Joshua Pittman

A Spirituality for the Digital Age

Dec Church Newsletter article

 

     Advent is upon us and I have having a hard time embracing the necessary excitement or passion for the coming of the Christ Child.  I look at the weeks of Advent leading up the Birth of Christ and I don't really know what to feel. I know we are supposed to celebrate Hope, Love, Peace and Joy as the pillars of this liturgical season, but I can't seem to muster up the enthusiasm. I see a world hurting. I see a world on fire.

     Where Native Americans are fighting for clean water and the respect of their ancestors I see a world where students  fear for their lives well they try to learn reading and writing and arithmetic. I see wildfires raging.  I see a country divided by race and economics and political party. I see now more than ever we as Christians have a great a responsibility to be Salt and Light to be help in a world of Darkness now more than ever before. When there does not seem to be much hope peace Joy or love in the world we must bring Hope to them. If we are the hands and feet of Christ we have the power of Salvation and Grace the power of redemption and restoration, and it is our job and our joy to bring healing and hope to our community.

     How we do this I'm unsure but I do know that we have to start the conversation. That we have to begin to talk about how we can heal. I am convinced that neither the private sector nor the public sector can fix our problems but we as the religious sector, as people of faith, have the power and the responsibility to do what these other two groups cannot. So as we make ourselves ready for the Christmas season, as we hang our lights and decorate our trees, as we buy Gifts and get ready for all the festivities, I want us to think about what the birth of Christ means to us. How it changed the world over 2000 years ago and how by our celebrating Christ birth this year. how can it change the world again?

 

Grace and peace

 

Pastor Joshua Pittman

 

Advent Hope? Where has Hope Gone.

Over the last few weeks I have seen the polarized nature of humanity.  I have watched white men in a board room salute our future President as if he was their Fuhrer, and I have watched as the people of Standing Rock have stood up to power and have consequently been sprayed with water cannons and shot with rubber bullets. On Sunday, in my own neighborhood in St. Louis, a young man allegedly ambushed a police officer shooting him in the face, and within hours he lost his life. I have listened to the right and the left, the victors and the defeated, and in all of it there is a need. A need for action.  Now more than ever people need to know that we are Christians.  Not by our politics and not by our theology, but by our love. That we as the people of God, need to embody that love.  Rather than counting our blessing this Holiday Season, why don’t we become the force for Good? Why don't be become a blessing for someone else?  

 

This week Cornel West put it quite well in his article in the Guardian, “For us in these times, to even have hope is too abstract, too detached, too spectatorial. Instead we must be a hope, a participant and a force for good …” If you rather Mahatma Gandhi said it as “You must be the change you wish to see in the world.” Paul tells us that together we are the body of Christ.  We are the Hands and feet of Christ.  We as Christian have heard this saying so often, that we do not grasp the full meaning of this text.  Think about the full ramifications of I Corinthians 12.  If together we are the Body of Christ, then together we have the power of salvation and redemption. We have the ability and means by which we can change this world, that we can renew this global community.  Why can’t we be strong and kind? Why can’t we stand against injustice and still care for the oppressors? How do we stand for the weak and beat back the mighty, all while making sure we have a roof over our heads and our kids get to school?

 

We have world size problems in the midst of our small daily lives. No one person is going to fix these problems, not even the President, for our issues are greater than the lack of economic opportunity or the racial divide.  We have greater problems than legalizing Cannabis or signing the TPP. At the base of it all we have a deficit in America, the lack Faith. We as Christians have relinquished our station as moral and ethical standard bearers.  We have vacated our position as Spiritual Entrepreneurs.  When our country was young and settlers trekked out into the wilderness to form new communities, these immigrants had needs.  They needed Schools and Hospitals.  Those trailblazers turned to people of faith. In St. Louis alone, we have three hospital systems whose roots are Baptist, Catholic and Jewish. Before there was Social Security or Medicare there was the church, and yet the people of faith (for the most part) have turned these endeavors over to public or private entities (for lots of good reasons). My question is, what are we working towards now?

 

We used to have such a strong a relationship with our community that when it was in trouble they would come to us, but this is not the case anymore. Or rather the community did not have to come to us because we were so involved with helping our neighbor that we knew what they needed before they asked. This relational bond no longer exists because we have shown our communities that we are no longer a place to pursue the divine, but rather an entity concerned with its own survival. We are afraid of the people we are called to help, and the help we offer is temporary.  We are more concerned with budgets and membership rolls than our community at large. We look at numbers and not people.  We believe that we can help the church survive if we modernize it or make it more relevant in some way, but this is false.  We cannot use the tools of the secularism to invigorate our churches.  We are to be in this world, but not of this world.  Using this thinking we become another company, another non-profit. We think that we need to have numbers, money or status in order to effect change, yet that is not the model that Christ gave us.  Christ did not gain followers until he started being the change he wanted to see in the world, until he started teaching, challenging the status quo and healing the crowds didn’t appear. It is time for a grand new design a bold experiment.

 

When we take the 1st century and the 21st century church, we must form a new way for the people of faith, not a right or left way, and not a middle way where we take a little from both sides, but the Highway.  What would it look like if instead of closing our churches, which are no longer viable, we converted them into a small business incubator or efficiency apartments for the homeless, housing for wounded veterans housing, or transitional housing for refugees? What would it look like if we allowed grassroots organizations to use our unused facility space to tackle issues like voter suppression,campaign finance reform, or price caps for prescription drugs?  There are issues that we as people of faith can agree on, and if we could unite under one cause, we could effect true change.  There use to be three sectors that made up the fabric of America: the Public Sector, the Private Sector, and the Religious sector.  If the private sector won’t take on these issues and the Public sector is gridlocked, why can’t the religious sector tackle these type of issues? Now more than ever, people need faith and they need their faith leaders to stand for something.

How we come to Faith?

In my humble opinion, many people come to faith for reasons that are less than selfish. We tend to think our lives are at a less than optimal state, or rather, that they are abysmal. We need help with the content of our reality. “God, give me a Porsche. God, help me with the math test (I know I studied). God save my loved one.…”

The Foxhole and the Malcontent

From my experience, I have concluded there are two types of faith seekers, the Foxhole and the Malcontent. Foxhole seekers are people who ask for help when they find themselves in a painful negative situation and then return to their previous lifestyles when that pain goes away.

Then there is the Malcontent, which means:

mal·con·tent [‘malkən,tent]
noun
1. a person who is dissatisfied and rebellious.
synonyms: troublemaker, mischief-maker, agitator, dissident, rebel, rabble-rouser
adjective
1.     dissatisfied and complaining or making trouble.
https://www.google.com/search?q=malcontent&oq=malcontent&aqs=chrome.0.69i57j5j0l2.496j0&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8

In general, a Malcontent one who is dissatisfied with life. Both paths are legitimate and both require different types of effort and spiritual work to enter faith.

We all long for more from this life

We want meaning to our life. We want purpose. Often we have exhausted all avenues of self benefit/indulgence including food, sex, money, knowledge and power. Though finding the dross within, we still turn to other self-indulgent paths. It is as if we were a child's puzzle missing just one piece. We know what the picture is and we know what shape we are looking for, but alas, the piece eludes us.

We all long for more from this life. It seems to almost be an innate law of humanity to be discontent with our current state or with our lot in life. Furthermore, disconnectedness is irrespective of the wealth, fame or accolades we may acquire. Some give up because the evolution process required is too difficult. They fall back to the pile of misshapen pieces strewn across the floor.

The missing piece — asking God for help

What God is waiting for us is for us to look up and ask our heavenly parent, "Hey, have you seen my missing piece?" Children at birth understand their place. My boys ask me for help everyday but as they master how to walk, speak and run, they do not ask for my help. If I try to force my help upon them or hover over them, they get mad at me. I often hear "I can do it, Dad!"

"I need help." This may sound simple but it is counter intuitive for humanity. We think we have all the answers within us. We think we can access the answers around us without surrender. We think we are grown when, in actuality, we are babes in the spirit. We do not think we need someone to take us by the hand and show us how to eat, walk and speak.

Luke 18:15-17
15People were bringing even infants to him that he might touch them; and when the disciples saw it, they sternly ordered them not to do it.16But Jesus called for them and said, “Let the little children come to me, and do not stop them; for it is to such as these that the kingdom of God belongs. 17Truly I tell you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of God as a little child will never enter it.”
http://bible.oremus.org/?ql=91871856

Just food for thought

-Joshua  

Violence and Syria

Violence in Syria

http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/johncassidy/2013/08/john-kerrys-case-for-bombing-syria.html

When it comes to Syria, I understand and take into consideration that there are geopolitical forces beyond my experience and understanding. I agree with President Obama that action must be taken against the government of Syria for launching weapons of mass destruction against its own people. When you are a leader and you say there is a red line, then you have to take action or you will lose all your credibility.

That being said, I question any groups first response is violence. We live in the country that brought you space travel, the Internet, and Big Macs.  All we can come up with is bombing. It seems very Yosemite Sam to me 

“Ya better say your prayers, ya flea-bitten varmint … I’m-a-gonna blow ya to smithereenies!”

The Syrian government killed their own and now we are going to kill more of their own to show them. No wonder the world thinks we are arrogant and self righteous. I am not a pacifist by any means but I have to think that there is another way. What is our individual response?  What is the responsibility of the Church?

Thoughts?

 

-Joshua

Voted in as Pastor of Warwick UCC

Sunday I was voted in as Pastor of Warwick United Church of Christ, an Open and Affirming congregation in Newport News, VA. (www.warwickucc.com) 

It has been such an interesting ride since I left my last church as a Baptist on September 1, 2010. More than three years later, I am in a new position. Granted, I have been working for Warwick UCC since 2012 as a consultant, waiting from my documents to go though the regional board.

I left my last church thinking that I would never work in a church again. Through faith, chance or design, I made my way to fill the pulpit at Warwick and one month turned to two. Then two months turned into long term supply and next they offered me a position as general consultant and now pastor. It has been a time of healing and growth for me as a person and as a minister. I was broken and empty when I came to Warwick. During my short time here, they have breathed life into my soul once more. I am honored to finally serve them as pastor.

Interestingly enough, my last church was a moderate/conservative Baptist church and now I work for one of the most progressive churches on the Peninsula. It has been so freeing to not worry about the theology of exclusivity and elitism. I am not saying that Warwick is a perfect church; we have had our rough spots but we have worked through it. Though we may not always agree about a process, perspective or an approach, we are not fighting about clergy equality (women or gays in the pulpit), congregational diversity, marriage equality, social justice or activism. I feel like a millstone has been lifted from my neck.

I am looking forward to the continued work at Warwick and the force for good we can become. We have laid a foundation of resurrection for the church. During our short time together, we have refurbished the church and set a new course for future. I am excited by the work that awaits us and the opportunity to bring hope to the people of Newport News

 

-Joshua

 

 

Beginning a New Endevor

I have decided to write down some of the thoughts that keep swirling around in my head. I 

have so many ideas and options and have resolved to be transparent in their conception and 

implementation. Though no one may ever read these thoughts, maybe they will help with the 

inner quandaries of the wandering spiritual traveler.

-Joshua