Our Daily Bread with Fresh Vegetables on the Side

A recent national survey reveals that more U.S. states now have greater numbers of obese persons living within their borders.  It should come as no surprise that states with especially high numbers of overweight residents are those with the largest metropolitan centers.  Big cities have lots of poor folks, and the poor are less likely to have healthy food choices. So much for good, wholesome daily bread–or anything else for that matter.

In my own city of Detroit, where more than a third of the citizenry have no automobile access, the neighborhood shopping is often limited to convenience stores and high-priced local grocers. The larger, cheaper, and cleaner supermarket chains pulled out of the city years ago, preferring to relocate in the suburbs.  With no car and a nearly non-existent public transit system, the poor are forced to pay exorbitant prices for  produce and other food that is often only marginally fresh.

Jesus taught that we should pray for nothing but our daily bread.  If we believe in the essential goodness of God, we understand what he meant.  But what if business decisions and public policy pronouncements effectively impede the divine prerogative vis-a-vis food access?  I submit that the shalom of God is violated every time a single human being is denied sustenance because of accident of birth or place of residence.  What might be the mission implications for a congregation looking to engage in a non-patronizing  inner city ministry?  Food pantries are one thing, but systemic change is much more faithful to what we are called to do as the people of God.  And consider the societal benefits of lower incidences of diabetes, hypertension and the like.  Less wear and tear on an overburdened health care system, and maybe even lower health care cost for all of us.

It seems to me that every human being has a basic right to good, healthy food.  It is, after all, a  fundamental matter of justice.  Have we ignored this issue because it is an inner city thing?  If so, shame on all of us.

Leave a comment

Filed under Social justice

Leaving Home

Novelist Anne Rice, perhaps best known for her Interview with the Vampire, and who also wrote a story about the young Jesus a few years back, has left her Roman Catholic faith.  The author cited her growing discomfort with what she perceived as ecclesiastical  intolerance of gays, women, abortion rights, Democrats, secular humanism, etc. and declared that she was through being a Christian.  Wow!

In making her pronouncement, Rice made it clear that she was still a follower of Christ–just not in the context of an organized community.  While I sympathize with Rice, there is a problem with her logic: Christianity, by it’s very nature, is a communal faith.  And while I can easily understand one’s displeasure with the perception of exclusivity–the human tendency to set up walls around the Lord’s Table–the church, with all its flaws, is still the body of Christ.

Eugene Peterson reminds us that the church should not be known by what it does, negative or positive, but rather by what it is.  I can tell you that such an observation has picked me up from near despair over the “failure” of the church and the yearning for a programmatic congregation that does all sorts of good and exciting things.  That reminder has freed me to celebrate the goodness of the church simply because it is the Christbody.

As one who has been a disciple since I was an adolescent, the church is my home.  I suspect that Anne Rice is deeply grieved over having left hers.  Perhaps one day, she will find her way back.

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

America the Indignant

While listening to “The Takeaway” on NPR this morning, I was impressed with the comments of co-host John Hockenberry regarding the controversy now swirling around the proposed construction of a mosque near Ground Zero in lower Manhattan.

Hockenberry observed that a kind of “religion” has grown up around Ground Zero, which is not actually religious in nature, but rather a kind of secular devotion that maintains an odd sacredness of the environs.  While not discounting the tragic reality that there are yet human remains in various forms on that site, he points out that such veneration is unique to that particular space.  One thinks of the memorial in Oklahoma City that does not possess nearly the same sanctity.

The opponents of the Islamic structure, which is actually a community center that will include a mosque, seem to equate the evil that played out there on September 11, 2001 with the religion of the perpetrators.  In places across the country where Muslims are noticeably absent, there is a profound suspicion of adherents to that faith.  Most folks don’t stop to consider that members of the KKK are often nominal Christians.  Evil done in the name of religion is still evil.

Perhaps Hockenberry’s analysis is telling.  American Christianity often morphs into a pseudo-secular faith that equates patriotism with righteousness.   The furor over the Muslim center falls into that trap.

1 Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Welcome to Raising Basileia!

I hope I wasn’t excessively obtuse in choosing the name of my blog.  My wife reminds me of that tendency from time to time.  Not a positive attribute for a preacher, I suppose.  I only hope that occasionally I will have something edifying to say.

I’ve been threatening to launch this project for some time now, and I wanted to begin an intelligent and sensitive dialogue about what I perceive as the heart of the Christian faith.  The Greek word basileia is often translated into English as kingdom, as in “kingdom of God.”  It’s the word the gospel writers used when Jesus taught what has come to be known as the Lord’s Prayer in the Sermon on the Mount (or on the plain).  Jesus often spoke of the “kingdom” as being in us and around us.  And yet, its essence is often just beyond our grasp in the present.

Raising Basileia, with a discernible nod to the Coen brothers (e.g Raising Arizona), which I hope is neither pedestrian nor crass, is an attempt to talk about the notion of heavenly kingdom in a manner that avoids offensive piety and reminds all of us of the Divine Presence in every day life.  There is way too much rancor in religious circles these days, much of it taking a decidedly nasty political tone.  I want to avoid that, for it is not helpful to any of us.

Since none of us can hasten the coming of the Kingdom, although we social liberals often fall into the trap of thinking we can, I submit that what we all ought to be doing is striving to recognize the reality of the Kingdom in our midst.  I have come to believe that the Christian faith–or rather the faith of Jesus– is not about individual salvation, but about living with this kingdom awareness.

So, here’s to raising a little basileia!

2 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

Hello world!

Welcome to WordPress.com. This is your first post. Edit or delete it and start blogging!

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized