Category: Adam Hamilton

  • this week’s round-up (april 26)

    Adam Hamilton on The Logic of Hell.

    Donald Miller on Two Words That Kill Passion and the follow-up, Moving From “Ought To” to “Want To”. The “ought to” idea/problem has been on my mind this past week. As I’ve been reading though Jay Bakker’s book Fall to Grace he writes of how the idea of “works” can be abused to create a secondary legalism that is counter to the Christian concept of grace. In the book, he writes:

         “The trouble is, if everything you do comes back to your own cosmic scorecard, you’re not really caring about others. Your selflessness ends up being self-obsessed. You are all that you think about. Where’s the generosity in that?
         “When you try to earn your salvation through works, you judge your neighbor by the same harsh standard that you use to judge yourself. Instead of being encouraged by other people’s good deeds and generosity, you fall into a pointless competition, trying to do a little better and be a little more virtuous than your neighbor. You are keeping up with the Jameses.
         “To avoid this trap, we have to find a motivation that lies outside the law and works. We have to find a source of inspiration beyond obligation or pride. We find it in the freedom of grace. But free isn’t easy…”

    From the Art of Non-Conformity blog – Whose Side are You On – thoughts on Ani DiFranco and the virtue of forging your own path, even when it is risky.

    This video made the rounds this past weekend, but worth checking out if you haven’t seen it (or taking another look, if you have).

    A Portrait of Christ from Jeremy Cowart on Vimeo.

    Roger Olson on Whatever Became of the Cross. Interesting reflection – growing up in a mainline church I don’t remember hearing much about the cross, and later years grew weary of the violent imagery it conveyed, especially when it is presented it ways that almost seem to glorify the violence. The whole “washed in the blood” imagery has never been part of my vocabulary, but in recently I’ve been more and more convinced that we do need to fully acknowledge and by humbled by the cross – you can’t get to Easter Sunday without walking through Good Friday. There is a middle way between completely ignoring the cross and becoming so obsessed that sometimes you forget Jesus even lived, and the church certainly needs to be present somewhere in that middle ground.

    On a similar Good Friday theme, be sure and check out Walter Bruggerman’s reflection, Praying in the Abyss.

    Also from Sojourners: Ayn Rand, Manicheanism and Christianity. I was reading another article about Ayn Rand a couple weeks ago and struck by how her philosophy is so antithetical to Christianity and wondered about this apparent disconnect in the minds of those who try to commit to both. Love the sentence at the end:
    “If the choice is Jesus or Rand, I choose Jesus.”


    Jeremy Smith on All Doubt in a Day – I’m preaching the lectionary this week, also looking at the story of Thomas, and some of Jeremy’s thoughts might find their way into this week’s message.


    This should have made last week’s round-up but got missed: Becca Clark offers some important thoughts on personal safety in the practice of ministry. While a gender dynamic might be part of the equation, I know I have also been in situations when an unsafe person has been in my office and I’ve calculated an “escape plan” in my head (although never to the point that Becca experienced). In my current setting, I’m limited to a single entrance/exit with limited room to maneuver, a distance away from my administrative assistant (who, as I think about it, also has limited space and no secondary exit), and we don’t currently have an emergency plan in place. Something for all churches to seriously think about and make efforts to correct.


    Michael Hyatt talks about his idea capture and organization process using a blend of traditional paper and electronic. On the computer he uses Evernote which I’ve had on my computer and mobile devices for a while, but never really used. I might have to give his system (or some variation of it) a try.


    Advertising & Detroit:

    “I love Detroit, the people here, the spirit, the nearness of despair, the nearness of spectacular success. It is the American crossroads,” he tweets, adding in another: “Along with my hometown of Oakland, I am now convinced that Detroit is the most soulful city in our country.”

    New music from Steve Earle out this week (I’ll Never Get Out of This World Alive). Here’s an oldie but goodie from his back-catalog.


  • On franchise churches and Methodist reform

     A couple days ago Jeremy Smith wrote a great article about his concerns with Church of the Resurrection entering into discussion with another struggling United Methodist congregation about becoming a remote campus of CoR. Jeremy does a great job not only naming the temptations of such a move, but also suggests the ramifications (specifically dangers of theological outsourcing, denominational splintering, and the marginalization of women and minority clergy).

     I think Jeremy’s on-target, but in the early morning hours as I found my mind awake before my body was ready to be, I found myself reconsidering.

     I’m playing “devil’s advocate” to a degree here, but is it possible this (or something like it) is exactly where United Methodist reform is going to come from?

     Is it possible that instead of this being the first step to a Wal-Mart church, this is a step back to what John Wesley was doing by traveling the English countryside preaching churches where he was invited in (and fields where he wasn’t), declaring “the world is my parish” and doing an end run around the (largely ineffective) structures of his day? Could an internet feed of a person’s preaching simply be the modern-day equivalent of publishing a volume of “Standard Sermons“? The reality is: creating a wide-spread movement, observing a set of unified expectations and practices, primarily driven by a single dynamic personality, that generated controversy and divisiveness is largely was Wesley was about.

     Now I’m not saying that’s what Hamilton is after, and he’s certainly not going to accomplish it by entering into a series of adoption agreements that involve studies of things like demographics and debt obligations, and the approval of Bishops, District Superintendents, and Church Councils.

     But it did strike me that Hamilton (and Slaughter) are both in the position to spark that kind of reform if they wanted. It seems to me that they are both very close to having the tools as well as the leverage in place to bring about significant denominal change if they so desired. By design the United Methodist system lacks a single visionary leader, largely to our credit; the system of leadership offered by regional Bishops works well. Yet, I find myself wondering, if we’ve entered a time when we need a new “John Wesley” – someone who can spark a wide-reaching, inspiring vision that is rooted in those unified standards and expectations.

     What if it’s not about building an empire of mini-CoRs, what if it is instead about inspiring a church to reach back to it’s roots (before it was a ‘church’), to be a reform movement once again, reaching out to the people who have been alienated from the institution, and motivating people to live their faith?

     I don’t think that’s what CoR is doing right now, and so in the end, I resonate with Jeremy’s concerns, but I find myself wondering if it could be possible.

  • this week’s round-up (may 13)

    Fairly slow week, in terms of stuff that caught my attention…

    Lifehacker offered up their Top 10 Motivation Boosters and Procrastination Killers as well as a nice peek into a tiny office arrangement – that’s pretty relevant to me because my new digs are probably close to 1/2 the size of my current office, so utilizing space will be a priority (and I have no need for that triple monitor arrangement).

    Adam Hamilton offered some brief thoughts on the 10 Largest Churches in the UMC. His note about worship attendance vs. membership is important, but I also appreciated how he explained that the membership-to-attendance ratio varies significantly between the churches. He doesn’t go into it, but I know the membership philosophies between Resurrection and Ginghamsburg are differ in some key ways, and I’d be interested to see Hamilton comment more on that.

    Scot McKnight posted a quick comment regarding Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove’s book The Wisdom of Stability. As someone serving in a denomination that embraces itineracy rather than long-term stability it’s a question I wrestle with.

    Wil Wheaton posted some thoughts today on the Space Shuttle launch. What hooked me was his mention that he was home sick the day of the Challenger disaster, and on that day I happened to be home sick, too. I also appreciated his comment at the end, where he says:

    We humans are a flawed species, to put it mildly, and I think we could do a much better job taking care of our planet and each other … but when I see what we’re capable of doing, it gives me hope that the future I pretended to live in twenty years ago will actually arrive some day.

    Thinking about the small office space thing in Lifehacker, made me think of this song: