Progressive Faith Con Blog

July 31, 2006

Carnival time!

Filed under: carnival - Thurman @ 8:33 pm

Um, I’m gonna say this one was called due to excessive heat and pretend like it isn’t every bit as hot today as it was yesterday when I forgot to post this.

Anyway, here we go:

Take a highbrow look at how spirituality is necessary for humanity. Then ponder the meaning of a witch. Pause and dispell a nasty rumor or two, while you’re at it.

Wayfarer has news from New Jersey. Peter gets a meal and an update on Lebanon. Over at CAP, Mainstream Baptist looks at defective conscience. Then we find some Q & A concerning the war on terrorism.

See the rest at Xpatriated Texan

July 26, 2006

Carnival

Filed under: Uncategorized - Thurman @ 4:04 pm

If you’re interested in hosting the Carnival, leave a comment and I’ll get you set up for it.

July 25, 2006

Pluralism resources

Filed under: faith - Rachel @ 2:39 pm

Emily Ronald of The Pluralism Project, who many of us had the pleasure of meeting at the blog con a few weekends ago, asked me to pass along the following tidbit. She writes:

Having promoted it a bit at the convention, I thought I’d extend the invitation again. Faith bloggers may be interested in using the Religious Diversity News service offered by the Pluralism Project, which is a weekly selection of current news articles "related to religion in multi-religious America."

You can either read them at http://www.pluralism.org/news/index.php, or add a set of links that auto-update twice weekly (directions available at http://www.pluralism.org/news/headlines/index.php.)

We’d also appreciate suggestions for making this resource more user-friendly and more widely available. If you have comments or suggestions, send them along to me at staff@pluralism.org.

Enjoy, all!

July 24, 2006

Carnival

Filed under: Uncategorized - Thurman @ 12:16 pm

A new carnival is up. If you forgot a link, put it in the comments at Solidly Average. Also, if you’d like to host the carnival - and you can do so next week or any time after that - please send me an email at texan-at-xpatriatedtexan-dot-com. I’ll be happy to schedule it and will have a central page for it soon. Cheers!

July 16, 2006

A few more conference posts (updated!)

Filed under: blogstuff, community, faith, politics - Rachel @ 11:23 pm

Shanta offered an overview of the weekend, including some good words about hopes for the future.

Michelle posted notes from the Saturday evening roundtable.

And Reverend Bruce posted the text of his remarks from last night — don’t miss this one!

Rabbi Jill Jacobs posted an overview here.

Mata H. posted a beautiful weekend wrapup post that talks some about the worship we experienced together.

Andrew posted three lovely things about the weekend: Live from the Progressive Faith Blog Convention, On Prayer, and Progressive Faith Blog Con: Coda: New York at night.

And here’s a final post from Velveteen Rabbi: Christian worship, and closing remarks.

On an unrelated note, I’m about to go offline for a week — a rabbinic school retreat — so I won’t be able to keep aggregating conference-related posts here. But please enjoy reading each others’ conference posts, leave comments, have conversations…and I’ll talk to y’all when I get home again!

Liveblogging post 3

Filed under: blogstuff, community, faith, politics - Rachel @ 2:06 am

There’s been more liveblogging! Michelle posted Progressive Faith Blog Con, Saturday morning and a writeup of the Faith in politics panel.

Photos are also beginning to appear; here are some of Lorianne’s photos, and here is a photoset I started earlier today. Reverend Bruce offers a photo of the faith and politics panel.

Islamoyankee posts notes on the Muslim worship session that he led. Here’s a response to the Muslim prayer experience at Velveteen Rabbi.

And one more Velveteen Rabbi post: Roundtable: what is progressive religion? 

July 15, 2006

Tools from Talking Tech Panel

Filed under: blogstuff - Pearlbear @ 8:43 pm

Here are the accumulated tools from the Saturday Morning Talkign Tech Panel, with Michelle Murrain (Pearlbear’s Blog,) Chris Walton, (Philocrites,) and Stephen Rockwell (CrossLeft.)

Blogging tools:

Promotion Tools:

Technorati

RSS Aggregators

Other Tools

  • Online Advocacy
  • del.icio.us - social bookmarking, subscribe to bookmarks
  • podcasting
  • tags/categories
  • Google Groups - for organizing groups of bloggers, etc.
  • Images
  • Design
  • Best promotion ideas

    • Media coverage
    • Google Rankings
    • progfaithblogcon list
    • media forums (nytimes.com washingtonpost.com)
    • traffic monitors (sitemeter)
    • cross posting

     

    More liveblogging links (updated!)

    Filed under: conference planning, blogstuff, community, faith, politics - Rachel @ 6:23 pm

    Lorianne at Hoarded Ordinaries posted a photo-illustrated piece about the weekend, starting with last night’s service and moving into the heart of today: Plugging in.

    Islamoyankee at Islamicate posted a hyperlinked list of good stuff from the Talking Tech panel, and some notes on the Faith and politics panel.

    Chris at Even the Devils Believe isn’t liveblogging per se — because he’s not here; he’s stuck in Paris! But he weighs in from afar

    And at Velveteen Rabbi, I posted a writeup of this morning’s meditation (both the learning, and the practice) called Buddhist meditation; a writeup of this afternoon’s "faith and politics" panel at Faith and politics; and a writeup of the International relations breakout, too.

     


    Technorati tags: progfaithblogcon.

    Roots and Branches irc log

    Filed under: conference planning, blogstuff, faith - Rachel @ 6:00 pm

    Pearlbear transcribed the first panel of the morning for us in the irc channel. (Thank you so so much!) We hope to have audio of all of the panels eventually too,  but for now, here’s our first chat transcript of the day…

    Jul 15 09:43:15 <pearlbear>    Panel #1 - Roots and Branches. Participants: Rachel Berenblat, introduces herself. Velveteen Rabbi is her blog
    <pearlbear>    Emily Ronald - research associate at the Pluralism Project at Harvard. Hussein Rashid (Islamicate) Ph.D. program at Harvard
    <pearlbear>    Islamicate, blog of issues related to Islam
    <pearlbear>    First, we’ll talk about pluralism, what it is, and isn’t
    <pearlbear>    Emily: Pluralism project - studying the diversity in the US. One of the definitions of pluralism - a guiding principle.
    <Rachel>    FYI, these quotes about pluralism are online here: http://www.islamicate.com/islamicate/2006/07/pfbc_pluralism.html
    <pearlbear>    In her work, Emily looks at the ways that sometimes we fail to come to grips with it - the challenges of pluralism
    <pearlbear>    Can also see the blessings of pluralism, such as the Katrina efforts, interfaith dialogue that is new, organizations that take interfaith approaches to the environment, or the workplace, or an art project
    <pearlbear>    www.pluralism.org, a lot of research and a directory of religious centers across the US
    <pearlbear>    challenges and blessings of pluralism comes from the fact that it is a process, which is ongoing.
    <pearlbear>    Rachel: talk about blogging community or communities. Are we one or many? How do we intersect? How are we interested in coming together?
    <pearlbear>    Question to audience: where are the different connections between our faith communities, and where do we want them to be?
    <pearlbear>    Hussein: Islamicate started in 2003. One of the first two substantive commenters on the blog - an episcopalian, and Rachel
    <pearlbear>    As they were trying to figure out who they were, and why they were different, they learned that they could be in a place to build bridges between different faiths
    <pearlbear>    Emphasis on the everyday interactions to keep conversations keeping.
    <pearlbear>    We read blogs of different traditions, so we are already building connections with each other
    <pearlbear>    Arthur: History of the connections are around, but we are in a new situation. Perhaps like 12th century Andalucia with a depth of connection.
    <pearlbear>    different religious traditions on the planet are like organs in a body. What are the connections?
    <pearlbear>    Two levels of connection: organs communicate directly with each other. The second: they all have their same DNA.
    <pearlbear>    What is it that’s the same DNA at the heart of all of our traditions. How does it unfolds in to difference?
    <pearlbear>    Chris Walton: Whether people interact with people who hold different theological views within their own traditions?
    <pearlbear>    Most people raised their hands
    <pearlbear>    How do we connect both between and within traditions
    <pearlbear>    Tim: It’s easier to talk across faith lines than to conservative Presbyterians, for instance because of the vitriol and conflict that is happening now
    <Xpatriated>    crucify them
    <Xpatriated>    ok, not really
    <pearlbear>    Thalia: Deep fracture inside Christianity. We struggle with what to do with the conservative Christians.
    <pearlbear>    Radical right: plague and scourge and heartbreak as a Christian
    <pearlbear>    Mik: Blogs tend to attract people of opposite views - to cause trouble and troll. Not terribly productive. On the other hand, how do we create forums that people who have different understandings can come together. Have folks had a good experience with that?
    <pearlbear>    At JSpot, there has been a good experience, more space to have that. In other places it seems that it is rarely a civil conversation.
    <pearlbear>    Chris Walton: Grew up a Mormon, now a Unitarian. Follows timesandseasons.org - largest Mormon blog in the world. Grew out of online conversations of 4 law students - conservative and center/left
    <pearlbear>    attracts very broad range of Mormon opinion. 4 original bloggers were committed to civil conservative engagement - so that the blog conversation stays civil
    <pearlbear>    In the Unitarian blogging community - some conversation between conservatives and others. Mormon blog is a good example.
    <pearlbear>    Steve Rockwell: Less concerned about having cross-political spectrum conversations right now. The left doesn’t have a well set agenda. We know what we are against, but not what we are for.
    <pearlbear>    Alot have pushed us to do the cross-political boundary stuff. We need to get together ourselves first, to figure out what we stand for, and then have these conversations.
    <pearlbear>    The emphasis, time spent should be on redefining the policies that we stand for, what are they now?
    <pearlbear>    Tim: He disagrees because there are so many evangelical conservative Chrisitans, some have never heard Christian ministers who have never affirmed a woman’s choice for an abortion, or equal treatment for gays and lesbians.
    <pearlbear>    They have been talking in their own echo chamber for so long, that they haven’t heard other voices.
    <pearlbear>    They haven’t had people from their own religious tradition speak back.
    <pearlbear>    We need those kinds of conversations.
    <pearlbear>    There is chaos within progressives about our message, but there are those who have never heard people speak against tax cuts, or the war - having that contact can be transformational
    <pearlbear>    Tim: Christian Alliance for Progress
    <pearlbear>    http://blog01.kintera.com/christianalliance/
    <pearlbear>    Lorianne: Are we talking about going to radical right blog and attracting notice, or are we relying on Google? How much are we going out, how much are we letting people find us?
    <pearlbear>    Thurman: He has suggested to people not to engage the religious right - it will attract hard right commenters
    <pearlbear>    There are 10 to 20 readers to each commenters. There are people on the right we will never convince. But there is a large middle part of america we can reach
    <pearlbear>    Bruce Prescott: Never had to invite the right to my site - they just come. Like electronic graffiti - try to refute everything you said.
    <pearlbear>    Dialogue between the readers. We are first trying to just find each other. Progressives of a variety of traditions.
    <pearlbear>    the other side has taken over the public domain, and we don’t have a voice.
    <pearlbear>    They dominate the airwaves, there is not enough $ in the progressive community to buy up the communications abilities they have
    <pearlbear>    What kind of a nation are we going to be? Are we going to be pluralistic?  Only way is to work on the internet. We have to find each other first, then find a way to communicate that message more carefully and thoughtfully.
    <pearlbear>    Thalia: Beliefnet - a place where a lot of people discuss that. Can the progressive community make a liason with a place like Beliefnet - why not make a connection to that instead of reinventing the wheel
    <pearlbear>    How many have posted on Beliefnet? A few raised their hands.
    <pearlbear>    Nathan: progressive statesman. There is a good agenda on economic justice. Someone who is in the unchurched nonfaith community. Hear too much about tolerance. Not recruiting.
    <pearlbear>    The religious right recruits, the religious left does not.
    <pearlbear>    People who go to church most often didn’t used to vote right wing
    <pearlbear>    Who is talking to them? When you have a conversation - what is the arguments that connect people, and will draw people in?
    <pearlbear>    Engaging the hard right is diverting you from your goal. How do you gain people from the margins?
    <pearlbear>    Omar Sayed: Muslimwakeup.com progressivemeetup.com(?)
    <pearlbear>    First - organize amongst ourselves and come up with a strategy.
    <pearlbear>    Then, once we are know how to approach it, make conversations. Start with moderates.
    <pearlbear>    Two issues: gender - Mixed gender prayer lead by a woman. Lots of press, death threats, demonstrators. And the gay rights issue.
    <pearlbear>    Demonstrators are too radical to engage.
    <pearlbear>    Hussein: Within each community, issues are a little different
    <pearlbear>    conversation is happening with moderates
    <pearlbear>    Extremism in the Muslim tradition both left and right - what does it mean to be liberal? Where do we situate the text, and how do we use the text to move forward?
    <pearlbear>    Arguments put forward are textually based. Progressive label is a contentious issue among Muslims right now - fracturing this community, like it is fracturing many communities
    <pearlbear>    Rachel: this conversation must continue - at lunch, on our blogs - the friendships we make here can help sustain this conversation.
    <pearlbear>    What are our roots, and where can our branches grow?
     

    Coming to you live from Montclair!

    Filed under: conference planning, blogstuff, community, faith, politics - Rachel @ 5:19 pm

    A bunch of us are liveblogging the conference; here’s an attempt to round up liveblogged posts so far.

    Posts at Velveteen Rabbi:

    - Friday

    - Roots and Branches

    - J-blogosphere breakout

    - Blogging Scripture

    - all conference posts: here

    Posts at Islamicate:

    - Pluralism

    - Beginnings

    - Blogging text

    Posts at Mainstream Baptist:

    - Panel about community

    - Faith affiliation breakouts

    Posts at Faith in Public Life:

    - Blog con on

    - Talking About Our World

    Posts at Pearlbear’s Blog:

    - Blog Con, Day 1.

    (She also spent the early part of the morning transcribing everything everyone said for the irc channel — yay and thankyou! We’ll post a link to that soon too.)

    If you’re blogging the conference, let us know and we’ll do our best to add your posts to this list in realtime…

    Technorati tags: progfaithblogcon.

    Blog Con in the press!

    Filed under: conference planning - Rachel @ 3:39 pm

    The New Jersey Jewish News ran an article about our con!

    Religion, liberalism, and Web savvy are the watchwords of the first Progressive Faith Blog Con, a convention to be held over the July 14 weekend in the Conference Center at Montclair State University.

    Jews and Christians, Buddhists and Muslims, and at least one self-proclaimed pagan will gather to continue in person the kinds of conversations they wage on-line as authors of blogs, the Web diaries that range from the queasily personal to the politically influential…

    You can read the article here: On-line religious liberals plan meeting for Montclair. [x-posted from Velveteen Rabbi]

    Technorati tags: progfaithblogcon.

    Good morning! and irc

    Filed under: Uncategorized - Rachel @ 12:40 pm

    The irc channel is open, so if you’re online today and want to hang out, please do; just go to freenode.net and join channel #progfaithblogcon (per the instructions here.)

    We’re about to begin morning meditation, so the channel may be quiet for a while yet, but I wanted to let y’all know that it’s there! 

    Opening Remarks at the BlogCon

    Filed under: Uncategorized - Thurman @ 3:29 am

    Namaste. Shalom. Salaam. Merry Meet. And welcome brothers and sisters. Ladies and Gentlemen, people of all faiths, welcome to the inaugural edition of the Progressive Faith Bloggers Conference.

    When I first reached out to Rachel six months ago to find out if this idea of mine would work or if I were simply deranged, I found a workmate that has time and again proven resourceful, wise, and wonderful in every way. I dont know what this would have been like without her efforts, but it certainly would have been much harder for me to put together. From the bottom of my heart, I thank you.

    The two of us began contacting people in a rather naïve fashion searching blogs for email links and sending blunt invitations. To our surprise and great pleasure,it seemed that everyone we contacted wanted to be involved. That you are all here today is a testament to the ability of such men and women as Mik Moore, David Buckley, Kety Esquivel, and many others to live the embodiment of their faith. They had the faith and the drive to breathe life into this idea and they brought the organizational skills and resources with them that, as my wife will vigorously agree, I sorely lack.

    So we are here today, poised on the edge of history. About a hundred and forty years ago, groups much like this one met to create a national society for the abolition of slavery. Informed and motivated largely by their faith in God and their sense of social injustice, they joined forces to right one of the greatest wrongs ever perpetrated on this continent. They didnt have blogs back then, so they started newspapers, they wrote pamphlets and novels and plays, they barnstormed the north and mid-west speaking wherever they could find a crowd. Sometimes they were ridden out of town on arail for their efforts. Their printing presses were destroyed and thrown in the river. Some of them lost their lives.

    I dont believe that the issues facing our society today match up to that of slavery. I wont demean that horrible crime nor slight the efforts of the abolitionists by using a direct comparison. Yet there are similarities. We are here because, for far too long, the public voice of faith in America has been too narrow, too harsh, too exclusive.

    Like many of you, I have grown tired of hearing my faith attached to issues that I find to be tangential, positions that I find untenable, and to a vitriolic glee that I find unholy. I find myself unable to remain on the sidelines, quietly working to lead by example alone. When I began looking for someone to speak for me publicly, I found myself again and again looking into the mirror. As imperfect a tool as I saw looking back at me, it was the only tool I had at my disposal.

    I wont pretend to speak for the entire group about why you are here or why you write or what you hope to accomplish. But that is why I am here. I am here because there is work to be done and I am capable of doing it. I am here because one day the two children growing inside my wife will look to their father and decide for themselves whether or not he is the kind of man they want to emulate, whether he has spoken empty words or whether he has been a living example of what he preaches. Im here because I must be here.

    Im also here because I need you. Man was not made to live alone, and it is through our friends and family, our community that we see our true selves. We can feel empathy, but until we reach out to another, it is a useless emotion. So we come here, not to reduce our faith to a lowest common denominator, but to celebrate our diversity and to learn to understand so that our love for each other may abound and grow.

    But we also come here so that we can move forward. I said long ago that it would be a victory to pull off such a conference but I understand now that it is only a small victory. There is much work to do in a world that is literally starving to death for want of spiritual sustenance. Its here in the broken homes and the empty eyes of the street youth of America as much as it is in the hungry stare of famine-stricken Africa or wore-torn Asia.

    So our purpose here is complete, in one sense, just by being here tonight. And I will not charge you to set aside the fellowship and spiritual nourishment offered in order to chart the future. I willsimply ask that at some time this weekend, you consider what is needed from this group. If it is only a day or two of fellowship, then I would say it is too much time and money and effort to do again and again. But if we have a larger purpose, if we have a larger communion, if we have an unfilled need, then we have a calling to answer. No voice is too small to be heard and no need is too great to address.

    For all things, there is truly a time. Tonight is our time to worship, to join in fellowship, and to forge the bonds of affection that will allow us to do the work we begin tomorrow. So I say to you, in way of closing:

    Namaste. Shalom. Salaam. Merry Meet. And welcome brothers and sisters. Ladies and Gentlemen, people of all faiths, welcome to YOUR Progressive Faith Bloggers Conference.

    The blog con has begun!

    Filed under: conference planning, faith - Rachel @ 1:51 am

    Hello from the beautiful conference center at Montclair State University!

    The blog con has begun: tonight Thurman made some beautiful opening remarks (which I hope he’ll post here eventually) and then I led an erev Shabbat (Sabbath eve) service with Harriet’s exquisite melodic help.

    I posted the siddur (prayerbook) from that service, with a few explanatory notes, here at my blog.

    We’ll try to update this blog regularly throughout the weekend with links to people’s posts; if you’re liveblogging the conference, let us know!

    July 14, 2006

    Poised to dive in

    Filed under: conference planning - Rachel @ 12:56 pm

    I smiled to see Thurman’s post here this morning about what led to the creation of this gathering, since I made my own post over at Velveteen Rabbi about that last night ("The night before blog con.")

    The folks on the planning committee have delightfully complementary interests in the broad realms of faith and politics. I suspect the same will be true of the broader group that’s gathering this weekend.

    Some of us may be more passionate about creating conversations between and among people of faith; others may be more passionate about social action and working in the political sphere. May the interplay between these two conversations be fruitful for all of us.

    Travel safely, gang. See you soon!

    Technorati tags: progfaithblogcon.

    TODAY: Progressive Faith Gets Moving

    Filed under: Uncategorized - Thurman @ 11:52 am

    This evening, the curtain will go up on the first ever Progressive Faith BlogCon.  The concept started six months ago when Rachel Barenblat of Velveteen Rabbi and myself both looked at the GodBlogCon and found it to be far too oriented on Conservative Christians to be representative of our faiths.  Rather than sit and fume and feel left out, I  asked who among the many liberal of people of faith would step out to organize and energize a movement among us.  I found the answer first in my own mirror, then in an enthusiastic reply to my first email to Rachel.

    Naively, we began reaching out to other bloggers who write about their faith and the way it addresses the world.  Muslim and Jewish, Christian and Buddhist, and even a Pagan or two found themselves aligning with our simple goal: To make the public voice of faith in America more representative of America.  We are not all marching in lockstep with the Christian Right and we refuse to be shouted down or to have our faith questioned for that reason.

    We are part of the “moral values” crowd.  Our moral values lead us to oppose unjust war, the misuse of power, the victimization of children, women and minorities through systematic disenfranchisement and misrepresentation of their interests.  We raise our voices against the dangers of unparalleled greed and avarice, the craven lust to control world resources, the refusal to acknowledge mankind’s negative impact on our beautiful world, and the cynical use of our faith for political gain.

    Faith is personal, but never private.  At its best, it urges people to engage the world around them and make it better for them having been a part of it.  At its worst, it divides, closes people’s minds, and insulates itself from the world.  The American public is exposed on a daily basis to too much of the latter and not enough of the former.

    Our goal is not to proselytize.  We will argue that our faith should have a voice in public life, but it is not a voice that shouts down any who speak in a different tongue.  Our goal is not ecumenicism.  We will not pare down our beliefs and confine our faith to any lowest common denominator.  Our goal is the simple fulfillment of American pluralism.  We will raise our voice and let it be joined in the marketplace of ideas.  

    Why I Must Do This: Part Two

    Filed under: faith, politics - Thurman @ 10:43 am

    As I wrote yesterday, there are many among the group widely labled as the "Christian Right" who are much less than thrilled about the "sudden" appearance of a loosely oranized group of liberals/progressives (is there any other kind of group of liberals/progressives?) who are speaking openly about their faith and how it informs their politics.  In case you’re wondering, no, I’m not surprised.  It was largely the vitriolic hatred that spews from this group that orginally made me question whether or not I actually wanted to be a member of organized religion in the first place.  Their motto often appears to be "Who Would Jesus Hate?". But it was the answering levels of hate and mistrust from the opposite direction that really overcame my impetus and caused me to step forward and speak about my faith and my politics.  It was the same type of vitriol from the secular left that really shocked me out of my comfort zone.  I’ve sit in rooms filled with what can only be called the elite of society - people with some level of power, with high levels of education, with some amount of money at their disposal.  I’ve listened to people of faith - all people of all faiths - be lumped together and smeared with a broad brush of derision.

    Take for example, the fallout from Senator Barak Obama’s recent speech to Call for Renewal.  Some of the criticism may be valid, but it’s clumsy and it tends to alienate the very people to whom Sen. Obama was talking.  The obvious answer for many is, "So what?"

    Well, I’m one of those people, so "So what?" is a big deal to me.  It’s a defense used by conservatives against such things as Affirmative Action.  "I haven’t deprived a black person of opportunity, and many black people are successful, so Affirmative Action must be a farce."  Well, just as is true with Affirmative Action, all you have to do is to open your eyes to know why it is needed.  There are, indeed, a lot of people who want to stifle all discussion of faith and politics.  

    In a recent conversation with my brother, he got rather hot under the collar when he spoke about the way his faith was received by atheists - calling it "superstition" and refering to him as a "deluded fool", among other things.  Even many liberals and progressives that do believe and practice religion are too busy condemning it from the public sphere to give a straight answer about it - something that doomed John Kerry’s answer on abortion and what Barak Obama was trying to address.  "I don’t believe religion should have any place in politics."  If I had a dime for everytime I’ve heard that, I’d be a very rich man.

    The suspicion and hate from the Religious Right, I can accept and understand.  We are challenging the core beliefs of their faith system.  It’s a frightening thing to have to contemplate the possibility of being very wrong about so much that means so much.  But that is actually the reason for faith - to look into the abyss of man’s soul and find a redeeming answer.

    The suspicion and hate from the left, though, is much harder to take.  I understand it as a gutteral reaction against the very public voice of the Christian Right.  But I don’t understand the insistance that anyone who believes anything is a priori wrong, misguided, and ignorant.  I also understand that their insistence that faith be left out of politics is an inherent statement that they don’t understand what they are talking about.

    Politics is nothing more or less than the methods people use to make collective decisions.  That’s it.  It isn’t holy.  It’s simply an agreement within a group to abide by the rules for making group decisions.  If you live in a monarchy or dictatorship, then your beliefs are irrelevant.  It doesn’t matter to Fidel Castro if the people think he is a good Catholic.  In Cuba, truly, your faith has no place in politics.

    But what is faith?  When put into action, faith is a means of guiding your behavior - including a set of ethical and moral precepts by which you determine your personal course of action.  In simplest terms, faith is a means of making decisions.  It can’t possibly tell you immediately what the preferable course of action is in many circumstances, but it can help define what the acceptable limits of behavior are.

    So are we really to believe that we should take this system for making decisions and avoid using it when we try to make decisions that effect everyone around us?  That’s insane!

    The problem with faith in the public square isn’t that it shouldn’t be there, the problem is that it isn’t fully represented. But to live in the public square, liberal faith must be able to articulate a meaningful dialogue.  It must reach people where they live and breathe and motivate them to work for a better, more just society.

    Faith should not dominate the public square, but it must have a place there.  To fight that is to embrace defeat.  This does not mean that faith should have an elevated position in the public square.  No, it must join the battle of ideas and be met on its merits.  It must carve out a sphere where it can show itself plainly.

    This is why I called for - and reached out for the help of good people to produce - the Progressive Faith BlogCon.  Starting tomorrow night, we will look into each other’s face and find, not ecumenicism, but plurality.  We do not seek to hide our differences for the sake of our similarities, but to celebrate our similarities for the sake of preserving our differences.

    Untested faith is not faith, it is hope.  A faith unwilling to encounter ideas that do not mesh with it fully is not the bright candle to guide mankind, but the fearful candle that is hidden under a bushel.  Similarly, a plurality that is unwilling to allow all people to speak freely of their beliefs and actions is not a plurality, it is a dictatorship.

    July 13, 2006

    Getting to the Hotel and Conference Center

    Filed under: Uncategorized - Thurman @ 2:26 pm

    I just drove past the hotel, and the signage has not changed. So, although your reservations are for La Quinta, you’ll have to look for the sign that says “Wellesley Inn”. It is accessible from Rt. 3 in the east bound lanes only. If you are coming in on Rt. 3 in the west bound lanes, take the next exit (marked “Main Street, Passaic Ave”). At the light at the end of the exit ramp, turn left (you will be on Main Street). Go under Rt. 3. You can get on Rt.3 east by turning left (there is a traffic signal)or you can make the block and take the back entrance into the hotel.

    To take the back entrance, continue down Main Street. At an unknown point, it becomes Passaic. At the second traffic light (Kingsland), turn left. Go all the way down until the road ends at a “T” intersection with River Road. Turn left on River Road and the hotel parking lot will be the second entrance on the left.

    To get from the hotel to the Conference Center, use the back exit from the hotel, turn right on River Road and go down to Passaic. Turn right and go under Rt.3 to take Rt. 3 West.

    From Rt. 3 West, take the Grove Street exit. That will be after the second Garden State Parkway exit and Rt. 3 will be squeezing down from 3 lanes into 2. Stay in the far right lane and you’ll be fine. At the stop sign at the end of the exit ramp, turn left onto Grove Street. You will pass an elementary school on your left and then a florist/garden shop on your right. Just after that you will see a cemetary on your right hand side. There is a traffic light at the corner of the cemetary where you will turn right onto Mt. Hebron Road. Follow Mt. Hebron to the next traffic light where it crosses Valley Road. There is a church on the corner. Turn right on Valley Road and go to the next traffic light. That is Normal Ave. Turn left on Normal and the school will be on your right.

    To find parking on campus:

    You can always use the Red Hawk Parking Deck - but it is paid parking (approx. $10 for eight hours). To park there, you take the first (main) entrance into the school. The road will bend to the left and you will see the parking deck to your immediate right. Turn right into the parking deck. The fifth level is the ground level for the exiting side of the parking deck. As you walk out of the deck, there will be a practice soccer field to your left and a building to your right. Follow the walk between them and the University Hall is immediately in front of you. The Conference Center is on the seventh (top) floor.

    On weekends, there is also a limited number of free parking spots in specific areas. Here is a map of the parking facilities. Only metered parking spaces can be used for free during this time. Those are located in lot 4 and lot 17. Lot 4 will be to your immediate right as you enter the campus. To get to lot 17, you would enter the same way as if you were going to the Parking Deck. However, rather than turning into the deck, you would go to the stop sign at the corner and turn right. Where the road forks, you will take the right-hand fork and go up the hill. At the top of the hill, you will see University Hall to your right. The road forks at that point around the Red Hawk Diner. Take the fork behind the diner and enter the first parking lot to your right. You can park along the row that faces towards the diner.

    At the entrance to the campus is a guardshack that is usually manned. Feel free to ask for directions there or at the Red Hawk Parking Deck.

    July 12, 2006

    Why I Must Do This: Part One

    Filed under: faith, politics - Thurman @ 9:35 pm

    From a book I am currently reading:

     

    Western civilization is passing through a social revolution unparalleled in history for scope and power.  Its coming was inevitable.  The religious, political, and intellectual revolutions of the past five cneturies, which together created the modern world, necessarily had to culminate in an economic and social revolution such as is now upon us.

     

    By universal consent, this social crisis is the overshadowning problem of our generation.  The industrial and commercial life of the advanced nations are in the throes of it.  The industrial and commerical life of the advanced nations are in the throes of it.  In politics all issues and methods are undergoing upheaval and re-alignment as the social movement advances.  In the world of thought all th eyoung and serious minds are absorbed in the solution of the social problems.  Even literature and art point like compass-needles to this magnetic polie of all our thought.

    The social revolution has been slow in reaching our country.  We haev been exempt, not because we had solved the problems, but because we had not yet confronted them.  We have now arrived and all the characteristic conditions of American life will henceforth combine to make the social struggle here more intense than anywhere else.  The vastness and the free sweep of our concentrated wealth on the one side, the independence, intelligence, moral vigor, and political power of the common people on the other side, promise a long-drawn grapple of contesting forces which may well make the heart of every American patriot sink within him.

    The title of the book is Christianity and the Social Crisis and it was published by Walter Rauschenbusch in 1907.  His call is one for greater social justice.  He saw that the full power of vested wealth and political power was arrayed against the common man who simply wanted to live out his days in peaceful labor.  

    Primary to his arguments is the revolutionary concept of Jesus as a religious agitator, not a social reformer.  He tore down taboo and ritual - the trappings of what Rauschenbusch refers to as "priestly religion" - and substituted a concerted focus on the treatment of fellow human beings - the bones of a "prophetic religion".  The difference is important, because Rauschenbush sees a priestly religion as being one of a conquered people who have no power in their world.  When you can’t force greater justice, you seek inner piety - and the ritual, pomp and circumstance of priestly religions help guide us in that direction.  When a people has control of their society, the focus shifts to that of a prophetic religion.  Jesus is an important and revolutionary figure because, supernatural origins aside, he called for a prophetic religion even in the midst of  a powerless and downtrodden people.

    Even if it killed him.

    It’s an approach that is gaining strength in many progressive circles.  Brian McLaren, Jim Wallis, Robin Meyer, Michael Lerner, and others are addressing themselves to this very-long-historied strain of faith.  I believe it is probably the overwhelmingly preferred approach for my fellow participants in the Progressive Faith Blog Con.  It certainly fits very closely with the faith of my childhood - before evangelical Christians raced to embrace the far right-wing of the Republican Party.

    With this approach in mind, I looked through a collection of news articles sent out by Sojourners:

    The first one directly casts aspersion on this approach, asking if Judas Iscariot might be comfortable with it.  This follows, of course, on the heels of a sickening statement of identity for the author who "saw some sort of messiah in Bush and voted for the man because he said he was saved".  For those who believe in a divine Christ, the first part of the comparison is straightforward heresy.  The second part simply shows the worst part of using faith to guide politics - that it blinds someone to everything else being discussed.

    "I’m saved - but I’m going to bomb someone back to the stone age."

    Trust me.  Those are not words that Jesus would speak.

    The next one is even more blatantly damning.  It also shows a complete ignorance of the message carried by Rev. Wallis.  "That is, to cast poverty not as something that individuals rise above and out of, but as something that bureaucrats spend other people’s money on to eliminate."  Since Rev. Wallis, in particular, devotes at least half of his book, God’s Politics, to a searing indictment of this approach, you have to wonder if the author actually looked past "Democrat" before snapping shut any semblance of thought and putting the rhetoric on auto-pilot.

    Still a third refuses to see any such approach as being of faith unless it becomes a shadow of the Christian Right.  "Until I see a Democrat push for legislation that restricts abortion or protects traditional marriage, I’ll remain unconvinced."  I’ll make a deal with you - show me in the Bible where it says that should be our primary focus and I’ll write a thousand posts on it.  

    The Gospels didn’t care much for marriage - Paul preached that it was a poor substitute for someone not strong enough to remain celebate and alone.  Luke writes: "But they which shall be accounted worthy to obtain that world, and the resurrection from the dead, neither marry, nor are given in marriage."  Matthew and Mark contain passages that are much the same.  If marriage is something that will be entirely foresaken in the here-after, then how can it be in such dire need of protection?

    This is one half of the problem faithful people like myself face.  The de facto "public voice" of our faith would require us to entirely give up everything we believe in.  I actually left more than one church because of that.  

    This is one of the major reasons why I called for a Progressive Faith Blog Con.  The simple faith of my childhood, in many ways, was too small.  It was a naive faith that accepted a literal interpretation of 5000 year old words.  In the almost forty years that I’ve been on earth, my faith has been challenged, sometimes failed, but always come back stronger and more able to deal with the reality of the world in which I live.  

    My faith informs my politics, my politics does not determine my faith.  The authors of the three articles cited above will never understand that, I fear.  So, I will leave off this post the same way as I began - by quoting Walter Rouschenbusch, whose prose has the power to melt your heart:

     

    All human goodness must be social goodness.  Man is fundamentally gregarious and his morality consists in being a good member of his community.  A man is moral when he is social; he is immoral when he is anti-social.  The highest type of goodness is that which puts freely at the service of the community all that a man is and can.  The highest type of badness is that which uses up the wealth and happiness and virtue of the community to please self.  All this ought to go without saying, but in fact religious ethics in the past has largely spent its force in detaching men from their community, from marriage and property, from interest in political and social tasks.

     

    The fundamental virtue in the ethics of Jesus was love, because love is the society-making quality.  Human life originates in love.  It is love that holds together the basal human organization, the family.  The physcial expression of all love and friendship is the desire to get together and be together.  Love creates fellowship.  In the measure in which love increases in any social organism, it will hold together without coercion.  If physical coercion is constantly necessary, it is proof that the social organization has not evoked the power of human affection and fraternity.

    X-posted from Xpatriated Texan

    Tracking con-related posts

    Filed under: blogstuff - Rachel @ 5:47 pm

    It occurs to me that it’d be nice to be able to track con-related posts — posts made before the con, at the con, and after the con. Technorati tags and del.icio.us tags seem like a good way to do that.

    (Edited to add: flickr tags, too!)

    So if you post about the con, beforehand or afterwards or at the con itself, please tag your posts (and photos) with the tag "progfaithblogcon." That way, anyone who wants to can easily aggregate con-related posts, and can join in the various conversations (we hope) will arise…

    Technorati tags: religion, politics, progfaithblogcon.

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