111 posts categorized "Blogging"

November 02, 2007

Interview Questions for RevHRod

I was recently interviewed by Eric who blogs over at The Heart of a Pastor.  It was alot of fun.  In return, I offered to interview another fellow blogger.  RevHRod, whom I know both in the real and virtual worlds, asked to be interviewed.  Here are her questions:

  1. You are ordained and currently serving in a "specialized" call.  What do you miss most about the parish? What do you like most about your current call?
  2. What is the most important thing you learned in seminary?
  3. What did you not learn in seminary that has been most helpful for your ministry?
  4. If you were not a pastor, what can you imagine yourself doing?
  5. You've moved a few times in your life.  Which place that you have called "home" is your favorite, and why?
  • Bonus Question: Please ask and answer a question you would like someone to ask you.

RevHRod, here are the rules.  Post these at the end of your interview response. 

1. If you are interested in being interviewed, leave me a comment saying "interview me."
2. I will respond by posting 5 questions for you. I get to post the questions.
3. You will update your blog with a post containing your answers to the questions.
4. You will include this explanation and offer to interview someone else in the same post.
5. When others comment, asking to be interviewed, you will ask them 5 questions.

Have fun! I can't wait to read it!

October 23, 2007

Eric Interviewed Me!

Eric has interviewed me as part of a nice, slow moving meme that is making its way around the blogosphere.  He gets to ask me five questions (which he posted here), I have to answer on my blog and offer to interview someone else (directions below).  So, here are his questions with my answers.  Thanks!

(1) What one class does the seminary not offer that they should?
In the senior year of seminary, all students should be required to take a cross-cultural immersion course called, "The Laity: A Look at the World According to Everybody Else."  In this course seminarians would

  • talk with an actual layperson about their work, preferably at their workplace
  • read Joel Osteen and various other best-selling pop-religion authors
  • interview 10 laypersons about their experience with religion, faith, worship, church
  • go to a soccer field or Starbucks on a Sunday morning
  • visit three Lutheran congregations as a visitor and try really, really hard to analyze the experience from the perspective of someone who doesn't know the difference between a "green book," a "kyrie," and "intinction."

(2) When did you first know that you were called to ordained ministry?  Who did God sound/look like (i.e. In my call story God sounded and looked like my dad)?

Though I was always active in my tiny congregation as a youth, I never considered ordained ministry until my freshman year in college.  At that time I was spending time with Evangelical Christians whose witness to Christ lit in me a new passion for the Gospel, even while I continued to worship in the Lutheran church.  I recall one Sunday, during the Prayers of the Church, praying out loud for a friend of mine who was not baptized but curious about Christianity, that she might find the comfort and joy that comes from Christ (or something like that).  As I prayed for her I was overcome by goosebumps and a feeling of complete love - as if I had become a conduit of God's love for my friend, and in the process had received a wickedly powerful dose of divine love myself.  At that moment I knew that I wanted to be in the business of sharing the Gospel with others.

(3) At the risk of sounding like a candidacy committee member, what is your hope for the future of the ELCA?  What concerns you about their future?

I'm concerned that we're increasingly irrelevant to the lives of folks not already in our pews, stuck in a incurvatus en se posture that gets more worked up about liturgy and potlucks than about encountering, embracing, and sharing the Living Word of God in our daily lives.  I hope that our church can come to live into the wonderful words of Wengert and Lathrop, who write, ""For [Luther], church was less an institution and more an event.  It occurred precisely where God's word and faith collided."  We need to cultivate collisions of people's faith with God's Word in - and beyond! - our congregations.

(4) I like hearing about books people read.  What one book has made the biggest impact on your ministry (other than the Bible and the confessions)?

My passion is to help others live out their faith in daily life.  To that end, two distinct books have shaped my faith practice and way I speak about faith.  Michael Foss' Real Faith for Real Life: Living the Six Marks of Discipleship outlines six core personal faith practices - Daily Prayer, Daily Bible Reading, Weekly Worship, Christian Service, Relationships That Encourage Spiritual Growth, and Giving in the Spirit of Generosity.  These are wonderful marks of the Christian life, and this book has encouraged me to attempt a more disciplined approach to practicing my Christian faith.

On the other hand, another Augsburg Fortress book - Listen God is Calling! Luther Speaks of Vocation, Faith and Work, by Michael Bennethum - is an excellent little book grounded in a Two Kingdoms and Baptismal perspective that shows the value and spirituality of the daily work of laity.  It is a wonderfully pastoral book, written out of a concern for the faith of church members who often doubt that their daily work is special or holy, or who fail to see that faith has something to say about their line of work.

The Foss book is an exercise in a disciplined piety; the Bennethum book is an articulation of the spiritual value of otherwise "secular" or ordinary work.  While they both look at the issue of faith in daily life, they take very different approaches.  I feel more "at home" in Bennethum's approach, but feel that even a good vocational theology needs to be supported by regular, personal faith practices as outlined by Foss.  (I have done an adult forum on the issue - perhaps I'll post my notes here soon.)

(5) And finally...a "fun" question:  What cartoon character do you relate to the most and why?

Dilbert.  I'm not sure that I identify with him as much as I just love the sarcasm and dry humor of the comic strip.  I often wonder what a church version of Dilbert - complete with wry mockery of the latest church growth fads - would look like.

And...to continue Diane's addition to this meme:  What is one question you would like someone to ask you?

Q) Outside of your involvement in the church, what is the single most important or formative experience of your life?

Therapy.  Years of therapy.  In my mid-twenties I spent a little more than three years in psychotherapy, including a year of five day/week psychoanalysis.  Dr. Levin - or rather, the work I did with Dr. Levin - changed my life.  Through this work I was able to acknowledge and break through all kinds of unhelpful emotional conflicts stemming from my childhood that, left untreated, would have seriously threatened my ability to keep a job or stay in a longterm relationship.  So much more could be said, but I'll leave it at that.

- - - - -

Many thanks to Eric for taking the time to ask me such thought-provoking questions.  This was really fun to do, especially as a respite in the midst of what has been a rather busy week (note the lack of blogposts in the past week).

So, here are the rules, folks.  If you've made it this far, read on for just a few more pixels:

1. If you are interested in being interviewed, leave me a comment saying "interview me."
2. I will respond by posting 5 questions for you. I get to post the questions.
3. You will update your blog with a post containing your answers to the questions.
4. You will include this explanation and offer to interview someone else in the same post.
5. When others comment, asking to be interviewed, you will ask them 5 questions.

October 08, 2007

Comment #1000 - thanks, Diane!

Many thanks to Diane, who blogs over at faith in community, for providing the one thousandth comment since this blog was reincarnated at Typepad.com in April 2006 (the comments from my 201 posts over at blogger didn't move with the conversion).  I feel like I should send you something to commemorate your place in Lutheran Zephyr history.  If I only had Lutheran Zephyr coffee mugs to give away . . . wow.  Lutheran Zephyr coffee mugs - that's what I call instant yard sale fodder!

Thank you Diane, and thanks to all of you who contribute your two cents here.

October 05, 2007

Four Things Meme

My friend, RevHRod, tagged me for a rather simple meme of lists of four.  I think I can handle this . . .

Four Jobs I've Held:

  • Augsburg Fortress congregational sales rep
  • paperboy
  • camp counselor at a Jewish daycamp (they called me goy-boy)
  • Starbucks barista

Four Films I Could Watch Over and Over: PASS.  I'm not much of a movie person.  But I've watched many, many Disney movies over and over in recent years . . .

Four TV Shows I Watch: I currently get two television stations - only one without static - on my rabbit ears-equipped television.  With that in mind, here's what I would watch if I had a functional TV:

  • Law & Order (any version, any time, any where)
  • Baseball Tonight/Sports Center
  • The Office (I hear it is really fun, and I've been told that I would LOVE it)
  • The Daily Show

Four Places I've Lived:

  • over a donut shop
  • in a colonial farmhouse
  • over an art gallery
  • over a print shop

Four Favorite Foods:

Four Websites I Visit Everyday:

Four Places I Would Love To Be Right Now:

  • In Denver getting ready for Game Three of the Phillies-Rockies national league divisional series, with the Phillies ahead 2-0, rather than behind 0-2
  • in bed
  • a few feet from President Bush, so I could ask him what the heck he was thinking when he (fill in the blank) . . .
  • out of debt

Four Names I Love But I Would/Could Not Use For My Children:

  • Shadrach
  • Meshach
  • Abednigo
  • Esperanza

September 24, 2007

Blog Stats

Shortly after moving to Northern Virginia last month I began using Google Analytics, a free program that tracks visitors to my blog and all kinds of associated data.  I have found it to be much more user-friendly than other tracking programs I have used in the past.  Unfortunately, since I began using it after my move, I'm unable to compare data pre- and post-relocation to Virginia.  And that's a shame, because . . .

In the past three weeks, the top locations for visitors to this blog are:

  1. Washington
  2. Minneapolis
  3. Philadelphia
  4. unknown
  5. Fairfax (Virginia)

That Philadelphia and Minneapolis are on my Top Five cities make sense to me.  They are both home to Lutheran seminaries, where students are likely to blog in a Lutheran fashion.  I also have friends in both cities, and family in Philadelphia. 

But Washington and Fairfax, VA?  Since I only started using Google Analytics after moving here, I have no idea if the visits to my blog from the Metro DC region spiked in recent weeks or has been constant for several months.  Since arriving I have not particularly talked up my blog with my new synod or congregational colleagues.  (I have configured Google Analytics to not track hits from the IP addresses of my computers at home and at work - those Fairfax visits are not from me!)  So why are folks from Fairfax and DC ranking so high on my hits list, as opposed to other regions of the country?  Perhaps some folks thought it would be a good idea to Google the new Vicar's name.  If so . . . hello there!

Folks are spending an average of 4:14 on my Daily Prayer page (some more, some less, of course), which makes me think that perhaps some of you are using this for your own prayer.  Wonderful!  And among visitors who came to my blog via a Google search, those that used the keywords "lutheran daily prayer" spend the most time on my blog. 

The most viewed picture on my blog is of my damaged Nissan following my run-in with a deer last year.

That's it for now.  Happy blogging to you and yours!

September 13, 2007

A Butt-Kicking

I'm getting my (insert term for gludius maximus) kicked on internship.  Transitioning from a summer of childcare which, though exhausting, provided me with ample daily naps and a rather casual work setting, to a new church where I'm struggling to learn names, wrap my head around the particular tasks of ministry at this place, meeting schedules, and where I'm preparing for 8 days when my supervisor will be out of town . . . it has been simultaneously exciting and exhausting (of course, it's not just the church that is tiring.  The children who seem unable to sleep through the night surely contribute to my sapped energy levels . . .).

But as I begin my internship there is another feeling - I really, really care about this job.  Not that I didn't invest myself in or care about past jobs as a fundraiser, sales rep, or chaplain, but in those roles I knew from the get-go that my vocation was elsewhere.  Well, though this is only an internship, I have arrived at elsewhere.  Eight years after dropping out of seminary, I have finally returned to my parish vocation, and I find my mind, my heart, my faith racing as I strive to fulfill this internship vocation faithfully. 

I know that I can't do everything in my first few weeks, and that I have a full year of service and learning ahead of me.  But I'm so stinking excited and eager to learn, to serve, to do the stuff of ministry . . . perhaps this is the perfect time to "be still" and listen for the silence and presence of God.  Hmmm . . . perhaps this is the perfect time to resume my old practice of daily prayer, a practice that fell to the wayside over the summer.

August 29, 2007

The Blog and Candidacy (or Congregation)

I have no idea if members of my Candidacy Committee read my blog.  Which got me to thinking . . .

Have any of you seminarian or pastor bloggers out there ever been burned in any way by what you've written on your blog?  Do your parishoners or candidacy committee members read your blog?  Do you openly share your blog with these folks?  We've all heard of college kids getting turned down from jobs because of their MySpace pages, or of employees who were fired for what they wrote on their personal blogs.  Has any such thing ever happened in the church?

Some seminarian and pastor-types use their blog as a sort of online newsletter, nary allowing personal or unpolished content to creep onto their webpages.  Sports passions?  Mundane family matters?  Faith doubts?  Political opinions?  Such topics are filtered and do not appear on these polished blogs which generally present theology, ministry and faith matters in intelligent and insightful ways.

But other bloggers - myself included - are less filtered, sharing insights, news, thoughts, and feelings that they might not necessarily share in front of their candidacy committees, in their church newsletters, or from their pulpit - at least, not without some refinement.  Faith, family, sports, politics and the mundane are all fair game with these blogs.  Many of these bloggers are anonymous or semi-anonymous.

I am not anonymous.

I once was anonymous, and then semi-anonymous, and then finally I simply outed myself.  And I've found that since my name has appeared on my blog I am a little more intentional about what I write.  But my blog is not as filtered as perhaps it should be, and in these pixels I give expression to some doubts and questions and opinions that I might express differently in front of my Candidacy Committee or in my parish.  Is that problematic?  Should I reconsider what I do on this blog and how I do it?  Sometimes I wonder if I need to abandon this blog and resurface anonymously at a later date at a different blog (I'd love a good excuse to migrate over to WordPress, but I've got too much invested here at Typepad).

By now Tim Wengert and any good pastoral caregiver would ask: Why do you ask this question?  My answer - I begin internship next week, and as I creep closer and closer to this pastoral vocation I find myself wrestling with what it means to fulfill the office of ministry with its various responsibilities and sensibilities, while also giving honest voice to the questions, experiences, insights and passions that God has given me. 

Or, perhaps put another way, To what extent am I changed by fulfilling this office, and to what extent is the office changed when I fill it?  I'm sure that Luther has something to say about the office of ministry.  Any suggested readings?  Perhaps that could make some good Labor Day Weekend reading . . .

August 05, 2007

Life without internet . . . egad!

Tomorrow morning is move-in day at our new townhouse in Northern Virginia.  With my wife in Chicago for the ELCA's Worship Jubilee and my older daughter in Delaware with some dear friends, my one-year old and I will coordinate the move.  We are blessed to have a crew from my internship congregation come with food for the refrigerator and cupboard, tools to build furniture, and people to play with the baby.

From my laptop computer at my hotel this evening I have subscribed to the Washington Post and signed up for Verizon FiOS service.  Whereas the Post will begin on Tuesday or Wednesday, my Verizon FiOS service won't begin until next Friday, August 17.  Verizon FiOS might be high speed, but the low-tech newspaper will arrive sooner than my internet service.  (As Alanis Morissette might ask, isn't it ironic?)  How will we live without internet for two weeks?  Gosh, we might have to read that newspaper I just ordered!

Unless I violate the seventh commandment by jumping on a neighbor's unsecured wireless signal, I may not
get online to do such meaningful things as check my fantasy baseball team and blog.  Somehow I imagine that I'll find a way to get online over the next two weeks, but just in case . . . see you in a few weeks!

June 26, 2007

Next post will arrive in August, from Virginia

It's going to be a heck of a summer.

As many of you know, we're moving to suburban Washington, DC (Fairfax, VA).  With my wife gone for the next two weeks teaching at the Summer Theological Academy, and me being consumed with full-time Daddy Daycare and coordinating our au pair search, with my best friend's wedding on July 7, and our move looming around August 1, I'm taking a long-term leave from blogging.  Unless something crazy happens - such as Derek becoming a low-church methodist or LutherPunk removing his tattos and trading his truck for a Honda Civic or the ELCA announcing that it has discovered the meaning of the long-lost "E"-word and is growing membership and congregations by leaps and bounds - I shall not blog until I'm moved into my new digs in Virginia.

Please, keep me in your feedreader until then or sign up for my email updates (available @ right), and have a blessed and safe summer.  You'll hear from me in August.

Peace to you,
Chris

June 19, 2007

Blog Observations

I haven't been blogging recently on any kind of heady or deeply theological level, a conundrum I addressed in a recent post, Blogging the Ordinary.  The drought continues.  Sorry folks.

But I have recently added a few blogs to my Google Reader and to my lamely-titled blog list, "The Feeds in my Google Reader," available at right.  There are now 81 blogs in my Google Reader.  A few of the most recently-added blogs came after I reviewed my site statistics and referrals, and saw that someone came to my blog from a previously unknown-to-me Lutheran blog.  Just added tonight - The Heart of a Pastor

When reviewing those stats, I can also see what Google search terms steer people to my blog.  The most interesting set of search terms of late - baby "spitting up blood tinged mucus" - sent this websurfer to this page: Details of Caring for a Sick Baby.

And finally, a point of blogging trying-to-be-a-tech-geek-but-it-didn't-work embarrassment.  Over a year ago I began paying a small annual fee to use the domain www.lutheranzephyr.com.  Only tonight did I hit the "activate" button to turn this domain into more than just a forwarding address - now all my pages sit on this domain, rather than just sending them to the blog @ typepad.com. 

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