Sunday, June 20, 2010

The Negative Impact Podcasting Has On Preaching




We are seeing an insurmountable impact in the pulpits across the world because of Podcasting. I could’ve easily written a blog entitled, “The Positive Impact Podcasting Has On Preaching” because of the wide accessibility of complimentary resources. That title is for another time and place. The Negative impacts may also trace its roots to the wide accessibility of complimentary resources. Church podcasting has turned into PodOmania; even the laity are listening to their favorite communicator. The pressures of local preachers for quality communication are being felt all over the country because of the well polished messages of the prominent. Consequently, preachers are mimicking verbiage, hand gestures, tonation, and even full messages of the most prominent preachers of evangelicalism. Some prominent preachers even sell sermon kits that includes a preaching manuscript. I see this effect all over the country; camps, churches, conventions, etc... It can be scary how easily this phenomenon can be ascertained while listening to even a brief part of a message. Every preacher has a personalized signature to their message. Here are a list of the prominent preachers that many of you have seen mimicked:

John Piper
Francis Chan
Mark Driscoll
Rob Bell
Andy Stanley
Louie Giglio
Erwin McManus
Ed Young Jr.

I have already seen some up and coming preachers mimicked such as:

Steven Furtick
Perry Noble
David Platt
Matt Chandler

I’m not saying it is bad at all to be influenced by these speakers. However, this craze has homogenized verbage, sermon structuring, hand gestures, theology, tonation, and sermons in ways none of history has recorded. What is the effect? Homogenization leading to a loss in God given individuality, critical thought, sermon preparation, creativity, and ultimately, the Holy Spirit’s leading. These are just a few of the short term effects.

Friday, June 11, 2010

A Dialogue on Culturally Contextualizing the Gospel




After studying the book of Colossians, I posted this quote on twitter:

"We must differentiate culture from biblical theology to connect to this generation and avoiding false teaching. #lessonsfromcolossians"

After posting this quote, this dialogue was the result...

Charles Affholter: Do you mean the differentiation between the culture of the early Church within which the Pauline community produced this document and the particular, and notably well-developed, Christology that is the central point of the larger argument, or a differentiation between modern culture and theology? I hopefully assume the former to be what you mean, rather than the latter.


As you well know, I find "relevance" to be nothing more than a nasty case of "buzzword toxicity" infecting evangelicalism which was itself a response to the very relevant, though theologically vacuous and equally toxic buzzword, "social gospel", that had become de rigeur in main line Protestantism early last century.


Granted, it bay be a step up from the days when high Christology was fodder for dock-side chatter, but to my mind, the dumbing down of america in general, at which most fundamentalists have excelled far beyond their secular brethren, has left few christians with the education to adequately engage in serious theological reflection. "Engaging the culture" does not and cannot condone the watering down the gospel into the cheap grace that pervades the ecclesiastical communities that are growing the fastest.
14 hours ago



Chad Logan: Biblical principles are indispensable prescriptions for us today; however, there are methods we use to implement those principles. If principles and methods are unchanging, then I would label you as a Christian fundamentalist. Theology should be closed, fixed, and non negotiably biblical; On the other hand, our methods may be culturally contextualized and flexible to change. Some call that cultural capitulation, but they have already contextualized whether they have realized it or not. i.e. latin to English liturgy, Old to New Calendarists, driving a car etc.. Cultural contextualization may and can be bad thing... For instance, many methods may overemphasize or underemphasize the characteristics of God. For example, much of evangelicalism overemphasizes the imminence of God and underemphasizes the transcendence of God. Eastern orthodoxy and Roman Catholicism often emphasize vice versa. On that regard, I would argue that each has much to offer the other and we should pursue a healthy balance of rightly observing the characteristics of God...

Of course I would argue the NT should be the criteria for what contextualization should and ought be. Paul declares to be all things to all people.. The reality is that many churches are so insular that they are providing great reasons for the unchurched to remain unchurched. Creating a Christian culture of a moral majority is NOT being obedient to the scripture in being IN the world but not OF the world; this idea deserves more insight for another occasion. at any rate, creating a coalition of Christian soldiers is not the prescription of scripture by any stretch.

What must be avoided in the balance of biblical principles and cultural contextualization is syncretism; syncretism can be traced throughout all of Christendom. Some argue that Gnosticism and Greek paganism has left its mark in many forms of Eastern orthodoxy. St. Augustine’s reliance on Plato’s philosophy may be an example of syncretism as well. The middle ages brought a change between the Bible and the church. Therefore, more and more classical non Christian philosophers were freely mixed in dogma. Aquinas’ use of Aristotelian philosophy is an example. The mixture of Biblical teaching and philosophy led to a disregard to scripture because truth could be found without it. May it be that even systematic theology is more indicative of culture than the Bible?

Mexico is an extraordinary case of syncretism of Spanish catholicism and Native Indian cultures. The Virgin of Guadelupe can be traced back to an ancient tribal goddess. The Virgin of Guadelupe is just one of many examples of Mexican syncretism that has invaded catholicism. America evangelicalism is experiencing syncretism on an epic level. The American dream has infiltrated evangelical pulpits with the health, wealth, and prosperity gospel. The list goes on and on... This discussion is a very delicate topic that requires much reliance humility through prayer and the biblical pursuit of orthodox doctrine. Will there be mystery? of course... But at the end of the day, let our faith be in the Gospel alone, not culture or tradition. My thoughts here may be one reason I have a newfound interest in the early church fathers of whom were not tainted by 2,000 years of cultural history.

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Simple Stage Curtains On A Budget


Stage curtains are an inexpensive way to create a simplified stage. Creating stage curtains using this easy method also enhances versatility with height adjustment as well as using different prop methods. 1 1/4 inch pvc was used for the curtain holders and each curtain set has 3 2 way L brackets that is used for 90 degree angles on the top and bottom. 1 1/4 PVC pipe can be purchased at Lows for a little over 3.00 per 10 ft. piece. The pipes are easy to saw off or add extensions to. Each curtain is self standing using only a 2 way L PVC Bracket: however, 3 and 4 way PVC brackets can be purchased for extra weight support. The two side curtains are $14.00 king size flat bed sheets purchased at Wal-Mart. It is as simple as removing the hem from the width in order to hang the sheet. The width is approximately 8 feet w x 9 ft. h and the sheets spared about 10 inches to allow fullness. Now the largest curtain is approximately 10ft.w X 12ft. h. I added a 2 ft. extensions. Extension brackets can be purchased at any hardware store for .50. The larger curtain is 2 black tablecloths sewn together. Tablecloth material is 70 inches wide so this allowed us 20 inches of spared fullness in the sheet. The AState BCM logo is a science fair poster board purchased at Wal-Mart drawn using permanent markers. The design was created using both Photoshop and Illustrator and the font came from dafont.com (College font). I traced the logo from a projector.

I look forward to creating cheap props that will add more flavor to this project.

Materials:

12 1 1/4 inch PVC Pipes
12 1 1/4 inch 2 way PVC L brackets
2 king size bed sheets
2 12 ft. black table cloths
2 1 1/4 inch PVC extension brackets
2 science fair display boards
Magic Markers

time: 3 hrs.