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Faith column: The things that stalk us

Posted at 10:00 am March 3, 2013
By David Allred Leave a Comment

With the advent of the Internet, you might have already noticed that intelligent, rational conversation about religion is increasingly becoming a thing of the past. Online identities have been constructed somewhat anonymously and disconnected from any real “community,” thereby allowing many to pass off opinion for fact, with an absence of accuracy, honesty, and personal integrity.

For example, I cannot begin to count the number of times I have read this on an Internet message board: “Religion kills more people worldwide than anything on the planet.”

Of course this is nonsense, but proof that if we repeat something loud enough and frequently enough, we can get a majority of people to believe it. Let’s leave the debating about what is “religiously-motivated” violence versus “ethnically-motivated” violence for the scholars to debate. The lines are always going to be blurry there, although I believe the evidence from these scholars would be more than enough to put this disinformation to rest. Still, we don’t even need to dig that deep—all we need to do is crack open a beer.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: addiction, alcohol, alcoholism, atrocities, Crusades, David Allred, drugs, greed, High Places Community Church, Internet, religion, Spanish Inquisition, violence, violent crimes

Faith column: It’s the end of the world

Posted at 12:37 pm December 30, 2012
By David Allred 1 Comment

Since the world didn’t explode, many of us celebrated the most recognized holiday in human history, Christmas. We toiled over lists, waited in long shopping lines, and exchanged both gifts and pleasantries. I am certain that holiday cheer abounded, and many still bask in the afterglow of the season.

If it was to have been the end of the world, this probably wasn’t the worst way to go. Maybe the Earth didn’t explode or get vaporized by an on-coming comet; although maybe, as T.S. Eliot wrote, the world for some did end this month, “not with a bang… but a whimper.”

We’ve experienced a terrible tragedy this Christmas season, reminiscent of Herod’s assault on the children of Bethlehem after the birth of Jesus; a horror described by the prophet Jeremiah as “a weeping that refuses all comfort.” I will resist any kind of temptation to make sense of our current tragedy in Newtown because if such an event can appear in the first Christmas—at the very birthplace of the Messiah— then I see no reason to believe we are going to be immune to suffering.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: Bethlehem, Chistian, Christmas, end of the world, Freud, God, Gospel, Herrod, Jesus, Mayans, suffering, tragedy

Faith column: Christmas and ‘The Comfortable Inn’

Posted at 11:26 am November 18, 2012
By David Allred Leave a Comment

As the lines wrap around Best Buy and shoppers begin hurdling one another at Walmart on Black Friday this week, the usual complaints and pontifications will be offered up in defense of the “true meaning” of Christmas. Everyone knows Christmas isn’t supposed to be about the “stuff” money can buy, but about all those “happy things” that money can’t buy. Everyone knows this already. It’s old hat, but it is what we clergy are supposed to say this time of year.

I’m not sure what good another sermon, or another article, or another sour-faced television reporter can really do to change our holiday insanity. The truth is we all struggle with the merchandising of Christmas in one way or another. If we aren’t busy shopping for our own wants, then we tend to worry about under-giving to friends and family, or sometimes (when we feel especially moved) under-giving to our favorite charity. Christmas is too often driven by want and obligation: forces that keep our psychological inns overcrowded, but still pretty dang comfortable if we’re able to squeeze inside. We know who gets locked outside at Christmas and the story of how his mother stumbles “away to a manger” to give birth. I’m supposed to be writing about that.

One of the things that turns me off the most about Christianity this time of year is the way we pastors present ourselves as the hero of the story… as the ones who are able to “call America back” to the real meaning of Christmas. I’m not that guy. The truth is my kids are quite comfortable this year; the stuff beneath our tree will be taking up just as much space as yours. When it comes to merchandising the season, I am on the comfortable side of the door.

We’ve all heard the knocking. The poor are right outside, some of them even nine months pregnant and needing a warm place to stay. But the comfortable inn stays pretty full… Besides, it’s not as easy to help as it used to be. Behind door number one is a family too embarrassed to put their child’s name on the angel tree. Behind door number two is a family who has placed their child on 18 angel trees spread across four counties. Knowing which door to open requires a personal relationship and those are in short supply these days, even for pastors. No one knows what to do anymore or how to best help, so the easiest thing is to do nothing at all, to lose ourselves in the season—the television specials, the parades, the carols, maybe a little Kahlua on the rocks with a dash of half-and-half by an open fire.

Somewhere out there though, a miracle is taking place and deep down, we all know it. Somewhere, out where the animals make their beds and the stench of livestock fills the air, something precious is born. This Christmas, like so many others, we will turn our heads for just a moment to the frost on the window pane. We will see past the reflection of paper littering the floor. We will sigh once again, like we did last year, and offer up a whimper of prayer before being distracted by the sound of electronics and the smell of ham.

It won’t be too awfully different this year. I’m no better than anyone else. Still, deep down I know something is amiss, not just with the world, but with my own soul. Somewhere out there, I believe that mercy incarnate shivers in the blackest cold of dawn. He grows stronger with each passing second and with every undue hardship cast upon him. In due time, He will emerge and find His way to my “Comfortable Inn” to knock once more… if I choose to open the door. He will smile the sweetest smile for me, whisper a word of love, then offer the thing I need most: He will throw across His shoulders all the unwrapped packages of my shame.

Rev. David Allred is the lead pastor of High Places Community Church, 123 Randolph Road in Oak Ridge. He works alongside founding pastor Martin Fischer. High Places owns and operates the historic Grove Theater, which is also home to numerous arts organizations that share a vision for improving the quality of life in Oak Ridge. For more information, see http://highplaceschurch.com.

Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: Christmas, comfortable inn, David Allred, meaning of Christmas, miracle

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