Philip's Tunnel to Nowhere 3

Revelations

by philip on Jan.10, 2010, under my psychology, spirituality, underground

January must be the fourth or fifth month straight that I’ve had a few days of a cold that’s just making me feel lousy. It worries me a bit, although I think it’s partially that my worries are impeding my defenses and partially that the lack of a conventional work schedule is giving me an excuse to sleep 12 hours a day and sleepwalk the other 12.

But I’m trying to use my down-time wisely, and I think God has a way of forcing me to slow down “doing” so that I can focus on growing spiritually. I wouldn’t want to claim that any of the following is special revelation that others should take as a word from the Lord, and certainly none of the following insights supersede Scripture or anything else one might hear from wise teachers. But I do think the following is some insight that I’ve distilled from various passages, sermons, etc. lately.

  1. For me dying to self means setting aside my need for accomplishments. I won’t lie. I crave plaudits from others. I don’t spend my life running around after wealth or material toys (as seemed to be a big theme in today’s sermon at Southwood). I run around worrying that everyone considers me a terrible failure and a bum. I blogged about this form of idolatry a couple of months ago, but it’s going to take a long time for me to get away from it.
  2. I can’t compare God’s work in my life to God’s work in others. This is a huge problem for me. I have sort of a recurring theme in my conversations with my mom. She’ll say something like, “God’s just got to bring you to the point of total surrender,” and then I’ll flip out in frustration. But it occurs to me, my frustration isn’t because I really think I’ve reached the point of total surrender. My frustration is because I don’t think anyone has reached the point of total surrender, but other people don’t seem to require this same “education.” I resent that they’re allowed to crave approval as much as I do, but still have productive, ego-stroking careers. Actually I just put together that this is the reason for my resentment, as I was typing #1. Well, my subconscious knew why I was resentful, but I just now reached enough awareness to type it up as a list item here.

    I don’t get upset that Mom thinks I’m not at the point of total surrender. I get upset that Mom thinks that God needs to teach me this lesson more than he needs to teach other people. But what occurs to me now — God forbid, maybe it’s my ego speaking, but I think there’s some truth here — is that the mission for my life somehow requires me to internalize this truth more deeply than most people have. At least that’s what I’m going to believe to stay sane.

  3. Tremendous freedom comes when we don’t think anyone’s judging us for our accomplishments. I know that, “God helps those who helps themselves,” isn’t in the Bible, but the associated mindset has always been in the back of my mind as I thought about the topic of life-goals and accomplishments. Today I’ve been trying to imagine what it would be like to live an entire life literally not caring about measuring up or not measuring up. It’s really amazing. I think in the back of my mind, I’d always feared that I’d use true freedom as an excuse to just lie in bed all day, maybe getting up to check sports scores or engage in some stupid battle on Wikipedia or something. But I don’t really want to do that. I still want to do something significant to help people, even without the negative reinforcement of imagining God shaking his head saying, “What a disappointment!” to motivate me. Since that negative reinforcement is neither necessary nor helpful to motivate me, I should discard it.
  4. Boasting in Christ is healthy, and isn’t the same thing as boasting about following Christ. I think I’ve mentioned how disgusting I find it when Christians make faith into a work and start to act superior just by the basis of their faith in Christ. Perhaps this revulsion has blinded me to just what Paul is saying in 2 Cor. 10 when he talks of “boast[ing] in the Lord.” Honestly, I’ve always thought this passage was a borderline ego trip. Maybe so, but I’m coming to see that boasting in the Lord means filling that craving for accomplishment with wonder about how God is working worldwide. If I’m really taking pride in God, so to speak, then it really doesn’t matter whether my role in that work is large or indetectable. I can die tonight and still feel proud to be a part of redemptive history, because God is still doing huge works.
  5. I need to get back to where I was in 2000-01, praying for Harvard Square. Sometimes ignorance forces you to rely on God. Before I had any experience hanging out in the Pit, back when I thought that I was in constant danger of gutter punks beating me down for saying the wrong thing, I spent about six months praying. I thought my prayer was so outlandish that I couldn’t imagine how God could possibly want me to reach out in that context. I certainly had no clue that a few faithful brothers and sisters from another Cambridge church already had a method to reach out, or that I’d be joining with them in a few months, let alone co-leading the effort within a couple of years Reading Clark and Rabey makes the need of youth today seem overwhelming. All I know to do is pray. I need to get back to where I was in 2000 and 2001.
  6. God can be trusted in the afterlife. I’m not going to develop this right now, but it’s something I’ve struggled with, and I received an insight today that made me feel a lot better. If this bothers you too, I hope you’ll get a similar insight.
  7. Bitterness and other emotional pain is analogous to physical pain. This could be number 2A, because my friend Laura suggested it in an IM conversation after I shared item 2. I certainly don’t want to justify my own bitterness and other unholy attitudes, but they do serve a purpose. They make me aware something’s wrong, and given my tendency toward pensive reflection, it seems likely I won’t really rest until I’ve worked the proximate cause up to consciousness, like a splinter. Anyway, that helped me a lot with item 2 above, and it helps to think that these triggers are triggers for a reason, to make me aware of the underlying issue.

That’s all I got for now. Hope this is helpful to posterity.

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Protected: Back to the drawing board for 2010

by admin on Jan.01, 2010, under Uncategorized

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And we’re live….

by philip on Dec.31, 2009, under meta

After one false start (ported an old backed-up DB by accident, heh, so my latest posts were from 2007 and WordPress thought its root directory was /philip instead of / … oops!) we’re apparently working again.

I have much to write about after a conversation on the last day of 2009, but it must wait. Happy new year to all.

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Administrative note

by philip on Dec.29, 2009, under meta

I’m going to be changing hosts this week (if my new vendor ever replies to my service request so I can transfer files! grr) so if you see this site is not responding, it’s a very temporary thing.

Not that there’s been any new content to read anyway. Sorry about that.

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Reformulating it as a mission statement

by philip on Nov.29, 2009, under career, latest, underground

My career goal* is to research and teach about youth culture, emphasizing youth subcultures, with the goal of informing the church to help it communicate the Gospel.

This is just a slight rewording of what I’ve been pondering lately, but this isn’t Jeopardy so it probably makes sense to change it from a question to a statement.



*Tentatively.

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Life update: Applying to seminary?

by philip on Nov.15, 2009, under latest

I should probably get my latest news up here so I can point people here instead of writing long e-mails.

In early 2009 I was accepted into the Masters program at the University of Michigan Center for the Study of Higher and Postsecondary Education. This M. Ed. would open the door to working at a college in many capacities, but specifically in my case what interests me is working in career services, advising college students on how to meet career goals. It’s a great program (ranked #2 in the latest USN&WR, down from #1 in 2008) and I’m greatly honored to be accepted. But for various reasons I deferred starting the program until Fall 2010.

This has given me some time to address a nagging feeling that, although an M. Ed. would be a very good career path, it might not be the best career path. Back in May I formulated my aspirations in the following question:

What would be a career path for someone who wants to study youth culture (and especially subcultures) as an academic with the goal of informing the church to help it communicate the Gospel?

I’m not sure I’ve found the answer, but I’ve come up with a plan that’s got me pretty excited. As I understand it, Fuller Seminary is one of the leaders in the field of missiology — they even have a School of Intercultural Studies. They also happen to have a professor who’s one of the leading researchers in youth culture. So it seems like a great combination where I can go study both youth ministry and the theory of cross-cultural outreach, with the goal of integrating both into my eventual academic career.

They don’t have a doctorate program, so getting a Masters would be a prerequisite to moving on to a Ph. D. At this point I’d say I’m about 80% sure I’m at least going to apply, and then weigh options accordingly. I have until March to decide to enroll at Michigan or not.

It’s a little daunting to envision paying (for at least one year) for a degree that, once I finish it, won’t qualify me to do anything else but pursue another degree! Stay tuned for details.

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Just suck it up!

by philip on Nov.08, 2009, under my psychology, spirituality

It really annoys me when other people, especially Christians, believe that happiness is just a matter of deciding to be happy. I got told today that Jesus told us to love people, implying that we can make a choice contrary to feelings there, so therefore it follows that we can just decide to be happy too. Arrrrgh.

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Nowhere near rock bottom

by philip on Nov.07, 2009, under my psychology, spirituality

I turned off my automatic feed on Facebook so that this post won’t get pulled into there via RSS/Atom. I’m just not up to all the well-meaning comments and all that, and feeling needy, and burdening my friends. Funny enough, posting it on here is about the closest thing to a private journal that exists. (Of course I could make it literally private, but part of the fun is expressing these thoughts publicly, even if it’s only a nominal kind of publicly that no one will ever see. I’m a strange person.)

Over the years I’ve become pretty good at the parlor game, so I think I can play both roles here.

- I’m unhappy with life. I don’t think God answers my prayers or cares about anything related to me. Sometimes I wonder if I’m even deceiving myself to believe God is out there, but then I think of the evidence and am pretty convinced there is a personal higher power. He just doesn’t seem to want much to do with me.

- How can you say that? Don’t you know Jesus died for you?

- Yes, and to the extent that this makes for a happier afterlife, I’m genuinely grateful. But it’s all abstract. I see nothing relating this reality to the earth where I live and breathe. I certainly hope I can trust God for a wonderful afterlife and I want to believe in that, desperately I do, but it seems really disconnected from where I am right now.

- But God loves you and has a wonderful plan for your life!

- Oh yeah? Then why does it seem like all the good, meaningful stuff in life is meant for someone else? Career satisfaction, finding love, having a wife and children, all of that is plainly intended for someone else. It’s like in the circles I run in, I’m reading someone else’s mail. And that mail says, “God intends all these wonderful things for YOU!” Only, I know it’s not my mail.

- Things could be so much worse! You have supportive parents, a good education, so many blessings….

- Oh, I don’t doubt things really could be worse. I could be born into incredible poverty in some preindustrial village in a developing country. I could be in 14th-century Europe dying of the Black Plague. I could be buried alive in the Mexico City earthquake of 1985. I can think of all kinds of situations that would be worse than where I am now, and I’m absolutely thankful I’m here and not there. So the sign that God loves me is that my meaningless life is less full of suffering than an alternative meaningless life might be?

- But your dissatisfaction with your life isn’t a reason to question God! The suffering you’re going through now is to prepare you for something great God’s going to do. Why, look at how much time Paul spent wandering around (Gal 1.17-18, 2.1)!

- Sure, maybe this is all preparation. And maybe from now until the day I die, until it’s all unquestionably finished for my earthly life, you can always use this as a catch-all answer. No matter what happens, who’s to say it’s not just preparation for something else? How would we test this hypothesis? Until I’m dead, we can’t! And even then, who’s to say I’m not a martyr, not like Jim Elliot dying some apparently pointless death only so that my murderers can come to faith years later? Your answers are too easy, because they’re not externally verifiable. If you have an answer for everything, then you have an answer to nothing.

And on and on I go. Even writing this out feels like philosophical masturbation because I’m not getting any closer to truth. Sometimes I feel guilty for questioning God who loves someone so unworthy as me. But, these are the dialogues I have in my head, so I suppose I’m not being unfaithful or somehow sinning to put them into words and post them where no one will see them.

(If you read this far, by no means do I intend my remark about “well-meaning comments” to dissuade you from posting feedback.)

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No idol that any red-blooded American male wouldn’t cling to

by philip on Oct.21, 2009, under Uncategorized

I wrote this up Sunday night but somehow stupidly locked myself out of my account and couldn’t post it until now. The formatting got destroyed in my copy/paste but I’ll fix it later.

On a day where I’ve been responding to a sermon by focusing on my idols, I want to scribble down a few more thoughts before heading off to bed.

Besides significance, the other great idol I’m struggling with is provision. I mean providing
both for my own needs and for those of some hypothetical
down-the-road family I might one day have. Providing for my own needs is
obvious — even grinding out a meager living playing 60 hours a
week has been a source of some satisfaction, because I’m earning my own rent.

Providing for others is obviously a consideration only in the hypothetical, but the impact on my self-image is very real. No woman wants attention from the proverbial guy who lives in Mom’s basement, right? Especially at my age, the inability to at least work out an acceptable d ?tente with the evil mysterious world of careers, whereby I spend all week doing something I despise in order to pay the bills so that my (yet hypothetical) family doesn’t have to go hungry — my inability to work that out is troubling. Should be troubling, indeed.

I guess I need to have more faith that those issues will get resolved when the time is right. That’s why provision is an idol.

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Tired

by philip on Oct.18, 2009, under my psychology

I’m tired of being mediocre at life. I’m desperate to find something at which I’m excellent. Maybe that’s my idol. Maybe I can only find peace when I let God take over my need to be good at something.

My thoughts run way too fast for a human being. Way too fast.

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