Upcoming…

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Love to be in one of these right now, but...

I've been thinking and praying this weekend about Cerulean Sanctum. I've been blogging pretty much non-stop for five years with maybe a week off here and there. In light of work and schooling issues, I've decided to take a month off to work on getting my book published, get my homeschooling efforts with Ohio Virtual Academy squared away, and to get out to drum up more freelance writing business. Rather than post spurious posts during this time, I'm taking a break.

I'll continue new posts through this week, then beginning next week I'll be reposting some of the better (or most controversial) blog posts here during the weekdays for the next month. If you're not familiar with some of the older stuff here, it'll seem like I'm still live and in-person.

And yes, before my hiatus begins I promise to be incendiary… 

Reality, Part 2

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Yesterday, I asked why Christians are so loathe to deal with economic issues that extend beyond the merely personal. 

My post today deals with the personal.

Cerulean Sanctum has been around since September of 2003. I had a blog called The Boiled Frog Blog that ran for a few years before CS, so I'm ancient in the blogging realms. Yep, five years makes you a geezer.

This blog started as an outlet for ministry when none existed for me. I'm a stay-at-home dad who homeschools, tends our growing farm, and writes professionally as a freelance commercial writer. I aspire to be a published novelist, so I'm working toward that ends, too. But most of all, I'm a man with a deep desire to disciple others in Christ by asking tough questions that other Christians tend to avoid. The only way to grow deep disciples is to  challenge them to wrestle with difficult solutions to intractable problems. If you've read this blog long enough, you've witnessed this firsthand.

Jonathan V. Last, editor of The Daily Standard, encouraged me to begin blogging by writing what I'm passionate about. My passion is the American Church. For that reason, I've tackled many heavy church-related subjects here at Cerulean Sanctum. Dan EdelenEvery week I get private e-mails from folks saying that this blog has been a blessing just by being unafraid to confront the Gordian Knots that face the American Church. I thank every one of you who have written. Your notes mean the world to me.

Because of the nature of this blog, I long ago decided to reject any kind of advertising here. I don't believe it's possible to remain objective on a blog if you're accepting advertising money from outsiders. And what the American Church needs more than anything are Christians who are unafraid to tackle all aspects of the Faith in all aspects of life no matter who that puts out. For this reason, you'll never find outside advertisers on Cerulean Sanctum. It's too much of an incentive to start catering to whomever is sponsoring this blog. If Cerulean Sanctum ever lost its edge, there'd be no reason to come here.

There are no Amazon or PayPal donation buttons to press at Cerulean Sanctum, either. I have received freely, so I give freely.

I do, however, believe a workman should earn his own keep.

I've come close to shutting this blog down numerous times, usually because I feel I'm only adding more talk to an American Christianity already mired in hearing itself talk. Talk is cheap; action is what matters. And a Christianity ensconced in a crystal flask is as far from the vital reality of the Church Jesus Christ founded as the farthest galaxy is from the computer monitor you're reading this on right now.

I'm NOT shutting down Cerulean Sanctum. However, my reality is that my family is increasingly pressed by the economic issues we face in America, issues that are not good and are not getting better. This has forced me to be objective. I can't devote time to Cerulean Sanctum if I can't keep pace with skyrocketing costs in so many sectors of our economy. While God has blessed me with outstanding clients and blessed me further by their deep appreciation for my writing skills, unless I can devote more time to securing at least five more of them to make up the increasing differential we face, I won't be able to give Cerulean Sanctum the best of what I can offer. It would continue to exist, albeit in a drastically diminished form. I don't believe that must happen, though.

This is where you come in. If you're a long-time Cerulean Sanctum reader, you know that I firmly believe that we Christians must do a better job of working with each other to meet each others' needs. My need is to add more clients to my roster. If you would like to help me locate at least five new clients who need the skills I can provide as a freelance commercial writer, please e-mail me at the address at right. I don't wish to do any more plugging here, but through an e-mail I can let you know the types of writing I provide and the well-known companies and organizations I've written for.

Folks, we need each other. No one is an island. Tough times are on the way. Thanks for helping my family through them by assisting me with this request.

May the Lord bless you abundantly and beyond your fondest desire.

Dan

Reality, Part 1

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What now?In the nearly three years that Cerulean Sanctum has existed, I've posted many times about the disconnect between the American Church and economic issues. We've approved of Crown Financial or Ron Blue budget classes because they cater to the individual making personal decisions (reinforcing the stereotype that Christianity is all about "a personal Jesus"), but we're pathologically quiet about macro monetary issues.

I believe this to be an enormous mistake. If the Church cannot speak to larger issues than personal ones, we will increasingly be seen as irrelevant. We may already be there.

Many blanch at the mere mention of relevance, but I think that what is at issue here is not relevance per se, but the fact that we Christians in America can't seem to live out what we believe on any scale beyond the personal. That gives Christianity the sheen of being a religion that might speak to me, but can't speak to my neighborhood. In lieu of this, our faith falls into a category of just another personal decision, like whether to shop at Target or WalMart.

Gasoline is poised to spring up to $4 a gallon in some parts of the country. To the minimum wage earner, this translates into heightened desperation. Many people who work minimum wage jobs are forced to live outside the more costly areas of town, necessitating longer drives. If I make $6 an hour and have a forty mile round trip to make every day, I'm in trouble.

When I lived in Silicon Valley from 1996-2000, the cost of living was so exorbitant that the average two bedroom apartment rented for more than $2000 a month. No one making less than $15 an hour could possibly live there. Those folks lived in outlying areas and suffered through daily one to three hour commutes from up to a hundred miles away. I once talked to a Safeway grocery store clerk who commuted an hour and forty minutes one way to get to work every day. Now ask her to pay $4 a gallon for gas.

Ford announced record losses last week. They piggybacked a historically large recall on top of that bad news. Their bonds are junk. Toyota just passed them as the second largest automaker in the world. And carmakers aren't looking to build more plants in the US, but in China.

The sheer number of companies in this country that depend on Ford for business should give us pause. The sheer number of Americans who are now paying spiraling prices for every staple of life that is transported by oil-consuming vehicles should start us talking.

But the Church in this country has nothing to say about any of this.

When my wife and I moved into our house five years ago, gas in our area was about $1.35 a gallon. The digits swapped this year and the price of gas this last Saturday was $3.15. We own a thirteen-year-old four-cylinder pickup truck that gets about 22 mpg on the highway and a compact car that gets about 38 mpg. In 2003, we spent about $290 a month on gas under normal usage. We now drive less than we did then, but with inflated gas prices, we're at nearly $600 a month now.

We're not rich; nor are we poor. Kissing $310 a month goodbye hurts. It hurts even more through the ripple effect. The cereal we bought two years ago for $1.50 a box is now about $2.75. Multiply that ad infinitum.

We hear about a good economy, but the real facts are depressing. The latest numbers reported one year ago show that while Americans did enjoy more income, with steadily rising salaries, factoring out the top one percent of wage earners nearly eliminated all gains.  In fact, 99 percent of Americans enjoyed a 1.5 percent increase in salary over the dog days of the last recession. The 12.5 percent increase in wages among the top one percent accounted for the offset. Translation? The rich got richer and inflation ate the average family's wage increase.

Being better educated didn't help, either, despite the prevailing wisdom. Salaries for college educated Americans declined in 2004.

And don't talk about savings. Last year, Americans on average saved zero percent of their income. Nothing. This year, economists are already saying that we could be looking at a negative one percent savings rate. 

The figures cited here are the most recent we have. And that's before gasoline above $2 a gallon and Ford and GM bonds falling into the basement. 

Yet what are we as a Church doing in light of this? Not one thing that I can see. Did we champion the recent push for an increase in the minimum wage? (In Ohio, the $4.25 state mandated minimum wage hasn't changed since 1990!) Certainly no Evangelical worth his conservative salt mentioned this lest he be lumped in with Jim Wallis. Are we Christian conservatives true to our nomenclature by calling for conservation of resources? All such calls that I've seen have been lampooned. What are our plans to help each other cope with looming economic disaster for many households? Or is the mantra we're chanting in our churches today, "Every man for himself"?

I don't know why we're so shortsighted.

I want to tell you something you may not consider: There are people in your church who are really smarting from this increase in the cost of gas that is progressively trickling down into all goods and services. They're wondering how they'll cope. With China and India industrializing faster than you can say "globalization," capitalism's market forces dictate that demand drives price, and that demand for oil will only increase. What then, if salaries do not keep pace? As we've seen, they aren't.

I'm not a fearmonger. I'm only calling for common sense. Our churches MUST speak to this reality and start doing something immediately to ensure that the least of those in our churches are not bankrupted by forces they cannot control. Because right now, someone in your church is weeping over bills they could easily pay two years ago, but not today.

That person might even be you. 

More tomorrow…