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Tuesday, October 9, 2012

#263- Making a Commotion @ General Conference


For those of you who don't know what this is, it's called a Meme. Memes started as pictures in chain email forwards that you used to send directly to your trash bin without opening them. It's a descendent of the early internet humor of the nineties. Think of The Dancing Baby or The Hampster Dance. These were the progenitors of memes.

Basically, what a meme is is this: internet humor that not a lot of people get. The ones who do 'get' can sit on websites like 4chan or 9gag and scroll for hours, laughing incessantly and never getting bored, no matter how stupid, random, abstract or completely senseless the stuff they're looking at is. The ones who don't 'get it' just roll their eyes when they see it, and click onto the next thing.

There is no sense to a meme. It's like an inside joke that all you have to do to get on the inside of is say you get it, and boom, you're in.

"It's so funny!"
"But why is it funny?"
"Oh, you either get it or you don't. I couldn't possibly explain it to you."

About the UPC Meme

Allow me to introduce you to a list of characters. Your task is to figure out what they all have in common:


  • The guy most likely to use a prank handshake buzzer at a funeral. 
  • Possible kamikaze pilot in a past life. 
  • All-too-happy-that-you're-here Wal-Mart greeter. 
  • Semi-Pro Paintball player. 
  • Your Aunt Mildred.
  • Retired Auto-worker who has had it up to here with anyone who does not buy American. 
  • Aging mayor whose one goal now in life is your approval and your vote. Or....
  • On halloween night, he is the one guy who leaves Free Candy on his porch with the house lights off making it seem like he's gone for the evening, but lo and behold he was hiding in a bush the whole time and wouldn't you know it, he has a live chainsaw and is chasing the unsuspecting innocent children, but "don't worry mom and dad, there's no chain on the chain saw so it's safe!" And the kids are left in tears and half heart attacks, and are so worked up they just can't bring themselves to go onto another house free candy or not.... and all of this because the guy with the chainsaw likes watching kids cry.

So what do all of these have in common? If you answered that all of the above are possible analogies for Jeff Arnold's preaching persona, then you win. If you were wrong, well maybe next time. Because as a UPC meme, Jeff Arnold can be all of the above and more when he's preaching.

As for Jeff Arnold's sermons.... you will laugh. You will clap. You will become disoriented, but in a good way. This is because listening to a Jeff Arnold sermon is kinda like being on a tilt-a-whirl ride that has spun off the track. There is no way to tell where you are or where you'll end up, and the scariest part is you can't recall how you even got on the tilt-a-whirl in the first place. 

Other things you may encounter in a Jeff Arnold sermon:


  • Someone will find a lit firecracker in their pant pocket two seconds too late. The firecracker will ignite leaving a slightly blush-worthy hole in the victim's pants. Everyone there will laugh including the victim. They will say "Oh Bro. Arnold" and he'll have his hands up and say "Hey folks, it wasn't me" in a serious tone... but then with impeccable comedic timing, he'll break his stare and say "Naw I'm just playing.... It was me." And he'll laugh and the audience will laugh harder and then he'll give a noogie to the victim with the huge hole in his pants and the victim will smile as if he is the lucky one.
  • You will hear Jeff Arnold say the word "Shenanigans" in all seriousness and without irony.
  • You will see Jeff Arnold do what can only be described as The Geriatric Douggie, in which he will shuffle around the stage to a beat played by God that only Jeff Arnold can here. Whilst doing The Geriatric Douggie Jeff Arnold will tell you to get off your 'fanny' and dance, because if he and his robo-hips can gyrate then yours should too, you young whipper snapper.
  • You will hear Jeff Arnold rip into conservatives at conservative churches because he's Jeff Arnold and he's called by God. He will then rip into liberals at liberal churches because he's a licensed UPC minister. And at the end of the day he'll he walk past you with his suit over his shoulder and give you a finger point and a wink and he'll say "now that's how you play ball son." And you'll know right then that he's completely in control of the situation no matter how much his preaching style reminds you of  a circus-tent on fire during a circus' grand finale
Before recently, I had always thought Jeff Arnold a meme for the UPC. Like a meme, my only knowledge of him or his sermons came through the virtual world of the internet or preaching tapes. From what I saw, he seemed like a kind of inside joke meme that we hollered at in support, but always with a wink, a giggle, and an elbow-nudge to let everyone know that we don't take him too seriously, like he's comic relief. Sure he said some witty statements to tweet here and there, but it was just enough Truth to allow the show to go on lest we be accused of allowing church to decay into a one-hour stand-up comedy act.

The question in my mind was whether or not Jeff Arnold himself was serious or was voluntarily just playing the part of UPC class clown?

But then you hear that he says stuff like this...






(Please Note:  Typing the sermon words out to accompany the sermon and adding intense-Batman themed music cannot save the quote from it's comedy/bigotry/stupidity).

Jeff Arnold's witnessing abilities are flawless. And by flawless, I mean pathetic to someone who knows a homosexual or is one. Nothing says "Jesus loves you" like "fag/twinkie/queer!" Apparently he does this kind of thing all the time.

Which if you missed it, according to Jeff Arnold, since I'm an advocate of gay rights, I'm either a "Fag," "a twinkie," or "a queer." Note: I'm heterosexual. But Arnold's inference is that only a fag/twinkie/queer would actually care about gay rights...

Not to mention that parts of this clip were beginning to eerily remind of a minute long segment in the film version of The Wall: http://youtu.be/IoPpw7DNzCY

Or maybe I'm taking Jeff Arnold way too seriously....and who cares if he's said such things many other times before?

"Which let's be honest. That whole queer/fag quote...well it's Jeff being Jeff right? It's what he does. He says bold things. Some of them silly, some of them true. And along the way you are bound to get some bigotry mixed in. It's part of the price I guess.... he's from the South and all... it's not that big of a deal. You should cut him some slack...."

And truth be told I was. Glen had told me about this stuff for a while, but I just said that it's "Jeff's gig." He's there to shock and to get laughs and to get us to pray a little and by the end of the night hopefully we'll be able to say the Lord was there and a time was had.

And Glen warned me that his preaching at General Conference was a cause for concern.

I didn't listen.....




Here is the sequential logic of the above clip:

1. Jeff Arnold likes puns.
2. Jeff Arnold has a Word from the Lord
3. Jeff Arnold declares Jeroboam an idiot and a fool.
4. Jeff Arnold reveals that Jeroboam birthed a spirit named after him and the spirit is sweeping the nation.
5. Jeff Arnold lets us in on the Spirit of Jeroboam's platform: Pro-Tolerance
6. Jeff Arnold reminds us that we sometimes have to confront things regarding holiness. We must contend with the faith.
7. Jeff Arnold exceptionally paraphrases the people who are under the influence of the Spirit of Jeroboam. AKA "The Pro-Tolerance" preachers.
8. Jeff Arnold announces that "that's not legalism. That's life."
9. Jeff Arnold has a loud voice and he'll use it if he has to.
10. Jeff Arnold quotes Jesus telling us that He will give us life and life more abundantly.1
11. Jeff Arnold declares there is nothing wrong with modesty, sacrifice, formality, or separation.2
12. Jeff Arnold sings "When I think of his goodness and what he's done for me."
13. Jeff Arnold doesn't want to hurt anyone's feelings.
14. Jeff Arnold is 68 years old.
15. Jeff Arnold does not have real hips.
16. Jeff Arnold is the original Mr. T.
17. Jeff Arnold announces he is a robot.
18. Jeff Arnold demonstrates that robots can dance.
19. Jeff Arnold wants to know what your problem is.
20. Jeff Arnold does not like non-emotional people.
21. Jeff Arnold thinks you are a liar.
22. Jeff Arnold wants you to be just as somber and quiet and unemotional when you catch a 5 pound bass fish as you are somber and unemotional in church.
23. Jeff Arnold thinks you need to do something.
24. Jeff Arnold wants you to get happy.

Glen's less rigorous, more honest interpretation of the above clip:
"I can't even tell what he's getting at. The last time I heard him preach he was all over the place, dropping 'zingers' and one liners. Back in the day he was a great speaker, but I think he's reliant on the whole 'Oh no he di'int" candor he was known for in the nineties and he just isn't shocking anymore. Oh you called someone a twinkle toes or a faggot and then shuffled around and said we should get off our "fannies" and dance? Don't push that envelope too far, you'll get a paper cut."


Footnotes:

1. Note the bait & switch argument here. Talk about one thing (holiness) and back up the talk by talking about one of those Christian buzzwords that will get everyone worked up. Next, hope everyone is too rowdy to notice the shoddy logic that acts like "Life and life more abundantly" has anything to do with confronting and challenging "tolerance."

2. The inference here being that the "pro-tolerance" camp say that modesty, sacrifice, formality, or separation is a bad thing. (Which is so not true that even the angels are scratching his head over this one. Except for formalities. I personally don't care for formalities. But nor does God: He's the one who made Adam and Eve naked and turned water into wine and called a woman a dog ). Plus, irony here: Arnold upholding "formalities?" That's like Republicans supporting NPR.

3.  Another quote from later on in the evening: "So you think I'm a legalist? If I am a legalist then my Father is a legalist. It was He who said "Get out of my garden and put some clothes on."*

*God never said this*                                                                                                                                                                                            


So there you have it. We can chalk up the above logic to being orchestrated by the power of the Holy Spirit which apparently works in the same discontinuous, shoot-from-the-hip style similar to the way we imagine a 2 year old would attempt to spell "White Mans Paranoia" off the top of his head with a set of scrabble letters.

And maybe in the chaos we'll get a meme.

So ask yourself,  what kind of meme your'd prefer? One that says fag as if it was authorized by God himself...

Or a meme that also makes little-to no sense but will also never call you a fag since this kind of meme is a dog barking into a phone with a look of horror hoping to God that it it's not Jeff Arnold calling him on the other end of that phone line asking him why he doesn't dance in church.




14 comments:

  1. Although this is only a clip of a longer sermon, I've heard many entire sermons preached in this manner by many different preachers.

    They had no main idea, and no organized content. They consisted of often disconnected statements designed to make people shout. This why out of all the thousands of sermons I sat through at camps and conventions as a teen, I can remember two. At some point I decided to stop shouting at such things, for fear I'd end up looking like a German at a political rally in 1939.

    I will say though, that of the two sermons I do remember, one was a camp sermon where the camp preacher came in and told the audience there would be no shouting tonight, and proceeded to teach a well-planned message that stuck to one topic. That message has been useful for me often over the years, and was more valuable than all the rest.

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  2. I've rarely heard a single bit of Jeff Arnold's preaching except for the experts posted here - and once when his preaching was forced upon me via VHS at someones house once, because they just loved him and that he "told it like it was" Even then, 10 years ago, I had a bad feeling about this guy. I couldn't figure out why "telling it like it is" had to include slurs.

    Calling him a "Pentecostal Charlie Sheen" made me laugh out loud - kudos!

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  3. 1 Chronicles 16:21-22 21 He suffered no man to do them wrong: yea, he reproved kings for their sakes,

    22 Saying, Touch not mine anointed, and do my prophets no harm.

    Being that you all claim to Christians and can quote the bible with the best I do not think the verse above should even need to be mentioned, I would have hoped that you would have remembered that while you posted a outrageous post about a Man of God. Do you need to like Brother Arnold? no! Do you need to agree with him? No! Do you need to respect the man of God and the position he holds, YES.

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  4. He is no prophet. He is a man. You recognize him in a symbolic-fictional world that the New Testament church would not even lend credit to. Our high priest is in heaven offering sacrifices for us continually according to Hebrews. Our High priest is the Spirit that lives in all of us. Our High Priest will never tolerate bigotry and hate and intolerance like the one that man is promoting, no matter how much Jeff Arnold can make you dance or cry in church.

    To allow that man the title of "prophet" is no different than allowing an image of God be confused as God Himself. Please reconsider the cross before you subscribe old testament fallacies about not "touching the Lord's anointed."

    Because I haven't touched the man. I've only seen his video's on youtube. And the Holy Spirit tells me that Jeff Arnold's spirit and mentality is icky.

    I am fervent about this. I am uncompromising.

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    Replies
    1. This could be a blog post if it its not already? Stuck on my phone so I can't search

      Brian

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  5. Jesus referred to the Scribes and Pharisees as "hypocrites," "serpents," "brood of vipers." He described them as "full of extortion and self-indulgence," "full of hypocrisy and lawlessness." He said that they, "devour widows’ houses, and for a pretense make long prayers." He was intolerant of those who rejected Him after seeing His miracles, "Woe to you, Chorazin! Woe to you, Bethsaida! For if the mighty works which were done in you had been done in Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes. But I say to you, it will be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon in the day of judgment than for you" (Matthew 11:21-22). Jesus was intolerant of those who set aside God’s law to follow human tradition (Matt. 15:3-9). He did not tolerate "false christs" and "false prophets" (Matthew 24:24). He told the Sadducees that they were "mistaken, not knowing the Scriptures nor the power of God" (Matthew 22:29).

    Brian

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  6. Glen, I appreciate your wit, but you are fairly overbearing with your criticism.

    I do have to preface my comment with the fact that I have only been able to hear him live a small number of times, so my thoughts are based off 4-5 live and a number of recorded sermons.

    I never thought "his mind is falling apart". for starters, there is a flow to his speaking. it is a bit scattered, but I do that myself and he does have a main topic or thread that is fairly consistant.

    As far as his "brand"? Does he even sell any tapes or cds of his own? I've never seen any outside of his home church or people who organize at places he preaches. Also, he is who he is. what is wrong with being yourself?

    Lastly, I don't consider preaching as pandering...


    Brian

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  7. 'Jeff Arnold is not a man of God'???

    'Being a man of God makes you a man of God and no respected man of God has ever...'??? And who are you, Mr. Glen McGee, to make that call? I thought He's our judge?

    I could go with judge not lest you be judged. I could. But I'll stick with "Don't push that envelope too far, you'll get a paper cut."

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  8. Regardless if it is a list in your head or scripture from the bible. ..you are still judging him. And I think there is bible for that, too. I am uncomfortable when people take it upon themselves to question the calling placed on another man’s life. It’s not our place at all. . . .whether we agree with someone being called or not. Maybe instead of spouting a bunch of reasons why you think Bro. Arnold is not a ‘man of God’, you should instead pray and let God handle him. I do believe that is HIS job

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  9. Look, I wasn't defending the guy. I only said your comments to the effect of "not a man of God" were judgmental. So two things here;

    1. that scripture in Timothy is specific advise on the pastoral office. Jeff Arnold isn't your pastor so you can't use that scripture to back you judging him. It, like your comments I don't approve of, is uncalled for.

    2. I don't think I was defending that "them up there, us down here" approach either. I just think you took your point a bit far with your accusation i.e. "not a man of God." I mean, maybe I should've just asked you what you meant? A bad witness? A bad preacher? Not a pastor? Not a righteous man? It's that last one I was afraid you wanted to imply, so I was all like who are you to make that call on who's righteous and who's not. I dunno, maybe the term "man of God" has a specific meaning in your context, but this is a blog open to the whole wide internet, so yeah, maybe I'm not alone in reading it as "not a righteous person."

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  10. :-) No problem. I am not trying to be purposely argumentative, we just disagree is all. I am not defending Bro Arnold, or his choice of words by any means. And I am also not saying that we can't 'speak back' to what he is saying, and voice our disagreement with him. I just personally feel that we can disagree with ministers in the apostolic movement, and still be respectful while doing it. And I strongly believe no one has any right to flat out say that a minister is not called by God, and therefore not a man of God. Trust me, there are other ministers in the UPC that I do not care for and have issues with things they do/say, but I would never be so bold as to say that they are not called men of God. Because I believe the calling of ministers is God's territory, and His alone. I just felt you were delving into an area that I don't think any man can delve into. You bring up some interesting points. I still disagree with you, though. But it's all good ;-)

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  11. Only one perfect man walked this earth without sin or blemish....but because of the fulfillment of Jesus purpose...It is he who opens the door and purifies and it is he who uses us..the filthy and unrighteous....God calls upon to anoint "Man"..to carry out words to draw us to him....but we are "men"...anointed "men" walking..with God ...and if you ask me the anointing is undeniable... Bro. Arnold. He is an anointed "Man" like you my friend. Lets resist the devil and encourage every when to come up a little higher. -Bro Trey Moore

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  12. You say enough stupid and mean things, you become those things. I am just sick of mean, nasty people hiding behind the pulpit. Accountability has come to collect. Pay up.

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