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Monday, September 2, 2019

Labor Day Thoughts on the Labor of the Church

On this Labor Day here are a few thoughts on the labor of the church. It is an excerpt from my book: Vocãtiõ: Imaging a Visible Church.

You can find various versions of the book here.

Humans, Tools, and Commons

Whatever structurally does not fit the logic of machines is effectively filtered from a culture dominated by their use.
Ivan Illich[i]



Teeming Ingots
by James E. Allen, printed by Charles S. White, 1935
Throughout the book Vocãtiõ I have critiqued the post-Constantinian Church and demonstrated how vocations have been compromised by both chrematistic valuation and complicity with secular power. (The word chrematistic means related to or occupied with the gaining of wealth.) But there is still more to say about the impact of our shifting economic practices. Our global economy has obliterated local communities, rendering them insufficient to meet their own needs, and making the people who live in them terminally isolated. The vast majority of human beings do not make anything, let alone make anything for themselves. Berry writes, “Outsourcing’ the manufacture of frivolities is at least partly frivolous; outsourcing the manufacture of necessities is entirely foolish.”[ii] Household economics must reclaim a local focus. “Neighborhoods” and “neighborliness” must remerge as important values. A yearning for neighbors is baked into the small-batch movement, which is reconnecting producers and consumers, and individuals with the creative minds behind the products they purchase.[iii] The small-batch trend is bringing about local production of foods and household goods--many created inside homes and garages. Small batch bread, bourbon, clothing, and the farm-to-table movement are sacramental views of this trend in neighborliness.
The Gospel community can further undermine the dehumanizing practice of the global market by focusing locally and adding value to the neighborhoods where their communities are embedded. The church must partner with others and help people in local communities to relearn the art of household management, which has been obliterated from cradle to grave because chrematistic patterns of exchange have adhered to every part of life.  The Church must help individuals re-member themselves as parts of a family because families are the foundation for rebuilding local communities. Jesus went to families. He met in homes. Family is the core of the shalom community. Chrematistic rituals of exchange wear away family bonds and even collapse friendship circles by the weight of the powerful, urgent drive to accumulate money. Rowan Williams, former Archbishop of Canterbury, spoke to a group of economists about the emerging issues that an unencumbered system of competition has on individuals, their families, and their children. He said,
An atmosphere of anxious and driven adult lives, a casual attitude to adult relationships, and the ways in which some employers continue to reward family-hostile patterns of working will all continue to create more confused, emotionally vulnerable or deprived young people. If we're looking for new criteria for economic decisions, we might start here and ask about the impact of any such decision on family life and the welfare of the young.[iv]
Williams also points out that the human creature is meant for creativity. We have already spoken about God’s invitation to be a partner. But chrematistic systems of exchange force people to live without space for imagination. Imaginative play is how we learn to question, to problem solve, and to see the world with its future differently. Adults need space and time to play as much as children do.
It is the extra things that make us human; simply meeting what we think are our material needs, making a living, is not uniquely human, just a more complicated version of ants in the anthill. One of the greatest legacies of the British labour movement has been a real commitment to this--to the enlarging of minds and feelings (anyone who's been able to see that wonderful play, The Pitmen Painters, will know what I mean). So the question is how far economic decisions help or hinder a world in which that space for thinking things might be different is kept open.”[v]
In Philip K. Dick’s classic sci-fi novel entitled, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, later made into the popular film Blade Runner, androids can only mimic empathy but cannot truly express it. For Dick, empathic connection is the exclusive purview of the human being. Nurturing family and friendship circles through play and a leisurely sharing of life and time expand the human capacity for understanding, sympathy, and empathy. Chrematistic systems of exchange demand that life be oriented around work. Self-interest and success are promoted in the workplace. Williams points out that such a culture, “encourages you to struggle for your own individual interest and success, you are being encouraged to ignore the reality of other points of view--ultimately, to ignore the cost or the pain of others. The result may be a world where people are very articulate about their own feelings and pretty illiterate about how they impact on or appear to others--a world of which reality television gives us some alarming glimpses.”[vi] We generally scapegoat individuals who demonstrate villainous lacks of empathy without looking at the social determinants that make such toxicity possible.
The Church as a community of shalom has much work to do in a world dominated by chrematistic exchange. Christian charity pushes us to reach out to the casualties of society, and the number of broken people continues to mount. The community of shalom is a different kind of life where families are celebrated, new families are formed, and all these families bless one another. People recover the value of the Sabbath. They discover that they are made for partnership with God and that imagination, play, and discovery rejuvenate human relationships. Such a community of shalom names the lie that things and people can only delight us if we have them in large quantities. To actually die with the most toys (a bumper sticker popular in the West) is to die with nothing. God comes as mystery, inviting human participation in a great narrative, which stands in stark contrast to the world where relationships, friendships, and families can only be known as commodities.[vii] Williams points out that “an economic climate based on nothing but calculations of self-interest, sometimes fed by an amazingly distorted version of Darwinism, doesn't build a habitat for human beings; at best it builds a sort of fortified boxroom for paranoiacs (with full electronic services, of course).”[viii] The modern Church has failed at grafting a theology of charity into the dominant culture of chrematistic exchange. The inverse has happened: chrematistic exchange has grafted itself into the heart of the Church. We have made the baptized and the clergy into commodities for the maintenance and support of the institution.
A renewed gathering of the followers of Jesus must break into the world, and break up the world. The gathering where bread is broken, stories shared, and prayers are offered reminds the local community that they are implicated in a narrative of peace. Such a renewed gathering also breaks up the constant work expected by chrematistic institutions. The gathering in God’s name to proclaim the message of grace, reminding each other that all are invited into partnership with God, and giving thanks for a creation that has enough for all is an act of defiance in the face of chrematistic institutions promoting works righteousness, limited success for only the most devoted apostles, and a philosophy of private ownership and scarcity. In his book Political Worship Bernd Wannenwetsch observes,
Worship again and again interrupts the course of the world. Through worship the Christian community testifies that the world is not its own. And this means also that it is not kept alive by politics, as the business of politics, which knows no sabbath, would have us believe. That is why the celebration of worship is not directed simply against this or that totalitarian regime; it is directed against the totalization of political existence in general.[ix]
Christian community is one of the few ways that people can successfully resist the colonization of our bodies by the institutions of chrematistic exchange. We are slowly reverting to a model of social and political life where, through technology, the powers and authorities have a total claim on the body of every human being. Humans, once again, are seen as resources rather than beings.[x] The gathered community of shalom reveals this total control to be a lie. The human body is meant for a different end altogether. Gathering reminds the community of our heavenly purpose. Worship reminds the community of our heavenly purpose. In fact, the true beneficiaries of Easter are those who have suffered and died at the hands of unjust powers and institutions of chrematistic exchange for not even institutions as powerful as these can separate God from the faithful. (Romans 8:37-39) Christians remember the dead when we gather because our remembrance is a sign of our hope, and a declaration that the powers of death will have no victory.[xi]
Sunday morning worship services are being changed as people make new communities that share meals in other settings. Certainly, the missional movement and the farm-to-table gatherings of Christians are whittling away at the traditions we have received through the institutional Church. Borrowed spaces, public and private, are reshaping assumptions about what is needed for gathering. Jesus said that there is something “more here than temple.” (Matthew 12:6) Jesus broke open the centralized faith of his day and redistributed the faith of his forbearers. For instance, Jesus used the term worship in only a few instances.[xii] Worship is indeed part of what Christians do. We continue the notion of giving thanks to God, prayers, and worship that we received from our faith ancestors in the Mosaic or Sinai tradition. But Christians are doing more than simply worshiping God. The very act of gathering in relationship and holding hands resists commodification of our bodies.[xiii]
Another basic tool the shalom community uses to resist colonization is the chabûrah --the feast of friends. Neighborliness, as Peter Block, civic engineer and author, argues, is rooted in friendship. The community has an opportunity to engage in friendship with its surroundings. It bears witness to Jesus’s willingness to eat and drink with others by engaging relationally with the community around him. “Service can be commoditized, friendship cannot.”[xiv] The missional movement across the Church is rooted in this principle of friendship. This kind of friendship leads beyond outreach and the dehumanizing practices of toxic charity into a relationship of collaboration. It breaks open our inherited models of Christian community and knocks down the walls that buffer our private spaces. Friends are not bound by private space or false ideas of secular and sacred, but by agape: friendship love. As Wendell Berry writes, “A community is the mental and spiritual condition of knowing that the place is shared, and that the people who share the place define and limit the possibilities of each other's lives. It is the knowledge that people have of each other, their concern for each other, their trust in each other, the freedom with which they come and go among themselves.”[xv] He reminds us that the abdication of communal authority to the powers and authorities through governmental systems has freed us from each other in a toxic way. Reclaiming neighborliness as part of the communal life is essential to Christ’s vision. No person can live unto themselves. It is simply impossible. But, more importantly, the personalization of neighborliness returns authority to the members of the small community the local church serves. Its members start to care for one another again, which taps into the inclusive DNA of the Jesus Movement.
A shalom community engaging in friendly partnership with its neighbors will gravitate towards the urgent issues that preoccupy the local community. If people in our neighborhood care about safe public spaces, transportation, economic development, crime, or education, then God cares about these things, as does the community of shalom in a living partnership with the neighborhood will invest in local remedies to all of these issues. It will invest in economic development and partnerships that empower those in need of a better life. Along with the financial investment and time investment, a community of peace will focus on raising up new leaders within their neighborhoods. Indigenous leadership or contextual leadership is essential for the success of such partnerships. This is how friendship works. Friends empower each other to share their voices and do things they did not think were possible. A Church resisting colonization will be busy helping its neighbors invest in each other so that cycles of violence are broken and a new vision of life together in peace becomes possible. Gathering for worship and service bears a visible public witness against the powers of this world, and undermines them by resetting the boundaries of physical space in the world.
            Finally, a community of shalom will resist the powers of chrematistic exchange by recovering a commons that can be enjoyed by every member of a neighborhood. The privatization of land as resources, the eventual carving out of mineral rights, or immanent domain has contributed to our isolation by placing new boundaries upon our shared space. We view space as a commodity we individuals have the right to exploit rather than as part of a created order in which we all live and are invited to be partners together with God in managing. (Genesis 1:26) The transformation of our lived environment from a space held in common to a series of spaces held privately serves the interests of the few while impoverishing the many. This has amounted to a slow appropriation of the “commons.” Historically, the commons in the West, or the word iriai in the East, has designated the environment in which people lived. The commons were governed by custom and were characterized by shared access.[xvi] Ivan Illich explains,
People called commons that part of the environment which lay beyond their own thresholds and outside of their own possessions, to which, however, they had recognized claims of usage, not to produce commodities but to provide for the subsistence of their households.[xvii]
The openness of the commons meant that people could fish, hunt, graze, collect wood, or plants.
An oak tree might be in the commons. Its shade, in summer, is reserved for the shepherd and his flock; its acorns are reserved for the pigs of the neighboring peasants; its dry branches serve as fuel for the widows of the village; some of its fresh twigs in springtime are cut as ornaments for the church—and at sunset it might be the place for the village assembly.[xviii]
The use of the commons had limitations for the sake of sustainability, but the commons were shared spaces that made gathering with neighbors essential for individual life. The Church’s position towards the practice of maintaining commons in cities and villages began to change in the fourth century. As became normative in Western society, the Church became a private property owner. Somehow the Church must reclaim its critique against the evacuation of the commons. Privatization of common resources inevitably leads to those resources becoming assets that undergird invisible wealth. This is the slippery slope of chrematistic exchange.
Enclosure, once accepted, redefines community. Enclosure undermines the local autonomy of community. Enclosure of the commons is thus as much in the interest of professionals and of state bureaucrats as it is in the interest of capitalists. Enclosure allows the bureaucrats to define local community as impotent to provide for its own survival.
Enclosure of the commons allows for a sort of economic independence upon the enclosed resources and the commodities produced there. Conversely, people become tied to the land in a way that they were not prior to shared commons.
Furthermore, enclosed commons accentuate the separation of the secular and the sacred. The Church can take steps towards eroding private space by stepping across the lines that demarcate such enclosures. First, the Church can become a commons itself, gathering the local community, and sharing its resources for the improvement of the neighborhood. Second, the Church can offer the Eucharist in public and other private spaces. In this way, the gathering of people for Haggadah, the feast of friends, redefines the space. Both of these tools (worship and service) reinterpret the boundaries of church space and reengage neighborhoods across the boundaries of private space. The Church’s reentrance into public environs of any kind is a direct confrontation with the powers and the making of a feast there undermines the stories of scarcity, the survivalist mentality, and expands the political boundaries of acceptance.



[i] “Silence is a Commons” (1982) [edited] Address at the "Asahi Symposium Science and Man - The computer-managed Society," Tokyo, Japan (21 March 21 1982); as published in The CoEvolution Quarterly (Winter 1983).
[ii] Berry, What, 51-53.
[iii] For more information see my 2016 book entitled Small Batch.
[iv] Rowan Williams, "Human Well-Being and Economic Decision-Making,” The Archbishop of Canterbury, November 16, 2009, Accessed August 14, 2017, http://rowanwilliams.archbishopofcanterbury.org/articles.php/767/human-well-being-and-economic-decision-making
[v] Williams, "Human”.
[vi] Williams, "Human”.
[vii] Peter Block, Walter Brueggemann, and John McKnight, An Other Kingdom: Departing the Consumer Culture (Hoboken: Wiley, 2016) 37, 64-66.
[viii] Williams, “Humans”.
[ix] Bernd Wannenwetsch, Political Worship, trans. Margaret Kohl, Oxford Studies in Theological Ethics (Oxford University Press: New York, 2009) 127.
[x] Jean Bethke Elstain, "Christianity and Patriarchy: The Odd Alliance." Modern Theology, November 12, 2008, accessed August 15, 2017, http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1468-0025.1993.tb00297.x/abstract
[xi] Wannenwetsch, Political,132-3.
[xii] Matthew 14:32, 28:9; Luke 24:52; John 9:38.
[xiii] Brueggemann, Sabbath, 89.
[xiv] Block, “Kingdom”, 132.
[xv] Wendell Berry, "The Loss of the Future." Manasjournal Volume XXI, 47. November 20, 1968. Accessed August 15, 2017. http://www.manasjournal.org/pdf_library/VolumeXXI_1968/XXI-47.pdf
[xvi] Illich, “Silence”.
[xvii] Illich, “Silence”.
[xviii] Illich, “Silence”.

Monday, July 8, 2019

Bishops of all six Episcopal dioceses in Texas issue statement decrying the inhumane conditions at our country’s borders

To our state and national leaders,
We are bishops of the six Episcopal dioceses in Texas. All but 700 miles of the almost 2,000 miles of the US-Mexico border are in Texas. All of Texas feels the impact of anything that happens on our southern border.
We feel it through our families, many of whom have ancient deep roots in lands south of the United States. We feel it in our economy, as Mexico is Texas’ biggest trading partner. We feel it in our culture, since Texas was part of Mexico before we were part of the United States. Most of all, we feel it in our souls, for these are our neighbors, and we love them.
We write to decry the conditions in detention centers at our border because we are Christians, and Jesus is unequivocal. We are to pray without ceasing for everyone involved-refugees, elected officials, and law enforcement-while also advocating for the humane treatment of the human beings crowding our border as they flee the terror and violence of their home countries.
We call on our state and national leaders to reject fear-based policy-making that targets people who are simply seeking safety, and a chance to live and work in peace. The situation at the border is, by all accounts, a crisis. Refugees come in desperation; border personnel are under stress.
We call on our leaders to trust in the goodness, generosity and strength of our nation. God has blessed us with great abundance. With it comes the ability and responsibility to bless others.
We do this because Christians are commanded to love our neighbors as we love ourselves. And how we are to treat our neighbors, especially the children, could not be any clearer than it is in Matthew 18:2-6:
“He called a little child to him, and placed the child among them. And he said: “Truly I tell you, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven. Therefore, whoever takes the lowly position of this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven. And whoever welcomes one such child in my name welcomes me. If anyone causes one of these little ones—those who believe in me—to stumble, it would be better for them to have a large millstone hung around their neck and to be drowned in the depths of the sea.”
We are to care for the children, cherish them, protect them and keep them safe.
But what if they are strangers, foreigners? The message of God in the Hebrew Scriptures, Leviticus 19:33-34, also is very clear: “When a foreigner resides among you in your land, do not mistreat them.  The foreigner residing among you must be treated as your native-born. Love them as yourself, for you were foreigners in Egypt. I am the Lord your God.”
And again, in Matthew 25: 31-40. “I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me.”  And, in Matthew 25:40: “Truly I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these, youdid it to me.”
This is not a call for open borders. This is not saying that immigration isn’t complicated. This is a call for a humane and fair system for moving asylum seekers and refugees through the system as required by law. Seeking asylum is not illegal. Indeed, the people at our border are following the law when they present themselves to border authorities.
Asylum is “a protection granted to foreign nationals already in the United States or at the border who meet the international law definition of a ‘refugee,’ which is ‘a person who is unable or unwilling to return to his or her home country, and cannot obtain protection in that country, due to past persecution or a well-founded fear of being persecuted in the future ‘on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion.’”
Congress incorporated this definition into U.S. immigration law in the Refugee Act of 1980. The Refugee Act established two paths to obtain refugee status—either in the United States as an asylum seeker or from abroad as a resettled refugee.
As Christians, we seek to follow the biblical and moral imperatives of our Lord.In addition, the United States has legal obligations through international law as well as our own immigration law to provide protection to those who qualify as refugees.
And while the border authorities can detain asylum seekers, courts have ordered them to do so in “safe and sanitary conditions.” Credible news reports documenting unsafe conditions, especially for children, have made it clear this is not happening in consistent and sustained ways, as resources and personnel are overwhelmed by the situation.
This nation has the resources to handle these refugees humanely. We call on our leaders to find the will to do so swiftly.
 The Episcopal Diocese of DallasThe Rt. Rev. George Sumner
The Episcopal Diocese of Fort WorthThe Rt. Rev. J. Scott Mayer
The Rt. Rev. Sam B. Hulsey
The Rt. Rev. Rayford B. High Jr.
The Episcopal Diocese of Northwest TexasThe Rt. Rev. J. Scott Mayer
The Episcopal Diocese of the Rio GrandeThe Rt. Rev. Michael Buerkel Hunn
The Episcopal Diocese of TexasThe Rt. Rev. Andrew Doyle
The Rt. Rev. Jeff W. Fisher
The Rt. Rev. Kathryn M. Ryan
The Episcopal Diocese of West TexasThe Rt. Rev. David Reed
The Rt. Rev. Jennifer Brooke-Davidson
For more information contact:In the Diocese of Texas, Communication Director Tammy Lanier, tlanier@epicenter.org
In the Diocese of the Rio Grande, Canon to the Ordinary Raymond Raney, rraney@dioceserg.org
In the Diocese of Fort Worth, Communication Director Katie Sherrod, katie.sherrod@edfw.org
In the Diocese of Northwest Texas, Diocesan Administrator Elizabeth Thames, ethames@nwtdiocese.org
In the Diocese of West Texas, Director of Marketing and Communications Emily Kittrell, Emily.Kittrell@dwtx.org
In the Diocese of Dallas, Communication Director Kimberly Durnan, kdurnan@edod.org

Tuesday, November 8, 2016

Thoughts on the 2016 Presidential Election

Bishop Doyle's Thoughts on Election Day from The Episcopal Diocese of Texas on Vimeo.


“If we who are Christians participate in the political process and in the public discourse as we are called to do — the New Testament tells us that we are to participate in the life of the polis, in the life of our society — the principle on which Christians must vote is the principle, Does this look like love of neighbor?" – Presiding Bishop Michael Curry, March 2016

Today we elect the 45th president of the United States. After a long and grueling campaign, many of us are eager for this election to be over. The past few months have been filled with anger, blame, and fear, not to mention a fair amount of hostility. Many say that this particular election has divided us more than any election in recent United States history. I suspect this interpretation of the current state of our union has things backwards. My sense is that this election has not created division. It has revealed deep divisions that have lain dormant beneath the surface of American life.

When an 18-wheeler passes over a bridge and leaves cracks in its wake, we don’t blame the truck. The truck reveals a structural unsoundness already present in the bridge. The current presidential election has been an 18-wheeler driven over the bridge of American social and political life. It has revealed deep cracks in our community, and it has exposed our deep need for healing and reconciliation at the social and political level.

As a Bishop in the church, I can only make sense of this election in light of the doctrine of reconciliation. As Christians, we believe that God has already reconciled all people, parties, and potential presidents to Himself in Jesus Christ. We understand reconciliation as a past tense event that informs present tense action as we embody a future tense hope. When viewed from eternity, “It is finished” (Jn 19:30).

Yet as we look upon the newly obvious cracks in our social and political life, we know that even as God’s work is finished that our work is not. In other words, we cannot simply talk about reconciliation. God invites us to embody now what will be in God’s Future Kingdom as we work for the common good and strive to seek and serve Christ in all persons.

Reconciliation is not just an idea or an important theological doctrine. It is something that God wants to be a felt reality on earth. This means that real racial, social, and economic reform is needed. If this election tells us anything, it is that many people feel disenfranchised, forgotten, lied to, and left behind. An “us versus them” mentality infuses our political speech and our actions. We are a polarized nation, and our desire to win is often exceeded only by a much stronger desire to see our enemies lose. We may narrate the current social divide a bit differently, but few deny that such a divide exists. In a recent op-ed piece, David Brooks puts it like this:

The crucial social divide today is between those who feel the core trends of the global, information-age economy as tailwinds at their backs and those who feel them as headwinds in their face. That is to say, the most important social divide today is between a well-educated America that is marked by economic openness, traditional family structures, high social capital and high trust in institutions, and a less-educated America that is marked by economic insecurity, anarchic family structures, fraying community bonds and a pervasive sense of betrayal and distrust. These two groups live in entirely different universes. [1]

The work of reconciliation always begins with a commitment to the truth, and the truth is that many of us are living in entirely different universes. We are not listening to one another or giving people the benefit of the doubt, nor do we feel compassion for the deep pain and grief that always gives rise to people’s anger.

We may not know who will be elected president today, but we sense that a time of healing and reconciliation will be necessary regardless of the results of this election. If healing is to happen, God’s people must be committed to the work of making peace. “Blessed are the peacemakers,” Jesus said, “for they shall be called children of God” (Matt 5:9). Our commitment to peace must rest on the deep Biblical truth of our interconnectedness and our interdependence as we acknowledge that our common good is bound up together. To win at the expense of another is always to lose, for “when one part suffers, every part suffers with it” (1 Cor 12:26).

As Christians, we believe in a God who has emptied himself in sacrificial love so “that he might create in himself one new humanity in place of the two, thus making peace, and might reconcile both groups to God in one body through the cross, thus putting to death that hostility through it” (Eph 2: 15-16).

My deep prayer is that the people of God act as agents of God’s reconciling peace-making in the aftermath of this election. I pray that we work for racial, social, and economic reform in such a way that engages our political process with integrity, but also in such a way that we do not rely on that same process to heal our deep wounds.

I understand that many of us are deeply invested in the results of this election. We feel that much is at stake, and if we are honest we want “our side” to win. In light of this very human desire to win, I am humbled and challenged by a Lord who talked so much about losing. I hear Jesus asking me to lose my attachments, my petty desires, my simplistic solutions, my political identity, and my very life to make peace and love my neighbor. I hear Jesus reminding me that the neighbor I am invited to love is often one I too quickly call an enemy and that the Samaritan is actually my brother. Above all, I hear Jesus remind me that reconciliation is an accomplished fact where all sides have come together under His Lordship, and I hear Him pleading with me to embody and share that same message with others.

My prayers are with you on this Election Day, and on the day after, and they are with our nation. Cast your vote with hope and integrity and humility. Above all else remember that today marks not the end of our work as a nation and a church, but the only beginning. Let us pray:

Almighty God, to whom we must account for all our powers and privileges: Guide the people of the United States (or of this community) in the election of officials and representatives; that, by faithful administration and wise laws, the rights of all may be protected and our nation be enabled to fulfill your purposes; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. (Book of Common Prayer, Page 822)


Quotes

  • "Christianity is not a theory or speculation, but a life; not a philosophy of life, but a life and a living process." Samuel Taylor Coleridge
  • "Most people are willing to take the Sermon on the Mount as a flag to sail under, but few will use it as a rudder by which to steer." Oliver Wendell Holmes
  • "Perfection, in a Christian sense, means becoming mature enough to give ourselves to others." Kathleen Norris
  • "Do all the good you can, by all the means you can, in all the ways you can, in all the places you can, at all the times you can, to all the people you can, as long as ever you can." John Wesley
  • "The Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting; it has been found difficult and left untried." G. K. Chesterton
  • "One of our great allies at present is the Church itself. Do not misunderstand me. I do not mean the Church as we see her spread out through all time and space and rooted in eternity, terrible as an army with banners. That, I confess, is a spectacle which makes our boldest tempters uneasy. But fortunately it is quite invisible to these humans." C. S. Lewis
  • "When we say, 'I love Jesus, but I hate the Church,' we end up losing not only the Church but Jesus too. The challenge is to forgive the Church. This challenge is especially great because the church seldom asks us for forgiveness." Henri Nouwen, Bread for the Journey
  • "Christians are hard to tolerate; I don't know how Jesus does it." Bono
  • "It's too easy to get caught in our little church subcultures, and the result is that the only younger people we might know are Christians who are already inside the church." Dan Kimball