Tag Archives: Christ

Confessions of a Supposed Hipster

Yesterday, I read an article that examined what the writer called the “Christian hipster” trend. He explained that a Christian hipster is a Christian who is influenced by and, reciprocally, seeks to influence his or her culture. Christian hipsters are Christians who are not afraid of various aspects of society and culture – i.e. attending art shows, reading philosophy, drinking beer or wine, smoking pipes, watching R-rated movies, etc. – because they desire to embrace life in a celebratory rather than a suspect manner. The writer claimed that Christian hipsters are committed Christ followers who “seek to cultivate a strong aesthetic sensibility and intellectual rigor” as an essential form of that discipleship.

Huh?

While I appreciate someone seeking to understand and analyze this recent trend of reinterpreting the Christian faith as bent toward inclusion of culture rather than exclusion of it, the name “hipster” only makes me roll my eyes. Certainly, this article describes much of the person I have become. I drink beer. I enjoy the occasional glass of wine. I smoke a pipe. It seems almost all the movies I enjoy are R-rated (not so much of a shocker, considering I am an adult). I read literary fiction – novels, short stories, poetry – and despise most of the stuff churned out by Christian publishers. I am not uncomfortable talking about all sorts of philosophical or theological concepts, including those unfamiliar to the denominational tradition in which I grew up. I like Jon Stewart, Wes Anderson and Wendell Berry. I’m a fan of Bob Dylan. I think there is much for Christians to discuss in books like The Great Gatsby, The Catcher in the Rye and The Road. I support free-trade coffee and free trade in general. I believe some of the most edifying spiritual experiences can take place outside a church sanctuary or Christian campground.

What this article does not describe is who I am at my core. And, as I wrote in my previous post, what lies at the core of my life is Christ. In other words, labeling myself a “Christian hipster” is not the same as recognizing and embracing my identity.

Over the past few weeks of school, I have helped my students navigate their way through a myriad of colonial American concepts, namely identity, personal liberty and freedom. We have gone from John Proctor’s famous cry, “Because it is my name! Because I cannot have another in my life!” to Thomas Paine’s assertion, “My own mind is my own church,” to the violent metaphorical language of Jonathan Edwards’ greatest sermon. This weekend, for their homework, I asked my students to gather all of these works of literature together and write a paragraph or two that attempts to find what they hold in common. I think it is an easy thing to determine how things, or people, contrast. Understanding what amalgamates all things – the commonality and the communion – is often harder.

There is nothing wrong with choosing words that help define who you are. The problem is more deeply rooted in every human being’s search for true identity. For some, the definition of identity lies in their materialism and the security (or lack thereof) within it. Other seek meaning in another person, or through a group of people. Some perpetuate a political identity while others feel that who they are is delineated by their families. For people who believe that identity is realized from someone or somewhere else in the world, certain words of definition work. For such people, identity is something that is measurable and adjustable. It is subject to every whim and interest that momentarily turns our heads.

On the other hand, I have stopped believing that anything earthbound will hold the truth of my identity. If this were the case, my identity would be something finite. Something perishable. Something limited.

Looking at all this in one way, the reason I like wine and pipe smoke, R-rated movies and F. Scott Fitzgerald, has nothing to do with the fact that I call myself a Christian. Looking at it another way, these things have everything to do with my faith. Why? Because while my faith – that is, my center in Christ – is something wholly other than what exists within this mortal world, the life I live in this world is a life of freedom and personal liberty. Certainly I avoid the things that distract me from my center, but the things that point back to my center (or to the wonder of life provided me by my center), I embrace.

We have all had those moments when everything simply felt right. We may have been relaxing on a front porch with friends, a pipe or a clove cigarette in our hands. We may have been driving up the highway listening to Ray Lamontagne or Mumford and Sons. We may have stood for hours in front of a Picasso, or sat for hours in a Starbucks discussing P.T. Anderson’s Magnolia. And at some point, either during those moments or immediately after, we understood that the experience was very, very good. That it had been edifying. That our soul was healthier for it. That, somehow, we had become more aware of our true identity, or at least aware that one indeed exists.

The late Kyle Lake, pastor of University Baptist Church in Waco, used to end his sermons with the statement, “Love God. Embrace beauty. Live life to the fullest.” Each aspect of the statement is different, yet they are connected. It becomes one pursuit. Words may not define the one who follows such encouragement, but, then again, that person would have little need of such insubstantial terms.


The Center

I’ve been thinking lately about finding my center. I know, it sounds like ridiculously futile, New Age recreation. However, I mean this in an intensely practical manner. I’m not interested in “finding” my center because I think it has gone missing in some subconscious or metaphorical way. If anything, it is I who have gone missing.

As Yeats writes in “The Second Coming,” ” Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold; / … The best lack all conviction while the worst / Are full of passionate intensity.” Perhaps this is an odd reference, but if I am to war my way through the thousands of daily skirmishes – the decisions and the distractions and the desperations – and still place my head to the pillow in peace, then there must be a center that reels me back in, day after day. That keeps me breathing and thinking and just courageous enough to look in the eye this ravenous world with its starving stare. It is not my center that has strayed from me, but I from it. And each day that I do, things fall apart; the center cannot – or will not – hold.

Much of what I have written so far might seem pointlessly abstract. However, when we begin to consider our centers – that which holds our life together and gives it meaning and purpose – I believe many of us, if not all of us, will find that we must speak thus. Words only go so far, whether they are passed between friends, expressed in lines of poetry, partnered with a melody, or delivered from a pulpit. Eventually, even the words fail us. (Such is a frightening and sad reality for a teacher of literature and composition to accept.)

Perhaps this is why “centering prayer,” as it is popularly known these days, does not depend solely on spoken words to communicate our desires and our attitudes to God. There is even more basic forms of expression that go on, such as breathing, posture, and that wonderful communique, silence. Sometimes, we have to leave all our many babbling words behind in order to genuinely express our inmost inclinations.

As a Christian – specifically one who desperately wants that to mean something more than a political preference or a moral mindset – my center is Christ. Not the tired metaphor of Christ “living in my heart as my personal Lord and Savior,” (was there ever a more selfish way to describe the work of the Savior in someone’s life?), but as the unifying and very real God drawing every single aspect of my life into communion with Him. Christ, the benevolent giver of mercy and grace, is proclaimed as Lord over the lives of his followers. But unlike some eternal foreman or power-hungry overseer, this Lord draws us into a relationship that transforms servanthood to friendship, worldliness to meekness, selfishness to humility.

Finding my center means daily doing whatever it takes to live in communion with this wonder-filled Christ. What I am beginning to discover is that while I seek to do this, life does not slow down. The skirmishes keep tumbling over my horizons, making the need to commune with my center even more necessary. After all, without our “circumferences,” as the writer Richard Rohr puts it, there is no center. Without the world around us turning and turning in Yeats’ “widening gyre,” we may not even know we had a center, let alone what that center must be. We would be flung into the depths of our lives, fighting and scrabbling our way through the muck of earthly experience, without any awareness that turning with us and waiting to draw us back into a sense of wholeness and purpose is something – Someone – greater than it all.

Evangelism, then, begins with reminding people there is something to which all the spokes in our wheel connect. Something that remains central while we are hurled back and forth by the centrifugal, retrained chaos of our years, our months and our days. This is the truth of living, and only once it is established can a greater Truth be recognized and possibly accepted.

And when things fall apart, as they are apt to do again and again, it is the greater Truth that holds out his steady hands and calmly asks us to take hold and find our footing once again. Finding the center, and finding the courage to hold on to Him, is the greatest undertaking a person will ever face.

Maybe words go farther than I thought…


Everything is Insignificant

The life of a Christian is marked by simplicity of purpose. The writer of Philippians equates everything beyond knowing Christ as a rubbish heap ready to be burned away. It is a bold statement, but not a stupid one. Back in what I call my “Christian bookstore days,” I wore many a “Christian T-shirt,” and some of these shirts purported the Philippians statement in slogans like, “I WANT TO KNOW CHRIST… the rest is just details,” and, “EVERYTHING IS INSIGNIFICANT… compared to knowing Christ” (that last one was a play on the bleak outlook found on many “Emo” shirts of the time that carried no second half of the statement).

Yes, compared to knowing Christ, the importance we place on everyday things, the little anecdotes, equations, and happenings that make up our lives, does melt away into insignificance. However, there are a lot of Christians who stop there. They hold to that statement as proof of simplicity. They feel there is nothing more to say – nothing more they need. In essence, their Christianity revolves around a slogan, not transformation.

To know Christ… This is to realize that there is unfathomable depth within the simplicity of the relationship. A life marked by Jesus Christ becomes, in many ways, vastly more complicated than a life disconnected from Him. While the transforming truth and reality of the relationship will always be quite simple – Christ died for thee - a person’s outlook and behavior must be completely renovated, with allegiance to new, often counter-cultural responsibilities becoming necessary. 

Today, if you were to walk into the majority of churches on any given Sunday morning and ask a random sampling of parishioners what societal issues should Christians be concerned about, there is a very good chance that most people would list abortion, gay marriage, and stem-cell research right at the top. Some might list only these three. This is because many Christians have become victimized by an ever narrowing Christian sub-culture that continually frets and chews their nails over these three issues because they seem to hold the most apparent and immediate danger to what we are and how we do things. So, like a pitcher with only three good pitches, those in positions of influence continue to hurl these same ol’ problems our way. And we have become rather adept at fouling them off. 

The other night, some of us were discussing the case of Joe Horn, the man from Pasadena, TX who, last November, shot and killed two illegal immigrants he spied robbing his neighbor’s house. Recently, a grand jury decided Horn was not to be prosecuted and was acting in self-defense according to the “Castle Doctrine.” However, no matter what the grand jury says, our country is in uproar on both sides of the situation. The issues being debated include gun control, the use of violence, immigration, and even civil rights. It is as if a dam has burst and suddenly we are flooded, if only for the moment, with unresolved issues that allow for a variety of interpretations.

And, just as it did in our discussion the other night, the question invariably drops, “What is a Christian to do in such a situation?” And even upon answering, there comes the subsequent question of how one justifies his or her position. Indeed, in the Gospels alone there are statements that seem to condone pacifism (“If anyone strikes you on the right cheek…”) and those that condone self-defense (“And now, whoever has no sword is to sell his cloak and buy one…”), and even those that speak of blatant violence (“And he made of scourge of cords and drove them out of the temple area…”).

What is a Christian to do? 

Certainly, it is not to ignore the fact that there are many, many, many issues that demand our thoughts. True, nine times out of ten, I will never experience a specific situation that calls for my “Christian” interpretation of an issue. But what happens the tenth time when, in the sweltering, rabid heat of the moment, I find myself facing a decision for which I have not prepared.

So … What is a Christian to do?

Immigration. Poverty. World hunger. Genocide. AIDS. Totalitarian injustice. Health-care. Abortion. The definition of marriage. The death penalty. Stem-cell research. Gun control. Civil rights. Gay rights. Religious freedom. The list goes on and on, and how valuable am I really if I have not stopped to think about where I stand and why I have decided to stand there. Indeed, when it comes to “Well, this is what the Bible says,” if we really dig in, cross reference and investigate, we will find that just about all of these topics are not as black and white as we think they are. To begin to consider where I stand on even one of these issues often causes me to bow my head and humbly ask for God’s mercy to be upon me abundantly in my interpretation.

The life of a Christian is marked by simplicity of purpose. But “knowing Christ” does not mean shutting off our God-given brains. It means learning to live as one who is transformed in body, soul, and mind. It means taking captive every thought and making it obedient to our Savior; often times this is more of a wrestling match than a stamp approval.

So may you truly come to understand that, compared to knowing Christ, everything is insignificant. But it’s still important. It is your life, and He is the God of all of it.


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