Archived entries for Blogs

Top Five Posts From 2009 That Weren't Mine

I started this blog in June of 2009 mostly as a way to connect with people in our fledgling faith community. After that project began to take on its own life (and spawn its own website), Pastoralia emerged to become a space for writing about my thoughts and experiences as a leader exploring the intersections of faith and culture.

I have enjoyed writing here so much I’ve decided to devote more time to it from now on. Consequently, Pastoralia will undergo some significant changes in the coming weeks, but in the meantime, here are a few of my favorites posts of 2009 from around the Christian blog-world (don’t worry, this’ll be quick): Continue reading…

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Announcing Progressive Advent

Our family is excited to be celebrating the Advent season this year with our newly initiated church family, Ikon Community. In addition to daily Advent readings and exercises from December 1 through the 24th, we’ll also be gathering in the homes of different Ikon families for each of the 4 Advent Sundays leading up to Christmas.

Jenell and I have worked every year to develop practices that help us re-appropriate Christmas as a truly Christ-centered holiday, and we’re excited to take this next step with a new group of friends. What do you and your family or church do during this season to refocus on the parousia of Christ? Continue reading…

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Join Us For Thanksgiving in the Park

Over at Ikon Community Cory and Crissy Verner have planned a day-after-Thanksgiving dinner in the park in Escondido with their homeless friends. I’m really proud of these guys for subtly yet significantly different approach to helping the poor a radically by simply being their friends.

This is a great opportunity to meet some amazing people and make new friends. If you’re in the San Diego area we want to invite you do join us.

Click here to RSVP at the Ikoncommunity.com site. Continue reading…

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Make Something Day, 2009

It’s the time of year when we start thinking about gifts. No, I’m not talking about Christmas. Friends Jason and Brooke Evans started Make Something Day a couple years ago as a way of practicing an alternative economy of simplicity and gift-giving on the most conspicuous consumption day of the year: Black Friday. Naturally, this idea appealed to me right away as it goes hand-in-hand with the gift economy approach of the Twoshirts.org Community.

Here’s a snippet from the MSD website: Continue reading…

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Church Told to Stop Feeding the Poor

UPDATE: Today the AZcetnral.com news site picked up this story. Some of the quotes in the article are priceless.

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Crossroads United Methodist Church in Phoenix feeds the hungry, but today they were told they can no longer continue this practice because in doing so they constitute a “charity dining hall” and, as such, are breaking local ordinance.

Even though this hateful decision has been masked in a facade of local code issues, Rev Escobedo-Frank rightly identifies at the root issue:

“Or, are we just discriminating against people who are poor and who don’t have homes, because we don’t like what we feel when we see them? The real issue, is not that there are hungry people out there, or that we serve food in church, the real issue is that we are afraid. Afraid to reach out a helping hand; afraid to see what the economy could do to us; afraid to face our worst fears…”

Afraid indeed.

Last year I wrote over at Twoshirts.org about the case of a Detroit teenager accused of murdering a homeless man: Continue reading…

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We Ditch Church Once And Make the News!

This weekend we did things a little differently at Ikon Community. Normally we gather every Sunday night at someone’s home for a meal, the Eucharist, some reflection and discussion of scripture, and prayer. But this Sunday was the weekend for the local Stand Up Against Poverty event, organized by ONE San Diego in support of the Millenium Development Goals.

So, we decided to show up there for “church” instead.

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The Stand Up event garnered a little coverage in our local paper today (I have no idea how my family ended up in the photo, but that’s me hugging Judah, with Jenell to my left and Savannah to my right), but there’s actually more to this story for Ikon Community. The Stand Up event was held at Grape Day Park in Escondido, which happens to be the epicenter of a rather large homeless population. For the past several months one of the families from Ikon Community – Cory and Crissy Verner and their kids Levi and Luke – have been going to Grape Day Park every Saturday morning to bring food and coffee to the scattered “residents” there. So, we organized a little picnic to take place immediately afterward with our 30 or so Grape Day Park friends. It was a blast. We ate together, talked about life, and wrapped it up with a small group communion celebration. I let the body and blood do the preaching.

More importantly, Cory and Crissy have been developing genuine friendships with the folks at Grape Day Park. It has been awe inspiring for me to see how simple friendship, and the support which naturaly follows, can break the hopelessness associated with poverty. I honestly don’t think Cory and Crissy Verner see the full impact they’re having, but Jenell and I see it and we’re grateful to be part of what they’re doing.

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Was John Calvin a Murderer?

If you don’t already know, My friend Bill Kinnon keeps an excellent blog. He’s thought-provoking, smart, funny, sarcastic, and somehow humble all at the same time. Yesterday he had the audacity to smear John Calvin on the celebration of said Reformer’s 500th birthday:

Many hold Calvin up as one of the greatest Scriptural exegetes who ever lived. So, I ask, in all humility (yah, right) did Calvin simply skim over the Gospels? Did he miss Paul’s statement that one of the fruits of the Spirit was long-suffering?(Apparently Servetus was rather obnoxious in the way in interacted with Calvin.) Or is their a Secret Message of Jesus that the rest of us can’t find that allows theologians to put heretics to death.

See, there’s that sarcasm I was referring to. It’s definitely worth the read if you’re in to that sort of thing. I’ll have more to say on the matter myself this week, so stay tuned for that : )

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Jason Evans on Christian "Rights"

On the heels of the recent home bible study controversy in San Diego, Jason Evans of the Ecclesia Collective in San Diego (of which our very own Doug Humphreys is a board member!) has posted some excellent and thought provoking comments about Christian “rights” and the separation of Church and State. Definitely worth the read.

Link: http://a51t15.blogspot.com/2009/05/convenient-separation.html

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Link: What if clergy were supported, not paid?

An online friend (and Twoshirts member!) Chuck Warnock posted an interesting piece today on the subject of clergy pay. It’s long, but worth the time to read of you’re interested. Click here: http://tinyurl.com/rbefyx

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Eulogy for my friend, Dave Schori

My good friend of 20 years, Dave Schori, passed away recently. Having been the funeral pastor at a fairly large in my previous position, I’ve officiated at quite a few funerals in the last 10 years (about two dozen), including my nephew’s, my grandfather’s, and my grandfather-in-law, but Dave’s was the most emotional one for me.  What follows is the eulogy I shared at his funeral:

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I’ve been incredibly fortunate to have several mentors in my life, and I count Dave Schori among them. Dave taught me some important lessons; the kind that have made me a better man.

He taught me how to fish – off the shore or off a boat – at lake Perris, lake Powell, Lilly lake, Strawberry Reservoir, and countless other puddles and streams between Utah and California. He taught me to enjoy a glass of wine and a good smoke. He taught me how to make a Margarita. He taught me how to knife-fight underwater. He taught me that truly great cooking requires only three things: tasty ingredients, sharp knives, and good friends. He taught me that you can enjoy the finer things in life without being pretentious about it. Continue reading…

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