Pastor Rick Warren Hosts McCain and Obama

19 08 2008
John McCain and Barack Obama discuss faith and politics in a forum hosted by Pastor Rick Warren (center) Saturday night (

John McCain and Barack Obama discuss faith and politics in a forum hosted by Pastor Rick Warren (center) Saturday night (Mario Anzouni/Reuters)

Saturday night Pastor Rick Warren of Saddleback Church and author of The Purpose Driven Life successfully moderated the first public event between the two candidates for president.

Warren’s premise for hosting the debate is that while he believes in separation between church and state, he does not believe in a separation between faith and politics. After all, he asserts, “faith is just a world view, and everybody has some kind of world view.”

I felt that Warren performed very well in his role as moderator, and appreciated the forum to hear the candidates discuss matters that matter to me.

I encourage you to check out CNN’s full discussion available online.





Walking in Wide Spaces

18 08 2008

I stumbled over this beautiful, yet counter-cultural truth in Psalms 119 this morning:

Do not snatch the word of truth from my mouth,

for I have put my hope in your laws.

I will always obey your law,

for ever and ever.

I will walk about in freedom,

for I have sought out your precepts.

I noticed the word used for “freedom” is a phrase in the Hebrew– it literally reads something like “I will walk in a wide place”. This statement captured my heart and my attention as I thought about it. The writer is declaring that he has hoped in God’s laws, he has striven to obey God and will continue to do so for ever. And the result of having sought out God’s precepts and striven for obedience? Freedom. And I wonder, freedom from what? Perhaps there’s a freedom from the pressures of sin. Pride brings pressure as we struggle to maintain an image that over-represents us. Financial pressures narrow our existence as we’ve had eyes bigger than our pocketbooks. Relational pressures weigh us down when we do life our way instead of God’s.

In God, under his laws, his precepts, his direction is found a wide place to roam.

Freedom.





A God Who’s All About Me

12 08 2008

I’ve begun reading God in Search of Man by Abraham Joshua Heschel. I’m only 33 pages in so I will be no means comment on the book in general, but I wanted to share one concept from the opening pages that caused some real reflection for me.

In the context of self-clarification and self-examination, Heshel writes:

Religious thinking, believing, feeling are among the most deceptive activities of the human spirit. We often assume it is God we believe in, but in reality it may be a symbol of personal interests that we dwell upon. We may assume that we feel drawn to God, but in reality it may be a power within the world that is the object of our adoration. We may assume it is God we care for, but it may be our own ego we are concerned with. To examine our religious existence is, therefore, a task to be performed constantly. [Italics mine]

“We may assume it is God we care for, but it may be our own ego…” These were the words that cut to my heart Morning. I live in a perpetual Disneyland compared to the reality of following Jesus for the first Christians and even many in other parts of the world today, for whom a public profession of faith in Jesus marks the end of life as they new it, and possibly even the end of life. Only in such an easy environment could following Jesus become so discombobulated that I may seek God for my benefit. I want what he can give me and what He can do for me. At least, I must admit this is often the case.

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Apologies for America’s “Original Sin”

1 08 2008

I recently took my son to the mall where we spent time at his favorite spot: the toddler play area.  It’s here that he loves to run ferociously around a padded play track that looks like a roadway.  He also likes to crawl through a train-shaped tunnel, climb an oversized baseball bat, and slide down a little dog-shaped slide.  It is this last structure that tends to cause problems.  The slide has been the site of many toddler scuffles in the past year as energetic and impatient boy and girls (like my son) struggle to share the alluring dog slide.  On quite a few occasions I’ve caught my little angel shoving a kid he thought was taking too long to go down the slide, or getting in a little skirmish at the bottom of the slide with a kid who had the nerve to slide down after him and try to dislodge him from his new home at the base of the slide.

These little toddler squabbles with my son typically end with dad breaking things up and asking my son to say he’s sorry to the other child.  I do this because I want my son to understand that his actions matter; that what he does to people is important.  I want my son to know that if you wrong someone then you need to own up to it and apologize.  It’s the right thing to do.

So I was intrigued by a news story I caught this morning out of the House of Representatives.  Tuesday the House passed H. Res. 194 issuing an apology for slavery.  Perhaps some of you would be surprised to learn that the US government avoiding such an apology so long.  Twenty years ago congress apologized for its treatment of Japanese-Americans in WWII; an apology that was backed with financial reparations.  The magnitude of wrongs committed by Americans and a complicit government during the years of slavery and Jim Crow are nearly incomprehensible to young people today.

The resolution is written as a step forward in our long healing process as a nation.  Acknowledging our wrongdoing, even if it is far overdue, is healthy.  The Christian faith embraces the spiritual power of confession (see the book of James 5:16).  

Therefore confess your sins to each other and pray for each other so that you may be healed.

More than that it’s something the parent of any toddler realizes: when you do something wrong, it’s important to own up to it and to apologize.

I don’t know what difference this makes in the long run, but I do know that I’ve more appreciation for a government that will embrace it’s sins than one that sweeps them under the rug.  When I talk with my son someday about the sins of our past, I can at least point to a much belated apology too.

Here’s a section of the resolution:

Whereas an apology for centuries of brutal dehumanization and injustices cannot erase the past, but confession of the wrongs committed can speed racial healing and reconciliation and help Americans confront the ghosts of their past…

Whereas it is important for this country, which legally recognized slavery through its Constitution and its laws, to make a formal apology for slavery and for its successor, Jim Crow, so that it can move forward and seek reconciliation, justice, and harmony for all of its citizens: 

Now, therefore, be it Resolved, That the House of Representatives— 

(1) acknowledges the fundamental injustice, cruelty, brutality, and inhumanity of slavery and Jim Crow; 

(2) apologizes to African-Americans on behalf of the people of the United States, for the wrongs committed against them and their ancestors who suffered under slavery and Jim Crow; and 

(3) expresses its commitment to rectify the lingering consequences of the misdeeds committed against African-Americans under slavery and Jim Crow and to stop the occurrence of human rights violations in the future.