Wednesday, January 5, 2011

A New Year

It is always amazing how quick the year goes by.  I haven’t written anything in my blog for quite some time and realize that I need to get back to some sort of discipline in my life.  I have started to do a morning meditation that begins with the Psalms and has a a short reflection.  Today I read Psalm 5.  I also have been reading from the Book of Daily Prayer which has prayers for morning, mid-day, and evening.  I was reading in the reflection that if one would start the day with prayer and/or exercise one is more likely to continue to follow through.  The struggle is not giving into that voice that says, Oh you can do it tomorrow.  So keep me in prayer as I continue to work on this discipline.

I also have started to read a new book by Brian McLaren.  The title of the book is “A New Kind of Christianity,” which focuses on ten questions that he believes that the church needs to respond to.  I have just started but I find that what he has to stay about church and the need we have to examine what we do to be insightful.  I have often questioned why we speak of changes that need to be done and those changes seem to make little effect for many churches.  Yet, I am aware of system theory that states any family, organization, or institution is a system and that all systems tend to develop a balance that allows it to function.  Any changes in that system can result in some imbalance that can create something new.  But the system tends to return to its original balance (or what it is used to) over time unless one continually challenges that status quo.

McLaren starts his book with this quote, “Never accept and be content with unanalyzed assumptions, assumptions about the work, about the people, about the church or Christianity.  Never be afraid to ask questions about the work we have inherited or the work we are doing.  There is no question that should not be asked or that is outlawed.  The day we are completely satisfied with what we have been doing; the day we have found the perfect, unchangeable system of work, the perfect answer, never in need of being corrected again, on that day we will all know that we are wrong, that we have made the greatest mistake of all.—Vincent J. Donovan.”

I will be commenting at different times about some of the reflections I have regarding his ten questions.  Brian states that he is responding to his experiences as a pastor and traveler but that he is not the final answer.  See quote above.  We are on this journey of re-discovery and nothing is above reflecting.

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