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Letters to People of Influence Part One: To Religious Leaders

This is the first in a four-part series of “Letters To…” that will address concerns and insights touching on vital issues of our day.

Here in Part One, I address pastors in general and Pope Francis in particular. Please enjoy and add your insights to the conversation.

Dear Pastors (of every Christian tradition),

Thank you for your sacrificial love and service as you nurture communities of faith of all kinds.

As I pray for you as a fellow pastor, I have three requests as you carry out your holy calling:

One: Remember that it is the Triune God who calls God’s people together and is the object of worship. As Eugene Peterson says, our primary pastoral task is keeping people attentive to God.

Two: Please commission and empower all vocations as important to God’s kingdom. God’s work in the world takes place through people that work, whether paid or volunteer, labor or leadership, home or office.

Three: Please take time to nourish your soul and care for your “first flock” – your family (if married). If single, take time for healthy relationships that build you as a person. Eat well, exercise and rest…your health will help you inspire health in others.

Pastors, I am grateful for all you do – seen and unseen – that Christ uses to transform others. My prayers are offered not as a perfect practitioner, but as a fellow-learner trying to gain wisdom from mistakes and victories. 
Thank you!

Dear Pope Francis,

Thank you for caring for the poor and beginning to redeem the financial and sexual scandals in the church.

Thank you for reminding us that the deepest problems are spiritual and that our selfish/sinful hearts need change.

Thank you for reaching out to the “outsiders” in dialogue and well as showing compassion for the faithful afflicted by divorce.

I do, however, have deep concerns. 
Without judging your motives or sincerity, I beg you to…

…Avoid being manipulated by the agendas of global elites using climate change to unjustly redistribute wealth.

…Stand for the persecuted church and all dissidents that oppose totalitarian regimes, especially in Cuba.

…Use your office as a prophetic peacemaker, calling on Muslim leaders to affirm the dignity and equality of all persons.

…Support Israel’s right to exist while actively working for a peaceful solution, not just the protection of holy sites.

…Affirm that economic freedom, when rooted in value creation and virtue, is the best pathway out of poverty.

I pray you will use this moment to help millions envision a life rooted in Christ and serving the common good.

 

Nurturing Life: Pastoral Insights for Parents

The spate of Planned Parenthood videos raises many issues – almost none of which I am addressing here. The one issue germane to this essay is nurturing the life we (or our community members) have had a hand in conceiving, adopting and welcoming into our homes.

Nurturing discipleship in our communities includes biblically and theologically informed insights for parents as they express faith, hope and love in welcoming children into God’s world.

The following are insights from 35 years of parenting and pastoring in churches large and small, financial and geographic upheaval and more divine grace than my wife and I deserve.

Our aim: partnering with the Holy Trinity to make disciples that are neither anarchists not automatons, but passionate and principled volitional followers of Christ. We are parents of adult children ages 31, 28 and 25 and enjoy good relationships with each of them. They are each in different time zones, unique places in their journey and bring us no end of delight and concern.

Recognizing the diversity of family circumstances and structures, these reflections are not culled from a one-size-fits-all-prescription-laden text. Here are some thoughts for discipling parents in our communities:

  • Welcoming a child (or children) into our home is an act of faith that changes everything. I often tell parents, “Marriage changes your world; children change your universe.” Parents are divine subcontractors and stewards of life and must cry out for divine strength and wisdom hour by hour.
  • There are timeless biblical principles for nurture, but no one method of child rearing. Context and culture, personalities and particularities create opportunity for listening to God and learning from community members.
  • Do not compete with other parents for how early your children walk, read, play an instrument or enjoy fishing. Within very wide boundaries (do listen to a good pediatrician), you can chill a bit and raise more secure children.
  • If you are married, let children see (with discretion) your mutual love and respect and welcome them into family decisions as they mature. If you are a single parent, work with healthy opposite-gender congregants so your kids have a healthy view of themselves and both genders.
  • Create an environment of aesthetic, intellectual, social and spiritual growth, modeling lifelong learning and childlike wonder.
  • Teach the integration of faith, work and economics early, communicating that adding value through good work is more important that mere material wealth. Help them see work as worship to God and service to others, from the simplest of chores to the most complex occupations.
  • Nurture potential with hopeful realism. Do not offer untrue platitudes such as, “you can be or do anything you want!” Better to say, “Let’s discover how God has made you and what unique gifts you bring to the world.” The power of Ephesians 3:20 includes the wisdom of Ephesians 2:10: The Lord can do more than we imagine…and God has designed good (general and specific) works for us. By the way, when I was 12, my father wrote in Harvard Alumni Journal, “Charles is a fiery humanist and repressed basketball star (too short).” By 15 I knew the NBA was not my future!
  • Please help your children eat healthily, exercise often, turn off the computers and television and enjoy being alone with a book and comfortable with people. Respect their temperamental differences. Do not force extended solitude for extraverts or constant socializing for introverts. The aim is Christ-formed character and the blossoming of their person, not vicarious fulfillment of the parents.
  • Above, below and around all other precepts: pray and praise God together, joyfully singing and dancing. Lament together and explain that our God sheds tears as well. Without being oppressive, let your life with Christ be “Spirit-natural” and your children will never be religiously inoculated.

Joyous lament

At least once a week, my wife and I say to the Lord, “Thank you for the gift of freewill. We just wish our kids would use it better sometimes!” Every good decision makes our hearts swell with joy. Every poor one brings pangs of agitation and guilt. What an amazing window into the heart of Abba Father, the Almighty. We worship a Lord of great pathos, beaming and singing over his children (Zeph. 3:17) and longing for a desert place to weep when they rebel (Jer. 8-9).

For leaders, these insights for parents apply to our nurture of the spiritual children God entrusts to our care. May we see the Bible inform and the Spirit empower our nurture of maturing, responsible and loving children of God.

 

Podcast: Why Does Work Matter for the Flourishing of the Human Soul?

Dr. Charlie Self is an author, minister, professor of Church History, and co-founder of Discipleship Dynamics. He’s also a senior advisor for The Acton Institute of Religion and Liberty, a board member for the new Missio Alliance and an advisory board member of the Oikonomia Network. Charlie’s passion is in biblical-historical-and theological approaches to economics and work and the integration of faithful churches that create flourishing communities.

Key Thoughts and Questions Discussed

  • When we elevate everyone to their full vocation, we bring God’s reign and the common good together.
  • Why does work matter for the flourishing of the human soul?
  • Is to be human to accomplish?
  • If God’s mission is reconciliation, every sphere of human activity matters to God.
  • The great commission takes place through people who work all day.
  • What’s the difference between vocation and occupation?
  • If you provide jobs, you are integral to human flourishing.

Listen To ThePodcast

9/11

9/11: We all remember where we were. (Flames Restaurant, San Jose, CA).

9/11: Grief. Horror. Shock. Anger.

9/11: And prayers in full churches. Hugs with family and neighbors. Our Persian landlords bring a fruit basket and share tears with us.

9/11: Our eldest son’s 18th birthday. We still have cake and presents, because life is still worth living.

9/11: A nation in mourning. A nation facing an intractable and zealous, elusive and untraditional foe that hates every value we hold dear.

9/11: Not a conspiracy – a tragedy. Not a time for a religious crusade, but repentance and resolution, moral and spiritual reformation and action.

Today is 9/11/14.

Mr. President, will you lead with civil and political consensus, with international support and moral and military courage? The enemies beheading Americans (and raping and killing across all cultural and religious lines) must be opposed without qualification. We are not facing victims of Western imperialism. Israel is not a genocidal state, she is a democratic ally. Even Egypt knows this!  The West is weak, but not destroyed. The question of the hour is simple: will be stand for freedom, oppose tyranny and not be reduced to the morality of our opponents?

9/11/14: Time to act with courage and wisdom, not platitudes and wishful thinking. We must not allow our self-hatred and historical guilt (some of which is valid) to cloud our vision. Our enemies want our complete submission. We must call for complete freedom of conscience and religion and defend for all others the rights we want for ourselves.

Like the 1930s, we are war weary – and hopeful that generous financial arrangements and a wide toleration of cultural differences will persuade our enemies to desist. Our lack of internal integrity and strategic inaction only increases their resolve.

9/11/14: A time to act.

Courage: Compassion and Confrontation

75 years ago Europe erupted in warfare as Hitler invaded Poland with the aid of his new “cooperative partner” Stalin. Just days before, on August 22, Germany and the Soviet Union signed a 10-year non-aggression and trade agreement. The secret protocols divided Eastern Europe into zones of conquest for each power. Russia was given half of Poland, and a free hand in  the Baltic states and Finland. Germany was given her share of Poland and a free hand in the West. Both powers knew they would one day go to war…but for now they were allied against the forces of democracy.

While these totalitarians oppressed Europe, Japan was expanding her conquests in China and eying much of the South Pacific. Her military rulers felt it was their destiny and right to rule a vast portion of the East. Japan was  allied with Germany and Italy. To lovers of democracy and the Judeo-Christian tradition, the world had gone mad.

For a decade before these events, the Western powers tried to ignore the warning signs and pretend that appeasement and decency could convince dictators to limit their ambitions. There own ambivalence was rooted in elitist rejections of traditional values joined with colonizing much of the developing world under the guise of League of Nation “mandates.” Voices such as Churchill’s were drowned out by anti-war advocates and men like Neville Chamberlain who were convinced that a little humility and a willingness to understand Germany’s historic grievances would maintain the peace.

Germany’s invasion of the Rhineland in 1936, her absorption of Austria and negotiated capture of the Sudenten part of Czechoslovakia in 1938 convinced Hitler that the West had no moral or military stomach for confrontation.  Japan felt the same as she pillaged and raped the populace of China. Mussolini took Ethiopia and set his sights on Libya. Protests were made, but little done on the part of a West weary of war and an America comfortable in isolation and wrestling with years of economic depression.

In 2014, the dynamics are the same, with a new set of implacable foes of freedom. Radical Islamic terrorism confronts a civilized world with religiously-fueled absolutism, intolerance, misogyny and violence. “Moderates” in Islam (like historic German conservatives, Japanese Royalists, Italian nationalists and cooperative “euro-socialists” in the West in the 1930s) are so invested in anti-Western narratives and fearful of reprisal that they refuse to see the danger. The pagan-secular Left in the USA and West are blinded by their anti-American ideology and residual historical guilt. They willfully refuse to change their “narrative” and confront their mortal enemies with moral and military strength.

Hamas, ISIS/ISIL, Hizbollah, Al-Queda, the Taliban and the host of other groups have one goal in mind: a new Caliphate in the Middle East, North Africa and Southern Europe (reliving the glory days of 632-732 and the 14th-15th centuries) and eventual world conquest for Islam. Their hatred of Israel and the USA knows no bounds. Their contempt for Western civilization is total. Jihad is not moral struggle or defensive warfare. It is conquer, “convert or die” and destroy. Beheadings, rape, mass executions and deportations are policy, not accidental consequences of conflict.

Such evil must be opposed with all the moral, political and military strength the civilized world can muster. While President Obama plays golf and calls for “managing” such opponents, China expands her influence in the Pacific and Russia eyes new conquests in Eastern Europe and beyond.

Academics, media personalities, public intellectuals and politicians in the West must wake up and recognize that these enemies of liberty are much worse that any imperialism of the West or the Israeli governance of the West Bank. It is easy to protest against democratic Israel. No lives are lost and she cares about public opinion. It is easy to advocate for radical social causes in the USA – our freedom of religion, assembly, redress and speech open the doors to all kinds of expression that would destroy someone in the 57 nations under the thumb of Islam.

The troubles in the Islamic world today are no longer the fault of Western colonialism. There is enough oil money to eliminate poverty. No Western nation wants to conquer and occupy a Muslim land. The problems in the Arab and world are their own making. Iran is ruled by apocalyptic mullahs willing to subjugate a cultured, intelligent people.

What is the allure of radical islam? Male power and resentment of the West. Religious ideology that sanctions violence against all who disagree is appealing to young men from all walks of life.

What is the way forward?

Compassion and courage. Without losing our highest ideals and deep sympathy for the victims of structural injustice, the West must demonstrate moral and military strength. Peacemaking and negotiations must be reinforced by a willingness to strike back with overwhelming force, not half-hearted gestures.

Israel, NATO and the USA are natural allies in this struggle to preserve the hard-won freedoms of the past three centuries. It is time for conservatives and liberals, religious and secular, women and men of all cultures to unite against foes that desire our destruction. While we (necessarily) argue over principles and policies within our nations and communities, we must come together as lovers of liberty and call on all Islamic moderates to join us in peacemaking, compassion and military and political actions.

The next generation will determine whether liberty becomes a memory or an expanding influence. The choice is ours.