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: Where Jesus May Be Found

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Jesus announces a new order of things in which the anawim—a Hebrew word applied to those who are the very lowest in society, the huddled masses, the wretched refuse, the homeless, the tempest-tossed, the folks who live out next to the garbage dump of life—a new order of things in which the anawim occupy the places of honor, finally get to sit at the big people’s table, no longer handed the crumbs and the leftovers.

Jesus proclaims a new realm—unlike the kingdoms of this world with which the Tempter enticed him out in the wilderness just a few verses prior—kingdoms where some have and others are left holding the bag, where a few get to steamroll their way to the front of the line and everyone else gets flattened, where some have food, and others are left to starve. Because the reign of God does not exist where some are welcome and others are not.


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Is "evil" a thing?

'Indeed recent developments demonstrate that evil remains a stubborn concept in our culture, resistant to attempts to reduce it to pure "physicalism." To read the mainstream media commentary on the Breivik case, for instance, is to come upon, time after time, the word "evil." Not just that the acts were evil, but that he, Breivik was, as a Wall Street Journal columnist put it, "evil incarnate."

But what exactly does that mean? The incarnation of what?'

Evil was, like, so last decade anyway.

If Jesus were a folksinger

“I have sung for Americans of every political persuasion, and I am proud that I never refuse to sing to an audience, no matter what religion or color of their skin, or situation in life. I have sung in hobo jungles, and I have sung for the Rockefellers, and I am proud that I have never refused to sing for anybody."

Pete Seeger

Before someone decides to condemn me for calling Jesus a Commie (which I'm not, although a case could be made), it should be understood that, while Seeger's political affiliations didn't always align him with good company, his intentions, and methods were always genuine and, in my estimation, beautiful.

Pete Seeger's vision of the world was one in which we all cared for each other—greatest and least. He believed that we are all accountable for the world where our brothers and sisters live, breathe, play, and love.

What's more, he was unwilling to remain silent about such things. Seeger's politics got him publicly silenced. But his message of peace, love, and goodwill transcended him as a beacon for those marginalized and hopeless. He was a voice for those who had none. And, despite being banned from the airwaves for many years, he has become one of the most iconic and revered activists and humanitarians of our time.

Sounds pretty familiar.

Monday evening, he passed away. The phrase "a great loss" is being used by folks who admired him and his life. I'm inclined to humbly say that they may be missing the greater point. For 94 years, Pete Seeger lived. And the world is better for it.

I bet Jesus was awesome on the banjo.

There and Back Again: The Fellowship of the IKEA Meatballs

So, the youth room, depleted of its furniture, needed to restock. What better place to go for youth room furniture than IKEA?

On Sunday afternoon, the brave souls set out for West Chester, Ohio: Land of... things from Ohio... and the nearest IKEA to the Louisville Metro Area.

3 lamps, 2 tables, a number of oddly shaped pillows, a shelf, a couch, and roughly 45 "Swedish" meatballs later, they returned a tired yet successful fellowship from the Northern Lands of Cincinnati.

With all of these new additions, and the big screen coming back from it's short retirement, the new youth/media room is will soon be back in business.

Notes on the week.

Lots of things to think about this week...

We remember the life of a great human being:

We anxiously watch our leaders deal with decisions of liberty, security, and privacy:

And we await relief and resolution for our friends in the West Virginia:

It has been a heavy week.

It's weeks like this that I like to sit listen to Louis Armstrong and ponder.

Just ponder.

Have a wonderful weekend, and peace be with you all.

Letters from a Birmingham Jail

"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly."

Everyone should read it. We all know the quotes. But, man oh man, how much better is the whole thing?

Happy Birthday, Dr. King.

Martin Luther King Jr NYWTS 6

Career advice for an 18 Year Old

"So what do you do on this scary, lonely, exciting path? That’s totally up to you — you are empowered to figure things out on your own."

It seems like at 18 (or 21, or 35, or 60), everyone is telling you how much time you have to figure things out. I never bought that anyone really meant that when they said it. I don't begrudge them. It's the "right thing to say" in those obligatory moments of insight an wisdom asked of us without consent as though we know what the $@&! we're doing.

Leo Babauta's response hits less on the "what to do" as on the "who to be" of the question, which is the part I've always been a bit more intrigued with.

Also, he's awesome.

Do Gay People Control the Weather?

"Whenever there is extreme weather, some religious leader gets airtime for blaming someone. Whether it's a tsunami, an earthquake, a heat wave or a drought, someone will say it's God's way of getting our attention and therefore it has to be someone's fault."

For all future weather requests, please email Rev. Derek Penwell.

Sermon Podcast: Bringing Forth Justice

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And don’t you think the church—among the inheritors of this promise to Isaiah—is always in danger of missing this point, convinced as it often is that the reign of God will be established only when the church gets everything right?

It’s easy to forget that the church isn’t an end in itself; it’s a tool, chosen by God to bring about God’s purposes. We find it easy to believe that God’s work will be accomplished by the force of the church’s charismatic personalities or through the power of its innovative programming—when in reality, God’s work very often gets done in spite of what the church considers its strength, rather than because of it.

Why?

Because, according to Isaiah, the glory of God shines in bruised reeds and dimly burning wicks. If you want to do the work of God, recognizing your brokenness is a good place to start.


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Escaping the cold...

In the spirit forgetting just how miserably cold it is outside, you may either close your eyes and dream of paradise...

Click here to buy Mylo Xyloto http://links.emi.com/coldplayMX This video was directed by Mat Whitecross in 2011 and was filmed in South Africa and London Music video by Coldplay performing Paradise. (C) 2011 EMI Records Ltd This label copy information is the subject of copyright protection.

... marvel at how amazing and possibly delusional these guys are...

Follow Ben Saunders and Tarka L'Herpiniere live in Antarctica now on their remarkable return journey from the coast to the South Pole and back. 1800 Miles - On Foot - Unsupported The first completion of Captain Robert Falcon Scott's Terra Nova route and longest unsupported polar journey in history. Daily blogs.

... or be glad we all don't live in Northern Ontario.

Woke up to a balmy -41C this morning in South Porcupine, ON. Thought I'd share what happens when you mix boiling water and a water gun and take it outside for a few shots. To use this video in a commercial player or in broadcasts, please email licensing@storyful.com OVER TWO MILLION VIEWS!

Stay warm, folks!

Sermon Podcast: On the Way

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It’s so easy for us to believe that our lives are defined by those events we call significant. The truth of the matter is . . . we live most of our lives in the in-between times.

Most of our lives are spent returning to our “own country by another road.” The problem with living from milestone to milestone, however, is that we’re always in grave danger of missing God on the way.

The magi looked up, saw a star, and launched their boats in the desert. They had their eyes focused on Bethlehem, on meeting the special child.

But once they’d finally reached their destination, they were almost immediately sent again on their way. Because, you see, for them, as well as for us, Bethlehem is not the end of the journey, but the beginning—not home, but the place through which we must pass if ever we are to reach home at last.


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Sermon Podcast: God with Us

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With everything going quickly to seed, we needed a sign of God’s salvation. We needed a God who wasn’t afraid to jump in and get dirty hands. We needed a God who wasn’t ashamed to walk the roads we walk. We needed a God who wasn’t afraid to be with us.

And that’s something I think we still look for. With the sands continually shifting beneath our feet, with the uncertainty of facing life in our precarious world, we need a God who’s not afraid to be with us.

We need a God who embraces our humanity, and not only our humanity, but a God who embraces us in the midst of each of our weak and fallen humanities.

When we cry out in the dry night of our shattered existences, we need a God who hears.


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Shelter Information

So, as most of you know, it's going to get really cold tonight. Like, really cold. To those out there who have no place to stay tonight or in the coming days, here are some places that will keep warm:

Volunteers of America: Homeless and Housing Services

Wayside Christian Mission

ShelterListings.org

If you, or anyone you know is in need of help, give one of these places a call. No one needs to die tonight.

Wrap up. Bring in your pets. Stay warm!


If anyone has any other contacts, programs, or helpful tips, feel free to email us at douglassblvd@gmail.com and we'll add them here.

“Tell me what you want to do, not what you want to avoid doing.

By Derek Penwell

“What do you want to do when you get out of college?” That was the question on the table. Summer camp. We were gathered together with one of the grizzled veteran counselors to talk about what we planned to do with our lives.

Having just graduated high school, we found the whole conversation a bit abstract. We didn’t know. And we certainly didn’t want to be reminded about the fact that we didn’t know.

But somebody asked the question, and we were all raised with the kind of manners that wouldn’t allow us to say what we were thinking: “I really don’t want to think about this. Ask me about the beach, or about what we’re going to do when we get to college. After college is just too far away.”

One girl said, “Well, I don’t want to have to do a job I hate, where I’m stuck doing the same thing over and over—like a factory. And I don’t want to work someplace that makes me do busy work just to satisfy some kind of Human Resources directive intended to create a ‘positive working environment.’”

“Ok. What kind of working environment do you want to work in?”

“I don’t want work with a lot of passive-aggressive people—you know, the kind who get mad about little things and start putting up signs about not eating their yogurt or taking the stapler off their desk.”

“You run into a lot of sign hangers, a lot of yogurt and stapler thieves in high school, did you?”

“No, but I hear my dad talk about it all the time.”

“Anyone else?”

A long-haired guy in a denim jacket and boots said, “I don’t want to have do any job that requires me to wear a name tag or be a part of a ‘team’” (his use of air quotes tipping us off to his studied use of sarcasm.)

I jumped in and said, “Look, I just don’t want to have to get up too early in the morning.” I was not particularly ambitious.

The counselor, showing signs of frustration, said, “You’ve obviously thought about this. Here’s what I want, though. Tell me what you want to do, not what you want to avoid doing. What are your dreams? What makes you excited enough to get out of bed in the morning? What do you care about so much you’d be willing to die for?”

The impression many young adults who’ve lost any desire to associate themselves with the church feel like they’ve heard ad nauseum an answer to the questions, “What do Christians want to avoid? What do Christians hate? What kinds of things are Christians willing to kill for?”

As cliché as it may sound, more people in emerging generations know Christianity by what it stands against than by what it stands for. Jesus, though he clearly had strong opinions about what people should stay away from, seemed on balance more concerned about the kind of things in which people should be investing their lives.

This full-throated commitment to doing something got Jesus in trouble. In Matthew, he is contrasted with the ascetic John the Baptist: “For John came neither eating nor drinking, and they say, ‘He has a demon’; the Son of Man came eating and drinking, and they say, ‘Look, a glutton and a drunkard, a friend of tax-collectors and sinners!’”

It’s important to point out that Jesus drew the contrast between himself and John the Baptist to indicate that there’s just no pleasing some people, no matter what you do. However, it is worth noting that Jesus developed a reputation not for the things he avoided, but for the things he threw himself into.

In a post-denominational world the church must be aware of the widely held perception that it cares more about keeping people from doing things than in giving them the resources they need to live and flourish, and, finally, to follow Jesus. As commitment to mainline denominations deteriorates, the church would do well to think more intentionally about how it embodies its vision of the reign of God.

Justice. Equity. Mutuality. Community. Compassion for the poor, the outcast, the powerless. These are positive visions.

“But isn’t that just a rehash of the traditional liberalism mainline denominations have been trying to interest people in since the latter part of the nineteenth century? If it were such a winning strategy, why are mainline denominations dying?”

Excellent point! I realize I’m trying to thread a pretty fine needle here. What I’m suggesting, though, isn’t a strategy (I don’t think traditional liberal mainliners necessarily thought the Social Gospel was just a strategy either). Making strategic decisions about justice in God’s reign as a way to attract more people misses the whole point. Justice, equity, mutuality, etc. are what we think Jesus came to establish, not well-devised membership recruitment tools.

In a post-denominational world the church needs to quit thinking first about how to save its own bacon, and start devoting more thought to doing the right thing—because we have no other way of conceiving our lives as followers of Jesus.

New Young Adult Class!

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Jai Husband is leading a new young adult class on Sunday mornings at 9:45 a.m., upstairs in the education building. The class will be exploring the Gospels and what God means in the context of everyday life.

Come on out!