Saturday, January 26, 2008

Here goes my new blog

All,
Here goes a new effort. I'm not sure how it will turn out, and if you happen across this blog, I'd be interested in your reaction. The dialog we might create about the matters discussed here will sharpen what I think. I never really know much without listening carefully. I want to listen to you.

While this not an official DJAN effort, as one of the founders of the DISCIPLES JUSTICE ACTION NETWORK, I am passionate about what this decade-old organization has done, is doing and will do. I have known many of you over the years--and you have known me, so much of what I say will probably be familiar.

Since returning from teaching theology in Australia, Wendy and I have lived at Pilgrim Place in Claremont, California. I do some teaching for the Disciples Seminary Foundation, and am employed about a quarter time for Progressive Christians Uniting--a peace, justice, ecumenical body. I put out a hard hitting "Alert" for them, and will add you to the list is you send your e-mail address to me at cbayer@pcu-la.org.

Now let's get down to business!

I am a churchman. I have served it all my life. I believe in it. A number of years ago I published a book called, Hope for the Mainline Church. The last chapter was really dedicated to a young minister--a Timothy. My advice to him was "love the church." Over the years of his ministry he encountered plenty of reasons NOT to love the church. He is now out of the ministry and out of the church. He does not love it.

While that grieves me, I understand it. I have had, and still do, a love/hate relationship with the church. I still hope that God will find new ways to use it as a forerunner of what Jesus called the Commonwealth (Kingdom--Reign) of God. But hope is not optimism, and my confidence in what I find in so many congregations, and in our extra-congregational bodies--Regions and the what we have called the "General manifestation,"-- is modest in the extreme.

We'll get to those issues as we go along in these blogs. But briefly, and with particular relation to the Disciples of Christ: I find congregations here and there which are open, clearly identified with God's call for justice, peace, equity and inclusion. However, I find many more just fixated on trying to survive, and as such have lost any edge which says, "It is the world, not the church, which should be at the heart of our message."

I talk to ministers who know what is asked of faithful people in our day, who never say anything about GLBT (gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender) inclusion or the disaster of the war against Iraq or much anything else, because they tell me, "I have lost too many people already, and I can't afford to offend those who are left. So I must try to be a pastor and not to raise issues I really can't to anything about." So they sit quietly in the middle of the boat watching it slowly sink.

I see much the same thing among the work of our Regions, and even in the Office of the General Minister and President. Now Sharon Watkins has an impossible job, with not enough resources and with a denomination that is not sure what it is to be or do. It seems to me that she--and the rest of the church--has a brace of options. She can either see her job as trying to hold onto what is left of a troubled church, or pointing in a hard new direction. For now it seems that she has mainly taken the first option, while John Thomas of the United Church of Christ--at some risk--has said: "Folks, here is a direction we need to go, and if there are those ready to go with me, come along."

So much for that. I will not spend much time in denominational or other church gymnastics. I am far more concerned about what is going on outside our ecclesial cocoons--and so to a couple of those larger issues in the next entries to this blog. But for now that's enough of an introduction.

I will end these blogs as I did editorials I did on the nightly ABC news in St. Joseph, Missouri: 'But that's just my opinion.' So please feel free to share yours with me and with others reading this blog.

Charles Bayer

6 comments:

David Polk said...

Charles, you old dog you! Congratulations. Last summer I heard Ariana Huffington say that if Edward R. Murrow were alive today he'd be a blogger! Great that you've joined this techno evolution.

I'm going to forward you an email I just sent this morning to Jan Linn. If you like any parts of it, post it over my name if you'd like. It's liberal political junkie stuff.

boblog said...

Hi Uncle Charles -- welcome to the blogosphere! I'll add you to my blogroll.

boblog said...

In regards to the substance of your post, I couldn't agree more. I've visited my parent's church from time to time and there's nothing more discouraging than hearing banal scriptural platitudes in the midst of so much going on in the world. It seems that holding on to a congregation has become the raison d'etre of too many mainstream christian churches. Ironic that such would become of the church founded around such a revolutionary. Preaching a message that panders to the flock is a sure recipe for a slow slide to irrelevance...

beth said...

Dad: got you kicking and screaming into this "at" generation! Love the site. As you know, I've have become (once again) unchurched and have very strong feelings about the difference between a building and a church. Sad for me; shame on the building and its human contents. I'll try again some day. Love you Beth

Anonymous said...

Congratulations Charles! I'll look forward to checking in every week. Take care. Love, Mary

Anonymous said...

Nice work Charles. I'll forward this to Deb so she can gain a better understanding of your theology. It's interesting that I just heard the same ideas expressed about literal interpretation of scriptures from Ayaan Hirsi Ali yesterday on NPR. She is the Muslim woman from Somalia who's been elected to the Dutch parliament.