Time and Place
U2 & Davy Jones - Daydream Believer
My favorite band singing a classic Monkees song with none other than Davy Jones.
The Church: A Definition

I was reading A Glimpse of Jesus by Brennan Manning last week. In it, he reflects on these words from Hans Küng. They are moving, inviting and challenging.
An Apology
Off the Grid or Blazing a Trail?
I often speak with pastors who are tentative and nervous about the future of the church in America. Some blame a “liberal agenda” for attacking and attempting to dismantle our Christian foundation. Others point to the absence of God in education and other public places. Criticism of the media and entertainment industry abound.
Whatever the cause, the fear is realized when Christian leaders consider the beliefs and lifestyles of the “twenty-somethings.”
Recently I read a three-part blog by Brandon J. O’Brien on the Out of Ur blog. He wrote about the religious views of the twenty-somethings in the U.S. While many are concerned about them, feeling like they are off the grid when it comes to religion - I wonder if it’s more a case of blazing a new trail.
All pioneers have a sense of where they are going, but don't always know what they will find. At times it seems as though they are completely lost, and other times like they are leading the way. Either way, they forge new territory and discover new things.
Perhaps it's a bit of both. What are your thoughts?
+ Continue Reading, Part One, Part Two, Part Three
You Don't Have To Parent Alone
When it comes to being a parent I am pretty confident. This is not because I think that I am an amazing person or that I have read (or authored) parenting books or that I am just arrogant and have a high opinion of myself.
I am confident as a parent because I know that I am not going at it alone. My wife and I live with a community of people, all of whom love my children and are committed to nurturing them. We believe that it does, in fact, take a “village to raise a child.”
My wife and I don’t think we can abdicate our roles as “mom” and “dad,” but we do realize that we cannot do this alone. It has only been in recent history, largely in the west that people have come to believe that a set of parents can raise children on their own. (and considering our current cultural climate, I ask, "How is that working out?")
Many Evangelicals have spoken passionately about defending the family and preached family values. Most of their focus has been the modern nuclear family. They deeply believe their passion is rooted firmly in Scripture.
The problem is that the Bible never speaks of mothers, brothers, sisters, or fathers in terms of a modern nuclear family. In fact, “Hebrew, like Greek, has no word for the small social unit which we call family” (Colin Brown, ed., New International Dictionary of New Testament Theology, p 247). Any mention of family is always talking about the larger household or extended family and friends.
This should not scare us, but encourage us. It is the presumption in the biblical narrative that the people of God would live together as a community. As a parent there are moments of tremendous beauty and frustration. At times the task can feel overwhelming. This can even be worse when you as a family are isolated. Perhaps, the answer lies in the formation of an “extended family.”
Sally Breen has recently written a beautiful blog about rearing children in such a way. It is a beautiful vision for what a family should be. + Continue Reading

