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Talbot Davis

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Top Five Tuesday — Top Five Rock Songs With Choir
January 15, 2013 at 2:00 am 2
In December of last year, the Kennedy Center Honors Program paid special tribute to Led Zeppelin as part of its annual show.

And the highlight of that particular segment was the version of Stairway To Heaven led by Ann and Nancy Wilson of Heart.  The Heart thing actually wasn't so great; what was great was the song's crescendo, this time brought to even greater heights by a backing gospel choir.

I'd never heard Stairway done that way before, and I must say it brought new life to what had become a tired warhorse of a song.  And it brought tears to Robert Plant's eyes.  Take a look:



All of which got me thinking: what are the best rock songs ever to feature a choir?

Voila!  My list is below.  (Note: I refuse to include Pink Floyd's Another Brick In The Wall, perhaps the best known rock-song-with-a-choir of them all, because it's just too banal and absurd.)

5.  John Hiatt, Have A Little Faith In Me.   John Hiatt is an underappreciated roots musician with a distinctive voice and gift for lyrical punch.  Have A Little Faith in me is one of his best:



4.  Marc Cohn, Walking In Memphis.  Why is this his only good song?  At least it's really, really good -- and I've never even been to Memphis.




3.  The Rolling Stones, You Can't Always Get What You Want.  For sure the only Stones' song that parents can use as a disciplinary tool.  And so we did.



2.  Led Zeppelin Fans, Stairway To Heaven.  See above.

1.  U2, I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For (Rattle & Hum Version).  The gospel choir is thoroughly in keeping with the gospel feel of the original lyrics.  This track alone makes Rattle & Hum worth the purchase price.




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Why We Are Doing “Home”
January 14, 2013 at 2:00 am 1
Here's why:  click on this link and watch the video.

We played a slightly edited version of that bile-inducing footage during yesterday's message.  As you might imagine, the response was shock and disgust.

And, I suspect, in some quarters the reaction included some secret shame.

That's because we named the reality that men in church have no doubt played a part in creating the sickening demand for underage girls that leads to the kind of traumatized supply we hope to serve and restore through Home

We're hoping to redeem what church men have played a part in ruining.

It was all part of an admittedly PG-13 messaged called Man Cave.

Here's a rough transcript of the sermon:


Some of the guys in this room today have a Man Cave back at home (AV) – a separate room, probably full of sports memorabilia, maybe including a refrigerator for adult beverages, and definitely a high tech entertainment system to watch sports.  And a lot of guys who don’t have such a cave wish they did.  But virtually every guy here – Man Cave or not – has watched this scene from Mel Gibson’s Braveheart:  FREEDOM! Clip.  Oh, so many men, in church and out of it, see that scene, hear that cry, and the heart begins to pump faster and the adrenaline begins to flow harder and it’s like “Yes! That me!  I want freedom! I am free!  Free to fight noble causes! Free from tyranny.  Free to express myself.  Free to be and to do what I want.”  Mel said it (before his troubles), I believe it, and that settles it.

            Gosh, even the bible endorses it!  In Galatians 5:13, while in the middle of a letter that contrasts the rules of religion with life in the Spirit, Paul says it this way: READ 5:13:  “For you were called to freedom, my brothers and sisters.”  Wow!  You’ve got Mel Gibson, you’ve got St. Paul, you’ve got every man in his man cave and it’s clear that every guy in here is free.  Free to spend how you want.  Free to love who you want.  Free to say what you want.  Free to worship where you want.  As LS said, “free as a bird now.”

            Yet, look at what Paul says next: READ 5:13b:  “Only do not use your freedom as an opportunity for self-indulgence.”  Where it says “to indulge” there it literally means “as a base of military operations.”  A platform.  So the declaration that we have freedom comes with the caution not to use that freedom as a launching pad for living sinfully.  Because, sadly, both in church and out of church, that’s exactly what we do.  Guys.  In the name of freedom, many of you engage in the kinds of activities in that man cave that leave you ultimately shamed, hollowed, and empty.  And more than that, the kinds of things that leave you ultimately enslaved.

            So I’ll name the main thing I’m talking about.  Porn. Adult entertainment. The sex industry and the escalation that goes along with it and often leads to encounters, rendezvous, and affairs.  Probably 60% of the men in the room are involved in the former and not a few of you in the latter.  You’ve pursued it because you COULD, because you’re 18, because you’re a consenting adult, BECAUSE IT’S A FREE COUNTRY . . . and now that freedom has trapped you.  Bile inducing slavery.  The only reason there is a Girls Gone Wild is because Men Have Gone Crazy and some of you are at the top of the list. 

            Yes, Paul warns us not to use our freedom as an operations base for sin but that’s what so many of us have done, men.  Your current state of enslavement shows exactly why the warning.  It occurs to me – and it kills me to acknowledge it – but if Xn  men (Xn men now!) didn’t do what they do in their Man Caves & beyond, there wouldn’t be the same kind of “market” that leads to sex trafficking & our need to rescue girls with OEWM.  It’s a sad case of supply meeting demand via any means possible.

            Just so you know, this freedom-centered base of operations for sin involves sexual issues but isn’t limited to them.  (They happen to be the ones in my pastoral experience that cause the most damage.)  But for others of you, it has to do with money.  You’re free to spend as you wish – and so you have.  You have the credit rating or the greedy reputation to prove.  Another guy here it’s that temper. You’re free to lose it and so you do – and your own children know all too well what it means to hide under the bed.  And then others have taken the freedom to become couch potatoes and some of you married guys have abdicated any spiritual influence at all to your wives, thinking “that’s women’s work.”  So it involves the salacious sins but that’s not all.

            And can I acknowledge something here?  The church has rarely helped guys in these or any area.  Sometimes it has spoken a much different language than that which you understand.  Think about it: in a lot of churches, maybe the one you grew up, the preacher wore a dress.  At least that’s what the robe looked like to you.  Worship is word-focused, reading-centered . . . and many guys learn better by doingthan reading.  And some of you guys really like thrash metal or at least Black Sabbath & that’s not what you get in even the most cutting edge of churches.  In some ways, the church has tried to feminize you, or at least tame you.  Now: because I like books, study, words, and am clueless w/ tools and have never shot a gun, all that appeals to me.  But to a lot of you, the church has seemed most interested in taming your wild heart, making you nice and has dealt with the secrets of the Man Cave by simply piling on another layer of guilt and shoulds and oughts.

            And because of that experience with church, MOST of you would expect the next line in Galatians 5, the line to follow don’t use your freedom as a base of operations for your sinful nature,to be: RESIST!  DISCIPLINE!  JUST SAY NO!  But no.  The next line is this: READ 5:13c:  “but through become slaves of one another.” (NRSV)  Huh?  If Paul tells us not to use our freedom as the base of operation for indulgence, shouldn’t he then rebuke us and tell us to reform?  Evidently not!

            See, the kryptonite for guys gone crazy isn’t discipline, it’s slavery.  Love-soaked, Spirit-fueled slavery!  Men: Jesus doesn’t want you nice!  He wants you surrendered!  He doesn’t want you reformed!  He wants you resurrected!  And he knows that he can’t tell you SIMPLY to STOP doing something without also giving you a new, better calling than self-indulgence.  And what is that calling?  It’s right here!  Slavery!  Real freedom comes when you choose slavery.  It’s shocking, it’s counter-intuitive, it’s a paradox, it don’t make no sense! . . . but it’s true. REFRAIN.  Now: slaves to whom?  Well, to God, but we’ll get to that part.  Look more closely at what it says here: slaves to one another.  Uh oh.  Surrender to God begins with slavery to others.

            Married guys: that means you leave here as the slave to your wife.  And get this: DON’T PROMISE HER YOU’RE GOING TO DO IT; JUST DO IT!!!  Women in my experience are sick and tired of hearing guys’ empty promises, the pitiful, “that’s in the past; I’ll be better.”  They are looking for you not to tell them what you’re going to do; tell them what you’ve done.  So today, guys: she sits, you serve.  She talks, you listen.  She communicates, you turn the TV off – even if you want to watch that playoff game.  REFRAIN.

            Dads: it means you are slaves to your kids.  I loved hearing about the brother and sister talking to their dad who was explaining the dif between quality time and quantity time.  “Quantity time is how long you spend with someone.  Quality time is how good that time actually is.  So which do you want with me?”  “Quality time!” the little boy replies, “and lots of it!”  Indeed.  Listen, guys: changing your baby’s diapers will do more for their sense of security in the world than 10 trips to Carowinds.  Did you hear that?! They need you in the routine, the mundane, the day to day, and the Disney days only augment that, it never replaces it.  Drop-by dads don’t impress me; diaper changing ones do.  You become enough of a slave to those little ones and I believe the energy of THAT replaces the urge to use your freedom as a platform for sin.  REFRAIN

            Singles and single agains: get this.  The moment you become, as one pastor says, more interested in who you are becoming than in who you are hunting, watch God work.  God’s greatest goal for you and your life is not your next mate or girlfriend or even sexual conquest.  His goal for you is your spiritual growth.  Spiritual growth doesn’t look the same for all of you, but for each of you it WILL involve a decision to worship and a commitment to gather together beyond Sunday a.m., either serving, learning. REF

            All of you: undergirding your slavery to wives & kids & church people, it’s your slavery to God.  I am so glad that God doesn’t want nice men or sweet men or even reformedmen; he wants NEW men.  Like the son whose dominant memory of his father is early in the morning, praying.  “Nothing,” the guy remembers, “would get in the way of my dad’s early morning appointment with God.”  What will your kids say about you?  You’re free not to make appointments with God!  You’re free-er when you do.  REFRAIN.

            You know why all this matters?  When you use your freedom as an operations base for sin, you WILL GET FOUND OUT.  You’re not the exception.  The leader of the US Spy Agency got exposed!  You’re not as smart as he is!  Every exposure is preceded by failure and every failure is preceded by compromise and every compromise is preceded by temptation and I want to stop the behavior early, early in that cycle.  It’s like someone said to me, “It’s not the attraction.  It’s the action.”  There’s not a guy in this place who at some level DOESN’T want to use the freedom they have as a base of operations to indulge every desire they have.  The ones who do get trapped in misery.  The ones who use their freedom to choose slavery to God and to others . . . .ahhhh.  They’re the ones I know who even if they have dark corners in the past are today living lives free of regret and absent of shame.  Guys who embody a living relationship with Jesus Christ. Man cave to prayer closet.

            Even if these struggles are not specifically yours, we have an opportunity to reclaim and redeem much of what has been debased in Man Caves & beyond.  Two weeks from today, on 1.27.13, you’re going to have an opportunity to give, to give well, and to give sacrificially.  (See: you’re free to keep all your money but I guarantee you’re free-er when you give a bunch of it away.)  As we’re building our own homes from the inside out, we’re going to be buying a home for girls who’ve been rescued from sex trafficking.  Our partners at On Eagles Wings do the restoring work in the lives of the girls who’ve been delivered, and we have a marvelous opportunity to provide a safe, secure space for that to happen in.  Guys and girls: you are oh-so-free in Christ when you let loose of money to rescue girls who’ve had so much robbed from them.  Here’s the kind of thing you’ll be able to advance: AUDIO of girl from Brad with nice background.  Our decision is that every dollar collected on 1.27.13 LEAVES (freedom in serving!) and our goal is that there will be $125K of those dollars on one day.  REF

            I thought a lot about how to conclude this experience.  Because I really want the men of GSUMC to be fessed up, cleaned up, and fired up.  But we decided early on NOT to have a kind of bold altar call, Courageous-style, where men stood or kneeled and PROMISED to be slaves.  Because frankly, women, wives, and even pastors are weary of seeing guys make pledges in the heat of emotion that they don’t keep in the dark of their desires.  Instead, here’s what I’m going to ask of guys:

1.      Find an ear.  If this has surfaced some darkness in your particular man cave, stop hiding.  I’ve instructed our male pastors to be available this week and their direct phone numbers are in your bulletin.  That ear may well be a first ear that then directs you to therapy or a help group.

2.      Come to our Steak Out on Saturday 2.2.13 for good food and honest talk with fellow pilgrims.  Drop in basket.

3.      Today, decide with whoever helps you decide what it is you’ll give to buy and restore this home for rescued girls.

4.      Don’t promise to serve as a slave to those closest to you.  Instead, by the power of the HS, do it. This p.m.


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Home, Week 2 — Man Cave
January 11, 2013 at 2:00 am 0

Week 1 of Home was full of large crowds, high energy, and an exciting announcement.

I wonder what Week 2 will provide as we go exploring in the Man Cave?

Sunday.

8:30.  10.  11:30.
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Politically Incorrect
January 10, 2013 at 2:00 am 6
I've been wondering about some things that people may think but are hesitant to say

Including me.

Here goes . . . .

1.  If reversing 2,000 years of Christian teaching regarding sexual practice was the key to revitalizing the church as a whole, then the United Church of Christ would be thriving and Northpoint Community Church would be hemorrhaging.  Neither seems likely to happen anytime soon.

2.  If more people loved their kids, there'd be less of a call for people who "just love kids."

3.  If violent video games, TV shows, and movies don't influence behavior, then why does television advertising exist?

4.  If I haven't lost a bit of sleep over the fact that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed was waterboarded, does that give us some kind of moral equivalence?

5.  Number of Murders, United States, 2009: 15,241
Number of Murders by Firearms, US, 2009: 9,146
Number of Murders, Britain, 2008*: 648
(Since Britain’s population is 1/5 that of US, this is equivalent to 3,240 US murders)
Number of Murders by[pdf] firearms, Britain, 2008* 39
(equivalent to 195 US murders)
*The Home office reported murder statistics in the UK for the 12 months to March 2009, but these are 12-month figures).
For more on murder by firearms in Britain, see the BBC.
In the case of Britain, firearms murders are 48 times fewer than in the US.
Source:  here

Hmmmm . . . and guns don't kill people?

6.  When MTV broadcasts a show called 16 & Pregnant, it doesn't do anyone any favors.

7.  I've wondered if the more charitable services that churches and other non-profits provide, the greater a demand we create.  Not sure.  Just wondering.

8.  Doctrinal unity leads to demographic diversity.  The more you treasure ancient truths, the more modern people of all colors and ethnicities will rally around the cause.  When will the United Methodist hierarchy realize this?


 
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The Heart Of Methodism
January 9, 2013 at 2:00 am 1
Some months ago, my cyber-friend John Meunier posted a marvelously brief summary of the heart of Wesleyan-Methodist thinking:


All need to be saved.

All can be saved.

All can know themselves to be saved.

All can be saved to the uttermost.

Naturally, my first thought was, "that will preach!" followed by, "how can I pretend I thought of it first?" 

But then yesterday, Teddy Ray of Lexington, Kentucky -- only 12 miles from Asbury Seminary -- did something much better: he expanded and then personalized the ideas John introduced.

It's such a good explanation of what we in the Wesleyan-Methodist family hold dear that I've included it for you below:

1 – All need to be saved.

We believe that all of humanity is totally depraved. We are all sinners, and our only hope is the grace of God. Even the best of us are so far fallen that we can’t do anything to earn God’s grace.

By what we call God’s prevenient grace, God makes us aware of our own bondage to sin and offers us the grace to repent and have faith.

2 – All can be saved.

We believe God loves all of humanity and “wants all people to be saved and come to a knowledge of the truth” (1 Tim 2:3). And we believe that salvation was made possible for all because, by the grace of God, Christ tasted death for everyone (Heb 2:9).

The most wicked person I know… Christ tasted death for him, and he can yet be saved if he receives God’s grace.

3 – All can know themselves to be saved.

We believe in Christian assurance. We don’t have to go about life worried about whether or not we have received salvation. God has put his Spirit in our hearts, and “the Spirit himself testifies with our spirit that we are God’s children” (Rom 8:16).

4 – All can be saved to the fullest.

We can be saved completely – both from the guilt of all past sin and the power of all present sin. “No one who is born of God will continue to sin” (1 John 3:9).

God’s grace and salvation justify us before God so that we may appear holy to him. But they go beyond that, trampling over sin’s power in our lives. They sanctify us before God, so that we may actually be holy and blameless before him. We don’t go on sinning. All of this only by the grace of God, not by our merits.

My experience

That last bit is what has particularly transformed my life. I dropped the “well, I’m just a sinner” mentality and realized that God’s power and grace aren’t just about making me appear holy before God, but are actually making me holy. What great freedom and transformation have come from that!

Does that mean I have no more sin remaining in me? I never do wrong? I wish, but no. There are still moments – too many – that I look back at something I did and realize how selfish, prideful, vain, or envious it was. That’s what we call “sin remaining” – bubbling up from within us, even when we’ve devoted our full wills to God.  (And for what it’s worth, pure Wesleyan doctrine says we may be sanctified through and through in this life. God is able to remove even the sin remaining in us. If we confess our sins, he will purify us from all unrighteousness [1 John 1:9].)

What I mean at least by sanctification is that I don’t willfully sin. If I know that something I’m about to do is sin, I don’t go on and do it anyway. That would be “sin reigning” – as if that sin had such control over me that I couldn’t resist it, even though I knew it was sin – an affront to God, a rejection of Christ’s lordship. So even if sin still remains, it can no longer reign in the life of a believer. By the grace of God, sin has lost its power.

That is the piece of Wesleyan theology that expanded my understanding of God’s grace and power far beyond what I had ever previously understood.

And all of this is only dealing with doctrines concerning salvation. There are other beautiful distinctives in Wesleyan theology, especially regarding the sacraments, worship, means of grace, and stewardship, but I’ll leave off at this for now.

If you want more, take a look at my Crash Course in Theology post. The Harper and Haynes books would probably be the best places to start.


 
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