Monthly Archives: April 2006

Pamela Anderson in the Wall Street Journal

Yes, you read my title correctly. Pamela Anderson has written an op-ed column in the Wall Street journal.

Surprisingly, the article is well-written. It is thoughtful, insightful, and articulate. Apparantly she is the honorary chair of PETA and has taken an interest in animal rights. The best paragraph?

I’ve vowed never to be involved with a production that uses live apes because I don’t want to be a part of this cruelty, and I bet you don’t either. Let’s drop the curtain on ape “actors” by sticking to animatronic animals or willing human performers for our ads. It’s not like there’s a shortage of struggling starlets willing to embarrass themselves if it means getting on TV.

Tags: , ,

Baptist Protestor

This video absolutely infuriates me.

Shirley Phelps Roper heads up a group of protestors from her church–a Baptist church in Iowa. These people picket military funerals holding up such signs as “God hates you” and “Thank God for dead soldiers.”

This is a sick and twisted view of Christianity.

I have to applaud Hannity and Colmes for a job well done in their interview.

Excerpts (full transcript can be found here):

SEAN HANNITY: Ah you feel good about this? Do you feel good about going to the funerals of men that put that put their lives on the line for their country to give you the right to do this and to put pain…

SHIRLEY PHELPS-ROPER – Of course.

SEAN HANNITY- to inject pain into their families lives. This is something that you feel good about?

SHIRLEY PHELPS-ROPER – I feel good about warning this nation that the wrath of God is pouring out on their heads.

SEAN HANNITY– I’ve got a question for you. You thank God for 911? You thank God for AIDS? You thank God for dead soldiers that give you the right to be a fool?

SHIRLEY PHELPS-ROPER – I thank God for every God for every one of his single righteous judgments that he executes upon a rebellious nation…

SEAN HANNITY– What are your sins?

SHIRLEY PHELPS-ROPER – Yeah, you tried this the other day. Why don’t we talk about this issue at hand, Mr. Hannity.

SEAN HANNITY– What are your sins?

SHIRLEY PHELPS-ROPER – Why is it that you don’t warn your neighbor? Why is it that you don’t use that bully pulpit that you have to warn your neighbor that his sin is taking him to hell and to encourage your fellow man. Knowing the terror of the Lord, you should persuade men to obey and behave.

SEAN HANNITY– Alright…Halleluiah

When I hear what this woman has to say, not only do I feel a vast anger, but I also feel heartbroken. She has never met my God. My Savior. The One who loves her and wants to be part of her life. He wants to be her Savior. But her views are so distorted that she can’t see love and grace. All she sees is hate, judgment, and condemnation.

This isn’t who God is!

Unfortunately, people see folks like Ms. Roper and automatically assume that everyone who carries the name “Christian” is the same. And, of course, they want no part of that. Goodness, I don’t even want a part of what Ms. Roper is offering the world! She is offering hopelessness; Jesus gives hope. She is offering hate; Jesus gives love. She is offering condemnation; Jesus gives grace.

Tags: , , ,

New Tenant

Check out my new tenant this week, Reflections Unlimited. I won’t link to it here, so you’ll have to click on it in the sidebar.

Rex Pe is “a student of philosophy whose writing attempts and creative work are drawn from his insatiable quest for enlightenment and curiosity about man and the universe.” He describes his blog this way:

This blog presents stories and meditations about culture and society, philosophy and the humanities, religion and spirituality, language teaching, man and the universe, experiences on the road and life in general.

Check it out!

Christian Carnival 119

Christian Carnival 119 is up and running on Brain Cramps for God. There are some fabulous posts this week, and I encourage you to check it out!

Tags:

Feminization of the church.

Rhett Smith has a great post on the idea that the church is being feminized. While it is obvious that he was offended by the idea, his thoughts are well written, valid, and right on the point. I urge you to check it out.

Tags: , ,

Religiosity and Intelligence

The Martian Anthropologist posted about an article in Wikipedia called “Religiosity and intelligence.”  One of the first things you’ll read is a quote from a study done in 1986:

All but four of the forty-three polls listed support the conclusion that native intelligence varies inversely with degree of religious faith; i.e., that, other factors being equal, the more intelligent a person is, the less religious he is.

I don’t even know where to begin commenting on this. For those of you are regular readers (and surprisingly enough, there are a few of you), you know that I am most definitely a Christian. And it completely blows my mind that Wikipedia says this is the Christian response to the charge that Christians are less intelligent:

It has been argued by some Christians that the Bible does not necessarily dispute these findings, as the beginning of the first letter to Corinthians reads:

“Brothers, think of what you were when you were called. Not many of you were wise by human standards; not many were influential; not many were of noble birth. But God chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise; God chose the weak things of the world to shame the strong.” (1 Corinthians 1 v 26-27, New International Version)

While it’s true that the Bible does, in fact, say that, Wikipedia has taken it completely out of context–and in doing show has shown the bias held by editors of Wikipedia.

Now, it’s seems to be acceptable in society to use “religious” and “Christian” interchangebly. But I want to assert that they are not synonymous. I am a Christian. I am not religious. Religion is nothing more than following a strict set of rules (which is where we get the phrase “doing something religiously.”). People who don’t understand Christianity (which, I also assert would include some who label themselves “Christian”) don’t see the difference, but it’s a big one.

Christianity acknowledges that we are all flawed. Everyone, from the corrupt politician to Mother Theresa to the Pope. CS Lewis wrote a poem in which he faces this truth about himself:

All this is flashy rhetoric about loving you.
I never had a selfless thought since I was born.
I am mercenary and self-seeking through and through;
I want God, you, all friends, merely to serve my turn.

Peace, reassurance, pleasure, are the goals I seek,
I cannot crawl one inch outside my proper skin;
I talk of love–a scholar’s parrot may talk Greek–
But, self-imprisoned, always end where I begin.

Christianity is about acknowledging this truth. And then about allowing God to give you a heart transplant so that you can do as He has commanded: “Love the Lord your God with all your passion and prayer and muscle and intelligence–and that you love your neighbor as well as you do yourself” (Luke 10:27, The Message).

Religion? Religion is about judgement and condemnation. Religion asks the question, “How many right things have you done today?” Religion leaves no room for love or grace. True Christianity is not religion.

So then, I have to ask, how accurate can these studies be? If the basic premise of the study, that religion=Christianity, is wrong, then how can we take them at face value?

Tags: , ,

Life, Homesickness, and Steel Magnolias

I just watched the one movie that I should probably never watch again. Steel Magnolias is one of my favorite movies, but I hadn’t seen it in years. Not only does the movie just break my heart, but it makes me so homesick. I miss the South. I miss the closeness of my family. I miss my mama.

Most folks out here don’t realize I’m Southern. My accent virtually disappears when I am around people who don’t have one. When I do talk to my family, I’m teased mercilessly by my friends here because the accent comes back in full force. I know that they don’t mean anything by it, and that it’s a treat to hear a “real” Southern accent.

It’s as if I’m torn between two worlds. I’m almost two different people. The Southern Amanda seems to be completely different from the Coloradan Amanda. The one constant between the two is my relationship with Christ. Without that, I’d probably be wearing a straight jacket by now, and my view would consist of padded walls.

Do any of you ever feel this way?

Tags: , ,

What does a Christian look like?

I was raised in the Bible belt. Good old Southern fundamentalism was rampant. I grew up believing that Christians are dull, boring, cookie-cutter people who are always looking for what you’re doing wrong. In fact, for several years I became a dull, boring, cookie-cutter person of faith.

I was dead wrong. I actually lived a miserable existance for awhile because of my very wrong preconceived notions about Christianity. The sad thing was, no one ever told me my perception was wrong. My perception was reinforced from the pulpit three times a week.

I can still remember when I realized there was a LOT more to life than what I had. I began going to Chi Alpha Campus Ministry my senior year in college and encountered people who lived for Christ–and they were full of life! It was so strange to me. People who loved to proclaim Christ’s love and grace–not His wrath and condemnation.

When I began to realize there was more to a life in Christ than I realized, I started reading Blue Like Jazz, by Donald Miller. This book revolutionized the way I thought about Christianity. Don drank beer and smoked a pipe (gasp!). And he loved God. I had always been taught that they were mutually exclusive and anyone who did those things were worldly heathens on an express route to hell. But Don Miller loved Christ, and that love was evident. As he shared his journey, I found myself longing for the relationship that he had with Christ.

Bottom line: Christians aren’t all the same. Christians can have blue hair, piercings, and wear punk clothing. Christians aren’t plastic cookie-cutter people. We have fun. We laugh. We love. It isn’t about judgment or condemnation. Not even close.

Tags: , , , ,

This week’s tenant: Christian Answers

I forgot to mention this weeks tenant, Christian Answers. Run by a man named Pablo, this blog addresses serious questions posed by readers who want answers. The most recent post is a fascinating read about the Gospel of Judas. Check it out, comment, and tell him Mandi sent you!

Duke’s Lacrosse Team

If you haven’t at least heard about the scandal surrounding the Lacrosse team at Duke University, then you probably live under a rock. Basically, a stripper who danced at a party attended by members of the team has accused 3 of the boys of violently beating and raping her in the bathroom of a frathouse. You can read about it here, here, here, here, and here. That last one is my favorite.

This whole case just frustrates me to no end. The prosecution simply doesn’t have a case. He tested the DNA of every single white male on the team and didn’t produce a match. There are time-stamped photos of the alleged victim with bruises and cuts before the alleged attack took place. The eye-witness second stripper can’t even tell us if a rape happened or not.

This is really nothing more than a race war. What else could cause the DA to aggressively seek charges against the white boys accused of raping a black woman?

Times like these make me ashamed of my hometown.

Tags: , ,