Sunday, October 08, 2006

Contemporary Christian Music

Eric E. from the Nuart Theatre and Campus Christian Ministries here in Moscow recently e-mailed some thoughts in defense of Contemporary Christian Music prior to a concert at the Nuart. I thought I would post them here, because I think they're interesting and agree that sometimes, we at Christ Church are too critical of CCM. While I no longer believe that the contemporary hit parade praise songs should be used in corporate worship, there's no doubt that we can be blessed by all sorts of Christian entertainers. Especially disconcerting are those Christians who would rather go to a Dave Mathew's concert than go here somebody sing about Christ! So thank you Mr. E for your work at CCM and your music! (By the way, Eric has an album, which many people don't know about, called "Lead Me to Life" with his own Christian songs on it that I've really enjoyed.) Here are Eric's comments:


"I have heard from quite a number of people that they are not planning to come to the Bebo Norman/Aaron Schust/Brandon Heath concert on Monday, because they don't like the style of music. I would like to address this briefly.

Let me say that it makes me sad that many people will miss out on something very special, because of slight perceptional problems.

This concert on Monday night will not really have a definable "style". In fact this music isn't about "style" at all. It's not about playing music in such a way as to convince the audience that you really do sound as good as if you were black, Irish, or wearing a powdered wig. It's not about playing inside a pre-defined stylistic box and not coloring outside the lines. Those kind of concerts are wonderful-- I enjoy them-- especially when the musicians really are black, Irish, or wearing a powdered wig. But that is not what Monday night will be.

Monday night's concert at the Nuart is about getting to know three young men, and hearing them put their passion for Christ into poetry. There will be one set of songs each, by three different guys with a six-piece band of Nashville (viz. excellent) musicians. When they wrote these songs, these young men were not trying to ape a style at all. They simply wrote poetry and used whatever sounds came out of their guitar to make the poetry more beautiful. And this concert will be about sharing the personality and Christian walk of these young men, and rejoicing with them in the goodness of God. That rejoicing will result in direct worship in which they will ask you to join. It's not about musical "style" at all.

If people insist on nailing down a style for this show, it would have to be somewhere between "easy rock" and "acoustic rock". Which means it is a style that will be accessible to probably the broadest age-range. It will be very hard not to like the music-- you'll have to work at it.

It is truly a shame when people say they don't like "Christian Contemporary music". They certainly like contemporary music of some sort. If they are Christians, they must like music that praises God. Many times the people who say they don't like Christian Contemporary music, haven't really listened to any in twenty years. Is there current Christian music that is sappy, trite, silly, and poorly played? Of course-- just as there is in EVERY style, even 300 year-old music. Does that mean there is no good modern music that is currently done by Christians? If you think so, you simply haven't been around the block. Christian music is way better than it has ever been, and the quality of the musicianship and technical production is as good as anything out there that is secular. One must simply keep an open mind, just as one must in the world of fine wines and fine food. Feasting involves much more than eating the same few foods until we are too old to taste the difference.

So, I would encourage you to throw caution to the wind, dare to risk your taste buds, and come to the concert at the Nuart at 8pm on Monday night."

Monday, June 19, 2006



This is my good buddy Jeremy. Jeremy and I go way back. Thanks for the picture man!

Tuesday, June 06, 2006

Sunday, June 04, 2006

Virginia Beach



Robby has been putting on a few pounds here in Virginia, what with our team dinners and families feeding us almost every Sunday.

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

The 2006 Pest Control Gang





Robby Lisenby, Luke Nieuwsma and Jesse Sumpter have joined me in Richmond! Here we are in front of the Richmond WWI veterans memorial and also in downtown Annapolis Maryland before church on Sunday.

Monday, May 08, 2006

Rain day

Dear friends,

Now I remember why I started this blog in the first place. It was a day not unlike today, my first summer selling pest control. Once again I'm 2500 miles away from home and I don't have one Christian friend in this entire city! Normally the nature of my work keeps me from getting restless and thinking too much about home, but today it's raining just enough to keep me off the doors. I can't decide if I want to go knock in the rain or if I should get my oil changed, but I suppose anything is better than sitting in my car. Right now I'm in the Glen Allen public library. Glen Allen is probably the most wealthy suburb of Richmond and where I will be knocking for at least half the summer I'm sure. So far I've done pretty well since I've been out here. I've sold about 90 in the first five weeks. But I've got 15 more weeks to go!

Yesterday I went to a Reformed Presbyterian Church in downtown Richmond, it was a good service, but not quite like the CREC. Next week I'll either go to the CREC church in Lynchburg or the one in Newport News, both are about an hour and a half drive. I also went to the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts yesterday and saw an Art Nouveau collection with lots of bizzar, fantastic looking furniture and cool lamps made of all different colors of glass. I also saw some Van Gogh paintings, but the most memorable thing was meeting one of the numerous black security guards who told me to look at three different paintings in succession, saying "see if you can find the flaw in that one." I usually couldn't see at first what he was refering to, but sure enough, he would show me where the artist had forgotten to paint a shadow of something, whereas for other objects he had made a shadow, or he showed me how a dogs legs were way too long and he would look like a kangaroo if he tried to stand up. He had practically memorized every detail of the paintings he was required to guard, and this was how he relieved the boardom of the job, just standing around in an art museum. On my way out an older black lady scolded me for not wearing a coat on such a rainy day. "I ought to lay you accross my lap and paddle you," she said in a very low smoker's voice.

I know I rarely if ever post on this blog, but today I could not help but give a shout out to the world. Friends, let me know if you read the post.

Marty

Tuesday, April 18, 2006

Oops! Here's my correct summer address

The first address that I posted was wrong. They decided to put me in a different apartment. So this is my new summer address just outside of Richmond, VA. I just moved in yesterday and got all settled and I'll be here till the middle of August.

2908 Lake Point Dr. #3D
Midlothian VA 23112

Marty

Thursday, April 13, 2006

Please pray for my mom

My mother, Ruth, is going to receive her first chemo-therapy treatment today. The doctors consider this an essential treatment, even though they removed all the cancer surgically. So please pray that she will make it through all right. My mom is taking all of this really well; she is a heroine of the Christian faith to me, but I just pray that the Lord will continue to free her from cancer. She is currently a youthful looking 62 years old.

Tuesday, April 11, 2006

Chris and Shey


I just recieved some pictures from Chris and Shey's wedding and this is my favorite. Chris Hoops and I spent last summer knocking doors in Washington D.C. He's a great guy and I'm very happy for him and his new bride. A very beautiful wedding indeed Chris!

Friday, April 07, 2006

Dear Family and Friends,

Well, I've been in Washington DC for a week now. At first it was really cold, absolutely fridged, with a stiff wind. It's the first time I've ever had to knock doors in a long sleeve shirt and pants, but it's warming right up now.

I've got a new phone number, which I will have until the middle of August: 804-248-2274. It's a Richmond number, because I'll be moving down to Richmond at the biginning of May.

Be in touch,
Marty

Wednesday, March 29, 2006

Old Family Photos

Dear Family,

Ever since I was very little, I've loved to look at old family photos. Anything before I was born facinated me, like the pictures my Grandpa Becktell took at the New Tribes Missions training camp or pictures of their trip to Mt St. Helen's with my parents before it blew. Sometimes our own lives seem stagnant; the future is uncertain, we don't always know what we want to do in life. There are so many possibilities. Possiblity overload is a problem of my generation in particular. However, when I look at pictures of my parents and grandparents, they don't seem stagnant, or hesitant at all. That would be impossible. Their story has already been told. There is a comforting solidness and surity in their smiles. There is motion and direction in their lives. All this I percieve even though they probably didn't feel at all like they had things figured out at the time. But if I feel as if I don't know what to do with my life, my job is to look to them and their stories for inspiration, to find continuity with the past.

Anyway, that was all to say that I have uploaded some photos to Flickr.com, which you can see in the right sidebar of this blog if you scroll down. I hope to upload much more in the future, and I would like them to be a resource for all the grandchildren of Herbert W. Butt and also his great grandchildren. If anyone in my family objects to particular photographs being on the web, please let me know.

Love,
Marty B.

Thursday, January 05, 2006

Intoleristas seek to oust Atlas from downtown

I wrote the following article for Atlas School, where I teach a class on art history and drawing.

In addition to our hardworking students and supportive parents, Atlas School has been discovered by a another special group of people—An especially exasperating group of people that is!—though surely provided in God’s providence to increase our vigilance.

They are the same people, which have been hostile to anyone and anything associated with Christ Church or Trinity Reformed Church for quite some time. We’ve even coined a term for them, “The Intoleristas.”

However, now they have found a new pebble to throw: They are seeking to apply the cities zoning code in a fundamentalist spirit in order to frustrate the ministries of New St. Andrews College (NSA) and now Atlas School.

This may be old news to many readers—the complaint that Atlas occupies its current location downtown in violation of city zoning codes was made in April—However, a recap of the zoning controversy as it pertains to Atlas School is in order.

What’s happened so far:
The complaint against Atlas was made three months after a similar complaint was filed against NSA. It was brought by Saundra Lund, 44, and Rose Huskey, 61, two women, with apparently too much time on their hands, who have left a long paper trail of harassments of members of Christ Church and their undertakings!

Due to the fact that Atlas is closer to a cooperation of homeschoolers than a school and has no formal legal incorporation, Headmaster, Toby Sumpter had not sought to do any paperwork with the city, regarding it’s use of the Nuart Theatre, owned by Campus Christian Ministries.

“Prior to the complaint,” said Sumpter, “The city didn’t even know we were here, so we said ‘Here we are’ and ‘What do we need to do?’”

First on the order of business for the city was to issue Atlas an “occupancy permit,” which is a permit issued by a building inspector, stating that the building is safe to occupy for its intended purpose.

Building inspector Jim Johnson inspected the Nuart and the two, tiny, adjacent rooms, which Atlas occupies. According to Sumpter, he said it looked fine. He did ask Eric Engerbretson, who is responsible for the Nuart theatre, to install a lit exit sign. The sign was duly installed so that Atlas met all the requirements of the building inspector and was slated to receive an occupancy permit.

However, the city also required a zoning permit in addition to the occupancy permit. This was the second part of the complaint: namely, Atlas was operating downtown in the central business district in violation of Moscow’s zoning code.

With regard to this second issue, that of zoning, Joel Plaskon, Moscow’s zoning administrator, wrote a letter to Mr. Sumpter saying, in effect, it looks like you guys are fine. He saw no violation of the spirit of the zoning code by Atlas School, and he said he would not enforce the code against Atlas.

To understand Plaskon’s initial tolerance of Atlas School, you have to understand the larger zoning controversy, because Atlas, at this point in time, was following in the wake of what was happening to NSA. Plaskon’s initial response to the complaint against NSA was also that he would not enforce the code against NSA, because he was reading the law as an “integrated whole.”

Plaskon wrote, “I acknowledge that the current use of New St. Andrews College is not explicitly listed as a permissible use in the CB Zoning District. However, such use has been explicitly permitted as a use by right in the past…. Additionally, I read the law as an integrated whole and considered the intent of the Zoning Code and the Comprehensive Plan. Therefore, it is my determination that such use be allowed to continue while the City more thoroughly reviews the Zoning Code regarding these types of uses and considers amending the Code to clarify or explicitly allow such uses in such Zoning Districts, either by right or by Conditional Use Permit.”

So, due to Plaskon’s reasonableness, the zoning permit, in addition to the occupancy permit, seemed forthcoming by May or early June, according to Sumpter. However, neither permit was yet granted, and in the meantime, the complainers against NSA appealed to the Board of Adjustments, which ruled in their favor.

Plaskon then wrote to Sumpter stating that he could not issue an occupancy permit due to what happened to NSA.

Subsequently, the city council also ruled against NSA and, finally, in the week before school started, Plaskon wrote to Sumpter that he had decided to enforce the zoning code against Atlas, thereby treating Atlas as a separate entity from NSA.

After talking with Greg Dickison, the same attorney representing NSA, Atlas decided to appeal Plaskon’s decision to the board of adjustments, as NSA had done. This appeal occurred near the end of October and was unsuccessful for Atlas. Despite the helpful representation of Dickison and the attendance of Mr. Sumpter and members of five Atlas families, the board ruled against Atlas based on a ridged reading of code.

The complainants were able to convince the board of adjustments and city council of a particular reading of the code, Sumpter said. That is to say, the safety issue was not a real factor at this hearing. (The originators of the complaint, Huskey and Lund, had initially characterized their action as being initiated out of concern for the students safety.)

Where we stand:
Atlas has now appealed to the City council and we have a hearing date on January 19. Unfortunately, this is after the new city council members will be sworn in on January, 3. According to Christ Church member Dale Courtney, who reports on Moscow politics on his blog, the six-member council will be losing two conservatives and gaining two liberals. The new liberals are Bob Stout and the particularly radical Aaron Ament, who calls himself Citizen Ament, like a French revolutionary! Liberal Nancy Chaney will also be taking over as mayor, having a tie-breaking vote on the council. Needless to say, the new council may not be particularly friendly to Atlas school in the January hearing.

Broadly speaking, progress has been made with regard to the zoning issue. A proposed amendment to the zoning ordinance is being considered now, which would allow “educational institutions,” like NSA, within the Central Business District on a conditional basis; however, not “schools.”

NSA has received much support, not only from people who own or work in businesses downtown, but from editors of both the Moscow-Pullman Daily News and the Lewiston Tribune. Four different editors have supported NSA in no less than seven separate editorials, which are worth quoting in order to show the kind of support that may be available for Atlas School as well.

Jim Fisher of the Lewiston Tribune likes Doug Wilson’s term “Intoleristas:”

“Intoleristas, he calls them, and with good reason,” Fisher said. “They speak for a community that indulges all manner of political and religious thought, as long as it's from the left side of the spectrum, and all manner of small-town businesses, as long as they are not connected to the wrong church.”

Murf Raquet of the Daily News came down on the Intoleristas for their rudeness:

“A handful of opponents of schools,” wrote Raquet, “—in particular the faith-based New Saint Andrews College—in the downtown business district lost their civility in the fervor to speak their mind at Wednesday’s meeting. In the excitement to articulate opinions as to why there shouldn’t be schools downtown all ability to communicate in English was lost. Cat calls, snorts, outbursts and a few boos interrupted the proceedings. That childish behavior was most evident when NSA President Roy Atwood got up to speak.”

Craig Clohessy, writing for the Daily News said, “Neither complaint really has anything to do with the city's zoning regulations. The challenge to NSA is all about personal grudges against Doug Wilson, who sits on the college's board.”

And Steve McClure, writing for the Daily News, also sees what is truly going on: “There will be some who say this is nothing more than spot zoning, or changing the law to avoid enforcement. Some of those people will be the same ones who would have us believe this whole hubbub started over nothing more than zoning issues.”

This is a very strong show of support from the local media—from the editors no less! Therefore its clear that level-headed residents of Moscow, holding no grudges against Christ Church, are ready to support NSA and by the same token, they may support Atlas School as well.

Nevertheless, not many level-headed Moscowans are sitting on the current council. Therefore, Atlas needs a strong and continued show of support. Just because NSA has won it’s fight doesn’t mean that we can let up.

What’s at stake:
What is at stake is not merely Atlas’s convenient location (The downtown location is a central place for all the Atlas parents to drive their sons) and not just the money that we save (Community Christian Ministries has been gracious enough to rent the two rooms that Atlas uses for $250 per month and to allow use of the theatre for some classes. This enables Mr. Sumpter to keep tuition low). What is at stake is the right of Christians to not be bullied by politicians, backed by a handful of activists, for no better reason then that they are annoyed with us! Their complaint is not about our safety or the appropriateness of having a small, half-day school downtown. Their complaint is that we are visible—essentially, that we are invading the town square and potentially upsetting the left-wing, secular uniformity of our small town. Our sixteen student’s blue sweater-vests are too bright for their monochrome vision!

Unlike NSA, Atlas does not have much money invested in its current location.

“We’ve never really thought of this as our permanent home,” Sumpter said, “Every year we’ve revisited the issue, checked with the Nuart to see if we were bugging them too much. If push came to shove, we have a computer and four tables, we could move, but this has been an incredibly convenient location. And it’s cheap: $250 per month!”

A welcome catalyst for moving Atlas from its current location at the Nuart would be an increase in enrolment. Mr. Sumpter would love to have between 25 and 30 students and be able to hire a second full time-teacher. Therefore, while moving would not be excessively harmful, being forced to move would be a mistake for the city of Moscow, and something which all Christians on the Palouse, not just those of Christ Church and Trinity Reformed Church, should resist. After winning support for NSA to be downtown, it would be a shame for concerned Christians acquiesce to the radical council with regard to Atlas.

Atlas’s argument:
Our argument, as Mr. Dickison has laid out, is that the spirit of the zoning code is trying to prohibit a full sized elementary school from moving downtown and Atlas, considering its size and format is not something a responsible city government should be trying to oust from its current convenient and economical location.

In a public relations tactic to demonstrate that the complaint against NSA was not really about zoning, Nathan Wilson, fellow of rhetoric at NSA and, Aaron Wrench, director of admissions, filed complaints against the Moscow Food Co-op and the University of Idaho for their incompliance. Grocery stores, although defined by the code, are not specifically listed as allowable in the Central Business District, and educational institutions are not listed as allowable in the University Zone. Therefore, according to the intoleristas hermeneutic, which they so zealously applied to NSA, these institutions should also move. Wilson’s and Wrench’s complaints with their accompanying humorous and sarcastic press releases, signed “for the love of the code,” were obviously tongue in cheek, (The complaint against the University of Idaho was made against the entire university!) they simply demonstrated that the code was a mess and needed revision. Obviously, neither the Co-op, nor the University of Idaho, nor NSA should be moved.

The reason the Co-op is a good fit for downtown is that it is not like most grocery stores and in the same way, NSA and Atlas School are not like typical colleges and schools. No one wants a Wal-Mart or a Winco Foods to be downtown and yet everyone is happy with the popular Co-op, because the size and character of the Co-op is taken into account. So also should the size and character of Atlas School be taken into account.

At another level, the families of Atlas school are simply arguing that they ought to have the freedom to drop their kids off downtown for classes, provided they are not starting a large school right on Main Street. A school with 100 kids could be a safety issue, depending on how the kids were dropped off and picked up, but a half-day school with less than 1/3rd that number of students, who are not outside playing in the street, ought not to be repressed under the guise of safety, as the following post taken from Dale Courtney’s blog, aptly explains:

"We were so concerned about the kids' safety," Lund said. ?????

"Unsafe for kids" does not appear to be a very defensible position for this Nanny or the city to hang its hat on...it is simply a "red herring", an appeal to "emotion" or "motherhood"; i.e., how can anyone argue against "motherhood" ("safety")?

Imagine, fifteen kids show up five days a week and go into a building between 7:45am (before stores are open), and leave at lunchtime.

What they are doing in that building is irrelevant to the argument. They could be taking dance lessons, learning martial arts, playing Dungeon and Dragons like they do at the Palouse Mall. Parents paying for their kids to learn Latin, Greek, and Hebrew somehow makes them unique for zoning? If that is "unsafe" what about the "kids" going to the theater itself? Lots more bodies I suspect. Or what about the dance school across the street? How many kids come and go from there? Or how many kids come and go from Hodgin’s? (a lot I bet because it's a really neat store).

The logical conclusion is for the P&Z to declare a "kids free zone" on Main Street. The City can place a kiosk at both ends of the street. Parents would have to register their kids at the kiosk before entering the "kids free zone", and obtain an official "Moscow Kids Safety Token", which would allow them to enter the "Zone". The number of Tokens would be determined by an appointed number of "concerned" citizens of Moscow. Fines could be issued. Think of the revenue that could be raised! And OH! the safety that would result!!!

The bottom line is that parents have the freedom to drop their kids off downtown, so that they can go into a building and study for four-and-a-half hours. Atlas is not a large elementary school with buses and street guards and hundreds of pedestrian children. The Intoleristas in Moscow are simply unable to comprehend or accept the diverse educational options outside the monolithic public schools.

What its all about:
Again Atlas Families and students need to remember that this controversy is not really about zoning or safety issues, but about a group of people who are bitter about Christ Church. They are trying to use the city code, something designed to be for the benefit of all the citizens of Moscow to strong arm a particular group whose religious and social views or perceived views they find offensive.

These intoleristas begin to squeal with delight when they think they have the law on their side as if the law is their own personal wooden gavel that they can bop people over the heads with. Lest you think that this metaphor is too far off the mark, the anti-NSA/Christ Church website “zonemoscow.com” plays an audio clip of the mayor of Moscow banging his gavel at a city council meeting when the site first loads! Theirs is the rhetoric of the banging gavel.

The Intoleristas tried to pose as merely concerned citizens, wanting to abide by the laws. But they ended up looking like a bunch of zoning Nazis or Pharisees.

As Pastor Doug Wilson has pointed out. When Judas brings back his 35 shekels to the Pharisees, a serious discussion ensues about where it is lawful to use the money, never mind the fact that they just ordered the betrayal of Jesus! In the same way, Moscow has a lot of citizens pretending to have an orderly, rational discussion about the zoning code, when what they are really interested in is persecuting a church which obediently educates its children under the guidance of God-fearing parents and teachers, instead of secular bureaucrats.

In perspective:
We at Atlas School, are thankful to Jim Wilson and Eric Engerbretson of Community Christian Ministries for offering the extra space in the Nuart Theatre. It’s convenience and low-cost have been a real blessing. If we are forced to move because a few radical city council members have a little too much fun with their gavel wielding, then we will be thankful for that demonstration of the Lord’s will as well. Such an outcome may be indication that it is time for Atlas School to grow.

However, we are hoping and praying that through our representation before the City Council, and other means, the Lord will thwart the designs of the Intoleristas, as He has done on so many other occasions, for the glory of his name in Moscow, Idaho!

How to help:
Please pray for Atlas School and Greg Dickison, our counsel, as we go before the city council on January 19. Pray that the intoleristas would be exposed once again as the anti-Christ-Church fanatics that they are and that the council would distinguish between Atlas and a full-sized school and thereby recognize the freedom of Atlas Parents and Mr. Sumpter to hold classes where they wish. Mostly, pray that God would be glorified by our actions regardless of the outcome of the hearing.

Atlas school is also accepting gifs in order to cover legal costs. Although Atlas is seeking to avoid being forced to move, obtaining a new facility is nevertheless a foreseeable expense within a couple years, if not sooner, if enrolment increases. And so donations may also be saved for this purpose and other needs.

Please consider sending a gift, to our treasurers Bill and Robin Amos (606 Homestead Place, Moscow ID 83843) in order to support Atlas and its unique mission to train and educate young men in logic and languages, math and science, music and poetry and history, to the end that they may be faithful servants and conscientious worshipers of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Sorry, gifts are not currently tax-deductible. Checks may be made to “Atlas School.”