I guess as long as we live we will be tempted to conquer life through the flesh standards of accomplishment and success.
Faith truly challenges us to move into an entirely new zone. The leader of that territory is the Holy Spirit; invisible, flexible, and known only by faith.
It would seem that the deepest desire for most is to be a better people. The road to this victory is not in self-improvement nor in self-maintenance; but is to be found in a Person named Jesus. Think it not strange that such an admonition, alone, seems nebulous. Ah, welcome to the Spirit world!
No, when it comes to faith, the flesh has a low tolerance for the vague. We are a meat and potatoes kind of believer that wants understandable guidelines. Yet, the Guide gave us Guidelines to lead us to the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen definition of FAITH.
The Bible contains one story upon another of individuals too weak and sometimes too awkward for the task at hand to guide us to the God who can accomplish through us. Abraham was assumed too old to father a child. Joseph was betrayed and dumped in a pit only to arise as a national leader. Moses begged off--at first--when God called him to do what could not be done (but did get done) in rescuing God's nation held captive.
The reason churches fail a community could be found by drawing people in only to admonish its members they can do better if they will just try harder. The reason a church blesses a neighborhood is discovered when one surrenders his or her self-effort for the heroic trust in our active and invisible God.
Faith isn't the flesh doing better. It is the spirit of a person leaning into the Spirit of God trusting that He will do better with us than we would by our own steam.
For further evaluation of such a concept, I think you would thoroughly enjoy Sharon Hersh's The Last Addiction (Why Self-Help Is Not Enough). You will be blessed.
Saturday, September 29, 2012
Friday, September 28, 2012
JESUS CRACKED THE CODE
Code language is an interesting concept. Swordfish at the door. Jasper from Saginaw. Blue Bell. Ah, even from our childhood codes told us who "we" were.
We use some of those in the church. Auditorium. Closing prayer. Invitation song. "We" know the exact meaning when "they" may not be able to decipher insight.
Jesus is the word to crack the code of legalism. He puts it away. I doubt I'll live long enough to take in this Truth and this Glory. After all, he is eternal in nature.
A challenge "we" face among our many codes is that we fail to move from Code to Person; Law to Jesus. They are not the same.
If not careful we will interpret NT Law as simply a step up from OT Code. If we fail to let the OT lead us to Jesus, both OT and NT have failed.
Carl Ketcherside wrote many decades ago, It is easy to develop a Pharisaical attitude about the New Covenant Scriptures as about the Old. If we condition our relationship with God on the basis of knowing a compilation of sacred writings, rather than faith in Jesus, we actually make the Bible our God. As a result, we become inconsistent and insecure. Every interpretation, exegesis, or opinion that disagrees with our own is considered treason. Our problem is that we make the basis of our hope an agreement with men, not a covenant with God.
The church suffers loss in areas because we have known our Bibles well without knowing our Jesus very much.
You search the Scriptures, because you think that in them you have eternal life; and it is these that bear witness of Me; and you are unwilling to come to Me, that you might have life...Jn. 5:39.
Jesus alone cracked the code. May we treasure new authentic life in the Spirit of God.
We use some of those in the church. Auditorium. Closing prayer. Invitation song. "We" know the exact meaning when "they" may not be able to decipher insight.
Jesus is the word to crack the code of legalism. He puts it away. I doubt I'll live long enough to take in this Truth and this Glory. After all, he is eternal in nature.
A challenge "we" face among our many codes is that we fail to move from Code to Person; Law to Jesus. They are not the same.
If not careful we will interpret NT Law as simply a step up from OT Code. If we fail to let the OT lead us to Jesus, both OT and NT have failed.
Carl Ketcherside wrote many decades ago, It is easy to develop a Pharisaical attitude about the New Covenant Scriptures as about the Old. If we condition our relationship with God on the basis of knowing a compilation of sacred writings, rather than faith in Jesus, we actually make the Bible our God. As a result, we become inconsistent and insecure. Every interpretation, exegesis, or opinion that disagrees with our own is considered treason. Our problem is that we make the basis of our hope an agreement with men, not a covenant with God.
The church suffers loss in areas because we have known our Bibles well without knowing our Jesus very much.
You search the Scriptures, because you think that in them you have eternal life; and it is these that bear witness of Me; and you are unwilling to come to Me, that you might have life...Jn. 5:39.
Jesus alone cracked the code. May we treasure new authentic life in the Spirit of God.
Thursday, September 27, 2012
TO DISCOVER A PROBLEM IS TO DISCOVER OUR PURPOSE
Carl Jung said long ago, The central neurosis of our time is emptiness. Could it still continue today?
Emptiness is a choker. It lives in nursing homes. Sadder yet, it reigns in coffee shops, classrooms, and even in church pews. Emptiness, though, gives you and me purpose because we are fillers since we have been Filled.
Believers are a perfect match for this problem that plagues mankind.
Filled with gratitude, filled with purpose, and filled with His Holy Spirit, of all people we are the ones who have filling to offer.
And guess who needs filling? Millions! Some are CEOs. Others are homeless. Yet, others are simply prim and proper....and so very lonely.
E. Stanley Jones wrote in Conversion that it was said by a certain Christian in India regarding another, He is suffering from nothingness. Jones points out that human nature simply can't stand emptiness and meaninglessness. It gets jumpy, jittery, and goes to pieces.
Imagine. If you were to discover a culture that has tried everything and basically concludes that most is in vain, what could be done for this sort? Ah, how about inserting the church of the living God?!?
We are perfectly poised for meaning and purpose because Problems is the name of the day for lines as far as we can see.
I urge us to continue to awaken to the truth that our purpose is highlighted when problems exist; and many do. Be encouraged. Discouragement is nothing but a red flag of opportunity for those who believe God can do what we could never imagine...Eph. 3:20.
Emptiness is a choker. It lives in nursing homes. Sadder yet, it reigns in coffee shops, classrooms, and even in church pews. Emptiness, though, gives you and me purpose because we are fillers since we have been Filled.
Believers are a perfect match for this problem that plagues mankind.
Filled with gratitude, filled with purpose, and filled with His Holy Spirit, of all people we are the ones who have filling to offer.
And guess who needs filling? Millions! Some are CEOs. Others are homeless. Yet, others are simply prim and proper....and so very lonely.
E. Stanley Jones wrote in Conversion that it was said by a certain Christian in India regarding another, He is suffering from nothingness. Jones points out that human nature simply can't stand emptiness and meaninglessness. It gets jumpy, jittery, and goes to pieces.
Imagine. If you were to discover a culture that has tried everything and basically concludes that most is in vain, what could be done for this sort? Ah, how about inserting the church of the living God?!?
We are perfectly poised for meaning and purpose because Problems is the name of the day for lines as far as we can see.
I urge us to continue to awaken to the truth that our purpose is highlighted when problems exist; and many do. Be encouraged. Discouragement is nothing but a red flag of opportunity for those who believe God can do what we could never imagine...Eph. 3:20.
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
THE BOTTOM LINE IS THE BOTTOM OF THE LINE
Something wonderfully catastrophic happens to each believer. We can walk with the herd or we can balk in the face of strong admonition. Neither will make us effectively Christian.
Something wonderfully catastrophic happens to each believer for when it happens it hurts our hearts terribly. One can never quite reach a pivotal point in life--regardless of energy and effort--until we move to the bottom by realizing we (me) (truly I) are disastrous sinners.
A lot of Sunday School talk has gone on for centuries under the guise that we talk about God, the world's condition, and what might be done to lead people to Jesus. A considerable amount of lip-service and foot- power will surely be given to both organization and projects.
But the bottom line changes....everything.
The bottom line is that we are wretched sinners at the bottom of the line. Preaching changes, reading the Word opens, criticism begins to melt, and attitude is significantly adjusted when one thing occurs; realization that we each are the chiefest of sinners.
When this truth strikes us we begin to feel....we begin to be emotionally connected. The difference is moving from a state of reading a book about being imprisoned for a week to being imprisoned for a week. Understanding abruptly increases because we shift from theory to experience.
The bottom line is that we are at the bottom of the line 'til Jesus becomes our Savior; not in theory but in experience. When this happens.....when we realize the enemy to God really was us--Romans 5:8-12--not only are we wonderfully blessed; but those who experience the new attitudinal us will be blessed as well.
Something wonderfully catastrophic happens to each believer for when it happens it hurts our hearts terribly. One can never quite reach a pivotal point in life--regardless of energy and effort--until we move to the bottom by realizing we (me) (truly I) are disastrous sinners.
A lot of Sunday School talk has gone on for centuries under the guise that we talk about God, the world's condition, and what might be done to lead people to Jesus. A considerable amount of lip-service and foot- power will surely be given to both organization and projects.
But the bottom line changes....everything.
The bottom line is that we are wretched sinners at the bottom of the line. Preaching changes, reading the Word opens, criticism begins to melt, and attitude is significantly adjusted when one thing occurs; realization that we each are the chiefest of sinners.
When this truth strikes us we begin to feel....we begin to be emotionally connected. The difference is moving from a state of reading a book about being imprisoned for a week to being imprisoned for a week. Understanding abruptly increases because we shift from theory to experience.
The bottom line is that we are at the bottom of the line 'til Jesus becomes our Savior; not in theory but in experience. When this happens.....when we realize the enemy to God really was us--Romans 5:8-12--not only are we wonderfully blessed; but those who experience the new attitudinal us will be blessed as well.
THE PERPETUAL CHALLENGE
We--theologically speaking--are both consumed and enamored with God's handiwork, mission, and commands. We study, dissect, and then announce to the world our latest findings. Such issuance brings delight to some and conflict to others. A new debate ensues which is as old as the hills; old versus new.
A perpetual challenge breeds in the church; How shall we deal with new?
When we enter the kingdom zone we tend to forget that paradoxes abound. To keep one's life one must die. Giving causes keeping; but refraining from giving away will result in loss of that which was kept. The only strong ones are those who lean into their weaknesses.
The kingdom is wired to befuddle the rational and the logical. This will always be a perpetual challenge.
New is always the challenge. Why is that?
God is the Creator. He continues such a prolific style. He makes all things new. We are to be a new creation. His very nature is newer than the newest. Should we kick against His style, the church will fade into relicism.
Margaret Wheatly voices, To be responsible inventors and discoverers, we need the courage to let go of the old world, to relinquish most of what we have cherished, to abandon our interpretations about what does and doesn't work. We must learn to see the world anew. As Einstein is often quoted as saying: No problem can be solved from the same consciousness that created it...We inhabit a world that co-evolves as we interact with it. This world is impossible to pin down, constantly changing, and infinitely more interesting than anything we ever imagined.
Yes, in Christendom there is a Rock; his name is Jesus. He is firm, solid, and sturdy. Our perpetual challenge is identical to the religious leaders of his day; to develop an ability to be sure of him while remaining with flexible stance upon those truths which must evolve as we study our Bibles and experience the Creative God they reveal...John 3:8.
A perpetual challenge breeds in the church; How shall we deal with new?
When we enter the kingdom zone we tend to forget that paradoxes abound. To keep one's life one must die. Giving causes keeping; but refraining from giving away will result in loss of that which was kept. The only strong ones are those who lean into their weaknesses.
The kingdom is wired to befuddle the rational and the logical. This will always be a perpetual challenge.
New is always the challenge. Why is that?
God is the Creator. He continues such a prolific style. He makes all things new. We are to be a new creation. His very nature is newer than the newest. Should we kick against His style, the church will fade into relicism.
Margaret Wheatly voices, To be responsible inventors and discoverers, we need the courage to let go of the old world, to relinquish most of what we have cherished, to abandon our interpretations about what does and doesn't work. We must learn to see the world anew. As Einstein is often quoted as saying: No problem can be solved from the same consciousness that created it...We inhabit a world that co-evolves as we interact with it. This world is impossible to pin down, constantly changing, and infinitely more interesting than anything we ever imagined.
Yes, in Christendom there is a Rock; his name is Jesus. He is firm, solid, and sturdy. Our perpetual challenge is identical to the religious leaders of his day; to develop an ability to be sure of him while remaining with flexible stance upon those truths which must evolve as we study our Bibles and experience the Creative God they reveal...John 3:8.
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
GROW IN MYSTERY
The Word speaks of mystery.
My earlier years didn't include mystery.
They included many answers, explanations, and facts. But mysteries were avoided because these didn't contain touchable/tangible rationalization.
Yet as we grow to accept mystery in this vast kingdom called God's, there seems to be a surprising peace which had yet been experienced. That seems odd to the control freak; me.
John Eldredge wrote, The more comfortable we are with mystery in our journey, the more rest we will know along the way. He continues with attention toward life's paradoxes that Paul pointed to in II Corinthians 6:10, Sorrowful, yet always rejoicing; poor, yet making many rich; having nothing, and yet possessing everything.
Eldredge, then, follows with a tremendous shot, And if we are willing to let go, we'll discover something most surprising--that all is ours. That is why reaching to possess is one danger of which the heart alive must stay wary. Those who have given up caring aren't tempted by this. But once we know what we want, we must learn the grace of release.
To learn the grace of release.....yes, a most surprising life will follow. The mystery....will always remain mysterious...and we are glad.
My earlier years didn't include mystery.
They included many answers, explanations, and facts. But mysteries were avoided because these didn't contain touchable/tangible rationalization.
Yet as we grow to accept mystery in this vast kingdom called God's, there seems to be a surprising peace which had yet been experienced. That seems odd to the control freak; me.
John Eldredge wrote, The more comfortable we are with mystery in our journey, the more rest we will know along the way. He continues with attention toward life's paradoxes that Paul pointed to in II Corinthians 6:10, Sorrowful, yet always rejoicing; poor, yet making many rich; having nothing, and yet possessing everything.
Eldredge, then, follows with a tremendous shot, And if we are willing to let go, we'll discover something most surprising--that all is ours. That is why reaching to possess is one danger of which the heart alive must stay wary. Those who have given up caring aren't tempted by this. But once we know what we want, we must learn the grace of release.
To learn the grace of release.....yes, a most surprising life will follow. The mystery....will always remain mysterious...and we are glad.
Saturday, September 22, 2012
THE SATURDAY NIGHT JITTERS
I am afraid of Sundays.
I never gave a thought to preaching for I never gave a thought as a kid to even going to church. Church was not high on my bucket list.
Now I am one.
This is one of the most bizarre lives any man ever encountered. I still cannot get used to what I get to do. But especially Saturday nights scare me.
Several things bring this inner dis-ease about:
It is so weird being a preacher. I can't wait to get there to hear what I've got to say; yet my mind goes nutso scrambling for word formation while my heart fights for air.
I love the church and believe deeply in the people in front of me. They are so very much more than they believe themselves to be. My job is to keep their fire lit by exposing them to the Hero named Jesus.
I fight tearful collapse Sunday after Sunday by covering with goofy humor. Ah, they are good to laugh. We even have groomed professional laughers. But the tension....oh it exhausts me.
So I say this to those of you who are not Memorialites. Be good to your preacher tomorrow morning. If he acts weird it could be he feels to pressure so strongly he's trying to keep from passing out.
The Saturday night jitters....well, they are valuable and important and I hope they never go away....but I always root for me the next morning!
I never gave a thought to preaching for I never gave a thought as a kid to even going to church. Church was not high on my bucket list.
Now I am one.
This is one of the most bizarre lives any man ever encountered. I still cannot get used to what I get to do. But especially Saturday nights scare me.
Several things bring this inner dis-ease about:
- Wondering if God will leave me in the pulpit by myself.
- Doubting I have a message that will give outrageous life to hearers.
- Fearing I won't be enough.
It is so weird being a preacher. I can't wait to get there to hear what I've got to say; yet my mind goes nutso scrambling for word formation while my heart fights for air.
I love the church and believe deeply in the people in front of me. They are so very much more than they believe themselves to be. My job is to keep their fire lit by exposing them to the Hero named Jesus.
I fight tearful collapse Sunday after Sunday by covering with goofy humor. Ah, they are good to laugh. We even have groomed professional laughers. But the tension....oh it exhausts me.
So I say this to those of you who are not Memorialites. Be good to your preacher tomorrow morning. If he acts weird it could be he feels to pressure so strongly he's trying to keep from passing out.
The Saturday night jitters....well, they are valuable and important and I hope they never go away....but I always root for me the next morning!
eBay AND MY ELDERS
eBay had a radical idea. It allowed plain people to sell and trade with no inventory. Today the world shops eBay. In general there was never a need to control the shoppers or the sellers.
Why?
One fundamental notion became their model; We believe people are basically good. We believe everyone has something to contribute. We believe that an honest and open environment can bring out the best in people.
When I read this quote my thoughts went immediately to Memorial's elders. This is more than their motto; it is their shepherding philosophy. When this is practiced--and it does work--one can understand their motto of stay out of the way. When the elders' role is to stay out of the way of the people, weird and wonderful things happen.
People become creative. Members seem to lose their fear factor of not doing things good enough. The results have been our people find reluctance replaced by willing effort.
Long ago Ethel Maynard, Tommie Weaver, and Virginia Cameron thought it necessary to provide food for funeral families. They have been at this special service for a looong time now.
Norm and Merilyn Herron had an idea. They began a Food Pantry years ago. It flourishes involving a host of Memorial's members plus volunteers from the community who want to pitch in. We didn't see the latter coming.
Michelle Bowers had an idea of beginning a clothing drive once a month for those standing in line to get food. Success. Success. I doubt the elders made a decision on this. Rather, they were as encouraged as anyone that this work would begin!
Ethelen Magnusson and Ellie Miller directed our Resource Room for teachers for decades. Today Trish Jones and JoDelene Hutchison have taken the organizing baton and run with it. I'm sure the elders learned of this responsible and productive transition the way the rest of us did. They saw them working.
And then there're Eric and Jenny Connel who began Project Tulsa to take food and water to the homeless. Aaron and Lea Henley, simultaneously, started Imgonna which reaches to a nearby apartment complex filled with kids.
Pam White and Mindy Willman recently designed a new Prayer Room of meditation and prayer.
Memorial Drive is made up of people who believe in people. It is a robust place. We inherit this ability to serve from our elders. These guys are not permission givers and would be irritated if they thought we thought so. Rather, these four are just as eager and just as enthused as the rest of us to find out new ways the team is approaching the Tulsa community and the whole world.
I doubt Clint Davis and Janyt May sought the elders' permission before they each tackled Uganda. It isn't that our shepherds are against being in on exciting plans, etc. And, they are surely interested when guidance would be sought. It is just that they believe in the flock. They behave as if they think we can get stuff done.
AA meets here Tuesdays and Fridays. It was the calendar that allowed that to happen.
Oh yes, this week we learned the Cubs Scouts are using our building on Monday nights beginning in October. There's more. We are grateful.
This eBay concept of believing in people originated with God's call to each of us.
Why?
One fundamental notion became their model; We believe people are basically good. We believe everyone has something to contribute. We believe that an honest and open environment can bring out the best in people.
When I read this quote my thoughts went immediately to Memorial's elders. This is more than their motto; it is their shepherding philosophy. When this is practiced--and it does work--one can understand their motto of stay out of the way. When the elders' role is to stay out of the way of the people, weird and wonderful things happen.
People become creative. Members seem to lose their fear factor of not doing things good enough. The results have been our people find reluctance replaced by willing effort.
Long ago Ethel Maynard, Tommie Weaver, and Virginia Cameron thought it necessary to provide food for funeral families. They have been at this special service for a looong time now.
Norm and Merilyn Herron had an idea. They began a Food Pantry years ago. It flourishes involving a host of Memorial's members plus volunteers from the community who want to pitch in. We didn't see the latter coming.
Michelle Bowers had an idea of beginning a clothing drive once a month for those standing in line to get food. Success. Success. I doubt the elders made a decision on this. Rather, they were as encouraged as anyone that this work would begin!
Ethelen Magnusson and Ellie Miller directed our Resource Room for teachers for decades. Today Trish Jones and JoDelene Hutchison have taken the organizing baton and run with it. I'm sure the elders learned of this responsible and productive transition the way the rest of us did. They saw them working.
And then there're Eric and Jenny Connel who began Project Tulsa to take food and water to the homeless. Aaron and Lea Henley, simultaneously, started Imgonna which reaches to a nearby apartment complex filled with kids.
Pam White and Mindy Willman recently designed a new Prayer Room of meditation and prayer.
Memorial Drive is made up of people who believe in people. It is a robust place. We inherit this ability to serve from our elders. These guys are not permission givers and would be irritated if they thought we thought so. Rather, these four are just as eager and just as enthused as the rest of us to find out new ways the team is approaching the Tulsa community and the whole world.
I doubt Clint Davis and Janyt May sought the elders' permission before they each tackled Uganda. It isn't that our shepherds are against being in on exciting plans, etc. And, they are surely interested when guidance would be sought. It is just that they believe in the flock. They behave as if they think we can get stuff done.
AA meets here Tuesdays and Fridays. It was the calendar that allowed that to happen.
Oh yes, this week we learned the Cubs Scouts are using our building on Monday nights beginning in October. There's more. We are grateful.
This eBay concept of believing in people originated with God's call to each of us.
Friday, September 21, 2012
THE MULTIPLICATION COMPLICATION FACTOR
Complication is a stressful matter. It could be used to hone our skills. Yet, too much of it can bury a person while he or she lives. Repeated multiplication of complication chokes, smothers, suffocates and kills.
This why the clear call of Jesus when he levied that thieves come to steal and destroy while he arrives to offer abundant life; the letter kills but the Spirit gives life.
Life is God's goal for us. Death is the Thief's concept. Complication sets in when laws multiply. In the medical arena it is said of one dying, Complications have set in.
There seems to be growing concern about America's government. Reflection upon all parties is that a gigantic shift has taken place from simplicity to complication. Regulations keep order for a good while. Yet, when these begin to multiply, the opposite gradually moves in; congestive disorder.
If not given honest care, the multiplication complication of government will choke, smother, suffocate, and eventually kill a once young and vibrant nation.
So it is in the church. From Bible versions, to women's dress code, to whether hands can clap, to legalizing opening and closing prayers, the church took on the multiplication complication long before America existed as nation. The MC factor was alive in Jesus day and he died to get us out of it.
We have much growing to do. I'm excited to be in the loop on such a direction. We must be aware that it is too easy to slip into a regulatory atmosphere that becomes dependent upon what we allow and don't over the breath-taking awareness of a Holy and Living God abiding within each of us.
May the simplicity of Jesus renew every aspect of our existence.
This why the clear call of Jesus when he levied that thieves come to steal and destroy while he arrives to offer abundant life; the letter kills but the Spirit gives life.
Life is God's goal for us. Death is the Thief's concept. Complication sets in when laws multiply. In the medical arena it is said of one dying, Complications have set in.
There seems to be growing concern about America's government. Reflection upon all parties is that a gigantic shift has taken place from simplicity to complication. Regulations keep order for a good while. Yet, when these begin to multiply, the opposite gradually moves in; congestive disorder.
If not given honest care, the multiplication complication of government will choke, smother, suffocate, and eventually kill a once young and vibrant nation.
So it is in the church. From Bible versions, to women's dress code, to whether hands can clap, to legalizing opening and closing prayers, the church took on the multiplication complication long before America existed as nation. The MC factor was alive in Jesus day and he died to get us out of it.
We have much growing to do. I'm excited to be in the loop on such a direction. We must be aware that it is too easy to slip into a regulatory atmosphere that becomes dependent upon what we allow and don't over the breath-taking awareness of a Holy and Living God abiding within each of us.
May the simplicity of Jesus renew every aspect of our existence.
Thursday, September 20, 2012
WILL GOD BE FOUND IN HIS CHURCH?
We must be sober about the present condition of the church. People cannot afford for us to be whimsical nor moody. Youngsters will not endure a stalemate of middle-of-the-road practices which give much more lip service than heart service.
There remains a void in the human heart which can only be filled by the perfect fitting of the Spirit of Christ. We must see that the two are introduced to one another.
Will God be found in His church?
Absolutely!
This completion of relationship, however, will not happen due to safe and normal habit. Rather is will begin to arise when assortment and broken and weak and different are allowed to come together as one. Every generation hungers for Life...authentic, real, sensitive, and tangible Life.
This life is found in relationship to the Holy Spirit. Doctrines may mask; but will not supply the heart's hunger for relationship with he Divine. Dos and Don'ts may be clearly heard; but rules will never replace the Son and his remarkable, immeasurable life to be encountered within.
Will God be found in His church? Absolutely! It is our faith-work to believe Him in all settings. People are everywhere. He will be found in people; not in performance. He will be found in the downtrodden; not in the trim and proper. God will be found in the church...in the very ones we might tend to dismiss should they not fit our standards of uprightness.
A famous author wrote, Every age has its own characteristics. Right now we are in an age of religious complexity. The simplicity which is in Christ is rarely found among us. In its stead are programs, methods, organizations and a world of nervous activities which occupy time and attention but can never satisfy the longing of the heart. The shallowness of our worship, and that servile imitation of the world which marks our promotional methods all testify that we, in this day, know God only imperfectly, and the peace of God scarcely at all.
A. W. Tozer wrote this in 1948.
There remains a void in the human heart which can only be filled by the perfect fitting of the Spirit of Christ. We must see that the two are introduced to one another.
Will God be found in His church?
Absolutely!
This completion of relationship, however, will not happen due to safe and normal habit. Rather is will begin to arise when assortment and broken and weak and different are allowed to come together as one. Every generation hungers for Life...authentic, real, sensitive, and tangible Life.
This life is found in relationship to the Holy Spirit. Doctrines may mask; but will not supply the heart's hunger for relationship with he Divine. Dos and Don'ts may be clearly heard; but rules will never replace the Son and his remarkable, immeasurable life to be encountered within.
Will God be found in His church? Absolutely! It is our faith-work to believe Him in all settings. People are everywhere. He will be found in people; not in performance. He will be found in the downtrodden; not in the trim and proper. God will be found in the church...in the very ones we might tend to dismiss should they not fit our standards of uprightness.
A famous author wrote, Every age has its own characteristics. Right now we are in an age of religious complexity. The simplicity which is in Christ is rarely found among us. In its stead are programs, methods, organizations and a world of nervous activities which occupy time and attention but can never satisfy the longing of the heart. The shallowness of our worship, and that servile imitation of the world which marks our promotional methods all testify that we, in this day, know God only imperfectly, and the peace of God scarcely at all.
A. W. Tozer wrote this in 1948.
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
THE ART OF EMPOWERMENT
Power is fascinating. Horsepower, political power, God-power....on the list grows. Power is a powerful tool for every one of us.
The secret to kingdom power is not the accumulating; but rather the giving. Power is perfected in weakness is stamped in gold on the front of my Bible. It tells the truth. We are never strong because of our strength; only due to our weakness...for when I am weak, then I am strong (II Cor. 12:9-10).
Empowering others is my drive. I want to see individuals succeed. Such a process will often require I take a backseat in my leadership role. In the kingdom we often lead by urging others to be the leaders. Our role is to give them the nudge that they, too, can be effective because of their inherent weaknesses.
John Maxwell wrote, Many people neglect to empower others because they are insecure. They are afraid of losing their jobs to the people they mentor. They don't want to be replaced or displaced, even if it means that they would be able to move up to a higher position and leave their current one to be filled by the person they mentor. They're afraid of change. But change is part of empowerment---for the people you empower and for yourself. If you want to go up, there are things you have to be willing to give up.
I relate.
When I was nervous about my image, there was a slight competition in my mind toward the other staff partners. It hurt me to see them be credited when such seemed to say I wasn't enough. How silly. Yet, welcome to the reality of the inferior.
The Good News is that The Art of Empowerment is a glorious relief. For the past six or seven years I probably give myself to mentoring more than any other ministry commitment. I love, love, love the preaching role. Yet, the building men and women's confidence is a seven-day-a-week assignment from God that flows from a heart no longer protecting its self-image. I basically have no image other than silly and foolish weakness.
Everybody knows it. The best part is that I know it.
The Art of Empowerment is a most delightful arena. I believe my posts empower you. I believe in people; especially the insecure, the inferior, and the weak ones. Why? Because I want to do for others what patient and gracious others did for me.
The Art of Empowerment is a productive way to live. Don't cast your frailties aside as if they are in your way. They are your secret to The Art of Empowerment. Use them.
The secret to kingdom power is not the accumulating; but rather the giving. Power is perfected in weakness is stamped in gold on the front of my Bible. It tells the truth. We are never strong because of our strength; only due to our weakness...for when I am weak, then I am strong (II Cor. 12:9-10).
Empowering others is my drive. I want to see individuals succeed. Such a process will often require I take a backseat in my leadership role. In the kingdom we often lead by urging others to be the leaders. Our role is to give them the nudge that they, too, can be effective because of their inherent weaknesses.
John Maxwell wrote, Many people neglect to empower others because they are insecure. They are afraid of losing their jobs to the people they mentor. They don't want to be replaced or displaced, even if it means that they would be able to move up to a higher position and leave their current one to be filled by the person they mentor. They're afraid of change. But change is part of empowerment---for the people you empower and for yourself. If you want to go up, there are things you have to be willing to give up.
I relate.
When I was nervous about my image, there was a slight competition in my mind toward the other staff partners. It hurt me to see them be credited when such seemed to say I wasn't enough. How silly. Yet, welcome to the reality of the inferior.
The Good News is that The Art of Empowerment is a glorious relief. For the past six or seven years I probably give myself to mentoring more than any other ministry commitment. I love, love, love the preaching role. Yet, the building men and women's confidence is a seven-day-a-week assignment from God that flows from a heart no longer protecting its self-image. I basically have no image other than silly and foolish weakness.
Everybody knows it. The best part is that I know it.
The Art of Empowerment is a most delightful arena. I believe my posts empower you. I believe in people; especially the insecure, the inferior, and the weak ones. Why? Because I want to do for others what patient and gracious others did for me.
The Art of Empowerment is a productive way to live. Don't cast your frailties aside as if they are in your way. They are your secret to The Art of Empowerment. Use them.
Monday, September 17, 2012
THE AWE OF LIFE IN THE CHURCH
We are new!
Life isn't found in putting our hands to the Bible and looking back to see where the church has been, what it did, or who it knew. No, we are on a mission to know God; to be led by Him into regions few have yet found.
Life is a gift from God!
It is full of hope. The wonder we find in walking with Jesus is thrilling upon thrilling. We are not just bankers or teachers or secretaries or shop hands. We are Jesus in the flesh moving about under the arm of the living God.
We see things, do things, live for things that unbelievers do not sense. They are naive to such values and powers.
We are filled!
The actual Holy Spirit of the Trinity sits within. We encase a true bit of heaven. Glory thrives in us. Hope radiates. Bad news withers faint under the Son of Light and Grace.
We are alive!
So think like it. Act like it. Talk like it. Believe like it.
We are not normal. We are new normal.
The world needs a dose of heaven. Give it to 'em.
The awe of life in the church.....is who we are!
Life isn't found in putting our hands to the Bible and looking back to see where the church has been, what it did, or who it knew. No, we are on a mission to know God; to be led by Him into regions few have yet found.
Life is a gift from God!
It is full of hope. The wonder we find in walking with Jesus is thrilling upon thrilling. We are not just bankers or teachers or secretaries or shop hands. We are Jesus in the flesh moving about under the arm of the living God.
We see things, do things, live for things that unbelievers do not sense. They are naive to such values and powers.
We are filled!
The actual Holy Spirit of the Trinity sits within. We encase a true bit of heaven. Glory thrives in us. Hope radiates. Bad news withers faint under the Son of Light and Grace.
We are alive!
So think like it. Act like it. Talk like it. Believe like it.
We are not normal. We are new normal.
The world needs a dose of heaven. Give it to 'em.
The awe of life in the church.....is who we are!
BURIED BY LIFE....OR....INTO IT
Day by day reports sting, press, and/or knock our socks off. Communication is at a rate so fast if not careful it will actually pass at such speed that time might go backwards. Well...not really...but a lot comes our way.
Living is a tedious matter. We can become swallowed by its rigors or we can be buried into Life (Jesus' Life) and find ourselves consumed in either course. We say the latter!
God is right. We will either serve God or mammon. Serve we will. Shelter ourselves we won't.
Life is one gigantic expenditure of the self. The Jesus route is worthy. The other lacks way too much.
Drop the shyness. Release the protective gear. Leap--be buried--into the Life of Christ. Be absorbed by it and get lost in it.
There is nothing so demanding nor so rewarding. And....it is the only one which satisfies the hungry soul famished for meaning of life.
Living is a tedious matter. We can become swallowed by its rigors or we can be buried into Life (Jesus' Life) and find ourselves consumed in either course. We say the latter!
God is right. We will either serve God or mammon. Serve we will. Shelter ourselves we won't.
Life is one gigantic expenditure of the self. The Jesus route is worthy. The other lacks way too much.
Drop the shyness. Release the protective gear. Leap--be buried--into the Life of Christ. Be absorbed by it and get lost in it.
There is nothing so demanding nor so rewarding. And....it is the only one which satisfies the hungry soul famished for meaning of life.
Sunday, September 16, 2012
THE CHURCH OF THE FUTURE
Day by day life is even more exciting. Yes, circumstances and people can surely put the challenge to us. However, we are risen in Jesus; not just buried. And that rising is extremely special.
We are raised to walk a new life....Romans 6:3-5
New life!
Not remodeled.
Not refurbished.
New!
I believe the years of Christian accumulation have not revealed but a smidgen of the true life available to us. I speak not in criticism of anyone but in compliment to our immeasurable Father. So much is yet to be discovered. Just as gold remains buried, as well as gas and oil are yet to be unearthed, there is much new undiscovered life in Christ yet to be unheavened.
We mill around on earth carrying our Bibles and entering good deeds. Both are prudent and important. Yet, I think there is more....more that has yet to be discussed, yet to be imagined, and yet to be obtained about the Spirit walk with God.
May our prayers be full of gratitude and anticipation. May our hearts beat a new cadence of imagination and hope. May we enter the realm of God that only our forefathers wished they could see; but failed to enter.
The church of the future: I hope we are filled with gratitude for all blessings of our past and gripped with hunger to enter the zones no one thought yet to seek. The realm of God is not to be captured so we must not life believing most of it has been.
We are raised to walk a new life....Romans 6:3-5
New life!
Not remodeled.
Not refurbished.
New!
I believe the years of Christian accumulation have not revealed but a smidgen of the true life available to us. I speak not in criticism of anyone but in compliment to our immeasurable Father. So much is yet to be discovered. Just as gold remains buried, as well as gas and oil are yet to be unearthed, there is much new undiscovered life in Christ yet to be unheavened.
We mill around on earth carrying our Bibles and entering good deeds. Both are prudent and important. Yet, I think there is more....more that has yet to be discussed, yet to be imagined, and yet to be obtained about the Spirit walk with God.
May our prayers be full of gratitude and anticipation. May our hearts beat a new cadence of imagination and hope. May we enter the realm of God that only our forefathers wished they could see; but failed to enter.
The church of the future: I hope we are filled with gratitude for all blessings of our past and gripped with hunger to enter the zones no one thought yet to seek. The realm of God is not to be captured so we must not life believing most of it has been.
Saturday, September 15, 2012
TRUTH MAY NOT BE ALL WE'VE CRACKED IT UP TO BE
Truth.
Translation for us?
We are right.
Our views, our take, our extracted 10% of the Bible's verses?
Hmmm, how about that! We are right!
Truth was not the sledge hammer used against the world. It was the axe laid at religion's root. It is to hit us between the eyes in order that we open them to see the world. Fundamentally, a huge percentage of the church does it's battle within our four walls. We accomplish this without really touching the world we verbalize as to what should be our mission.
The religious mocked John the Baptist because he dressed weird and his diet matched his dress. On the other hand they didn't like Jesus either claiming he ate and drank the wrong things....a drunkard and a glutton.
Truth is assumed by all to be the defining code of accurate spirituality. A struggle develops immediately when those of us who parade it most fail to recognize a pattern set in the early church of legalistic Pharisee-typical behavior has rotted our roots.
The world knows this about us; but we don't.
They said John the Baptist had a demon and that Jesus chummed with sinners. Neither pleased the establishment. Both were of truth. Jesus is the truth.
Truth.
It is not our stance that makes it so. Neither it is our deep hunger for any God-facet. It is the mysterious call of Jesus to go where the Truth-Keepers refuse to go; to the tax-gatherers and sinners of our communities.
Truth.
It isn't all the self-preserving church has cracked it up to be. It is, though, the hope of every soul if we will have the courage to aggressively move into our regions with the charming and compassionate nature of the real truthful Jesus embedded within each.
Translation for us?
We are right.
Our views, our take, our extracted 10% of the Bible's verses?
Hmmm, how about that! We are right!
Truth was not the sledge hammer used against the world. It was the axe laid at religion's root. It is to hit us between the eyes in order that we open them to see the world. Fundamentally, a huge percentage of the church does it's battle within our four walls. We accomplish this without really touching the world we verbalize as to what should be our mission.
The religious mocked John the Baptist because he dressed weird and his diet matched his dress. On the other hand they didn't like Jesus either claiming he ate and drank the wrong things....a drunkard and a glutton.
Truth is assumed by all to be the defining code of accurate spirituality. A struggle develops immediately when those of us who parade it most fail to recognize a pattern set in the early church of legalistic Pharisee-typical behavior has rotted our roots.
The world knows this about us; but we don't.
They said John the Baptist had a demon and that Jesus chummed with sinners. Neither pleased the establishment. Both were of truth. Jesus is the truth.
Truth.
It is not our stance that makes it so. Neither it is our deep hunger for any God-facet. It is the mysterious call of Jesus to go where the Truth-Keepers refuse to go; to the tax-gatherers and sinners of our communities.
Truth.
It isn't all the self-preserving church has cracked it up to be. It is, though, the hope of every soul if we will have the courage to aggressively move into our regions with the charming and compassionate nature of the real truthful Jesus embedded within each.
Friday, September 14, 2012
THE EARTH WINDOW
A moment set in time for every individual is that of our Earth Window. We are born. We live. And, we die. Within this frame, we take our Earth Tour only to fade out in order to phase in to the next Tour.
I recently spent hours visiting my mom in the nursing home. Nothing sharpens the brevity of the Earth Window of time for me like the nursing home lens. Dreary. Sad. Terribly depressing.
Yet, against this backdrop of dim lighting, strewn wheel chairs with bibbed patrons, plus the disruptive noise of TVs booming from a couple of nearby rooms (and not on the same channel), there is comfort in knowing the One who declares that this is NOT THE END.
Earth Window is not all there is to life; it is simply a window of time.
This truth needs to awaken us to focus upon things during our Earth Window that matter.
I encountered old friends throughout this facility. One is one year older than me, partially paralyzed, and stuck within a few square feet for the duration of her Earth Window. And I want to complain about how long it takes to drive somewhere?
I greeted the town millionaire who owns a thriving production company with employees, trucks, vans, and buildings. Today his Earth Window is restricted to where his newest set of wheels--a chair--will take him through a choice of three dimly lit hallways.
Yes, sitting in a nursing home for four days was a unique seminar held for one; me. I must capitalize on my Earth Window. At the same time I must remember it is merely a window and not the circumference of existence. There is more to come.....much more.
The Earth Window is only a fraction of eternity. May we live like it.
I recently spent hours visiting my mom in the nursing home. Nothing sharpens the brevity of the Earth Window of time for me like the nursing home lens. Dreary. Sad. Terribly depressing.
Yet, against this backdrop of dim lighting, strewn wheel chairs with bibbed patrons, plus the disruptive noise of TVs booming from a couple of nearby rooms (and not on the same channel), there is comfort in knowing the One who declares that this is NOT THE END.
Earth Window is not all there is to life; it is simply a window of time.
This truth needs to awaken us to focus upon things during our Earth Window that matter.
I encountered old friends throughout this facility. One is one year older than me, partially paralyzed, and stuck within a few square feet for the duration of her Earth Window. And I want to complain about how long it takes to drive somewhere?
I greeted the town millionaire who owns a thriving production company with employees, trucks, vans, and buildings. Today his Earth Window is restricted to where his newest set of wheels--a chair--will take him through a choice of three dimly lit hallways.
Yes, sitting in a nursing home for four days was a unique seminar held for one; me. I must capitalize on my Earth Window. At the same time I must remember it is merely a window and not the circumference of existence. There is more to come.....much more.
The Earth Window is only a fraction of eternity. May we live like it.
Thursday, September 13, 2012
STRESS: THE REVERSE FORTUNE
There's Cairo in our news this week. Libya is there as well. Yemen now arises giving us more concern.
Trouble. Rough stuff. Stress. Fear. Anxiety. The whole nine yards of problems face us.
In all this the Bible appears to be read best through His children being read by the world. You are our letter, written in our hearts, known and read by all men....II Cor. 3:2.
So what are our headlines?
And then the Third Day, stress and disappointment showed reverse fortune. Death, it turned out, was the sucker in the story. God used it only to get His point through: Don't worry child. I will be there.
So it is with, to, and for us. We are read best when our headlines declare; Dark Days Prove Advantages for God's Children!
I say....another good post, Terry!!!!!!
Trouble. Rough stuff. Stress. Fear. Anxiety. The whole nine yards of problems face us.
In all this the Bible appears to be read best through His children being read by the world. You are our letter, written in our hearts, known and read by all men....II Cor. 3:2.
So what are our headlines?
- Boo Hoo
- YIKES!
- We've Had It!
- I'm Mad. I'm Angered. I'm Annoyed.
- We Have Already Won
- We Will Not Be Taken Out
- We Will Minister to Our Enemies
- We Will Salute God with Great Glory
And then the Third Day, stress and disappointment showed reverse fortune. Death, it turned out, was the sucker in the story. God used it only to get His point through: Don't worry child. I will be there.
So it is with, to, and for us. We are read best when our headlines declare; Dark Days Prove Advantages for God's Children!
I say....another good post, Terry!!!!!!
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
GOD IN ALL THE LIFE-STUFF
Sorry readers, I have been away from the blog world since last weekend. I am in NE Missouri tending to my ailing mother. I hope to be back at this blog region soon.
In the meantime, practice thanking God for all things. Our faith is not to be in our works, our heritage, nor in our possibilities. It is to always be in the glory of God.
He alone is fascinating.
See Him in all things.
Do not restrict Him to the church stuff. See Him in the pain stuff, the disappointment stuff, the aggravating stuff, and the disorienting stuff.
Whether good day or bad, His Spirit gives hope....Romans 5:1-5.
Whether positive circumstance or negative, we keep moving with confidence....Philippians 4:11.
Believe God. This is our every day, every moment, every breath work. We will notice God in all the life-stuff.
In the meantime, practice thanking God for all things. Our faith is not to be in our works, our heritage, nor in our possibilities. It is to always be in the glory of God.
He alone is fascinating.
See Him in all things.
Do not restrict Him to the church stuff. See Him in the pain stuff, the disappointment stuff, the aggravating stuff, and the disorienting stuff.
Whether good day or bad, His Spirit gives hope....Romans 5:1-5.
Whether positive circumstance or negative, we keep moving with confidence....Philippians 4:11.
Believe God. This is our every day, every moment, every breath work. We will notice God in all the life-stuff.
Friday, September 07, 2012
MAY WE LEARN FROM NON-LEARNERS
Benjamin Barber, an eminent sociologist, once said, "I don't divide the world into the weak and the strong, or the successes and the failures....I divide them into the learners and nonlearners."
What on earth, Carol Dweck asks in her book Mindset, would make someone a nonlearner? Everyone is born with an intensive drive to learn. Infants stretch their skills daily. Not just their ordinary skills, but the most difficult tasks of a lifetime, like learning to walk and talk. They never decide it's too hard or not worth the effort. Babies don't worry about making mistakes or humiliating themselves. They walk, they fall, they get up. They just barge forward.
What could put an end to exuberant learning? The fixed mindset. As soon as children become able to evaluate themselves, some of them become afraid of challenges. They become afraid of not being smart. I have studied thousands of people from preschoolers on, and it's breathtaking how many reject opportunity to learn.
We in the church are faced with extreme and sober challenges in this arena of learning. Mindsets become locked; not because of truth but because of fear of it. I find the church in many pockets---both educated and un---smug and rigid in the name of well-versed when in reality such a behavior is more likely due to few-versed.
As the social culture swings from harsh and exacting discipline to handing out trophies of some size to every participant so no one would feel rejected, learning has slipped. The reason? Learning includes and requires correction. Society has moved from possible over-correction in the 40s/50s/60 to under-correction in these modern times.
Non-learners are afraid. I am a professional fraidy cat. I know all too well where to dart, where to hide, where to avoid. I have had to learn to fail and get back up. This is hard stuff to do when a mind is programmed for assumed and repeated failure. Surprisingly, our failures offer some of our most valuable training.
Personally, I have to guard against non-learning for I am 65 years old. Learning doesn't mean accepting every idea; but it may well include weighing foreign ones to see if there is yet another facet of truth I might need to weigh....or re-weigh.
For those groomed as me, I encourage you to reject fear and barge into opportunity. Don't be stupid in your move. Be a learner. After all, isn't that what disciples are to do?
What on earth, Carol Dweck asks in her book Mindset, would make someone a nonlearner? Everyone is born with an intensive drive to learn. Infants stretch their skills daily. Not just their ordinary skills, but the most difficult tasks of a lifetime, like learning to walk and talk. They never decide it's too hard or not worth the effort. Babies don't worry about making mistakes or humiliating themselves. They walk, they fall, they get up. They just barge forward.
What could put an end to exuberant learning? The fixed mindset. As soon as children become able to evaluate themselves, some of them become afraid of challenges. They become afraid of not being smart. I have studied thousands of people from preschoolers on, and it's breathtaking how many reject opportunity to learn.
We in the church are faced with extreme and sober challenges in this arena of learning. Mindsets become locked; not because of truth but because of fear of it. I find the church in many pockets---both educated and un---smug and rigid in the name of well-versed when in reality such a behavior is more likely due to few-versed.
As the social culture swings from harsh and exacting discipline to handing out trophies of some size to every participant so no one would feel rejected, learning has slipped. The reason? Learning includes and requires correction. Society has moved from possible over-correction in the 40s/50s/60 to under-correction in these modern times.
Non-learners are afraid. I am a professional fraidy cat. I know all too well where to dart, where to hide, where to avoid. I have had to learn to fail and get back up. This is hard stuff to do when a mind is programmed for assumed and repeated failure. Surprisingly, our failures offer some of our most valuable training.
Personally, I have to guard against non-learning for I am 65 years old. Learning doesn't mean accepting every idea; but it may well include weighing foreign ones to see if there is yet another facet of truth I might need to weigh....or re-weigh.
For those groomed as me, I encourage you to reject fear and barge into opportunity. Don't be stupid in your move. Be a learner. After all, isn't that what disciples are to do?
Thursday, September 06, 2012
LEADERSHIP'S PERSONALITY
I have watched the political conventions with enormous interest. A politician, I'm not. But I love to study the dynamics of reason, vision, and speech delivery; both the poor as well as the profound.
I continue to keep my eyes most upon the path of Jesus; his speech and his work.
Jesus is leadership at its perfection.
Glimpses of him show up in men and women on these stages I have recently viewed.
What is it that makes a leader a leader? Surely shelves cannot contain the books written over time nor banks the royalties gleaned from latest leadership fad.
But I love to learn. I am to be a leader and I want to note how it's done and track how it isn't done. I want to accomplish the former and avoid the latter. The truth is I'm more of a wannabe leader than a real one.
But when I study Jesus I hear his words, watch his movement, and imagine both his eyes and his facial expression.
Jesus is the leader's leader.
He caught it. Knew it. Was it. Is it.
Here's what I see about him that we in leadership positions and political stages still need to practice. Jesus had a knack for being sacrificial toward his enemies and responsive to the neglected. He was a powerful man.
In watching Jesus, I find the might of leadership to be found in both humility and courage. It takes great strength to yield--even if appearing as a loser for a time--that God might have a shot at offering His resurrection power.
It takes great courage to be humble....but I think it is THE trait of heaven's leaders.
.
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