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More on Suburbia

DateJun 7, 2006
Comments2 Comments

Tim Dees over at Triumph of the Lackadaimonians makes some good comments about the two books for Christians in Suburbia.  A few quotes:

So that's the plan. 8 steps, buy the more expensive coffee at Starbucks, and all is well. What if Christ actually operated this way? It might have looked like this:

Jesus: "Come follow me, and I will make you fishers of men."

Disciples: "Jesus, we're really slammed, and this fishing thing is really taking off."

Jesus: "Ok, well how about this. Don't worry about following me, but at least use dolphin-safe tuna nets."

Disciples: "Done deal, Jesus!"

(high fives ensue)
That is, my friends, hilarious...and a bit of hyperbole.  I think that the book was saying "Follow me, byyyyyyyyyy using dolphin-safe tuna nets" - I think that may be funny (in a different way) as well. 

Christ did not die on the cross because he bought fair-trade coffee or shopped in locally-owned stores. I think sometimes we skip right over the verse where it says that God will not be mocked. Indeed, he won't. The call of Christ is the upending of our lives, or it is nothing.

Now my dear brother Dees, I agree with you.  But slow down a tad and admit it - it would be cool if a 2500 sq ft house was purchased rather than a 5000.  A 250K one rather than a 400K one...and the rest of the wealth given to the poor and the Kingdom.  But I feel you brother, but maybe there is helpful practical advice for those following Jesus as Lord in the burbs. It is at least hypothetically possible, no?

Afterall, for some strange and mysterious contours of divine Providence...he did ordain that the suburbs be.  Now, dear Jesus, Sovereign Lord, please help us to escape the burbs!!!

Appreciate you Tim 

 

Comments

Thanks for your thoughts on this. I'm glad to see people engaging the topic of how to live Christianly in the suburbs. It seems like there are two common extremes - suburbs are evil, or suburbs are fine. And Christians either criticize the suburbs as shallow and vapid, or they don't think about it at all and uncritically absorb everything about the suburban ethos. Better, I think, to acknowledge that suburbia is a mix of good and bad, like any environment, with its own particular challenges and opportunities for living Christianly. Our challenge is to figure out how to live Christianly in suburbia, however insufficient or imperfectly we might do so. Nothing is beyond redemption!

Al, well put my friend. In all the contours of culture found on the earth there is a Christian way. Even suburbia...I do think that the prophetic voice is much needed to the suburbia world as it can quickly be absorbed into a myopic world of safety, security, and greed which all seems very "normal" without the critique and prophetic voice of the Scriptures.

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