12 May 2009

James Bond Villains and the Art of Fearmongering

Those who know me well will recall I am, and have been for years, a fan of the 007 flicks. I own all of them and one point could have given you the name of each movie (like Goldfinger) and told you who starred as James Bond (Sean Connery), the name of the Villain (Auric Goldfinger) and his henchman (if applicable, in this case Oddjob - masterfully played by Harold Sakata), the name of the damsel with the stupid name (Pussy Galore), and the year it was made (1964). Unfortunately, with the passing of time and the development of other hobbies I can no longer rattle all of that useful info off for each of the movies - which might be one reason why I eventually was able to marry a beautiful woman.

Those who know me even a little know I work for an amazing organization which desires to radically change the world - Amor Ministries. We have been working in Mexico since 1980 and are now making inroads around the globe to show the love of Christ to people in a way that make s a lot of sense. I have worked with Amor for nearly eight years. Amor is definitely one reason I was eventually able to marry a specific beautiful woman.

Anyone who has not had their head buried in sand for the last year realizes Mexico has been trampled under a sensationalized media stampede decrying the country as a war zone and unsafe for travel. Likewise, Mexico has been quarantined as the the epicenter of the latest doomsday pandemic because of a virus that amounted to a very mild flu. The
result has been fear. This post is about fear.

Author, Thinker, and Marketing Guru Seth Godin was recently asked this question:

If you were a James Bond villain, how would you take over the world?

He answered:
I'd release a pheromone that increases the fear that people have about doing great things. It would only increase it by 3%, but that would be enough to wipe out most competition. I'm convinced someone is already doing this, by the way.

I agree with Mr. Godin. There seems to be more hysteria now than ever. The most alarming aspect of is that the Church has fallen victim to this fear and has trapped itself in hypocrisy. Yesterday, in church, we sang a worship song that was full of the usual "victory in Christ " fanfare that is so common in our Sunday morning services. At one point we actually sang these words:
And I will fear no evil
For my God is with me
And if my God is with me
Whom then shall I fear?

They probably should not have left this portion of the song an interrogative (rhetorical or not). Because the answer is PLENTY. I have seen fear rock hundreds of churches completely of course and seen a false sense of self preservation prevent people from following through with the most basic of Christ's teachings.

In my own day to day this amounts to a tepid stew of drug violence and swine flu seasoned with economic worries keeping the Church from partnering with churches in poorer nations to provide resources for those most in need. To be more specific: All of the sudden Mexico became uncomfortable and the American Church ran like hell. No trust. Lack of Faith.

When were we promised following Jesus was going to be safe? When were we promised it would be easy? When did following Jesus cease requiring sacrifice? I am still in my twenties and I vividly recall being taught from a very young age that serving God is a wonderful adventure that requires desperate faith in the midst of adversity. I remember being taught Christ's sacrifice was the ultimate act of love for us - and our lives would require sacrifice as we grew to be more like Him. Likewise I recall that our basic function as a member of the Body of Christ was to love everyone in the name of Jesus.

Are these tenants still being taught? If so, please stop. Because our actions no longer reflect these teachings.



Everyone with 18 minutes to spare should watch this...

11 May 2009

This weeks example of something I will never be able to do...

but I appreciate that they can. (Thanks for the link Ryan.)