Unplanned Modernity?

Armodoxy for Today: Unplanned Modernity

Planned obsolescence is a strategy used by manufacturers to design products with a deliberately limited lifespan, so that consumers will need to replace them sooner than expected. It started back in the late 1800s with lightbulbs and today, most electronic equipment and gadgets are built to be obsolete within some timeframe.  Usually the consumer is alerted with a message: this device can no longer be updated, leaving you with the only option of purchasing a new model.

Jesus’ message is the opposite of planned obsolescence. Perhaps we may call it unplanned modernity. Jesus’ message is always relevant and new. Because it is not fabricated and in sync and harmony with the universe, it is natural. It is unplanned. Forever modern, forever contemporary, never out of style, never needing any extra upgrades, eternally true. Once acquired, keep it polished, and it will last a lifetime. This has been the formula adopted by the Armenian Church. No reason to consider an upgrade. This is Armodoxy.

Today’s one minute for Summertime.

Striking Out: Two Ways

Armodoxy for Today: Striking Out

In the game of baseball, a player may strike out either by swinging the bat and not hitting a pitched ball, or by not swinging on a good pitch. There is a punishment – a strike – on an action and on a non-action, provided there was an opportunity to hit. Yes, a strike is counted on an action that misses its goal as well as on an opportunity missed.

Christ invites us to action. To “ask, seek and knock (Matthew 7:7), Jesus tells us, as well as to “Feed the hungry, clothe the naked, comfort the suffering” (Matthew 25). The opportunities to swing are many in our life, with despair and disease being pitched at us daily.

A Christian is called to action – to swing – by using his or her talents – those blessing that are uniquely his or hers.

Today’s one minute for Summertime.

The Verbs of Jesus

Armodoxy for Today: Verbs of Jesus

In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus say, “Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you.” (Matthew 7:7)

Christianity is a religion of action, we know, and the direction to that action is given to us by Christ himself. Ask, seek and knock are all verbs, words of action.

Isaac Newton put forth the third law of motion, to every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. For Newton this was a law about energy and heat flow, although the law easily describes the dynamics at play in Jesus’ statement. And although Newton did not make that connection, it doesn’t escape us the Sir Isaac was a mathematician, physicist, astronomer, alchemist, author and theologian.

Today’s one minute for Summertime.

Actions to Love

Armodoxy for Today, one minute for Summertime: Actions to Love

Christianity is a religion of action. Over and over again, Christ teaches that we are to use the talents God has given us to bring goodness to lives – ours, as well as the lives of others. It is in doing that we discover responsibility. Hence, life has value and meaning when we act, when we share the gifts God showers on us, with others.

Jesus’ singular commandment was to love. And to avoid an misunderstanding, Jesus demonstrates the action of love with His life. “Love one another as I have loved you,” he says (John 13:34). Jesus’ love is a sacrificial love. We’re called to that same standard, to love by giving of ourselves.

Today’s one minute for Summertime.

Don’t don’t, Do

Armodoxy for Today, one minute for Summertime: Don’t don’t, Do

I received a well-intentioned informational video the other day from a church, in which the narrator explained, while a model visually demonstrated the dos and don’ts of church attendance. This was the latest incarnation of a list outlining church etiquette that has been floating around as long as I can remember: Don’t cross your legs, don’t chew gum, don’t wear sleeveless shirts or blouses, and about 20 other rules. Sadly, only one item on the list was “do” and even sadder was that it pointed to women having to wear head coverings.

In their good intentions to keep the sanctuary space sacred, often these lists are skewed to the “don’t” side, giving the impression that Christianity is about curtailing and restricting actions. A quick glance at the Bible reveals that the Old Testament contains 613 laws and regulations. Moses brought it down to a manageable size with the 10 Commandments. Jesus summarized with the word “Love.” Not a prohibition but a direct order to “do,” to Love.

Today’s one minute for Summertime.

Sensational and the Mundane

Armodoxy for Today, one minute for Summertime: Peter and the Tent

At the Transfiguration event, recorded in Matthew, Mark and Luke, Jesus is shining the Christ Light. * As I shared over the past few days, this is the Light that transcends a source, such as the sun, star or even reflective light such as the moon. The event is singular in nature, it is extra-ordinary, extra-sensational, mystical and supernatural.

Peter, who is a witness to this event, asks Jesus if he would like a tent constructed for himself, Moses and Elijah. In the face of this extraordinary, mystical, supernatural event, Peter is preoccupied with the mundane. Sure, the gesture is a most hospitable one, but it deprives him of fully engaging in this singular event.

The action, or inaction, of Peter serves as a reminder of our own worldliness. Often we become consumed with the mundane while the true beauty and extraordinary events of life pass us by.

Today’s one minute for Summertime.

*Matthew 17:1–8, Mark 9:2–13, Luke 9:28–36, 2 Peter 1:16–18

Fulfilling the Law & Prophets

Armodoxy for Today, one minute for Summertime: Fulfilling the Law and Prophets

At the Transfiguration, Jesus is surrounded by two Old Testament characters, Moses and Elijah. They represent the Law and the Prophets respectively. God’s voice is heard saying, “This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased. Listen to Him.” *

In the Armenian Church tradition, Jesus is the fulfilment of the Law and the Prophets, a pronouncement which is made every Sunday at the conclusion of the Divine Liturgy in every Armenian Church. Indeed, the Kingdom of God is at hand. It is enacted.

God gave the Law, He gave the prophets, but He so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son. (John 3:16)

Today’s one minute for Summertme.

*Matthew 17:1–8, Mark 9:2–13, Luke 9:28–36, 2 Peter 1:16–18

Transfiguring the God Light

Armodoxy for Today: Transfiguring the God Light

The Transfiguration which was celebrated by the Armenian Church this weekend is described in the Gospels of Matthew, Mark and Luke, and also in the Letter of Peter. It is a spectacular event where Jesus physically radiates the Divine Light.* “His face shone like the sun, and His clothes became as white as the light,” says Matthew.

Take a quick trip to the beginning of time. In the first chapter, the first few verses of Genesis we hear God say, “Let there be Light.” And there is Light, a few days before the Sun or the stars were created. This is the God Light, the stand-alone Light that is the foundation of the Universe. And for a few minutes, Jesus radiated this Light in the witness of three disciples, but also in the witness of all of us who engage in this story.

Today’s one minute for Summertime.

*Matthew 17:1–8, Mark 9:2–13, Luke 9:28–36, 2 Peter 1:16–18

Deliverance from Evil -10/10

Armodoxy for Today: 10x One Minutes on the Lord’s Prayer, Part 10 -Deliverance from Evil

God provides the tools – patience, strength, willpower – to protect us from temptation and therefore the natural the follow up is a request to be delivered from Evil. Ancient authorities read, “the Evil One” but either way, it is clear that ours is to avoid evil or simply, that which is not good.

Over the last 10 days we studied the prayer offered to us by our Lord Jesus in parts. In conclusion, as a whole, we may say that it is an affirmation of our Faith in God, a commitment to the celebration of the life and world in which we live, and an acceptance of our responsibility to others, our world and to life itself. To which we may appropriately add, “Amen.”

Today’s one minute on the Lord’s Prayer, for Summertime.

Protect from Temptation -9of10

Armodoxy for Today: 10x One Minutes on the Lord’s Prayer, Part 9 – Protect us from Temptation

And lead us not into temptation” is a bit misleading, when we recite it at the end of the Lord’s Prayer. It lends to the belief that somehow, we are on the puppet strings of the Grand Puppeteer, and we are begging that he does not steer us in toward temptation.

The true request here is, may God protect us from temptation. When we see, hear, or think tempting thoughts, may God give us the wisdom, the clarity of vision and the openness of mind to stay away from those things that draw us to sin.

Temptation is all around us. God doesn’t take us there. Rather, He gives us the tools with which we can overcome temptation.  When Jesus offers us the Lord’s prayer, it is in the context of the Sermon on the Mount, where he is challenging us all to find purity of mind as we live our lives. God gives us the strength and will to not be led toward it.

Today’s one minute on the Lord’s Prayer, for Summertime.