Archive for October, 2008

30
Oct

The Type of Art I Want to Learn @ VBS

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29
Oct

Nebuchadnezzar for President

A few weeks ago a coworker and I were sitting in our lobby watching the last Presidential Debate.  I tried not to miss any of the debates – including the Vice President.  My coworker looked at me and said, “You’re voting for McCain, right?”  I looked at her and asked way she assumed that.  She said because “you’re a Christian!”  I told her Obama was a Christian too and I was still considering candidates.  She apologized because the same thing had happened to her that morning.  She was at her dentist and with his hands in her mouth said, “I got me an Obama supported!”  After he was done, and his hands kindly removed from her mouth, she asked why he was inspired to say that.  He said because she was black — but he was an Obama supporter too so it was “cool”.

I was stereotyped as a McCain supported because I’m “Christian” and she was pigeonholed as an Obama supported because she is black.  Do you think something is wrong with this picture?

As I read Jeremiah 27 and 28 today I was reminded of God’s view of politics – He decides elections.  Jeremiah 27.5-6 God’s message is “I’m the one who made the earth, man and woman, and all the animals (elephant and donkey) in the world.  I did it on my own without asking anyone’s help and I hand it out to whomever I will.  Here and now I give all these lands over to my servant Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon.”

This word from God was shocking to Judah.  They are the people of God and He was handing them over to an unbelieving ruler (I know one day he will be, but not yet)!  Two messages were advocated among the prophets.  One message was from Jeremiah that said, “Harness yourself up to the yoke of the king of Babylon. Serve him and his people. Live a long life!”  The other message was God would break the yoke of the king of Babylon within two years and return what was stolen.  God will reinstate Jehoiachin as king of Judah and return all exiles that were taken off to Babylon. 

Jeremiah’s message was meant to bring hope (Jeremiah 29:11), the other was to tickle the ears of the listener.  Jeremiah’s message was meant to preserve the life and legacy of Judah.  Hananiah’s message was meant to make Judah feel better immediately.

I’m not telling or asking you to vote for anyone.  I’m simply saying VOTE.  Make a decision about national, state, and local officials not based on skin color, age, religion, gender, or national origin.  But vote by listening to your heart and the Spirit.  And guess what – God may lead me to vote for the other candidate because ultimately He decides the election.  Whoever is in the Oval Office Wednesday is who God put there.

22
Oct

Security and God

Recently I’ve heard more talks on issues of security than in the past.  Much of this is due to the financial crisis we face globally, some in reaction to the U.S. election, and others in response to culture and church.  But what does anyone really mean by security?

Security is defined as the freedom from risk, danger, doubt, anxiety, or fear.  Security is something that gives or assures safety and confidence.  I believe Jesus came to rescue us from anything that offers security including religion, because God is our only source of security.  Why do we search for ways to feel secure?  As a nation, church, party, people we strive for security above all else.   In fact security is illusive, impossible.  We all die.  We all get old. We all get sick. People leave us. People will surprise us. People change us. Nothing is secure.  That’s actually the good news – unless your whole life is about being secure. 

If security is the focus of your “spiritual” life you can’t travel very far or venture too far outside a “religious or morale” circle.  You can’t allow too many conflicting ideas into your mind at one time or they may confuse you, challenge you, or change you.  You can’t open yourself to new experiences, new people, and new ways of doing things that may take you off course.  You don’t know who you are outside planned faith, so you cling to an intended identity.  You become a Christian, Muslim, Jew, you’re a Indian, Egyptian, Italian, American; your heterosexual, homosexual, or you never have sex or at least that is what you say when you identify yourself.  You become apart of an “us” in order to be secure and defend against “them”. You cling to your territory, because it’s your secure place, you must fight anyone who approach it.  You become your religion, cause, party; whatever “it” is that will freeze you, numb you, and protect you from doubt or change.  But all this does is shut down your mind.  In reality it does not make you safer. 

All this striving for security has actually made you more insecure, because now you have to watch out all the time.  There are people not like you, people you now call enemies.  You have places you can not go, faults you can not reflect, and worlds you can no longer inhabit.  So you spend your days fighting things off, defending your territory and becoming more entrenched in your fundamental thinking.  Your days become devoted to protecting yourself – this becomes your mission – that is all you do.  Ideas get shorter and they become sound bits.  There are evil doers and saints, criminals and victims, there are those who if they are not with us are against us.  It gets easier to hurt people because you do not feel what is inside them. 

Real security is not knowing something when you don’t know it.

Real security cannot be bought or arranged or accomplished with bombs. It is deeper. It is a process. It is the acute awareness that we are all utterly interdependent and that one action by one being in one town has consequences everywhere.

Real security is the ability to tolerate mystery, complexity, ambiguity — indeed hungering for these things.

Real security is living on God’s terms, knowing he does not live on ours.

Freedom means that I am not identified as any one group. I’m a follower of Jesus, broader than a Christian; I can visit and find myself in any group.  It does not mean I don’t have values and beliefs – it does mean I’m not hardened around them.  I do not use them as weapons.  In the shared future it will be just that – SHARED.  The end goal will be becoming vulnerable, realizing the place of our connection to one another rather than becoming secure and in control and alone.

 --Eve Ensler's (2005) TED Talk prompted these thoughts.
20
Oct

Changing Jesus?

Why don’t I blog more? Recently, my view on the world, ministry, church planting, family, friends, and life in general has been transforming.  I guess I don’t blog more because I don’t want to come over shifty? I consider myself ever changing.  I like that about myself.  I hope I keep changing my whole life.  I love to read, listen to others thoughts, and my head is always in conversation.  Some may find this strange but I find it normal.  Unfortunately people like my wife often get left out of conversations because I had them in my head. **Stop laughing**

I wonder if Jesus changed. I look at my daughter who is now sixteen months old and the world evolves around her (I know my world does), but probably not for everyone else.  At some point she will grow out of this and I will help.  But what about Jesus — did he never grow out of it?  Did he realize at some point that the world does hinge on Him?  How did Mary train up her child knowing he is the Messiah? 

I was trained in college, and practiced after, that the pursuit of leadership skills was key.  Part of being a leader is always being flexible, always engaging change in oneself.  For the last eleven years I have been on the journey of change and becoming better as a leader.  How about Jesus?  Was He ever changing on earth?  Did he journey toward the cross as well as something inside himself?  Was Jesus the same person at 30 as he was at 33?  A great deal of change in me has taken place since I turned thirty years old and started a new horizon in ministry.  Jesus started his ministry with disciples at thirty, was that the start of the biggest change in Him?  Was His teaching affected by this change?

Maybe this “following Jesus” lifestyle isn’t so black and white?  I’m sure it’s more about the direction of the change.

Thinking out loud.

04
Oct

Habitat for Humanity

One of the core values of Graceland People is Compassionate Living. Jesus radically taught that our neighbor is anyone in need.  Jesus calls his church to be a compelling force for good in the world, and we believe that the church is at its best when it serves, sacrifices, and loves, caring about the things God cares about.

In an effort to be agents for change our group had the opportunity to serve people in need this weekend.  We spent our Saturday building a home with Habitat for Humanity.  If you’re not familiar with Habitat for Humanity it is a nonprofit, ecumenical Christian housing ministry. It seeks to eliminate poverty housing and homelessness from the world, and to make decent shelter a matter of conscience and action.

We can’t agree more with the purpose and we had a great time serving.  Here is the group together.