You are currently browsing the category archive for the ‘Meta’ category.

I have blogged very little since last summer. My first year at Yale was a whirlwind in many ways. I’ve emerged mostly in one piece. My thoughts on theology, politics, ethics, and life have continued to develop, though I have not been charting that development publicly here.

Many posts on this site may not longer represent my views. I ask readers to proceed with caution in making guesses about what I think based on stuff written here, particularly on the topics of the state and the concept of identity in the Christian context. My thoughts on those issues have become more nuanced and are still developing; I’ve gained more of a cautious sense of identity as an American, for example, but it’s one that had to be rebuilt after how much I was questioning that whole notion.

I remain committed to nonviolence, to LGBTQ equality, to Christian witness against oppression, and to the gospel of Jesus Christ and the political reality of his Kingdom (and indeed, I believe those first items to be parts of this last). But the nuance of my opinions has shifted; I am less comfortable using terms like “Christian anarchist”, for example. I see more nuance in questions of “allegiance” and in controversies around the use of flags. I hope to continue to engage those issues and further develop my thought on them. Because I want this blog not just to represent my views but also the development of my views, I have not removed any of my old posts, even the ones with which I now disagree, though at some point I may go back and write in some disclaimers.

I intend to begin blogging again. I want the public development of my theology and politics to resume. So consider this post to be the beginning a new period in my writing.

Peace be with you all.

My posting has been rather irregular, at times infrequent. Sometimes I have big flurries of activity, followed by dry spells of a week or more.

In an effort to solve this problem, I’m considering adopting a schedule of a minimum of three posts a week:

- Sunday: “Sunday Reading”, an overview of things I found interesting and informative in the previous week (I’ve written several of these previously).

- Tuesday: A post either on a standard topic (ethics, nonviolence, etc), or a special-type post (like the “Theology of ____” review series).

- Thursday: Another post, generally a more standard one.

I’m considering working in more theologically-framed news commentary into this routine as well.

We’ll see how it goes. Hopefully having a schedule like this will help me maintain a constant rate of writing, rather than the bipolar mode I’ve been in.

A couple weeks ago I mentioned that I’ve been working on a project with some people I connected with through Crossleft. We’ve finally decided to move forward and put it into action.

At the end of January Gary Vance posted a proposal on Crossleft for a “Strategic Global Prayer Initiative”. Gary’s vision was that the initiative could serve as a way to mobilize Christians to pray over the issues facing the world in these tumultuous times, and many of us quickly latched on to his idea. I was asked to join the project, possibly as an issue-group coordinator of some kind, and thus for the past three months I’ve been involved in intermittent conference calls and long email-exhanges hammering out the details of the organization.

We’ve finally put up the site, StrategicGlobalPrayer.org. It’s still fairly bare-bones, but it’s fully functional. (Much thanks to Rev. Roger McClellan for putting in so much time working on the site.) We are launching five issue-groups for this early stage of SGPI: health care, poverty/economic crisis, war/peace/nonviolence, human rights, and environmental concerns. Each of these groups is led by a different coordinator; I’m the coordinator for the War, Peace, and Nonviolence Issues group.

Each group will function slightly differently, but for Peace Issues I”ll be starting off by sending out regular email updates to group members on current relevant events. Each email will include suggested organizations, persons, or topics for prayer. As I wrote in the description on the War, Peace, and Nonviolence Page:

The War, Peace, and Nonviolence Group of the SGPI exists to collect and disseminate information on incidences of violence around the world so that the voices of people of faith may be raised in prayer for God’s guidance as we seek to advance the causes of peace and justice. We shall pray for God’s wisdom; we shall pray for creativity in responding to violence nonviolently; we shall pray for those working for peace; and, following the call of Matthew 5:44, we shall pray for the enemies of peace, that they might be transformed by God’s love and come face-to-face with the peace that surpasses all understanding.

So. Please check out the site, including the built-in social network that provides another online meeting space for the various groups. If you want to get involved, you can fill out the sign-up form, and if you’re interested specifically in the Peace Issues group or have other questions, feel free to email me at matt.shafer[at]strategicglobalprayer[dot]org. I”ve also set up a related Facebook Group; if you’re on Facebook, please join.

SGPI is just getting off the ground, but we feel that God has tremendous plans in store for the Initiative and we are excited about its potential. I’ll post more about it here on Twice Infinity as appropriate.

Today, 10 April 2009, is the one-year anniversary of the beginning of this blog.

I began blogging by posting an essay I had written about marbles glued to my ceiling. For a long time, this was a blog about “everything”, which is basically the same as a blog about nothing. Just in that first month, I wrote about Bush, about “the coolest commercial in the history of the universe”, and about vitamins.

The months since have seen a lot of changes in the blog. I narrowed the focus of Twice Infinity to “the interactions between religion, politics, and science”; after the summer, I didn’t post a whole lot until December. Then I started focusing almost exclusively on theology, ethics, and the political positions that result. My blog finally found its true purpose. I got plugged into Crossleft, making a lot of new friends and connections with whom I’ve been working closely since (more on that in the weeks to come, incidentally). The blog got accepted into the CCBlogs network, and I really started to feel like I’d found my footing.

As for me, well, I’ve changed a lot too. At the beginning of the year I was a supporter of McCain. In the middle of the year, I went to YTI. By the end of the year, I had become a pacifist.

To those of you who’ve been reading and commenting pretty much the whole way (*cough* Joey, Erin *cough*), thank you. To those who’ve drifted in and out, thank you. To those who took one look and ran screaming, thank you, too. I think.

*   *   *

So, what’s in store for the future?

Well, there’s a good chance I’ll be moving the blog to a new domain at some point, largely because I don’t like the name “Twice Infinity” anymore and don’t think it’s relevant to what I write..at all. But I might change my mind on that. Don’t hold me to it.

I’ll keep writing, and hopefully you guys will keep reading and commenting. I’ve also been working on a project with some good guys over at Crossleft that we’ll be ready to unveil soon. I’ll write about that when it’s appropriate.

As for me personally, I’ve got more exciting changes ahead. I’ll graduate from high school on May 31. Some changes in my college plans that I may have neglected to mention have taken place over the past couple weeks, and this autumn I’ll be entering Yale University as a member of the class of 2013. I’m pretty pumped about that. (Go Bulldogs!)

*   *   *

One last thing. Given today’s milestone, I’d like to recognize three people whose influence has significantly impacted the way I look at the world (and thus, with varying degrees of directness, what I write here).

1. Trevor Terris: A friend of mine in high school (he graduated last year), Trevor always challenged me to look at the world in fresh ways. He was one of the people who pushed my political ideology past conservatism during my junior year, at the beginning of which I was a proud member of the Religious Right. Trevor, a libertarian, provided a thoughtful critique of my ideas, helping me to develop my views in new ways. Though I’ve largely moved past most of the libertarian views I held for a while, without that stage in the development of my philosophy, I would not be where I am today. (Indeed, libertarianism got me interested in anarchism, and this was my first introduction to the Christian anarchist movement, which has had a fair degree of influence upon my theology.)

2. Samantha Nasser: I met Samantha at a Constitutional Law summer camp in between my sophomore and junior years. This was a stage when I mostly still identified with conservatism and much of the Religious Right, but I was also beginning to question many of the assumptions I held dear. The camp was at the ultra-conservative-religious Patrick Henry College (a great place, despite my differences with it), and at the camp Samantha and I were anomalies due to our concerns for environmental issues, opposition to capital punishment, and a few other things. We thus become good friends, and though I was much more conservative than she, her ideas began to influence mine. She was the person who caused me to take seriously the possibility of pacifism as a natural part of Christianity, and though it would be a long time before I would adopt that position definitively, it would have been a lot longer without her. Along with Trevor, she was instrumental in forcing me to reconsider my essentially Republican political views.

3. Michael Kochenash: The influence of my cousin Mike goes back long before the two people mentioned above. He has always been one of the cousins I’ve been closest to, and we’ve had long discussions about all kinds of stuff. When he started taking courses in theology and Bible as an undergrad (eventually majoring in such), our conversations naturally shifted to that subject. We’ve talked for hours on end about the Bible, about theology, about how to read Scripture…you name it. Mike remains firmly in the evangelical tradition (in which I myself am grounded), but his influence led me to challenge many ampeacts of my theology. Because of my talks with him, I began to understand the difference between scriptural infallibality and inerrancy (eventually rejecting the latter in favor of the former), reconsidered my belief in the necessity of a literal Genesis, and in general began to become very interested in theology. Without Mike, I would not be as theologically-oriented as I am; I would not have challenged certain aspects of my beliefs that very much needed to be challenged; and I would not be as strong in my faith as I am today. (There’s a good chance I wouldn’t even have gone to YTI!). I owe him a lot. He’s now at Yale Divinity School finishing up his Master’s, incidentally.

*   *   *

So. It’s been a good year. Let’s hope this next year will be better still.

Some exciting things are happening around Twice Infinity…

1. Twice Infinity has been accepted into the CCBlogs Network, hosted by Christian Century. This network gathers a group of about 100 Christian blogs dedicated to “thinking critically, living faithfully”. Some of my favorite sites, like Unorthodoxology and Seeking First The Kingdom, are also members of the network. (So is Brian McLaren, incidentally…) Hopefully this will increase the site’s profile and raise discussion on articles. I encourage you all to go read some of the other blogs on the network; most of them have been doing this sort of thing a lot longer than I, and are quite interesting.

2. I’ve just been named a Featured Blogger at Crossleft.org, where I cross-post many of my articles.

3. I’ve been writing with a bit more frequency this month (at least the past few days), leading to a (slight) increase in readership! So now is the perfect time to post a comment, send me an email, or mention the blog to a friend (hint, hint).

4. Less excitingly, and much more personally: It’d be awesome if those of my readers who pray regularly could pray for me once in a while, as I feel somewhat spiritually homeless right now (see these posts). I think I’m about ready to get to college…

religion. politics. ethics. etc.

Enter your email address subscribe to new posts.

Join 12 other followers

ccblogo150

Archives

Friend of Emergent Village
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.