Sacred and secular vocations
Posted by Paul | Filed under work
Continuing my one-blog mission to disrupt the sacred/secular divide, here are some quotes on the subject from Andy Crouch’s Culture Making. We tend to think of this question in a relatively theoretical way — is there value in all types of work? Crouch aims for the practical and asks,
Is it possible to participate in culture, to create culture, outside of the church and experience every bit as much divine multiplication as those who work inside the church?
Not only ‘is secular work valuable?’, but ‘can we expect God to work with us in our ‘secular’ jobs?’
He uses an interesting example of his working for IVCF on-campus. He found times when students ‘renounced their ambitions’ in order to work for Christian organisations, only to find themselves struggling and seeing little fruit in what they were doing. Some of these eventually went to work in ‘secular’ employment and, in contrast, found ‘freedom and joy’.
Interestingly, a friend who has worked in missions said something similar to me — being on the ‘mission field’ does not mean you are doing what God intends for you.
Andy Crouch proposes a very helpful re-alignment
The religious or secular nature of out cultural creativity is simply asking the wrong question. The right question is whether, when we undertake the work we believe to be our vocation, we experience the joy and humility that come only when God multiplies our work so that it bears thirty, sixty and a hundredfold beyond what we could expect from our feeble inputs. Vocation — calling — becomes another word for a continual process of discernment, examining the fruits of our work to see whether they are producing that kind of fruit, and doing all we can to scatter the next round of seed in the most fruitful places.
By the fruits you’ll know, not the classification…
Tags: Culture Making (Crouch), work
Keller on Culture
Posted by Paul | Filed under uncategorised
I (re-)discovered the website of Redeemer’s Center for Faith & Work this week. They have a lot of interesting mp3s on the site on faith and culture, work, etc.
The talk I found particularly useful is Tim Keller’s Changing Culture: The Role of the Entrepreneur. It’s taken from a forum for ‘Christian Entrepreneurs’, but the definition of entrepreneurs seems to be defined very broadly so don’t let that put you off. A good part of the talk is a more general discussion of the call for Christians to be involved in cultural renewal. I found it pulled together a lot of thoughts I’ve been having recently on culture, work, etc. (some of which have made it on to the blog), as well as stimulating some more. (To be honest, as someone who isn’t particularly business-minded, even the title got me thinking in new ways…)
By the way, if you’ve read Andy Crouch’s Culture Making, this talk makes a good companion piece.
Oh, and he references Sufjan Stevens, so, really, what more can you ask for?
Another one worth a listen is Call to Action : Stewarding our Gifts, which is a short talk on practicalities. I particularly liked the musings on profit — Christians should have the space to re-think the purpose of profit in business — and on ‘form and content’ — if we add the content of christianity to an existing form, shouldn’t we expect the form to be altered in the process? This last point starts an interesting conversation with the question of whether borrowing forms will risk us losing the message.
(HT: I probably got to all this from the Reformissionary list of Tim Keller resources.)
Tags: culture, Culture Making (Crouch), mp3s, work
Fair Trade as cultural artefact
Posted by Paul | Filed under uncategorised
Prompted (obliquely) by recent negative comments about Fair Trade (i.e. the Fair Trade mark and associated organisation) on the Jubilee Centre blog (here and here) and also by recent thoughts on reading culture, I thought it would be interesting to try a hermeneutic of Fair Trade. Perhaps looking at FT as a cultural artefact will shed light the criticisms.
What does FT make more difficult/impossible? The main thing the FT mark makes more difficult is for consumers and manufacturers to disassociate their actions from the actions at the other end of the supply chain. The existence of Fair Trade forces the buyer to think about issues along the chain. On the other hand, it makes it difficult for ethical suppliers who, for whatever reason, don’t want to use the FT brand to emphasise their ethical status without some kind of branding, etc.
‘Whilst it is clear that fair trade might bring some benefits to particular groups, whether it brings significant net benefits to the poor in general is questionable. Moreover, the claim that fair trade transactions are more “just” cannot be substantiated. Customers also might be surprised to learn that the majority of the Fairtrade Foundation’s income is spent on promoting its own brand.’
Tags: culture, Culture Making (Crouch), justice
reading culture: what’s the point?
Posted by Paul | Filed under uncategorised
I was planning to write this post before reading the recently posted extract from Culture Making. Having looked at that, it’s even clearer that we must not miss this step out.
The mission of the church is to witness to the truth of the gospel by participating in God’s building project, realizing the well-wrought world redeemed in Christ.
…
The church is to be a glimpse of the new world in the midst of the old, a reminder that the old order is passing away and a standing witness to the new. Accordingly, it is charged with the task of being a permanent revolution to prevailing plausibility structures.
Crouch is even clearer on the need to make culture as well as analyse. A key point for him is that
The only way to change culture is to create more of it.
His contention is that the church tends to try to change culture one of four ways: either by condemning, critiquing, copying (forming a sub-culture) or consuming. None of these work in practice, the only way to change culture is
to create something new, something that will persuade our neighbours to set aside some existing set of cultural goods for our new proposal.
[w]e may produce very sophisticated analyses of the cultural goods around us. … But the depressing truth is that critique and analysis rarely change culture at all. … The academic fallacy is that once you have understood something — analysed and critiqued it — you have changed it. But academic libraries are full of brilliant analyses of every facet of human culture that have made no difference at all in the world beyond the stacks.
Although both agree on this, it is notable that Vanhoozer’s book gets very close to the problem Crouch notes (as discussed in the last post):
you would think that the solution to disembodiment would be embodiment—the living out in the flesh of the transforming vision. … But the emphasis always somehow stays on perception and vision, on thinking, on analysis.
Tags: books, culture, Culture Making (Crouch), Everyday Theology (Vanhoozer), hermeneutics
(more) Culture Making
Posted by Paul | Filed under uncategorised
IVP have put another extract from Andy Crouch’s Culture Making on their site. I had a very enjoyable and consciousness-expanding lunchtime in Costa reading this. Came away buzzing (not simply due to the fact that they forgot to put milk in my coffee…)
“Why does the Christian world view remain so disembodied?” Wolterstorff asks. His answer is telling—it remains disembodied because it is insufficiently … perceived. Christianity has not yet reformed and remolded our culture because of a lack of “vision.” But this is a strange turn of thought from Wolterstorff’s acute statement of the core problem, namely that Christianity is “disembodied.” You would think that the solution to disembodiment would be embodiment—the living out in the flesh of the transforming vision. And indeed every Christian proponent of worldview thinking gestures enthusiastically in this direction. But the emphasis always somehow stays on perception and vision, on thinking, on analysis.
His conclusion is
The language of worldview tends to imply … that we can think ourselves into new ways of behaving. But that is not the way culture works. Culture helps us behave ourselves into new ways of thinking. The risk in thinking “worldviewishly” is that we will start to think that the best way to change culture is to analyze it. … [We] will subtly tend to produce philosophers rather than plumbers, abstract thinkers instead of artists and artisans. … But culture is not changed simply by thinking.
Tags: books, culture, Culture Making (Crouch), worldview
reading culture: consequences
Posted by Paul | Filed under uncategorised
(I guess we should note that because Vanhoozer is less specific he potentially allows more consequences to be considered. For instance, he makes an interesting points around ‘culture as spiritual formation’, which doesn’t easily fit with Crouch’s questions, but I think guidelines such as those in Culture Making are a helpful start…)
Culture is what we make of the world.
Tags: books, culture, Culture Making (Crouch), Everyday Theology (Vanhoozer), hermeneutics