Showing posts with label The Journey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Journey. Show all posts

Thursday, October 23, 2008

LEAD Conference - Naps Follow

My church has hosted its first big conference on church planting this week. Here's my plug for volunteering: it gets you in for fabulously free. Click on LEAD for the City Conference for more info.

Here's the lowdown on my week:
Monday - picked up Tim Brister at the airport. A virtual friendship is made actual. Very nice.

Tuesday - Resource Tent duty calls. We sell books to pastors and potential pastors from all over the country. Free lunch. What'd I say about free? Ohhhhyeaaaah.... In the evening, went back to help with the funky fresh concert. J.R. and Titus were our performing arts guys. Conway did security with our fab SSU team. My beau on a bike at night is a security risk in and of itself, but thankfully, no scrapes.

Wednesday - back out at the Resource Tent. It's colder, windier, and cloudier today. Brr. Met a wonderful lady from the West County service. Better than free lunch is the chance to meet and talk to people I normally would never see. Love it.

Wednesday night - Eating dinner at Lemongrass with Tim Brister! I am honored to break noodles over talk about family, church, and of things to come in the blogosphere. A terrific end to three days of conferencing.

Regrets - I was lazy and didn't take any photos. : (

Thanks - My gracious mother, who cared for Calvin for these three days in our home while I've been away during the middle of the day. If Moms like this exist, God exists.

Now, AMEN, LET'S SLEEP!

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

The Journey in the NY Times


Read it here: "Taking Their Faith, but not their Politics, to the People" from the New York Times, published June 1, 2008.

Oh, ANYTIME that an article about The Journey's many interests in social issues and the Bible gets written in a major U.S. paper that begins with how Southern Baptists shun alcohol is a convulsing good time. What are we at, about a half-dozen of these now?

To be sure, I'm not complaining about the thin gild of approval that seems to coat the news coverage of my church. The last thing I want is to read how much people should despise us for talking about stuff. But what I observe more than anything in these articles is that they aren't really about us, The Journey. Rather, they are about how the older evangelical churches (namely Southern Baptist ones) are seemingly losing their way in culture and influence and how churches like The Journey are leading the way to pounding the nails into their proverbial coffins. Nice.

Only it's not like that. While journalists like to overly portray differences as ideological, the core disagreements concern methodology and a level of charity for opposing views that older evangelicals are unaccustomed to showing. I admit I'm generalizing a bit. Neela Banerjee, the journalist for the New York Times piece, thankfully did not impress this point of view as much as others like Tim Townsend (of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch) have in the past. Still, as benign as it is, by nature it is impossible for these news articles to be anything else but divisive when the reporter also searches out opinions of The Journey's more severe critics, like Roger Moran. Moran's negative commments about The Journey's Theology at the Bottleworks discussions should be understood in a very specific context and not taken to indicate that churches cannot associate. Indeed, Moran's views represent a small, albeit vocal, minority among more traditional churches. In general, The Journey has experienced little, if any, conflict with fellow Christian churches across several denominations, including Southern Baptist.

This particular article ends with a quote from yours truly, so I feel I must comment. It says,

Letitia Wong, 32, who said she favored a fence along the Mexican border to keep out illegal immigrants, added: “As much as our faith informs our political views, we aren’t united in one way of thinking. What unites us at the Journey is the power of Jesus Christ.”

I don't remember saying specifically anything about a border fence, other than when asked how many people present thought it was too easy to enter the US, I raised my hand. And, if you think my quote sounds a little weird, so do I. In its proper context, I meant to convey that The Journey's primary emphasis is on faith in Christ and not on political stances. We have thoughtful liberals and thoughtful conservatives in church who derive their political leanings from their interpretation of how the Bible's precepts apply to public policy, and I think that's fair enough. We can disagree all day long about who and what to vote for, but at the end of the day, it is important that we recognize that we are Christian siblings who share the love of Christ. And in that context, politics takes a back seat.

My hubby says I'm famous now. I don't really know--perhaps infamous might be more accurate. That suits me just fine. If you're curious about the lead photo, yep, that's me waaaaay in the back shoving a forkful of monster nachos in my face. Can't see me? Good.

In addition, I offer a few corrections to the article, for the sake of accuracy.
- The Journey is affiliated with the St. Louis Metro Baptist Association (which is a tier down from the Missouri Baptist Convention, which is itself a tier down from the Southern Baptist Convention), but it is a far cry from being a Baptist church. The church actually came about through the efforts of Jesus!--er, Darrin Patrick, through the Acts 29 Network.
- A 2,000 member megachurch? Shucks, not yet anyway. Service attendance over five services may reach 2,000, but actual membership is somewhere between 500 and 800.
- The Theology at the Bottleworks discussions don't regularly center on President Bush and the war in Iraq. In fact, we haven't approached that topic in over three years.
---
What others are saying:

Darrin Patrick at The Journey's website
Denny Burk
Revolution in Jesusland
Tom Durso at 501(c) Files
Stephen Murray
Guy Williams
Avery at AveryFineLine
Jonathan Merritt
Tim McNabb

The Times article was even reproduced internationally on a website called Vox Vocis in a language I can't even identify (the article remains in English).

Thursday, April 3, 2008

15 Minutes of Fame...or Dread?

UPDATE: After inquiring about a possible print date for this story, the reporter told me that, essentially, TATB has been upstaged by the Pope's upcoming visit to the US, and our story has been pushed back for an unpecified amount of time.

[Originally posted on Monday, 3/24/2008]
Last Wednesday, our monthly Theology at the Bottleworks discussion brought the folks out in droves, as often the case. Apparently, immigration issues gets people talking. Also apparently, the New York Times wants to shine a spotlight on TATB for their paper. Well, nothing new here--news articles about the Journey's TATB have been turning Christian against Christian for going on two years here in St. Louis--except that this time my name is going into the article.

The reporter gave me no indication her tack on the whole TATB experience, so I have no idea what angle the article will have. She asked me my age, my occupation, my political leanings (!), and how I get along with those with whom I politically disagree in church. Okay.

And then I find out that she'd finished wrapping up an interview with John MacArthur earlier that day prior to TATB for the same article. Uh-oh. I am unwilling to get into details of what my knee-jerk cynicism conjures up, but I smell another round of John MacArthur vs. Emerging church jousting coming up. Ugh, I pray not.

And my name is going in this article. Yikes.

Monday, December 17, 2007

Live with Darrin Patrick

That's pronounced LYV, not LIV (I love having Darrin for a pastor, but nooo thanks).

Tomorrow on Shapevine, there will be a live interview with Darrin on videocast at 2:30pm CST. Check it out!