New Wine Podcast: Education and Suffering

iStock_000006384421XSmallOn October 28+29, New Wine Director Dr. Paul Louis Metzger guest-hosted The Georgene Rice Show. Georgene has graciously given us permission to post recordings from the two shows. We’ll post the audio in (approximately) hour-long segments throughout this week.

Today’s episode features a conversation with Holley Clough, Dan Scalberg, and Roy Andrews all of Multnomah University on changing trends in higher education. Dr. Metzger ends the show conversing with Karl Kutz and Julie Lerwick on the topic of suffering.

Links to some things mentioned in the show:

Multnomah University’s Degree Completion program, directed by Prof. Holley Clough.

Multnomah University’s History Department, chaired by Dr. Dan Scalberg.

Multnomah University’s Educational Ministries degree for which Dr. Roy Andrews teaches.

Multnomah University’s Biblical Hebrew major in which Dr. Karl Kutz teaches.

Multnomah University’s Master of Arts in Counseling for which Dr. Julie Lerwick is the interim director.

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New Wine Podcast: Healthcare and the Common Good

iStock_000006384421XSmallOn October 28+29, New Wine Director Dr. Paul Louis Metzger guest-hosted The Georgene Rice Show. Georgene has graciously given us permission to post recordings from the two shows. We’ll post the audio in (approximately) hour-long segments throughout this week.

Today’s episode features a conversation with Brad Harper of The Institute for the Theology of Culture: New Wine, New Wineskins and Multnomah University and Milan Homola of Compassion Connect on theology and healthcare. Dr. Metzger then turns to Tom Krattenmaker, author of The Evangelicals You Don’t Know and Kevin Palau of the Luis Palau Association to discuss how Evangelicals are developing relationships with a variety of figures in Portland to advance the common good.

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Humanize Religion: A Seminary Class Discussion with a Pagan and a Former Druid

Jason and me when he spoke in my class last summer.
Jason and me when he spoke in my class last summer.

Pagan leader Jason Pitzl-Waters spoke in my world religions class today. Jason is perhaps best known for his blog, The Wild Hunt: A Modern Pagan Perspective. Jason travels from Eugene to Portland (not a short ride) to put a human face on Paganism. One of the things he asks himself is: “If I don’t come and speak, who will the Christian seminary professor bring in as a guest speaker?” He shared his internal musings with my class and put the matter in context so that we could appreciate the question. If Christianity were a minority faith tradition that is often maligned, would we Christians feel comfortable if the media pulled anyone off the street who acknowledged they were Christian and interview them as an expert on Christianity? In his effort to humanize Paganism, Jason asked my class to see Pagans as one of those groups of spiritual people we Evangelical Christians want to convert, not as a bunch of Satan worshipers. He added, “The better you understand us the better your outreach. Caricatures will never lead to connection with Pagans. Having actual human moments with people of other faiths leads to empathy.”

Today, my class had opportunity to share human moments with two people with Pagan stories. Jason, who is a Wiccan, brought with him someone from a Druid background by the name of Teo Bishop. Teo lives here in Portland and has been in the news quite a lot lately given his movement toward Christianity. Teo blogs at Bishop in the Grove and is currently on the cover of Witches and Pagans because of his recent migration back to Christianity—the religion of his youth. He has found the intensified interest quite challenging. I can only imagine how challenging it is since, by his own admission, he is simply trying to learn what it means to follow Jesus. How simple, yet so complex. Kind of like Teo. Kind of like the rest of us. Teo does not fit stereotypes. Who does?

Teo is not a paper-thin caricature, nor is Jason, nor are you and me. Jason brought Teo to class today to complexify the discourse. From the vantage point of Jason’s Pagan tribe, it might not be seen as advantageous, he acknowledged. Many Pagans feel like Christianity scored another point in Teo’s turn. But it was more important to Jason to complexify rather than score points or keep points from being scored against this or that religious tradition or spiritual path. Jason’s genuineness and honesty always speak volumes to me. I hope I would be simple enough to complexify multi-faith discourse whenever possible.

Toward the end of his talk, Jason encouraged my class to approach people of different paths as people, not members of enemy armies. How novel. It sounds simple, but it’s not so easy. Land mines from past religious culture wars cover the path. Still, we need to be willing to risk and move past our fears and push forward even though adherents of our respective teams, tribes and armies may excommunicate us simply because we choose to communicate face to face with fellow humans of different paths.

I am grateful for Jason’s willingness to risk, as well as Teo’s. Together with the students in my class, they put human faces on religion and spirituality today. No points were scored during or after class, but hopefully greater trust was built. We’ll need such trust if we ever hope to diffuse the religious war bombs that deface us all.

This piece is cross-posted at Patheos and at The Christian Post. Comments made here are not monitored. To join the conversation, please comment on this post at Patheos.

New Wine Podcast: Biblical Justice and the Multi-Ethnic Church

iStock_000006384421XSmallOn October 28+29, New Wine Director Dr. Paul Louis Metzger guest-hosted The Georgene Rice Show. Georgene has graciously given us permission to post recordings from the two shows. We’ll post the audio in (approximately) hour-long segments throughout this week.

Today’s episode features a conversation with Mark Strong of Life Change Christian Center and 11:45Greg Burch and Armae Johnson both of The Institute for the Theology of Culture: New Wine, New Wineskins and Multnomah University on biblical justice. Next, Dr. Metzger turns to a conversation with Mark DeYmaz of the Mosaix Global Network, David Stevens of The Institute for the Theology of Culture: New Wine, New Wineskins and Central Bible Church and author of God’s New Humanity, and Derek Chinn of The Institute for the Theology of Culture: New Wine, New Wineskins and Multnomah University and author of 1+1=1 on the multi-ethnic church.

Click here for more information about The Justice Conference. Don’t forget to register for The Justice Conference Portland (hosted by New Wine @ Multnomah University)!

Click here for more information on Multnomah University’s Master of Arts in Global Development and Justice, directed by Dr. Greg Burch.

Click here for more information about the Mosaix Global Network, including the conference they hosted earlier this month in Long Beach. You may also be interested in our Twitter feed from November 5+6, as we live tweeted from the Mosaix 2013 Multi-Ethnic Church Conference.

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New Wine Podcast: Youth Leaving the Church, Gang Violence

iStock_000006384421XSmallOn October 28+29, New Wine Director Dr. Paul Louis Metzger guest-hosted The Georgene Rice Show. Georgene has graciously given us permission to post recordings from the two shows. We’ll post the audio in (approximately) hour-long segments throughout this week.

Today’s episode features a conversation with Mark Nicklas of Beaverton Foursquare Church, Rob Hildebrand of Multnomah University, and John Franklin (formerly) of Young Life on what has been coined the “You Lost Me” generation–that is, a generation of children raised in the church who leave the church (but not always faith) in young adulthood. Dr. Metzger next turns to a conversation with Cliff Chappell of St. John’s All Nations Church of God in Christ and Man-Up, Eric Knox of Imago Dei Community and the Holla Foundation, Tory Campell of Irvington Covenant Church, and Mark Strong of Life Change Christian Center and 11:45 on gang violence, fatherlessness, and trauma.

In the latter conversation, Dr. Metzger mentions a blog post he’ll be writing about gang violence. Read it here!

Listen to this podcast:

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