October 4, 2005
Introducing Url and the Urthlings
Meet the contributors and moderator of Out of Ur.
Url Scaramanga is the facilitator of Out or Ur and an adjunct professor of interdisciplinary pseudonymology at the College of Creative Writing in Sheboygan Falls, Wisconsin. He is the son of circus performers but left to pursue ministry. Url nearly earned a seminary degree but was "encouraged to seek another calling" after an unfortunate incident in hermeneutics class involving a pigeon. He retains a keen interest in issues of theology, culture, carnivals, and ministry, and believes blogging is the best use of his gifts for the church.
Dave Gibbons is the pastor of NewSong Church in Irvine, California. NewSong is a multi-ethnic church with locations in Irvine, Los Angeles, Northern Orange County, and Bangkok, Thailand. Gibbons is helping NewSong shift from a megachurch model to a church of smaller congregations called "verges." He first met Url one night in Bangkok.
Collin Hansen is an editor at large for Christianity Today. He is currently a seminary student at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School while continuing to report for CT, Out of Ur, and author books. Hanson has also been seen on Fox News regarding issue of faith, politics, and culture. Collin first met Url during a toga party at a Reformed theology conference.
http://bobhyatt.typepad.com/bobblog/Bob Hyatt is lead pastor of the Evergreen Community - a church that meets at two pubs in Portland, Oregon. Apart from planting churches, helping other church planters, and blogging proficiently, Bob also edits the online e-zine, Next-Wave.org. Bob first met Url in Haiti where Bob was facilitating a water-purification project, and where Url was chasing chickens.
Skye Jethani is managing editor of Leadership. He also serves at Blanchard Alliance Church in Wheaton as a teaching pastor, a role he has occupied since 2002 after graduating from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School. He hold degrees in history and comparative religion, and has spoken and written widely about Christianity and consumerism. Skye first met Url at an ashram near Varanasi, India, where Url served as a short-term missionary/masseuse.
Scot McKnight is the Karl A. Olsson Professor in Religious Studies at North Park University in Chicago. Dr. McKnight has written many books and is a recognized authority on the New Testament, early Christianity, and the historical Jesus. He speaks widely and has been featured on television and radio stations across the country. Scot first encountered Url in 1986 while working on his Ph.D. at the University of Nottingham where Url served as sheriff.
Brandon O'Brien is assistant editor of Leadership. He also contributes to BuildingChurchLeaders.com, and has worked on the PreachingToday.com editorial team. His writing has also been featured in USAToday. Brandon has served in pastoral ministry in Arkansas, and carries degrees in Biblical Studies, Christian History, and Literature. He first met Url at The Slug and Lettuce, a pub in Edinburgh, Scotland, although both deny the veracity of the official police report.
Marshall Shelley is editor of Leadership and an editorial vice-president of Christianity Today International. Marshall joined Leadership Journal in 1982 after developing journalistic skills at Cook Publishing Co. and The Denver Post, and after serving as a pastor in his hometown of Denver, Colorado. Marshall met Url while they both served as understudies to Patrick Swayze in a short-lived musical stage production of the film Ghost.
David Swanson is Community Life Pastor at New Community Covenant Church in Chicago's Logan Square neighborhood. Prior to his gig in the big city, David served on staff at a church in an affluent Chicago suburb. He is the son of missionaries and spent his formative years in Costa Rica, Venezuela, and Ecuador. David first met Url in Peru, where Url worked as a Sherpa leading tours of Machu Picchu.
Posted by UrL Scaramanga on October 4, 2005

Comments
Good to see you coming out of Ur. It's not so bad out here.
Posted by: Marty at October 4, 2005
Author said: "Why are we shocked that we must leave the place of reason? Was faith ever about reason?"
There is a major place for reason. Without it, it is all subjective... may as well be a Mormon and believe in the Book of Mormon, for example. Our "reasoning" helps us sort out some of the nonsense in other religions. God even says, "come, let us reason together."
Isaiah 1:18
"Come now, let us reason together," says the LORD. "Though your sins are like scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they are red as crimson, they shall be like wool.
...Bernie
Posted by: Bernie Dehler at October 4, 2005
Well, the first post.
Interesting to see you guys going URL.
There seems to be a profound shift around the place, away from discourses and into discussions. Gee, with CT heading this way, maybe it'll be the new orthodoxy??
Posted by: mikeb at October 4, 2005
URgent? I think you've been staying up too late (or getting up too URly) working on this blog.
The way your team consistently stays on top of the game impresses and inspires me. You have consistently put out great stuff--as evidenced by the boxes of
Leadership magazines that have accompanied us on various moves.
Thanks for the URly warning about the blog (sorry, I couldn't resist, either). Keep up the good work!
Posted by: Martha Gail at October 6, 2005
Ah, so you've taken the red pill and leapt through the matrix. Welcome. ;)
AC
Posted by: Andrew Careaga at October 8, 2005
welcome to the blogosphere! glad you're becoming a more active part of the conversation and dialogue, and that you've left the comment feature open! (bold move for a publisher!) :)
Posted by: djchuang at October 31, 2005
Dear djchuang:
Thanks for the welcome. We have indeed left the comment feature open. But we also vet all the comments before they appear. We may be "bold for a publisher," but we aren't ready to abdicate our roles as publisher and host of the conversation. That's the function (or dysfunction) of an editor. We believe that well tended trees produce the most fruit.
Marshall Shelley
Leadership editor
Posted by: Marshall Shelley at October 31, 2005