Archive for the 'Faith' Category



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.

27
Aug

Can you picture me without reducing me?

We are more than our parts.  I’m more than a husband, I’m a father; more a lover of people; I’m a lover of God.  As much as you can describe me as spiritual, I’m a follower of the way of Jesus.  It’s hard to squarely fit anyone into a box.

I remember when I got engaged.  I called close friends and family and told them I had met the woman of my dreams.  Among the nice exchanges they would often ask me to tell them about Summer.  It was easy to list off the endless attributes that made her so desirable, but I often felt the picture conveyed somehow reduced her, because she was so much more then her features, qualities, and reputation.

We have a close friend who introduced a Mexican holiday to us a few years ago called, “The Day of The Dead.” Yeah, I was a little apprehensive about the holiday too, until we attended. It was a night more about life then death.  It was about remembering those who made tremendous influence on our life.  Often you find pictures, clothing, art that reminded people of their loved one.  Even then the pictures couldn’t communicate the depth of these people.  The framed pictures were icons for more.  Ask anyone about their item (picture, art, etc) and you see their countenance change.  You eyes light up, voices change, and stories begin to explain who the person in the picture was – much more then the sum of the parts.

God spoke through a prophet named Isaiah about people taking up idols because they needed something visual to connect with God.  Throughout scripture we find God illusive to images, because He is more than a statue, wood cravings, and symbols.  Recently, I have wrestled with a question from God in Isaiah 46.5 which reads, “…Can you picture me without reducing me?” God is love and love is beyond images, words, icons.  Like the love I have for my wife, she is more than I can communicate.  Like a picture of a loved one, it’s not the picture, but what the picture represents. 

One of lives biggest problems is God doesn’t show up in person and reveal himself.  Even when He did, it was as human and required faith, not evidence.  Many people demand, “God, just show me your real and I’ll believe.”  Throughout the gospel Jesus testified that He has and we still didn’t believe – and won’t.  Why? Because God cared enough to not take away the wonder of whom He is with magic tricks and superhero stunts.  He continues to put that responsibility in our hands.  We are to reflect His image, live out his kingdom of love, and be evangelist of hope. 

Can you picture God without reducing Him?

19
Aug

What is Marriage?

Paul said it was better to be single (1 Cor 7.7-8), Jesus said if you’re capable of growing into the largeness of marriage, do it. 

I live in Texas.  There is an act called “Common-Law Marriage” that allows two consisting adults to call themselves married if they show evidence that they publicly recognize each other as wife/husband.  Other people can also testify to the same effect. Another way is with legal documents (i.e. leases signed as husband and wife, tax returns filed jointly as a married couple, and insurance policies listing one person as the other person’s spouse).

What defines marriage? Does a certificate make you married? Can two people who live together, committed to each other for life, be considered married?  Is marriage a private issue between two people or calls on the support of the whole community?

The disciples in reaction to Jesus’ view of marriage and divorce were shocked and responded by saying, “If those are the terms of marriage, we’re stuck.  Why get married? (Matt 19.10)” Those are pretty strong words for followers of Christ.  But you have to consider their worldview of marriage.  Moses permitted divorce and Jews practiced divorce.  God viewed marriage for a lifetime, divorced provided a way out. 

Jesus’ view of marriage was different and He called people to return to its original purpose.  Husband and wife become one flesh in marriage – no longer two bodies but one.  Because God created this organic union of the two sexes, no one should desecrate His art by cutting them apart.  The only exception was where the spouse committed adultery.  It was this view of marriage that caused the disciples’ response.

Jesus said in Matthew 19.11-12, “Not everyone is mature enough to live a married life. It requires a certain aptitude and grace. Marriage isn’t for everyone. Some, from birth seemingly, never give marriage a thought. Others never get asked-or accepted. And some decide not to get married for kingdom reasons. But if you’re capable of growing into the largeness of marriage, do it.”

What classifies marriage?  How should we identify marriage? Every culture is different – marriage is as simple as a piece of paper and a state seal in some places, while others involve a week long celebration calling on the community’s participation. 

This week Ellen DeGeneres and Portia de Rossi got married in Beverly Hills.  Most twenty something live with their partner before taking marriage vows.  Professing Christians have a higher rate of divorce then unchristians.  Somewhere we lost the meaning of marriage. 

I believe Jesus had a deeper view of love, sex, marriage, even family than we do.  Can we grow into the largeness of marriage?  I mean cultivate a culture where marriage is more than paper and people.  The early Christians viewed marriage as “marry then love”, not “love then marry.”  Marriage was a choice for life before feelings had anything do with it.  One didn’t test drive the relationship or chose a partner based of emotions. Love can fade, Lust deceives, and Life changes.

Marriage is a commitment to stay when you don’t feel loving, give more then you receive, and disregard the option of divorce when life changes.  If you need a piece of paper (and you do in most places) to demonstrate your vow then so be it.  The really question is: can you capable of growing into the largeness of marriage?

23
Jul

Right Direction, Wrong Street

Recently, I’ve been engrossed in Job (maybe God is preparing me for something).  I’ve read the account of his lose, pain, and reconciliation with God over and over.  I can relate.  Today when I read Job 8 where his friend Bildad speaks, I thought in his first few words “his guy will have it right,” then I thought “no, his missing the point.” 

As you read chapter 7 you find Job is disappointed to say the least about his life.  Actually, he believes God is disappointed with him too.  You feel his pain and agony in his words.  Like his friends, you agree that Job is speaking nonsense because God doesn’t mess up.  Does God ever get things backward? At this point Bildad took a wrong turn, his going the right direction but down the wrong street.  His theory is:

God + Pain = You sinned so His punishing you

 Bildad says its plain to him Job’s children sinned against God – otherwise, why would God have punished them? He truly believes Job messed up and if he gets down on his knees before God, He’ll set everything right again, reestablishing Job’s fortunes.

 Here are the problems I see:

  • Suffering doesn’t equal punishment. We can’t assume that if we hurt then we sinned. That is not God’s nature in scripture or in life. Sometimes pain is due to sin, but sin doesn’t always equal pain.
  • Bildad believes the answer to pain is to be restored to one’s previous condition. He says “ask for forgiveness so you can re reestablished” as before. Suffering, pain what say you should make you better, stronger, healthier – not restore you to some previous state.

However, Bildad arrives at the answer. He says “Even though you’re not much right now, you’ll end up better than ever.” Our Life Group (small group) is discussing suffering this coming Friday and I’m excited to hear the discussion.  I’m more excited to see how God relieves Himself.  Please be praying for us.

02
Jul

What a day!

How would you respond if everything you possess was taken away at once?  Use your imagination on how this happens.  People steal your belongs, flood takes your home, your friends are killed by Mother Nature, your cars are stolen and your insurance canceled your policy, and your children are killed by the structural collapse of your home.  Moreover, your no payments, no interest loan comes due and your identity has been stolen, your bank accounts bleed and your credit is shot. Oh, and your phone’s battery last long enough for you to get the message from your boss that your fired.

What a day!  

Until today you have shared a wonderful life with your wife and children.  You ruled the world and now you swipe the streets you once owned.  How do you respond?  If you’re devoted to God, how would you respond? The question, “WHY” comes naturally?  Do you accept you came into the world without and will return the same? God gives, God takes – bless His name!

Everything you hold dear, valuable, and sacred has been taken and all you have left is your loving wife and health – until the first sore. Your whole body covered with terrible ulcers and scabs that itch and oozed.  Self mutilation is the only escape from the agony and burning. And your wives not so loving anymore, nor as spiritually devout – she demands you curse God.

Your response to everything, “We take the good days from God – why not also the bad days?”  Every act of man, nature, and science has cheated you of life and not once do you sin. Not once do you say a word negative against God.  Not once!

What a day!

Personally, it’s hard to think of loosing my daughter, home, possessions, and source of income.  Scares me to think my wife could deny me and God when our pain is peaked.  I don’t know if I could react as Job (Job 1-2).  I hope my life has shown truth and hope in God in times of abandonment – I hope I can do it again.

Take a moment and think about everything you “have” and think about it all being taken away – stop and just think about it for 3 minutes.  How did you respond? How will you respond? Now ask yourself why?

01
Jul

Starting Over

So when I turned thrity I made a commitment to read through the Bible once a year.  Got a really great 52-week reading schedule that works for me perfectly and dived in last year.  It was a great experience but sometimes hard to stick with.  I often found myself catching up or making up entire weeks of reading.  I chose the English Standard Verison the first time around.  Good read.

Anyhow, this morning I was excited to start again.  I’m using The Message this time and can’t wait to feel the difference. 

18
Jun

Malachi

My birthday is coming next week.  Last year when I turned thirty, I made a vow to read through the Bible in a year.  It’s easier said then done, but something I plan to do again this year.  I finished the Old Testament today with Malachi – the last prophet from God before Christ enters the scene.  The way I read through the Bible allowed me to read OT books that shared common people and places.  If you’re familiar with Malachi you know about 500 years before Christ, exiles from Israel returned to finish the temple encouraged by Haggai and Zechariah (both OT prophets you can read).  Around 457 B.C. Ezra the priest arrives with thousand more Jews to assist in the project.  Ezra was commissioned by King Artaxerxes of Persia (remember that name) to make sure the temple worship was developed and the Law of Moses was being obeyed (Ezra 7:17-26).

Just about twelve years after Ezra, King Artaxerxes sent his own cupbearer, Nehemiah back to supervise the building of the wall of Jerusalem (Nehemiah 6:15).  He also implemented social and religious restoration. During Nehemiah’s absence, returning to the Persian King in 433 B.C. the Jews again fell into sin. When he returned he found that the tithe had been broken, the Sabbath profaned, intermarriage promoted and the priesthood corrupted. (Nehemiah 13:7-31) Malachi echo’s these sins in his writing.

Malachi is an eye opener for people.  Here are people who are playing dumb.  God is calling for them to be in or out, blessed or cursed.  Stop acting like you don’t know what you’re doing.  They are giving their leftovers to God and asking for His best. His message is an encouragement to discouraged and disillusioned people to not break with God.  It’s a motivation to faith and obedience.   There is a blessing reserved for those who don’t go through the motions (religion) but begin to do God’s will and love the Lord with all their being (inside and outside).

I liked Malachi over the other prophets because it was more logical than poetic — more like a legal defense than an oracle.

So my mission ends with Malachi and his message of faithfulness which is the basis of the New Testament as well.  It also ends with the promise of Elijah the prophet being sent to return community and judgment.  Elijah’s return is a recurring theme in the New Testament. 

I look forward to starting again in July!

17
Jun

How To Be Saved

Recently, I’ve been apart of conversations that beg the question if Jesus is the only way to eternal award (heaven, etc). The question is always phrased different but the issue the same.  I’m not going to talk about life after death. I am going to talk about the larger question: Why We Need Christ. 

When someone asks the question if Christ is the only way, they have assumed we need God to free us from something.  But from what – the answer is sin.  So the thought here is “I know I have a problem, and need help, so as long as I’m following God (whoever He is) wouldn’t I get to the same result?” Yes, if that God views sin and redeeming the same.  The problem is that each major religion views sin (the reason we need God) in completely different ways.  And these different views are equally diverse among practicing Christians.  

The most general way to define Sin is an act that violates a moral rule, or the state of having committed such a violation.  Generally, Sin is anything that is considered prohibited or considered wrong.  So any thought, word, or act considered immoral, shameful, harmful, or alienating might be termed “sinful.” 

Here lays the problem – what actions does God (whoever God is) define as sin and how do we obtain salvation, deliverance, rescue, or escape?  Let’s look at how religions view sin and elude of sin. 

  • Buddhist believe in karma (good deeds produce good results while bad deeds produce bad results). Salvation is achieved by stopping suffering (yours & others).
  • Judaism holds that sin is what you do; not who you are (sinful). Salvation doesn’t come through animal sacrifice but through repentance and prayer alone (1 Samuel 15.22; Hosea 6.6; Psalm 51.17). 
  • Christians view sin as not following God’s moral guidance, violating the contract between you and God, thus savoring the relationship between people and God.  All Christians agree that sin serves as a barrier to one having a complete relationship with God (John 3.16).  Salvation is viewed in terms of reconciliation and a genuine relationship with Christ (Romans 6.23).
  • Islam (Muslim) views sin as anything that goes against the will of Allah (God).  Islam, like Judaism, teaches that sin is an act and not a state of being.  Sin is atoned by repentance and compensation if possible, feeding the poor, freeing slaves to even stoning to death or cutting hands.  It’s said that for every good deed that is done, ten bad ones (sins) will be taken off (Qur’an 11.114).
  • Bahai consider humans as naturally good, fundamentally spiritual beings.  Their teachings compare the human heart to a mirror if turned away from the light of the sun (i.e. God), is incapable of receiving God’s love.  In this sense, sin is to follow the inclinations of one’s own lower nature, to turn the mirror of one’s heart away from God and toward one’s self (self-serving).
  • Hinduism, sin is often used to describe actions that create negative karma by violating moral and ethical codes this differs from other religions like Judaism, Christianity and Islam in the sense that sin is against the will of God.  Sin is an intentional transgression of divine law and is not viewed in Hinduism as a crime against God, but rather as an act against dharma, or moral order and one’s own self.   

Here is the problem with religion – religion equals saving one’s self.  Any of the above religions views “salvation,” or escape from “wrong behavior,” as something you do.  You read that correctly, that includes Christianity, because Jesus didn’t teach this view of sin and salvation.   

Here is what Jesus taught.  He taught if you’ve seen him you’ve seen the Father (God of Abraham). We are not perfect and need a savior (more than a teacher).  We can never do enough to earn salvation, create harmony for ourselves or others, all our sacrifices and repentance will never make us right before a perfect God.  Nothing we do, no matter how many times we give will bring us closer to God.  We are no mirror image of God, nor capable of receiving God’s love on our own.  We are flawed.  We need Jesus completely God and completely man to be our mediator before God. 

I accept Jesus as Lord and Savior!  I don’t do enough to earn salvation or cause good for others. The God of Moses demands perfection and I failure.  How can I throw a stone or remove a limb of a person who is no worse than me?  I am not fundamentally good and often serve myself. 

Last, if salvation can come through being “virtuous,” following the rules, ensue teachers, or being good to myself – than I give.  Life, Faith, Hope most be bigger than any about me.

13
Jun

Amos on Justice

My mind is thinking on “justice” a lot today. In part because a close friend of mine is interviewing for a leadership position with Samaritan’s Purse this afternoon. Scott has influenced my view of God’s ongoing presence in the world. He is passionate about relieving suffering and fighting injustice, joining the God of the oppressed. He has encouraged my view that Graceland should be a compelling force for good in the world, and it will be at its best when it serves, sacrifices, and loves, caring about the things God cares about.

The other reason “justice” has been on my mind is because of the photo connected to a previous post – “Sunday Rest.” If you look close you will see the Bible opened to Amos. If you’ve never read the book of Amos then buy some Charmin tissue, fill your pants for padding, because you’re going to get spanked. I just recently read that whole book and thought “I have missed the point of following God for thirty years!” Even more, I have gone about pastoral leadership wrong. Read the book of Amos and for dramatic effect use The Message version of the Bible. It leaves little room for interpretation of the writer’s intent. For example, take Amos 5:21-24 (Message):

“I can’t stand your religious meetings.
I’m fed up with your conferences and conventions.
I want nothing to do with your religion projects,
your pretentious slogans and goals.
I’m sick of your fund-raising schemes,
your public relations and image making.
I’ve had all I can take of your noisy ego-music.
When was the last time you sang to me?
Do you know what I want?
I want justice-oceans of it.
I want fairness-rivers of it.
That’s what I want. That’s all I want.

Your “bum” sore? God is very serious about justice and impolite in his passion for the poor! Read Amos and you find yourself asking what are we supposed to do with God’s anger. Because the direct content of Amos does not fit my image of a loving God. And though I’m puzzled, I’m not fool enough to disregard the warning. The Almighty is furious and boiling about how the weak are victimized. While we may not know exactly how to respond, try reading these and other biblical judgments and coming away unconvinced about the need to respond, the need to do something!

Question for you. How do you respond to Amos? Because running to conferences, starting church projects, and raising money for image is not going to cut it with God! What do we do with Amos? I would love to hear some comments.