John August Swanson: Festival of Lights |
Hello to all
my friends out in cyberspace! I shocked myself when I opened up Seedlings and realized
my last post was four weeks ago. I have been on vacation, but not that long.
One of those weeks took me up to the Presbyterian heaven known as Montreat, so
blogging was far from my mind. Thank you for your patience – if you are still
there!
When I return to the pulpit this
Sunday at Seneca Presbyterian Church, my thoughts will be focused on a new
theme. Perhaps that theme can be summed up by the question: Is there a peculiar
way of being Christian?
I don’t mean peculiar in the
sense of strange, though I understand completely how many non-Christians would
characterize us in such a way.
By peculiar I mean distinctive, set apart, in the way the dress of a faithful Muslim woman sets her apart. Peculiarity can also be seen in the way Eric Liddell (Chariots of Fire), a competitive British runner in the 1924 Olympics, set himself apart when he refused to run in a race scheduled for a Sunday.
By peculiar I mean distinctive, set apart, in the way the dress of a faithful Muslim woman sets her apart. Peculiarity can also be seen in the way Eric Liddell (Chariots of Fire), a competitive British runner in the 1924 Olympics, set himself apart when he refused to run in a race scheduled for a Sunday.
So – is there a peculiar,
distinctive way of living the Christian life? The Apostle Paul would say yes,
and does so eloquently in the 12th chapter of Romans, our text for
Sunday.
- Let love be genuine.
- Hate what is evil, hold fast to what is good.
- Bless those who persecute you.
- If your enemies are hungry, feed them.
- Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.
As we gather for worship in the
coming weeks at Seneca Presbyterian, we will be exploring just how that can be
true. We will use the concept of Christian practices, a concept introduced by Dorothy
Bass and Craig Dykstra in their 1997 book Practicing
Our Faith. The concept was unique then; it is foundational now. Foundational
to understanding how Christians can live out the Christian witness in a world that
is increasingly secular and increasingly prone to characterize all Christians by
those given prominence in the media.
A Christian
practice is a cluster of activities, ideas, and images, lived by Christian
people over time, which addresses a fundamental human need in the light of and
in response to God's active presence for the life of the world in Jesus Christ.
(From Dorothy Bass, “What is a Christian Practice?” www.practicingourfaith.org) I hope you can sense from that definition something of what makes a
practice peculiarly Christian. It goes beyond what we do to why we do it, the
confidence behind the doing, and the strength we have to persist in the doing.
Over
the coming weeks, we will put the concept to the test as we explore more deeply
what it means to live as Christians in the world God is working to redeem.
Please join us as we do, but if you can’t: watch this space!
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