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March 2008

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My Podcast

  • My Podcast
    This is a link to my podcast where I ruminate on life, leadership, travel, spiritual revolution, books, and just about anything else that may pass through my mind when the recorder is on. Listen at your own risk!

Recent Comments

Prophet Pat

RobertsonThe Rev. Pat Robertson says God has told him that storms and possibly a tsunami will hit America's coastline this year.The founder of the Christian Broadcasting Network has told viewers of "The 700 Club" that the revelations came to him during his annual personal prayer retreat in January."If I heard the Lord right about 2006, the coasts of America will be lashed by storms," Robertson said May 8.He added specifics in Wednesday's show."There well may be something as bad as a tsunami in the Pacific Northwest," he said. Unfortunately, this is the image most Americans and Europeans have of Evangelical Christians. No wonder people flock to Oprah when they perceive Christianity to be the other option. I am convinced that this is one of the dangers of "Christian" television. To keep your audience, there always has to be something new and sensational, so why not a special message from our loving God about impending doom and destruction ... just in time for May sweeps!

Join a Million Voices for Darfur

DarfurmillvoiceIn Matthew 25:44-46 Jesus says, "Then they will reply, 'Lord, when did we ever see you hungry or thirsty or a stranger or naked or sick or in prison, and not help you?' And he will answer, 'I assure you, when you refused to help the least of these my brothers and sisters you were refusing to help me.' And they will go away into eternal punishment, but the righteous will go into eternal life.

Send a postcard to President Bush to help give him the leverage he needs to lead in the face of this human tragedy and genocide. Send a Postcard Now!

Damned by Darfur

Though it is good to see the tragedy of Darfur finally in the national and international spotlight to some degree, I am wondering why it is celebrities like George Clooney (God bless him) who are at the forefronDarfurt of this issue? Why is the Evangelical Church and its leaders virtually invisible when it comes to this issue? How many sermons were preached this last week in our pulpits in support of this past weekend's events planned to call attention to the genocide and put pressure on national and international leaders to DO something? Why are we as evangelical Christian leaders so passive and silent when it comes to such global tragedies? Imagine the impact if all of our evangelical churches in the Twin Cities (and the nation) had taken to the streets after our church services to stand in the gap for the Invisible Children and the gross injustices that are taking place in Sudan. I am afraid that by our silence we are being damned by Darfur. What are your thoughts? Why do you think our evangelical churches remain silent in the face of this tragedy and what can we do to shame the church into action?

Check out the Invisible Children

Rethinking Wealth

GoldbarsCheck it Out! Christianity in a Consumer Culture

For those living in a capitalist context, wealth, profit, advantage and power are understood, in a general sense, almost exclusively as material and, in a more specific sense, as economic. But clearly there is a form of wealth that is not rooted in money, property, or any other physical asset. Similarly, there are advantages in life that extend beyond the economic realm and there are forms of power that are not rooted in the world of financial wealth. 
    In the Old Testament book of Ecclesiastes, King Solomon, one of the wealthiest men in history, wrote, “Those who love money will never have enough. How absurd to think that wealth brings true happiness! …So what is the advantage of wealth – except perhaps to see it run through your fingers!”  Moreover, Solomon writes, “There is another serious problem I have seen in the world. Riches are sometimes hoarded to the harm of the saver … People who live only for wealth come to the end of their lives as naked and empty-handed as the day they were born.”  Solomon seems to be saying here that material wealth, in itself, is not capable of providing human beings with the happiness and inner peace that they ultimately value and seek. Something (spiritual capital) must exist beyond or beneath material wealth that imbues it with the power to grant happiness to its possessor. Solomon contends that people who seek material capital alone, apart from such spiritual capital live their lives under a cloud – frustrated, discouraged, and angry. Any thoughts? Let me encourage you to attend what should be an intellectually stimulating and life-changing event: Conference on Christian Consumerism

"Christian?" Christian Bashers

As a result of my recent encounter with Mr. Brannon Howse, I have become sickened by those who claim to be self-appointed protectors of "orthodoxy" and "true" Christianity and who do so by literarily bashing other believers void of all love. What possible scriptural defense can one claim for bashing and maligning other believers when they have never even been concerned enough to pursue meaningful conversation with those they attack? This is the same form of religious and ideological fundamentalism that is at the root of terrorism throughout the world. People so blinded by their "rightness" that it in their minds legitimates any activity necessary to defeat the infidels. Of course this is just my opinion. God help us all.

Brannon House Response

Here is the latest response from Brannon Howse. In spite of saying he would correct the article, he has not. And when asked to do so by me once again, this was his response. I was wrong, I guess he is a spiritual insurgent afterall ... just dropping his literary bombs then running for cover.

Sam,
I don't think I am wrong...Have you read the latest version? I think I have been more than fair.
I don't think there is really anything to dialogue on...I think we have to agree to disagree.
Trying to say the word mystic or mysticism is comparable to the Biblical word "mystery" is just not reasonable and without reason there can be no positive dialogue.
I think you guys just need to move on and not push me on this anymore or I may decide to write a few more articles about some of the other things I have read in Erwin's book.

So, just leave well enough alone and do your thing....

Still Waiting for Corrections and Retraction

My last post indicated that things seemed to be moving toward satisfactory resolution in my (and Bethel's) disagreements regarding numerous distortions and blatant mistakes of fact made by Mr. Howse in an article he had written about Bethel. Unfortunately, we are still waiting for appropriate corrections to be made and I am left wondering why my response to his original article has not been posted to his website as have others since mine. Bethel has issued a press release on the matter; to read it go to my website at: www.samrima.com and click on the Discussion Board.

Food For Thought on Food

It is estimated that in 2004, 576,000 Minnesota households DEPENDED on foodshelves for their survival (estimate by Hunger Solutions, MN). Today the Star-Tribune reported that the demand for help from foodshelves has grown by as much as 50% in the past four years! Average Americans are being relentlessly squeezed by rising fuel costs, housing expenses and the continually rising price of medical care and pStreetsleeprescription drugs. Many Minnesota familes are just one medical emergency away from bankruptcy. For many families today it is a constant tension between heating the house and putting food on the table. And these are not primarily homeless, non-working people. A recent survey found that today, 38-47% of foodshelve users are working fulltime and nearly one third of foodshelves are forced to turn people away because of shortages. This is a growing problem not just in Minnesota, but across the country. My question is, what are we as the Church doing to eliminate this problem? What are we doing to ensure that none of the families in our local fellowship are sending kids to bed hungry or living without heat? What mechanisms do we have in place to identify those who are struggling but too ashamed or embarrased to ask for help? As church leaders, are we taking seriously our need to give primary leadership to this situation? I cannot think of anything more important in the life of the local church than ensuring that the people in our faith community, as well as those in our neighboring community, have their basic needs met. True revolutionary Christ-followers care deeply about the working poor and those struggling to keep their homes warm and food on the table. For more information go to: www.2harvest.org or www.hungersolutions.org  or take some time to read the book "Consuming Religion: Christian Faith and Practice in a Consumer Culture ... just DO SOMETHING! 

Recent Posts

Reading for Revolutionaries

  • Shane Claiborne: The Irresistible Revolution: Living as an Ordinary Radical

    Shane Claiborne: The Irresistible Revolution: Living as an Ordinary Radical
    This book will rock your world! I believe this is a must read for anyone serious about being a genuine Christ-follower. Read it and weep ... Read it and rejoice. (*****)

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  • John Wood: Leaving Microsoft to Change the World: An Entrepreneur's Odyssey to Educate the World's Children

    John Wood: Leaving Microsoft to Change the World: An Entrepreneur's Odyssey to Educate the World's Children
    This is at turns and incredibly inspirational and convicting book. John Wood left a cushy job and promising future at Microsoft in order to devote his life to building libraries and schools in the villages of Nepal and other third world countries with low literacy rates. I wonder if this is what Jesus meant when he spoke to the rich young ruler? (****)


  • F. LeRon Shults and Steven J. Sandage: Transforming Spirituality: Integrating Theology And Psychology

    F. LeRon Shults and Steven J. Sandage: Transforming Spirituality: Integrating Theology And Psychology
    Shults and Sandage bring a fresh approach to this work on spiritual/personal/theological formation and its integration. As in their previous collaboration, "The Faces of Forgiveness," this book is a paradigm-breaking, creative, and invigorating contribution to the field of spiritual formation - though it deals as directly with subjects such as theology, psychology, anthropology, philosophy, and sociology, weaving them all into a rich, integrated whole. Just a taste of what awaits in Transforming Spirituality ... "However, the reformative Pneumatology we have been outlining can help us understand that our way of being-present to others in space and time is our spirituality." (*****)

  • Kathryn Tanner: Economy Of Grace

    Kathryn Tanner: Economy Of Grace
    Theologian Kathryn Tanner explores alternative economies that are based on grace rather than greed and money. She provides a challenging and cogent argument for rethinking the foundations of current forms of advanced capitalism. Though I do not agree with all of her final conclusions, I agree with her primary premise that current systems are in need of change and rethinking our theology of economics is where we need to begin.

  • Larry L. King: In Search of Willie Morris: The Mercurial Life of a Legendary Writer and Editor

    Larry L. King: In Search of Willie Morris: The Mercurial Life of a Legendary Writer and Editor
    A powerful and sad tale about the troubled life of a near literary genius and how his dark side caused him to squander his talent and strengths. A sobering reminder of the need for Self-leadership!

  • Stanley J. Grenz: The Social God and the Relational Self: A Trinitarian Theology of the Imago Dei

    Stanley J. Grenz: The Social God and the Relational Self: A Trinitarian Theology of the Imago Dei
    This book addresses how an understanding of the triune nature of God should shape our concepts of "self" or "soul" as well as result in a more relational and communal church which takes responsibility for the "other." Because we are created with the imago dei, we can only find our true self-hood in relation to others. God is a social God. Grenz does an amazing job of debunking the post-modern concept of "possessive individualism" which is killing the missional focus of the church today. (*****)

  • Gerald Clarke: Capote: A Biography

    Gerald Clarke: Capote: A Biography
    This is an excellent biography of a brilliant writer whose life was sabatoged by the Dark Side. A study in how not to be a parent! This is an interesting read. (****)