Monday 15 June 2015

the economy, RepubliChristianity and repentance.

I love R C Sproul.  I respect him for his diligence, learning and commitment over many long years. He is a keystone in modern Reformed Theology, and whilst I don't subscribe to everything he says I still go to him as a reliable resource when I have questions.  That is why it was so disappointing to read his small book on the church and the state.
I have been wrestling through the issues surrounding the modern divided economy, the gross inequality in our present, twisted version of capitalism, and trying to approach the starting of a new business that is equitable, communal and Christ-like, as much as a business can be.  It has also been election time in the UK.  Whilst I have always voted as a matter of principle (except when I have been too busy, or simply forgot!) I have become ever more disgusted and detached from the electoral process and the hobbling, crippled political elite it seems to support and enable.
So I went to RC to get a perspective on how I am to act in light of scripture as a citizen of the society I am 'passing through' on the way to my homeland, the Kingdom of God.
Now I have already 'Logos'-ed the heck out of the topic, seeing what scripture says first hand and looking thoroughly at the history of the Church, protestant, Western, Eastern and African, to see what we have done in the past, the good bad and ugly of it.   I may get round to writing something about this at another date.  For now though I just want to chew over what Sproul said on this complex and essential topic.
Sproul starts off with some excellent ground work, outlining important concepts about not confusing geographical nationhood with Christianity:  we have a greater loyalty to Christ's Kingdom, and no other temporal earthly kingdom can truly hold itself up as the shining, spotless paradigm of virtue that His coming Kingdom will truly be.  America, more than any other country in the last 70 odd years, has confused this line in dangerous, and provoking ways more than any other, placing itself as "the city on the hill" and "the light of the nations" in several presidential posturings.
This was all good to hear.  He did not, however, seem to take his own advice about confusing national ideology with Christian thought.  Not only does he suggest that anything vauguly socialist, such as the re-distributioon of wealth (which he lables as theft) should be excluded from the political sphere, but, of all the many problems facing the world system and America as the leading representative of this, suggests that abortion (a truly horrific problem of mass genocide of the unborn for primarily economic reseons) and high taxation of the rich are on the same level of centrality and importance.
I was flabergasted.  Being British I guess I don't understand how conflated modern, neo-classical economic thinking has been conflated with republican voting and therefore Christianity.
Why not address the system of soft-money donations that ammount to the same as legal bribery?  Or the state socialism for the rich that gives food stamps to the working poor, thereby sponsoring low wages and high profits for global mega-conglomerate corporations?  Or the unjust scales used in the punishment of crimes, such as black drug related crimes as compared with corporate larceny that can ruin the lives of thousands?  or the lack of oversight of the financial sector, that sees a market ethic (that is to say a Darwinian cronyism) penetrating all walks of life?  Or the state support of transatlantic and international trade agreements that put corporations (a-moral 'people' in their own legal right) above sovreign nations?  or the growth of monopolies (something God hates- see Malachi)?  Or any or the issues which face our modern, failing system?  Corruption?  national and personal debt?  The waging of wars against foreign powers against the will of the electorate for the protection of individual and corporate wealth? 
No. Apparently it is taking some of the ridiculously huge profits made (largely but not exclusively) through the perpetuation of these same things and putting it back into the hands of the same people who have been robbed, oppressed and discriminated against, institutionally, under both the Republican and Democratic party's watches.
Is Christianity in America still so hung up on Communism, and so desperate to conserve the (largely illusiory) golden past as a quasi-Christian (actually Deist/pagan) nation that it is blind to it's own iniquities?  
If so it could be that they will miss what God is trying to show them, and miss the repentance He is calling all Western power to.  We have had wealth and power and we have used it predominantly to preserve our own place in the sun.  Now we are suffering the heat stroke, sun burn, skin cancer that is the consequence of our immoral use of the trust God gave us.
So R.C. I hope you bring out a ammended version that tackles all the above issues. 

Thursday 30 April 2015

Social enterprise and the Kingdom of God.

Have spent the last couple of days on a course about self employment which has been excellent.  encouraging and challenging.  Prior to that it was a relay of vomiting children, 5 nights in a row, a total of 9 hours sleep in 5 days!  So we are all trying to get back on our feet, and I need to get back to work.
I have a load to do!
I am trying to build something.  This is a good thing, and something I would not have had the time or inclination to do when I was smoking dope, drinking up or pouring my life into K/D ratios on CoD!  God has better plans for us than we have.  The modern culture definitely wants to give us "bread and circuses", to eat up our time and energy on entertainment, secondaries, stuff that cant and wont make a difference.  We were not made for such stuff!  We were given a mission, a job to do, something so significant that eternity will not forget it.  But if the devil can bait the world with something tempting to our ever-warring flesh then he will do.  Anything to stop us building God's Kingdom, tending is garden. 
The stuff I have to do, aside from the simple fact that I have no technical ability with furniture, is all out of my capacity:  heavy on the admin, paperwork and structure.  But it is amazing how God has schooled me for this moment, taking on process and policy design for church even though I hate it, getting me ready for what was coming.
I am just trusting him that He will fulfill it all as I go along, as long as I sweat over what He has given me and never, ever move past His good news and continue to pray as though it all depended on Him. 

Kingdom Building and giants

So we have had a crazy couple of weeks. I won't bore you in one post with all of the details. It will be far better if I took a number of posts to bore you with the details!
We recently went on holiday, looking for some respite and relaxation close to family. Before this, I was digging my way through the practicalities of setting up a social enterprise, loving the theory, excited at the possibilities, but very much feeling out of my depth when it came to the technical side. I'll admit I'm not a very practical guy, I like theology, philosophy, thinking, sitting, talking about stuff: your typical daydreamer! Which, I admit, might be a nice way of putting your typical lazy beggar. I hope this isn't the case. I'm pretty self-motivated, and able to work consistently and hard at whatever sitting, philosophising, theologizing etc. etc. I'm presently doing. And I have worked really hard at putting bones on the vision. I can see it in the future, see that slice of God's kingdom growing, see some of the how and the why and the what of it.
However.
I've also seen my complete lack of technical ability, and hit a wall before the holiday when it came to business plan specifics. I looked at my previous experience, my own skill set, and was forced to ask myself why I thought I should be the one to take this forward.
And I didn't have an answer.
So feeling pretty despondent, we went away. The holiday turned out to be far less than relaxing, with Judah screaming most nights and a real sense of heaviness that seem to accompany us. I had some great time to pray and seek the Lord, and Jeanette and I had some great conversations, and an evening of prayer together which was very precious.
It wasn't until we returned home when I was reminded, and I can't even remember by whom, that we do what we do because God says so, not because we are equipped, but because he is sovereign. There is a great Song on the new Social Club album "Us", called Carpe Diem, which I mis-heard to say "it's not about how good you are but about how good He is to me".  I like that. 
He is good, so we walk on, dark vallys and shadows and death and all that.
So we will keep going, daily, trusting Him for every step.