system, as greed is essentially a bad thing. But now I’m rambling..