Saturday, March 31, 2007

Are You Paying Attention?: The Human Network

Are You Paying Attention?: The Human Network

So I have been watching these series of commercials on T.V. during the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament. It is by a company called CISCO. You may have seen their logo. It looks like this:
welcome to the human network.

"Welcome to the Human Network". What does that mean?
The Human Network means that there is no more audience. There are no more users. There are only participants. Participants in a human scale network.


Participants do not passively consume what an author, creator, director, developer, editor, critic or media outlet has to publish. They do not accept the authority. They do not sit silently ready to have their eyeballs converted into cash.

Participants participate. They create their own original information, entertainment and art. They remix their own version of mainstream pop culture- copyrighted or not. They post their thoughts, publish their fears and fact check every announcement. They share with their friends and discover the quirky and interesting, making it an instant blockbuster- at least for 15 minutes.

Participants are no longer eyeballs to be converted. They are ideas to be declared. Individually they are a market of one. Collectively they are a trend, a publishing powerhouse and a voice to be heard. A voice that has something to say.

Participants have changed the way media is published and interactions are monetized. But more broadly and importantly than that, they have changed the flow of global information from top down to bottom up. They are changing the tone and tempo of the conversation.

So is this how the world looks today? If so, how does the church fit into something like this? New series of questions that has now sparked my interest: Can Fundamentalism fit into a world that looks like this?

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Above All Earthly Powers: The Supremacy of Christ in a Postmodern World

Videos :: Desiring God

These interviews with some of the speakers at the 2006 Desiring God National Conference (Sept. 29-Oct. 1, 2006) were used in promotion of the event. I want you to especially watch the ones by John Piper and Mark Driscoll. Piper gives an overview of what this conference was to be about. Driscoll gives an emerging church point of view that sounds more thought out than the book that I am currently reading, Emerging Churches. He has thought about this and sees the Emerging Church "movement" for what it is, unlike the book which sees all emerging churches as on the same playing field. Let me know your thoughts.

Here are some notable interviews:

John Piper
  • What is the nature of postmodernism?
  • What are some effects of postmodernism?
Mark Driscoll
  • Seeker vs. Missional- Part 1 and 2
  • Biblical Principals and Cultural Methods
  • Style in Ministry
  • The Importance of Theology
  • The Need of Cultural Immersion
  • Relating to Sinners
Tim Keller
  • Is the Bible Culturally Conditioned?
David Wells
  • Postmodernity Defined
  • Religious Pluralism in America
  • Emergent vs. Traditional and Seeker

Saturday, March 17, 2007

Discussion from Contemporary Theological Issues Class at Baptist Bible Seminary- My Reply to Other Students Reply

Be sure to read the previous post before this one.

In short, I reject the reactionary position that the church is to be summarized solely as missional. Mission is an essential part of the church, but it is only one of many essential parts. God is love, but it is wrong to say that love is God. Similarly, the Church is to be missional, but mission is not to be the Church.

I want to add some thoughts and through out some questions.

I am still trying to wrap my mind around all of this and have made some harsh comments in other discussions. But if the church doesn't take the role as the primary means of "missions", who does? Matthew 28:18-20 says,

18And Jesus came up and spoke to them, saying, "All authority has been given to Me in heaven and on earth. 19 "Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, 20 teaching them to observe all that I commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age."

The main verb here is "make disciples." We are to go make disciples, baptize those disciples, and teach those disciples. Now I don't know what order the last two (baptize and teach) come but we have to go to those people in order to let them know about Jesus. Evangelism only happens when we go to them. Sure we can invite them to our church and our pastor can evangelize to them but I pray we have already been evangelizing before they get to church. The gospel has to connect to every aspect of our ministry. Everything we are about has to be evangelizing. Why do we do what we do? Because of the gospel. Why do we believe what we believe? Because of the gospel.

What are we training our people for? Ephesians 4:12 "...for the equipping of the saints for the work of service, to the building up of the body of Christ." How does the body of Christ build? By first evangelizing. The building has to grow in order to remain healthy. Just like us. We have to keep growing. We can not grow if parts start to die. And I think alot of churches are doing this today. We are so inward focused. You made the comment, "but I would suggest that the Scriptures indicate that our first and primary focus is to be on loving and meeting the needs of other believers" but I ask...How do those believers become believers? Can we really say that the primary focus is to be on loving and meeting the needs of other believers if we aren't creating other believers. Eventually those believers are going to die and then what? So what becomes the primary focus then?

I want to continue challenging this with a thought on being too "Jewish" in our thoughts. We can't discredit the unsaved public because we were apart of them at one point. The comment we made "I am unable to think of a text that exhorts the church specifically to meet the needs of non-Christian widows in the surrounding community." Let me help you with a couple. Mark 7:24-30 talks of a Canaanite woman that begged Jesus to heal her demon possessed daughter. Jesus and His disciples both strugged her off but she persisted to the point of going into the house and getting on her stomach, prostrate before Jesus' feet under the table in which He was eating. He became amazed by her faith and healed her daughter. But here is the point. Why did He help her? She was a gentile "dog" (grk. "puppy"). Because she recognized Him as Lord. She wasn't apart of Israel which He says in Matthew 15:24 that He was here only for the lost sheep of Israel. Not Canaan. Jesus extends a "mini-blessing" to this woman.

The second comes in the garden of Gethsemane. In John 17 Jesus prays threefold; He prays for Himself, His disciples, His disciples disciples. In verses 17 and 18 it says; John 17:17-18 17 "Sanctify them in the truth; Your word is truth. 18 "As You sent Me into the world, I also have sent them into the world. Jesus here again places an importance on going into the world. He even says that He sends them (the apostles). Then in verses 20-26 Jesus prays for me and you and everybody that is going to "believe in Me throgh their [the apostles] message." He prays that the world may know! Know what? Jesus as the Son of God the Father!

Now my goal in this long post is not to sound like I am on board with the Emerging Church in anyway but draw attention to the fact that they may be right in this area. The book of Ephesians stresses the point on the building of the Church but the goal isn't to just fill eachother full of knowledge. It is to prepare everyone for the "work of the ministry." In Ephesians 3 Paul talks about how he proclaimed "the mystery." What is this mystery"? It's the gospel! So back to my earlier point. The gospel has to be connected to every aspect of our ministry and our Christian lives. I believe that we have created these really good clubs that talk about, learn about, and sing about Jesus. But we really can't call ourselves a New Testament church, one that is concerned for Christless souls and does something about it, if we really aren't making the gospel THE priority.

Discussion from Contemporary Theological Issues Class at Baptist Bible Seminary- Other Student Reply

Be sure to read the previous post before reading this one.

“Our focus needs to change from just ministering to those within our midst to those that are outside our doors.”

I think I understand the idea behind this sentence, and I agree that Christians need to express genuine love and compassion for those outside of the church. At the same time, this sentence reflects a line of thought that emerged within our reading, that the primary focus of the church should somehow be on those outside of the church, essentially expanding the borders of the church, emphasizing an outward orientation versus an inward orientation.

The point at which I take exception with such a stand is at the point where the word ‘primary’ is inserted. Certainly, there is no doubt that we are to love our neighbors and our enemies, that we are to do acts of goodness and kindness to all men in all places, but I would suggest that the Scriptures indicate that our first and primary focus is to be on loving and meeting the needs of other believers.

As a quick example, consider the case of the widows. Throughout the New Testament, Christians are encouraged to meet the needs of the widows within their community, but I am unable to think of a text that exhorts the church specifically to meet the needs of non-Christian widows in the surrounding community.

As one other example, consider this statement from Earl Radmacher. (I have to paraphrase it, as he made the comment during a class session I attended, and I do not have the comment in writing.) He was speaking concerning prayer for salvation of the nonbeliever. He suggested that the biblical pattern calls for believers to pray for one another and to proclaim the Gospel to nonbelievers, and asserted that there was no

scripture that exhorted believers to pray for the salvation of nonbelievers. (Dr. Radmacher did leave one possible exception, the verse in which Paul says that his prayer, desire or wish is for the salvation of the Jews.) Whether we think he is overstating his case or not, we must agree that there is a difference in New Testament teaching between

how we are to act toward those within the church and those outside the Church. And, yes, this demands that we observe a boundary or separation between church members and non-church members.

In short, I reject the reactionary position that the church is to be summarized solely as missional. Mission is an essential part of the church, but it is only one of many essential parts. God is love, but it is wrong to say that love is God. Similarly, the Church is to be missional, but mission is not to be the Church.

Discussion from Contemporary Theological Issues Class at Baptist Bible Seminary

A student in my class began a discussion on "Missional Ministry" with this post. I am going to post a reply to this post and then my reply to that reply.

For many churches when we talk about missions or missions it is a program of the church. We have a missions committee and we have missions conferences. The emphasis is not on the here, but the far away.

Everything that we do as a church and as individuals should have a component of incorporating non churched people into the family of God. The emerging missional movement challenges the traditional approach.

"Rather than measuring the church by its attendance, we will measure it by its deployment," McLaren said.

Our focus needs to change from just ministering to those within our midst to those that are outside our doors. Many of these churches are holding so strongly to an old model that they are dying before our eyes. They are not making disciples and they are not reaching out. The real challenge is not change but will be survival. However, for most they are not aware of the situation. They have elevated the model to doctrine and thus are going down on a ship that needs not to be salvaged.

Becoming Missional

Becoming Missional

Here is a blog for those in favor of "missional" ministry.

Friday, March 16, 2007

ENGAGE Conference- (my church plug)

Are you engaging the world around with the message of Jesus Christ? Is the Gospel at the heart of your ministry? What would your ministry look like if you were to challenge yourself and your church to make Jesus Christ the center of everything that you do?

Over the past few years, the leadership of Saylorville Baptist Church has desired to host a conference in the Des Moines area that would cast a Biblical vision to connect the Gospel of God to every area of ministry. We are excited to announce that this is the year we intend to do so through the ENGAGE Conference.

Take a look around the site and explore the workshops and conference schedule. We look forward to seeing you and discussing ways that God says we are to engage our world with the Gospel! Please contact us via the contact form or by phone if there is any way that we can serve you.

What is a Missional Community

What is a Missional Community

Here is some more reading for you! More stuff from my class that I am trying to get my mind around. Click on the link above
A missional community is a group of Jesus’ apprentices who so trust his brilliance and mastery of life, that they learn from him how to be like him for the sake of the world. Through this apprentice/master relationship, the community journeys together to become the fullness of God and thereby become a finite earthly expression of the infinite Tri-Community just as Jesus was in his earthly life. A missional community is about becoming by grace what Christ is by nature. As the community experiences this, wherever the community members live their daily lives, they are learning how to easily, naturally, and routinely embody, demonstrate and announce God’s life and reign for the sake of the world around them.

The Emerging Church, by D. A. Carson

The Emerging Church, by D. A. Carson

I thought this article would be interesting to go ahead and post.

Also I am in the middle of a discussion in my Contemporary Theological Issues class through Baptist Bible Seminary in Clarks Summit, PA. I may post some of the discussions later.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

A Clash of Cultures: Evangelism in a Postmodern World (Part II)

By: Daniel B. Wallace , Th.M., Ph.D.

January 2005

In the first essay, I spoke of three approaches to culture that Christians take: opposition, assimilation, and engagement. I argued that engagement, in which discernment about the good and bad in society, was the only proper route for us. In this essay, I want to give a very concrete example of that.

Recently, a Dallas Seminary graduate, one of my former students, went to the annual conference of the Society of Biblical Literature/American Academy of Religion. These two societies have met together for years, though they will be going their separate ways in the not-too-distant future. But with them meeting in the same place, a person who is a member of one society has the opportunity to hear lectures in the other.

For those who don’t know about these societies, here’s a thumbnail sketch. The Society of Biblical Literature (SBL) is the world’s largest society of biblical scholars. It is over 120 years old. Every year, in November, the society meets somewhere in North America. The American Academy of Religion (AAR) is broader in its focus than SBL. Religions not related to the Bible, and topics that are, at best, remotely related to the Bible are discussed. Altogether, more than 10,000 people show up for these three-day conferences. Most members of SBL do not hold to any form of orthodoxy; this is of course much more true of AAR members. But evangelicals also attend. We are in a minority, but we are still there.

Now, to be sure, not all 10,000 people in attendance are in the same room at the same time! Rather, there are scores of meetings taking place simultaneously over the three-day period. And there are meetings that specialize in various disciplines and sub-disciplines. There is a group that focuses just on Matthew’s Gospel, another on Mark, another on Paul’s letters. There is a group that wrestles just with New Testament textual criticism, another that concerns itself with liberation theology, another with feminist theology, and so on.

Back to my student. Let’s call him Mark for convenience’ sake. Mark attended a meeting that addressed lesbian issues. Yes, lesbian. When he went into the room of 30 or so people, he soon discovered that he was one of the very few in there with a Y chromosome! Soon, he was surrounded by several curious people. They were most curious that men would show up for this conference. They were even more shocked when they saw his name badge and the institute he was from: Dallas Theological Seminary. But he didn’t tuck tail and run. He said he was interested in what they were talking about and wanted to learn. So, he stayed and learned.

He stayed for the whole conference in fact. All three days of it. At the end, one of the leaders of the lesbian group gave the final address. Let’s call her Joan. Joan told of her upbringing, and the message was heartwrenching. She was raised in a prominent religious teacher’s home. Her father was to her rather stern, stand-offish. In fact, he was often alone in his study with his children excluded outside. His life was an emotional desert. Joan said that she did not recall her father hugging her or showing her affection.

Later, Joan came out as a lesbian to many others, but not to her father. She came home and wanted to speak to her father about it. After repeated attempts to engage her father in conversation, she finally told her father that she had become a lesbian. He pondered this for a moment, then did not reply but left her alone.

The next day she found a lengthy written response. It was from her father. In it were all sorts of reasons, especially based on the Bible, telling her why lesbianism was a sin.

This approach by Joan’s father to her lesbianism was the quintessence of an evangelical-modernist approach to evangelism! It was reasoned, biblically-based, absolute, authoritative. And it was icy cold.

When Mark heard Joan’s testimony, he was deeply moved. He came up to her afterward, and said, “Your testimony has truly moved me. I am the father of a little girl, and I don’t want her to grow up feeling isolated from me.” After a brief pause, Mark went on. “I’ve never done this before, but I wanted to ask you something. Would it be OK with you if I hugged you?” Joan nodded.

When Mark hugged Joan, she melted. They both began to sob as she relived the pain of rejection, and Mark, too, was overwhelmed by it. For what seemed like forever, they hugged! She shared how she had longed to be hugged by someone who wanted nothing in return. Where truth had failed, love began to make a break-through.

Mark’s approach was essentially postmodern! He recognized that Joan didn’t need another sermon, didn’t need to have her nose rubbed in the text of Holy Writ. He recognized that she had never really been loved by any man, and by the Spirit’s prompting he became the instrument of God to address her need.

Since that conference, Joan has continued her ways. But she now corresponds with Mark on occasion. Mark does not hold back from declaring his views about lesbianism. But he also does not hold back the love for this woman.

When Mark told me this story, I was deeply moved. I felt as though a huge burden had been lifted off my shoulders, for here was a man who came through an evangelical seminary yet was bold enough to become all things to all people, even if his training didn’t adequately prepare him for that. I felt free to love in a way that I had not in years.

May God raise up more Marks for his glory! And may we all have compassion on the lost, “practicing the truth in love” (Eph 4.15 [NET]) as we share the good news of Jesus Christ in a postmodern world.

A Clash of Cultures: Evangelism in a Postmodern World (Part I)

By: Daniel B. Wallace , Th.M., Ph.D.

January 2005

Postmodernism officially began in 1960, but as with all youngsters it has taken some time to find its place in the world. Universities are generally one of the first places where new ideas take hold, while culture at large lags behind. And what lags behind the general culture is Christian culture. Howard Hendricks, professor at Dallas Seminary, is fond of saying to his students, “They should charge admission to this place so that visitors can see how people used to live 50 years ago!” Certainly part of the reason for Christians to be slow to change is our conservative values. But I digress.

When it comes to culture, Christians generally have one of three attitudes:

1. opposition: “Everything in the Enlightenment is wrong,” or “Everything in our modern culture is wrong.” Ironically, when we were thick in modernism, few evangelicals bought into it lock, stock, and barrel. But now that we are past modernism, too many evangelicals are longing for the good old days, almost as though they are perfect, en masse mimics of the Imago Dei. For many evangelicals, whatever is in society right now is all bad. As an illustration, a few years ago I heard some philosopher-theologians debate one another at the Evangelical Theological Society. The topic was postmodernism. Some of the panelists were arguing that we need to first to “convert” a person to Aristotelian logic before we can convert them to Christ! There seemed to be a genuine dread that culture was shifting, as though these professors would be out of a job! Some astute observer from the crowd said, “Maybe you guys just need to learn to love a little more! It won’t kill you to change your paradigm a bit.”

2. assimilation: We become conformed to the cultural values that surround us. For example, pop culture is more often guided by emotion than reason. Hence, “seeker-oriented churches” continually face the temptation to put a priority on relevance over truth, while those in evangelical seminaries are generally still steeped in modernism. Pastor and pew are clashing nowadays like never before, and something has to give. Usually, it’s the pastor who blinks first. But there are some churches where the pastor has trained the folks to think like modernists, to use their brains, to study, to learn. Of course, many of these churches care little for society; think little of missions, evangelism, or social issues that must be addressed by believers. In such cases, the pastor has assimilated the church to his values all too well!

3. engagement: What is good in society and what is bad? There is a huge dichotomy between churches and seminaries: There is a constant dumbing down in the churches, while seminaries are training the life of the mind. But while those in seminary often have a great struggle with seeing the value of personal experience, those in the pew often have a great struggle with seeing the value of Bible study. Both are necessary. The successful seminary graduate will realize that his or her training only addresses a part of Christian ministry. He or she will desire to learn from the experiences of others, of elders in the church, of sages who have great skill at living. Indeed, he or she will realize that upon seminary graduation, the apprenticeship for ministry now begins. The unsuccessful seminary graduate will assume a Gnostic-like relationship to his/her congregation, equating knowledge with spirituality and authority. All too many seminary graduates have a “local Protestant pope” mentality. Engagement is the best model for us to follow: There is good in society and there is bad. We need discernment more than judgment or acquiescence.

At bottom, I think all of this needs to be related to the Imago Dei. We recognize that the image of God was not destroyed in the Fall, though it was distorted. James 3.8-9 says, “But no human being can subdue the tongue; it is a restless evil, full of deadly poison. With it we bless the Lord and Father, and with it we curse people made in God’s image” (NET). In the least, this text is telling us that human beings are still created in God’s image. That image-making did not cease with Adam and Eve. But everyone created in God’s image is a sinner, and that means that the image is distorted, twisted. In each of us there is a beauty and a beast. In other words, there is good and bad in every person.

How does this relate to postmodernism? If the Imago Dei is distorted for each individual, it stands to reason that the same holds true for a group of individuals. There is thus a beauty and a beast in every culture, every society. To be sure, the more we hold biblical values, the more we resemble the beauty rather than the beast. But all cultures have ugly elements in them, and all have beautiful elements.

So how does postmodernism stack up? Its focus on emotion, on relativism, and as a subsidiary, on relationships, is not altogether a bad thing. Colleges, even high schools, are far more service- and community-oriented today than they were when I was in school. This is certainly a good thing! But there is despair, an uncertainty, and an isolation that marks postmodernism. Without a good dose of reason, logic, and truth, this almost always must be the case because a purposeful existence now has, at best, a near horizon. The irony is that dread of isolation is what seems to drive much of postmodernism, yet it is a hopeless battle.

But modernism, with its overindulgence in reason, tended to lose sight of our full humanness. We also have emotions, and we live in communities. Modernism produced isolated geniuses and emotional dwarfs. Among evangelicals, it produced “neck-up Christians”—those who were believers only from the neck up. Evangelical scholarship then took on their liberal counterparts and now, finally, when evangelicals can claim a great deal of respectability as to their intellectual prowess, liberalism has moved on. Relativism and tolerance for competing viewpoints is all the rage. As proof, Harvard Divinity School recently opened a post for an evangelical chair to be filled in the near future! This would have been unthinkable thirty years ago.

It strikes me that since we are living at a crossroads of cultures we must learn to become all things to all people that we might win some to the Lord. There are still large pockets of modernism in our shifting culture. And those folks will not be reached if all we have in our arsenal are postmodern techniques.

When we look at scripture, we see that this kind of adaptation is exactly what Jesus used. In John 3, he spoke to Nicodemus, “the teacher of Israel.” He used logic, scripture, and subtle arguments. He addressed his intellectual pride (“you must be born again”). In John 4, he addressed the woman at the well. Here, he spoke to her isolation (“Go, call your husband and come here…” “I have no husband…”) and her sin of seeking relationships inappropriately (“you have had five husbands and the one you now have is not your husband”). There was terrible isolation for this woman, even though she was desperate to have solid, permanent relationships.

As in Jesus’ day, we will not find a one-size-fits-all culture surrounding us. We must adapt, and we must discern. Creative thinking should help us wrestle with how to connect with people and meet their felt needs without compromising on the meaning of the gospel. May God grant us both the wisdom and the passion to reach the lost!

In the second essay on this topic, I will give a specific example that I learned of recently. It moved me beyond words.

Monday, March 12, 2007

εις επαινον δοξης αυτου: Machen's Lecture to his Students at Princeton, March 10th, 1929

εις επαινον δοξης αυτου: Machen's Lecture to his Students at Princeton, March 10th, 1929

Interesting post I found on a friends page.

A Short History of Post-Modernism

To understand what post-modernism is, it's more useful to compare it to what it isn't. Post-modernism broadly refers to the cultural period that succeeded the "modern" era, as historians know it. Roughly describing the period of time between the end of the "Victorian" era to the middle of the 1960's (roughly 1900-1965), the "modern" epoch was characterized by a triumphant view of science and technology, and the rise of the market economy, democracy and global integration. Essentially the height of the Victorian English civilization upon which it was built, this period of history is most noted for its confidence. While post-modernism can be characterized by a continuation of the same developments in science and technology that were the hallmarks of the "modern" era, it doesn't share the confidence of the time period that it replaced.

Intellectually personified by the "continental" philosophy of Jacques Derrida, the writings of historian Michel Foucault, and the work of Jacques Lacan in psychology, the first "post-modern" thinkers are roughly associated with a school of thought which railed against the prevailing "rational/scientific" (i.e. "modern") approach to the social sciences and philosophy which dominated academic life during the post-war period. The most important commonality between these post-modern thinkers and what are actually distinct epistemological approaches is the radical skepticism that characterizes each of their thinking, as well as a concurrent willingness to experiment within the academic boundaries of their respective vocations. To take Foucault as an example (the thinker with whom I am most familiar), his work contains sincere doubts about the relevance of narrative in historical texts (in a narrative driven discipline), the pretension of "scientific" approaches to the subject, and is characterized by a willingness to explore topics not traditionally considered worthy of historical analysis (such as sexuality and mental illness). Foucault's skepticism, as well as his desire to experiment, characterizes some of the traits of our current age.

The "modern" epoch followed a coherent narrative: "The Triumph of Science." Scientific knowledge led to enormous advances in health, technological development, and economic progress throughout the 19th and first half of the 20th century. Human beings lived longer, led healthier lives, and found themselves freer to pursue leisure activities as the result of scientific advances. Compared with the misery of dying of tuberculosis or cholera as late as the end of the 19th and early 20th centuries in the western world, scientific progress was ultimately humanistic and therefore welcomed by the academic and cultural voices of the period. However, historical developments including the growth of nuclear power and the arms race during and after the Second World War (not to mention the technological barbarity unleashed across Europe during the First World War), environmental damage, and economic uncertainty (the OPEC crisis and inflation), all contributed to a re-thinking of the epoch's intellectual foundations. Academic and cultural voices began to ask: Is science truly the answer? The skepticism then grew to encompass the question: Are there any answers at all?

This reaction to modernism has been labeled "post-modernism." This is the spirit of our age. Like Foucault, it rejects narratives. There is no overarching explanation for the way things are. Rather life is the cumulative result of human experience. Therefore the ordinary (sexuality, mental health) rather than the traditional areas of historical inquiry such as politics, war and economics (the large external events which shaped human existence in the "modern" epoch) became the focus of Foucault's inquiry. Humanity is the center of the post-modern period; indeed it is helpful to characterize this age as the self-centered era. Because there is no external reason for being, no explanation for human existence (such as the scientific march of evolution towards the perfection of the species), the focus of the post-modern age is internal and concerned with individual human existence.

Post-modernism then, looks inward, to find human meaning. Thus one looks to internal sources of morality (the self is the arbiter of moral behavior) in the post-modern age (there being no external God to provide moral direction). In political life one rejects military service (in the case of the Vietnam War) because of a basic distrust of external political leadership (who are willing to sacrifice human lives for the sake of abstract ideas such as "democracy" and the "state"). In economics capitalism exalts a new age of individual entrepreneurship whilst huge disparities between the rich and the poor emerge in the "new" economy (poverty being the individual failure of the poor rather than a broader systematic result of the structural economic system).

The other feature of post-modern thought is experimentation. The post-modern person is willing to look to non-western forms of religion (the remarkable rise of Buddhism in the west is an example) for spiritual guidance, and non-traditional forms of social habitation (such as the rise of sexuality including sexual experimentation) to engender self-actualization (I'm purposely using psychological terminology such as "self-actualization" to further my contention regarding the rise of self-centred human understanding. The language of psychology is the vocabulary that describes the nature of humanness in the post-modern age).

To summarize, post-modernism is a reaction to the overarching narratives which gave meaning to the modern era. In defining it, it is easiest to compare post-modernism to what it isn't rather than positively define it for what it is. Comparing its modern forms to the thought of the intellectuals whose ideas characterize the age, it is possible however, to find that post-modernism rests on a basic assumption: Truth, whatever truth is, is human centered and internal. This search for truth has resulted in a marked rise in experimentation in social arrangements such as sexuality, as people attempt to redefine truth based on the experience of the primary source of truth in the post-modern age: The self.

Copyright © 2000 Robert Delamar All Rights Reserved

Also See Wikipedia for an explanation of Post-modernism

Sunday, March 4, 2007

Here it Goes

Here is goes. I am going to attempt to create a discussion about postmodernism. This is what I will be learning, finding, and wrestling with. Will you join me?