Category: <span>Christianity</span>

I scored 62 and thought the question on the Sabbath didn’t have the option I wanted.

The moderate hermeneutic might be seen as the voice of reason and open-mindedness. Moderates generally score between 53 to 65. Many are conservative on some issues and progressive on others. It intrigues that conservatives tend to be progressive on the same issues, while progressives tend to be conservative on the same issues. Nonetheless, moderates have a flexible hermeneutic that gives them the freedom to pick and choose on which issues they will be progressive or conservative. For that reason, moderates are more open to the charge of inconsistency. What impresses me most about moderates are the struggles they endure to render judgments on hermeneutical issues.

Take the Hermenutics quiz.

Then tell me what you think about it.

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the-snowman.jpgOn Sunday, we showed the youth the Nooma DVD – Noise. They coped remarkably well with a dominantly reading-the-screen type of movie. It is about silence. We managed 5-10 minutes of it afterwards.

I don’t make a habit of silence, not a set habit anyway. I can sit at home for hours in front of a computer screen with or without music on, but it doesn’t count. I am the kind of person that gets so utterly engrossed in something that I lose track of everything. Making an effort to be silent I do not think includes letting myself be so engrossed that I forget to listen to that nothing. To just be.

I picked up a book a bought ages ago about Youth Spirituality. Oddly enough it was full of all the stuff I’d been looking up online (stations/labyrinth). There was a section on silence.

So I did it. For an hour. I didn’t limit myself too much, I could do roughly what I wanted. No music, no computer. I could read (and I did) and not just Christian stuff, I could write (and I did), I could sit (and I did), I could pray (and I did).

It felt long. But it felt different.

Did God speak? Perhaps. If he did it was about disciplines in general.

On consideration, my rock solid discipline for the past few years has been blogging. This has probably been better for me than I realise. Ultimately, it tells me that I can be an extremely disciplined person. The sad thing is that this disciplined part of myself doesn’t extend much further.

So I was thinking about what does discipline actually mean? And how is it different from simply living an organised life and is it just the specific ‘God’ stuff? And how I don’t think good discipline necessarily is just the prayer/silence stuff and about how perhaps it’s more about a mental shift and an application of yourself to somethin.?

I’m not sure though.

I’d like to try and be more disciplined this year in all kinds of areas, however it seems that it would be far too easy for it to slip in to me just getting into a freakishly organised life (which has happened before in stints) for a while.

So, what is the difference. What are good things to be disciplined about?

dis·ci·pline

  1. Training expected to produce a specific character or pattern of behavior, especially training that produces moral or mental improvement.
  2. A set of rules or methods, as those regulating the practice of a church or monastic order.
  3. A branch of knowledge or teaching.

After my bout of silence, I put on a movie called ‘The Snowman’ by Raymond Briggs. He is a cartoonist but these are animated short films based on his books and set to amazing music.

In essence, it gave me an extra half hour of silence. There was music and image: it was a boy’s quiet adventure. It begins at home where simple things are delightful. The boy and the snowman share each other’s worlds, fly across snowfields and party with other snowmen, at the end the boy is left with only the reminder of a scarf and that is all. His snowman creation came alive and gave him more of life for a short time, you don’t know the implications.

It was interesting.

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Blogging Christianity Church Post of the Day

dan-mccarthy7.jpgAfter all my whinging, the internet is not totally destitute of quality help for stuck youth leaders.

In my digging for something that we needed for youth on Sunday FAST, which I didn’t end up fulfilling (but things wound up okay), I found a whole lot of intriguing and useful blogs. Along with design related thing – a spawn from Church Marketing Sucks. Interesting.

Chase these links:

Church Marketing Lab – brochures/cards/flyers/posters done by people for Churches, some pretty good work here. I have a small bit of fun doing youth programs now and then, but I really don’t produce masterpieces. This might inspire me.

Jonny Baker – check the ‘Worship Tricks’ on the right hand side.

Passionately Pensive – her writing is fun and she shares ideas now and then.

Rethinking Youth Ministry – the title says it.

If you know of any other good ones please share.

image by Dan McArthy (I sourced it from somewhere else… but as usual I have forgotten where) regardless, there’s something pretty timeless and beautiful about it.

Blogging Christianity Church Design Ministry

I don’t know if I’ll make this a regular installment, but tonight I got thinking about pen-pals.

When I was about 12 I had a pen-pal called Misty (No joke and wow this is all coming back to me). I was in the Solomons, she was in Byron Bay. We wrote quite a few times – I’m not sure even where the pen-pal’ishness originated, some magazine thing I think.

One day I got all psyched up with Jesus and decided to be all evangelistic and share with her the true meaning of Christmas.

The story – which I swear is true – ended one of two ways (This I blame on my sketchy memory).

a) She wrote and said she wasn’t really interested

b) She never wrote back

Either in my 12-year old eyes was a disappointing outcome. I think I decided not to tell anyone – since I was embarassed in the first place at even writing it.

Ah well. I guess 12 year old’s need moments to make mistakes and to grow up a little.

Evangelism is a stigmafied poo. I’m sad to say that I’ve contributed.

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