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Will write for food?

This post can only be seen by "Friends of RLP."
 
Well, I got the word yesterday from Christian Century. CCblogs, which I conceived, developed, and moderated is going to be handed over to their new internet editor. I hate to lose the gig, but it's not unfair. Christian Century has endowment funding, and I'm sure they have taken a hit with the economic downturn. And all magazines are facing dwindling subscriptions and sales. Paying a specialist to run CCblogs was a luxury. So no hard feelings. I understand. CCblogs will continue, so I'm

About the current Foy story for Friends of RLP

I thought I'd offer a little background information about the current Foy story. If you are seeing this entry, you are a Friend of RLP and logged in with your rlp user account. It doesn't show up for anyone else.
 
I've never been to Fort Davis, though I want to visit that part of Texas very much. Jeanene and I are hoping to take a trip there together perhaps in the fall. The McDonald Observatory is in the Davis mountains, and I've always wanted to

Consafo insider news

Hey everyone. This is only viewable by Friends of RLP.

Well, the Consafo experiment got started. I'm a little nervous, but feeling better as the response comes in. I've had email reservations for 106 copies of the book in only 24 hours of being online. That's 1/4 of the way there!

Part of the idea of this approach to publishing is to

RLP on Facebook

Hey subscriber guys, I'm on facebook now as Gordon Atkinson. If you are and want to befriend me, go ahead and send a friend request. Write "friend of rlp" so I'll know it is you. I'm thinking of setting up a rlp group or something there. I don't know. I'm just now thinking of it.

Gordon

The Hell Thing

Hey, when I'm just writing to you guys, I've decided I'm not going to go back and edit much. Pretty much leave it just as it comes out of me. That would help and I'd probably write more of these if I do that.

Well, I've gone and opened up a huge can of worms. But I felt a strong...almost calling...to do so. Just so you'll know, I truly am doing the New Testament study on hell and hope to get some help in that from people answering. But I also want to shake up people a bit. I truly do think that what we say about hell is not very clearly taught - if taught at all - in the New Testament. I don't mind a bit if this piece shakes some people up.

Currently I have probably 6 or 7 responses. All very nice. Most from people who share my viewpoint and are providing their own scriptural study work. Which is good. Those who disagree either don't want to weigh in, or are busy building their case.

I'd be willing to bet there are a number of people who are really confused right now. And maybe getting angry. They have found the word hell in the gospels - It's used 12 times, all by Jesus. But those 12 times only represent 5 Jesus events. And in each of those times, the people going to hell are not outsiders, but people within the religious community who have been hypocritical, judgmental, and did not feed the poor and care for the weak and needy. In the language of evangelicals, it's pure "works theology" and that ought to bother them.

If people are honest, that should bother them greatly. If you are going to be "all literal" about hell, citing Jesus, then shouldn't you also be as literal about why people go there? Nothing turns a conservative hard-liner into a liberal, wishy-washy, "Jesus is just using metaphor" person quicker than finding out that their literalism might mean they are the ones going to hell.

heh.

sorry, I can't help but enjoy this a bit. In part because that's the journey I took. It hurt and was scary, but it was important. and this subject is important.

So I'll find a way to summarize and post everything that gets said to me maybe next week.

gordon

Hello from Colorado

Hey everyone,

Just a quick note on Thursday morning. We're having fun here at Creede. I've posted a bunch of photos at my rlp flickr account, which you should see popping up on the right menu. I think you can get to the flickr account if you want to.

It's interesting watching the girls decompress from their television/myspace existence. No tv here. No radio. No internet (for them) I use wifi hotspots. Last night we played dominoes and had a blast. Lillian said, "Why don't we do this more often. This is FUN."

Indeed. Mea culpa. We just don't take the time.

I'm working real hard on the Christian Century blog network project. That is something I will unveil at rlp soon. http://CCblogs.org.

And Jeanene has sold enough jewelry to help us not go into debt on this trip, which is very cool.

Thanks for your help and support. You guys' subscription thingies always come through when there is car trouble or whatever. Thanks for making it possible for me to dedicate a bunch of time to this blog.

gordon

Flickr Photos

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Finished Posting...Whew

That's me on Tuesday at 4:40 pm. I spent the entire day making candles out of the scraps of candles leftover in our church fireplace and writing the thing I just posted below this. This one felt pretty good. Felt like old Real Live Preacher stuff. I actually started that essay last August, revisited it a couple of times, but finally it caught fire in me.

I LOVE posting something after hours of wrestling with it. Instant good mood for me. MUCH better than finishing an essay and sending it to Christian Century, though that feels pretty nice too since I get paid for it.

So I'm feeling great. Hope you like the essay. At 6pm I'm going to our church "brotherhood" meeting. It's where the guys of our church get together to drink beer, eat pizza, and enjoy being together. Some would say the least spiritual thing we have going on. I don't know about that. It is definitely the most popular, long-standing thing for men at Covenant.

I'll drink a Shiner for you.

gordon

NOTE: Whenever I post something for subscribers, I'll put that notice at the top of the page so you'll know to log in. Otherwise this post would not be visible. A listing of previous subscriber posts is on the right menu IF you're logged in.

Sitting at Java Junction - Subscriber's Post

Hey there subscribers,

I'm thinking of changing that name. Maybe to Friends of rlp. I don't know.

This is an experiment. I'm posting something for you and allowing it to be promoted to the front page. That means that only people logged in as subscribers will see it.

But then, what if you aren't logged in? Should I have some kind of notification for you on the menu? New Friends of rlp content up. Log in?

Okay, I just put a little notification below the header.

Here I am right now, 11 am CST, sitting at Java Junction working on my sermon. I do a lot of sermon work here because of the free internet. I need internet because I love http://textweek.com. Good resources for the study I do before I figure out how the sermon is going to come together.

So, should I post subscriber things (er, friends of rlp) in this way? Need a notifier so you know to log in?

rlp

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New Photos

Dear subscriber friends,

(You only see this if logged in as a subscriber) I have some new photos I uploaded, including one of my hand, injured during the completion of the labyrinth. Not seriously injured. ;-)

See the right menu--------------->

Christian Century Essay for next issue

Hey everyone,

I recently submitted an essay to Christian Century. When I do that they usually put it online within a few days. Depends on how much back and forth the editor and I have. Occasionally the essay goes into the magazine as well. This essay is going to be in the magazine and at their website. I like being in the magazine, but it does delay my posting of the essay here because I have to wait until after the issue is printed. This essay won't be posted here (and at ChristianCentury.org) for perhaps a month.

Well, it won't be posted publicly anyway. But you can see it if you want.

Here is the essay as submitted. I got back the editor's changes today, though I haven't looked at them. She said they were pretty minor. If you're interested, I'll put the editor's version online too. I don't know, maybe someone is interested in the back and forth we go through behind the scenes when I work with Christian Century. Probably not, but if you are, leave a comment and I'll put her version up.

gordon

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Sunday Night Reflection

I preached a sermon this morning. Another sermon in a long line of sermons stretching back to 1992. So many sermons that I find it almost impossible to remember any particular one of them. And right now, on a Sunday night, I don’t want to remember any of them. The discipline of Sunday night is forgetting.

It’s strange, but while I can’t remember my sermons, I do remember preaching them. And if I close my eyes, I can see myself laboring away at the work of it.

I remember all the places where I have studied. The old office we had for a time in a retail strip mall. A spare room at a lawyer’s office where I studied for a number of years. The large, wooden table in the library of the Church of Reconciliation here in San Antonio. I see commentaries stacked here and there. My battered and beloved Greek New Testament off to the side. Pens, legal pads, a computer, and the ever-present Diet Coke.

I can see myself delivering sermons in the places where our church has gathered over the years. On the wooden floor of the Duck Blind lounge, wearing a coat and tie, though no one else did. I wore them because I was young and felt the formality was appropriate for the pulpit. I remember moving back and forth across the checker-tiled floor of Fox Run Elementary School with no tie and a small outline in my hand. Zeke, the school janitor, occasionally leaning on his mop to listen and meeting me secretly after worship to receive communion. And on Saturday nights at another church where we met for two years. That was the only time I’ve preached on carpet, and I didn’t much care for the feel of it.

And then in front of the fireplace of our little church in the woods. Feeling the stone hearth and wooden mantle behind me and seeing the faces before me. Eight years of that. Eight years of arriving in the darkness just before dawn. Arriving happy or sad or depressed or filled with irrational anxiety. But always arriving. The sunlight coming in the windows. Fussing about the church, making ready. Looking out the window for the arrival of my friends.

I am considered by many to be a liberal minister, which is the kiss of death for any Baptist preacher with ambition. Fortunately for me I have none in this regard. However, I’m always amused by my reputation, because I am so careful about this sacred calling and the scriptures from which all sermons are born. I have no tricks. I don’t tell stories that are not my own. I never do anything but read the text and try to encourage my friends to wrestle with its meaning, just as I have the week before. That’s all I am called to do. I don’t have the right to do anything more than that.

And that’s what I’ve done for sixteen years at Covenant Baptist Church. Preaching for an extended time in one community requires its own set of disciplines. You must have both a long and a short memory. Some things you must remember forever. Others must be quickly forgotten. You have to be at peace with the changing faces, for all churches exist in a kind of flux. You must love people intensely and let them go immediately. This will wound you, but it is not a wound unto death. At least I hope not. And you must always be wrestling with the scriptures. For it is only from that struggle that you will find fresh things to say on Sunday morning.

Preaching is such an esoteric art form. It requires creativity but only within very rigid rules, like old-school poetry. I’m not sure how to describe my own preaching style. Sort of “Junior Bible scholar meets philosophy major who secretly wishes he was Jerry Seinfeld.” Me with the Good Book in my hands, trying to be serious in front of the people with whom I love to laugh and will be laughing with in half an hour.

It is on Sunday nights that my mind turns inward and I ask myself, “What have I done with my life? Is this a good and worthy way to spend a life? Does preaching really do anything? Does it help people engage the scriptures, or is it just a little show on Sunday mornings so we can all pretend we still care about being connected to these ancient writings?”

I did the math today. I have been the pastor of Covenant Baptist Church for one third of my life. And a good bit of that time has been spent preparing and delivering sermons.

One third.

Of my life.

Is it good to give that much of your life to this calling? It might be a good thing. I do not know, and in spite of what people may say, the answer to that question is neither simple nor obvious. I fear I’ve lost quite a bit of Gordon in the role already. I fight hard to keep something of myself in the mix. Thank God my friends at Covenant love me and want to know the “real me,” whatever that means. Otherwise I would have perished, spiritually, long ago.

I do wonder about all those sermons, though. Where do they go after they leave my mind and my mouth? Do they float among the worshippers, being breathed in and out during the service? Are they taken outside in the bodies of the congregation and exhaled into the air as my words fade from their memories? Are they carried away on a breeze to the heavens? Do they have an earthy scent, like a handful of dirt and rosemary and me?

I think maybe the scent is all that is left of them. I hope it is a fragrance pleasing to the One we worship and serve.

rlp

How to purchase

turtles All of my books are for sale though me. I've not had the energy or inclination to send them to Amazon or any other place.


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