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do you get when you mix a knit beanie, ankle-rolled jeans, a pair of well-worn
Toms, a V neck t-shirt, some tasteful tattoos, a bible, and coffee? The
infamous, slightly androgynous, totally relevant, and absolutely perfect:
hipster Christian. You can catch this exotic biped lingering around local music
dives drinking in the melodies of popular (but not too popular) indie bands or
taste-testing the newest concoction at their local micro-brewery (Yay for
quad’s and porters, right?). Additionally, they might surface in groups at
nearby coffee shops gathered around Tim Keller’s newest book talking about God,
life, and poverty in third-world countries. If you see them here, I wouldn’t
disturb them. It’s probably best to just take pictures from a good distance. Their
diet of soy and legumes makes them slightly unpredictable at times.
*Image from thepubscout.com |
Well,
obviously this is a bit of a caricature, but I think it’s instructive as far as
it goes. A lot of twenty-somethings are asking the question: can Christianity
truly be relevant to contemporary culture? If so, what might that look like? Does
a charitable accommodation of Christianity merely consist of adopting cultural trends
and “baptizing” them with the presence of Christian traditions (i.e. Scripture,
prayer, concern for the poor, etc.)? This is certainly a confusing question and
a lot of times it seems like we just mash disparate parts of our life together
and hope for the best. We take our love for coffee and mix that with a little
bit of bible-study and (ta-da!) you get a “relevant, Christian” product. Unfortunately,
this approach seems somewhat flat. It doesn’t seem to account for the true
richness that we know the Christian worldview possesses.
So,
what is a better way of navigating this question?
To
begin, I think it’s helpful to remember that the evolving face of cultural trends
always masks their impetus. Their true nature is an expression of a genuinely
human desire: the desire for a place. We all want a place. We all want to fit
somewhere. We all want to belong. Latching on to hipster trends (or even
“hipster-ism” itself) seems to satisfy this human need and we just eat it up. Somehow
it makes us feel like we’re not so alone. It feels defined and definition
provides comfort.
Now,
don’t get me wrong. I’m not down on interesting and exciting new cultural
developments. In fact, I think iPhones are great, the 4,531 newly discovered
ways to make coffee is pretty phenomenal, and I never knew until now that Ray
Ban’s were actually the apex of ocular engineering. I’m not saying we boycott
these trends. What I’m encouraging is a that we honestly assess the reason
behind the trends to see how Christianity can properly engage them.
The
reality is, a new iPhone will never give you a lasting meaning or purpose. That
new coffee shop that “everybody goes to” will eventually close down. Given the inevitable expansion of your
plaid-encased mid-section, your skinny jeans (Lord bless ‘em) will probably
stop fitting in about 5-7 years. Trends
change. Cultural taste is about as capricious as a 5th grade love
interest and if you find your “belonging” in these realities, then you’re bound
to wear yourself out running around to “empty cisterns”(Jeremiah 2:13).
Now,
this desire for “belonging” is not (in itself) a bad thing. In fact, I think
it’s a beautiful reminder of the human condition. Human beings were actually
created to have a place. Fortunately, that place consists of more than just a
pair of skinny jeans and an asymmetrical haircut. We were created to abide in a
dynamic, reciprocal relationship with God the Creator.
In
Matthew 11:28 Jesus says, “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened and I
will give you rest.” Essentially, he calls to us saying, “Stop your useless
attempts to find meaning in other things. Stop carrying the burden of endless
cultural demands. I am here. With me you have an enduring place; one that
doesn’t change every other week. Only I can provide the peace you really need
and the place you crave.”
*Image from wallpaperfast.com |
Jesus
also says in John 4:10, “If you knew the gift of God and who it is that asks
you for a drink, you would have asked him and he would have given you living
water.” In the context here, Jesus is talking with a woman who was fumbling
through life, trying to find purpose and security through cultural customs.
Jesus recognized this and said to her, “You don’t have to keep doing this. Look
to me. I have the water that your soul is longing for. I can fill you forever.
I can satisfy that bottomless pit that your soul has.”
This
is why I think Christianity is actually MORE hipster than anything currently on
the table. Why? Because Christianity focuses its attention directly on the latent
desire existing behind cultural trends. It speaks to the most relevant and
essential deficiency you and I have: the need for a place to belong.
1 comment:
perhaps a particular helpful and appropriate message for you californians? :) Good stuff man
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