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    One Punk under God, Week 2

    By Jeremy | December 20, 2006


    If you missed last week's premiere of Jay Bakker's Sundance special, catch week 2 tonight. The first episode of One Punk Under God depicted a broken life in the process of restoration. The trailer for tonight promises more of the same.
    Related + Jay Bakker's CNN Commentary: What the hell happened to Christianity? + Jay's new church in Brooklyn, NY. Huh?

    Topics: culture, emerging church, jay bakker, media, one punk | 3 Comments »

    3 Responses to “One Punk under God, Week 2”

    1. john Liotti Says:
      December 21st, 2006 at 12:16 pm

      I don’t get the sundance channel, bummer. I think they have the episodes on itunes now… Let me know your thoughts.

    2. Sammy Says:
      January 3rd, 2007 at 7:50 pm

      I’m not sure how many episodes of the show iTunes has available, but you can find several clips from the fourth episode that premieres tonite on yahoo: http://tv.yahoo.com/one-punk-under-god/show/38989;_ylt=AnnpAYUhg4us9fThl_qkufiAo9EF
      I don’t watch to many shows week to week, but One Punk Under God has definitely caught my attention, and I’m hooked. Jay has really cleaned his life up, and I really love the “door is open to everyone” policy at Revolution Church. I wish he would open up a branch of Revolution in LA….

    3. KDB Says:
      January 12th, 2007 at 2:45 pm

      Taken from Charisma mag. 1/12/07

      Jay Bakker’s Big Blunder
      We had high hopes for Jim Bakker’s son, who launched a ministry in 1994. Now he’s decided to rewrite what the Bible says about sexuality.

      At the risk of sounding old-fashioned, prudish, out-of-touch, narrow-minded and judgmental—not to mention totally uncool—I want to go on the record as saying that I strongly disagree with Jay Bakker.

      Some of you are asking yourselves, Who’s he?

      You might remember him as Jamie Charles Bakker, the cute kid who made a few awkward appearances on his parents’ religious talk show, The PTL Club. The son of Jim Bakker and Tammy Faye Bakker Messner, Jay was one of the most tragic casualties of the PTL scandal that sent his father to prison. In Jay’s 2001 autobiography, Son of a Preacher Man, he tells how he struggled with alcohol and drugs after his parents lost their ministry.

      Jay grew up. He came into the national spotlight in 1994 when he launched Revolution, a creative outreach to disenfranchised youth. With his goatee, multiple tattoos and prodigal testimony, he fit right in with the punk-rock crowd. He began to plant small churches in urban areas all over the country.

      So far so good. I can get excited about winning punk rockers to Jesus—and I don’t mind if people use tattoos or loud music to reach them.

      But somewhere along the way Jay’s message got muddled. In 2005 he was invited to speak at a conference hosted by Exodus International, a ministry that helps people leave the gay lifestyle. Just before the conference began, Jay was yanked from the schedule because he would not sign a form that said he agreed with Exodus’ theology and conservative values.

      Not too much later Jay let the world know what he really believes. He told Radar magazine: “This sounds so churchy, but I felt like God spoke to my heart and said [homosexuality] is not a sin.”

      Before you expend all your breath gasping over Jay’s questionable “revelation,” consider that (1) he is quite popular among many 20-something Christian leaders; and (2) he has gained considerable media attention in recent weeks because of a six-week documentary on his life, One Punk Under God, which began airing in December on the Sundance Channel.

      In the TV documentary and other print interviews, Jay has made it clear that he embraces what he calls a “gay-affirming” gospel. He told Mother Jones magazine that he came to the conclusion that homosexuality is an acceptable lifestyle by “looking deeper in the Bible” and by visiting a gay-affirming church. He also admitted that one of his biggest ministry donors stopped supporting his work when he embraced this radical new theology.

      I don’t mean to pick on Jay. As a child he was the innocent victim of appalling religious hypocrisy. But he’s a big boy now, 31 to be exact, and if he’s going to be in the game with the adults he needs to play by the rules.

      I’m blowing the whistle. Consider this an official apostasy alert.

      In case you haven’t noticed, Jay Bakker is not the only voice in the blogosphere telling us that God has changed His mind about homosexuality. The Episcopal Church voted to affirm gay marriage and gay priests in 2003. Many gay-affirming churches are sprouting up in Middle America—including some that claim to be Pentecostal. In fact, the founder of the largest gay denomination in the country, Troy Perry of the Metropolitan Community Churches, was raised in the Church of God of Prophecy.

      Troy Perry, Jay Bakker and the Episcopal bishops are offering America a new religion that guarantees no hell and requires no holiness. It is a limp, spineless Christianity that cannot confront sin for fear of being “judgmental.” It is an impotent gospel that tells people who wrestle with homosexual feelings that they might as well indulge.

      It welcomes everyone with a polite “come as you are” mantra—but in the end is incapable of breaking the power of addiction or sexual dysfunction. It uses feel-good words such as “tolerance,” “acceptance” and “grace,” terms that sound hip and sexy in today’s permissive culture. It is a golden calf, shiny and seductive, forged by those who think they can rewrite God’s word and start a new religion.

      This gay-affirming “gospel” is a toxic heresy that must be addressed boldly from our pulpits in 2007. I pray there is enough moral backbone left in the church to face the challenge.