Words of God: Prompts and Triggers, Idols and Clichés

Daily writing prompt
What is a word you feel that too many people use?

Prompts and Triggers

Today’s prompt is a little triggering. Triggering might be one of those words.

Having spent too much time on Twitter, I have to go with “gutted.” Everyone on Twitter/X is absolutely gutted over everything. The popular meaning (bitterly disappointed or upset) supposedly originated in 80’s British prison slang, which makes sense because Americans on Twitter also love saying “cheers.”

“Cliché” is another one. I’d like to run an ad during the Super Bowl reminding everyone that nothing is cliché. Something can be a cliché, but the adjective they’re looking for is clichéd.”

In terms of what we talk about on this podcast? The word biblical gets thrown around a lot, usually by people who are misreading, misquoting, or misusing the Bible. Except in the UK, and if you’re Liam Gallagher, because then it just means awesome.

Word of God suffers in the same way. Did you know the Bible does not really call itself the Word of God? It can’t. It does, however, call Jesus the Word of God. And so does Karl Barth.

I was thinking today about the difference between how we think of God as God (the God of all creation, of the entire cosmos, the author of all reality) versus how we think about God in terms of our daily lives. On some level, I believe these are the same, but I also know that I navigate my personal needs (prayers for my family, for example) in a very set way. We all have ways of containing (more generously, interacting) with the Mystery. In a way, these practices, routines, and rituals are something like household gods. They can, of course, become idols. But the ancient phenomenon of household gods took root for a reason. We need imminent and immanent ways to interact with the transcendent and ineffable. So we make little statues or we draw lines of division. We create labels, all of which are overused.

In the Christian story, God comes to us (to space and time, literally) and to oppression, poverty, anxiety (the human condition generally) in Jesus. It’s as if God says “there’s no proof of life in your idols; follow me instead.” And, of course, we kill him. Idols can’t respond. They can’t tell us our prejudices and hatreds and selfishness are wrong. Jesus can and does. So we kill him. Then we replace him with a book. We forget that Jesus is the Word (the creative agency, the mind, the full revelation) of God and we settle for the Bible. We put our perspective of it in a place of honor with the rest of our household gods and then we say that shelf of lifeless artifact tells us all we need to know about Everything.

If the word biblical is overused, the word idolatrous sure isn’t.

Dying Metaphors

“A dying metaphor is a derogatory term coined by George Orwell in his essay Politics and the English Language. Orwell defines a dying metaphor as a metaphor that isn’t dead (dead metaphors are different, as they are treated like ordinary words), but has been worn out and is used because it saves people the trouble of inventing an original phrase for themselves. In short, a cliché. Example: Achilles’ heel. Orwell suggests that writers scan their work for such dying forms that they have ‘seen regularly before in print’ and replace them with alternative language patterns.” (Wikipedia)

Tom Spanbauer calls clichéd words and imagery received text. I learned that from this essay by Chuck Palahniuk.

What Brings You Peace?

Daily writing prompt
What brings you peace?

I thought I’d dip my toe into WordPress’s daily writing prompt today. The question posed is “what brings you peace?”

It’s hard to not think about this in relation to mental health. Timothy writes that God did not give us a spirit of fear but rather of power and love and self-control (or a sound mind, or a balanced mind) or, as Denzel Washington says in The Great Debaters, “a righteous mind.”

I don’t think of a righteous mind as an excessively pious one. I think of righteousness in this sense as health, wholeness, and healing. Our minds our miracles. They are powerful. Often, they need restoration. When Washington, in the role of Melvin B. Tolson, says “I and every professor on this campus are here to help you to find, take back, and keep your righteous mind… because obviously you have lost it,” I think of Jesus.

Other things that bring me peace: nature, exercise, music, having basic needs understood and having ways to meet them. And (certain) people.

How about you?

Opening Prayer (Graciously, Gratefully, Generously)

Ever-present God, remind us today that when we seek you, you answer. Sharpen our minds and strengthen our spirits to see what you have already made known; condition our minds and hearts to do your will, to become ever-more like You, and to live your call graciously, gratefully, and generously. In Jesus’ name, amen.

UAPs, Disclosure, and Observations of the Soul

David Grusch. Tom DeLonge. George Knapp. AOC?

We recorded and shared this bonus episode just over a month ago. Some things have happened since then, but there’s really no more clarity. So, here’s our take on UFOs (or not), aliens (or not), and some good stuff from quantum physicist Anton Zellinger about God, faith, and the nature of reality.

Opening Prayer (based on Psalm 8)

O God, our God, how majestic is your name in all the earth! Through the praise of children you have established a stronghold. When we consider your heavens, the work of your hands, the moon and the stars, the atoms and cosmos, which you have set in place, who are we that you are mindful of us, human beings that you care for us? But you made us, carefully, wonderfully, and have crowned us with the glory and honor of your image, your Spirit, your life. O Yahweh, our God, how majestic is your name in all the earth!

Opening Prayer or Call to Worship (Psalm 57)

We just changed the language for a corporate setting. “We” exalt you instead of “be exalted,” etc.

We will exalt You, O Lord, among the nations;

we will sing of You among the peoples.

For great is Your love, reaching to the heavens;

Your faithfulness reaches to the skies.

Be exalted, O God, above the heavens;

Let Your glory over the earth. Amen.

About that Fake Sun Bear

Maybe it’s real. Maybe it’s not. Who knows. One thing that’s certainly fake: the enclosure. Zoos aren’t real. Who cares if the bear is?

It’s a struggle out there.

Have you outgrown your current enclosure? What would it mean to put down whatever masks you wear? Are you looking for that next step to wholeness, health, and healing? These are better questions.

From a hilarity standpoint, I want the bear to be fake. But she’s probably real. We have a hard time telling the difference because we think our worth is based on our accomplishments. How good we look. How convincing we are. How real we seem.

Get back in touch with who you really are. A cosmic marvel. A child of God.

“Why Did So Many People Stop Going to Church?” at The Atlantic

There’s a lot here that’s true. Especially this: “In a workist culture that believes dignity is grounded in accomplishment, simply reclaiming this alternative form of dignity becomes a radical act.”

I don’t love that the book it’s talking about is connected to TGC. But beyond that, what’s the takeaway? Successful, upwardly mobile post-industrial people certainly sense there’s more to life. But modern churches have been pretty bad at being emotionally and intellectually fulfilling. This wasn’t always the case, but I think it is now.

What to do?

Opening Prayer

For use any time:

God of all people, God of all seasons, God of past, present, and future; bless us as we gather. Center us in your presence, remind us of your love, strengthen us with your protection, guide us with your wisdom, move us to hear Your call and do the good work you call us too. Amen.

Hymns for Deconstruction: “Walkaway” by Cast

1996 was like my peak teenage year. Sometimes I don’t think I have much to offer people who are “deconstructing” now. I put that in quotes because it’s not what I called it when I did it. I’m in my 40s, I’ve done this work. Sometimes I’m triggered by people doing it now, because they don’t know (and I know they can’t know) that this isn’t a new thing. Fundamentalism is far newer than the balance of the Christian tradition. So sometimes twitter is hard. I don’t feel like I have much to offer. But, I do have this. Call it a hymn of deconstruction. Follow Jesus away from the bullshit. The album cut here is slow, but I always play it fast and happy.