Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Dear friends and family,

Thanks for stopping by. This is my first ever post for this blog. I will be using this blog for journaling experiences and sharing whatever I feel like sharing from my Discipleship Training School and School of Worship at YWAM Denver in 2007-08. Yes, that is quite a ways off from now, but I just felt like getting a blog going for it now anyways. Now, obviously I won't have much about YWAM until I, you know... start it... but for right now I might just randomly post about stuff that's just kind of on my mind - things I discover or wrestle with in worship, in prayer, in the Word, in class, through other people and their experiences, or whatever else.

I'll start today with what I've been reading in 1 Corinthians.

In case you don't know, I am currently a freshman at Concordia University, St. Paul. I have lots of music classes (choir, piano, voice and guitar lessons), New Testament, and "Honors." Honors is one class that focuses on many different "subjects" and areas all in one class. It's not a specialized class, really. So there's tons of work in Honors. And other classes. But hey, it's college, I don't really expect anything less. This semester in Honors has been all about focusing on the poor, or the marganalized of our world. This has been really awesome, and an area that I really feel that God is placing on my heart and mind. (Maybe another post I'll expand...) Anyways, we just finished reading the book The World is Flat by Thomas L. Friedman, Concordia's Book of the Year, sadly.

Sadly??

The book is all about globalization. That is, how the world is becoming "flat," because of the internet, uploading, downloading, companies outsourcing and digitizing everything, and all that jazz. The first half of the book is fine - Friedman gives a detailed account of what he believes are the ten biggest "flatteners" of the past 15 years. The second half, however, is where I lost it for this book. He talks about how best to thrive in this flat world. He stresses competition - you've got to "beat out" the competition. If you've got a low-paying job and you're struggling - get a better one! is basically what Friedman says. Easy for him to say (he's a columnist at New York Times and his wife is an heiress to a fortune of shopping mall property, making them one of the richest families in America), but what about the millions and millions of people around the world who live in quite an unflat world? What about the poor? What about the people who go day by day wondering what they're going to get their next meal? There is little regard for them it seems. Friedman spends almost all of his time on golf courses, in five-star restaurants, and 30,000 feet in the air in a first class jet.

But enough bashing Friedman. I have quite a ways to go with my outlook and my regard for the poor myself. God, open my eyes to those less fortunate...

Anyways, where am I going with all of this and what does it have to do with 1 Corinthians?

Well, with all this globalization talk, I've been reminded of how our society works - you go to school to better yourself, you learn to better yourself, and you use all that to get a job, to compete with other people (directly or indirectly, knowingly or unknowingly) to BETTER YOURSELF. That's what I believe Paul would call the "wisdom of the world."

1:20 - "Has not God made foolish the wisdom of the world?"

Wow.

All that is foolish. God has made it foolish. Compared to God's wisdom, this wisdom of the world is foolish. So what then is God's wisdom? Verse 30 says, "It is because of him that you are in Christ Jesus, who has become for us wisdom from God - that is, our righteousness, holiness, and redemption. God's wisdom is more than head knowledge. It is righteousness, holiness, and redemption.

So am I saying that we should all quit school, quit our jobs, and quit learning anything because God has made it foolish? Absolutely not. But if we are learning and striving towards something in this life and God has no part of it, then what's the point? Where is that getting us?

I pray that when I learn, when I work, when I live, that by the grace of God through Christ Jesus may I come to know the things of God, the wisdom of God, first and foremost. "For the foolishness of God is wiser than man's wisdom" (1:25).

And it is only by His grace, through the Holy Spirit, that I am able to do this. Thank you, Lord.




Please feel free to email me about anything and everything at bartelsc@csp.edu or bartels.christopher@gmail.com. Either one works.

Also, when I write like this, I'm just throwing my thoughts out there - it's pretty much sparatic, and I don't proofread or anything like that. If I am in the wrong somewhere, please let me know. I will be grateful, not offended. If you disagree with me on something, awesome! Let me know, I'd love to hear what you think. I'm claiming to be nothing more than a servant of Christ, writing down what comes to mind.

Chris

10 comments:

DC said...

Dang, right on. The whole reason we should try to get better jobs in the first place is to help the poor. The whole reason we make more money than we need is to give it to the poor. There's a verse about that but I can't think of it right now.

Unknown said...

Keep those thoughts streaming, Chris - good stuff. Thanks for sharing. See you tonight.

Jordan said...

Yeah dc said it. Too bad we lose sight of the real goal for this life so often, but thank God for His forgiveness and strength in our weakness. I'm looking forward to every post you put up.

Unknown said...

By the way, perhaps this is the verse DC was looking for - 2 Corinthians 9:11
"Yes, you will be enriched so that you can give even more generously."

DC said...

thanks jim!

DC said...

I feel a need to respond to this post again....

I just started reading The World is Flat, well, just a few hours ago. Here is my take on why the book is the way it is.

I believe we talked once about how we can't expect non-christians to live up to christian 'standards.' Friedman is an extremely rich man, as you stated earlier. "It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter heaven." From what you have written and all I know about Friedman, it is hard to believe that he is a Christian. This is probably due to his extreme wealth and success in this life (or even his busy lifestyle), which can really get in the way of finding Christ, or even finding a need for Christ. So here is Friedman, a non-christian. Who is going to read his book, and who is going to buy it and make it a NY times best seller? Middle to upper class Americans, and that is exactly how it worked out. I have not read the entire book, but I can already tell that this is most likely the target audience of the book. What about the poor? Why should Friedman care? He is not a christian, is living the high life, and knows exactly who is going to buy his book and it is not them. Instead of bashing Friedman and his book that tells middle to upper class Americans how to adapt and best take advantage of this changing world, we should be condemning (and challenging!) the millions and millions of Christians on this earth who are doing nothing to aid the poor. This is not addresed to chris, as I know he feels a need to serve the poor, but to everyone who claims to be a christian but does not live out the call to physically help the poor. If Christians will not address the issue of the poor, we SURELY can not expect wealthy non-christians to do it.

Unknown said...

Dang, right on DC!

DC said...

thanks jim

DC said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Chris said...

You're right DC. I like what you said there. I guess I didn't clarify myself in the blog - the directions for the review we had to write on The World is Flat stated that we needed to examine his approach concerning the poor - it was supposed to be about how Friedman and the book saw the poor, not simply just a book review. And that's why I was arguing that the book was not a good choice for Concordia's book of the year. But yeah, I did'nt say that in the blog.

But I'm glad you're reading my blog! Yeah yeah!