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June 22, 2011

New Name, New Place

Well, friend(s), I'm finally moving. I've had this blog here, by this name, since 2004: 7 years. 

Time for a change.

I've decided that the name "PunkIsrael," while fun and kind of provocative, doesn't really suit me anymore. It's hard for a middle-class, slightly overweight, gainfully-employed husband and father to sell the idea that he's still a "punk" at heart.

So I'm changing the name to "Fallor Ergo Sum," which is Latin for "I err; therefore, I am."  

St. Augustine, in The City of God, anticipated Descarte's "I think; therefore, I am" by several hundred years. I opine; yet I may be wrong. But I must opine; I am rhetorical (and theological and literary) man.

I've also changed to a free blog host: Jun 22, 2011 6:38:17 AM

June 21, 2011

Hoarder Theology

So I got on the Hoarders bus pretty late; I watched the first episode yesterday (the A&E series first aired in 2009). If you're unaware, hoarding is considered a mental illness, where people are compelled to keep almost everything they have, worthless or not. The result is human beings living in houses that resemble nothing so much as landfills.

The premise of the show is the hoarders face a reckoning: either clean up, or lose their houses, lose their children, get evicted. A crew is available to help them clean up.

My first reaction was visceral: I was watching mentally-ill people live out their worst nightmare. I felt almost as sickened by that thought as by what some of them were hoarding: rotten produce, dirty laundry, used paper towels. 

I also couldn't help but relate it to sin, especially the secret kind that lives in our hearts.

Sin, like hoarding, is mental illness.

Sin, like hoarding, involves holding on to worthless things.

Sin, like hoarding, isolates us. 

Sin, like hoarding, requires drastic measures.

More to come...

November 08, 2010

Pastors and Elders are Ambulance Drivers

I just got finished reading Eugene Peterson's excellent book, Under the Unpredictable Plant: a Study in Vocational Holiness.There is much to consider in this short volume, but two principles struck home especially: 1) pastors, elders, and church leaders are susceptible to the temptation to demand Christ's glory for themselves, trying to be the Messiah instead of pointing people to him, and 2) we must choose our metaphors with great care, because we look through them in order to understand the world.

So I wrote this short story about ten years ago called "An Ambulance Driver, a Weather Girl, and an Ugly Couch." Subconsciously I was probably thinking about Hemingway and his work as an ambulance driver in WWII. The main character of my story was, as you've guessed by now, an ambulance driver, and also a messed up, ADD, single twenty-something who drank too much and struggled with control issues (was the main character a poorly-drawn portrait of my 23-year-old self? Most likely.) 

When I say control issues, I mean that he would make a mark on his living room wall for every patient he lost on the way to the ER. He took responsibility for their deaths. He was a weird kind of perfectionist. It was part of his problem. And it became a sort of contest between him and God. He was wrestling, I guess, with his hyper-Calvinism--was he rushing the patient to the God who heals, or the God who wills everything to pass, including death?

Anyway. I never published it, except on a blog, but when I was thinking about metaphors for ministry, this odd metaphor was the first to show back up. Because if the church is a hospital, and God is the healer (let's work with that side for now), what is the pastor or elder, but an ambulance driver? 

Think about it. Ambulance drivers may be paramedics, so they have some medical training. They can do a small amount of healing. But they are rushing the patients to the more qualified healer: the doctor. They try to make the patients comfortable, but there is a sense of urgency. And when the doctor arrives, the ambulance driver steps aside.

Now, replace every instance of the words "ambulance driver" in the previous sentence with "pastor," and every instance of the word "doctor" with "Jesus."

The thing I like about this metaphor is that it keeps the emphasis on the right thing, I think. Are ambulance drivers important? Absolutely. But less essential than the doctor. 

And what is required to be an ambulance driver? Not much. In fact, anyone with a driver's license can get someone to the doctor.

But who knows? Maybe the ambulance driver knows a quicker way to get there. 

November 01, 2010

A Punk Preaches Still

You can listen here

October 20, 2010

The Shame Flute

"The sestina villanelle is a dull thing. Many modern poets have tried their hands, or feet at it, as they should. Unfortunately, some have published the results." --Michael Baldwin DB, unfaithfully paraphrasing Michael Baldwin

Pick up a flute, I dare you, and try it,

in olden times when they honor the singer.

They fit you with something to help with your diet:

A tight metal collar, locked on your gullet,

A false flute protruding, with locks for your fingers.

Pick up a flute, I dare you, and try it.

This gadget will make you a bit more compliant.

Molest not the muse! Harass not the singer!

Injure their ears and you may start a riot.

Bury your music, and learn to be quiet.

Learn sewing or dance if you cannot sing, or

Pick up a flute, I dare you, and try it.

Find you a woman to help to you pry it

from your shivering neck and sore fingers.

Nurse your rage. Let ego supply it, 

Then play, fool, like everyone’s listening,

And shape your shame into melodies defiant.

Pick up a flute, I dare you, and try it,

Or bury your music, and try to be quiet.

October 04, 2010

A Punk Preaches Yet

Listen here.

August 09, 2010

A Punk Keeps Preaching

Listen here