Monday, August 15, 2011

Nature Deficit Disorder

Here's something that was referenced at our last Care for Creation meeting, which should be of interest to any of us who are vested in today's youth in any capacity.

Nature Deficit Disorder is a psychological condition that is gaining increasing amounts of attention in recent years. Simply stated, it suggests a correlation between lack of exposure to nature with developmental and academic problems. At the forefront of this (non-medical) disorder is the scientifically proven fact that the more our world becomes technologically driven, the less children play outside in any way. However, it strikes me that there is a lesser yet also vitally critical reason for this disturbing correlation. The more we destroy natural places to live, play and just be, the less our society's youth has incentive or opportunity to be outside at all. And it happens where we live, absolutely. Within the last month, I read about a study conducted by the American College of Sports Medicine over the 50 largest cities in the United States. Indianapolis ranked 44th out of the 50 in community and environmental factors as well as personal health indicators. Essentially, what the study determined (not that this should come as a surprise) is that the more "green space," e.g. parks, bike trails, parks, etc., that a city has, the leaner it is. While this isn't the same as Nature Deficit Disorder, I see a connection. Are the cities who rank high on this study also the ones who demonstrate highest or at the very least higher academic proficiencies?? Anyone agree with me that this almost certainly must be so?

If you're interested in reading more about this disorder, there is a slew of clear, thorough information about it at http://www.education.com/facts/quickfacts-ndd/what-is-nature-deficit-disorder/.

Monday, July 25, 2011

Mushroom packaging

Have you heard about this super cool, eco-friendly idea that is being used more and more? Mushrooms are cheap, easy to grow, low impact waste that is bio-degradable and therefore compostable. Check out the link below. While it's not a wholly justifiable reason to purchase a new computer just to get the packaging, it does increase the WOW factor!

http://www.naturalnews.com/029463_mushrooms_packing_material.html

Monday, July 11, 2011

2nd Annual Hoosier Food Fest

Have you heard about the 2nd Annual Hoosier Food Fest?

Food!
Games!
Food!
Good people!
Laughter!
Food!
Fellowship!
GOOD food!!

It was a rousing success last year, so it's returning again. But you have a little bit of homework again:
*Flip through your favorite recipes, or...
*look for some new ones.
*Visit your local farmer's market.
*Think of fun, yummy ways that you can incorporate some of Indiana's finest produce into an everyone-must-try-this dish.

Do you have any recipes that you clipped out of the paper, borrowed from a friend, inherited from your Great Aunt Ruth that you have been wanting to try but haven't had a good excuse to make yet? This is your opportunity to broaden your culinary scope and flex your kitchen muscles. Think of this as the perfect opportunity to use up some of that zucchini that your pesky neighbor keeps leaving anonymously on your doorstep (I've heard that this happens...)!

So get ready and put a reminder on your calendar for August 14th; it's coming up soon!

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Check this out!

I don't know how long this concept will take to really be a successful model of an alternate, greener grocery option, especially for "everyone," but it's a really interesting idea, I think!

The concept is a packaging-free grocery store, and one is actually opening soon in Austin, Texas. According to ecoprenuerist.com, the EPA estimates that a whopping 32% of household trash is solely from food packaging. That's way too much!! If you're like us and try to recycle what you can, you might also be amazed at how quickly those boxes, cans and bottles add up. It seems like we no sooner empty our recycling bins then they're overflowing again. That alone makes me believe the validity of the EPA's estimate.

All of this means that someone had a brilliant moment when they developed the idea of this store: in.gredients. (Fun name, right??) Basically, it means that you bring your own packaging, i.e. reusable containers like boxes, cartons and bags. The (HUGE) positive benefit of this is the incredible lack of waste that you would generate just by going to pick up your weekly groceries. The (unfortunate) downside is that if you're like me, you never truly know what you're going to walk out of the store with...if you don't have enough or the right kind of containers, that could really put a damper on your grocery trip. Plus, you might not be wholly comfortable shlupping around empty containers.

In.gredients is the first packaging-free grocery store in the U.S., but there is something of a precedent for this concept already. Londoners already have Unpackaged, which you can read about at http://beunpackaged.com/. Even more interesting, in.gredients is unique in that it is starting through a business plan that relies on crowd funding, raising start-up costs through public donations and incentives.

Personally, I think that the success of this business model lies solely on Americans' willingness to step outside of their comfort bubbles, their zones of tradition. In.gredients (and any other packaging-free store for that matter) will only work if we accept that we have to change how we do things because of the incredible impact that our actions currently have.

Everything that we think of as normal/traditional now was a never-before-thought-of idea at its inception. Would you be willing to try something "radical" in order to lessen your environmental impact?

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Introducing: Christ Lutheran's Care for Creation team

I know that you've heard of us--Christ Lutheran's Care for Creation team. At long last, I'm breaking the blogging silence and formally introducing ourselves to this medium of communication. The intent is not to preach, but to share what we are learning and talking about.

Truly, this doesn't just concern the members of our group (and everyone is encouraged to join us on the 2nd Thursday of each month at 7 p.m.); the more we get together and participate in a dialogue of Mother Earth, the more we realize how much these matters should concern us all. We are all affected, and we can each decide to live more consciously of the resources that God has blessed us with.

Our group has been going full-throttle for 2 years now, and it was amazing how quickly we learned from each other and found small ways to better use our church building. It may not seem like much, but for every Styrofoam cup that is no longer mindlessly discarded following the coffee break on any given Sunday morning, our Earth is that much healthier. (And for those of you who missed the "official" word about Styrofoam last week, check out this link: http://abcnews.go.com/US/styrofoam-chemical-styrene-added-possible-carcinogens-list/story?id=13815600.) Each seemingly innocent little cup that is absentmindedly used and then pitched in the trash out of habit or negligence takes 500 years to break down in a landfill (don't believe me? http://www.all-recycling-facts.com/recycling-statistics.html).

Consider this verse from Romans 1:19-20 - since what may be known about God is plain to them, because God has made it plain to them. For since the creation of the world God's invisible qualities—his eternal power and divine nature—have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that men are without excuse. I'm drawn to this verse in particular tonight because of the wording men are without excuse. God created our world and (allow me to ever so slightly alter the original verse) it is bursting with his invisible qualities, so much so that they are clearly seen. How can we spend our lives with our eyes selfishly, ignorantly, obstinantly, steadfastly shut to His divine creation? I wouldn't accept a handmade sweater from my Great Aunt Ruth knowing the time and care she put into the garment only to wear it out to change the oil in my car, knowing that I would ruin it with spills and stains and knowing that she was watching me ruin it with negligence. God gave us this Earth as a gift to his treasured beings. All arrogance aside, humans don't have singular control of this term; God has many treasured creatures. Let's share it with others (even squirrels).

We have good things happening in this church because we have people who care and are willing to learn. Let's continue to set ourselves apart for all of the right reasons in the greater Kokomo community!

Monday, May 23, 2011

The Great Divine Cleanup of the World

I have been, among other things, both a minister and a chemist.  As an analytical chemist I had occasion to present technical papers at professional meetings, where I would describe a newly developed analytical procedure precisely.  The object was to define the procedure unambiguously and systematically, so other labs could reproduce it exactly.  Good preaching however, is nothing like that.  Good preaching is about saying one thing, but meaning another.  'Jesus is the Lamb of God' does not mean 'Mary had a little lamb'.  Lamb of God is of course a metaphor that points to a different and unspoken reality.  One could have long and (sometimes) scholarly discussions about just what 'Lamb of God' means.  But ultimately the meaning remains unspoken.  Good preaching is the art of the unspoken.  Only biblical literalists think they can scientifically define the metaphor, when in fact literalism destroys and perverts it.  Literalism tragically overlooks the deeper meaning metaphor points to, while arguing about the scientific accuracy of surface meaning.

Lamb of God is a relatively simple metaphor.  Some metaphors are much 'bigger'.  Some are so big that we can live our whole life in them.  We use science to manipulate things, manipulate our environment as we please.  But we don't live in science.  We live in metaphor.  And ultimately we can't explain the metaphor we live in.  A large percentage of people would say that when we die, we go to heaven.  Others would say we lie waiting in the earth until the Lord returns at the end of the world.  Still others would talk of purgatory.  These aren't identical metaphors that lend themselves to being harmonized in a literal way.  But in general they point to a reality beyond themselves that doesn't differ too much.  They all point to getting beyond this life, to a better life.  They all point to escaping an imperfect world for something more perfect.  They all deemphasize the importance of now, and focus clearly on the glories of later.
Jesus' parables are masterful metaphor, common stories of the everyday world which you think know all about, only to find out at the punch line that the 'kingdom' Jesus was pointing too was an entirely unanticipated reality.  Paul too used metaphor extensively.  That is why they both are such powerful religious figures.  Religion lives in metaphor.  Myth is culturally accepted metaphor.  Parable is the subversive questioning of accepted myth.  They are mirror images.

The thing is though, that both Jesus' parables and Paul's metaphors emphasize the importance of now, and go all fuzzy on the glories of later.  Consider the parable of the lost coin.  Did Jesus say the kingdom of God is like . . . waiting at a train station . . . or like hastily sweeping the floor?  The parable is not about waiting for the future; it is about jumping into action.  Paul constantly used metaphors, especially coming back to the resurrection metaphor over and over again.  But the metaphor as Paul used it was different from the metaphor as we use it.  The General Resurrection was a 1st century Judean metaphor concerned with God's remaking the present world faithfully, rather than about our leaving the present world as a reward.

Paul was a Pharisee.  And a Pharisee's understanding of the General Resurrection was that it symbolized God's justice for this world.  Israel always had more than its fair share of martyrs, but especially so in the several centuries preceding Paul's time.  Ancient Israel never talked about an afterlife, despite the fact that Egypt was located right next door, until those martyrs began piling up.  How could God be just, and the martyrs die?  The Pharisaic idea of a General Resurrection came from a sense of the justice of God, not from a desired future for us.  Western Church art depicts Jesus nimbly emerging from the tomb all alone.  Eastern Church art still retains the more Judean idea of Jesus emerging from the tomb in the company of a host of Old Testament and New Testament martyrs, with the Gates of Hell smashed below his feet.  The creed's 'decent into hell' was to rescue the martyrs. 
To point to what the General Resurrection symbolized, J. D. Crossan coined the phrase, 'The Great Divine Cleanup of the World'.  For Paul, the General Resurrection, the Divine Cleanup, had already begun, and Jesus was the 'first fruits'. The Cleanup is not in the distant future, after death, or in the imminent future . . . soon.  It has already begun, and we already live in it.  So live accordingly!  Now!  When Paul talks about the 'people who get it right', as he does in all his letters, and especially in Romans, he has in mind the people who trust that God actually is in process of cleanup, who trust to the point of collaborating with God on the project, who form little communities that together work on the cleanup.  And also for Paul, the 'people who get it wrong' are the people who trust in their religious traditions instead.  'Jews' then have become 'the churched' now.  'Gentiles' then have become 'the unchurched' now.

When one talks about the 500 Year Garage Sale, about why mainline churches are declining, about how the Reformation church can renew itself for the next 500 years, Jesus' parables of the kingdom, and Paul's metaphor of the General Resurrection matter.  A post Garage Sale church could end up with people selling every possession, waiting breathlessly for some eagerly anticipated great event to occur, maybe on a cleverly forecast date.  A post Garage Sale church could end up with people waiting at a train station, sleepily singing hymns that have lost their umpf, to pass the time.  Or a post Garage Sale church could be collaborating with God's Divine Cleanup, now.  Which one sounds like life to you?  Metaphors matter.

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Are Titles Important? Sometimes More Than You Think!


Ara Pacis - Altar of Peace
To celebrate retirement, I rationalized I needed a large flat screen, to better appreciate the intricacies of the line blocking when my grandson and I watch the Packers play the Bears.  Lenore, on the other hand, decided her retirement treat would be to see the glories of Rome.  Go figure!  So shortly we will be touring museums, and wandering through the Sistine Chapel.  (She decided to take me along.)  Now as luck would have it, the Vatican is just across the Tiber from the ruins of Caesar Augustus’ mausoleum, and his Altar of Peace.  And just a little farther on is the forum Augustus built, with the ruins of its temple of Mars Avenger.  So my plan for the trip is to soak up as much as I can of the spirit of Augustus.  Not because I am that interested in ancient history, but because in a very real sense Augustus was Paul’s sparring partner.
Temple of Mars Avenger
Augustus in Paul’s letters?  Yup.  We imagine Paul’s letters as abstract and eternal religious truths.  Rome would have understood them as high treason, an attack on the culture of empire.  So where in the letter does Paul mention Augustus?  Where is the political conflict?  Everywhere!  Our ears just aren’t attuned to it, since we are not Romans.  Basically Paul and the early Jesus movement stole all the titles of Caesar, and applied them to Jesus instead.  The obvious conclusion is they didn’t much like empire.  Consider just the first sentence of 1 Thessalonians, Paul’s version of a normal first century salutation.  'Paul, Silvanus, and Timothy to those in Thessalonica who are called together by God our Creator and Benefactor and our lord Jesus, God’s Anointed:  divine favor and peace to you.'

In an economic system dependent on patrons doling out favors to clients, Caesar was the greatest giver of benefactions.  Rome was Washington lobbyists writ large, and then even extoled as the virtuous way to run a kingdom.  To say, as Paul did, that God is our benefactor is to insult Caesar.  And insulting Caesar had consequences.  Consider that it was obligatory at a banquet for friends, to offer a wine toast to Caesar after the meal.  That puts ‘he took the wine cup after the meal and said, This cup means the new covenant. . . in a whole different light, doesn’t it?  Wouldn’t that make for a different kind of liturgical renewal! 

Paul called Jesus lord, when lord is a title of Caesar.  Jesus is singled out as God’s Anointed – the Christ, the chosen one.  But Caesar was the one chosen by the Gods to save the empire when it was about to crumble under the weight of a long bloody civil war.  If Jesus was anointed, chosen, then Caesar wasn’t?  Paul invokes God’s divine favor and peace.  But for Rome favor came from Caesar.  And Caesar was the prince of peace, because of his victories which ended the empire’s civil war.  Augustus built that exquisite Altar of Peace, now on display next to his mausoleum, specifically to impress upon Romans that he was the one who made Rome peaceful.  Peace through victory on land and sea was the Roman mantra.  And the Temple of Mars Avenger was Augustus’ nod to the God of War.  Of course, Augustus would say, empires are made peaceful by war.  How else?

And all that in just the opening sentence of formal greeting of 1 Thessalonians.  There is much more in the rest of the letter, if you are sensitive and looking for it.  Caesar was divine.  It was chiseled in stone billboards all over the empire.  Augustus was the ‘son’ of the divine Julius Caesar, whose assent to the heavens was proclaimed on Roman coins.  Paul and early Jesus followers stole the titles of Caesar, the one who ruled from the Palatine Hill in Rome, and bestowed those titles on the executed criminal from the Nazareth Ridge in Galilee.

So if you want to host a quiet social evening for a small group of friends, good heavens, don’t invite Paul.  That old religion and politics don’t mix line would never work with him.  Paul was a political animal, not an abstract philosopher of eternal truth. 

The other thing that jumps out in 1 Thessalonians is that Paul was more than just a talker.  He was a social activist.  Think about it.  He formed little communities of opposition, little groups who refused to toast Caesar when they met together, specifically in the capitals of Empire.  It wasn’t only that Paul was against empire.  He had a vision of an alternative empire, lived here and now in the communities he was forming.  The Thessalonians were singled out for lavish praise, specifically because they lived out that vision of alternative empire here and now.  'And so you became imitators of us and of the lord . . . Therefore, you have become, in turn, a model for all those in Macedonia and Greece  . . . your trust in God is so widely known that we don’t need to mention it.'  And the rest of the letter is basically Paul’s attempt to encourage the Thessalonians to even more fully model life together in the alternative empire.

So reforming churches Paul’s way has nothing to do with finding a wiz bang new minister.   It has more to do with modeling an alternative society, a society of justice and sharing, rather than of power and accumulation.  No raping of the earth now, and then escape to heaven later.  I really am looking forward to walking where Augustus walked, thinking quietly about the different kinds of empire people build.  That and the Packers/Bears game too.