Archive for the 'Random' Category



11
Feb

Stories

I’ve been thinking about “story” a lot recently; specifically our nation’s story.  We have a first African-American president in Obama and his been compared to Abraham Lincoln, which is electrifying as we celebrate 100 years of the NAACP (Feb. 12. 1909). Of course, tomorrow is Lincoln’s birthday (2/12/1809) and I’m reminded of the Gettysburg Address where Lincoln quoted Thomas Jefferson’s words found in the 1776 Declaration of Independence that read, “all men are created equal.”  These are the same words Elizabeth Cady Stanton, the women’s movement leader, affirmed in the 1848 Declaration of Sentiments and that Martin Luther King Jr. cited in the 1963 “I Have A Dream” speech.  These words have long been apart of our nation’s story

 As a church, Graceland People, believes everyone who calls themselves followers of Christ are called to minister, so we avoid titles and systems that elevate one person over another spiritually.  In the Kingdom of God and Graceland People we are all equals. 

 God has long used story to communicate his redeeming purpose.  Perhaps, the greatest gift of story in the Bible is of Christ but also the linear theory of history with its implication that life can get better and avoid decline and the idea of the equality and dignity of each individual that culminated in the statement that “all men are created equal.”  

 As a community we value everyone’s story.  We encourage everyone, anyone, who has a story to share it with others.  In the future we will posted such stories on our church network website at www.GracelandPeople.com

 If you have a story of life, redemption, or what God can do and is doing please share it with others – share it with me.  I would love to hear your story, become apart of your story so we can share a story together.

I look forward to reading your story.

09
Feb

God’s Example

Recently, I was reminded how hard it can be to be first at something.  If the actions bring goodwill and success than the measures are worthwhile, but if you find failure and shame in the actions you carry regret.  You really don’t know until you take the first step.

 As you read the Leviticus 24 account of Israel you have a sense of rule and command, but also a sense of a God way ahead of culture.  A loving God who is calling for His people to be better then themselves and their surroundings finds an object lesson among His people.  Right in the middle of perpetual decrees about feasts, light, and bread you find God’s object lesson.  Someone always has to go first and for this son of an Israelite woman and Egyptian man you find God’s example.

 We don’t know his name but we know he blasphemed The Name.  His Name carried much reverence and pride in the people of Israel.  We know today that His Name was so reverence that they used a sub-name to protect themselves from abusing The Name.  So this day when this son of an Israelite woman and Egyptian man with no name broke out in fighting between him and an Israelite it was serious.  See the son of the Israelite woman blasphemed the Name of God and cursed.  They brought him to Moses.  We don’t know the son’s name but we know his mother’s name was Shelomith. 

 So what does a man like Moses do with a son of an Israelite woman and an Egyptian father?  This son has the blood of the oppressed and the oppressor running through his veins.  He is both native and foreigner so do the rules still apply.  This son will be our first so how do we treat him?  Do we treat him different?  This will affect Israel and how they treat others forever. So the scripture says Moses put the son in custody waiting for God’s will to be revealed to them.

 God says take the son outside the camp and everyone who heard him blasphemes must put their hands on his head, and then the entire congregations stone him.  God says tell everyone there must be accountability for anyone who blasphemes the Name of God.  It makes no difference whether he is a foreigner or a native, if he blasphemes the Name, he will be put to death.

 What follows is the instructions how to treat those who kill, mistreat, or hurts others.  It’s here the famous words ring, “life for a life…eye for eye, tooth for tooth.”  You know “do unto others as they have done unto you”…or at least that is how we remember it. 

 This act of blasphemes is strong words and disrespect of God.  The act of blaspheming goes much deeper than words and deeds to the root of man’s heart and lack of regard for God.  We would hear again in Numbers 15.30 that blasphemes leads to being cut off from a person’s community.  Mark 3.29 that blasphemes against the Holy Spirit can not be forgiven.  And last Luke 12.10 that everyone who speaks words against Jesus as Man (his acts on earth) will be forgiven, but anyone who blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven.

 In spite of the gravity of the sin God didn’t just have him stoned; he had the community get involved.  It was that heavy and serious to God.  He called to everyone to participate, to remember and respect.  I guess the moral of the story is being careful of your regard of God. Last, if you’re going to be the first at something, and be the class example, try to avoid the unforgivable.

08
Dec

Twelve Days of Christmas

It’s the season for shopping (I can’t believe I just typed that).  So my family has begun the race to buy gifts and roam the crowded malls.  As we shopped last weekend I noticed that Pottery Barn displayed using the classic song “The Twelve Days of Christmas” as their theme.  This one Christmas song has always confused me

I mean what in the world do leaping lords, French hens, swimming swans, and especially the partridge who won’t come out of the pear tree have to do with Christmas?

There is no substantive evidence supporting this claim, and no evidence that the claim is historical, or “anything but a fanciful modern day speculation.” But some believe it to be a catechism song to help young Catholics learn their faith.  From 1558 until 1829, Roman Catholics in England were not permitted to practice their faith openly.  Each element in the carol has a code word for a religious reality, which the children could remember. It has two levels of meaning: the surface meaning plus a hidden meaning known only to members of their church. 

The partridge in a pear tree was Jesus Christ.

Two turtle doves were the Old and New Testaments

Three French hens stood for faith, hope, and love.

The four calling birds were the four gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, & John

The five golden rings recalled the Torah or Law, the first five books of the Old Testament.

The six geese a-laying stood for the six days of creation.

Seven swans a-swimming represented the sevenfold gifts of the Holy Spirit: Prophesy, Serving, Teaching, Exhortation, Contribution, Leadership, and Mercy.

The eight maids a-milking were the eight beatitudes.

Nine ladies dancing were the nine fruits of the Holy Spirit: Love, Joy, Peace, Patience, Kindness, Goodness, Faithfulness, Gentleness, and Self Control.

The ten lords a-leaping were the Ten Commandments.

The eleven pipers piping stood for the eleven faithful disciples.

The twelve drummers drumming symbolized the twelve points of belief in the Apostles’ Creed.

So there is your history. You can read more here.

06
Dec

New Evangelism, part two

Last, week Graceland People sent out a prayer request about Thanksgiving and our upcoming weekend Life Group.  The Life Group discussion will be about evangelism.  One line has caused some to question my meaning.  I want to develop that thought further. For you who don’t follow the church, but read this blog here is the line – “We want to discover how we “listen and learn” without claiming that all beliefs and practices are of equal value and without claiming what we believe is absolutely true.”

To begin you can read my blog about a new type of evangelism.  Here I explain that the gospel at least in America has been made into a message that would only win Christians to Christ.  Nevertheless, how does one share the message of Jesus with someone who rejects the need for Jesus or accepts another god?  How does one offer Jesus without claiming absolute certainty? Is it possible we can count conversations rather than conversions?

When confronted with arrogance and superiority in the Kingdom of God among his disciples Jesus turned to the attitude of children.  He said accept this child you receive him, accept him and you receive the One who sent him.  “You become great by accepting, not asserting (Luke 9.48, MSG)”

John followed by asserting how they stopped a man not in the “group” from expelling demons in the name of Jesus.  Jesus responded by saying, “Don’t stop him.  If he’s not an enemy, he’s an ally (9.49-50). 

Too often we declare someone as “enemy” without ever listening and learning who they are and what they believe, if anything, about Jesus.  Perhaps, we fear by listening and learning we are conveying that any beliefs or practices are equal?  Maybe we fear more that our beliefs and practices are weak if we don’t claim they are absolute and without question?  Maybe we deem it sin? Jesus said in Mark 10:15 and Luke 18:17 that “whoever does not receive the Kingdom of God as a little child will by no means enter it (NKJV).”

Interesting when you read Jesus’ view of elementary people approaching God, he said in Matthew 18:4-7, 10, “Whoever becomes simple and elemental again, like this child, will rank high in God’s kingdom. What’s more, when you receive the childlike on my account, it’s the same as receiving me. But if you give them a hard time, bullying or taking advantage of their simple trust, you’ll soon wish you hadn’t. You’d be better off dropped in the middle of the lake with a millstone around your neck. Doom to the world for giving these God-believing children a hard time! Hard times are inevitable, but you don’t have to make it worse-and it’s doomsday to you if you do.” “(verse 10) Watch that you don’t treat a single one of these childlike believers arrogantly.”

Christianity is built on faith, hope, and love- not absolution? If it was it wouldn’t require faith because it would be without question. Faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see (Heb 11.1).  And one can not please God without faith (Heb 11.6). 

When pressed to identify the greatest commandment (Mark 12:28-31), Jesus listed two: love the Lord your God, and love your neighbor as yourself.  We tend to pull these commandments apart; we make them distinct and often even sequential.  Work out your relationship with God, and then your relationships with people will fall into place.  But Jesus held these commandments together and said they were alike.  He understood something our churches have often forgotten: we grow in our relationship to God and to each other simultaneously.  And it is often through learning to love each other that we find ourselves opening to God in new and deeper ways.

We need to be motivated by a desire to be in relationship with people who are in many ways different from you and me.  We need relationships because they help us to understand better what Jesus is doing in the world and how we might follow him, even as he leads us out of the church and into the bar.

What if our churches not only cultivated Christian fellowship through worship and small groups but also held as a high priority the building of relationships with people who are not a part of our church, even people who are very different from us? How do we create this type of church? We become a place where people learn about what a truly soul-nourishing relationship looks like.  With teaching and practice we build equality and mutual respect, where people are willing to listen as well as speak, receive as well as give.  When we become such a place where respectful relationships are in place, the church becomes a place where people learn to share their faith with honesty and integrity in a way that does not manipulate the relationship into a recruitment possibility.

If we practice building relationships in the church and can share our faith respectfully and without embarrassment, chances are we’ll be able to share our faith outside the church as well.  But we will not share only what others tell us we should believe.  We will share our own commitments, even when they don’t fit the “party line.” We will share our doubts as well and the things we find funny or peculiar.  And we will share our curiosity about the beliefs and commitments, practices and experiences of others, even those who are very different from us.  As we do, not only will we bring Jesus to the world, it’s likely we’ll meet him coming to us from the edges, from the wilderness, where we should never be surprised to find him.

07
Nov

Something Different

squarehead

Can I be honest? Lately, I’ve felt out of place, not the same as everyone else. I’m not saying I feel superior, actually less than, just not fitting the mold. It’s more of my issue than theirs, but I let myself feel like a outsider. Maybe I enjoy the idea more than the practice.

I assume God has something to do with my exclusion. Allow me to explain. At work everyone works five days a week, I work three with a regular Saturday appearance. When I take my daughter to toddler gym, I’m the only daddy. I’m the stay-at-home dad at the playground. Mom’s stir in wonder if I’m “safe” to be there. I’m planting a church with new believers instead of recruiting mature believers. I conduct services in my living room instead of launching in a rented facility. I believe 80% of a churches income toward a Sunday morning worship experience is too much.

Somehow these all make me feel like a “Maverick” (oh no, I’m John McCain and I don’t want to loose). But I wonder if being the square in a world of circles is what God is teaching me right now. I remember a song from the 80’s (Summer what was the song?) that said “it’s hip to be square.” If I can only teach my heart and ego to believe that.

30
Oct

The Type of Art I Want to Learn @ VBS

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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.
08
Jul

Austin City Limits

 

Last night I went online and bought tickets to ACL.  It’s perhapes the biggest music festival I’ll ever attend.  I love music and all the burnt albums in youth group are a testament to my passion for tunes.

Well, I will be going with a friend from college and meeting up with friends from Austin.  I would enjoy seeing some other people who are joining thousands for the festivities in Zilker Park, Austin TX on September 26-28, 2008.  You don’t want to miss 3 days, 8 stages, and 130 bands.  I think it’s less about the music and more about the people.  You meet the most random people and relate on so many levels. 

I know Summer will kill me, but you can sleep at my house.

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. 

24
Jun

Paper Pusher

I want to write, but can’t find the words.
I want to create, but no color is appealing.
I want to sing, but have no voice.
I want to run, but can’t find my speed.
I want to shout, but no one would hear.

I’m having one of those days when I just want to be active, not busy-.  Apart of planting a church sometimes means working bi-vocationally.  I’ve been living in these two worlds for eight years and days like these are common.  I don’t want to sit in an office; I want to be with people.  I want to study scripture in a coffee shop, surround myself with possibilities, listen to live music, jog with neighbors (or better my wife), and want to feel the joy of helping someone hear God.  I want to be in ministry, not behind a desk pushing paper…too much pushing paper.