Fellow bloggers, you have been called out.

Pearson's picture
Submitted by Pearson on Sun, 08/12/2007 - 03:44

So Eaton has told me he wants me to pay him back for all his brilliant web help by fiddling around on this site, and so I've been dropped into this thing with him, who I don't know nearly as well as I'd like, and you two other guys who I wouldn't know if you you'd taken my classes. So I'm going to play a Growing-Up-Goddy meme game, and I'd like for you to play it with me. We can at least use it to compare notes on our experiences, and we might even find fodder for future posts in them.

So, have some fun with this. Fellow bloggers, I expect responses to this (and, by all means, if you think you can add useful categories, add 'em). If you're coming through and you find this interesting, you may feel free to play along in the comments; you'll be useful help for our enterprise, too.

(Heh, this Drupal thing automatically clips my post, too. We'll have to fix that. If you haven't figured it out yet, there's more behind that "Read more" link below.)

Name: Dr Chuck Pearson (yes, that's a PhD in Biophysics from Ohio State)
Job: Professor at a small Southern Baptist school (and not only do my posts here not represent them, they might disavow all knowledge of my posting here)
Youthful church background: Disgruntled United Methodist
Current religious leanings: Disgruntled United Methodist (yes, there was a period of time between my youth and now when I was not a disgruntled United Methodist)
First church culture memory: Having memory verses for Vacation Bible School come from - of all places - Romans 10. (So I've always had a weakness for Romans.)
Strangest church culture memory: Praying the sinner's prayer for the first time - while taking a friend to her Christian school's PROM. (It wasn't a real prom, mind, there was no dancing whatsoever. I'll leave it to your imagination what we actually did, and how it morphed into actually getting altar-called and praying the prayer. To be totally honest, I don't remember the details myownself - it was just brain-breaking.)
Claim to fame within church culture: Probably the cascade of posts I made to the rec.music.christian Usenet newsgroup between 1992 and 1999. Most of that time, I was a young married grad school guy. I probably got as much education out of rec.music.christian as I did out of grad school. And not just about Christian music.
First CCM song heard: "Restless Heart", Michael W. Smith
Book that changed my life: Scandal of the Evangelical Mind, Mark Noll
Most embarassing thing about church culture circa 2007: Kirk Cameron. I don't know why I'm so desperate to hide my head in the dirt every time I see him hawking this "Way Of The Master" crud. But I am.
Church culture weakness that will probably never go away: Not only am I a PUNK RAWK KID at age 35, but I will still go bonkers over a good Christian rock band. I still don't know why Luminate doesn't have a major label deal, I'm a bigger fan of Red than most of my students, and I cannot get enough of Anberlin. And yeah, I linked their MySpace pages. Wanna make something of it?

Comments

Eaton's picture

Submitted by Eaton on Sun, 08/12/2007 - 06:18

Name: Jeff Eaton
Job: Professional geek with Lullabot. We do training, consulting and development work with Drupal, a super-slick open source web framework.
Youthful church background: I spent my first few years in a Charismatic commune in the Chicago 'burbs, then morphed into a drifter between the evangelical and charismatic worlds.
Current religious leanings: Holding onto the basics of Christianity, with lots of head-scratching.
First church culture memory: First grade: I didn't dress up as a host or a monster for halloween. I dressed as a missionary doctor.
Strangest church culture memory: Being at 'Charismatic Ground Zero' during a religious conference in Kansas City, with people all around me being slain in the spirit and laughing. I was not slain in the spirit, and I didn't laugh.
Claim to fame within church culture: I co-hosted the 700 Club once...
First CCM song heard: Angels Watchin' Over Me, by Amy Grant.
Book that changed my life: The Myth of Certainty, by Daniel Taylor. I'd felt like I was alone in a world that demanded atheism or fundamentalist lockstep; reading it showed me I wasn't.
Most embarassing thing about church culture circa 2007: "The Culture War," in all of its manifestations.
Church culture weakness that will probably never go away: Horrible rapture fiction and kitsch media? Really, though? The connection, community, and sense of shared positive purpose that's there when times are good.

Eaton's picture

Submitted by Eaton on Sun, 08/12/2007 - 13:13

I had a sneaking suspicion. ;-)

Actually, I'm now looking at setting up this set of questions as the semi-official biography/profile each new author can set up. It'd be pretty cool, I think...

Clark's picture

Submitted by Clark on Mon, 08/13/2007 - 01:32

Name: Jeremy Clark

Job: Student (PhD in Cryptography)

Youthful church background: Fellowship Baptist. In Canada, there was a split between the modernist and fundamentalist Baptists. We were the fundies (and boy did we hate those Convention Baptists).

Current religious leanings: Agnostic; somewhere between deist and negative atheist.

First church culture memory: I have a notoriously bad long-term memory. I don't remember being "saved" for example, which happened when I was four, and the most available memories are the most salient (like throwing up during church), not the cultural things that I just assumed everyone did. I suppose the earliest would be the flannelgraph Bible stories.

Strangest church culture memory: Strange is relative, and growing up Baptist kept me shielded from the Charismatic movement. And so my first witnessing of the outpouring of the holy ghost left me feeling quite perturbed, in a psych-ward kind of way. (I’m not trying to rile any charismatics up, this is just an honest reflection of what it felt like).

Claim to fame within church culture: Unlike my co-authors, I really don't have one. All my letters to Breakaway were never printed and I had a knack for getting banned from Christian message boards for pointing out the real reason Sodom was destroyed or pointing out that the charismatic movement stole glossolalia from the Mormons.

First CCM song heard: The first one I heard and loved was Geoff Moore's (pre The Distance) cover of "Why Should the Devil have all the Good Music." Growing up in a hymn-singing church where rock and roll was "from the pit of hell," this song spoke to me in so many ways. I wore out the cassette listening to intro: a few measures of an organ being played just like Sunday mornings, and then out of nowhere, a ripping guitar solo begging you to crank the volume.

Book that changed my life: "Beacon's Dictionary of Theology." This was basically a theology encyclopaedia, with articles on nearly all variations of a Christian belief on a given topic. Because it offered criticism of beliefs the editors didn't agree with, it was a "safe" book to have. But it exposed me to new, exciting, and unorthodox beliefs that I didn't know were out there and would go on to embrace.

Most embarrassing thing about church culture circa 2007: The political agenda. Although it is more subtle than it’s made out to be by the media, there is a consistent subtext. Its embarrassing because the church believes it is influencing politics without being influenced itself---sort of like evangel-dating a non-Christian.

Church culture weakness that will probably never go away: I'm not sure if this question is meant to be relative to me or relative to the church, but I'll assume the former. If they can even be called a weakness: Philip Yancey's books. He's like the Malcolm Gladwell of Christianity.

***

And for added measure, I wanted to say a word or two about the drastic transition in my religious beliefs. I always had intellectual trouble with Christianity, and in my late teens I became obsessed with theology. I felt that the answers were out there, I just had to find them. Through this process, I liberalized my beliefs significantly, but I also got distracted. Theology got boring and I started reading about the philosophy of religion, and then just general philosophy. From there I discovered political philosophy; I spent a long time shaping my political beliefs. This also led me to study economics, and behavioural economics bridged my interest into cognitive science and evolutionary psychology. In short, I just stopped trying to figure out religion because there were more exciting things to learn. But recently, economics and evolutionary psychology has brought me back to reconsidering it. The latter really challenged my beliefs by presenting an alternative explanation that seems to better fit the facts, and the economics of religion helped me to understand why I still value Christianity so much even if I basically reject it intellectually.

Add new comment

You are here