Somewhere in Northern Ireland

I'm in Belfast, Northern Ireland at the moment possibly stuck.  We'll see what happens tomorrow.  The weather over Northern England and Scotland is creating havoc with the flight schedules so my plans are very much up in the air--although the planes are not. I've been to Ireland before---actually met God there once---that's an interesting story for another time---but I've never been to Northern Ireland which is Protestant and is actually part of the U.K. along with Scotland, Wales, and England.  Tomorrow I may be heading back to Berlin, may get stranded here in Northern Ireland, or may end up in Scotland.  Just not really sure at the moment.  And I don't care.  Although, I am missing Jamie and Marco terribly on this trip.  Once I'm done with this one--I have no more trips away from the family until 1 week in January--and the rest of these 2 months we will travel together if we have to at all.  Good!

More on my time with the Liverpool church later with pictures.  Right now, nothing is wanting to load.

Christian Persecution in Pakistan

Pakistan is not only the center of the world on terror, but it is also becoming a center of major Christian persecution.  From Time Magazine: "It all began a year and a half ago, with a quarrel over a bowl of water. A group of women farm workers were suffering in the heat near a village in Pakistan's Punjab province. Aasia Noreen, an illiterate 45-year-old mother of five, offered them water, but was rebuffed. Noreen was a Christian, they said, and therefore her water was unclean — sadly, a common taunt hurled at Pakistan's beleaguered Christians. But rather than swallowing the indignity, she mounted a stout defense of her faith.

Word of the exchange swiftly filtered through the village of Ittan Wali, in Sheikhupura district. The local mullah took to his mosque's loudspeakers, exhorting his followers to take action against Noreen. In a depressingly familiar pattern, her defense of her faith was twisted into an accusation of blasphemy, according to her family and legal observers familiar with the case. As a frenzied mob pursued her, the police intervened, taking her into custody. But far from protecting her, they arrested and charged Noreen with insulting Islam and its prophet. And on Nov. 8, after enduring 18 months in prison, she was sentenced to death by a district court, making her the first woman to suffer that fate."

You can read more here.

(Note: I'm in Liverpool, England and will hopefully post some pictures tomorrow, although I still can't figure out how to get the pictures off my phone.  Technology is hard.  Pushing buttons is hard.  Plugging things in is hard).

Liverpool Yeah, Yeah, Yeah!

Tonight I am flying to Liverpool to visit with our only church in Northern England which is pastored by J. Pemberton.  This will be my first trip ever to Liverpool--although I've wanted to go there for much of my life.

I have been a big Beatles fan since I was a kid.  I think I was 4 when I first started getting to know the most famous songs like "Michelle" and "Yesterday."  When I was 8, my sister borrowed "The Beatles Greatest Hits 1962-1966" and "The Beatles Greatest Hits 1967-1970" as well as "The Beatles: Love Songs" (which is no longer available).  These three albums had probably 60 to 80 songs on them and that was when I became fanatical about the Beatles.  Around that time, I saw "The Complete Beatles"--A Fantastic 2 hour documentary on the Fab Five and I started to read all the major books about the Beatles: Philip Normans, Peter Brown's, and others.

I didn't discover "the White Album" until my senior year in high school, and it was the summer of my senior year that I listened to Abbey Road over and over.  In 1992, my friends Greg, Mike and I went to Abbey Road and crossed the famous crosswalk outside the studio (which is featured on the album cover).  There is a picture of me doing that somewhere but I lost it.  I have it on video though.  And when I was about 17, my Dad took me to see "Rain"--A Beatles impersonation group.  They were uncannily perfect.  It was the closest thing to living back then and is still one of the best concerts I've ever seen.

There's a lot that makes the Beatles fascinating:  the first major, global, rock group, 4 very distinct personalities, the early period of instantly catchy hits juxtaposed against the complexity and psychedelic nature of their second era, their sense of humor, and their spiritual journey--as crazy as it might have been.

But for me, there are two things that really stand out about Beatles music.

The first is that it is unnaturally, consistently catchy and melodic.  Most bands never put out two good albums in a row.  You are lucky to ever compose a song that is remembered 10 years from now.  Perhaps if you are very lucky and talented (U2), there may be 5 to 10 that are known worldwide and the average person on the street can hum.  But with the Beatles, there are tons of songs that people around the world, of all cultures, all ages, and all socio-economic classes and musical tastes can sing or know well.  "Yesterday," "Michelle," "All You Need is Love," "Yellow Submarine", "Let it Be," "Can't Buy Me Love," "Something", "Come Together," etc.  "Yesterday" is the most recorded song in musical history.  The list could go on and on.  And for every well known song that many people love like such as "Michelle" there are five times as many wonderful songs that are less known like "Blackbird" or "Across the Universe" that are equally wonderful.  For any other band, these lesser known songs would have been their one great hit.

And the strange thing is that it all came from 4 young kids from a then, dingy, working-class section of Industrial England.  How did these 4 kids come up with a Mozart-like ability to create tune after tune that is ridiculously full of melody.  And it never stopped.  Abbey Road, their last full studio album has a song like "Here Comes the Sun" which is just as melodic as "I Wanna Hold Your Hand."  Most of the genius was Paul McCartney and John Lennon (Actually it's Paul's songs that are usually preferred by people, even though John is the one who is thought of as the edgier writer).  But George's songs were great and even when Ringo comes up with "Octopuses Garden" or "Goodnight", it is ridiculously catchy.

The song that always sticks out to me is "And I Love Her."  This quiet song has a guitar part that reminds me of Latin American (Chilean) music and it always blows my mind that such an odd sounding song (which sounded nothing like the music of the time) could be written by a bunch of kids in Northern England.  Where did the musical depth come from?  The chord progressions?

The second thing that sets the Beatles apart was their experimentation.  They went from a simple song like "She Loves You" to the complexity (and orchestration) of "A Day in the Life".  Much of this came from the production of George Martin who took Lennon and McCartney's wild ideas and made them real in the studio.  They experimented with stereo, they used orchestra instruments, they made lyrics abstract (as opposed to "She loves you yeah yeah, yeah!"), and they subverted their own image rejecting commercialism and they still remained the biggest band.  The White Album has everything from bluegrass, to country, to burlesque, to 50's orchestra band music, to psychadelic rock , to an imitation of surf music.  A band no longer had to be one thing or play in one genre---they could be anything.

And when the band broke up just weeks before I was born, they left on top.  They never went into decline like every other band does.  Their final songs were better than their early songs.  I'm actually glad they broke up.  I'm glad we never had to see them flame out musically.

There is a Beatles tour in Liverpool.  The purpose of my trip is not to see the Beatles, but the church, so I won't be doing that.  But maybe on one of my future visits I will do so. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

London Calling

We just got back from London last night.  Jamie, Marco and I attended the Quarterly Meeting of the Church of God in the United Kingdom.  It is a time when all the churches come together for the weekend and report to each other and have a unity service.  These kinds of things are very important to keep the country's leadership together.

We had a good meeting and a wonderful dinner with Pastor Mascall and his wife on Friday.  We met with the leaders on Saturday, and then I spoke on Sunday.

It was a real whirlwind of a trip.  We left at 5AM on Friday morning and returned at 10PM on Sunday.  All three of us are completely wiped out.  As you all know, London is my favorite place in the world, but there wasn't any time to enjoy the city on this trip.  Our Sunday service was out in Goodmayes in North East London---a section of the city I had never been to before.  T

Marco was patient with all the meetings.  We did manage to sneak in a couple of hours at the British National Museum which is amazing, but that was about it.  The weather in Berlin and London is about 32 degrees F this week so..it's pretty uncomfortable being outside for long periods of time.  We did make a brief stop at my favorite Travel Bookstore and I bought that book about South Africa that I wrote about a couple of posts together.  I am looking forward to reading it.  Right now I'm reading the VS Naipaul book on African Spirituality which is turning out to be a train wreck.

As with all the places we have been visiting, the churches are in the midst of thinking about what is working, what's not working, and what kind of changes need to be made.  Overall, we are very happy with the way the U.K. is encouraging and investing in their young people.  And we are really looking forward to spending more time with them in the future as they re-calibrate and engage their awesome city.

This process of re-examination is one that I will probably write about in the future here on the diary.

In a mere 4 days, I'm off to Liverpool, England and Scotland.  I will be getting to see our one church in the North of England for the first time and I'm really looking forward to that.

Through the magic of this thing called "technology", my phone can take pictures. If I can figure out how to get them off my phone, I'll post some.  But no promises.  It's me we're talking about here.

Happy T-Day

We had our first snow here yesterday.  It was only a light dusting of snow, but it confirmed that winter is here. Today we have a full house as we celebrate Thanksgiving.  We haven't had a Thanksgiving in a long time.  This one feels like we are in America.  The weather is cool and fall-like, instead of hot and humid.  And Aaron rigged it up so we are watching NFL football live on our TV.  We had turkey, gravy, stuffing, and apple pie.  And we have about 12 of us in the home tonight.

The Tatman's from Auburn, Indiana have been with us this week and it has been great having them in our home.  They have been wonderful supporters of the Simpson's work in Bulgaria and are just returning from a visit there.    We'll miss them.  They've been awesome guests.

Tomorrow VERY EARLY in the morning, Jamie, Marco and I are flying to London for the Quarterly Meeting of the Church of God in the U.K.  We'll spend time with the youth on Friday also.  We'll fly back Sunday night.  As you all now, London is my favorite place on this green and blue little planet we call Earth--so it's always a good day when I'm on my way there.  And it's great to be with the folks in Tottenham.

Well, it's possible that we'll check in from London and hopefully we'll have some pictures to post.

Happy Thanksgiving to all our friends and family back in the USA.  We are especially thankful to all of you that support us and the Three Worlds team over here in Europe and the Middle East.

Cheerio!

South Africa: Promise Unfulfilled?

Back in 1995, I was in London and spent an evening hanging out with six guys from South Africa.  This was just a year after the new post-Apartheid era had begun.  These guys were angry.  They were white and their parents were part of the privileged elite.  Now in the post-Apartheid era, their fathers had lost their high level jobs and they felt the country was going down the drain.  "You wouldn't believe how incompetent the people are that are governing South Africa." I remember being shocked.  Our images of South Africa were all so positive.  This racist country led by white Afrikaners had peacefully allowed true democracy to occur allowing the African majority to vote in Nelson Mandela.  It was a triumphal moment in human history (and it still is).  South Africa was a wealthy, modern, racist state.  The big question lingering was "could it continue to be as successful?"  It was too early to tell in 1995, but I hadn't heard anything negative---until meeting these guys.

Now, a long-time South Africa watcher has written a book about the post-Apartheid South Africa; and it doesn't paint a pretty  picture.  There seems to be bad governance.  From the Wall Street Journal Review:

Trevor Manuel, the South African finance minister from 1996 to 2009, got his job when the aging Nelson Mandela asked, at a cabinet meeting, who was a good economist. Mr. Manuel raised his hand thinking Mr. Mandela had asked who was "a good communist." Mr. Manuel served his country ably. But the appointment of the sole competent minister in the first government of African National Congress was a matter of blind luck.

A weakening economy:

Today the economy and infrastructure are in shambles. Unemployment is 25.3%, up from 17% in 1995. When I last visited South Africa in 2008, the state-owned energy giant Eskom was implementing rolling blackouts because of low capacity and booming demand—the predictable effects of the ANC's drastically subsidizing the price of electricity.

And as is often the case, the revolutionary leader is often a lousy governor (Castro, Mao Zedong, Nelson Mandela).

But at the heart of the country's sickness is its governing party the ANC:

Mr. Johnson has been a prolific critic of the ANC's 16-year tenure in power. "South Africa's Brave New World," his political history of the post- apartheid era, amounts to a book-length indictment of the ANC. Its leaders come through as so corrupt, lecherous and violent that governance is not even an afterthought.

So this is some of what those guys in London were talking about.  Cronyism run a muck and a country with a strong economic foundation weakening quickly.

In Africa's latest renaissance, South Africa has been a pillar of African globalization.  Africa needs a strong South Africa.  While much of South Africa's successful institutions were built by whites upon the back of black workers, South Africa has people of all races that could make it a well-governed nation.  The recent World Cup held in South Africa was a big deal for all of Sub-Saharan Africa, not just the country of South Africa.  Much of what ails South Africa already plagues some of the rising African nations like Nigeria, Angola, and Liberia.  Will South Africa be more like the countries of Sub-Saharan Africa in the future?  Or will Sub-Sahran countries look more like the modern South Africa of the present?

Of course Sub-Saharan Africa is not a monolithic thing---there are many cultures and peoples on this continent, but there are enough commonalities in these countries that South Africa will always be the big example--for better or for worse.  I'm glad this (most likely) politically incorrect book has been written because Africa is getting its second chance at rapid modernization and it needs to get as much right as it possibly can.

The UN Human Development Report 2010

Despite the recessions, terrorism tension, and natural disasters---as I have long argued--the world's never been safer, wealthier, or healthier.  The UN Human Development Report 2010 is out and among the findings:

*Globalization is leading poor countries to catch up to rich countries on a scale never seen before.

*Since 1970, income in the developing world has risen 184 percent

*Literacy in the developing world has risen 61 percent since 1970.

*School enrollment and life expectancy have risen sharply in most developing nations.

*In 1970, just a third of nations had true democracy; today, the fraction is 60 percent.

*World literacy , is 84 percent now (that is VERY high).

*Life expectancies in Africa have grown by 15 years in the past 40 years.

*Oman, China, Nepal, Indonesia and Saudi Arabia are seeing the fastest overall development socially.

*Norway is the overall healthiest place to live.  Zimbabwe is the worst.

*The USA is high upon the list as top places to live and China is far, far behind.

Marco was asking us about the terrorism alert here in Germany the other day.  "Are we safe?"  We told him about how when we were his age (and we're not that old), there were literally thousands of nuclear missiles pointed at each other between the Soviet Union and the USA.

When my father was his age, there were cities in Europe (including in Germany) that were 95% destroyed by bombs.  Not Africa, Europe!

When my grandfather was Marco's age, most people would have been fortunate to make it past 50 without painful, disabling sickness.

I believe we are entering into the counter-action phase of this latest round of hyper-globalization.  And many things will get worse and go wrong in the future.  The speed of innovation is far surpassing our ability to manage what we create and this is going to continue to have negative consequences.  But despite this, even since the mid-1990's,---even here in Europe, just 5 miles from this house in Berlin where a wall once stood----things are far better than they once were.

Threats Against Germany

German authorities are on guard against threats of armed attack on civilians of the kind that killed 166 in the Indian city of Mumbai in 2008, Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said Thursday.

Police are taking added precautions, de Maiziere said, a day after Germany tightened security measures citing threats from Islamist militants.

"What we are basically preparing ourselves for, is that terrorists, coming from abroad, commit an attack soon after arrival, without warning, in a building or public place, knowing that they may not survive," de Maiziere told broadcaster ZDF.

"In shop talk, we'd call that something similar to what happened in Mumbai," he added.

Wednesday, Germany said it had strong evidence Islamist militants were planning attacks in the next two weeks, and it ordered security at potential targets such as train stations and airports to be tightened.

Security officials in Berlin said on condition of anonymity then that three scenarios existed -- one involving senior al Qaeda leader Younis al Mauretani, another involving the Mumbai-style attack, and a third pointing tosleeper cells already in Germany.

As de Maiziere spoke, German police were on route to Namibia to aid a separate investigation into a suspect package found at Windhoek airport during security checks for a German tourist flight to Munich.

Catholicism Challenged in Post-Christendom Europe

An interesting article in the New York Times today about Catholic house-churches.  These are small communities of Catholics in Europe that are frustrated (or have lost faith) in the institutional Roman Catholic Church, and are creating their own churches (in this case in Beglium and Holland).  Of course, this is strictly forbidden in the RCC since it is a hierarchical form of Christianity.  All churches lead to Rome.  But in Western Europe, the forms of Christianity that are growing are these independent, break-away churches, while the institutional church is dying on the vine. Why is this happening?  From the article:

They are an uneasy reaction to a combination of forces: a shortage of priests, the closing of churches, dissatisfaction with Vatican appointments of conservative bishops and, most recently, dismay over cover-ups of sexual abuse by priests.

This is part of the crisis of European Catholicism.  A lack of priests to preside over the Parishes and serve communion---yet women and lay people are not allowed to serve the elements.  Then there is the fact that beliefs of the RCC are out of line with what most Europeans believe (whether on issues such as ordained women, birth control, or homosexuality).  And then there are the sexual scandals combined with the institutional cover-up in many European countries that are creating mass cynicism and disgust with the institutional church.

But there's deeper issues at foot.  One that is striking even Protestant institutions:

We are looking for ways to live faith in a modern way,” said Karel Ceule, a Lier member. “If you look at the crisis today with Archbishop Léonard, he is a symbol of an old, conservative church. In Flanders, this doesn’t work anymore. We have reached a stage of history where we don’t accept that the priest has to be the go-between. We want to take charge of baptisms and communion.”

There is a push toward de-centralization which we see in Protestantism with its post-denominationalism.  We also see a break from the church as it was in an effort to have it relate better to a post-modern culture.  In this case, the home-made service uses young people and they bring in something secular into the sacred:

Almost 150 people gathered around him for a service organized by teenage members who picked a theme of peace and music from John Lennon and Paul McCartney.

This also mirrors the route many Protestant churches are taking in the missional/emerging movement.

In France, some of the fastest growing churches are Charismatic Roman Catholic Churches.  These, of course, exist throughout the non-Western world, particularly in Latin America and the Philippines.  The RCC is not happy about it.  But now this phenomenon is growing in Western Europe.  This is fascinating because one would expect this charismatic Catholicism in places with a strong indigenous religious presence (like Africa), but not in the heart of modern secularism---France.

The level of spirituality and interest in spirituality in Europe is continually underestimated.  What is clear is that the institutional church--particularly the largest--the Roman Catholic Church--is in severe crisis.  But that is not the whole story.

Empty Churches, Overflowing Mosques

This is where I spoke today.  The Church of God in Paris meets in this very old, historical monument Lutheran Church just down the road from Notre Dame.  In fact, after church, I walked into Notre Dame and caught the last part of the poorly attended Sunday noon mass.  I then got a bite to eat across the river from Notre Dame and headed back to Gare Du Nord to pick up my luggage and get online for a bit.  I fly home tonight.

As you can see, it's a gorgeous sight--and tourists come to visit the church and hear the large pipe organ. Today was a joint unity service so the Lutherans and the Chogers were both in attendance.  It was nice to make some new friends.  Overall this trip has been fantastic, and I've been thrilled to have a chance to connect with the 20 something and 30 something young people in the church who are everything Three Worlds are looking for .

The previous three days we have been in another part of Paris closer to where I always stay just down the road from Gare du Nord--which, by the way, is the busiest train station in Europe.  At this other church, we have been listening to a former Imam from Cote D'Ivoire share about his conversion to Christianity.  Although it is in French, I was able to pick up a bit on the first day, and then had interpreters the next 2 days.  He is a riveting speaker who is extremely clear about the key issues separating Christianity and Islam.  These lectures have been really powerful.

As is so common in the Middle East and Africa, he converted to Christianity after having a number of dreams in which Jesus appeared to him.  This happens a lot in this part of the world--where dreams are still taken very seriously.  You can see this cultural tendency in the Bible---and Middle Easterners and Africans often find it strange that Westerners totally disregard dreams.

This man was the son of two generation of Imams.  His life was set by his parents--he would become an Imam.  But as he grew up he found himself haunted by two things that often haunt Muslims who hear about Christianity:

1) What assurance do I have of salvation? Islam does not offer any theology of grace.  As with most non-Christian religions, it is a merit-based, transactional kind of faith which the Bible--particularly the New Testament seeks to subvert in many ways.  The God of Abraham looks like he is going to be a God of appeasement and distance (as in the story of Abraham being asked to sacrifice Isaac), but then the story of Israel and Jesus subverts that by moving away from a works-based, transactional, tribal religion.  The lack of assurance in Islam is an issue many struggle with.

2) Who is Jesus and why don't we believe him if we revere him so much?  The Koran reserves special recognition for Jesus.  While they do not view him as the son of God, or the last prophet, or even that he was crucified---he is revered.  But this leads many Muslims to ask why do we revere someone in Islam who we fundamentally disagree with?  It's the old C.S. Lewis question:  Either Jesus was a liar (and a particularly nefarious one at that), a delusional lunatic, or he was Lord.  This Imam was haunted by these 2 questions.

At Yale University, my primary professor was an African from the Gambia born into the family that was the head of a tribe.  They were Muslims.  But as my professor grew up, he too cold not get over that second question:  "Who was Jesus?"  Today he is the world's foremost expert on Global Christianity and a renown expert on Islam and Islamic-Christian relations.  He converted to Christianity in his college years I believe--or somewhere thereabout--after an exhaustive examination of the Bible's claims about Jesus.  And of everyone I've ever met, I don't think there's anyone I know that can do research at higher level than this professor.  He is a master "hunter-gatherer" in his words.

The Imam here in Paris suffered after his conversion.  There is often retribution for leaving Islam.  But some of his family members converted including those that experienced miraculous healings.  This is the kind of thing that occurs in the Non-Western Christian world  (or the Book of Acts world as I call it in Mosaic).  He said there have been 6 million converts to Christianity in the last few years.  Christianity is still the fastest growing religion by conversion (by far), while Islam is the fastest by birth--meaning that people are born in places like Indonesia or Saudi Arabia and just assumed to be Muslim on their birth certificate.  But conversion is something that usually happens away from Islam to Christianity.

The Imam was full of interesting stories and a fascinating take on problems he sees with the Koran that miss most of our Western-based critiques.  He really feels that a lot of Muslims feel hostage to the Koran.  That it's extreme contradictions are far beyond the "contradictions of the Bible" which fit into a larger Biblical narrative structure that serves as a self-critique.  This is something I wrote about in Passport of Faith because it's a very important point. When we talk of disisrepecies or contradictions in the Bible, they are of a different, more benign nature that those of Islam.  After all, Christendom (Christian Jihad) was an abberation in which church and state and war were linked.  Now this can happen in Christianity too still today---and sadly some American Evangelicals seem to think it should although they hate that Islam preaches the same thing----but Christianity offers an enormous critique against the merging of church/state/and war.  At the heart of the critique is Jesus Christ who tradition and history tells us was crucified and said, "My Kingdom is not of this world."  The difference between  crucified sacrifice and a theocratic general is a huge one.

Because Islam does not make that move toward a non-earthly Kingdom---to quote my old professor---"Muhammed was a religious ruler and a general rolled into one."  Islam has an inherently Constantinian view of the world.  It has no problem dividing the world into the Islamic world and the world that must be won to Islam.  Unlike Christianity with its critiques:  (Church tradition, Church authority, Sola Scriptura) which create an authoratative power that can critique Christian theocracy---Islam has no such thing.  Even Imams are less authoritative than your average Catholic Priest or Protestant Pastor.

Any religion can get hijacked and go terribly off course.  We've seen that with all of them--even Buddhism (take the battles between fighting monks in South Korea or the persecution perpetrated in the Dharmsala area of India for instance).  But Islam is more vulnerable to this because it is rooted in a specific culture, and one that was a polytheistic warrior culture that was organized and led by a warrior.

The Imam showed us footage of a Somali being buried alive and then stoned to death.  For all the mistakes Christianity has made in the past (and there are many), in the final analysis there is a huge difference between having a founder that said, "Let you who has never sinned cast the first stone" versus one that existed in that same culture of stoning and never critiqued it.

If Christianity still had that same hostile spirit found in its desert culture, then the churches and Cathedrals of Europe would not be empty today.

I'll post more on the origins of Islam and a proper Christian response in future posts. I'm typing quickly before I catch a train and a plane, so more fleshed out later.  Now it's back to Berlin.

BY THE WAY---I AM NOT POSTING PHOTOS OF THIS CONFERENCE OR THE PEOPLE IN IT FOR SECURITY REASONS.  IT'S SAD THAT THIS HAS TO BE THE WAY IT IS BUT, IT'S NOT WORTH THE RISK.