Category Archives: Sin

GHOST-WRITING: A COMMON (EVEN WITH CHRISTIANS), YET UNETHICAL PRACTICE

My introduction to ghost-writing came via a gifted friend from my days at Stanford.  She received her B.A. in classics from Stanford with distinction.  She is a gifted writer.  After college she went to work with a Christian ministry.  My wife and I were visiting with her one day when she read a letter from a well-known Christian leader.  I was a bit surprised by how well the letter was written and commenced to voice my astonishment.  My friend said, “Oh no, she did not write it.  I did.”  I was speechless…a rather uncommon occurrence for me!
After this, I started to hear more about ghost-writing.  There were all kinds of rationales given to the practice, but all struck me as ridiculous.  Who cares if everyone is doing it?  That is certainly not a compelling argument.  Who cares if both the ghost-writer and the more famous Christian are fine with it?  No argument of any worth there either.
My first opportunity to ghost-write came about ten years ago.  I turned down the offer even though the money was good.  In the depths of the recent recession when we almost lost our home, I said “yes” to ghost-writing two smaller pieces.  It was a weak moment to be sure, but inexcusable.  I will never do it again.
I have no problem with a famous Christian utilizing the skills of a more gifted writer as long as proper attribution is given.  Which means in many cases putting them on the cover as a co-author.  And how many follow that practice?  Very few, I’m afraid.
I talked with a journalist several years back who was working on a major book about ghost-writing among Christians.  He decided to scrap it because he felt it would be too much of a stumbling block for Christians to find out how many of their favorite writers are really not the guy or gal writing the book!

ANTHONY WEINER AND THE DISAPPEARANCE OF SIN

This was originally posted on May 30, 2013, but there sadly is a need to get some things clear in our collective conscious!

Since Anthony Weiner is back (again!) in the news, I thought it good to reflect some on his undoing.

Let’s get things clear from the get go.  I find Weiner’s behavior inexcusable and to employ a word I have not yet heard: sinful.

It is a good thing Weiner resigned from the Congress.  The spectacle that preceded it was unfortunate.  It only seemed to underscore the very problem that got Weiner into trouble to begin with, namely his narcissistic tendency toward self-promotion.  As some preachers I’ve heard proclaim, “Sometimes we have got to repent of our repentance.”

It is interesting to hear the commentary by the media and members of Congress, but not so much for what has been said.  Rather, it is what was left unsaid that has been striking.

For example, why are so many up in arms over what Weiner did?  If there is no God, as Dostoyevsky famously declared, then all things are permissible.  I imagine there are several in the media and in Congress who find the “fear of the Lord” a quaint maxim of a bygone era.  Nevertheless they are quick to pronounce absolute judgment on Weiner.  No one seems troubled by this inconsistency.

For those of us who do believe in the “fear of the Lord” it is crucial to do some honest soul-searching.  Sure, our sins may not be public.  They may also occur in more socially respectable areas of life: food instead of sex, gossip instead of hubris, and lying instead of lying.  Wait a second.  We are more like Weiner than we care to admit!

As a Christian, I believe God can redeem anyone.  The death and resurrection of Jesus takes the hideousness of sin and the hope-filled reality of a changed life seriously.  The Bible is loaded with unsavory characters who found redemption.  King David was a murderer and adulterer.  And yes, King David also lied.   He outdid Weiner on many fronts.

One’s understanding of redemption in the Christian sense starts by recognizing our real problem: sin.  Failure to appreciate our own sin results in simply casting stones at fellow human beings.  Instead of seeing redemption as a real possibility we gladly cast the pariah to the margins of society.  With the offending party gone from our midst we are freed from having to ponder our own compulsions, dysfunctions, hubris, self-satisfaction, arrogance, and what can be the umbrella term for all: sin. 

When a society loses the language to depict the realities of sin, it has lost more than it can possibly know.  When sin is gone from the scene, so is redemption.  And when redemption is gone, where does that leave us?

SIN PROMISES, BUT NEVER DELIVERS

 

 

File:Michelangelo, profeti, Isaiah 01.jpg

I am currently meditating through Isaiah.  Many things struck me in chapter one, but the last verse was especially sobering:

“The mighty man will become tinder

and his work a spark;

both will burn together,

with no one to quench the fire.”

Sin is not life-giving.  Sin destroys us.  Sin fools us.  Sin eventually delivers what we never expected!

 

GILLIGAN’S ISLAND AND THE SEVEN DEADLY SINS

My dad taught me at a young age about “Palegas,” one of the first memory aids I learned.  It represents the “Seven Deadly Sins” which are pride, avarice, lust, envy, gluttony, anger, and sloth.  I can recall them with little effort.

Some of you may know that there has been an attempt to link the seven characters on Gilligan’s Island to the seven deadly sins.  No kidding.

One guy says the seven sins are represented by everyone except Gilligan.  In this scheme, the Skipper got tagged with both gluttony and anger, so Little Buddy ends up as Satan!

It is interesting that the so-called “Seven Deadly Sins” are about as relevant today as Thurston Howell’s (the III!) musings about the stock market.

LIVING EAST OF EDEN

A few days ago I was in Boston enjoying the evening with a dear friend on the very street where the two explosions went off. 

Another graphic reminder that we indeed live east of Eden.

May God display His mercy and truth in tangible ways through the various caregivers in the area!