Showing posts with label Brian McLaren. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brian McLaren. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

And There Was Rain: The Expectations and Reality of a Wild Goose Chase

wild goose festival, north carolina, camping, christianity, spirituality, justice, art

by Charity Erickson

Whatever there is to be said about Wild Goose Festival 2013, my strongest impression will remain that I was mildly damp for its entirety.

Before I left for the festival I had many romantic fantasies about what it would be like: camping in a beautiful mountain setting with friendly hippies, passing food and stories and beer around the campfire. But instead, at the end of most nights I found myself trying to dry out my tent, watching episodes of New Girl on what was left of my laptop battery, scarfing chips and hummus while nursing my beer alone.

I’m not complaining (except for the incessant moist-ness of North Carolina; I’m definitely complaining about that)—when I’m at home, I relax into the evening by watching TV on my laptop while I prepare dinner. It’s what I like to do. In retrospect, I was in a state of denial when I decided to camp out in the first place. My imagination had recommended camping to me in a way that had no connection to reality; it hadn’t mentioned the nightly throb of screaming cicadas, port-a-potty stink, dead flashlight batteries and shoe-sucking mud.

I sat quietly in my tent on Thursday night, and as all my campfire visions faded into the ether I realized: I loathe camping.

This was the first of many instances of thwarted expectations I encountered over the course of the festival. When I made it down to Friday morning’s first Main Stage gathering—an “Elder’s Session” with Krista Tippett, Phyllis Tickle, Vincent Harding, and “honorary elder” Speech from Arrested Development—I looked out over the sea of camp chairs and was shocked to see not a horde of young, bearded radicals and hippy-dippy mamas; instead, attendance was dominated by Baby Boomers, and older.

And as I discovered in the next session—a workshop where participants engaged in conversations about race and difference, led by Dana N. Courtney and Alexia Salvatierra—most attendees were not the Shane-Claiborne-inspired, post-evangelical types that I expected to encounter. They were, by and large, mainliners.

Is it horribly ignorant, and rude, that I was stunned (and perhaps slightly disappointed) to realize that I—a charismatic, evangelical, pseudo Christian-Anarchist—had come to the woods looking for a transcendent spiritual experience…and found myself at a mainline conference? I came to the festival thinking I was going to a meeting of like-minds; what I found was that I was feeling increasingly on the outside of the festival culture—and increasingly critical of it.

Lest one think I was glaring through sessions, arms folded and silently judging, I found the actual content of the festival to be incredibly moving and engaging. I wept through Philip Yancey’s (sometimes bordering on politically-incorrect) talk about God’s affection for the imperfect; I sniveled through Nadia Bolz-Weber’s characterization of the faith as one of defiant hope; I boo-hoo-hooed as Frank Schaeffer told a beautiful story about being blessed by an extremely conservative church community; I teared up as Melvin Bray (a favorite new-to-me voice at the festival) spoke about what happens when we miss opportunities to respond to God. Over the course of four days, I was consistently the mess at the back of the crowd. Usually this means that I’m enjoying myself. Also, that I am tired.

Brian McLaren, wild goose festival, elder's session, pentecostal, non-whiteThe source of my criticism has to do with the festival’s culture. There was a lot of discussion about racial reconciliation, which fit with the theme “Re-Membering the Body.” But I didn’t see it addressed in practical ways. Several speakers made reference to the fact that non-Western, non-white Christianity is increasingly Pentecostal—Phyllis Tickle, Alexia Salvatierra, and in a more critical way, Brian McLaren. (Hear his fascinating story here from 25:00-28:45.) But the culture of the festival was not one that was welcoming to charismatic worship styles.

Despite the festival being named for the Celtic understanding of the Holy Spirit, the general attitude of the festival was apathy—and sometimes, antagonism—towards the way that most of the world’s non-white Christians understand the Holy Spirit. Most Christians worldwide believe in miracles, healing prayer, and “spiritual warfare.” All this was, to me, significantly absent; instead, there was liturgy fandom (which I want to understand, but don’t totally get yet.)

I recognize that it isn’t evil to appeal to a population with a distinct culture. As Brian McLaren responded when I asked how the culture of liberal Christianity could find a point of connection with non-Western Pentecostal Christianity (video linked above, 44:50,) holding cultural (and spiritual) distinctives with love and integrity can enrich relationships between those with differences.

And if race hadn’t been such a topic of concerned conversation at the festival, I might not have noticed the weird dissonance between what the festival-goers claimed to want, and what they actually enjoyed. If a gathering of Christians aims to be a force for bridging the cultural/racial divide and yet its worship practice consists of Beer and Hymns, Johnny Cash on the banjo, and contemplative prayer—not to mention the ubiquitous cracking of jokes at the expense of worship choruses—it’s hard not to see its concern as disingenuous, or at least, an expression of deep denial.

If multicultural Christian fellowship were to be a true priority for Wild Goose, it would take more than inviting a diverse selection of speakers. The entire culture of the festival would need to change—the music, the worship, the location. A multicultural Wild Goose would have a totally different identity—one that, perhaps, the people who currently attend would not enjoy as much.

wild goose festival, camp, moist, cross, sacred spaceJust as I discovered when I arrived at my sodden campsite, what is ideal to the imagination takes on a much different form in reality. Wild Goose, as it is, probably shouldn’t expect to lead the charge in the Church’s conversation about race—it’s not a hospitable place for open and honest discussion on that particular topic. And you know what? That’s ok. Wild Goose has become a home and haven for those who have been alienated from Christ’s Body in a number of different ways; just because it is not the best venue for pursuing racial reconciliation in the Church doesn’t mean it isn’t serving a desperately necessary function.

The solution to this problem is honesty. Honesty about who we are, what we like, and how far we are willing to stretch ourselves to achieve a desired goal. For me—a hand-waving, amen-shouting Charismatic—and the majority of Christians worldwide, the festival would be more culturally comfortable if it had a greater emphasis on the Pentecostal understanding of the Holy Spirit (and if it was held closer to a Starbucks.) But if what would be meaningful to me threatened the inclusive, free, and delightfully weird identity of the Wild Goose community, it would be a travesty—a thunderstorm over the campfire. And that wouldn’t be fun for anyone. 

Charity Erickson and her husband Lance live and work together in the suburbs of Minneapolis, Minnesota. Check out her blog for more of her writing and follow her on Twitter @CharityJill. 

You can follow On Pop Theology on Twitter @OnPopTheology or like us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/OnPopTheology. 


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Thursday, October 18, 2012

Alex Rodriguez, Jealousy and Hate

by Ben Howard

Alex Rodriguez is good at playing baseball.

I have no idea how many of you follow sports, but for those of you that do, you know this is an incredibly controversial statement.

Alex Rodriguez is one of the greatest baseball players in the history of the sport. There's no rational argument that can make a case against this statement. He's easily the greatest player of his generation and has been since he was about 16 years old.

Alex Rodriguez is also probably one of the most hated baseball players in history. To be clear, this isn't that kind of friendly-rivalry-hate or that love-to-hate-'em phenomenon that some people have with athletes. There is nothing fun involved in the hatred of Alex Rodriguez and that's probably because people don't hate Alex Rodriguez: The Person, they hate Alex Rodriguez: The Idea.

Rodriguez is hated because he's always been good. He's hated because being good has always looked easy. He's hated even more because that talent that looked so effortless made him the highest played player in professional sports. Jealousy plus a perception of easy money? Yeah, that's a recipe for deep-seated hatred.

It doesn't help that Rodriguez comes off as stilted and awkward during interviews. Something that in a lesser player might be interpreted as a distaste for the limelight is interpreted as Rodriguez being cold and corporate, unable to relate to the common man.

This hatred has nearly boiled over several times including when Rodriguez was nearly traded to the Boston Red Sox, but eventually went to the Yankees instead and several years after that when it came to light that he had used steroids for a short period of time in Texas.

Jealousy + easy money + corporate facade + steroids? That's a recipe for sports fan hell.

This has bubbled up again during the recent postseason. The Yankees have been struggling offensively up and down the lineup. No one is playing well, but most of the hatred has been pointed at Rodriguez. Fans don't want it to be a slump, they want it to be the end of the line. There is this widespread believe, or maybe hope is the better word, that two bad weeks in October mean that he'll be forced to retire in shame.

Even the Yankees manager seems to have bought into this weird, what-have-you-done-for-me-lately mentality replacing Rodriguez with the far less adept Eric Chavez for the two of the last three games.

Why do we do this? Why does this happen?

I don't think any of us is immune to this kind of jealous hate. I know for certain that I'm not. I do it all the time with writers. Some author becomes wildly successful and my immediate reaction is that he must be a sell-out. All of his ideas must be empty and baseless, because no one becomes popular based on substance in the religion and theology racket. Christian best-seller is just another phrase for "Book I won't be reading soon."

This type of thinking is so stupid. I know that I've gone through this very scenario with Rob Bell, Brian McLaren, Shane Claiborne, the list goes on. But when I think about it, when I think about what they're actually saying, they're right. It's true and it's authentic and they didn't change. I did, or at least my perception of them did.

So I want to apologize to Rob Bell and Brian McLaren and Shane Claiborne and any other author that I've secretly felt resentful towards because of their success. I'm sorry, you guys are really awesome, I was wrong. I also want to apologize to Alex Rodriguez. I hope things get better for you.

Take this as a call to reconsider why you hate the things you hate and love the things you love. Are they actually as bad as you think or are you possibly jealous? And as for the things you love, are they actually true or do they just reinforce what you already believe? Those are simply two sides of the same coin.

I hope we all find the freedom to say we're wrong and change our minds.

Peace,
Ben

You can follow Ben on Twitter @BenHoward87 or email him at benjamin.howard87 [at] gmail.com.

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