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Daily Swarm reader Brendan Hilliard tipped us off to this article from Conversant Life:

Christian hipsters tend not to like contemporary Christian music (CCM), or Christian films (except ironically), or any non-book item sold at Family Christian Stores. They hate warehouse churches or churches with American flags on stage, or churches with any flag on stage, really. They prefer “Christ follower” to “Christian” and can’t stand the phrases “soul winning” or “non-denominational,” and they could do without weird and awkward evangelistic methods including (but not limited to): sock puppets, ventriloquism, mimes, sign language, “beach evangelism,” and modern dance. Surprisingly, they don’t really have that big of a problem with old school evangelists like Billy Graham and Billy Sunday and kind of love the really wild ones like Aimee Semple McPherson.

Things they like:
Christian hipsters like music, movies, and books that are well-respected by their respective artistic communities—Christian or not. They love books like Resident Aliens by Stanley Hauerwas and Will Willimon, Rich Christians in an Age of Hunger by Ron Sider, God’s Politics by Jim Wallis, and The Imitation of Christ by Thomas a Kempis. They tend to be fans of any number of the following authors: Flannery O’Connor, Walker Percy, Wendell Berry, Thomas Merton, John Howard Yoder, Walter Brueggemann, N.T. Wright, Brennan Manning, Eugene Peterson, Anne Lamott, C.S. Lewis, G.K. Chesterton, Henri Nouwen, Soren Kierkegaard, Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, Annie Dillard, Marilynne Robison, Chuck Klosterman, David Sedaris, or anything ancient and/or philosophically important.

Christian hipsters love thinking and acting Catholic, even if they are thoroughly Protestant/evangelical. They love the Pope, liturgy, incense, lectio divina, Lent, and timeless phrases like “Thanks be to God” or “Peace of Christ be with you.” They enjoy Eastern Orthodox churches and mysterious iconography, and they love the elaborate cathedrals of Europe (even if they are too museum-like for hipster tastes). Christian hipsters also love taking communion with real Port, and they don’t mind common cups. They love poetry readings, worshipping with candles, and smoking pipes while talking about God. Some of them like smoking a lot of different things.


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#1 Billo666 says:

"Christian hipster"? Surely that's an oxymoron...

#2 Blankity says:

I feel like I know a lot of these, probably myself included.
I was wondering how I could reconcile my religion with hipsterdom.

#3 Big Bomb says:

I wonder if they would like Larry Norman? The Pixies did. I wonder if they like old skool hippy christian music like "lord of the dance" ...

http://digital.spin.com/spin/200805/?...

#4 Steve says:

My giant invisible frti3end
My giant invisible friend
He knows all about me and you
He knows everything that you do
My giant invisible friend

#5 imelgringo says:

Its not such a bad thing to be hip and Christian, and even mixing the two. Its like anything else though, when your focus become more on the ACT of being or doing rather than on GOD then it becomes idolistic. Think of mom's that love so much they can't give their children freedom. Its a perversion of a Godly trait.


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