The Porpoise Diving Life, By Bill Dahl
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Just Jim - 2006

The Porpoise Diving Life

The Question - 2006

Enough - 2006

The Summit - 2006

Reflections on Mainstream - 2006

Friendly Fire - 2006

The 7 Rabbits - Article - BEGIN HERE

Just a Sign of the Times - 2006

On Porpoise

Fawnix...N-Z (Emerging Church) - 2006

The State Of The Church 2007

I Still Have A Dream - 2005

Immi-doption v. Immi-bortion - 2006

Collateral Damage - 2005

Reflections on Technology - 2006

Just Chump Change - 2006

Fawnix ...A-M (Emerging Church) - 2006

Reality For The Rest Of Us - 2006

The 7 Rabbits - Poem

Porpoise-Diving or Purpose-Driven?

Victimmigration 2006

Poem Under Poem - 2006

Where's Charlie Wear At? - 2006

What We Believe

Immigrace-un 2007

The Red 'C' by Bill Dahl

November 2006 Book Review

Discrimmigration

Podshots - Photo Gallery

Recommended Listening

Book Reviews

More Recommended Reading

Take Away The Stone - Shedding Light Inside The Emerging Church

No Thanks - An Explanation by Bill Dahl

Emerging Church Prayer for 2008

FACEBOOK - The Porpoise Diving Life

FLICKR - The Porpoise Diving Life

The Best of the Emerging Church 2007

The Porpoise Diving Life - A Poem

Naked Spirituality by Brian McLaren

The Sword of the Lord by Andrew Himes - Review by Bill Dahl

EXPRESS YOURSELF --- WRITE FOR The Porpoise Diving Life -

2012 - Reading Suggestions

The Shadow of a Doubt

Air God - Where's The Plane of Faith Taking Us in the 21st Century? by Bill Dahl

Brian McLaren on The Questians by Bill Dahl

The BEST BOOKS OF 2010

Help For Underwater Homeowners

Why Did Jesus, Moses, the Buddha and Mohammed Cross the Road? by Brian McLaren - A Book Review by Bill Dahl

“Faith” in unprecedented times (?) by Bill Dahl

Ms. Metaphor by Bill Dahl

HUH? or Tapping on the Walls of the Echo Chamber

Air God Flight # 21- Where's the Plane of Faith Taking Us in the 21st Century?

Contemplating 2011

George Barna - Maximum Faith - Live Like Jesus

Hope Is Closer Than You Think

The Questians - Foreword

The Voice Within The Silence

LOOKING FOR INTERVIEW CANDIDATES - April/May 2012

The Next Questians

The Cause Within You by George Barna and Matthew Barnett

Stretch Out Your Hand

A January 2008 Note From Bill Dahl

The Real Toll of Rob Bell's Tale - Love Wins

God Without Religion - by Andrew Farley

Cross Roads - A NEW Novel by the Author of

Hope

Any Questians? - Prologue/Introduction

Practice Resurrection by Eugene Peterson

The BEST Book of 2009 by Bill Dahl - #1

NERVE - A Book by Taylor Clark

Best Books of 2009 - # 2 Through 10 - by Bill Dahl

God In A Box - by Bill Dahl

On Becoming An Artist – Reinventing Yourself Through Mindful Creativity - by Ellen J. Langer

Out of Our Minds – Learning To Be Creative by Sir Ken Robinson

The Evolving Self – A Psychology for the Third Millenium - by Mihalyi Csikszentmihalyi

Hopeful?

The Questians - Chapter 1 - The 'Q' Gene

THE SOCIAL ANIMAL – The Hidden Sources of Love, Character, and Achievement by David Brooks

The Little Ones

The Questians - Chapter 2 - The VaQuum

Immillusion - Encore

Do You Belive This?

AweSum

Sheepmanship - A Poem About the Sacred Cow of Leadership - By Bill Dahl

The Questians - Chapter 3 - The Qage

Promise Says

Pondering God

Book Review: Wrestling With Our Inner Angels - Faith, Mental Illness and The Journey to Wholeness by Nancy Kehoe

A New Kind of Christianity by Brian McLaren

Cowboy Ethics - What Wall Street Can Learn From The Code of the West

The Questian Confession by Bill Dahl

Impufficient - Hijacked by Harvard

The Ambition by Lee Strobel - Review by Bill Dahl

Between Wyomings - My God and an iPod on the Open Road

Friend of Questians - by Bill Dahl

At Canaan's Edge by Taylor Branch - Review by Bill Dahl

The Future of Faith by Harvey Cox

The Seven Faith Tribes by George Barna

Stories From The Shack - A Review by Bill Dahl

Just Jesus - 2006

Curious? by Todd Kashdan - A Book Review by Bill Dahl

What We Think We Know by Bill Dahl

The Dream Lives On!

Iconoclast – A Neuroscientist Reveals How To Think Differently - Book Review by Bill Dahl

SWAY - The Irresistable Pull of Irrational Behavior

Between Something Real and Something Wrong - by Bill Dahl

Mindfulness by Harvard’s Ellen J. Langer - Book Review by Bill Dahl

Putting Away Childish Things by Marcus Borg - Book Review by Bill Dahl

Growing Spiritually: Without Getting Bogged Down in Religion by Bob Ouradnik - Book Review by Bill Dahl

God In A Box - by Bill Dahl

The Black Swan - by Nassim Nicholas Taleb

The Genius In All of Us by David Shenk - Book Review by Bill Dahl

It's All About Us - Lyrics For A Song

The Scent of An Angel - 2006

Sell Fish

An Interview with Futurists/Strategic Foresight Practitioners Mike Morrell and Frank Spencer - by Bill Dahl

Did Jesus Exist by Bart D. Ehrman - A Review by Bill Dahl

Dancing with Diana --- An Interview with Diana Butler-Bass by Bill Dahl

Being Jesus in Nashville by Jim Palmer - A Review by Bill Dahl

WANTED WOMEN: Faith, Lies & The War on Terror: The Lives of Ayaan Hirsi Ali & Aafia Siddiqui – by Deborah Scroggins

Christianity After Religion - The End of Church and the Birth of a New Spiritual Awakening by Diana Butler-Bass - A Review by Bill Dahl

An Interview With Bart D. Ehrman - Did Jesus Exist? by Bill Dahl

FUTURECAST by George Barna - Book Review

Book Review: Killing The Messenger by Thomas Peele - Review by Bill Dahl

An Interview with Jim Palmer - by Bill Dahl

Unladylike – Resisting the Injustice of Inequality in the Church by Pam Hogeweide - A Review by Bill Dahl

HEAVEN IS NOW - Awakening Four Five Spiritual Senses to the Wonders of Grace by Andrew Farley - A Review by Bill Dahl

An INTERVIEW with George Barna - FUTURECAST - What Todays Trends Mean For Tomorrows World

Blogger of The Year: 2011 - Ron Cole

The Resignation of Eve - What If Adam's Rib Is No Longer Willing to Be The Backbone of the Church - A New Book by Jim Henderson - A Review by Bill Dahl

Mr. Nobody - A Song Inspired by the Writing of Jim Palmer

Healing The Heart of Democracy by Parker Palmer

Interview: Award Winning Investigative Journalist & Author Thomas Peele - by Bill Dahl

The New Evangelicals by Marcia Pally

A Husband's Heart

Person of the Year 2011 - by Bill Dahl

The Best Books of 2011

Wide Open Spaces - by Jim Palmer - A Review by Bill Dahl

SUMMER 2012 - Reading Suggestions - by Bill Dahl

Divine Nobodies by Jim Palmer

Pray for Jim Palmer

VIDEO: Being Jesus in Nashville

Immipartheid

Just Another Day - 2006

The Jesus Testimony - 2006

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The 7 Rabbits - Article - BEGIN HERE

Beneath the warm fuzzy appearances within the Christian community

Art by Rob Woodrum
All Rights Reserved 2007

Larry Crabb once wrote:

"We must learn to tell the story of our lives---how we impact others, how we’ve been damaged by others, how we feel about God---in order to disrupt the sinful attitudes and practices that still remain. Telling our stories requires us to face painful truths about ourselves. And once we’ve faced those truths, we will again feel the noble passion to love, to be and to worship, passions planted in our hearts by God’s Spirit.” (1)


I wish rabbits could talk.


When I was about 5 years old, I saw my first magician on television. He was dressed in a black tuxedo with tails, white shirt and a black bow tie. Those were the finest pair of black shiny shoes I had ever seen. He was sporting a black, handlebar mustache. He was so graceful it was as if he was floating across the stage. He looked magical to me. He explained that he was about to pull a rabbit out of a hat. He even showed the audience the white silk lining in the empty top hat. I was mesmerized by the thought of it. He motioned his magic wand over the empty hat two or three times and then, “Abracadabra!” He pulled a big white, floppy eared rabbit out of the hat. I went berserk!

I was laser focused on the television jumping up and down shouting “Mom! Mom!” I was screaming like an alien was abducting me. Mom dashed into the living room, as I pointed frantically to the television. The magician was parading around the stage proudly displaying the bunny for all to see. He was holding the rabbit by the scruff of its neck, which I thought was kind of cruel. Mom explained that this is the way rabbits prefer to be carried. I was relieved. The magician passed the rabbit to a scantily clad woman, took a bow and departed stage left. I stood there vibrating with awe.

Pulling rabbits out of hats is what this book is all about. We humans adore being entertained, even when we know that there’s more than meets the eye. My parents didn’t ruin the rabbit pulled out of the hat thing for me. Church did. Christianity and Christians did.

I’ll never forget that Easter morning Sunday when, after the service, I went out onto the church lawn for my first Easter egg hunt. After I found my first piece of candy, I looked up for my mom and there he was: Chet, our next-door neighbor, dressed up like an Easter bunny. Believe me, Chet was nowhere near anything remotely resembling the pictures of any Easter bunny I had ever seen. Chet was short, stocky and had a huge beer gut, like a woman about to give birth to twins or quadruplets. He always smelled like beer and chain-smoked Camel straights. When I saw Chet, with those phony bunny whiskers painted on his mug, my Easter bunny world began to crumble. Chet had a big black hat in one hand. I saw him put a bunny in it. He made a few awkward moves with one hand over the top of the hat and then pulled the bunny out. Some kids were amazed and squealed with delight. Me, I ran as fast as I could to my mom, screaming and crying my brains out. As we walked to the car, I threw my Easter candy toward Chet, sobbing, cradled in the arms of my mother.

I’ve had the same kinds of experiences with the Christian church, Christians, and those tilling the spiritual growth field…sometimes it seems as if rabbits are being pulled out of hats. Although I have been an intrigued spectator, and even a participant, I have concluded that there are some practices, rituals, popular thought processes and events that claim the name of Christ that have absolutely nothing to do with sewing good seed, raising high yield disciples of Jesus, and becoming the transformed harvest that God yearns for, capable of creating His kingdom “on earth as it is in heaven.”

Christianity in the western, developed world continues pulling rabbits out of hats slyly, yet deceptively, attempting to persuade those around us, and even ourselves, about the validity of our act. Yet, we’re the one’s on life’s stage each and every day, claiming we are Christians, performing this deception! What’s wrong with us? The rabbits aren’t the problem. It’s the people pulling them out of the hat! These are The 7 Rabbits of Slyly Defective People this issue will explore.

Imagine that you wake up, surrounded by 7 Rabbits. They have been living within the Christian community during the past several decades. These rabbits have heard every sermon, every song, every prayer and all the conversations that have taken place. They have been daily observers our behavior. These rabbits can talk. They became concerned and began to pray. God heard and answered their prayer. He sent them to the Christian community to deliver His message. What does God tell us through these rabbits about 7 characteristics we Christians presently possess that must be unlearned, discarded or grown out of?

First, I wrote a poem entitled “The 7 Rabbits of Slyly Defective People” that provides the context for this theme. You can find it here. I hope you enjoy it and it causes you to think about this question on a personal, missional and community level. It is designed to not only spur contemplation, but dialogue with others.

Next, I wrote 6 poems and one article that, for me, illustrate the heart of the 7 points I would like to share with you, pertinent to this theme. These 7 pieces address the following question: What are the 7 things we Christians must unlearn, discard or repent of (according to the 7 Rabbits sent by God)? Here’s what I’ve come up with:

1. Selfishness – Enjoy my story entitled “Sell Fish.” Return here to contemplate the following from C.S. Lewis: "The natural life in each one of us is something self-centered, something that wants to be petted and admired, to take advantage of other lives, to exploit the whole universe. And especially it wants to be left to itself: to keep well away from anything better or stronger or higher than it, anything that might make it feel small. It is afraid of the light and the air of the spiritual world, just as people who have been brought up to be dirty are afraid of a bath. And in a sense it is quite right. It knows that if the spiritual life gets a hold of it, all its self-centeredness and self-will are going to be killed and it is ready to fight tooth and nail to avoid that." (2)

2. Survival – I hope you appreciate the poem, “The Sky is Falling.” When you’ve finished reading the poem, return here to contemplate the following: “We have learned that maintaining the status quo serves neither God nor the people He loves.”(3) There are those who recognize that “Christianity cannot survive in anything like it’s present form.” (4)

3. Promises – My prayer is that “Promise Says” provides you with food for thought. Upon completing the poem, return here to consider this from Charles Handy: “If the new way of doing things is going to be different from the old, not just an improvement on it, then we shall need to look at everything in a new way. The new words really will signal new ideas. Not unnaturally, discontinuous upside-down thinking has never been popular with upholders of continuity and the status quo.” (5)

4. Cynicism and Doubt
– I hope my poem entitled “Do You Believe This?” will provide you with some additional fodder to ponder. After you read the poem, return here to pray about this from author Lee Strobel:

“It’s the decision to follow the best light you have about God and not quit. The idea of choice runs all through the Scripture. Look at Joshua. He says to choose this day whom you’re going to serve, but as for him and his house, they will serve the Lord. So faith, at it’s taproot is a decision of the will….Consequently, at it’s core, faith is a decision of the will that we keep on making, but we’re given an option by God’s grace. We’re empowered to keep making it by His Spirit. And, it’s a choice we must make without having all the complete information we’d like to have.” (6)

5. Illusions – My poem entitled “Illusion” should get things started. After you read it, return here to consider the insights of Daniel J. Levinson: “As he attempts to reappraise his life, a man discovers how much it has been based on illusions, and he is faced with the task of de-illusionment. By this expression I mean a reduction of illusions; a recognition that long held assumptions and beliefs about self and world are not true. This process merits special attention because illusions play so vital a role in our lives throughout the life cycle.”(7) Maybe the tendency to be perplexed is a gift, rather than something to be avoided. I hope you appreciate my poem entitled “Illusion.”


6. Hypocrisy – The unveiled face of a current social issue in the U.S. provides the basis for illustrating this reality. The poem is entitled “Discrimmigration.” When you’re done, contemplate this: George Barna, pre-eminent scholar, author and social researcher on Christianity in the U.S. writes; “We witness a born-again population that is indistinguishable from the rest of the nation – and has very little credibility when it comes to promoting genuine Christianity.” (8)

7. Counting the Wrong Stuff – We live in a world that counts. I wrote an article called “Counting Character” that I hope delivers the message. Return here to consider this: “What really counts (emphasis is mine) is whether we see the overlooked and forgotten in our midst.”(9) Brian McLaren notes, “Faith that counts, (emphasis is mine) then, is not the absence of doubt, it’s the presence of action.”(10) Furthermore, I would also include the fact that we must embrace the risks that these opportunities present, whether we can see them at the outset or not. Faith without risks isn’t faith. Faith without works? Well, you know how this phrase ends.


Madeleine L’Engle suggests:


“Stories make us more alive, more human, more courageous, more loving. Why does anybody tell a story? It does indeed have something to do with faith, faith that the universe has meaning, that our little human lives are not irrelevant, that what we choose or say or do matters, matters cosmically.” (11)

Write your story. Share your story. Tell your story in new and creative ways. We hope this template provides you with just one example of how we might begin to tell our stories in new and creative ways. We are always interested in your comments, feedback, poems, letters emails, songs, thoughts and articles. Tell us what you learned, what grabbed you…tell us the story of your Porpoise Diving Life.

You might begin by contemplating what your own 7 rabbits look like. Pull them out of the burrow in your soul. Face them -- Each of them. Write about them. Name them. In a world yearning for certainty, the predictable, the comfortable, the secure and the safe --- Jesus Christ calls us to change. We must reawaken to a fundamental reality as characterized by Donald Miller:

“I think every conscious person, every person who is awake to the functioning principles within his reality, has a moment where he stops blaming the problems in the world on group think, on humanity and authority, and starts to face himself. I hate this more than anything. This is the hardest principle within Christian spirituality for me to deal with. The problem is not out there; the problem is the needy beast of a thing that lives in my chest.” (12)

Read the following from Harold Kushner a few times before you begin identifying, facing, naming and writing about your own 7 rabbits:

“But when religion teaches us that God loves the wounded soul, the chastised soul that has learned something of its own fallibility and its own limitations, when religion teaches us that being human is such a complicated challenge that all of us will make mistakes in the process of learning how to do it right, then we can come to see our mistakes not as emblems of our unworthiness but as experiences we can learn from. We will be brave enough to try something new without being afraid of getting it wrong. Our sense of shame will be the result of our humility, our learning our limits, rather than our wanting to hide from scrutiny because we have done badly.” (13)

I’ll conclude with this insight and encouragement from Oswald Chambers:

“The only way we can be of use to God is to let Him take us through the crooks and crannies of our own characters. It is astounding how ignorant we are about ourselves…How many of us have learned to look in with courage?” (14)

Until then, our blessings to you and yours.

Bill Dahl
Author, Creator, Editor
http://www.theporpoisedivinglife.com

Bill Dahl, is a freelance writer and social justice advocate. Bill is published in numerous professional publications, magazines, websites, journals, newspapers and newsletters. Bill and his family make their home in central Oregon.

For Reprint Permission Contact: Bill Dahl

wsdahl@bendbroadband.com

NOTES


1. Crabb, Dr. Larry, INSIDE OUT, NAVPRESS, Colorado, Springs, CO. 1988, p.31

2. C.S. Lewis, Mere Christianity, HarperSanFrancisco – A Division of HarperCollinsPublishers, (c) 1952, p. 178.

3. Caldwell, Kirbyjon & Kallenstad, Walt with Sorensen, Paul Entrepreneurial Faith – Launching Bold Initiatives to Expand God’s Kingdom, WaterBrook Press, A Division of Random House, Inc., Copyright © 2004 by Kirbyjon Caldwell, Walt Kallenstadt and Paul Sorensen, p. 1.

4. Jenkins, Philip The Next Christendom, Oxford University Press, New York, New York Copyright © 2002 by Philip Jenkins p. 9.

5. Handy, Charles The Age of Unreason, Harvard Business School Press, Boston, Massachusetts Copyright (c) 1989 by Charles Handy p. 23

6. Strobel, Lee The Case For Christ, Zondervan, Grand Rapids, MI. Copyright (c) 2000, pp.236-7.

7. Levinson, Daniel J., The Seasons Of A Man’s Life, New York: Ballantine Books, a division of Simon & Schuster, 1978, p.192

8. Barna, George The State of the Church: 2002, Published by Issachar Resources, a division of Barna Research Group, Ltd., 5528 Everglades Street Ventura, CA 93003 Copyright © 2002 by George Barna p.128.

9. Main, Bruce Spotting The Sacred – Noticing God in the Most Unlikely Places, Baker Books, Grand Rapids, MI Copyright © by Bruce Main, p. 223.

10. McLaren, Brian The Secret Message of Jesus – Uncovering The Truth That Could Change Everything, W Publishing –A Division of Thomas Nelson Publishers, Grand Rapids, MI Copyright 2006 by Brian D. McLaren p. 109.

11. L’Engle, Madeleine and Chase, Carol F. Reflections on a Writing Life, Shaw Publications, Copyright © 2001

12. Miller, Donald. Blue Like Jazz, Thomas Nelson Publishers Nashville, TN Ó Copyright 2003 by Donald Miller, p. 20.

13. Kushner, Harold S. How Good Do We Have to Be - A New Understanding of Guilt and Forgiveness, Little, Brown and Company Boston, MA Ó Copyright 1996 by Harold S. Kushner, p. 39

14. Chambers, Oswald My Utmost For His Highest, Barbour Publishing, Inc. Copyright © 1935 by Dodd, Mead & Company, p. January 12th.

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