Finding Our Way Again: An Interview with Brian McLaren
by Thomas
Everyday Liturgy: When I started this blog a year and a half ago I did it in part to begin to explore ways to expand my relationship with God. I had recently graduated from a Bible college and wanted to build on the foundation in Scriptures I had been given. The evangelical answers, quiet time and prayer cards, no longer seemed capable of leading me further in my spiritual journey. Bible-software, inductive study, and individual petitions no longer seemed adequate. What role do you see "Ancient Practices" having in our technological, individualistic world?
Brian McLaren: Thom, I think you've really diagnosed a key dimension of the problem: individualism. I think our spiritual lives languish in a "Jesus and me" isolation chamber, but they become robust and deep when we realize that God calls me into an "us for all of us" way of life. To echo Paul's amazing words in Ephesians 3, I come to know the love of God "with all the saints." Knowledge in this sense is a knowing with - knowing God with people of different periods of history, different cultures, different denominations, and so on. So the ancient practices draw us into a wider, deeper way of knowing God that includes but also transcends my individual experience. ... more
Dining Tables in Vermont
April 14, 2008 - 3:02pm by ThomasThe future of the ecumenical movement will rely greatly on table manners, on where we recognize and honor Christ in the sacraments and how we recognize Christ in others. -Sarah Howell
My wife and I spent a three day weekend in Vermont on a vacation that bookended my participation in the University of Vermont's Tolkien Conference. I read a paper entitled: "'Their Fall is into Possessiveness': Possessiveness, Imperialism, and Colonialism in Middle-Earth" and if you contact me through Everyday Liturgy I will be happy to send a copy to you.
Staying in a bed & breakfast was a great treat for me. We stayed at Elliot House in Shelbourne, VT, and upon entering we were promptly greeted with shortcake and tea. At the mere mention of tea I fell in love with the place! The shortcake was good, too.
Over the weekend, we spent a good deal of time sitting in the kitchen or library of the old farmhouse talking to the owners or fellow guests, and this was often done over food. I am still trying to "intellectually process" what was going on when strangers meet around a table with food, but my initial thoughts are the purely rustic: "it was thoroughly enjoyable and pleasant."
I had a blast just being with other people in hospitality. Coffee and omelets do wonders to open up conversations, and you can learn so much as you pass salt and pepper shakers.
So what if they other guests in the hotel were just on vacation or planning a surprise party with loads of wine? Jesus traveled a lot, and he supplied the wine for a celebration as well. And to celebrate Christ we must celebrate him in all his wonderful complexity. He is incarnate, he was a fisherman, a carpenter, a crucified person, a supernatural miracle, a sea-side cook, and a vitner. Christ meets us in the sacraments, but he also meets us around the dining room table as well. And the woods, and the arcade, and the concert hall. The possibilities abound, and everywhere we look Christ is there, for he reigns. ... more






