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Pinebrooke Posts Week of November 17, 2024Sunday, November 17, 2024
Weekly Blog
Can we slow down enough to care for others? One of the consequences of our worship of speed is our inability to get out of ourselves enough to consider those right around us. It takes slowing down enough to notice. I’m always impressed with Elijah’s encounter with the Living God. The Scriptures tells us the story. God didn’t show up in the earthquake or the fire or the wind, but in the still small voice that was barely above a whisper.
What is right around you? Do you notice and can you wait for whatever it is until its reality unfolds its wings, and you see it for what it is? I think that has been Jesus’ way of living fruitfully. I’ve been rereading Alan Fadling’s book, An Unhurried Life and have found great wisdom for us as apprentices of Jesus. Learning Jesus’ way is our first task of doing. It is hard to see and hear the hands of God when we are living in a hurry.
There is a huge difference between fruitfulness and productivity. Our common culture raises productivity to the pedestal of worship which equates to busyness which equates to speed. On the other hand, fruitfulness is rarely fast. It takes time to produce fruit. Fruit often requires pruning and patience and attending to. Fruit is rich and flavorful and sweet to the taste, productivity is often mediocre and temporary and dry. In the process of meaningful productivity it must become fruitful to be sustained.
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Week of November 3, 2024Sunday, November 03, 2024
Weekly Blog
Now that we have our election cycle behind us maybe we can get on to the kingdom of God we have been assigned, bringing light to the darkness. I admit, sometimes we are bent from time to time to lose our focus because of the noise that surrounds us. This is the season to hear the bells of gratitude and the shining light of the Advent of our Savior. This is an excellent time to create some empty space to listen to the still small voice of the Lord of the Universe.
The immediate season before us has its roots in the gratitude and relief that followed both the Revolutionary War and the Civil War during those two centuries in our national history. Yet, for me I bring the emotional image of the Pilgrims and Native Americans celebrating God’s protection and provision from His faithful care of both survival and peace. Maybe this would be a good practice this year given the atmosphere of our culture to look for survival and peace.
It behooves us as followers of Jesus to bring the peace of Christ to bear on our culture. In every encounter, event, and experience our world is groaning for the peace of Christ. It is not some flabby altruism or niceness, rather it is a penetrating peace that shakes the soul from its lethargy. In a world that is bent on skimming the surface of life, the light of Christ lived through the peace of Christ is a penetrating light in the midst of the darkness.
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Week of October 27, 2024Sunday, October 27, 2024
Weekly Blog
This week we celebrate a watershed event in human history, the Reformation. It was an event of deeply held value which occurred on the wings of protest. The Reformers as a group were protesting the abuse of the most important subject of humankind, one’s communal relationship with Almighty God. The authority and tradition that had developed over centuries had become debased by ignorance and abuse. The protest was meant to be a purifying effort of that which is of eternal value, man’s relationship with God.
The fruit of that protest, initially intended to right the ship in the waters, produced something quite different. Something that wasn’t necessarily intended, but because of pride, ignorance, and control created something quite new. The substance of the protest has benefitted those of us who believe as it has created the hooks upon which we hang our relationship with God. Protest over truth vs. untruth is the essence of the battle in which we are at odds.
The hooks are five solid commitments that cover the vast variety that makes up Protestantism. Scripture alone is our authority for faith and practice. Christ alone provides our salvation with His sacrifice for our sins. Our salvation is established by faith alone. And it is by grace alone that we have been included in the salvation story. And finally, the glory of God is the point of it all.
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Week of October 20, 2024Sunday, October 20, 2024
Weekly Blog
I think the most common obstacle that modern man deals with is perspective. With our worship of speed and the assumption that the present is all there is we are ill-equipped for living fruitfully and honestly. Augustine shared wisdom that we might need as we live out our days with vigor. The past is the present plus memory. Isn’t that the value of history, what happened and why and can we reproduce the good and learn from the bad? Then there is the present and here the wisdom of de Cassaude, “the sacrament of the present moment” or where do we see God in what is going on. And then we have the future which is the present plus our expectations.
The common struggle comes when we pay no attention to the past and learn from it. I suspect that we don’t know how to look at the past and how what happened, happened. Learning is never a complete blank slate. There are always residual effects in what has happened in history. There are themes to recognize and information to gather. The other obstacle is in our impatience with waiting preferring to simply act and move life along. The practice of listening and thinking are for the most part unpracticed. Maybe because they require empty space, and we are afraid of empty space.
Perspective also requires an openness and readiness to move beyond ourselves. When we are afraid of openness it seems that our identity is rooted in the stability of our ideas and notions about things. Learning to be secure in what God says about us and His love for us can give us a strength beyond our self-generated orientation. The perspective then does not need to be self-generated but can come in submission to the One who loves us most. Perspective can then be generated and malleable in the hands of God in our lives. Thus, we can grow in our perspective.
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Week of October 13, 2024Sunday, October 13, 2024
Weekly Blog
Confusion is not new to humanity! The root of it is that often we do not know the truth, or we have become sloppy in the pursuit of truth. When Jesus told Thomas, “I am the way, the truth, and the life” it was because Thomas was confused by some of what Jesus had said and done. Truth is at the center of who God is and it is paramount to God that we know the truth and that we stick to the truth. He knows that the evil one is about disrupting the truth, so in the advent of the Holy Spirit we are taught that the Spirit will guide us into all truth and will reveal the truth of Christ to us.
The truth doesn’t originate in the mind and heart of depraved humankind but is rooted in the Author of Truth. Our natural bent is to bend the truth to fit our own preferences. The fact is the truth exists apart from the mind and heart of man and it is our task to live in relation to that which is beyond us and then the process includes appropriating the truth in order to live according to the truth. That is where the Word of God comes in.
I have felt that it is most helpful to take the truth of God in so that I might be shaped and formed by the truth – the Word of God. That exercise provides a cultivation of the mind and heart in order to truly become the kind of person that God created me to be. God has promised the Holy Spirit as the One who can take what has been written and enlivened it so that same Word can become living within us. In addition, the best preparation for dealing with the “truth talkers” in our ordinary day is to become intimately familiar with the truth of God. When dealing with contradictory “fact checkers” the residual sense that is gained from God is helpful in everyday discernment.
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Week of October 6, 2024Sunday, October 06, 2024
Weekly Blog
It would seem that we are in a state of confusion. Just as fact checkers can’t agree on the facts, so we are recipients of conflicting information. When we consider the evil ones, basic strategy is one of deception, no wonder in a informational society in which we live that the confusion resides in the midst of information. In addition, our own perceptual framework impacts how we see what we see. It would seem that for followers of Jesus, the Word of God ought to be our foundational source of truth.
In addition, as sinners redeemed by Christ, we also have been blessed by the power and presence of the Holy Spirit of God who has been given to us as our Teacher and revealer of Christ. It seems that it is God’s strategy that His righteous ones who find their center in Him and what He has revealed of His way, truth, and life. It sounds simple, but His way, truth, and life is meant for the “inside of the cup.” We are created to live from the center out.
Inside out living is the power that God uses to tell the world what He is like. That is the glory that God has bestowed upon His children when we become like Jesus (Rom. 8:29) we represent the stability of the universe. If we do not embrace the re-shaping of our lives in the “image of Christ” we failed at our very purpose of our existence. This isn’t heaven no matter what Archie said. Baseball in an Iowa cornfield is not it.
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Week of September 22, 2024Sunday, September 22, 2024 Weekly Blog
Here is something to think about. Though Jesus did not have a sin nature like us he had to face the tempter with temptation that the Scriptures described like us when it says, “He was tempted in every way like us.” Temptation isn’t in and of itself isn’t the result of our humanness because Jesus was fully human. Jesus was tempted to disobey His purpose or vision. He came to provide a path of redemption in light of the glory of God. It was His commitment to that vision that enabled Him to choose to resist Satan’s direct attacks.
We as fallen creatures have to deal with the self-centered self or ego, but on another plane of our humanness the issue is the glory of God. If the glory of God is our vision, we have what we need to resist the weakness of our egos or self. Maybe the issue at some level is our commitment to our purpose, the glory of God (Isa. 43:7). Maybe that is what we need to reflect on each day, living for the glory of God.
Jesus is our example for what it is to be human. So, maybe we ought not shame our humanness and instead confront our lack of vision or commitment to the vision into which we have been born. Being conformed to the image of Christ is not just a commitment to His character, but also a commitment to living out the vision of God for us with a consistent intentionality. Maybe the question each morning as we arise from sleep is, “How might I envision the glory of God today in all that I am and all that I do?”
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Week of September 15, 2024Sunday, September 15, 2024
Weekly Blog
Integrity is important to Jesus. Usually, we think that has to do with whether we speak truly or whether we lie, but it seems according to the Scriptures that Jesus is talking about a much higher standard. When we are converted to Christ it is so much more than simply moving from hell to heaven. Jesus intent it seems to me was to bring about the transformation of our lives that we might grow into Christlikeness and then represent Him to the pagan world in which we live.
I find it interesting that most of the New Testament writers in their letters to the believing community focused on what the gospel of Christ lived out in the followers of Jesus and that our task while we walk the firmament of earth is to learn to know God more fully in our experience and then to show the world what the grace of God is meant to do in the re-formation of our lives. As an example, the Apostle tells us in Romans 8 that we are here to be conformed to the image of Christ.
The development of grace is what is often missing in life. Somehow our understanding of grace is completely passive since we know that salvation does not come through works of the flesh. However, I think we have missed Jesus’ point. Grace or God at work is meant to exist in stereo. The sound of grace, the sight of grace, and the experience of grace is meant to be residual, resident, and resplendent throughout our lives. It is meant to be a reservoir of quality that irrigates the fields of our lives.
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Week of September 8, 2024Sunday, September 08, 2024
Weekly Blog
It is a typical reality for serious followers of Jesus that no matter when and where we live the world in which we live is pagan. It was true in the 1st century, and it is true in the 21st century. Jesus’ way, truth, and life has never been the common culture no matter when and where humankind has lived. Simply put, this is not heaven which is the absolute dominion of Almighty God. He rules with absolute holiness and love. I am becoming quite aware that at our best we are only a caricature of what we were designed to become.
What is usually mission for us is a vision of what we are to become – Christlikeness. In the modality Dallas Willard put forward, we need a clear vision, a solid intentionality, and a commitment to the necessary means to honestly pursue the vision. To become a delight to our Creator, Redeemer, and Sustainer is worth every effort. Our conversion to Christ is a conversion from the natural instincts of our pagan world. In that sense what we are becoming is so much more important than what we have been.
We have one life to live and the person we become is our main work. In the words of Gordon Smith, we have been called to vocational holiness. My work, your work is holiness before God. Holiness is a matter of wholeness as well as the transformative separateness that sets us apart from the pagan instincts with which we exist. Our journey is the process of replacing those old instincts with the vital living instincts demonstrated by Jesus. In that every day that we breathe as an eternal purpose.
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Week of September 1, 2024Sunday, September 01, 2024 Weekly Blog
The challenge I am embracing these days comes from a life changing text, Shaped by The Word. With the emphasis that I grew up with on conversion to Christ the focus was on making a decision. The path that God has set before us is so much more than that. I am deeply grateful that I was introduced to scripture memory long before I made that important decision for Christ. From the very beginning of my life, I believed that the scriptures were vital to life.
I have a vivid memory as a pre-teen of a regular gathering in which various members of the community were assigned to bring something to the group. In particular, I remember one old, dirty rough handed farmer short in stature grow large in my eyes when he quoted from memory, Romans 8. In all those years attending that monthly gathering I only specifically remember that experience. I take that to be God speaking to me about the importance of being shaped by His Word.
When you think about it, if this is what God has revealed of Himself and His ways why wouldn’t we want to be shaped by it. This is His take on reality now and this is His Way on the other side. The more I am embracing what He has revealed the more I am becoming what He created me to be. Therefore, our journey into His story with us is learning to live to His glory.
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Week of February 25, 2024Monday, February 26, 2024
Weekly Blog
As we engage with Jesus as He turns His attention to the cross that awaits Him, we are challenged as to whether we draw near to Him, or we begin to pull away. The disciples were quite confused as He began to talk about leaving and going. For the last nearly three years they we used to Jesus dropping out for short periods of time (for prayer), but He always came back and then they were off to the next place never sure where or why, but they were always invited along.
As the focus for Jesus changes His language changes as well and He begins to bear down on yet inexperienced terrain for them. He begins to talk of things that were confusing for them. Yet, we know the rest of the story, but like the disciples Jesus is asking to join Him in these days and join Him closely. Join Him using your imagination and opening our hearts to Him so that we actually join Him in the story.
I confess that I have never opened myself to the experience of The Passion Week, I have only thought about it at best. As followers of Jesus, we naturally let the centuries separate us from His presence in the story. We think about it as an event, but not an experience. If we will allow ourselves to consider what He was thinking and feeling to the degree that the text may allow us, I suspect that He will draw us into a new environment with Him and we will be the better for it.
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Week of February 19, 2024Sunday, April 02, 2023
Weekly Blog
With the advent of Lent, the journey with Jesus takes both a deeper cut and a darker swath as we head to the cross. The cross is about sin and sacrifice and love and the path to real freedom in Christ. It is such a “heavy” road and one that we often need to be reminded of. Substance is often hard and requires a greater engagement from us. The deeper we experience the darkness of our sin, the greater the glory of forgiveness, love, and freedom. Seeing the ugliness of sin is not morose but choosing to move more intimate with Jesus.
No wonder those who have gone before us saw this season as one in which we would genuinely fast as we become more fully aware of the seriousness of the encounter with Jesus’ love for us that would lead Him to the cross, not flippantly but through a well thought out submission. It is in His humanness that He would fight the good fight for us. The cross is a serious spiritual moment a grievous moment that made not only atonement for our sins, but also an entry into the life Jesus came to offer to us.
If we are seriously going to invite the transformation of our lives into the shaping presence, heart, mind, and will of Jesus, then we ought not draw back from heart heaviness of Lent. The historic practices of fasting (not just abstinence), pray (with lament), and alms-giving are meant to lift us up out of our endless self-referenced living and in a renewed Christ-referenced way of living if only for 40 days. What an unspeakable blessing!
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Week of February 12, 2024Sunday, April 02, 2023
Weekly Blog
On the one hand the journey is so very simple and on the other it is so very difficult. What Jesus has put before us is simple, “Come follow me.” But the following is so very difficult because we would rather lead than follow. The problem is we cannot do both, they are mutually exclusive. As is made clear in the series, The Chosen the disciples of Jesus had to get used to the fact that they rarely knew where they were going, how long they would be there, and what they were to do while they were there.
It is so very difficult not knowing and not having clarity ahead of time. Jesus simply called them to follow Him. Ultimately it was a matter of trust, would they trust Him when they didn’t have all their questions answered? They had to deal with “soon” or “not now.” How are we then when it comes to following Him, our followership usually requires trust, patience, and simple obedience with what He has already told us.
We are about to enter the season leading up to the Passion Week. The spirit of this season takes us into a deeper dive of engagement. If we learn to walk with Jesus, the path is meant to transform our hearts so that we can join Jesus at this time heart to heart. I suspect that we are hesitant because our comfort is so important to us, but it seems to me that He offers us the same Source and the same comfort that He experienced as He walked this line. Maybe it is time that we experience the comfort that comes to us in the midst of fellowship with the Trinity, not from a painless life but one rich in love.
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Week of Febuary 5, 2024Sunday, April 02, 2023
Weekly Blog
As followers of Jesus, it is imperative that we learn how to live out our purpose in life by watching Him. In a way the journey of life is so simple, just follow Jesus. We have the story from the perspectives of His first followers. These are first person accounts of what He did and how He did what He did. I think the way has become somewhat vague to us because we are not like what He first spoke of, “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”
Apparently, what is most common to us fallen creates is that we are not naturally poor in spirit, yet read from right to left, “the kingdom of heaven is populated by the poor in spirit.” I suppose in our contemporary vernacular, the kingdom of heaven is populated with those who live a Christ-referenced life and for the most part the kingdom of earth is populated with those who live a self-referenced life.
We have put a lot of emphasis in our lifetime on getting people converted, but sometimes I wonder. Maybe we haven’t challenged our spiritual family to embrace the way of the kingdom of heaven. It begins with being poor in spirit. If what Jesus said is true, maybe the kingdom of heaven is what Jesus showed us what it was and our natural lifestyle is our problem, a big problem. Maybe we haven’t known that we have been converted from accumulation of wealth, seeking honor, and control of all things. If I understand the word, conversion spiritually speaking is to be converted from something and converted to something. I suspect simply following Jesus takes away from what has been and to what hasn’t been.
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Week of January 28, 2024Monday, January 29, 2024
Weekly Blog
As we track the movements of Jesus this week, He takes us with Him to the synagogue in Simon, Andrew, Big James, and John’s hometown, Capernaum. Rabbinically-trained, Jesus stands to explain the Old Testament text and suddenly the audience is exposed to authoritative teaching. Not the same “humdrum, mind-dulling” expose’ of the sacred text. Jesus stands out in the most elementary way.
In the words of William Manson, British theologian, “The rabbi taught, and nothing happened, Jesus taught, and all kinds of things happened.” I suspect that when we are truly open to the Spirit who has inspired the text and when we are hungry for God, then the text comes alive to us, and we are transformed little by little. Being shaped by the Word is a glorious experience in the adventure we live.
Jesus audience is often taken with the phenomenon that attends His words, but when we are truly open in our minds and hearts to truth, the truth stays with us. It is the nutrition for the soul. The phenomenon is simply the packaging. It is meant to get our attention. It is meant to illustrate the power that lies in the truth. It is through the Word in our hearts and souls that creates the light of Christ in us.
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Week of January 7, 2024Monday, January 08, 2024
Weekly Blog
As we track the movements of Jesus this week, He takes us with Him to the Jordan River and His encounter with His cousin, John, the one we have come to call “the Baptist.” The point of John Mark’s description of that day is that the way of Jesus is the way of humility. I turn to Paul for the most direct definition of the term when he wrote to his brethren in Rome when he said, “… rather think of yourself with sober judgment….” I think that is an excellent definition of humility…sober judgment.
In my vernacular I describe this humility as being “comfortable in your own skin.” There is no deceiving oneself, no “kidding ourselves.” Humility is based on the truth of things, on reality. It means living without inflating oneself or deflating oneself. Humility only truly exists when we can see ourselves as beloved sinners. God sees us for who we are not who we are not. And yet His love for us remains consistent.
Jesus begins His work with a clear-cut declaration by His Father as beloved and a delight. All before He begins to function in the assignment that He was given…the Savior of humankind. Like Jesus our creation is a beloved delight in the heart of the Father. Being beloved delight is meant to set us free to love Him more nearly and walk with Him more clearly day by day. We are meant to start the day with affirmation not living the day striving for affirmation. It is ours but we have to receive it. Living for our glory is the perpetual carrot on a stick. The carrot never becomes ours.
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Week of December 31, 2023Monday, January 01, 2024
Weekly Blog
Today we celebrate the first week of Christmas. The journey leads us through the “showing” of who Jesus is to the beginning of His official incarnational work. Jesus said early on “I must work the works of Him who has sent Me while it is day for the night comes when no one can work.” Ironically, that became my life verse about age 10 or 11. It still describes what each day is about. Along with that comes a meaningful life purpose.
The principle and foundation for those of us who follow Jesus was stated in Isaiah’s prophecy, “… for you have been created for My glory.” The point is we are here for the sake of the Other – the glory or shining of God. We are here to make Him shine throughout the planet. The life that we have been given is a gift that we can choose its shape and substance.
Jesus has given us the freedom of partnership with Him. He made that concrete when He described our role as a yoke, designed to keep us aligned and in cadence with Him. As we enter a new calendar year, this is a great time to evaluate our alignment and reflect on the speed of our cadence. Often, we push ahead of Jesus but at the same time we are often speed by the opportunities that He places before us. Stopping to reflect is a grace, the pure unmerited favor of God where God is at work.
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Week of December 24, 2023Monday, December 25, 2023
Weekly Blog
The candle for our celebration of this fourth Sunday of Advent is the angels’ candle. The lectionary gospel readings highlight the experience of the shepherds (the lowest class of folk) out doing the dirty stinking cold and lonely work of attending to flocks of the wealthy. It is to these people on that night that the angels of the Most High came and announced the salvation story.
The conversation the angels brought was the announcement of what had happened. The physical reality could be discovered in a “trailer park” of sorts in the midst of farm animals. The encouragement was to go and see for yourselves and then tell everyone. It is a message from the ground up not the top down. It has remained that way.
The message becomes reality as the shepherds confirm what has been told them. The message becomes Good News for everyone. God only waits for us to come to grips with the importance of the Good News – news that lasts, that never loses its dynamic. Maybe we live fast asleep needing an angel of the Lord to reawaken us to the Good News of Bethlehem.
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Week of December 17, 2023Monday, December 18, 2023
Weekly Blog
The candle for our celebration of this third Sunday of Advent is the shepherds’ candle. The lectionary gospel readings highlight the conversation John the Baptist had with the Jewish leaders. John’s conversation entailed what the Baptist had said about himself and how he referred to Jesus as one among them that they were blind to.
The conversation regarded light in the midst of darkness. Unless one recognizes one’s own bent toward darkness, it is hard to recognize the light. It always has been, and I suppose it always will be. I’m reminded of something Jesus said later in John’s gospel when He was describing the arrival of the Spirit and announced His task. “… He will convict men of sin, righteousness, and judgment.”
The purpose of the Light is to reveal itself in the midst of the surrounding darkness. I think that an important posture for us as we anticipate the Advent celebration and the second Advent event it is a good time to make space for reflection on the light of Christ within us. The purpose of the light is to shine. As it takes up residence within us our work in this Advent Season is to shine the light on the Light.
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Week of December 10, 2023Monday, December 11, 2023
Weekly Blog
The candle for our celebration of this second Sunday of Advent is the Bethlehem candle. The lectionary gospel readings highlight the prophecy of Isaiah regarding John the Baptist. John Mark was most likely a teenager in the Baptist’s day, and he recalls his experience with the Baptist from his youthful perspective. The prophet impacted Mark in a way that prepared him to respond to Jesus.
The Baptist’s message prepared a dry spiritual climate with the vibrancy of confession and repentance. We probably minimize the connection between confession, repentance and salvation faith, but it seems from God’s perspective since this was His plan from centuries before that as fallen people, we would need a message and action of preparation before we would be ready to receive from Jesus.
I think that an important posture for us as we anticipate the Advent celebration and the second Advent event it is a good time to make space for reflection on the condition of our souls. Are we living in the vitality of Jesus’ way, truth, and life or have we lost the edge of our spiritual openness to the conviction and work of the Holy Spirit. Make this Advent Season one for a greater intimacy with the Prince of Peace.
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Week of December 3, 2023Monday, December 04, 2023
Weekly Blog
The candle for our celebration of this first Sunday of Advent is the candle of prophecy. The lectionary gospel readings highlight Jesus’ conversation with the disciples just before the beginning of what turned out to be the Passion week. They we about to lose Him in flesh and blood and yet they could not conceive of such a thing, so I assume much of what He said about His return escaped their comprehension.
How could it be that you are leaving, you just got here as far as they were concerned and yet here is Jesus describing something they would not experience in their lifetime. That would suggest to me that He was talking to them for our sake as much as for their sake. The main thing in all that He says seems to me to pay attention. Learn to live alert! Not only in order to be ready for His return in power, glory, and judgment, but also to simply live well.
Living in light of Christ and living with a sense of accountability for that which is beyond oneself is to live well. Living life for ourselves is dead-end living. Maybe that is why there is so much deadness around us. Someone wrote a book about that with the descriptors of “terminal thinking” and “relational thinking.” Relating the events, experiences, and knowledge for the sake of others breeds vitality and dynamic. Acquiring accomplishments, experiences, or knowledge as an end in itself is terminal or death creating. Make this Advent Season one for the sake of others.
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Week of November 12, 2023Monday, November 13, 2023
Weekly Blog
I was struck with the contemporary importance of the Protestant Reformation this week. I had coffee with a Catholic brother, a true brother in Christ. I have no doubt as to the genuineness of his faith in Christ, but I so disagreed with his theology. One of the things that the Reformers did for us was to call us to certain certainties call sola or “alone.” Not everything that is popular is true. There have always been traditions that enter our frame of thought that “fit nicely” but are not true.
The spirit of the Reformation was one of pushing away from certain traditions and embracing true truth claims. Traditions form around taking our earthly definitions of God instead of God’s biblical definitions of Himself that can be observed in the scriptures in how He reveals Himself. Inevitably in time man’s ideas of reality trump truth, especially when man’s sentiments digress from God’s way.
It was a good experience for me as I had to consider how I responded in the midst of the conversation. I am clearer about the theology than I am about myself. The conversation was greatly fruitful for me in that it caused me to face myself and what the issues are that God would have me face. I saw in myself one of the “sins of the fathers” that I was somewhat aware of but ignorant of its impact in how I relate to others. The net is, it was a very healthy conversation for me.
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Week of November 5, 2023Monday, November 06, 2023
Weekly Blog
In the rhythm of the church that some are aware of and others not so much, but I think it is a worthwhile celebration. It is usually referred to a “All Saints Day.” I think it is worthwhile to remember those who have gone before us that God used to lead us to faith in Christ. God used some to explain the gospel of Christ to us and others he used to show us the way through their lives.
Many times, in modern history there have been multitudes of efforts to draw attention to the salvation message. In my lifetime whether it was a Billy Graham Crusade or other evangelist or the “I Found It” strategy or simply sharing the Four Spiritual Laws with fellow college students. We are a very media savvy population, but in my life, it was the influence of those who were living out the character of Jesus in one way or another that had the most impact on me.
When I think of saints, I think of those that grasped the way of love and sacrifice to provide a path with clarity in pursing the Jesus way, truth, and life. Since childhood I have had the grace of spiritual writers who speak to the deeper issues in discipleship. These writers who have passed on to glory continue to speak to me of what the way of the greater glory of God is. I have discovered true saints from different theological stripes who grasped God’s love and His ways from biblical days throughout the following history.
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Week of October 29, 2023Monday, October 30, 2023
Weekly Blog
Today we celebrate an event in history that makes a great difference in the lives of those who follow Jesus. Reformation Sunday is a commemoration of a time of choosing the Word over tradition, truth over supposition, faith over works, grace over penance, Christ over the Church. The practical point is that to be a disciple of Jesus is to focus in on the “freedom of the Christian.”
As followers of Jesus, we have a heritage of courage, not just courage in the past but the way of courage in the present. Standing on the truth of Christ and standing up for the truth is part of our DNA. As is often the case we tend to depend on the work that those in the past did for our sakes while the challenge is to do the work to refresh and sustain the truth in the present.
Truth separates fact from fiction, but the learning to live Jesus’ truth is an expression of compassion, not judgment. Judgment is God’s bailiwick not ours. But we can and are called to hold to the truth. In both the heavenlies and on earth truth is always under attack. As disciples of Jesus we are called to step up and fill the gaps all around us with truth.
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Week of October 22, 2023Monday, October 23, 2023
Weekly Blog
I’m thinking about the “wisdom of stability” these days. Jonathan Wilson-Hargrove wrote a book by that name to describe the work that God had given he and his wife to do in Walltown area of Durham, North Carolina. A group of believers made a commitment to live in a run-down area of Durham and bring the way of Jesus through their personal and communal lives. It required staying put and living out the gospel of Christ.
In our faith community we have been studying the attributes of God over the last several months as we seek to learn to know who God is and how He is different necessarily than ourselves. Our final theme focuses on the immutability of God, a God who does not change. What occurs to me is that God knows that the immutability of God is important for us. Everything in temporal life is on the move usually in dissipation.
The stability of God is life, eternal life. His staying the same is anything but boring. The stability of God as He enters our lives is the source of a dynamic life. His immutability when we embrace Him allows us to be the creatures that He created us to become. Steadiness of life is the environment for profound change. I am thankful that the unchanging God of ours is continually present and accessible.
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Week of October 14, 2023Sunday, October 15, 2023
Weekly Blog
One of the great dilemmas in living as humans is our natural bent toward fulfilling our own will while we live in a universe governed by God’s will. It some ways we are simply kidding ourselves when we think we have power over the will and ways of God. I suppose that the very nature of sin is to think we are who we are not and to think that we have power over all circumstances of life. I think about that when I hear someone say, “I’m never going to let that happen again” as though they have the power over every uncomfortable circumstance.
The fact is we live under the umbrella of God’s sovereignty. Only God is totally free, and our freedom is rooted in Jesus. Our self-protective instincts can control our actions. It is only when we receive our freedom from Him and in Him that we have any semblance of true freedom and yet it is freedom to find ourselves safe under the will of the One who loves us most.
God’s sovereignty becomes our friend when we make space to reflect on the many showings in our lives where God showed up with goodness, beauty, and truth. Seeing God go before us is a way for us to embrace His sovereignty. I’m so glad that God is sovereign that He has always known what was good and He has always had the power to work within His will of “prosperity” of spiritual goodness for me. Learn to pay attention to His ways with each of us is the path to so much joy.
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Week of October 8, 2023Monday, October 09, 2023
Weekly Blog
It is God’s job alone to maintain the wholeness which is the healthiness of the universe. That is why He gets angry over sin. Sin disrupts and destroys our wholeness and the universe’s wholeness because we are part of the universe. That is why we need to tune into holiness. Holiness maintains our wholeness as well as the universe’s wholeness. Holiness is our friend because it is for our good. Unholiness robs us of our well-being.
God is always interested in our good. It would seem that we aren’t always. Why would I choose that which is to my detriment? Maybe the fact is I have been tricked by the evil one and frankly, I trick myself. That is the hard thing to keep in mind. Often, I don’t know what is best for me and I am willing to settle for less than God is willing to do.
My point is holiness is our friend. If we don’t hold out for it in our world, who will? There is a beauty in holiness, and we need to learn to see it that way. It is up to us as followers of Jesus to hold fast to holiness. That is our first assignment. Gordon T. Smith makes a great case for the fact that our main work is vocational holiness in his book, Called to Be Saints.
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Week of September 24, 2023Monday, September 25, 2023
Weekly Blog
We have officially entered the autumn season and with it a different rhythm. Along with the weather in this season it is like a reprieve before winter. It is a perfect season to notice, attend to, and wonder. I think we are okay with noticing, not as good at making the space necessary to attend to, but utter failures at wondering. Wondering requires stopping and allowing ourselves to enter into awe.
Awe speaks to our souls and our souls provide the sacredness of our lives. If we make empty space to notice that leads to wonder, we need the space to use our imagination as well as our thinking. Our imagination brings color to our lives. It helps us see beyond the surface of reality and engage the depths of life. Wondering leads us beyond our self-referenced thinking in order to see God behind all that is.
Autmn is also the season for preparation. Though it never last as long as I would like, it does provide enough time to take on the richness, the spiritual calories if you will that will be needed for the natural transitions and challenges that no doubt are ahead for us. Preparation takes time and it is a process of good labor that enriches the soul. I think the challenge of autumn is to make empty space that is not distracted so that we can receive what God has to give us.
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Week of September 17, 2023Monday, September 18, 2023
Weekly Blog
This week I am giving thought to the compassion and mercy of God. What is difficult for us is that according to the scriptures (Ex. 33:19) God chooses who He has mercy for and who He is compassionate toward. What God does is governed by His own will and His actions are not according to a principle. I think we want life to be governed by impersonal principles so that we can be assured of what will happen. But in fact, that is on us, not on God.
On one hand we are quick to confirm that God is Person and relates to us personally, yet we are not ready for what that means. Our first error in our thinking is that we know what God’s attributes mean and how they will be expressed in our “earthly” life. It behooves us to study the scriptures to see how God’s ways have been with His created ones and how it varies in accordance with His purposes.
What is consistent is that in compassion and mercy God came to earth to provide a way for our salvation. That is available to all who believe. We can choose to place our lives in His hands for His purposes (Isa. 43:7) and that is a compassionate path. In His compassion He offers to shape and form us in the way of Jesus. Compassion and mercy is all around us, but always on His terms.
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Week of September 10, 2023Monday, September 11, 2023
Weekly Blog
This week I am giving thought to the justice of God. Our most common distorted attachment is that we have a tendency to think about justice from the center of ourselves out. Such as if it seems just to me then it is just. If it doesn’t seem just to me then it isn’t just. I suspect that most of our practical theology is not with God and His Word and actions, but with our “take” on things that fit our way of thinking. Thus, when it comes to our understanding of life we live with a distorted perspective.
When we look carefully at how God looked at things through His story with us, we see that the notions of righteousness and justice stands apart from our normal human self-referenced perspective. It would seem that with absence of God as the center of reality we are particularly at a loss to come to grips with the fact that reality defies our sensibilities.
We can glibly declare that we need to let God be God, but are we ready for that? To let God be who He is requires that we live in submission to Him, how He thinks and how He acts. The scriptures are replete with story after story of what God says and what God does. Can we learn to let Him define the meaning of the words that we are given. If we choose live what He says and if we accept what He does our lives become more of what we were created for.
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Week of August 27, 2023Monday, August 28, 2023
Weekly Blog
If we learn God’s way and if we walk in the light as He is in the light we will stand apart as odd, irrelevant, and out of touch. Things have come to that in our world! Living tossed to and fro by the ever-changing mood of our day has come to be known as an in-step, progressive mindset. No wonder there is such a stressful spirit that describes ordinary life in our contemporary world. To stand apart has never been acceptable. It wasn’t in Jesus’ day, and it isn’t in our day.
The Chosen has informed us that Jesus was mostly known as a “rogue preacher” to the establishment. To walk in the light as He is in the light continues to identify us as radical or revolutionary. Our greatest challenge is to stay the course to the end and not bend to the forces that surround the followers of Jesus to “not be ridiculous” and “find a middle ground” in which to carry our “religion.” Among the many influences that his solitary life revealed, Jesus’ “centeredness” was and is the most powerful.
I think our challenge is to learn the cadence that Jesus set for us and walk in it. It becomes a personal choice and in the vocabulary of Ignatius of Loyola, it is a matter of our election, our choosing a deeper way and fuller path. Doesn’t it seem that our days are more like Jesus’ day than the day into which we were born. These are the days of Elijah. The days of meaningful separation, separating our hearts to Christ. We can lament the direction of our days or we can embrace the unique call of Christ in which we are daily called to “carry our crosses” and thus live for His glory alone.
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Week of August 20, 2023Monday, August 21, 2023
Weekly Blog
I confess I grew up believing propositional truth and doubting human personal experience. My misunderstanding came from believing that in my fallenness everything about my humanity was distorted except for my brain and if I were to think rationally, logically, and in a linear way that we be the only path to reality. What I didn’t recognize was some of the very truths that I believed. For instance, as Moses wrote in the Genesis, that we were created in God’s image with all the human capacity that we would need to obey the will of God and to experience Him as Adam and Eve did.
I’ve come to see in the writers of the Text of God’s story with us, they wrote out of their experiences with God that we have come to see as truth. From Genesis to Revelation God has been speaking and working and listening to those who tell us the Story. I think one of the reasons that the film, The Chosen, has connected for so many people is that the text that we are so familiar with has “come to life” through the imagination of the writers of the screen play.
The disciples have come to life with real character depth. We can see ourselves in them and their personal stories speak to us just as Jesus’ words and way speaks to us. We are able to see that the message is in the experience. Words on the page are certainly true, but they are more than words on the page. They are realities to be experienced. Each character models a common human experience in coming to follow Jesus and that is the point – coming to follow Jesus. We each have obstacles to overcome for the sake of our genuine discipleship with Jesus. Their story spurs me on!
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Week of August 13, 2023Monday, August 14, 2023
Weekly Blog
I’ve been giving thought to discernment as a way of life. For a follower of Jesus there is both knowledge to be gained and wisdom to be acquired and a present sense of openness to be experienced. The reading I have been doing goes to great lengths to make discernment a practice broken down into numerous rules of discernment. But as helpful as they might be it seems that specific awareness and attentiveness spiritually provides the necessary spiritual intuition.
There are three categories of knowledge that fill our spiritual base: what is God’s way for us in the Jesus, “way, truth, and life.” What is the evil one’s way for us, “to steal, kill, and destroy.” And what is the way of the flesh, “lust of the eyes, the lust of the flesh, and the boastful pride of life.” All three of these influences are part of the discernment journey. If our core question is, what is God’s will for me in this or that situation that needs to be our beginning question.
As the Apostle warned us, “we war not against flesh and blood, but against principalities and powers in heavenly places.” The evil one’s main goal is to disrupt our journey of walking with God. He is the great disrupter. He uses pride and deception to distort the journey always wanting to “steal, kill, and destroy.” Spiritual discernment is meant to be part of our daily story of life, living with God in the atmosphere of the fruits of the Spirit.
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Week of August 6, 2023Monday, August 07, 2023
Weekly Blog
Ignatius of Loyola has had a significant influence both in his lifetime and since his death. His experience of conversion has provided humankind with fruitful path to be wholly converted to Jesus. The journey begins with a vivid engagement with the love of God for each of us personally and intimately. The journey includes walking with Jesus through each phase of our conversion story.
The preparation for the journey leads us to encounter the gracious created reason for our existence on earth, created for the glory of God. If we can learn to hold that truth in the reality of our souls and not let go, it becomes a beacon that continually draws us into it and sheds light on the way before us day by day.
The pursuit of God is our life-long cadence. As we engage the way of Jesus we are faced with the continual process of praise, reverence, and service. It is meant to lead us to a life of greater and greater intimacy with Him. As we draw close to Him, His radiance transforms our souls so that we might follow the Teacher even above the teachings. In this God separates us into a relationship with Him above any religion.
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Week of July 30, 2023Sunday, July 30, 2023
Weekly Blog
I’ve been giving thought to the fact that we have been created for God’s glory (Isa. 43:7). It is the purpose of our existence. I’ve thought about what that means for me and to me. I don’t think we are all that used to the word glory, so I’ve been seeking out what Mirriam-Webster have to say about it. Surely, they could be of some help – and they were. The word that resonates most for me in my study is the word, radiance. Thus, we have been created for His radiance. I find that stunning!
In my study of the nature of God that is given to us through the Holy Spirit is palatable. If I read it right, I’m to radiate every day all day, love, joy, peace, patience, goodness, kindness, gentleness, faithfulness, and self-control. Yes, I have to contend with my fallen but deeply loved by God nature, but the question is, do I envision life as a created one who exists for the radiance of God?
I think the saddest thing that can exist is a Christian who does not know that he was created on purpose for a purpose that brings glory to God in the radiance of his life. Maybe our struggle is that we have become attached to lessor things so that we never rise to our calling in Christ. Our created purpose from God is meant to set us free to pursue the greatness that God has always had in mind for us.
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Week of July 24, 2023Monday, July 24, 2023
Weekly Blog
Journeying through the Ignatian Spiritual Exercises can be a life transforming experience. The focus is on experiencing God as a way of life and entering into the freedom that that brings. I’m reminded of Paul’s statement in his letter to the Galatian Church, “It was for freedom that Christ set you free.” The Ignatian term for that freedom is indifference. Not our usual definition of the term, but the focus is on Christ so that the other influences in life take a backseat to Jesus. It is meant to give us freedom to live in His atmosphere.
When we learn to breathe Jesus there is an amazing freedom and centeredness that the chaos that often encircles us in circumstances cannot take away from our hearts and minds and souls. I think that gives us the opportunity to live in accordance with our true selves, not the false self of lust and pride.
It doesn’t matter the Christian tradition or era, there have always been saints of Christ who have undertaken the path that has led to a meaningful encounter with Jesus from Paul’s statement to the Galatians, “I am crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me…” to Teresa of Avila to Thomas a Kempis to Julian of Norwich to Ignatius of Loyola to A.W. Tozer to C.S. Lewis to Dallas Willard.
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Week of July 17, 2023Sunday, July 16, 2023
Weekly Blog
I read something a week or so ago that has provoked me, and I have given a fair amount of thought to it since. In one of the groups, I am in we are working our way through the book, Following the Call. My friend, Chuck Moore who is a part of the Bruderhof has assembled a weekly reflection on the Sermon on the Mount. One of the questions in the first chapter has stayed with me, “How is following a teaching different than following a teacher?” I’ve been provoked that the first disciples were simply following the Teacher.
The dynamic of that pulls at my heart. I’m all for following what Jesus taught, but I am even more excited about following the Teacher. The question is not what would Jesus do, but rather what did Jesus do? It is of a completely different mood to consider the existential dynamic of walking with Jesus throughout the day, day in day out. I cannot get away from the draw of the present personal dynamism that the disciples experienced.
I don’t think it is all that unusual for us to give ourselves to want to follow a script. However, it is a whole new thing to follow the Person of Jesus. We have to get used to not knowing where we are going, what we are going to be doing, and how long we are going to be there. It seems like the Lord’s Prayer makes a lot of sense if we are intent on following the Teacher. There is a dailiness about it and there is an immense practicality to life with the Teacher.
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Week of July 9, 2023Monday, April 10, 2023
Weekly Blog
An important aspect of life is the dimension of growth resident in our minds and hearts. Over time we are meant to be engaged in the transformation of letting go and embracing. I think that is what is required to continually experience vitality. There have always been things that we have thought and valued that we know now are not what we thought they were. Growth is about choosing what we come to understand to be more important.
Experience has to be experienced and we cannot know what we have not experienced. We can make a commitment early in life to be shaped by that which has stood the test of time – the Word of God, but we rarely can perceive its importance when we are young. So much of what we think is gathered from the surrounding world and its influences. It is hard to anticipate that which sets life apart in its fullness when we have so little experience.
Frankly, the richness of life is meant to grow and in order to grow, fresh water must enter into our minds and hearts. It is not unlike the two bodies of water between the Jordan River. The Sea of Galilee, fresh water in and fresh water out. The Dead Sea, fresh water in, no water out. One is the metaphor of life, the other the metaphor of death.
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Week of July 2, 2023Tuesday, April 04, 2023
Weekly Blog
I may have written about this before, but actually I don’t remember. It is so important that if I did it is worth repeating. Dallas Willard wrote a book titled, Life Without Lack. It is about living out Psalm 23. In dealing with faith as a central aspect in our spiritual lives, he uses Job’s experience as an example of the progression in our faith development. In a very helpful way, he identifies the most common experience that we have with faith when it names it, the faith of propriety. It is the common notion that if we are being blessed, we are where we should be.
On the other hand, if things are going wrong, then there is something we need to correct in our faith. However, life in the ways of God is meant to deepen our trust in Him. We don’t come by trust easily as it requires that we put our full weight on Him and that is an uncomfortable dependence for us. Putting our full weight on Him requires that we let go of being able to control everything in our lives. Letting go feels very risky, yet that is often what He asks of us. The second stage of our faith development he calls, the faith of desperation.
It is when we are desperate and are genuinely not in control that we are finally open to faith on His terms. Faith on His terms is the faith of sufficiency. When God is enough and we have no other protection, it is then that trust in Him means something. I don’t know if we have to go through the challenges that Job did in order to come to the faith of sufficiency, but if we are willing to challenge our simplistic definitions and live with the risk of sufficiency, I do think it can change the arc of our life in Christ.
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Week of June 25, 2023Sunday, June 25, 2023
Weekly Blog
I’ve been giving some thought to the importance of experience. For some of us in the Christian paradigm we have been taught that truth is limited to propositional statements and the theological defense of those statements. But I think God has shown Himself in the scriptural account that though he does not need anything, he wants to be known in our experiences. It is difficult to have relationship without experience of the “other.” It seems to me that what we believe about God is meant to be experienced with Him. It is hard to imagine a relationship without experience.
We only know in the deepest most genuine way through our experience. What we believe about God it is only of help to us when we experience it. In other words, to know Him is to experience Him. I can love the Lord thy God with my head, only with my heart. What is it then to engage my heart if not with the experience of life.
Experience is historical, it happened in time, it is emotional, or it engages my feelings, it is meaningful or memorable. When we encounter God in creation, in conversations, and in circumstances those are all experiences. Thinking and feeling are both essential in the process of experience. All the great spiritual writers from former times wrote from what they had experienced with God, and I think that is why we still are impacted by what they have shared with us. It might behoove us to take some time this week and collect some of the experiences that we have had in creation, conversation (including meet Him in the scriptures), and circumstances. He reveals Himself all the time to us if we can see His hand and recognize His voice.
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Week of June 12, 2023Monday, June 12, 2023
Weekly Blog
I have been giving thought to the “being” of God. I don’t think we give thought to that maybe because it has never occurred to us or maybe it is because we don’t know how to think about it. I confess that I am indebted to an author from an earlier generation, A.W. Tozer, d. 1963 the same year that C.S. Lewis died. When Tozer writes about God’s attributes, he addresses God’s being. The subject seems to be rather esoteric, but when one gives careful thought to those attributes there is great substance that makes a difference in our lives.
One of my frustrations in my theological education is that doctrines were taught only as propositional truths. The question never seemed to come up, so what? What difference does this fact regarding God and God’s way with man make? I’ve grown to see that every truth regarding God matters and makes a difference in our lives when we come to realize that truth is meant to be experienced. For instance, it makes a difference in my life when I experience God’s sovereignty. Sovereignty includes God’s omniscience (all knowing), God’s omnipotence (all powerful), and absolute freedom (accountable to nothing but His own will). Sovereignty is not then linear but to the mortal mind, a mystery.
It is easy to see God’s sovereignty in retrospect, reflecting on the past. He shows up in completely unpredictable ways. As someone said in my hearing many years ago, “God is predictably unpredictable.” So, how then do I experience Him in His sovereignty? His sovereignty cultivates my faith and trust in Him when I can control what is happening. Sovereignty is an aspect of His being. The Scriptures reveal to us how God’s sovereignty has been expressed in various circumstances with various people in the Scriptures. I think God wants us to experience His sovereignty that we might come to know Him more fully.
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Week of May 29, 2023Sunday, April 02, 2023 Weekly Blog
Today is Pentecost Sunday, a watershed day in the life of the Church. The water of life flows in a completely different direction from before the coming of the Spirit to live in us to now, the season of the Spirit. Life was measured by obedience to the Law of Moses and now it is measured by growth and consistency in walking in cadence of the Holy Spirit. Historically, so much of the churches focus has been on the event of Pentecost, yet Jesus focused on the on-going role of the Spirit for the sake of the kingdom of God.
The teaching, revealing, empowering work of the Spirit makes all the difference in our lives. The empowerment of the Spirit in essence is for the person we are to become. Jesus’ concern for the disciples was always about the kind of persons they were to become because as a different way was being shaped in them a different expression of life would come to characterize their lives. The immersion in the Spirit is what engendered a radical way of life.
In light of our forefathers in the way, truth, and life of Jesus are we in any way a replica of that radical life? Pentecost was a radical day! A day that would be a day for the message of the kingdom of God. Is that true of our lives? Is the way that we are both an insight into the work of the Spirit as well as a replica of what the Spirit came for? Or do we view this day as a day in the past that carries little weight in the present? That would be a tragedy of tragedies! Or as Paul was inclined to say, “miserable of miseries.”
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Week of May 22, 2023Tuesday, May 23, 2023 Weekly Blog
One of the central themes in our life in relationship with God is faith. I’ve been reading about Job’s faith in Dallas Willard’s text, Life Without Lack. As I have been reading, George Mueller of Bristol has come to mind. He is my hero in living out the Lord’s Prayer. I have been especially impacted with how he remained faithful to “… give us this day our daily bread.” And yet when his daughter took seriously ill his comment was that it was to test his faith in God at a deeper level.
So, the story of Job was like that. It was to test his faith in God at a deeper level. Like most he had had a faith that was simple and linear. If you are religiously good, God would bless you. He knew a lot of that blessing in his life. If things went “south”, then there was a problem in what you were doing. Linear thinking is like that. It is unprepared for the mystery of heaven’s conversations and intentions.
When we make the mistake of thinking that all of reality is visible and understandable, we have a problem in our thinking. Our thinking is always at issue. Job didn’t know what he didn’t know. He didn’t know about the conversation taking place in the heavenlies. Maybe he would have come to the end of himself sooner if he did, but it isn’t God’s way to always inform us of what is going on. The point was for Job to come to the place that Dallas calls the “faith of sufficiency.” The destination of faith is trust when we place our full weight on God. That is the point of the Job’s life story.
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Week of May 8, 2023Tuesday, May 16, 2023 Weekly Blog
I’m being confronted with terminology that I am somewhat unfamiliar with. As I have been writing a paper for a class I am taking, maybe it would be more accurate to say, “it is taking me.” Anyway, the terminology that I have been less familiar with as it references our attitude toward God’s work within us is the notion of generosity. I know what the biblical value of generosity is, it includes a sense of sacrifice. In Paul’s second letter to the Corinthian Church, he appealed to them to sow generously and that included varying degrees of sacrifice.
Ultimately the question put before me is, am I generous toward God? The context is about much more than money. The question I have been dealing with is, “am I generous with my life in both pursuit of and receptivity toward God?” In my more familiar verbiage, “do I want all that He has for me, and do I hold back anything?” Do I put any limits on my relationship with Him trying to maintain control? Are there any limits I put on my efforts in pursuit of Him?
In 2 Corinthians 8 Paul describes the generosity of the Macedonian churches essentially saying that they put no limits on their generosity. They found great joy in their generosity. Generosity was not limited by what they had, but what they were willing to give. When I think about what God has been willing to be give to me, why would there be any limits on my generosity toward Him? It is a very convicting consideration.
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Week of May 1, 2023Monday, May 01, 2023 Weekly Blog
I’ve been struck with the cursory way that online voices reference the Bible when they are only repeating something that another popular voice (to them) acts as ones who can speak authoritatively regarding the truth of God. I fear it is the way of popular ethics, rooted in political opinion not the Word of God. I am quite certain that God has revealed His mind to us in the inspired Word of God. When the ways of man run up against what God has said then there must be a way to manipulate or minimize the significance of what God has said.
We learn to know God through the Scriptures. We learn what He is like, what His attributes are. We learn about Him through the ways He has dealt with people, His created ones. We are invited into a genuine personal relationship with Him through prayer, worship, and reading His revelation in order to be formed in the image of Christ (Rom. 8:29). Why wouldn’t we give ourselves to a personal relationship with our Creator? Why wouldn’t that be the priority of our lives? Yet, it would seem that at best most only dabble in the spiritual.
I am reminded of Paul’s statement to the Colossian church when he said, “… your real life is hidden with Christ in God.” Our real life is the life that we live in relationship with God when He is the only one in the audience. Our participation with God in this relationship is meant to be the focus of life. Everything of value comes from that.
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Week of April 24, 2023Sunday, April 23, 2023 Weekly Blog
It is my perspective that if we are to develop a relationship with God, we need to learn to know Him in our experience with Him, just as we would if we have any other relationship. I confess that that the relationship I grew up with was simply to know the truths about God so that a relationship with God was primarily a cognitive encounter. Yet, so much of the scriptures are written by or about characters that knew Him in their experience. So much of the Psalms are written to reveal the dynamic in David’s experienced relationship with Yahweh.
I wonder if that is the obstacle in our faith. Do we have so little impact on our day to day living because the truth of God has not been our experience? Are we any different than our neighbors? We face the same kind of human (earthly) circumstances, but do we respond to them differently. It seems that if we are indeed the light of Christ on earth and that is part of our purpose, what evidence is there that we are indeed the light.
I think the progression of our growth in Him requires that we learn to face ourselves in truth. Are we being transformed in any genuine way. Do I respond to the challenges that face me any differently than my neighbor. The challenge is whether the substance of who I am on the inside is any different because I say that I have a relationship with Christ. After all the scripture tells me that I am “predestined to be conformed to the image of Christ” in this life. We need to ask those around us, “do you see the light of Christ in me,” how do you see that.
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Week of April 17, 2023Sunday, April 16, 2023
Weekly Blog
My afterglow following Easter has been to consider, “How Then Shall We Live.” There is a great pull to simply fall back into line with “what needs to get done” but what if we were to resist that and consider what Paul called, “heaven’s realities” in Colossians 3? I admit, I have been watching the seasons and episodes of The Chosen and I’ve been struck with the fact that Jesus work was in the midst of the hustle and bustle of His day, but he did His kingdom work anyway. It wasn’t always easy for his followers to keep their focus.
I think that is one of the realities of kingdom of God living. We have to accept the hustle and bustle of ordinary life, but it is critical that we are not shaped by it. In fact, it is essential that we find out how God would have us live apart from it. It doesn’t have to distract us if we know how to immerse ourselves in what matters most. I used to use the illustration of the submarine. How a submarine operates depends on what it is filled with. Whatever it is filled with determines what it does. So it is with us.
If the Person and the Presence of God is what fills me, then I am able to live in a “centered” way. The weight of Presence is capable of steering the course of my living. Do you carry that kind of Weight, do I carry that Weight? Not talking about physical pounds, but are you a Weighty person? Am I a Weighty person. Substance is meant to outweigh form just as character is meant to outweigh talent. Everything about Jesus was substance and character.
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Week of April 10, 2023Sunday, April 02, 2023
Weekly Blog
The process leading up to significant biblical events like Christmas and Easter can easily capture our attention with both Advent and Lent, but what about afterward? I wonder if these crescendos dissipate too easily. What is profitable to celebrate and then move on without a meaningful afterglow? In the lectionary there is at least the intent to stay with the message for a number of weeks. What if we were to hold the significance of Jesus’ story with us intentionally for some time?
Just think about the past week. What if we were to hold our visual image of Jesus astride a donkey’s foal for a while. Let the lesson of that vignette reside in our minds and hearts. What if we were to hold the Upper Room with a last Passover meal, the first celebration of holy communion, and foot washing kept in our frontals. What if the movement of the Passion stayed with us? How might it shape our minds and hearts. And then Easter.
Use your imagination, had you been at the tomb what might you have felt? What difference would it make if your whole way of thinking were changed? Is it possible for us to carry a truth that was first experienced long ago in a continuing, even fresh way? I suspect that we suffer from forgetting what we know. I’m reminded at how Solomon treated wisdom, he often kept saying to keep the truth “on your frontals.” Don’t let transforming truths escape your everyday living.
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Week of April 3, 2023Sunday, April 02, 2023 Weekly Blog
I’ve been giving thought to foundations upon which we build our lives. As we make space to listen to the pain and thinking that guides our day, it seems like the foundations have to be recalibrated. I’m wondering if each new generation needs to revisit the foundations that set the disciples of Jesus apart from those who are simply Jesus admirers. What does it mean for us to “love the Lord your God with all of your heart, all of your soul, and all of your mind?”
I’ve been rereading the work of A. W. Tozer, solid disciple of Jesus in the middle of the 20th century, The Knowledge of the Holy. What stands out is that we are almost completely ignorant of who God is and how God works in our day. The renewal that is needed in the church it seems is to restore the truth of God as our foundation. Rather than our shaping God in our own image, it behooves us to let God shape us in His image.
For all the desire in recent days to make the gospel of Christ relevant in our cultural milieu, it seems that our calling instead is to call the common culture to the gospel of Christ. I am struck with Jesus words in the Sermon on the Mount when he said, “Enter though the narrow gate. For wide is the gate and broad is the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it. But small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find it.” In these days of an ever increasing volume it seems that Jesus calmly calls us to just live the gospel and our Father will rejoice.
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Week of March 27, 2023Sunday, March 26, 2023
Weekly Blog
I have given some thought this week to forgiveness. As we pray the prayer that Jesus taught his disciples to pray, forgiveness of trespasses, debts, or sins (depending on the translation and the location of the Lord’s Prayer) seems to be central to kingdom of God living. Knowing that our culture no longer recognizes personal sin as a reality, though evil is attended to as long as it is seen as “out there” away from “in here” we are left with tolerance. Tolerance requires nothing from us.
In the words of N.T. Wright, “forgiveness is richer and higher and harder and more shocking than we usually think!” When it comes to personal experience forgiveness requires more from us. We are required to see ourselves in truth understanding our own sin and then not hold the “other” more accountable than we hold ourselves. It is true that wrong is wrong, but sometimes our expectations of others is misplaced. Sometimes we expect of others what God alone can do.
In our common culture forgiveness itself is other offensive and to forgive becomes a point of contention, but is the way the kingdom of God will always be in earth’s fallenness. When Jesus warned his disciples that they will be hated because he was hated we often forget that. For some reason we have never owned that as part of our spiritual heritage. Consequently, we have often failed to live out our identity in Christ. If we could remember what Jesus said and just lived that out, we could come to understand better that we are “strangers and aliens in a foreign land.”
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