10/09/2008

The Daily Office

In a March blog entry, I wrote about my participation in a Power of Full Engagement Course. One of the main benefits of this training is that it requires you write a new story; a story that describes who you must become to achieve mission success in your life. I wrote my new story and went to work on establishing a few new rituals that would help bring alignment between my new story and my day-to-day living out of this story. One area of my new story - being a man of prayer - had been particularly hard to achieve until I discovered the daily office.

My first discovery of the daily office was while reading Brian McLarens recent book; Finding Our Way Again: The Return of the Ancient Practices. Finding our Way Again is the first in a series of eight books that will be called The Ancient Practices Series. The books will be written by eight different authors, reflecting on the practice and application of spiritual disciplines. The next book in the series; In Constant Prayer, by Robert Benson. As Robert Benson says, “At some point, high-minded discussion about our life of prayer has to work its way into the dailyness of our lives. At some point, we have to move from talking about prayer so that the marvelous that is possible has a chance to appear.”

This being the 30th day of my practice, I now feel that the ancient practice of the daily office, is a wonderful ritual for help bring alignment with my new story. If your interested, more information can be found in the The Devine Hours section of explorefaith.org.

10/07/2008

A Redemptive Financial Crisis?

Our church community just finished a sermon series on the topic of stewardship. As is our new practice, we completed this series with an interactive question and answer session. I particularly appreciate this practice as it satisfies my, some would say postmodern, desire for interaction. I am increasingly no longer content to silently ponder and respond to the ideas of the speaker, but desire real interaction so that the words have a better chance to take root in my life.

One of the more interesting questions asked, concerned the current financial crisis and the possibility that God is using the crisis as a punishment for our failure to defend the rights of the unborn. While I don’t believe there is much biblical support for this conclusion, I was challenged to consider the possibility of the financial crisis being linked to our failure to obey other biblical admonitions.

As I go about my daily work, I often pass by a prominently displayed adaptation of Proverbs 31:8-9

"Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves, for the rights of all who are destitute. Speak up and judge fairly; defend the rights of the poor and needy."

As the interactive session continued, I could vividly picture this passage in my minds eye and I have been pondering it ever since. What strikes me is this passage seems diametrically opposed to the libertarian ideals of our “ownership society”. These ideals have both pervasively and perversely been the dominate world-view of our society for at least the last few decades. Up until the current crisis, the prevailing thought was – and for some still is - that we need to drop all control of “the market”. At best we have been silent; we have stood by while the rights of the poor and needy are trampled by increasingly freer-markets. At worse, we have strongly supported the principalities that endeavor to support this system, mostly because we’ve learned to personally benefit from our knowledge of its inner workings.

Perhaps there is a redemptive nature to the current financial crisis. This crisis is affecting me and I no longer feel that I have any particular knowledge of how to benefit from the current system. Maybe now, I’ll actually “speak up” and as a result defend the rights of the poor and needy.