Wednesday, February 06, 2008

A Sustainable Faith Recap

As the only member of the Sustainable Faith leadership team that is also an active blogger I have been assigned the task of reporting on the conference. Luckily Josh Brown has done a good job of providing pictures, reporting and controversy. See here for his recap. See here for his controversial statements on one of the speakers.

As one involved deeply in the planning and execution of the event, I am unable to provide an unbiased look at what happened. There are things I feel went very well, but I am too close. Similarly, there are things that I have negative impressions of, but that could be due to proximity.

So here is a rundown of the highlights. It is up to you to decide if you missed something special.
  • pre-event involving shuffleboard in the cold evening with the team, some Atlantans (including Mr. Brown) and my kids. By the way, my 6 year old daughter out shuffled many of the adults (on a regulation ?board?).
  • A typically thorough and brilliant (yet simple and basic) talk by Tim Keel on the church as an ecosystem (it is so funny that many new church planters think that the "holistic missional community" is some new thing. As if they are the first to go this route)
  • Chris Haw causing trouble and making anyone with an open mind think (Chris wrote a great new book with Shane Claiborne). Some found Chris abrasive during the panel, but I asked him to push the limits.
  • While a bit hot, the weather was still very nice.
  • Shane Claiborne is among the nicest, most humble people you will ever meet. We have kinda known each other since 2000 and he has changed very little (and for the better). Some want to find clinks in his armor so they can feel less convicted by his lifestyle (this bored me). But face it. He is more right than most of us. Plus, what he does is out of conviction to Scripture and following Jesus. It is not done out of anger or with a sense of superiority. Other advocates and prophets could learn from that.
  • The panel was too short and not as spirited enough, but some good things were said (too many of the panelists were quiet, so it was accidentally dominated by a few).
  • A great Dinner with speakers, leaders and my best friend (roommate for 3 years of grad school) at Chadaway's, the best burger joint in the Southeast.
  • I reminisced with old friends Danielle, Troy, Chris and Spencer. I gained new friends like Josh Brown.
  • People responded to the ministries and social agencies represented, including Small Steps, which passed out 150 bags for donations, Created (a ministry to those in the sex industry) and many others.
  • a lively discussion around he subject of the Sabbath led by Danielle.
  • The emcee did not suck as bad as he could have, only making 4-5 remarks that only those above 30 could understand.
I may come back later for a more extensive evaluation, but probably not (I will note it if this happens). Stay tuned to this site and www.asustainablefaith.com for mp3s and podcasts of many of the talks (we may try to get a few on the EV podcast).

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I agree with your Tim Keel point...he is one articulate young man & wished I could have stayed for Shane's discussion. Was wondering where you weighed in on the Viola angle...very much enjoyed the burger (no avocados?)and movie / music talk with you and a few new kindred spirits...need to hang out more often, friend!

Anonymous said...

oooo, i forgot about how much the emcee sucked in my response. j/k.

i think shane is legit too. it's a shame it's easier to dismiss than think and act. and i think chris was the best part of the event. and danielle rocked it hard on the sabbath too.

and i think i've listened to tinarewin 20 times through. but i'm still not a fan of the new pornographers.

Jeromy Donlon said...

What a great day. Saturday was awesome. Would have loved for the panel to go longer and heard more from Chris. I was challenged to re-evaluate my own convictions or lack there of. Really look forward to the next one. Made some new friends whom which I hope to further communicate with and gather together again.
Jeromy