Monthly Archives: May 2006

Brian McLaren on the DaVinci Code

by Mandi

Brian McLaren gave an interview about his thoughts of The DaVinci Code with Sojourner Magazine (HT: Finding Rhythm). I think that McLaren has possibly the most objective reasonable opinion from a Christian perspective about the book. A few of my favorite questions:

So you think The Da Vinci Code taps into dissatisfaction with Jesus as we know him?

McLaren: For all the flaws of Brown’s book, I think what he’s doing is suggesting that the dominant religious institutions have created their own caricature of Jesus. And I think people have a sense that that’s true. It’s my honest feeling that anyone trying to share their faith in America today has to realize that the Religious Right has polluted the air. The name “Jesus” and the word “Christianity” are associated with something judgmental, hostile, hypocritical, angry, negative, defensive, anti-homosexual, etc. Many of our churches, even though they feel they represent the truth, actually are upholding something that’s distorted and false.

I also think that the whole issue of male domination is huge and that Brown’s suggestion that the real Jesus was not as misogynist or anti-woman as the Christian religion often has been is very attractive. Brown’s book is about exposing hypocrisy and cover-up in organized religion, and it is exposing organized religion’s grasping for power. Again, there’s something in that that people resonate with in the age of pedophilia scandals, televangelists, and religious political alliances. As a follower of Jesus I resonate with their concerns as well.

Do you think the book contains any significantly detrimental distortions of the Christian faith?

McLaren: The book is fiction and it’s filled with a lot of fiction about a lot of things that a lot of people have already debunked. But frankly, I don’t think it has more harmful ideas in it than the Left Behind novels. And in a certain way, what the Left Behind novels do, the way they twist scripture toward a certain theological and political end, I think Brown is twisting scripture, just to other political ends. But at the end of the day, the difference is I don’t think Brown really cares that much about theology. He just wanted to write a page-turner and he was very successful at that.

You can find the entire interview here.

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Christians Judging Others

by Mandi

I’ve noticed a trend among Christians recently that really disturbs me. Christians seem to think that it’s perfectly acceptable to judge nonbelievers. I keep hearing snide comments about that “slutty girl” or the man who lives with his girlfriend.

Thinking like that is never going to bring lives to Christ! And if you’re someone who says, “I would never say that to their faces!” then I urge you to consider this verse:

But the things that come out of the mouth come from the heart, and these make a man ‘unclean.’ (Matthew 15:18).

What you say reflects what you really think and feel. Even Jesus didn’t judge nonbelievers:

John 12:46-48: “I have come into the world as a light, so that no one who believes in me should stay in darkness. As for the person who hears my words but does not keep them, I do not judge him. For I did not come to judge the world, but to save it. There is a judge for the one who rejects me and does not accept my words; that very word which I spoke will condemn him at the last day.”

And Paul actually said we aren’t to judge those outside of the church:

1 Corinthians 5:12-13a: “What business is it of mine to judge those outside the church? Are you not to judge those inside? God will judge those outside.”

So why is that Christians are so intent on holding nonbelievers to a godly standard? We don’t expect our children to walk before they learn how. We don’t expect a newborn baby to eat solid food. So how can we expect someone to live by godly standards when they don’t think anything is wrong with theirs?

It is our job to show the nonbeliever Christ. It is only by being introduced to Christ that lives will change. Changed lives do not come from snide comments. Changed lives do not come from condemnation. Changed lives do not come from judgment.

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Moussaoui wants to change his mind

by Mandi

I haven’t posted much in the last week and, as a result, there’s a lot I want to talk about.

First, Zacarias Moussaoui. He has the audacity to request his plea of guilty be removed after being sentenced to life in prison.

In an Associated Press article:

“I had thought I would be sentenced to death based on the emotions and anger toward me for the deaths on Sept. 11,” he explained in an affidavit. “But after reviewing the jury verdict and reading how the jurors set aside their emotions and disgust for me and focused on the law and the evidence … I now see that it is possible that I can receive a fair trial even with Americans as jurors.”

Explain to me why he wanted the death penalty if he didn’t have anything to do with September 11?  If death would have been honorable for him, wouldn’t it logically conclude that he had done something to deserve the honorable death? And since he didn’t get that death, he wants to try and get off scot-free? I don’t think so.

And I have completely forgotten what else I wanted to write about. When I remember, I’ll write another post.

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Blog of the Week: In the Outer

by Mandi

Click on the link in my sidebar to visit my new tenant this week. …in the outer… is a fabulous blog written by The Bloke. His writing is thoughtful, intelligent, and relevant to our culture today. His posts have often challenged me to think more critically, and I’ve come out a better person for it.

Go read it.


Christian Carnival CXX

by Mandi

This week’s Christian Carnival is being hosted over at Daddypundit. There are some fabulous posts this week, especially Christian Logic’s “The Problem of Evil” and Pursuing Holiness’ “Chicken-hawk Christians” which addresses how Christian should handle this problem of war.

Go read them. Seriously. You’ll be glad you did.

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Social Justice and Christianity

by Mandi

I mentioned earlier how I felt like a failure because I didn’t show up to the GNC. I’ve been reflecting further on how social justice fits into Christianity. Am I just lazy? Is that why I didn’t go? Or is it bigger than that? I think it’s bigger than that.

In America, we, as a nation, take so much for granted. We have certain liberties and rights that we have grown accustomed to. When we don’t get them, we complain. The irony is that we have the right to complain.

As a Christian in America, I have so much more to take for granted. I have the freedom of religion. I have the freedom to meet with my small group without fearing for my life. I have the freedom to tell people about my faith. These are freedoms that other countries don’t have. These are freedoms that I don’t even think about most of the time. Like air, they are just there all the time.

The verse that keeps springing to my mind is Luke 12:48, “For everyone to whom much is given, from him much will be required; and to whom much has been committed, of him they will ask the more” (NKJV).

I praise God for the freedoms that He has allowed us to have. And I thank Him for not punishing us for the way we use them. I don’t want to speak for all Christians, but when I hear the phrase “social justice,” I always think of the hippy free-spirited type of person who is always protesting something.  But in reality, we all have the job of achieving social justice in the world–so much more so if we are Christian.

As Christians, we are to show God’s love to the world. Not just to our best friend or next door neighbor. If we sit and ignore the atrocities going on in the rest of the world, then we are no better than the monsters who are causing them. I think this quote, spoken by a Kansas Senator about the war in Uganda, can apply to any situation in the world that we close our eyes to in order to stay blind:

“If you had known about the holocaust, would you have done anything to stop it? You have access and the ability to do things to help people. And if you don’t do it somebody’s gonna die. If these guys don’t do this, more people are going to die. Literally. They’re going to die. Because there’s no voice, it’s not heard, it’s not seen, it’s invisible. They’re invisible children, and they’re gonna die. Because we didn’t do something.”

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We’re all immigrants…

by Mandi

…some of us just came sooner than others.

Click here to read the best post about immigration that I’ve seen.  The Library Lady is brutally honest and, I believe, offers a solution that is most definitely American. Go read it. Leave a comment and tell her Amanda sent you!

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I’m a fraud

by Mandi

I did not participate in the Global Night Commute. After all of the stuff I posted here about it, I didn’t go.

I’m full of the desire to change things. To show the world that Christians are full of love and grace. But when it comes down to it, I’m all talk. If I won’t actually take a stand and do something, then I’m worse than the person who says they won’t do anything.

I feel like a failure.


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