Thursday, July 1, 2010

Its been a long time, sorry I left you...


Since the last I blogged, my wife and I celebrated an anniversary, our church turned 4 yrs old, and the Lakers won their second title in a row. Yes 3 months! That is way too much time away from blogging. I mean, I've got to much to say, too many opinions in my head, and too many thoughts that can help people- what am I doing taking that much time off?! To some degree I feel I have a responsibility to write and I promise I will be more regular with my writing IF, you guys help me grow this blog...

The "Wanna know what I think" concept was created to foster conversation starting with my most random thoughts, but ending with your insight. So know, that I wanna know what YOU think too. And I get it, everyone is not a writer, but your thoughts help me do my main gig which is imparting, instructing, and motivating. So tell me what you think. It gets political, religious, simple, deep and down right petty at times in here, but Im sure you will fit somewhere, so check out these blogspots and tell me what you think. Even if you follow me on twitter or facebook I'd still like to hear your full thought on these topics. So talk to me and spread the word!

So I bid you an apology in the tune of the great rapper Rakim, "its been a long time, sorry I left you..." I will be more regular, more insightful, with more clarity, and with more impact! Until then, be blessed, and say what you mean, with respect, honesty, and passion- even if your knees shake while you're doing it!

Out!
terrell

Monday, April 5, 2010

Its time to think about it- (4 Believer's Only)



I just read an article by Bryan McLaren and I will say from the onset that I don't agree with much of his theories, however he did share a thought that I found interesting. McLaren's article contrasted the Milgram Experiments of the 1960s with modern American Christianity. Scientist Stanley Milgram wanted to measure peoples willingness to obey authority figures even when it conflicted with their personal conscience. The study was prompted after observing past Nazi war crime trials and noticing that many of the officers claimed to have committed the heinous war crimes because their superiors ordered them to do so, most namely Adolf Eichman.

In one particular experiment, one group of participants were told by authorized scientists to press a button that would send a painful electric shock into another group of participants sitting in another room. The results were shocking. When the lab authorities gave the order, 65% of the "button pushing" participants repeatedly sent an electric shock into the "receiving" participants. As the voltage was increased the results remained the same; participants trusted the scientists admonition that what they were doing was good for scientific advancement. When asked if they had sympathy for the other participants many said yes, but never questioned or resisted, they simply did it because the authority told them to do so.

McLarens position questions how or if Christians think for themselves or if we are like those participants who were willing to inflict consequence against their conscience because their leaders say so. Its a very interesting idea for us to ponder, so I pose this question, who's pulling your strings? Have you given your religious leader, Bishop, Pastor, Counselor etc. unquestioned authority to your life? If we say sow, do you sow? If we say Republicans most demonstrate Christianity, do you believe that and shun the ideals of Democrats? If we say to shun any fellowship with a homosexual, do you shun gays? If we say no contraceptives in your marriage, do you shun contraceptives? If we say reject spiritual gifts, do you reject spiritual gifts? What if we don't approve of who you chose to marry, do you turn your heart in another direction? This is not an endorsement for these concepts but examples of how a host of personal, political and religious ideals have been passed to the Christian community with very little introspection by the average Christian as to why we are being told to accept them. To make matters worse, some of the opinions that we adhere to raise conflicts within our own conscience's.

Dear Believer, it is okay to have a different opinion from your leader as to how your life plays out-just make sure its not different from Gods opinion shared to us in Scripture. We are mere resources to you, not your final authority. Your life journey will bring you all types of turns and twists that others may not readily identify with. Interpreting what this means for your life is the beauty of having an authentic relationship with the Holy Spirit versus with His flawed representatives. We cannot tell you how to vote, who to marry, or who your friends should be etc. Scripture doesn't give us that authority and neither should you! So hear us as advice, not as the comp-controller of your life. Respectfully challenge us to a dialogue versus a one sided monologue. With that said, this is not a license to become argumentative and difficult for arguments sakes, or to disregard advice that is useful and Biblical, and certainly not a license to operate in clear and obvious sin. It is however an admonition for you to think for yourself and not be framed into a "system of religious living" and false accountability that minimizes your intelligence and choice making ability. It's further an invitation for you to enter into the kinds of discourses where people interact and with leaders for community, accountability and knowledge's sake. Its the checks and balancing act that is needed to produce the best Christians, nations, families, businesses and human beings possible. With this you can take control of your own life. Know why you do what you do and don't be afraid to own it! YOU make decisions with the information YOU gather so that you can please God, honor others and make your house a product of your choices not someone elses. Trust the Holy Spirit to guide you!!

In closing, I agree with McLearen in this regard, that many Christians are afraid to publicly express support for ideas that are not in the Christian mainstream. For you that fit that category, I say that your conscience is a powerful piece of who you are and if you are acting against your conscience life will be most miserable for you. There is wisdom to asking questions and getting clarity on what you believe and why instead of taking our words for it only. True faith begins with a surrender of the heart and you aren't doing the Christian faith any favors by signing on to ideas that you haven't surrendered your heart to- whether Biblical or otherwise.

Thats what I think and Im stickin to it!!

Sunday, March 21, 2010

If Its About Politics, Prove It



Anyone who casually reads or faitfully follow this blog know that I am, without regret or shame a born-again Christian and a registered Democrat. In many ideological concepts I agree with the democratic agenda, however it must be duley noted that while democrat in affiliation I am anti-abortion and and pro-proposition 8in association. While this stand can be complex to the strict conservative, it actually is a position that many moderates and liberals carry. In some sense, the anti abortion and prop 8 disclaimer has become necessary for liberals like myself because misinformation and ignorance keep the average American from understanding that liberal politics and Christianity can indeed coexist. However, its not my intention to defend my own politics or faith in this blog. I am here to challenge the most powerful factions in American politics that are unapologetically conservative and also Christian.
I honor the premise of their faith and respect their political position, however, with respect to them both, they should be ashamed of the public behavior by many in their faction during the last month of health care debates. Some of the rhetoric and actions have been disturbing, distasteful and yes, shameful. I don't understand because there are many good conservative party members who honor decorum and are dignified; why then is Rush Limbaugh, his followers and the Tea Party the loudest voice of conservatism in America?! I ask this because constituents of both these movements lined the streets leading to Capital Hill and expressed their displeasure with curt disdain. So curt that Black democrats were greeted at Capitol Hill Saturday afternoon and Sunday morning with racial slurs and spit. It was so shameful that Represenative John Lewis, a Democrat from Georgia declared that it was the worst he had seen in "40 or 45 years. Since the march from Selma to Alabama." The behavior was crude, un-American and ultimately unChrist-like.

I expected more from the Christian community on the right in the way of denouciation. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 made it illegal to act on bigoted impulses but in no way could it eliminate bigotry or bigots, so I understand (though don't accept) that bigotry is a part of life- I am concerned beacause these acts of bigotry came groups that associate themselves proudly with Christianity. The sheer silence of the Conservative Christian Right is surprising and disappointing. Where the heck are they while their loudest voices are publically insulting the national leaders they disagree with and hurling racial insults at the rest of them? And for the record this is taking place on the streets AND in the chambers of congress, literally. The evangelical Church is the largest Christian "lobby" groups in America and as of yet we have not seen one major player of those organizations denounce these behaviors with much force- none. In fact, some leaders on the right have condemned the actions so weakly that their condemnation could possibly be confused with an endorsement. Today, GOP leader Michael Steele (who ironically is a black man) when pressed to comment on the behavior was quoted as saying "of course we don't condone this, but they are just angry." WOW Mr. Steele, wow!

The Christian conservative right is strong, and thank God they are. They cried loud enough to be heard when they supported President Reagans trickle down economics because they thought it was necessary; they screamed loud against President Clintons shameful immoral indiscretions for the same reason; we heard them loud and clear when they supported President Bush's war in Iraq (no comment); and just recently, I personally showed up along side many of our brothers to help make a big showing during the Prop 8 votes. Make no mistake about it, the Christian conservative circle is a very powerful voice in our country that can be heard when it wants to be heard! I just don't get why there isn't more noise being made now? Maybe its the politics of the day. But politics aside, the very premise that Christianity stands on and the multi-cultural hertitage that many died to ensure and ultimately makes our country great is threatened when the most powerful members of Body of Christ yeilds its power only when the politics fit. It shouldn't matter where the the injustice comes from, it is the Body of Christ's calling to be the spiritual and social conscience of the nations of the world. The behavior of these organizations and the politicians that egg them on should be denounced publically. Because these groups and leaders often claim Christianity and have gotten Christian support in masses at times, the denoucation should come from powerful Christian leaders without redirecting the issue back to the healthcare bill.

Greedy industries, gays, broken economies; none of these will ultimately cause speedy decay in our country. Our country will hasten to spirial downward with unhearlded speed when powerful Christians tolerate what is supposed to be untolerable; when we are quiet when our friends are wrong; when our most influential leaders pick and chose when to do their "God-job." The Christian Right is wealthy, intelligent, connected, and anointed- a powerful combination- however with all that, they have proven also to be extremely selective. Im eager to hear from a non-democratic, non ethnic Christian leader to stand up and publically and forcibly denounce whats been happening. I further charge them to challenge the leaders of these groups to curb their antagonistic, hateful public rhetoric and keep the heart of their discourse about policy so that this won't be about class and race, unless it indeed is... Thats another blog!!!
Thats what I think and Im sticking to it!

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Who is "just be there" and why is he checking my ego?


This past Friday my wife and I went to Baltimore Maryland for the funeral of a friend. We returned to Ca on Monday and while we were driving home we were enjoying our normal banter which included laughing and trash talking each other when all of a sudden my wife went silent. I mean the kind of deafening silence that makes you wonder if you did or said something wrong. Then in one methodic stroke she peered out the window with her eyes fixated on a particular fast-food resturant. The resturant triggered a fond memory of her deceased mother. Tears followed- lots of them. Then more silence. Then more tears. A tissue. Then more tears and more silence. This continued the rest of the way home, into the house, into her pj's then finally into her beauty sleep for the night. In my attempt to be sensative to her moment I asked if there was anything I could do to help her or serve her. Her reply was simple, "no baby, this just is what it is. Im all right."

Huh? 20 minutes of tears, silence then sleep and it "is what it is" and you're "all right?" You serious?! Can I get a little more? I mean we were right in the middle of a great laugh and all of a sudden theres a memory, a fond memory mind you, and the intimacy of 'our' moment vanishes like a vapor over a teapot?! Is that all the explanation there is? Well, gee, yeah, in some cases that is all the explanation there is. It would seem that Im blogging to fuss about that memory being an unsuspecting thief, but Im not. I reliving this moment because during the ride home I touched my own feelings of inadequecies. I hated noticing it in the car and I hate acknowledging it while I type, but I was absolutely powerless to aiding my wife through her moment. I held her hand, I offered her tissues, I gave her a hug, and even kissed her forehead and nothing I did shook the fog that beheld her. I simply didn't have the stuff to ease it. I tried to earn the heros chair by trying every "technique" I knew to help the situation but in the end I failed. In that moment I realized that my efforts weren't going to work, and what an ego shot to realize that in somethings we are going to be virtually powerless to fix. What do you do when you do everything and it still doesn't satisfy?

This realization made me feel stripped of a chance to be her knight in shining armor and left "being there" my only recourse to assist in whatever was going on. Who is "being there" and why does he have so much power?! Well, first let me tell you that "being there" is powerful and has God all on it. It is the power of allowing God's presence on your life to be the calming affect on someone elses. Gods presence give's a peace that can't be told, taught or understood and the only prerequisite to making "being there" work is actually "being" instead of "doing." Yes, thats right, I became more of a support when I shut my mouth and calmed my actions and allowed my presence to be my answer. Yea, I get it, its not much of an ego tease when we don't do anything to fix a situation but some situations call for us to "be" instead of "do." This way God gets the glory and not you...

So you want to know what I learned that night. I learned that God wanted to personally wipe my wife's tears away, comfort her and put her to sleep and that my ego almost got in the way of that. Wow...
How many times do we get in the way of God doing God stuff because our ego's rush us to an action that God is not calling us to do? How many times do we "do" when God wants us to just "be?"
What are you working too hard at?
Thats what I think...

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

The "Two Percenters"


Im watching Pastor Dwight Thomson on tv and he's doing his thing in the tune of old skool... I mean fire on top of fire and brimstone old skool thing. He's just preaching and sending everyone to hell. No one is exempt in this message: the sinners, the so called Christian, the Muslim, Buddist, he even went on a rant about disobedient angels- make no mistake about it, it was a 'hell message.' And as brash, and cut and dry as it was, I enjoyed every bit of it...every bit.
I ran across him on accident while I was web surfing. I was drawn because as he screamed and cried, then talked through tears I couldn't help but wonder what in God's name got 'old skool' so riled up...the man was talking about soul winning! How powerful it was to see a pastor so passionate about an idea that is as close to the heart of Christ as it gets- repentance and salvation. He ran across the stage in excitement; he sat on the stage perplexed; he screamed to get our attention, and he cried because he knew that most of us wouldn't get it. But his simple "at the name of Jesus all men can be saved" message mezmorized everyone in the room and even this young pastor inking this blog.
Preaching Jesus and inviting men to be saved is a central message of the Gospel and was at the top of His "to do" list for us when He left. Sadly Pastor Dwight reminded us that only 2% of all Christans in America will win a single soul to Christ in their lifetime- you didn't get that so here it is again: two percent of all the born again believers in America will lead one non believer to Christ! Lets make that make sense in numbers: Out of 100 people only 2 people will win 1 person to Christ in all their lifetime. That means that out of 100 capable believers, at the end of the day the Kingdom has grown by a whopping 2 people!! We have got to get on our game family! I am saddened and convicted by this stat...you should be too. Thanks for the "chin-check" Pastor Dwight.

In a day when the only reason to shout and lift up holy hands is for a personal or material blessing, it was great and utterly refreshing to see the simple, old time message that Jesus Saves is still being preached and is a powerful sermon...and that it still excites someone! Pastor Dwight thanks for reminding the Body that this "forgotten" Gospel is the "true" Gospel and has all the power.
I think all of us Christians should remember this and with wisdom not be afraid to help save somebody from hell and into the love of Jesus Christ.
Thats what I think and Im sticking to it!

Friday, February 26, 2010

The Clock is Ticking

The last 4 weeks have been among the most interesting weeks of my ministerial career. I have been in connection and conversations with some of America's most talented spiritual leaders of our time. They have shared with willing compassion their insight, advice and prayers with me. This has particularly been a blessing for me because I was under the impression that not many of those guys shared their "secrets." I was obviously and delightfully wrong.
What caught my attention in my reflection of these few weeks is that its important to recognize when God has you in a "moment." By "moment" I mean a time or a season of uncanny favor on your life. Sure as born again Christians we have favor all the time, but I mean a unique blessedness where opportunity and clarity of the moment coincide with Gods desires for you. These moments exist in scripture. In fact King Solomon reminds us that "everything has a season, and there is a time for every purpose" (Ecc. 3:1). He teaches us that there is a perverbial stop clock on every season. No season lasts forever whether its good or bad. Key components in difficult seasons are endurance and perserverance; however in favorable sesons those components include recognition and capitalization. We have to make the most of our "moments" in life by taking notice when we are in dynamic seasons and then take it to the next level by participating with the God of the seasons to maximize the time. Whether it's seasons of meeting new friends, increase, keen understanding, or even the opportunity to learn from the best, notice it and take advantage of it! Take a risk because the clock is ticking!
Im attempting now to make the most of this "moment"- Im asking lots of questions, Im being transparent, even considering big changes that fit what Im doing. Im taking my risks...what about you?
In parting, I want to note that I believe that God has us in and out of these seasons all the time, however our ideals on life and circumstances often prohibit us from realization. I almost forfeited this season because of my false belief that those guys rarely shared their expertise. Boy was I wrong. And thank God I was... Be open and optimistic, because God is liable to move any moment.
Thats what I think...

Monday, January 25, 2010

Processing my trip to South Africa pt 1: Good people make for good times!


Im fresh off of a 2 week journey through South Africa. This was not my first time to the continent but my first time to South Africa. In a nutshell the trip was exciting, exhilarating, disheartening and encouraging all at the same time. The range of emotions would leave one laughing hysterically at one moment and in sobbing tears the next. Honestly, it was such an emotional conundrum that I am still processing, maybe struggling is a better word, with some of the images and what they mean to me both personally and organically.
Personally, people make everything that's anything- the right people in any environment can still make a moment memorable. I was blessed to be teamed with a great crew: Peter, Alex, Tina, Wayne, Rosetta, Anthony,Petruis, John and Pat. We were certainly a motley crew: 2 brothas, 3 Koreans, 1 Japanese, 1 Hawaiian and 2 South Africans. All of us were pastors except Rosetta and Petruis- they were our South African contacts, with Rosetta's organization being the reason we were there at all.
It was good to have a team that could carry a jovial atmosphere anywhere they were but also mature enough to express genuine heartbreak where appropriate. We walked miles on foot to deliver food to needy families, cleaned soiled bed sheets, bathed hiv patients, prayed for communities, visited schools and orphanages and even stayed the night with a Zulu family in their home. But all of this isn't why I describe this team as amazing; its because when we left any situation, this team took the mindset to learn from it and the people. We never viewed ourselves as their saviors but as learners from them. They were clear who they were and just needed a little encouragement. Or so we thought that's what they needed- we left most every situation more encouraged by them than vice versa! The Zulu people are among the worlds strongest. Their gentle temperament should not be confused with weakness, whereas their wherewithal has been long proven.
We got a great lesson on unconditional faith, perseverance, integrity and the power of hope- without these people and civilizations would crumble. They have all of the 'real' stuff it takes to survive.
So why were we there? Interesting question because on an abstract plain I haven't been able to answer that myself. I mean the obvious is that in certain areas of South Africa the poverty is so astounding that I wouldn't do it justice to describe it to you in this blog. There is no doubt that the country is in need and we went and met some of those needs- but I have yet to understand why they are in need. They have the stuff! They have the core stuff to survive, and survive the people as a whole are doing- but there must be more to life than survival! I know it looks bleak and hairy at times but the Zulu people are indeed surviving (as a people)! But what they are missing is abundance. Survival can be an individual achievement, but abundance requires inclusionary participation of others to make happen: there will be no abundance if others aren't willing to share!
I wonder if South Africa, the Zulu people in particular are among a growing community of world people at are the recipient of unfair play by other nations and countries? Those shut out of world markets and victimized by global monopolies in an attempt to control markets for future conservation. Ahhh, now we are blogging! Sure it makes some countries lavishly wealthy, but it makes others pitifully poor. I mean think about it, South Africa a nation that's three fourths surrounded by the most beautiful ocean in the world, its landscape is lavish and even lush at places. Its a diamond heaven too. In the cities their roads and and buildings look like the Europe, but the contrast is that 100 miles away I sat in a 4x4 mud room with a sick elderly woman who was too weak to shoo the flies from her face beg us for prayer before she met whatever eternal fate she believed awaited. Something clearly isn't right here. Why can't South Africa, in greater proportions make a leap from survival into abundance? Are the wealthier countries shutting them out? What about Nigeria, or Gambia, or (oooohhhh) Afghanistan? Many of these countries are poor but are strapped with enough resource not to be. What can we do to help them stand on their own feet? Westerners are so afraid that someone is a threat to our wealth. These countries dont need our wealth, they need us to let them in the game- to care that their babies are starving and that their elderly will die in mud huts enough to buy and sell with them at fair wages. Perhaps if the presidents, kings and czars of the world saw this first hand they would open up to expand the league...or maybe not.

Back to the local woman, the elderly woman, she didn't need pity- she didn't want pity. What she wanted was for someone to give a crap that she was there. Someone to validate that her life had meaning. And that, that meaning would perhaps inspire someone to give her hospice. Maybe our world stage is unfair because we have lost the value of how much all life and not just our own means to the continuum of humanity and to God. This lady didn't need a better home, (though by virtue of her being human she deserved one) but what would have helped her at that stage was to have someone present and there in the moment with her from time to time. She needed a few good people around her because as my sentiment said earlier, good people can make most any environment tolerable. Until the world changes, go be the change!
That's what I think!
t

Welcome

Hello and welcome to my new blog, "Wanna Know What I Think." If I may introduce myself, I am Terrell Fletcher. I am a husband, friend, pastor, teacher, and soon to be author and Im delighted you are checking this blog out.


Heres a little bit about the way this blog will work- it will be a healthy balance of optimism, scepticism, scholarly criticism and everything in between. It will be personal, political, spiritual and random, primarlily because, well its my blog (smile) and because my greatest curiosity stems from my interest in the worlds greatest asset, people. I believe the best that life has for us is available even though we don't always walk in it, so this blog will push you to be better.


You're invited to follow me and invite others to follow me from time to time, and to respond to a post if you feel the urge. I will say this again, I will be random; my blogs could range from posting personal pictures to giving Preisdent Obama grief to rooting on the San Diego Chargers- its really about what moves my boat that day or week. So roll with the flow if you wanna know what I think, but rest for sure if you wanna know what I think, you will be better for it!

terrell