Week 22: Valley Open Bible Church, 1 June 2008

Teresa told me I ought to being my tambourine to the Valley Open Bible Church this morning. But I would have been alone in my tambourine beating (shaking? what is it that one does to the/ with the tambourine?) had I brought one, as we went to the 8:15 “traditional” service and not the 10:30 “contemporary” one. Although the 8:15 featured songs from the 1990s and hymns, the jaunty clapping with He Lives and the Marshall stack* and drum set on stage pointed to the “contemporary” service having much more spirited music. The 8:15 service featured a guitar, bass, keyboard, and three vocalists, but, alas, no tambourines.

As the name of the congregation (and the name of the denomination) suggest, one of the main emphases of the VOB is reading the Bible. The VCOB is embarking on a new program using Life Journals and the SOAP method, and combining the “spiritual exercise” of Bible study with physical exercise (a walk in a local park), and “relational” exercise (they’ll pick up litter and greet people as they walk). The introduction to this program explained why the pastor was seated in a camp chair on the stage before his sermon. (Two reasons, actually. As a visual aid to remind people to bring chairs to sit on during the study, and also because they’re doing a drawing for a few chairs as they start the program).

I have two notes I made in this section. First, I quoted the pastor as saying, “Four years of Bible college didn’t do for me what reading it myself has,” which I marked as being ironic. He was, in the context, exhorting the congregation to study of the scripture, but it struck me as ironic because the very thing most Bible college programs pride themselves on is study of the scriptures. I think he meant to say that individual study is important and edifying and that one doesn’t need a degree, class, or course of study in order to derive benefit from it.
The second thing I wrote was, “Damn. [We] forgot to bring Bibles again.” We keep “outing” ourselves by not toting Bibles to the non-liturgical churches. We have several boxes that contain nothing but Bibles and commentaries that are currently in the huge stack of boxed books of a library that we tell people we own, but which many people are beginning to doubt. (Not Teresa, though, as she’s helped move them on more than one occasion).

No fear, though. The scriptures being referenced were beamed on the screen via power point. The sermon was on this formula:
Faith = Hearing and Believing and taking Action
With a focus on Abraham’s obedience to God in Hebrews 11: 8-10 and an emphasis on the phrase “not knowing where he was going,” the pastor walked the delicate line between what “the leadership books all recommend” for planning, and “obedience to God doesn’t always align with the wisdom of this world.” He gave examples from his own life, his triumphs and struggles as a pastor, and pointed out our having just taken communion1 Samuel 15:22, explaining that God desires obedience more than sacrifices, and then did a tap dance around communion as a religious duty. He said, Here we have performed a religious duty, but it’s not lifeless,” he explained that communion in this setting wasn’t “just going through the motions”–in contrast with liturgical traditions.

There’s something in the water. I swear there is. I’m about ready to stand up at the next service where they launch into the liturgical tradition and ask WTF? Okay, I’m more likely to ask what’s in the water . . . but really, my standing up and asking can’t be any more random than the woman in a trench coat and hat who walked in, walked to the front, and handed a CD to the pastor in the middle of his sermon. No, really — that’s my next note, chronologically, in the notes I took on the sermon.

He did a nice job of tying the sermon into two of the five points of the mission of the church, specifically Reach the unchurched and Raise up mature Christians.

I came home and sunk my teeth (brain?) into Brian McLaren’s A Generous Orthodoxy: Why I Am a Missional, Evangelical, Post/Protestant, Liberal/Conservative, Mystical/Poetic, Biblical, Charismatic/Contemplative, Fundamentalist/Calvinist, Anabaptist/Anglican, Methodist, Catholic, Green, Incarnational, Depressed-yet-Hopeful, Emergent, Unfinished CHRISTIAN because I don’t know that I can take any more church infighting without standing up in the middle of someone’s sermon and hollering WTF?

* TMBG has the only song I know that mentions a Marshall stack. Alas, VOB does not have a smoke machine.

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Juno

We’re having mandatory family fun night, watching Juno. Most of the time, MFFN involves playing cards or a board game. I’m probably going to include some spoilers in this discussion, so if you’re the kind of person, like me, who gathers as little knowledge as possible about a film before going to see it because otherwise you can’t maintain your suspension of disbelief, then stop reading right now and go rent the movie so you can come back and read.

Seriously.

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Reconciliation

I wish I understood the process of reconciliation better. Somewhere in the back of my mind, I find myself certain that if I just understood it better, I’d be ready, willing, and able to do it. This is a ridiculous assertion, of course, and I’m an idiot.
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Week 21: Real Life Ministries, 25 May 2008

Farmergirl confessed that after communion and the offertory followed directly on the heels of the opening worship music at Real Life Ministries, she thought we might be at a sermon-less church. I don’t know if such a thing exists (a sermon-less church — outside the Quaker tradition, anyway), but it was interesting that the order of service threw her enough to initially surmise that there simply wouldn’t be one.
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Week 20c: Memorial for Lillian Davis, 21 May 2008

I don’t think I’ve been to an Episcopalian funeral in the dozen years I’ve been an Episcopalian.
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Week 20b: Cursillo Closure, 18 May 2008

The closure of a Cursillo weekend is usually a joyous occasion, though the bulk of the participants and the team are usually really tired.  The community comes together for this final service, and, along with the things particular to the Cursillo weekend, celebrates the Eucharist.  The music at this service was particularly beautiful, not just because I happen to be madly in love with the lead guitarist, but because the Cursillo community in the diocese of Spokane really likes to sing, and there’s something really nice about singing with people who enjoy each other, and enjoy singing.

I also got to have communion again, which I think I’ve decided I like — and miss.  So that bumps the communion count up to 6 for the year, instead of the 20+ we’d usually be at at this point in the year.

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Week 20: Kaleo, Otis Orchards, 18 May 2008

We’re not quite sure when the Kaleo popped up. Small towns are kind of weird that way . . . sometimes you know and see all the changes, and sometimes things just pop up. We first noticed them back in January, when we were on our way to the Seventh Day Adventist service. Since then, the Four Corners Bakery in the same plaza closed, and Kaleo has either grown, or moved into, that same space. Michael is away this weekend at the 8th Inland NW Cursillo, and Farmergirl thought we ought to go to Kaleo because “they have a fun sign.” (It’s orange). (And it is fun).

As you’ve probably noticed, I often do a little bit of poking around to explore a church or a tradition before we attend. Among other things before we went, I found that Kaleo is listed as one of the churches of the Spokane Emergent Cohort, which seems to be sleeping. (I say sleeping because the most recent post is from September of 2007, but if you read any of my other blogs, you’ll see that some they all have been sleeping for far longer than last September, so I’m not ready to declare any kind of death). If you’re not already familiar with the Emergent/Emerging movement, Scott McKnight’s What Is the Emerging Church? is a good a place as any to start.
(If you find the 30 page transcript, Twain allusions, and theological language too much to handle before coffee, give the Christianity Today version a gander instead — but I have to tell you, the longer, more academic version is totally worth the time and brain cells . . . I read it to Michael last night while he was unpacking . . . pretty heady stuff that late in the evening).
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Saying “No”

It has fallen out of style to decline without excuse. To be honest, I’m not certain that it was ever in style, but I am met with increasing consternation when I decline without following up with details of the fabulous thing I am already engaged in that prevents me from accepting. That is, having an excuse to say no has become mandatory. It is no longer simply enough to say no, because the expectation is the yes.

All of this makes me crazy. Not simply because of the kind of blank stares I get from saying no without explanation, but because everyone else feels it necessary to explain what fabulous event is getting in the way of them saying yes to me.
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Elections

Vote for Jerry

We’re still members at ECOR, so we attended the annual meeting, where our friend Dave was sporting one of these in his lanyard, and passing others out. I didn’t realize the camera on this computer is a mirror-cam, so if you can’t read it in the picture, it says, “Vote for Jerry.”
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Week 19: One* (The Church Formerly Known as Grace Harvest), 11 May 2008

One* is a large church in the Spokane Valley that sports its own climbing tunnel play area called the Totally Tubular Zone and lattes. (I haven’t quite figured out the latte thing–that is, is it by donation? regular coffee stand prices? something else? It might be done a little differently each place. At least one — Life Center, I think — had a “free latte for first time visitors” policy, which indicates at least an expectation of a donation to cover costs).
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