tim hoeksema :: Friends blog

December 03, 2008

http://church20.blogspot.com/2008/12/projector-in-your-pocket.html



This device would be excellent for anyone who has to do presentations for a living. Especially presentations that are in a conference setting.


Keywords: technology

Posted by Kevin Rush | 0 comment(s)

December 02, 2008

George Barna and I just finished our fifth interview. It will be published soon. New Wineskins Mag. just published the report on the current move of God.

http://www.wineskins.org/filter.asp?SID=2&co_key=1618

Posted by Frank Viola | 0 comment(s)

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/TheForgottenWays/~3/471911048/

In order to really get to grips with the dynamics of these primal shifts (two posts ago) in community dynamics, I have found the anthropologist Victor Turner’s ideas of liminality and communitas particularly useful Victor Turner, The Ritual Process, Cornell University Press, 1969 ). Turner was an anthropologist who studied various rites of passage among African people-groups and came up with the term liminality to describe the transition process accompanying a fundamental change of state or social position. Situations of liminality in this context can be extreme, where the participant is cast out of the normal structures of life, is humbled, disoriented, and subjected to various rites of passage, which together constitute a form of test as to whether the participant will be allowed back into society and to transition to the next level in the prevailing social structure. Liminality therefore applies to that situation where people find themselves in an in-between, marginal state in relation to the surrounding society, a place that could involve significant danger and disorientation, but not necessarily so.



For example, in some tribes younger boys are kept under the care of the women until initiation age—around thirteen. At the appropriate time the men sneak into the female compound of the village at night and ‘kidnap’ the lads. The boys are blindfolded, then roughed up, and herded out of the village and taken into the bush. They are then circumcised then left to fend for themselves in the wild African bush for a period lasting up to six months. Once a month the elders of the tribe go to meet them to help debrief and mentor them. But on the whole they have to find both inner and outer resources to cope with the ordeal pretty much by themselves. During this time, the initiates move from being disoriented and individualistic to developing a bond of comradeship forged in the testing conditions of liminality. This sense of comradeship and communality that comes out of the shared ordeal Turner calls communitas. Communitas in his view happens in situations where individuals are driven to find each other through a common experience of ordeal, humbling, transition, and marginalization. It involves intense feelings of social togetherness and belonging brought about by having to rely on each other in order to survive. If the boys emerge from these experiences they are reintroduced into the tribe as men. They are thus accorded the full status of manhood—they are no longer considered boys.



So the related ideas of liminality and communitas describe the dynamics of the Christian community inspired to overcome their instincts to ‘huddle and cuddle’, and form themselves around a common mission that calls them onto a dangerous journey to unknown places. A mission which calls the church to shake off its collective securities and to plunge into the world of action where they will experience disorientation and marginalization but also where they encounter God and each other in a new way. Communitas is therefore always linked with the experience of liminality. It involves adventure and movement, and it describes that unique experience of togetherness that only really happens among a group of people inspired by the vision of a better world actually attempting to do something about it. (Remember the response to the tsunami.) And it is here where the safe, middle-class, consumerist, captivity of the church is so very problematic. And it is here where the adaptive challenge of the 21st Century could be God’s invitation to the church to rediscover itself as a missional communitas.


While some missiologists use this idea to describe the experience of transition the church in the West is currently experiencing in moving from one state (Christendom) or mode of church to another (missional), the emphasis has generally been on the new state of the church at the end of the process and so liminality and communitas are viewed as temporary experiences. From my perspective, significant manifestations of Apostolic Genius teach us that liminality and communitas are more the normative situation and condition of the pilgrim people of God. This is certainly the case for the phenomenal Jesus-movements in view; it is in the conditions of shared ordeal that these Jesus movements thrive and are driven to the activation of Apostolic Genius. What is clear is that both the Early Christian movements and the Chinese underground church experienced liminality through being outlawed and persecuted.


In this perspective, the phenomenal Jesus movements were/are expressions of communitas and not community as we normally conceive it. And as far as I can discern it is always a normative element of Apostolic Genius. The loss of communitas leads to a diminution of the total phenomenon of Apostolic Genius—the life force of the authentic Christian movement wherever it truly manifests.

Keywords: Alan, blog, Hirsch, missional

Posted by Alan Hirsch | 0 comment(s)

December 01, 2008

http://church20.blogspot.com/2008/12/it-not-crap.html

Just a reminder that the free videos start today over at Worship House Media
Daily Freebie Promo - "You Can't Say That" from Worship House Media on Vimeo.

FYI - Dale's beard is sweet! It makes me feel like he's Santa!


Keywords: technology

Posted by Kevin Rush | 0 comment(s)

http://www.kezrush.com/2008/12/too-lazy-to-blog.html

Imagine a future where blog posts and or websites that are completely written by computers.  Yes I said written by. Not hosted by, posted by, or published on, but written by.  It's just around the corner.[click here to see the future of the web]

Keywords: myblog

Posted by Kevin Rush | 0 comment(s)

http://frankviola.wordpress.com/2008/12/01/discerning-gods-will-in-the-missional-organic-church/

Posted by Frank Viola | 0 comment(s)

http://provocativechristian.wordpress.com/2008/11/24/christians-in-ukraine-the-fi

It is inspiring to see the what God is doing among the first generation of Jesus followers after that fall of communism. In many ways the church in Ukraine is going through adolescent growing pains, but it is wonderful to see what is happening in the lives of her people.

Keywords: Ukraine

Posted by Dan Lacich | 0 comment(s)

November 30, 2008

http://www.kezrush.com/2008/11/advent-conspiracy-podcast.html

If you have iTunes you should subscribe to the Advent Conspiracy Podcast by clicking

[HERE]

Keywords: myblog

Posted by Kevin Rush | 0 comment(s)

November 29, 2008

http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/TheForgottenWays/~3/469815857/

I have been reading a book by the brilliant Catholic theologian and ethicist George Weigel called Faith, Reason, And The War Against Jihadism: A Call To Action. It just so happens that I was reading it as the Mumbai terror attacks happened and so I post the headings of his insights here. His issue is not with Islam in general, but with the particularly dangerous brand called Jihadism, and I do find these insights very honest, insightful, and confronting. I am inclined to agree. What think ye?



  • Lesson one: The great human questions, including the great questions of public life, are ultimately theological

  • Lesson two: To speak of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam as the “three Abrahamic faiths,” the “three religions of the Book” or the “three monotheisms” obscures rather than illuminates. These familiar descriptions ought to be retired

  • Lesson three: Jihadism is the enemy in the multi-front war that has been declared on us

  • Lesson four: Jihadism has a complex intellectual history, the chief points of which must be grasped in order to understand the nature of the threat it poses to the west

  • Lesson five: Jihadists read history and politics through the prism of distinctive theological convictions, not through the lens of western assumptions about the progress of dynamic of history

  • Lesson six: It is not “Islamophobic” to note the historical connection between conquest and Muslim expansion, or between contemporary jihadism and terrorism. Truth-telling is the essential prerequisite to genuine interreligious dialogue, which can only be based on the claims of reason.

  • Lesson seven: The war against jihadism is a contest for the human future that will endure for generations

  • Lesson eight: Genuine realism in foreign policy takes wickedness seriously, yet avoids premature closure in it’s thinking about the possibilities of positive change in world politics

  • Lesson nine: In the war against Jihadism, the political objective in the middle East and throughout the Islamic world is the evolution of responsible and responsive government, which will take different forms given different historical and cultural circumstances

  • Lesson ten: in the war against global Jihadism, deterrence strategies unlikely to be effective, because it is almost impossible to deter those who are committed to their own martyrdom

  • Lesson eleven: Cultural self-confidence is indispensable to victory in the long-term struggle against Jihadism

  • Lesson twelve: Islamist salami tactics (also known as the salami-slice strategy, a divide and conquer process of threats and alliances used to overcome opposition) must be resisted, for small concessions in the name of a false idea of tolerance inevitably lead to further concessions, and into further erosions of liberty and security

  • Lesson thirteen: We cannot, and will not, deserve victory (much less achieve it) if we continue to finance those who attack us, therefore, a program to defund jihadism by developing alternatives to petroleum based transportation fuels is a crucial component of the current struggle

  • Lesson fourteen: Victory in the war against global jihadism requires a new domestic political coalition that is proof against the confusions caused by the Unhinged Left and the Unhinged Right

  • Lesson fifteen: There is no escape from US leadership

Keywords: Alan, blog, Hirsch, missional

Posted by Alan Hirsch | 0 comment(s)

http://www.kezrush.com/2008/11/selah-saturday-popeye.html

This is an old video that I have not got to post. So enjoy...

Keywords: myblog

Posted by Kevin Rush | 0 comment(s)

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