Category Archives: Personal Note

Calvin 500 Celebration: Thoughts On The Linkage Of Theology And Polity — Part 1: The Sovereignty Of God And The Gift Of The Church

I will begin with the Church, into whose bosom God is pleased to collect his children, not only that by her aid and ministry they may be nourished so long as they are babes and children, but may also be guided by her maternal care until they grow up to manhood, and, finally, attain to the perfection of faith. What God has thus joined let not man put asunder (Mark 10:9) to those to whom he is a Father, the Church must also be a mother. This was true not merely under the Law, but even now after the advent of Christ; since Paul declares that we are the children of a new, even a heavenly Jerusalem, (Gal. 4: 26.) [Inst. 4.1.1]

Probably the most frequently cited distinctive of Reformed theology is “The Sovereignty of God.” To put it very simply, God is in charge, we are not, and God has the power and authority to do whatever pleases him in his good and perfect will.  To put it another way, God created this world and God allows us to live in it.  The Geneva Confession Article on God begins in 2.1 with:

Following, then, the lines laid down in the Holy Scriptures, we acknowledge that there is one only God, whom we are both to worship and serve, and in whom we are to put all our confidence and hope: having this assurance, that in him alone is contained all wisdom, power, justice, goodness and pity.

While this may seem an obvious theological principle of Christianity, in John Calvin’s theological framework the logical consequence of God being in charge leads to the conclusion that God gets to decide who is saved for eternity, the concept of predestination.  But that is a very rough and brief statement, it leaves our one important logical step, and is a subject for later in this series.

But as we consider Calvin’s doctrine of the Sovereignty of God, what are the implications for the Church and our polity?

While there are a multitude of implications the one I want to focus on now is the gift of the Church.  If God is absolutely sovereign then the Church is not a human institution and does not belong to us.  As Chapter 25.6 begins in the Westminster Confession “VI. There is no other head of the Church but the Lord Jesus Christ…”  In Calvin’s Geneva Catechism it is similarly expressed:

Master. – You therefore mean nothing more than Paul says, namely, that Christ has been appointed head of the Church, and raised above all principalities, has obtained a name which is above every name. (Eph. i. 22; Phil. ii. 9.)

Scholar. – It is as you say.

And later in the questioning:

Master. – What is the Church?

Scholar. – The body and society of believers whom God hath predestined to eternal life.

So, because the Church belongs to God, God gets to decide who is part of it.

But the other side of this is that God also provides for the Church.

But as our ignorance and sloth (I may add, the vanity of our mind) stand in need of external helps, by which faith may be begotten in us, and may increase and make progress until its consummation, God, in accommodation to our infirmity has added much helps, and secured the effectual preaching of the gospel, by depositing this treasure with the Church. He has appointed pastors and teachers, by whose lips he might edify his people, (Eph. 4: 11) he has invested them with authority, and, in short, omitted nothing that might conduce to holy consent in the faith, and to right order. In particular, he has instituted sacraments, which we feel by experience to be most useful helps in fostering and confirming our faith. Forseeing we are shut up in the prison of the body, and have not yet attained to the rank of angels, God, in accommodation to our capacity,has in his admirable providence provided a method by which, though widely separated, we might still draw near to him. [Inst. 4.1.1]

Specifically, God provides leadership, particularly for the preaching of the Word, and God provides the Sacraments so that “we might still draw near to him.”  The leadership and Sacraments are for our benefit and by extension the benefit of The Church.

One application of this is that the officers of the church, teaching and ruling elders as well as deacons, need to see their role as stewards or shepherds.  The Church of Jesus Christ is entrusted to us, what are we doing to return that which is entrusted to us back to its true owner in better condition than when we received it?

Calvin 500 Celebration: Thoughts On The Linkage Of Theology And Polity — Introduction

In case you haven’t heard, and I seriously doubt that includes any of you out there, later this week the world is marking the 500th anniversary of the birth of the great French-exile lawyer and theologian, Jean Cauvin.  He is of course better known by his Anglicized name John Calvin and his majority residence in the Swiss city of Geneva.

For a couple of reasons I had originally planned to stay off this bandwagon and only make a passing reference on his birth date.  The reasons included the fact that it is a bandwagon and plenty of others are commemorating the occasion, the fact that I have a tremendous backlog of blog writing as it is and thought my efforts would be better spent there, and finally that what he is best known for – the “Five Points of Calvinism” that someone else actually put in that form – is related but somewhat peripheral to my blog’s niche.

But I changed my mind.  I changed it for one significant reason and that is the fact that in all the articles I have read I see little if any on the linkage of his theological ideas to his model of church government, a model that remains with us today in the Reformed and Presbyterian churches.  In my understanding of the Presbyterian system of church government the form is directly driven by Scripture and Reformed theology.

So I’ll go ahead and post a series of anniversary articles this week.  However, due to the limits on my time and the lack of formal training and experience in this area I need to be clear about a couple of things:  These are intended to be personal reflections and not scholarly dissertations.  Please accept them in that spirit but if I stray into inaccuracies or misrepresentations of Calvin’s work I do appreciate the gentle correction you offer.  Along those same lines these are not intended to be comprehensive but rather representative of how my ecclesiastical thinking has been shaped by Calvin’s ideas.

So hang on as we head straight into the Sovereignty of God and the Sinfulness of Humankind.

75th Anniversary Of The Theological Declaration Of Barmen

1. “I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the
Father, but by me.” (Jn 14.6) “Truly, truly, I say to you, he who does
not enter the sheepfold by the door, but climbs in by another way, that
man is a thief and a robber… I am the door; if anyone enters by me,
he will be saved.” (Jn 10.1, 9)

Jesus Christ, as he is attested for us in holy scripture, is the one
Word of God which we have to hear and which we have to trust and obey
in life and in death.

We reject the false doctrine, as though the church
could and would have to acknowledge as a source of its proclamation,
apart from and besides this one Word of God, still other events and
powers, figures and truths, as God’s revelation.

This past weekend marked the 75th anniversary of the meeting of the Free Synod of Barmen that produced the 1934 Theological Declaration of Barmen.  This has to stand as one of the great moments of the Church speaking truth to power in the 20th century.

I have to admit that this anniversary was not really on my mind as I was tracking two simultaneous General Assemblies, the reverberations from one just finished, and the preliminaries to a few more about to start.  But a good friend of mine reminded me of this occasion and over the last 24 hours the Spirit kept nudging me until I realized that I really should comment on this theological statement.

I personally hold the Theological Declaration of Barmen in very high regard both for its words as well as for its context.  There was a great audacity, chutzpah if you will, in these 138 representatives from Lutheran, Reformed and United churches that came together as the Confessing Church.  At their meeting in Barmen from May 29-31, 1934, they produced a statement that clearly, succinctly and forcefully tells the National Socialist government of Germany that the true church belongs to God, and is not an instrument of the state.  There are subtleties that are lost in the Declaration by reading it in English, or probably any language other than the original German.  Note section 4 in the German:

IV. Jesus Christus spricht: Ihr wisst, dass die Herrscher ihre
Völker niederhalten und die Mächtigen ihnen Gewalt antun. So soll es
nicht sein unter euch; sondern wer unter euch groß sein will, der sei
euer Diener. (Mt 20, 25.26)

Die verschiedenen Ämter in der Kirche begründen keine
Herrschaft der einen über die anderen, sondern die Ausübung des der
ganzen Gemeinde anvertrauten und befohlenen Dienstes.

Wir verwerfen die falsche Lehre, als könne und dürfe sich die Kirche
abseits von diesem Dienst besondere, mit Herrschaftsbefugnissen
ausgestattete Führer geben und geben lassen.

The English translation:

4. “You know that the rulers of the gentiles lord it over them, and
their great men exercise authority over them. It shall not be so among
you; but whoever would be great among you must be your servant.” (Mt
20.25,26)

The various offices in the church do not establish a dominion of
some over the others; on the contrary, they are for the exercise of the
ministry entrusted to and enjoined upon the whole congregation.

We reject the false doctrine, as though the church,
apart from this ministry, could and were permitted to give itself, or
allow to be given to it, special leaders vested with ruling powers.

I would call your attention to the fifth word from the end of the German version. What in English is translated “special leaders” is ausgestattete Führer in the original. I understand that there is nothing that of itself that would raise eyebrows in this language. But when the title “leader” or Führer is the title chosen by the head of state, this is a pretty direct confrontation in my opinion.

And standing by this statement was not without consequences.  While Karl Barth was Swiss and left Germany, Dietrich Bonhoeffer was executed in a prison camp and Martin Niemöller was also imprisoned in concentration camps and narrowly escaped execution himself.  Wikipedia tells us that of the 18,000 Protestant pastors in Germany in 1935, 3000 were strongly adhering to the Confessing Church and of those 700, about one-quarter, were imprisoned at that time.

This is a confessional statement that is very closely tied to its context as much as its content.  It is not a “teaching confession” like the Scots Confession or the Westminster Standards.  And it is not really a snapshot of where the church was at that time like the Confession of 1967 or the Brief Statement of Faith from the PC(USA).  But it’s theological forcefulness at a time of moral crisis has earned it a place in the faith statements of the Presbyterian Church of Aotearoa New Zealand, the Book of Confessions of the PC(USA), and the Evangelical Church in Germany, among others.

The German Confessing Church and the Theological Declaration of Barmen have also produced a modern concept that some consider their theological descendents (one example).  While the concept of speaking truth to power is Biblical there is also a sense in which the co-opting of the spirit Barmen Declaration for a range of modern controversies does not honor the original imperative and weight of the situation in 1934 Germany.  None the less, there are now several groups that have adopted the “confessing” label and aligned themselves with the tradition of speaking Biblical truth, such as the Confessing Church Movement, The Fellowship of Confessing Churches, the Alliance of Confessing Evangelicals, and the Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans.  Likewise the genre of the “we declare/we reject” confessional statement had a revival a few years ago.  (Although I may not be old enough to know if there truly was a lull in the interim.)  The World Alliance of Reformed Churches’ Accra Confession is written in this form as are a lot of other theological documents you will find if you do a Google search.  (Update:  There is a good article from Associated Baptist Press that looks into the modern implications and how nicely Barman has “aged.”)

But the interesting twist on this is that in the “we declare”/”we reject” structure the exclusiveness that is implicit in most confessions becomes explicit.  The Theological Declaration of Barmen tells us forcefully that if you say “Yes” to something you have to say “No” to something else.  What do we say yes and no to in our lives?

6. “Lo, I am with you always, to the close of the age.” (Mt 28.20) “The word of God is not fettered.” (2 Tim 2.9)

The church’s commission, upon which its freedom is founded, consists
in delivering the message of the free grace of God to all people in
Christ’s stead, and therefore in the ministry of his own Word and work
through sermon and sacrament.

We reject the false doctrine, as though the church
in human arrogance could place the word and work of the Lord in the
service of any arbitrarily chosen desires, purposes, and plans.

I Rise To A Point Of Personal Privilege

OK, I don’t do this very often but I could not let this milestone go unheralded…

Today marks the three-year anniversary of this blog.  Over the last three years I have commented on roughly 25 different Assembly meetings around the world, publishing over a quarter-million words in 495 posts.  And there are still 14 drafts in my queue that are waiting to be finished up and shared with other G.A. Junkies.

While I started out, and continue, writing this just because it interests me, I appreciate all of you who read this blog that fills a unique, and in some ways weird, little niche in the world of religion.  Thank you for being there and for your kind, encouraging, and resource-filled comments.

So now the moderator will rule me out of order for using a point of personal privilege to make an announcement and we can return to our regularly scheduled programming.

Being Synod-cal

Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses,
let us also lay aside every weight and the sin that clings so closely,
and let us run with perseverance the race that is set before us,
looking to Jesus the pioneer and perfecter of our faith [Heb. 12:1,2a]

Or

“What a long, strange trip it’s been”

I
started this post just over two years ago and since that time have
returned to it and revised it three other times, not counting this final one.  Such is my faith journey and evolving
thinking on the place of synods in the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
Well, my thinking is still not complete or fixed, but I figured that I
was at a milepost that probably needed an annotation.  So here it
goes…

Over a decade ago I had my first introduction to the
Synod of Southern California and Hawaii as a commissioner to its annual
Assembly.  At the time the Synod was working through some financial
challenges, especially with its camps and conferences program.  At that
meeting the Assembly concurred with the recommendation to sell a
conference center many considered the “crown jewel.”  (Think property
near Malibu.)  While that was clearly not the beginning of the decline,
since the program was becoming tight on cash and the objective was to raise some, in the Synod it is still
remembered as a major mile-marker in the history of the organization’s
slide.

Fast-forward to 2006 and I’m back at Assembly as a
commissioner.  The Synod is in the midst of a transition process and
there are concerns among many commissioners about the slow pace and nature
of the transition.  The office building is probably going to be put on
the market.  Mission giving has declined and per capita monies are dropping. 
The Synod is under stress and it is the view of many, correctly or
incorrectly, that the transition is simply reorganizing to do things
the way they have always been done.  (I stepped into this in progress
so do not personally have a good feel for what was actually happening in that transition work
but a couple of people I trust highly were not optimistic about the progress and direction.)  At the Assembly a substitute motion was adopted that
would hand the transition back to more direct input and control of the presbyteries for a series of
consultations and visioning meetings.  As the Moderator of my
Presbytery I was one of those to participate in the consultations.  All
of this is the background that got me thinking about the place and
future of synods as middle governing bodies of the PC(USA).  And based upon my past experience and the information I had received from others I entered the process with more than a little cynicism about the value of synods.

There are currently sixteen synods in the PC(USA) and as
many of you are probably aware, the place of synods in the denomination is
not just something that I am thinking about but is a topic of
discussion for the PC(USA) as a whole.  Over the last few years there
has been national activity to study, and possibly do away with synods. There was an overture to the 218th General Assembly.  Part of the national funding system for synod support will change, if not disappear.  And the Synod of the Southwest and two of its
presbyteries had serious issues resulting in a national consultation
in February 2007 about the nature and financial viability of the present Middle Governing
Body system.

It is interesting that in the midst of this there
are groups. principally Presbyterians for Renewal, that are looking at
a model for coexistence in the PC(USA) that would have like-minded groups move into a “Seventeenth Synod” that is national and parallel to
the present structure.  (Analysis by Pastor Lance at Full Court Presby)

On the one hand, there are several
strikes against synods in their traditional sense.  They are part of
the earliest structure of the American Presbyterian church, established
before the General Assembly.  But with the advent of faster
transportation and communications the need to have a regional governing
body to improve interaction and connectionalism has disappeared. 
Considering the number of observers that now attend General Assembly a
rough calculation would suggest that more people attend GA than all the
Synod Assemblies combined.  With the decrease in general mission giving
it seems that Synods are being squeezed out between the presbyteries’
and the national budgets.  In light of the lack of resources and
program, do synods still serve a purpose?

In thinking through
this question, working with the consultations, and closely watching our
Synod in operation, I have come to the following conclusion:  The Synod structure currently mandated in the PC(USA) Constitution is not specifically necessary, but there are desirable functions that should be done in “synod-like” entities.  Basically, I do see a need for certain things to be done on a scale above the presbytery but below the General Assembly.  If the synods were to go away these functions could be done by entities that are not individual middle governing bodies, but could be something like “super-presbyteries” or “General Assembly sub-regions.”  So what are these functions?

One group of functions is the ecclesiastical duties, specifically including judicial process and records review.  And this group is recognized in the New Form of Government where the draft includes synods, but allows for “reduced function” to cover only these duties. (3.0404)

I think that the argument for a division of labor in the review of records is fairly straight forward.  At the present time the 16 synods review the records of the 173 presbyteries.  Eliminate the synods and a GA committee would be responsible for the review of all 173.

The concern with the judicial process is partly the same argument.  Eliminate the synod and the GAPJC hears appeals from all 173 presbytery permanent judicial commissions.  But with judicial cases there are some added complexities when you start looking at appeals.  To have a remedial case against a presbytery be heard first by the GAPJC means that it is the court of first impression and the details of having the case reviewed on appeal would need to be worked out.  In addition, to have cases coming from the presbytery PJC’s reviewed twice as appeals, once by the synod PJC and again possibly by the GAPJC, I think helps crystallize the thinking of the final GAPJC decision which can stand as Constitutional interpretation for the denomination.

The other group of functions the synods have is in the area of mission and ministry.  In reviewing what our synod does it struck me that it was a point of collaboration or catalysis for the really big stuff and the really small stuff.  The former are ministry projects that are large enough that they cross presbytery boundaries and having a central point of contact has been helpful.  It is clear from coalitions that have developed on their own that synod involvement is by no means required.  But a case could be made that having the synod as a point of contact makes them more efficient.  (And I can think of a couple of people who might argue that getting the synod involved would make them less efficient.)

Maybe the more important function is working with ministries that are small, a few members from churches scattered throughout the synod.  No church or presbytery has enough involvement to sustain it, but across the whole synod there are enough individuals that they can gather in a meaningful and vital way.  A similar function that I have seen is in matching experience to needs across presbytery lines.  It provides a place for connecting knowledgeable people to more distant points where they can be helpful.  Again, neither of these activities requires the synod — the connections for ministry could be made across presbytery lines without the existence of the synod.  But the hope is that the synod could make the connection more efficient.

Finally, in our connectional system I wonder if we can feel connectional if the governing bodies immediately jump from the presbytery to the General Assembly.  I commented on this a little while back when I asked if the PC(USA) is too big.  In that post my thinking was not specifically that a synod was needed to foster a feeling and understanding of connectionalism on a regional level, but a synod could serve that purpose.

The question that is behind this and must be answered is whether these functions, if they do continue, must be done by a “governing body.”  Could they be done by other affiliated entities?  Under our theory of church government records review and judicial process needs to be conducted by a governing body.  But this could be satisfied by a change to the constitution that would allow ecclesiastical functions to shift from synods to GA to be conducted by regional commissions that are administered by the Office of the General Assembly.  This would approximate the synod system while reducing administrative levels and creating cost savings with economies of scale.  And while we presently understand there to be one court per governing body this cold be structured and viewed as one court with different branches.

Ministry and mission on the synod level is not as closely tied in our polity to being conducted by a governing body so it could be shifted in a number of ways including back to the presbyteries, up to GAC, or to networks, collaborations, or coalitions of presbyteries.  The problem is that without oversight or facilitation will the mission be done or die on the vine?  The flip side is that it would put pressure for the fulfilling of G-9.0402b:

b. The administration of mission should be performed by the governing body that can most effectively and efficiently accomplish it at the level of jurisdiction nearest the congregation.

This is partly just a though exercise in how the system could be stream-lined if that is what it needs financially, administratively, or practically.  At the present time the GA has chosen not to make changes to the system.  The question that I can not answer at this point is whether for the other 15 synods this is what will need to happen.  For the Synod of Southern California and Hawaii it is not something that is required at this time.  But the thinking is necessary, because going forward even five years there could be the need for radical restructuring in multiple synods, possibly including mine.

So where does that leave me?  After two years of participating in consultations, visioning and redesign of our synod I have become convinced that synods can play an important part in our connectional system.  By no means does this mean they are indispensable — I am also convinced that given the apparent realities of the future in a decade the PC(USA) middle governing body structure will look different than today.  It will be seen how radically different the structure looks and that different structure may or may not include synods.

My personal journey with my synod has taken many twists and turns, both in my thinking and my activity.  As I outline above, I have revised my thinking somewhat and think that there is a place for synods at the present time, although there will have to be some serious evaluation in the near future for some of the synods and the denomination as a whole.  And this thinking and activity on my part will continue:  The redesign work I helped with created a radically reorganized ministry unit which I was then asked to chair and “get off the ground” in 2008.  One of the implications of this service is that in 2009 it means that I will serve the synod as the Moderator, a job I am truly looking forward to.  So my “long strange trip” continues.

As a programming note, don’t expect much more about my synod Moderatorial work here.  As usual, if polity items arise or I want to revisit the nature and necessity of synods, that will appear here.  But to help facilitate the communication within the Synod of Southern California and Hawaii I will also have a moderators blog — Everything in Moderation.  In a sense, this blog will continue in chronos time w
hile the other will focus on the kairos time of the Moderatorial year.  The journey of faith continues and it will probably be as interesting as the journey that got me here.

Passings — Rev. Louis Evans Jr.

The Rev. Louis H. Evans Jr. joined the Church Triumphant on October 28 after an earthly struggle with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, aka Lou Gehrig’s Disease.  As you can see from the L.A. Time article, he had an impressive lineage and resume.  He was the organizing pastor of Bel Air Presbyterian Church here in L.A. and was the senior pastor at National Presbyterian Church in Washington, D.C.  He provided great service to the Lord Jesus Christ through his work in the church and there are numerous articles testifying to that effort.  And Ken Malloy, one of the TV news anchors in Fresno where the Evans’ lived, has a tribute to Rev. Evans on his blog.

But I want to share my one experience with Rev. Evans.  Several years ago our church invited Louie and Coke, as Pastor Evans and his wife Colleen were know, to lead a couples retreat for the church.  It was a wonderful weekend, they were warm, charming, entertaining, informative and challenging.  They did not have a hint of pretense but were “down to earth” people and meshed with the folks from our church right from the start.  They did have stories, mostly told on themselves, and that just added to their charm and familiarity.

I got to sit next to Louie at one of the meals and discovered we were both “GA Junkies” of another type.  That would be G.A. as in “General Aviation,” the technical term for private pilots and non-commercial aviation.  I am not a pilot but have a great interest and follow the field.  He had his private pilot’s license and once he found that he had an interested party to listen to more of his stories he was more than eager to swap tales.

It was a delightful weekend and I thank God for the two of them and their ministry which was continuing even at that point in their lives.  May God comfort his family with the knowledge that he is surely in God’s presence.  “Well done good and faithful servant.”

Passings — Evan Silverstein, PNS Reporter

It was with a heavy heart that I read the news today from the Presbyterian News Service that Senior Reporter Evan Silverstein passed away yesterday at his Louisville home.

While the news article gives details on his life and work, I will say that I enjoyed his articles for the tone, balance, and insight of his stories.  Maybe it does take an “outsider” to really show us what a “peculiar people” we are.  He covered a lot of the news from the field, not so much about our polity discussion, but about the people on the front lines and the people we, as a denomination, touched.  Evan, thanks for your work.

Magnified and sanctified be G-d’s great name in the world which He created according to His will.

All Saints Day 2008

For all the saints who from their labors rest,
Who thee by faith before the world confessed,
Thy name O Jesus, be forever blest.
Alleluia!  Alleluia!

If you have begun reading my blog in the last year I need to introduce you to one of my spiritual disciplines.  I use a few of the “feast days” in the traditional liturgical calendar as a way of reminding myself of the faithful lives that saints, those officially canonized and others not so formally declared, lived and displayed to the world.  But for me, the most significant is today, the Feast of All Saints, when I remember the saints I have known and that have been an inspiration to me in my spiritual journey, especially those who have joined the Church Triumphant in the past year.

This year I especially remember:

  • Dorothy — who though restricted in movement still attended worship and fellowship events at church with a smile that showed how much she loved the Lord and being part of the covenant community
  • Sonny — a dear friend and a wonderful, cheerful, faithful, and dedicated worker as long as he was able
  • Jean — who for years I saw working for the church doing little acts of hospitality and concern
  • Rose — someone who understood the wider church and cared about it more than most
  • Jack — how do I describe a saint like Jack?  While he would never accord himself the title, he was a “street” theologian who understood Reformed theology as well as anyone around here and would share his insights enthusiastically.  And as much as Jack understood what lay on the other side, he fought mightily to stay with the Church Militant
  • Robert — He demonstrated the essence of what it meant to be a Christian in the public arena
  • Bill — He always had a smile on his face and had good reason to, including a marriage that was in its seventh decade

These and others now praise God around the throne with the Church Triumphant.  Well done good and faithful servants.  And thanks for inspiring me.  May I run the race as well.

O blest communion, fellowship divine
We feebly struggle, they in glory shine;
Yet all are one in Thee, for all are Thine.
Alleluia!  Alleluia!

Thoughts on Leadership — When Theology Intersects the Secular

Well, we are in the final stretch of the U.S. presidential election. (Praise God!)  The major political conventions are over and those provided some surprises.  But throughout the multi-year campaigns faith, religion, spirituality and church attendance has been an issue like I can not remember in any previous election cycle. 

While I may be a GA Junkie I am not that much of a junkie for secular politics.  I follow it, but not closely.  I say this at the outset because this post 1) is intended to discuss the theological and religious aspects and not the secular implications, 2) this is based upon my observations which are not scientific or complete, and 3) feedback on theology is welcome but purely secular political comments will not be posted.

While a number of faith & politics issues have caught my attention, and continue to intrigue me, my thinking, overlap with the regular content of this blog, and reasonable citations lead me to comment on two areas today — experience and women in leadership.

Experience
I must admit to being a bit cynical about the political process and this political cartoon by Marshall Ramsey pushed both the cynicism button and made me laugh at how the whole “experience” thing has played out this campaign season.

I must admit that I find the experience argument in the presidential campaign to be somewhat amusing.  The charges, claims and counter claims should force one to think about what previous experiences are important and relevant.  Also, how much experience should one have in a particular position?  For the two “young, energetic and historic candidate[s] with little experience” I note that while one has almost twice as much experience as the other in a “national” office, neither has completed their first term in that office.

However, I am always amazed in the scriptures that God seems to chose the unlikely candidate for leadership.  Moses was a murderer on the run, David was the youngest of eight brothers and why would God chose the youngest, and many of Jesus’ disciples were not well placed in society or religion being working class, Galileans, and, horror of horrors, a tax collector.

But in each of the examples above, while the unlikely were chosen they either had, or would get important experience before they were thrust into leadership.  As a general rule when it comes to major Biblical leaders, the unlikely are chosen but they are prepared for their role.

I find there to be an interesting juxtaposition with the leadership selections made at this summer’s 218th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.).  In the case of the Moderator, the Assembly chose a candidate with some experience in higher governing bodies, but with no experience as the Moderator of a middle governing body.  In the case of the State Clerk election the Assembly chose the candidate with the most experience as a Stated Clerk having served as both a Presbytery Stated Clerk and a General Assembly Associate Stated Clerk.

It has also struck me that in both the presidential and moderatorial election campaigns youth and associated lack of experience, seem to be related to change, new ideas, and renewal.  Right or wrong, if someone is younger they are more likely to be viewed as better connected with new ideas and new ways of doing things.  (I do realize that a political partisan might view it that “my candidate does but not that other one.”)

And for a final parting thought on this topic, check out this post by DP Cassidy over at In Hoc Signo.

Women in Leadership
Since the party conventions many religious blogs have taken up the topic of women in leadership in a way that I don’t remember from earlier in the election cycle.  After all, at any point in this election process there was always a female candidate in the race.

Maybe the highest profile blog to ask the question about women in political leadership but not uniformly in religious leadership is On Faith which asked its religious panel if this was hypocritical.  Needless to say the answers were across the spectrum, which is what that blog is about.  The blog Ethics Daily discussed a switch in position of Southern Baptist Leaders from the ten year old statement that women should be in the home to the position that it is OK for women to serve in high office.  And in the recent frenzy in the blogosphere you can find posts on Presbyterian blogs including the Bayly Blog, Conversational Theology, Tribal Church, and A Church for Starving Artists as well as other blogs, like Ethics Daily and Vintage Faith, that touch on this complimentarian discussion and the role of women, particularly if the secular world differs from religious leadership.

Two additional observations about this topic:
First, in the Pentecostal tradition there is a long standing tradition of women in leadership, with Aimee Semple McPherson being an example.
Second, in the presidential race why did this suddenly become such a hot topic in reformed circles right around the time of the conventions?  Political and denominational affiliation probably were in play as well as family responsibilities and having a new candidate to raise the topic again.  The questions related to women in leadership positions are valid ones, but lets either ask them uniformly or hypothetically.

Enough secular politics for now.  These are areas where the secular news has overlapped with what Presbyterians are dealing with right now.

UPDATE 9/16/08:  1) Thanks to the comment below I guess I need to refer to Conversational Theology as a “transient Presbyterian blog”   2)  Overnight Michael Kruse over at the Kruse Kronicle has posted a thoughtful and detailed piece on complimentarianism in the present political context.  He also points out an opinion piece on the USA Today web site that discusses it as well.

Keeping the Lord’s Day — Revisited

Regular readers of this blog know that I have half seriously/half humorously visited the topic of keeping the Lord’s Day before.  While I do have some fun with this topic, our family does try to keep in mind that this is a day set aside for God.  However it sometimes seems to be a far cry from a “day of rest” when we have five people all going in four different directions on a Sunday evening: our daughter to worship and my wife and I to our small group Bible study, while still needing to get the boys to their respective small group studies.  And while we may spend time on Sunday afternoons getting odd jobs done around the house, we do try not to go shopping or go out to eat.  And yes, like yesterday when I sat down and watched a bit of an MLS game and part of the Canada-Honduras soccer match, we do sometimes relax in front of the television, usually watching sports.

One thing that is interesting to note about the commandment to set a day apart for God is that it is the longest of the commandments.  It gives not just the command that nobody and no animal in the household is to do work, but also the rational that God worked for six days and rested on the seventh.  Any polity wonk would think that with that much documentation serious consideration should be given to it.

While I would say that our family is respectful but not legalistic about the Lord’s Day, an interesting poll and discussion has begun over on the PuritanBoard about “Is watching NFL Football a violation of the 4th commandment?”  At the moment in the poll the results are running 20-8 that it is a violation.

But what is more interesting is looking at the discussion.  This is not a simple yes/no question as the various issues brought up in the discussion address.  There are so many subtleties and aspects that it would make a group of rabbis debating the law proud.  Such issues as…

Is it a violation of the sabbath just because of what I do or also because those I am watching are working?

Is it a violation if I record the game on Sunday but watch it another day?

Is it a violation if I recorded it on Saturday and watch it on Sunday?

Does the Lord’s Day begin and end at midnight or at sunset and if it is that latter can I watch the late game?

Is participating in a PuritanBoard discussion work and so should PuritanBoard be shut down on the Lord’s Day?

So we Presbyterian and Reformed hold this, like other things, in the tension of taking God’s Word seriously while still being gracious and not legalistic about the commandments.