Matt W Cook

writer.former fundamentalist.christianly fellow

Month: August, 2009

Analytical

var addthis_pub=”4a0af351783743a8″;I recently lost Google Analytics.

I was playing around with new-looking blog templates and all of a sudden it was gone. Google Analytics is a super-slick way of keeping track of how your traffic is doing, where it’s coming from and how it’s getting to your site. I suppose I could re-load it…

But suddenly I don’t really want to.

Do I really care how many people read this? Yes. I honestly do. I wish this was a super-popular blog that had visitors from all over the planet scrambling up the bandwidth pipe to bask in my cyber-wisdom.

But I don’t know if my handy-dandy counter is helping with that. So I’m not going to put it back on.

And I’m not going to get one of those flashy, pretty templates for the blog. I don’t want you to come here just because it’s pretty. I want this blog to stand or fall with words. Are the words good? Are the sentences valuable? Do you, the reader, get something from the time you spend here? Then it stands.

Otherwise it falls.

Either way, I’m not going to be analytical about it anymore.
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Bits of Flesh

var addthis_pub=”4a0af351783743a8″; It was the bits of flesh I noticed first.

The DVP was jammed almost as soon as we got on it. Sirens wailed in the distance behind us, coming quickly closer. Two police cars passed us on either shoulder.
“Car accident,” I muttered to Ruth and Jodi. We were taking Jodi to the Greyhound station downtown. She was going back to Quebec after staying with us for about a week and a half.
The traffic started to move and funnel into the left lane. I saw the police cars and looked for a sign of accident. The police were moving around quickly, putting up that yellow DO NOT CROSS tape and talking on radios. A couple cars had been pulled over to the side, but they didn’t seem damaged at all. There was no broken glass. No tire marks. I didn’t notice anything.

Until I noticed the bits of flesh.

Then it all came in quick. There was a body lying under a white sheet, bare feet exposed. I turned away quickly and felt sick. The girls gasped. It was then that I noticed where we were. Right under the Millwood bridge. Suicide.

I can’t find anything on the Internet about it. Who jumped? Why? Anyone care? What pushes someone so far? What makes a man think that non-life is better than life?

Ruth wondered aloud about what the jumper’s relatives must think now. Had they cared about him during life? Would they feel any guilt now that he was gone?

Depression is a dangerous thing. It’s too strong to fight with simple words. “Cheer up!” does nothing.

Toronto is a strange place. The highest and the lowest. The richest and the poorest. The happiest and the jumpers. What potential a large city has! What opportunity lies in dense population! What if we loved? What if we cared? What if we treated each other in a way that made it so there were no jumpers? What if we lived like Jesus told us to? What if we followed him?

Are we more than bits of flesh?

The next bridge down had a suicide net on it. I heard it cost about $2.5 million. Someone once commented that the money would be better spent on social services and suicide support lines. I doubt that would help. You know what would help? You know what would bring the suicide rate down? You know what would have stopped that nameless man from jumping?

Love. If someone loved him and knew his name. If we would just love people – all people – wouldn’t the world be better? What would it be like if Christ-love infected us all? What would it be like if we were all willing to love the unloved?

Paradise on earth?

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Ingloriously

So my brother and I were both very excited for Tarantino’s new film, Inglorious Basterds. We have both always loved his movies so this new one looked great.
It was.
I know, I know. I’m not supposed to hype thing up too much just in case my reader(s) gets disappointed. But we watched the film last night and we were impressed. The plot was great, filled with twists you didn’t see coming and void of the twists you thought you did see coming. The photography was amazing. The dialogue was hilarious. Brad Pitt completely secured himself in my mind as a top notch actor, not just a pretty face.
Good stuff. On the way out of the theatre an oldish lady asked me if the movie was good, because she’d been thinking of watching it. I told her it was. But as I got to the car I wondered if that was the best thing to tell her. While there was not much killing in the movie (at least, compared to some of Tarantino’s other films) the killing that was there was very raw. I’m not sure if it was her kind of movie.
So leave the kids at home and go see Inglorious Basterds. Not for the weak stomach. Good for the filmy eye.
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Books books books

var addthis_pub=”4a0af351783743a8″;I like books.

While I was in Pakistan I was reading about a book a week. It was glorious. Then I moved to Canada. From February to June I think I read two books. Made me sad. Things are moving quicker in TPK, but never quick enough, it seems.

I just finished Dreams from My Father by the President all Christians hate. It was exceptionally good, actually. Whatever else you can say about Obama, he’s an amazing author. And he wrote it back in 1995, before his political career had even begun. Smooth narrative. Reads like a novel even though it’s more of a memoir.

Next I picked up G.K. Cesterton’s Orthodoxy. Stole it form the Inglis family, I think. I’m only on page 25 but I’m already enthralled by it. I cant vouch for everything he claims but his reasoning is profound and his narrative is humorous, which is important in such a deep book.

After that I’m hoping to move on to finish Brandon Sanderson’s Mistborn series. I picked it up when I heard that he was finishing the Wheel of Time. At first I was worried, because when has the backup dancer ever rocked the stage as good as the star? But after reading the first book in the series, I’m not worried anymore. It’s a solid, complex little fantasy. Yay for Sanderson.

After that I don’t know what’s on my reading list. Anyone have any suggestions?
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Up @ Night #9 – Naiveté

var addthis_pub=”4a0af351783743a8″;Did you hear about how NASA had a computer that proved Joshua’s missing day?
Or what about the story about how Einstein proved there was a God?
And, of course, how Barak Obama is really a Muslim and probably a terrorist.
Did you know some airlines make sure a non-Christian is flying their plane, in case of Rapture?

I’ve often wondered where this strange, permeating sort of Christian Naiveté comes from. What make intelligent Christians believe in and stand up for things that have never actually happened?

Part of it is probably just because these urban myths promote our worldview. If they promote our worldview, they must be right. Unfortunately, they don’t really help at all because non-Christians quickly recognize them as falsehoods.

We all have a tendency to believe things if they sound nice and toss things out that we’d rather not be true. This is why we don’t require Bible dictionaries to cite their sources and at the same time refuse to believe a science article unless it provides a pile of primary data and statistics.

Discernment is good. Let’s use some.

But in the meantime, make sure you sign this petition to stop the upcoming movie that portrays him and his disciples as gay!

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Up @ Night #9 – Naiveté

var addthis_pub=”4a0af351783743a8″;Did you hear about how NASA had a computer that proved Joshua’s missing day?
Or what about the story about how Einstein proved there was a God?
And, of course, how Barak Obama is really a Muslim and probably a terrorist.
Did you know some airlines make sure a non-Christian is flying their plane, in case of Rapture?

I’ve often wondered where this strange, permeating sort of Christian Naiveté comes from. What make intelligent Christians believe in and stand up for things that have never actually happened?

Part of it is probably just because these urban myths promote our worldview. If they promote our worldview, they must be right. Unfortunately, they don’t really help at all because non-Christians quickly recognize them as falsehoods.

We all have a tendency to believe things if they sound nice and toss things out that we’d rather not be true. This is why we don’t require Bible dictionaries to cite their sources and at the same time refuse to believe a science article unless it provides a pile of primary data and statistics.

Discernment is good. Let’s use some.

But in the meantime, make sure you sign this petition to stop the upcoming movie that portrays him and his disciples as gay!

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Proclaiming #8 – Sticking it to Nietzsche

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What is more harmful than any vice? – Active sympathy for the ill-constituted and weak – Christianity …

Thus wrote Friedrich Nietzsche the in 1888; the year before he went insane. His influence on Western society is, I think, not really understood. Many of the bumper-sticker doctrines that form the foundation for our culture can be traced back to his writings. Here’s a list of some of them:

  • The goal of life should be to find yourself. True maturity means discovering or creating an identity for yourself.

  • The highest virtue is to be true to yourself (consider these song titles from a generation ago: “I Gotta Be Me,” “I Did It My Way”).

  • When you fall ill, your body is trying to tell you something; listen to the wisdom of your body.

  • People who hate their bodies or are in tension with them need to learn how to accept and integrate their physical selves with their minds instead of seeing them as in tension with each other. The mind and body make up a single whole.

  • Athletes, musicians, etc. especially need to become so attuned to their bodies that their skills proceed spontaneously from the knowledge stored in their muscles and are not frustrated by an excess of conscious rational thought. (The influence of Zen Buddhism on this sort of thinking is also very strong.)

  • Sexuality is not the opposite of virtue, but a natural gift that needs to be developed and integrated into a healthy, rounded life.

  • Many people suffer from impaired self-esteem; they need to work on being proud of themselves.

  • Knowledge and strength are greater virtues than humility and submission.

  • Overcoming feelings of guilt is an important step to mental health.

  • You can’t love someone else if you don’t love yourself.

  • Life is short; experience it as intensely as you can or it is wasted.

  • People’s values are shaped by the cultures they live in; as society changes we need changed values.

  • Challenge yourself; don’t live passively. (source)
  • There’s really no need to try to prove that these ideas are part of our culture. We all know and feel it. And just because Nietzsche said it, doesn’t make it bad.

    But there is another piece of advice that he gave that the church took far to seriously: The idea that helping the poor, weak and helpless is evil.

    How many times have we heard the same excuses?
    “You can’t help all of them.”
    “If I help them they’ll just use it to hurt themselves.”
    “They don’t deserve it.”
    “I have my own problems.”
    “They got themselves into this mess, let them get out of it.”
    “If a man doesn’t work, he shouldn’t eat.”

    This sort of thinking is only logically possible if we concede that humans are nothing more than smart animals. If we are animals then our survival is based only on our fitness and we are at competition with all the other members of our species. We are then well within our rights to bite and claw to survive and become our own Übermensch. When we refuse to help the poor, weak and helpless we are declaring that we are nothing more than products of evolution.

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    3 and a half years in Pakistan

    Here’s an essay I entered in an Unconventional Writing Contest. I didn’t win, so you get to enjoy it here!

    The sun was mostly blocked by the green turban on my head, but the heat wasn’t. The streets were loud and the bus was crowded. No empty seats. Except on the roof. But the roof was generally better than the inside, despite the sun. There are few feelings as great as barreling through rural Pakistan with the warm wind in your face. My family was below me, inside the bus – there was always room on a bus for women and children. I flew through the air, buzzing past the arid landscape with a dozen other men. I realized again: life is good.
    I was living in a back-water town on the edge of the Thar Desert. My tiny apartment was in the middle of the bazaar. I owned a bicycle, which carried me, my wife and son to school everyday (the mini-van of Pakistan). I made about $1000 a month. I drank chai with neighboring shopkeepers, drank translucent water, ate goat feet and lentils and endured heat waves without A/C or electricity. I even got malaria. Life was great.

    I had wanted to visit Pakistan for a while. And I wasn’t interested in a little jaunt. I wanted to live there. My wife is from rural Pakistan. And I mean rural. Like born-in-a-mud-hut-carry-water-on-your-head-from-the-canal sort of rural. Sweet girl. I guess she was a pretty big motivation for wanting to live in Pakistan. That, and the fact that the country is hurting and we wondered if we could be a bit of an influence for good in our own little way.
    I thought it would be a good idea to pick the brains of some other Canadians who had lived in Pakistan. I don’t remember how many of them I talked to. Maybe half a dozen or so. They gave me all manner of advice. I came up with about nine main points that each of them seemed to agree on.
    1) Don’t go to Pakistan. It’s a bad place. Especially if you have children.
    2) If you ignore number 1, then you need a good deal of formal education before going to Pakistan. Otherwise you will not be allowed in the country (especially if you marry a rural Pakistani).
    3) Before leaving Canada, you need to travel to as many churches and charities that will have you and ask them for money. Because, hey, who wants to live and work?
    4) Don’t worry too much about Urdu (the national language). The only people who don’t know English are poor and rural, and who wants to talk to them?
    5) Find the nicest house in a rich neighborhood to live in. The country will stress you out too much if you live like the average Pakistani.
    6) Do not: drink the water (it’ll kill you), give to beggars (they don’t deserve it), go to local restaurants (poor people live there) or hang out with the locals (that takes time away from real missionary work). Better to hang out with other missionaries.
    7) Stay away from Muslims. They’re all terrorists, after all. You might think this is hard, considering that 97% of the population follows Islam, but I’ve seen it done.
    8) Go back West every summer to tell churches how radical you are and ask for more money.
    9) Be safe. Stay inside. Take no risks. Never, ever ride on the roof of a bus.

    It was depressing. Confusing. My wife had almost nothing but good things to say about her country. But all these older, ‘wiser’ and educated people said she was wrong. I didn’t really know what to expect.
    I didn’t know any Westerners living in Pakistan when I first arrived. I only knew my in-laws (half of whom did not know English). So we lived with them for a while (thirteen people in a two-bedroom house) and I took my cues from them.
    Then I started breaking the rules.
    My month-old son grew to love Pakistan. My second child was born there.
    I have no post-secondary education. But getting permanent residency was no problem.
    I asked no-one in Canada for money (though I was given some anyway). I haven’t been hurting since.
    Urdu became my #1 priority, but informally, through hanging out with shopkeepers. After three years my Urdu was better than some missionaries who had been there for ten.
    I lived in a tiny apartment. No air conditioning. Poor area of town. We adapted.
    I drank water I couldn’t see through. I gave to beggars, knowing that I slept in a better bed than they did. I spent hours at dirty tea shops and restaurants. I made more friends than I could count.
    The Muslims became my closest friends. I was robbed three times while in Pakistan, but never by a Muslim.
    I did not leave Pakistan for three years.
    I refused to stay in my house, hide on holidays or follow any other rules that would hinder my relationships with my neighbors (the only day I decided to stay inside was when there was an anti-American parade passing in front of my house, complete with a stuffed dummy of George Bush ready for burning).

    The realization hit me hard: The missionaries were all wrong. The experienced sages of their generation were wrong. Their experience and advice for Pakistan tended toward a view that was simply not true. Convention, that arbitrary system of doing things, failed.
    I rejoiced in that for a while. I saw Pakistan as a place untouched. The established authorities were proved wrong, so I tossed their wisdom aside. My guides, in their place, were the Pakistani people, my conscience and faith. And I have never been let down. Pakistan was uncharted, and I was suddenly free to live as I pleased.

    We came back to Canada February 2009. Mixed feelings.
    I wondered, does the same realization apply here?
    Everyone seeks after happiness. This is the human universal. But almost no-one achieves it. And if we are not getting it in the West (or in the East, for that matter), does it not stand to reason that we are not living right? And doesn’t that mean that our presuppositions about living are screwed up?
    There are a set of rules, passed through society, about how we live in the West. The arbitrary rules of Convention. The rules that, often, stop us from being and achieving what we ought to be and achieve. I want to break them.
    I don’t have a TV.
    I have a family of four in a one-bedroom apartment.
    My ‘office’ is a patch of ground in the living room next to a filing cabinet.
    I hang out with neighbors.
    I try to live like Jesus taught, complete with ‘love your neighbor’, ‘give to whoever asks’ and all the other good stuff from Matthew 5-7.
    Life is good. I’ve made mistakes, and I plan to make more, but there is one mistake I refuse to make. I refuse to let something good pass by in the name of convention.

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    Filler most blatent

    I’m in Peterborough. It’s hot here.

    Many friends are here. I’m hanging with them. I love them so much that I’m not even going to bother trying to make this post profound or interesting. I’m just going to stop writing and get back to my socializing.

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    A Writer’s Prayer

    Holy muse,
    who puts creative sparks in every soul,
    your words sustain like a cool water hole
    in deserted places. The parchment scroll
    alone is weak, empty, until you dole
    living spirit to the one with the quill
    who, in turn, is lifeless without the skill
    thou giv’st to each according to your will.
    O ye great muse, make me a Bezalel.

    Thou source of all good, be pleased to ignite
    the dry stick of my life. And then enlight
    the dark places of my soul. And upright
    the overturned in me, and turn to right
    the crooked ways. Take my dry, broken pen
    and use it and dance with it to open
    the eyes that cannot see. And enlighten
    the minds without thought, time and again.

    The glory is thine and we have the joy
    of worshipping thee as we ought. Employ
    my words and mind to thy cause. And deploy
    sacred help from above. Let me enjoy
    thy enabling spirit. Make my mind free
    to weave phrases and plots that honor thee,
    and make all my words and pages agree
    that thou and thou only hast the glory.

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