Updates from December, 2008 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Mark 11:58 am on December 19, 2008 Permalink | Reply
    Tags:   

    “Do You Hear What I Hear”…a virus of peace 

    Christmas songs are ubiquitous this time of year.  I, like many, quickly get overloaded with sugary Bing Crosby goodness, and “Christmas” songs by Madonna and Britney Spears.  But every year, I inevitably turn that station that plays 24/7 Christmas music, and every year, I hear a classic Christmas song “for the first time.”

    This year it is “Do you Hear What I Hear?”  I’ve posted a video below with the lyrics, then some of my reflections on what makes this song so powerful and how its rocked my understanding of sharing God with the world.

    Said the night wind to the little lamb
    Do you see what I see
    Way up in the sky little lamb
    Do you see what I see
    A star, a star
    Dancing in the night
    With a tail as big as a kite
    With a tail as big as a kite

    Said the little lamb to the shepard boy
    Do you hear what I hear
    Ringing through the sky shepard boy
    Do you hear what I hear
    A song, a song
    High above the tree
    With a voice as big as the sea
    With a voice as big as the sea

    Said the shepard boy to the mighty king
    Do you know what I know
    In your palace wall mighty king
    Do you know what I know
    A child, a child
    Shivers in the cold
    Let us bring him silver and gold
    Let us bring him silver and gold

    Said the king to the people everywhere
    Listen to what I say
    Pray for peace people everywhere
    Listen to what I say
    The child, the child
    Sleeping in the night
    He will bring us goodness and light
    He will bring us goodness and light

    The child, the child
    Sleeping in the night
    He will bring us goodness and light

    What is brilliant about this song is its got the lines of communication all confused and backward.  The king should be commanding the shepherd boy, and the boy should be speaking over the lamb…this is the divine conspiracy brought on by the nature of God – that authority and power are turned upside down, and the real magnificence of God is seen in his power displayed in the most unlikely of places.

    This viral message begins in the wind…a mysterious tale that no one can claim ownership of.  It whispers to the innocent, powerless animal, even as the wind blows over the boy and the king and all of humanity.  But they miss it.  Many wonder if God still speaks today.  Most people asking that question are rich, or too busy to hear.  God’s most important messages come and go without us ever listening in, because they are blowing in the wind, and not coming down from a king’s throne.

    The bravery of the boy to speak to the king, to call on the king to give up his “silver and gold” (the boy wouldn’t have much of that as a shepherd).  Whatever this message is, wherever it has come from, it did not seek permission to be heard within the king’s walls, nor did it seek the kingly lines of communication (promenades and trumpet blasts).  It snuck through the streets, past the guards, and rested on a freezing child outlaw in a city slum.

    The king shows us a picture of what powerful people do when they “truly hear” – he steps aside and uses his position to proclaim the message to people everywhere.  What a difficult thing to say, “He will bring us goodness and light.”  Isn’t that the king’s one duty to his people?  Is he in effect saying, “This child, poor and freezing, sleeping and totally unaware, is more qualified to lead you than me.”  And with that he steps aside to watch the viral message of peace spread over the land, like a mighty wind.  If only our President could do that.  If only Prime Ministers and Kings and govenors and mayors of this state and world could do that.

    This message is a secret – “Do you know what I know?” sounds almost like school yard gossip.  A contagion of peace passed like a note in a classroom or a slave song in a field, pointing them to freedom.  Rarely do the rich and powerful stop to hear what is being said.  A quiet revolution sweeps over the earth like a breeze…do you hear what I hear?

    Share
     
  • Mark 9:47 am on December 18, 2008 Permalink | Reply  

    Snohawk! 

    Yep – totally winter.  About 5 inches of snow yesterday, and an ice-storm in today.  What does one do when things get this hairy?

    Why, give your vehicle a car-mohawk, that’s what!

    20081212_pic003

    In Texas, the thing to do in the winter was to crash your car into a ditch.  Believe me, it was all the rage.  Here in Chicago, people seem to want to stay on the road, and have the capacity to do so through years of training.  But with this snazzy new do, who’d want to stick to those old, tired tracks of thinking…may people start doing donuts in the snow-covered streets again!

    Here’s some other fun videos of stuff to do during Chicago’s snowy dayz:

    Urban Skiing

    Car Sledding

    Share
     
    • millertalbot 10:00 am on December 21, 2008 Permalink

      great stuff doode! i can’t wait to see your mug in some of these videos!

      peace

  • Mark 1:16 pm on December 15, 2008 Permalink | Reply  

    Cage-Free Christians 

    Living in the city has gotten me “a few steps” closer to living without a car.  Why is this such a big deal?  Several things excite me about this possibility:

    1. It sets me free from slavery to the Middle East.  That’s one less American dependant on imported oil, not to mention lays to rest many of the wars and conflict in the region, and keeps money in America, rather than shipping it to Dubai and other oil boom towns in the Middle East.

    2. One less exhaust pipe stinking up the city air.  I don’t know about you, but when I ride to work on my bike, it really hits me how much pollution really affects our city environment.  Its sometimes hard to inhale because of all the diesel trucks and cars pumping toxic fumes out on Clark Street.  It sure would be nice if we could smell that sweet Lake Michigan air coming in from just a few blocks away.

    3. The most important reason is that living without a car reels us in as humans to a more realistic limit.  Instead of charging ever forward to the next task or errand, maybe living without a car puts a few less things on our plate, and causes us to say “no” to more, and “yes” to only the most important things, which brings me to the point of this post:

    Developing healthy disciples of Christ in the urban Chicago scene will be hyper-local (within close reach), will focus on just a few, and will live a counter-cultural lifestyle.  Walking, biking, and taking trains and buses puts you in human-on-human situations in a way that a “cage on wheels” is designed to keep you from.

    Think of Jesus and his disciples.  They walked everywhere they went.  Their entire “circle of influence” was within a 3 mile radius.  That’s just a few “tribes” (or neighborhoods) in Israel.  Think of all the holes we would have in the stories of Jesus and his disciples if they drove from city to city (no woman at the well, no healing at the Bethesda pool, no Roman Centurian coming to faith…the list goes on….)  It was because they were more focused on the journey than the destination that gave them a capacity to be sensitive to people in need, and God’s adventure for them along the way.

    BTW – I think its awesome how Israel and Chicago are designed into walkable neighborhoods, each with their own distinctive ethnic and cultural flair.  Both even have identical urban design (with lakefront property!)  Check out what I’m talking about:

    chicago-neighorhood-mapisrael-tribes

    Fascinating!  A lifestyle of community, neighborhood and walking promotes a discipleship engaged in interaction with neighbors – rather than a curriculum isolated by commute times.

    I’m trying to implement this with disciples in our Pray4Chicago Project.  This project is designed to get people out of their cages (cars yes, but also our daily rat-race routines that blind us to what God is doing in the city) and into their neighbors lives.  What sort of things might happen?  Well, when this happened with Jesus and his disciples, he said he saw “Satan fall like lightning from the sky!…and now you can walk among snakes and scorpions and crush them!”  If Jesus gets this psyched about walking, maybe I should park my car, get out of my cage, and give it a try too.

    Share
     
c
compose new post
j
next post/next comment
k
previous post/previous comment
r
reply
e
edit
o
show/hide comments
t
go to top
l
go to login
h
show/hide help
esc
cancel