The Penthouse Suite at the Shangri La, the tallest building in downtown
When I was asked to write this item, I was asked to tackle the question, "Are we called to evangelism?" Let me put the question a little differently: Is there something valuable about our Christian faith, and is it important enough to share
Here's my attempt at an answer. It begins with the assertion that the Bible is a counter-cultural text, and that Christianity is a counter-cultural movement. If the New Testament is a counter-cultural text, the dominant culture Jesus opposed was the The
There was, in fact, a human being in the first century who was called 'Son of God,' and 'God from God,' whose titles were 'Lord,' 'Redeemer,' and 'Saviour of the World.' Most Christians probably think that those titles were originally created and uniquely applied to Christ. But before Jesus ever existed, all those terms belonged to Caesar Augustus. Jesus' alternative was the His strategy was the combination of free healing and common eating, symbolic acts which negated the symbols and social structures that supported Roman power. After his execution for high treason, Christians resurrected Jesus' message, and in applying to him Caesar's titles, denied them to Augustus. Shangri La promises an earthly paradise, a permanently happy land, isolated from the outside world, available only to a few that "deserve it." Its existence depends on our accepting that this is "the way things are," the modern equivalent to Caesar's divine right to rule. Three weeks ago we at the Cathedral chose the alternative: the We are called to build a Our duty is to subvert and confront the dominant culture with acts that challenge our cultural assumptions about prosperity, poverty, privilege, responsibility, merit, religion, and God, in the name of Jesus Christ, Chief Developer, President, CEO and Architect of Shangri La.