Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Grace's Blog

I can't believe I'm going back to school in just a few weeks. After graduation from high school this spring, I didn’t want to see another book for a long, long time, and about the time I was ready to whip out my library card again, I got involved with three murders. Now I want to study--psychology--to help me understand.

Monday, July 6, 2009

Grit's Blog

After solving three murders, Grit and Grace are trying to get their lives back in order. Without letting you in on too much of the story in “Murder by Accident”, I can tell you that Grit is now working full-time for the Bentonville Sentinel and thinking about going back to school to finish his B.A. Grace will enroll at the Bentonville campus of the state university to pursue a degree in psychology in the fall when their new adventure, “Murder by the Book”, will tangle the two of them in another murder. For the rest of the summer, they each will take time to blog.

GRIT'S BLOG: (fiction)

A group of New Jerusalem students is attempting to return to the U.S. after spending a week in the Honduran capital, Tegucigalpa, on a mission trip. The group is locked down in the airport and guarded by Honduran police and military. The airport was the scene of rioting and violence when the former president, Zelaya, tried to reenter the country this morning. I'm in contact with them by email and am working on a front page story for tomorrow's Sentinal. I may present a lesson on Christian suffering at Deep Water, Sunday. Please pray for the students.

This is the first summer for Deep Water, and weekday attendance is erratic. Grace, Maggie, Kale and I are working full-time while school is out, and Buddy is nearly swamped by summer school. Ricky, Tom and Amber have more free time than the rest of us, and they are putting all of it into getting the old store in better shape for our meetings. The rest of us put in hours when we can.

Ricky got the job at the new, local, PBS affiliate, but won't start until late August.

Keep the faith, Grit

Friday, July 3, 2009

The Shack

“The Shack” by William P. Young, as over two-million readers now know, is an allegory which portrays the Godhead as three indivisible persons: an African American woman (think Ethel Waters in the movie and Broadway musical, “Cabin in the Sky”), an ethereal dancer (patterned after George MacDonald’s “grandmother” in “The Princess and the Goblin”) and a folksy carpenter. This tale of horror, guilt, pain, forgiveness and redemption is a blending of suspense and fantasy that mirrors C. S. Lewis’ “Screwtape Letters” from the view of Heaven and the Godhead rather than from the view of Satan and Hell.

The theology is Biblical and spot-on until the nitty meets the gritty and Mackenzie, the main character and father of a brutally slain six-year-old, is told that Christ’s death on the cross means that everyone is forgiven unconditionally and that those who refuse to accept Christ’s sacrifice and forgiveness are not sentenced to some final punishment but simply sentence themselves to a life without full relationship with God in the here and now. In other words the only “justice” doled to the man who raped and murdered his daughter will be whatever is administered here on earth—“God loves all of his children too much” to eternally banish any one of them. Justice is neither here (before death) nor there (after). According to Young's carpenter, Christianity is a man-made system irrelevant to relationship with God or man. Young’s gospel of forgiveness and grace does not include nor require the great commission.

The main message of the book, that it is not in man to judge God and that God’s love will explain it all some day, is valid, but “all things work together for good” only for “those who love Him and are called according to his purpose”. Romans 8:28

Just as an aside, Christian Publishers rejected this New York Times bestseller as too controversial and secular publishers rejected it as too religious. I find myself in the same predicament with my Grit and Grace book. I also take note that Young’s book went through four major revisions after its initial self-publication and limited sales.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

All a Twitter

Bobby Ross of the "Christian Chronicle" posted a blog concerning the use of personal electronic communication devices during church services. According to Bobby, in some churches, worshipers/listeners are invited to participate in the service by posting reactions to the sermon, accessing scripture, twittering the minister’s message to friends, etc. For the purposes of this discussion, we will assume that those in attendance would not avail themselves of any inappropriate possibilities.

The question for today is, could a sister post a “preach on brother", "amen" or "hallelujah” without breaking the custom of women being silent? After all, a tweet is not a “speak”.

Of course the question is ludicrous, but some conservative Christians have painted themselves into this and similar corners. The answer to their quandaries is not debate, but better understanding of submission and authority in the church.