Wednesday, December 1, 2010

What Cigarette Do You Smoke Doctor?



Isn’t it ironic when you drive by the entrance to a hospital and see a group of doctors and nurses smoking? It’s amazing how the very people who are responsible for promoting health, are the same one’s who are knowingly polluting their bodies and destroying their lungs.


Smoking wasn’t always viewed as a bad thing for your body. In fact, in 1949 when this commercial was made smoking was a status symbol, and seemed to be as innocent as eating candy. Now smoking commercials are banned, and many American’s would love to see smoking made illegal.


It’s amazing how easily deceived we can be in our culture, especially when we are misinformed. We as a culture, have been socialized into trusting whatever a person in a white jacket tells us is true. We have been trained to look at the “experts”, and follow their guidance. This is not always a bad thing, especially if your doctor suggests by-pass surgery to save your life. But this commercial from 1949 does bring up an interesting question: How many people were deceived into smoking cigarettes and destroying their bodies because a guy in a white coat told them smoking was okay?


Today, our culture is filled with “doctors” and “experts” on every subject. Think about the amount of shows on TV devoted to the medical profession. House, Grey’s Anatomy, Private Practice, ER, General Hospital, Nip/Tuck, The Listener, Royal Pains, HawthoRNe, and Nurse Jackie just to name a few! Obviously these doctor’s and nurses are just characters in TV drama, but they are still teaching us ideas about life, God, relationships, and our identity in this world. Whether it’s the idea of giving into your bi-sexual desires, encouraging a woman to have an abortion, or simply that not all lives are worth saving, these people are trying to teach us something.


Even CNN and Fox News are filled with “experts” telling us that according to them someone has messed up the way life is supposed to work in this country. Whether it’s in the 1970’s where the scientists were warning about global cooling, or today when they are worried about global warming, they all have an agenda and a message. Eugenics, euthanasia, abortion, and many other “important” medical discoveries and processes come from “experts”, but a few years later, when you turn around and look at them again, it looks a lot like a doctor smoking a cigarette.


So whats the point? The point is not that we need to go into our doctor’s offices, and question everything the stethoscope man says about strep throat. But just because a guy wears a white coat or a woman is speaking from a college platform doesn’t mean that we can simply absorb what they are saying as true without analyzing the content. See, the issue is not unanswered questions, because there will always be a new discovery of something we don’t know anything about. The issue is instead unquestioned answers, the answers that the “experts” of our culture preach that we internalize without deciding if they are true ideas or not. In 1 Corinthians 10:4 Paul says, “Brothers do not be children in your thinking. Be infants in evil, but in your thinking be mature.” We can’t just believe what we hear from an expert, just because it comes from an expert. We have to analyze what they say, to make sure what they are saying is true.


Whether it’s a fictitious doctor from Grey’s Anatomy, or a real expert from Harvard University, we must be on our guard. Trusting the experts can save our lives, but it can also give us lung cancer. Just because our culture tells us to listen to an expert, doesn’t mean we need to shut down our minds and believe everything they say.


Monday, November 8, 2010

Awareness Test-Watch the video first!


Did you get the right answer? Videos like this are great because for a moment we get excited about counting all 13 passes, then we realize a little orange basketball and white outfits have kept us from the real story. When it comes to a silly video, we can laugh at missing the moon-walking bear, but what happens in real life when we focus on the wrong things?

Think about the man or woman who successfully navigates the business world by working a lot of hours and making a lot of money. Three cars sit in the driveway of their white victorian 6,000 square foot home with a swimming pool in the back and an indoor gym in the basement. Businessweek and the New York Times write numerous accolades in story after story, with quotes from every major businessperson on Walstreet. Our culture demands that this person be envied, respected, and looked up to. Business has been their focus, and they have counted the passes: 13!

The only problem is, our business professional has missed the lives of his children. Children that looked up to their dad or mom with respect and honor, but never felt any love or affection in return. In other words, our business hero comes home with a big number 13 tattooed to his chest, only to find an empty home with the remnants of a moon-walking bear.

Or what about the college student, who is pumped up about the four best years of their life right in front of them. Fall comes, they get involved in a fraternity or sorority, attend every major sporting event, every major party, and every campus ministry meeting. Monday night is ultimate frisbee, then there is Tuesday night Ice, Wednesday night they meet with their college ministry, Thursday night well we all know what to do on Thursday’s in college, Friday night is cookout night at the house, Saturday is the game with all it’s festivities, and Sunday is church and a little bit of rest before the week starts over again.

They could never have imagined college would be this much fun, and they are only three semesters into their college career. If you asked them how many social, athletic, or greek events the have each week they would probably say 13. Their GPA is now a 1.5 but it's only that high thanks to some online classes where notes are allowed. Everything is going well, until they receive a letter explaining their opportunity to bring their grades up elsewhere. With head bowed, and a regretful tone they repeat, “13...13...13” while, packing up their bear costume, and heading home.

Or how about the high school student, who is so excited to be in a relationship with him! She really is living a “Teenage Dream” every weekend, as flowers, movies, and dinners lead to her first experience with true love. You know, the kind of “love” we mean, the kind of love you see in Twilight. The kind of love that makes you realize how incomplete you were before you met him or her.

Anyway, our high-schooler is so excited about her relationship with him, that she gives away everything. Finally, she can be complete by consummating their love. 13 minutes later her life will be changed forever. As her belly starts to grow, so does the regret that Katy Perry promised wouldn’t exist. All she is left with is 13 minutes, while the bear moonwalks it’s way out of her life.

Awareness is good, but only if you are aware of the right things. Being aware of the wrong things can be devastating. 1 Peter 5:8 tells us to

be self-controlled and alert. Your enemy, the Devil, prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour. (niv)
Paul tells us over and over again in Corinthians and Galatians, that we can be taken captive by ideas and philosophies. Don’t get caught counting basketballs while missing out on the big picture.

Our enemy is real, deceptive, and distracting. So whether you get distracted by a melody line while internalizing a dangerous message, or whether you allow your job to consume your life, we must all “be self-controlled and alert” “taking every thought captive to the obedience of Christ.”


Thursday, October 28, 2010

"Teenage Dream" at the Ballpark?

“I love good surprises, especially when they involve tickets to a MLB play-off game! Baseball is one of those sports that can be very boring to watch on TV, but nothing comes close to describing the energy exuding from a ballpark during the playoffs. Peanuts, Cracker Jacks, $11 hotdogs, and free foam fingers add to the nervous excitement of several thousand crazy fans awaiting the first pitch. As the old song goes...”root, root, root, for the home team, if they don’t win its a shame, ‘cause its one, two, three strikes your out at the old ball game!”

Unfortunately, it was one of those nights for the home team, where they fought a good fight but came up short. However, losing the game took nothing away from the amazing time we had enjoying the festivities. Every break between innings was filled with a song during which the crowd would get up and start dancing around. From “Cotton-Eyed Joe”, to “Thank God I’m a Country Boy”, and then the wonderful classic “Teenage Dream.” Yes, that’s right! “Teenage Dream” filled the space between the third and fourth inning.

All the fans got up to dance like they always do, and we sat back and watched them all sing the lyrics:
“We drove to Cali, and got drunk on the beach. Got a motel and built a fort out of sheets. I finally found you, my missing puzzle piece, I’m complete. Let’s go all the way tonight, no regrets, just love. We will dance, until we die. You and I will be young forever. You make me feel like I’m living a Teenage Dream. The way you turn me on, I can’t sleep. Let’s run away and don’t ever look back...”


Somehow, Katy Perry’s “Teenage Dream” is related to Major League Baseball, I am just not quite smart enough to figure it out! It’s amazing though, how the messages of our culture invade almost everything we do. “Teenage Dream” is still holding strong at #4 on the Billboard Hot 100 Chart, and it’s success simply translates into greater and greater influence.

We all want to live a “dream”; whether its businessmen and women pursuing the “dream” job, families pursuing the American “dream”, or teenagers looking for what it means to make the most of middle school, high school, or college. Our culture has an answer for us when it comes to living the “dream”. For the business world you need to make as much money as possible. For families they need to have the biggest house on the block, at least one car for each family member, and a swimming pool. And the dream life for students, well Katy Perry just defined it: drinking, sex, and a relationship with someone who makes you feel ‘complete’.

2 Corinthians 10:3-5 says, “For though we live in the world, we do not wage war as the world does. The weapons we fight with are not the weapons of the world. On the contrary, they have divine power to demolish strongholds. We demolish arguments and every pretension that sets itself up against the knowledge of God, and we take captive every though to the obedience of Christ.”

Are you taking every thought and idea captive? Are you thinking about what you hear in a sermon at church, see in a movie, and listen to on your iPod, or are you simply consuming the message passively? Ideas are powerful, even when they are simply played over the loudspeaker at a baseball game...

Friday, February 26, 2010

2009 Mash-up

Yesterday we sent out our e-newsletter with this video featured. We'd like to get your feedback on it. What things stood out to you about this video? What are some good ways to think about the lyrics, images, ideas within the top songs, music videos and artists in 2009? What do you think the 2010 mash-up will look like? How should we respond? Let's discuss!

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Grey's Anatomy and Human Doing


Title: “What a Difference a Day Makes”
TV Show: Grey’s Anatomy
Company: ABC Studios
Location: Season Five, Episode 22 (7:18-8:00, 24:31-26:49)
Target Audience: College age students and 20 somethings
Cultural Impact: This show raises questions of life and death, identity, and often encourages love and sexuality however/with whomever as long as it makes you happy.

Growing up we’re always taught that what we do is important. Our actions and accomplishments make us who we are. Every day our culture undermines our worth, value, and significance as unique human beings unless we’re doing something important with our lives – whatever that means. Grey’s Anatomy sends this message to us through its doctors, patients, and frequent emphasis on being a “human doing” rather than a “human being.”

In episode 22 of Season 5 – “What a Difference a Day Makes” – we’re introduced to a girl named Becca. She arrives in the trauma unit of the ER after she was in a car accident with eight of her friends. They were on their way to their college graduation. As the doctors of Seattle Grace Hospital assess the damage and attempt to start treating her wounds, she realizes what she is missing. Her college graduation means everything to her. As the Valedictorian, she had a speech to give. Becca feels like she NEEDS to graduate from college. College was her life. School was her life. All she ever did was school. For someone whose life has been centered on her academics and schooling, college graduation day is the ultimate goal.

As elementary school, middle school, and high school students, we constantly look to the day way off in the distant future when all our hard work will pay off. We long to be a college graduate, a “grown up.” For Becca, that day was within her reach, yet she couldn’t grasp it from her stretcher in Trauma Room #2. Nearly in tears, Becca tells the doctors, “Today is the day my life’s supposed to start!” If graduation from college marks the beginning of life, what was the meaning of all the years before that?

It’s so tempting to base our worth and identity in the things that we’re good at – the things that consume our time and give us reputation and esteem in the eyes of others. We depend on those things, as Becca did, to give our life meaning. When people asked her, “Who are you?” her first response would probably be, “I’m Becca. I’m the class Valedictorian and soon-to-be college graduate.” That was her life. But we saw that when that foundation she had built for herself was suddenly ripped away, she was left with an identity crisis.

If I could give Becca advice I would encourage her to remember that she still has worth and value even if she can’t give her speech and can’t graduate. She was created intentionally, uniquely by God and that in itself gives her value.

Maybe Becca was on to something when she said “Today is the day my life’s supposed to start.” If she is willing to let go of her need to base her identity in her abilities, accomplishments, and actions, maybe she truly can start living – really living in the confidence that she matters not because of WHAT SHE DOES but WHO SHE IS.

By: Kristin1

Notes
  1. Kristin was a student at the Focus Leadership Institute (FLI) this past 2009 fall semester and will be going back to finish up her schooling at Corban College in Salem, OR. We miss her tons as she was an awesome intern for Axis in the FLI Practicum. Every semester, several FLI students are able to spend 96 hours as interns with AXiS and travel all around the country with us ministering to students.