Standing Advice

The following “goes without saying” – until I change my mind, at least.

Deep Sanity

  • All these things which are going on now, as well as all subsequent things, God will come with His broom and sweep them away in a manner known to Him. So, don’t worry. Let us commend ourselves and each other and all our lives unto Christ our God. (Elder Epiphanios)
  • Some fundamentals that we easily overlook:
    • The love of God that has been poured out to us in Christ Jesus is so strong that no conceivable hardship can separate us from that love. (Romans 8: 35-39)
    • Everything that happens to us is organized by Divine Love for our benefit, even if we can’t understand how. (Romans 8:28; Matthew 10:29-31)
    • In response to this love, we are commanded to replace anxious thoughts with a moment-by-moment awareness of all that is lovely, noble and good. (Philippians 4:6-8; 2 Thessalonians 5:16-18; Luke 12:29)
  • Repent. Acts 2:38. This is ongoing advice. You don’t repent just once.
  • To be deep in history is to cease being Protestant.
  • You cannot comprehend God. If your religion “makes perfect sense,” it’s almost certainly heretical.
  • Lex orandi, lex credendi.
  • Culture normalizes (which is a sort of variant on lex orandi …)
Economics
  • “The consumer society is in fact the most efficient mechanism ever devised for the creation and distribution of unhappiness.” Lord Jonathon Sacks, chief rabbi of Great Britain.
  • If it’s “too big to fail,” break it up into harmless little pieces.

Church and State

  • “The designation of the religious and the political is itself a political act.” (William T. Cavanaugh)
  • “Put not your trust in princes, in sons of men in whom there is no salvation.” Psalm 146:3.
  • American Exceptionalism is bad politics and, worse, bad theology.
  • Culture war ≠ spiritual warfare.
  • “It’s a complete absurdity to believe that Christians will suffer a single thing from the expansion of gay rights, and boy, do they deserve what they’re going to get.” (The Law of Merited Impossibility, discovered by Rod Dreher)
  • At some point, conservatives within the churches will realize that when liberals call for “dialogue,” what they really mean is “we talk until you give us what we want.” (Rod Dreher)
The Culture

You can consider it part of every blog.

Sunday thoughts 10/2/11

Michael Hyatt, a/k/a Deacon Michael, is one of the most popular bloggers on the internet, but it’s for his publishing and marketing savvy, not for his Orthodox faith.

He Tweeted yesterday a link to a blog by a counsellor that sounds both true and quite helpful:

“One cannot live the afternoon of life according to the program of life’s morning; for what was great in the morning will be of little importance in the evening, and what in the morning was true will at evening have become a lie.” Carl Jung

In the first half [of life] we gain our security and identity primarily from our accomplishments. These successes act like a container that holds our life together, making us feel secure in a complicated world filled with external pressures. But in the second half this container becomes less important and we may begin to doubt all that we worked so hard to accomplish. We may even doubt the basics that we always knew to be true. Beliefs about the purpose of life and how God fits may change drastically. Jung believes that this is necessary to live the second half of your life with any sense of real meaning.

Read the whole thing to promote cross-generational understanding.

I’ll try to be more patient with those who are trying to gain “security and identity primarily from … accomplishments.”

You’re coming of age in a world where accomplishments will be harder as fossil fuels disappear, and will look different than the dubious accomplishments of my generation: getting shagged, getting stoned, selling out, getting a couple of big cars, parking them in the multibay garage of the McMansion, and just generally living outwardly noisy lives to mask inner quiet desperation and the vague memory of having once cared, and then of having ceased.

Your real individual accomplishments may be in learning some self-sufficiency skills, like how to grow food in a small space without petrochemicals. Your larger accomplishments may be (re)building livable, walkable, cities, and abolishing the stupid ordinances (and neighborhood covenants) that frustrate gardening and small animal husbandry in the city. If you’re lucky, or really prescient, you’ll find the sweet spot between atomistic individualism and idolatrous statism. You’ll have close friends and neighbors, and you’ll help each other out, first, perhaps, as people help each other out after a natural disaster, then as friends help friends.

I could be quite wrong about the details of how you’ll readjust, but I’m virtually positive that, whether it’s because of peak oil or the information age, success will look different in the future, both in how it’s achieved and in the outward badges of it.

I’ll try to be more patient without any quid pro quo, although I would appreciate it if the “morning” people would be patient with an enigmatic old coot who must sound like an old Jesus Freak hippie sometimes..

Tasty Tidbits 9/29/11

  1. We’re homeless. What a relief!
  2. What, Mead worry?
  3. The only good (newsworthy) Christian is a bad Christian.
  4. J.K. Rowlings breadth and depth.
  5. WKB, RIP

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Writing one of the best personal “localist” essays I’ve ever read, Rod Dreher recounts how he was at his sister Ruthie’s long wake back home in Louisiana when he and his wife got an epiphany: Continue reading “Tasty Tidbits 9/29/11”

Proposition or Place?

I have heard America described several times recently as “the first nation built on an idea,” or words to that effect. It made me uncomfortable, somehow coming across as sinister blather. But I didn’t stop to figure out why.

Yet there are few questions – perhaps none at all – more important to our common life than just what it is we do “have in common.” In that form, the question has been roiling me for more than a decade. Now my thinking has been jump-started  Continue reading “Proposition or Place?”