Douglass Blvd Christian Church

an open and affirming community of faith

n open and affirming community where faith is questioned and formed, as relationships are made and upheld. 

Sermon Podcast: My Ways Are Not Your Ways (Isaiah 55:1-9)

But then God unveils the guest list: “Everyone who thirsts, come to the waters; and you that have no money, come, buy and eat! Come, buy wine and milk without money and without price.”

Does … uh … somebody want to tell God that that sort of thing is frowned on in these parts? You start having parties with all those people, drinking ginger-ale punch and eating spanish peanuts, and pretty soon they start thinking that you approve of their lifestyle.

Derek fills us in on what God wants us to do about all those free-loading sinner folk.


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But what if you don't have papers?

I couldn’t always understand my students’ banter, but I pretended and continued with false confidence into the realm of thesis statements and college acceptance, encouraging my students to believe that they could find success on the other side of an AP exam.

’But what if you don’t have papers?’ a boy named Cesar asked one day.

’Which papers?’ I asked, stupidly – my mind on essays and homework.

’You know, Miss, Papers.’
— http://www.patheos.com/blogs/goodletters/2013/02/living-in-a-border-state/

We often talk about the plight of the millennial generation and its burden of educational and financial uncertainty. What we often fail to recognize is that these disadvantages are exponentially magnified for those who don't have "papers".

Sure, you can go to college.

Then what?

Lobby Day Photos

Here are a couple of photos from the Rally for Fairness at the Capitol last Wednesday. If you have any you'd like to add, send them to us!

Sermon Podcast: How Much Is a Promise Worth? (Genesis 15:1-12, 17-18)

And more often than not, regardless of our intentions, we know, don’t we? Almost as soon as we say it, we know that we’ve just tossed one more empty commitment on the pile of broken promises. The heap grows bigger, and the sky grows dimmer.


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Fairness Lobby Day in Frankfort!

The time is upon us, y'all!

Tomorrow the van is leaving at 7:45am from DBCC. We'll be getting there at around 9 to start training then out into the halls!

If you're considering coming, we'd really love to have you tag along. We have a lot of space in the van and will be returning in sometime in the mid-afternoon.

See you bright and early!


P.s. For more info, check out the Facebook event.

Lent and Pancakes

Obviously, Lent is a time that is set aside for Christains to focus on our spiritual lives with prayer and fasting. However, the fasting of things that separate us from God often is equal to vices in our lives of which we are trying to rid ourselves of anyway.

Coffee, anyone? 

So, in fact, Lent often becomes everyone's last ditch effort at a New Years Resolution until Jan. 1 rolls back around. Now, I'm not saying that reneging on your Lenten fast for the Creator is going to land you in eternal Hellfire (or am I?). But if you've had trouble ridding yourself of bad habits or vices, maybe you've just been going about it from the wrong angle.

Maybe you're just not making enough pancakes.

Regarding “The First Pancake Problem”
Anyone who’s ever made America’s favorite round and flat breakfast food is familiar with the phenomenon of The First Pancake.
No matter how good a cook you are, and no matter how hard you try, the first pancake of the batch always sucks.
It comes out burnt or undercooked or weirdly shaped or just oddly inedible and aesthetically displeasing. Just ask your kids.
At least compared to your normal pancake—and definitely compared to the far superior second and subsequent pancakes that make the cut and get promoted to the pile destined for the breakfast table—the first one’s always a disaster.
I’ll leave it to the physicists and foodies in the gallery to develop a unified field theory on exactly why our pancake problem crops up with such unerring dependability. But I will share an orthogonal theory: you will be a way happier and more successful cook if you just accept that your first pancake is and always will be a universally flukey mess.
But, that shouldn’t mean you never make another pancake.
— http://www.43folders.com/2011/01/07/first-pancake

I love Merlin Mann. And while he isn't a Master of Lent-ology, he does have a way of understanding how screwed up we can be when we're trying to fix how screwed up we are.

So, read his article, and, you know, if you really want it to say "Lent" somewhere, this one.

Hint: One is way more entertaining.

And then, read this one if you don't believe Pancakes and Lent are related.

r-PANCAKE-RACES-large570.jpg

Happy Fasting!

Shouldn't I Look More Like My Role Models?

Martin Luther King.jpeg

By Derek Penwell

Shouldn't a question about who you consider to be your role model elicit some kind of immediate response? Shouldn't a face or a name pop into your mind? The names I think of seem too easy: Jesus and Martin Luther King, Jr. (Perhaps I have something of the martyr about me.) If those are the people who come to mind when I'm asked about my role models, shouldn't I have some sense of how I model my life after them? That is to say, shouldn't role models occupy some more tangible place within one's life than easy go-to answers, used to forestall reflection rather than to encourage it?

I can't explain why I find this troubling. Perhaps, because as an Aristotelian, I take emulation to be the sine qua non of growth, learning, and maturity. In other words, I believe that everything worth being in life comes from emulating the actions, behavior, emotions, and gestures of others. That's how children learn, how arc-welders learn, how doctors and philosophers and fry cooks learn. Our cultural fantasies about the self-made individual notwithstanding, we learn who we are not by making it up as we go along, but by watching and imitating--even when we don't realize that's what we're doing.

So, what does it mean that I don't have a more conscious idea about how I imitate the people I say I admire? Does it mean that I'm kidding myself about how invested I am in becoming like them? It could be that I only like the idea of Jesus and Martin Luther King, Jr., but am unwilling to take the difficult steps to live my life like them--a possibility I don't like, even though there may be some truth in it. It could be that I have so thoroughly identified with them that I don't have to think about living like them--a possibility I'd like to think is true, even though I realize it's not. Perhaps, my attachment to Jesus and MLK as role models is some strange admixture of the two--a hybrid of fear and stumbling attempts at getting it right.

I'd like to give a more certain answer to the question about the place of role models in my life. But I will console myself with the knowledge that, though naming a role model is insufficient to the task of emulating a role model, not having any names is a recipe for failure.

Sermon Podcast: The Year of the Lord's Favor (Luke 4:14-21)

Rev. Penwell:

"So, just so we have this straight, Jesus comes to the synagogue on the Sabbath, “as was his custom”; he stands up to read, and is given the Isaiah scroll. At which time he reads a well-known Messianic text. Shaping up to be an interesting day, right?

"But then, in the first words Jesus speaks as an adult in Luke’s gospel (apart from reading scripture), he says “Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.”

"Yikes!"

Enough said?


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Sermon Podcast: I Will Not Keep Silent (Isaiah 62:1-5)

Rev. Penwell on the voice in the lonely silence of despair.

But then God speaks a Word into the tumult—not much, a whisper, a baby in a cow barn in the middle of nowhere—and we’re given a name, we’re made kings and queens, “crowns of beauty in the hand of the LORD, and a royal diadem in the hand of [our] God.” And we’re aware that our lives are a gift of God, that we are no longer forsaken and desolate.

Good stuff this week.


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Excelente Series from NPR - "Losing Our Religion"

Any NPR listeners out there?

If you are, you’ve probably heard some, if not all, of this series.

Morning Edition (WBUR Boston) ran a series last week based upon the trend of emerging generations clicking “none of the above” on the existential religious affiliation survey.

Rev. Penwell’s last post on [D]mergent engages this very topic, tying it to the somewhat ominous (if not prophetic) quote by the Rev. Dr. MLK Jr.

Check it out. You’ll be glad you did.


Losing Our Religion

The Gospel according to ... Dave Matthews?

I love that this word comes from some guy who got kicked out of Chicago for being too much of a rock star. Can’t we see? Can’t we hear? The Gospel does not belong to the Church. It never did. It belongs to the world, to any and all who lift up their eyes, their hearts. Dave is a present day Magi.
— http://anglobaptist.org/blog/posts/sermon-the-gospel-of-the-world/

This is just a taste of the awesomeness of Tripp Hudgins, otherwise known as Anglobaptist. This is from a sermon he wrote, which is linked above.