Church Leadership Conversations

  • On why dieting and exercise and trying to look good and be fit and thin may not have as much to do with excellence as having a paunch, serving others, taking walks, and eating meals with people

    On why dieting and exercise and trying to look good and be fit and thin may not have as much to do with excellence as having a paunch, serving others, taking walks, and eating meals with people.

    I have been reading about diets and people trying to lose weight. Apparently almost any diet “works” the first two weeks if you haven’t been eating carefully.
    BUT then it is slow (and therefore harder to stay with).
    AND regular bingeing on deprivation hurts your body long-term.

    From a Christian perspective, trying to “look good” is not really something we’re supposed to be focused on. We are specifically told in the New Testament not to worry about nice clothing, fashionable hairstyles, jewelry, or impressive physical exercise.

    Often people *say*: “I just want to be healthy” but it seems like they are rather interested in their appearance. They spend a huge amount of time and money on working out, the right clothes, and healthy food; and less time reading, caring for others, and socializing.

    I wonder if it is worth spending massive amounts of time on your body when this 2020 study found https://bmj.com/content/368/bmj.l6669 people (at 50) with no healthy habits lived free of diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, & cancer until 74. With good habits, people lived to 81-84 without them.

    It is preferable to live from ages 74-84 without those health issues. But it is also misguided to deprive and discipline your self for decades just “for health.”

    And, it seems to me, often it is the fitness-obsessed people who have the most health issues in their 20’s-40’s!

    Where I am coming from is a heritage of Christians (evangelical Mennonites in the Midwest) who worked hard and enjoyed dessert a lot and were not particularly thin, nor were they fitness buffs. But most lived really long lives and were great people.

    I will also say that in my experience, there is no correlation between “fit and thin” leaders, pastors, and professors, and quality thoughtful work (though our culture constantly suggests that the marathon runners are more disciplined and productive).

    There *is* in my experience a positive correlation between those who are *active* with quality thoughtful work, if that *activity* is trying-to-help-others. But they often have a belly! Looking good is not that important to them. They care more about sharing meals with others.

    So find friends and a spouse who are active doing positive things (church and volunteering)—not on looking good or even “being healthy” (which I worry is code word for the former). And raise your kids to be active in activities (band, team sports, musicals, Scouts, Lego team).

    And eat meals with people as often as you can! Try a variety of foods! You’ll be happier.

    And do physical activities that need to get done (!) (playing with kids, lawn mowing, cooking, food shopping, laundry, cleaning, snow shoveling, leaf raking, and those at work), and a few physical activities you *enjoy* (taking a walk with someone, playing sports).

    Yes, I know that people in our culture initially judge people by their weight but it is WRONG! And once someone and your community gets to know you, they won’t care what you weigh! They will care about your warmth, your love, your unique contributions, you!

    Originally tweeted by Andy Rowell (@AndyRowell) on January 18, 2021.

  • Navalny, courage, protest, and exposing dictators

    Update on Navalny in this thread from the NPR correspondent in Moscow.

    For us on MLK Day, this is right out of the Martin Luther King Jr. playbook: Have an angry unjust ruler? Then do normal peaceful things and see if he lashes out with brutality—showing the world who he is.

    This takes tremendous courage and willingness to sacrifice. You may die. But if *many* people do the right thing and act with courage and without violence, the vicious person will eventually be toppled or at least be remembered as an embarrassment.

    The road is long.

    Courage is contagious.

    What other countries can do: make it less fun and easy to be enriching oneself by enabling and cooperating with brutal injustice. And associate their names formally with Putin for all to see.

    Gather symbolically and peacefully to ask that justice be done through the law (if it were being administered rightly). And demonstrate for all to see that the leader does not care about just laws. *Eventually* the majority of the people begin to see it.

    When someone is a dictator, reminding them that many think they are a selfish, lying, coward pierces their self-delusion. And it causes the dictator to choose between either appearing weak by giving in, or inspiring more resistance if he cracks down.

    Originally tweeted by Andy Rowell (@AndyRowell) on January 18, 2021.

  • On helping the poor while operating within capitalism

    These two tweet threads about working at Starbucks https://twitter.com/mangiotto/status/1350629396248367104?s=20 and McDonald's https://twitter.com/Nicole_Lee_Sch/status/1350468865810165760?s=20 remind of Jesus' story, the Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard from AD 30 in Matthew 20:1-16.

    "Make sure the undeserving don't get too much!" is not Jesus' way.

    I realize managing employees, minimum wage, food theft by employees, distribution of extra food, universal health care, and incentives are complex issues. But it is useful to approach them from the standpoint of a hard-working, food service worker.

    When you sell something or run a business, don't wring every last dollar of profit that you can, but rather leave some for the poor to get a deal!
    https://twitter.com/AndyRowell/status/1304441544364105730?s=20,

    YIMBY Let the poor be able to find a place to live in your neighborhood.

    I don't know why everyone is talking about minimum wage today but here's another tweet coming to my timeline.

    Being a host at Macaroni Grill was mind-numbing and made my feet hurt to stand for hours on the stone floor. Being a golf caddy at a country club was demeaning and humiliating. The only good was the money. (I preferred mowing lawns and painting houses where we had more autonomy).

    On the other side, I have been thinking about Cathie Wood who has been the most genius investor the last five years: innovative, collaborative, transparent, ethical. Her video from Friday:

    But she wanted Democrats to lose because of fear high taxes and regulations will drive companies to other countries. She believes in the market, companies, capitalism, and competition to bring positive change. I think her ideas can also be heard while still caring for workers.

    Another professor:

    https://twitter.com/AmyEricaSmith/status/1350884801327341569?s=19

    In my reading, Martin Luther King Jr., in his later years, from 1964 to 1968, more strongly advocated for economic justice for the poor than for racial justice. But in arguing for the former, he was also addressing the latter.
    https://twitter.com/AndyRowell/status/1348491861577461760?s=19,
    and

    Martin Luther King Jr.'s daughter today:

    If you wonder whether racism and economic philosophy are related, just remember slavery. Unrestrained capitalism exploits, abuses, enslaves the worker and reaps profit and riches.

    But capitalism's hard work and innovation can be good, if there is care and justice for the poor.

    One more argument for conservatives made by @mattyglesias is if you want America to thrive as a country (against China), you want lots of babies to increase the population. And people won't have them if economic well-being is super stressful when you're in your 20's and 30's.

    More viral tweets on minimum wage as it seems to be one of the hot topics people are talking about today:
    https://twitter.com/YasminYonis/status/1350562925728116737
    and

    https://twitter.com/conor_tripler/status/1350529321492856832

    And another viral tweet thread on minimum wage.
    https://twitter.com/JoshRaby/status/1350582459906351104
    What he is saying here is that it is doable for his restaurant if all the businesses do it. (And covid has been terrible for restaurants but that is another issue).

    Still pondering economic conservatives fear of taxes, I will also say that I have been skeptical that Republican politicians know what is best for the economy since 2013.
    https://twitter.com/AndyRowell/status/294821935504838656?s=19
    And indeed the stock market tends to do better under Democratic presidents.

    Originally tweeted by Andy Rowell (@AndyRowell) on January 17, 2021.