Contributors

Tuesday, October 09, 2012

Make Disciples--It's just that Simple

Love Francis Chan. . .He cuts to the chase.  May we be people who don't blur what God has made clear and overlook the obvious.   God has called us to make disciples.  The command is simple and clear, yet too often ignored.  Do I. . .do you. . .do we take that command seriously?


Wednesday, October 03, 2012

Sabbath, Solitude and False-fronts

     I just returned from sabbatical which was a time for me to purposefully think about what God is doing in my life, what the interior of my life consists of and why I do the things I do.

      If you remember the old westerns or have every been to one of those western "boom towns" you are familiar with those stores and shops that have "false front" architecture. From the front these places are built to look impressive, even extravagant. From Main Street, these buildings seem perfectly composed. However, upon from the side, rear or inside the building reveals that the architecture is not what it appears from the front. Closer inspection reveals that there is no interlocking relationship between the beautiful "false front" and the rest of the actual building. The inner composition of the building lacks integrity, and can often reflect downright shabby craftsmanship. 

      For me, the practice of sabbath and solitude is all about getting beyond the false front of our lives. Away from a life lived off of curb appeal and compliments of the crowd. Solitude and Sabbath with the Lord's help leads me away from the temptation to define my life by what others think about me, or by the way I project myself to others. In spending time alone with God, the false-front facade loses its luster, and I come to grips with the real "me". Behind close doors in prayer with the Father, I quit looking at myself through the shallow view of Main Street, and I begin to get in and around and underneath my life, discovering my true composition. 

      Looking at ourselves with "no false-fronts attached", can be humbling and without the grace of God, downright depressing. I discovered during my sabbatical that there are aspects of my life that are not composed as well as I would like to imagine. Once I got beyond the curb appeal that I project to the world around me, I began to see myself in a more truthful, sobering way. And, the truth is that I didn't always like what I saw, or who I saw behind the facade. Can you relate? 

      It was in discovering the lack of composition within my own life that I was able to reclaim the truths of the gospel. Because when the false-front is ripped away, and we see who we really are, we are either driven to despair, or are forced to reach out and grasp more tightly to the grace of God in Jesus. I can recall echoing the words of Paul in I Timothy 1:15: "Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners--of whom I am the worst". 

      Far from devastating me, the real truth about who I am beyond the facade had power and gave me reason to lean deeper into my own need for a savior. I am thankful that Jesus sees deeper than my curb appeal, yet loves me still. He sees the ugliness and the disorganized mess within me, yet offers his perfectly composed life for my own decomposed life. Despite the messiness of my meager house, he desires to make his home  there! This truth leads me to love him and empowers me to worship and glory Him. 

      Pastor Loretta spoke this past week on taking time to look at ourselves and ask why do we do the things we do. Hopefully, this has been a question you've been taking inventory on this week. As you get alone with God, may the false-fronts you have consciously or sub-consciously erected come down, giving you insight into who you really are. And, in that messy place, may you cling to the grace of God in Jesus Christ who "came into the world, to save sinners--of whom I am the worst."

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

He who has Ears

We are a people so desperately craving to be heard, that we have forgotten amidst our babbling, that few actually are listening. . .really listening to one another. Os Guiness says: "...The rarest commodity in the West is attention… because in the West everybody’s speaking, e.mailing, texting, tweeting, blogging, you name it. Everybody’s speaking. Nobody’s listening. And we think with better technologies we’ll get over to them. It’s not a technological problem, it’s a spiritual, moral problem. And if ever we needed the power of the Holy Spirit to say things simple and fresh that break through this barrier it’s today".

Monday, February 13, 2012

I Believe

My friend, Seth Fisher, recently passed this creed onto me.

He found it in the Celtic Daily Prayer and I found it encouraging.



“I still believe in the power of the priesthood, where

sinful men are helped by sinful men. I believe in an

authority that stoops to wash a poor man’s feet. I

Believe in a banquet where sinners learn to love,

eating in company with their God. I believe in parents

who teach their children the beauty that is life.


I believe in the words that God has left for man, words

that can fashion hope from darkness and turn bitter

loneliness into love. And I believe in the beauty

of his mind, the force of his emotions, the fire and loyalty of his

love. I know his weakness, his cowardice, his treachery, his hate. But

I believe in him and his thirst for acceptance and love.


Most of all I believe in God and the power of His victory in Christ. I believe

In a Resurrection that rescued man from death. I believe in an Easter that opened man

To hope. I believe in a peace that I know in fleeting moments and seek with boldness born

Of God. I believe in a life that lingers after this, and a life that God has fashioned for His friends.


I believe in understanding, in forgivenss, in mercy, in faith. I believe in man’s love for woman,

and hers for him, and in the fervor of this exchange I hear the voice of God. I believe in friendship and its power to turn selfishness to love. I believe in eternity and the hope that it affords.

Fr. James Kavanagh

Wednesday, February 01, 2012

A Reason for God. . .Interview with Tim Keller

This video is lengthy, but great.

As our culture is becoming more and more bombarded with myriads of belief systems, there are good reasons to develop a reasonable apologetic for the Christian faith. That is, you better know why you believe what you believe. It is our responsibility to do so. We are called to be able to "give an account" for why we believe what we believe.

Of course, there are good, good reasons for the existence of God. However, you're not going to win over a skeptic of the faith by proving the existence of God by way of the Bible. . .skeptics today don't believe the Bible. We cannot use the Bible to prove the Bible, as it were.

So, we need to start at even a more foundational place with people in order to help them come to understand practically that there is a God. The older Christian apologetic books like Evidence that Demands a Verdict often assume that the reader has at least some respect for the authority of the Bible. Today that is not as true as it was thirty years ago. The arguments (I mean that word in the best sense) that we have for our faith need to be sourced in the reasonability/plausibility of the existence of a God. In fact, there is good reason to see that being an atheist actually requires more faith than being a Christian.

What Keller is brilliant at is entering the predominate belief systems of the day and showing that those systems are often self-contradictory and collapse on themselves. . .they require great faith to believe in.

Here is a great conversation with a tough interrogator who is asking some deep questions about the Christian faith. Not only does Keller answer thoughtfully and thoroughly, but with civility and kindness.

Enjoy.

The God of Mission

"It is not the church of God that has a mission. It's the God of mission that has a church."

-Rowan Williams, archbishop of Canterbury




Friday, January 27, 2012

Living Incarnationally

The following excerpt came from one of my teacher's (Dr. Charles Arn) books entitled "Heartbeat".


KESWICK, UNITED KINGDOM (ANS) — Walking slowly to the podium, assisted by a cane and his research assistant, the theologian was met by a standing ovation from the overflow crowd on the warm summer evening of July 17th. Several years earlier TIME magazine had named him “One of the 100 most influential people on the planet.” What would he say in his final address to those listening in that room and around the world?

John Stott began by recalling how perplexed he had been as a younger Christian, about the answer to the question, “What is God’s purpose for His people?” In his message that night Stott described the resolution to his lifelong search:

“ I want to share with you where my mind has come to rest as I approach the end of my pilgrimage on earth. Here it is: God wants His people to become like Christ. Christ-likeness is the will of God for the people of God.

Stott spent the rest of the evening addressing this matter of incarnational evangelism; a process, he noted, “that can turn the world upside down.” Stott’s simple definition of incarnational evangelism was: “Entering into other people’s worlds with Christ-likeness.”

Incarnational evangelism, said Stott, is the road the church must walk in the 21st century. Our evangelistic efforts often lead to failure, he observed, simply because we don’t act like the Christ we proclaim. Quoting John Poulton, Stott noted that, “The most effective preaching comes from those who embody their message. What communicates now are not words or ideas, but rather personal authenticity; that is, Christ-likeness.”

Thursday, January 26, 2012

From small groups to missional communities

Is the purpose of small group communities merely community? Here is a discussion that asks some essential questions about why small groups exist and if they go far enough in accomplishing the tasks that we are called to accomplish as Christ's body. The conversation talks about transitioning from small groups to missional communities. Granted, we have several small groups in our church that, functionally speaking, are missional in nature.

Notice "missional" doesn't necessarily mean "doing lots of stuff". It means that a community has a sense that they are being called to enter into God's mission for the world. They are asking, "what is God up to in the lives of those in our neighborhood, and how can we join Him"?

Check it out and you'll get the gist of what's being said.


Monday, December 12, 2011

Nurturing Societies

We often speak of small groups as a late 20th century invention or programmatic method to get people "plugged in". Nothing could be further from the truth. Small Groups as they exist today should meet in the same vein as Christ did with his disciples. To corporately invest in the life of the Master and be sent out to do the Master's business together.

In the mid-1700's John Wesley influenced thousands of people into Christian discipleship through small societies we might refer to as small groups. Wesley was noted for saying, "Preaching like an apostle, without joining together those that are awakened and training them in the way of God, is only begetting children for the murderer."

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Humility

"Humility is not thinking less of myself. It's thinking of myself less."

-Tim Keller

Thursday, November 17, 2011

The Paradox of Choice

I was listening to a Tedtalk recently called the "paradox of choice". The paradox of choice goes like this.....the more options we have, the less content we actually are.

The theory can be tested through the lens of buying a pair of jeans. Back in the day, when there was only one kind of blue jean to buy in the store, I got them wore them and for the most part was content with them, because the only other alternative was, well nothing, or an uncomfortable pair of corduroys. So, compared to not having jeans at all, having a pair was great.

Fast forward 30 years.

Now I can choose literally 100s of different brands, colors, shapes and sizes of jeans all within my reach....and, while the jeans I wear today actually look and fit better than the pair I used to have when back in the day, I'm paradoxically, less content. "Why", you ask? Good question.

I'm less happy because, in a world of choice, I'm perpetually wondering what I missed out on. I'm continually ruminating over whether there might be another pair that might fit a tad bit better. And, the thought of there being something better just out of grasp haunts me, and breeds a spirit of dissatisfaction with that which I do have.

That's the paradox of choice. Logically, we assume, more choice should bring more freedom. But, in reality more options bring more consternation, frustration, dissatisfaction and self-obsession.

I see this as one of the great problems of consumeristic society. Options breed dissatisfaction. And, so it goes within the church. The answer to church dissatisfaction is not creating more options. More options don't make us happier. . .look at our culture for goodness sake!

What is necessary within the Church is that she develop a theology of less. Speaking of paradoxes, one of Jesus' great paradoxes in the gospels is that less is more. And, so we must attempt to think less like our culture and more like Jesus.

I remember those provocative words from Christ as he gently chides Martha. "Martha, Martha, you run after many things, but only one thing is necessary". Maybe, this economic crisis we are in will force us away from our smorgasbord diets, and we'll find that only one thing is necessary.

And, in finding that one necessary thing, we'll find personal contentment in those things that we do have.


Thursday, September 08, 2011

Where was God on 9/11?

As the ten year anniversary of 9/11 draws near, my thoughts go to my Uncle Bernie and Aunt Barbara and the rest of the Heeran clan. Growing up our family would travel up from Delaware to visit our New York relatives, and I have great memories of my cousin Charlie, who always lit up a room with his mischievous smile and Irish eyes.

Charlie's life was stolen from him on September 11.

As humans, it's hard to reconcile where God fits into our losses and pain. We don't see what God sees or know what God knows, and when evil strikes us personally, we are left with lots of unanswered questions. One of the biggies is "where were you God"?

Below is a Frontline Documentary called "Faith and Doubt: God and 9/11." Uncle Bernie and my cousin Sean are both featured, and discuss how the loss of Charlie has impacted their faith.

What I think is profound about Uncle Bernie's statements in the video is that while he doesn't claim to have all the answers, he doesn't blame God or hold God in contempt like others do in this documentary. In his own way, he basically says, God was is in the trenches that day fighting evil right alongside everyone else at ground zero.

As I reflect on Uncle Bernie's statement I think it's a pretty Biblical response.

I heard a story once that goes like this. . .A man loses his son tragically and is in terrible grief. In time, his pain turns into anger. And, in a moment of desperation he cries out to God from the bottom of his tormented soul. . . "God, where were you when my son was dying?? Then, after a long silence, a voice replies back. "The same place I was when my Son was dying."


Uncle Bernie is right. God is fighting evil right along side of us. He's not immune to suffering, death and misery. His own son, according to the Scriptures, was a casualty of the war against evil. Ground zero for Jesus Christ was Calvary.

He too suffered in the hands of terrorists. We have a God who is able to sympathize with our pain, because he has entered it on our behalf, and has been through hell too. God knows what it is like to lose a Son. And, I know that he stands alongside every grieving mother and father who lost a son 10 years ago.

But, Christ did not just passively die in the hands of evil. Through his resurrection, sacrificial love conquered evil once and for all. 9/11 reminds us that evil is real and on some days seems to win the battle. But, the resurrection shouts to us that the war has already been won. The grave is not the end. Evil cannot withstand the relentless, courageous, self-sacrificial love of our God. Evil is shattered and rendered impotent by the cross of Christ.

The God who is in the trenches fighting evil and suffering in the hands of evil, is the same God who rose victoriously and one day is returning to this world to once and for all snuff out any resemblance of evil.

Charlie, we love you and know that today you are with Christ.



Watch the full episode. See more FRONTLINE.



Monday, July 25, 2011

Who is this King of Glory?

Psalm 24

Of David. A psalm.

The earth is the LORD’s, and everything in it,
the world, and all who live in it;
for he founded it on the seas
and established it on the waters.

Who may ascend the mountain of the LORD?
Who may stand in his holy place?
The one who has clean hands and a pure heart,
who does not trust in an idol
or swear by a false god.

They will receive blessing from the LORD
and vindication from God their Savior.
Such is the generation of those who seek him,
who seek your face, God of Jacob.

Lift up your heads, you gates;
be lifted up, you ancient doors,
that the King of glory may come in.
Who is this King of glory?
The LORD strong and mighty,
the LORD mighty in battle.
Lift up your heads, you gates;
lift them up, you ancient doors,
that the King of glory may come in.
Who is he, this King of glory?
The LORD Almighty—
he is the King of glory.

The closing of this Psalm pictures a royal procession. It pictures the King of the Universe marching into that which is his own. The Holy One triumphantly entering, through the Gates of His walled city, Jerusalem. It's a breathtaking picture. The King of Glory entering in dignity, armed in strength and victorious over His enemy.

Of course, the gospels too speak of a royal procession into the city of the King. Except the New Testament adds to the psalmist's ancient prophecy an unexpected twist.

The gospels record that in Jesus Christ, the King did indeed enter through the gates of Jerusalem. And, upon His arrival, he was rejected by his loyal subjects and immediately led outside the ancient walls of the city He had built.

We are told that this King of Glory was crowned not with gold, but with thorns that tore into his flesh. This King was not only robbed of his glory, but of every strip of clothing as well. Naked, the king was elevated above the crowd, ironically heads were lifted up. But, not to honor him, but dishonor, smirk and jeer at him.

The Psalmist cries "who can ascend to the holy hill of God? He who has clean hands and a pure heart". Well, there were no clean hands or pure hearts that day. Only two pierced hands and one broken heart. Broken by love for a people who esteemed him not.

The King of Glory was led outside the city gates, precisely so we could be brought in. He climbed the Hill of scorn and rejection, so that we could could ascend to the hill called Holiness.

You see the New Testament twist to the psalmist story is precisely this: No one can ascend the holy hill. There is none righteous, no not one. And, in a move of divine paradox, in Jesus, the King of Glory Himself ascends a hill. But, not the hill called Zion, but the one called Calvary.


Who ascended to the hill of the LORD? None but Jesus Christ. But, graciously his courageous ascent, guarantees, by faith, ours as well.

What an amazing love.

Who is this King of Glory?
The LORD Jesus Christ--
He is the King of Glory!




Monday, July 11, 2011

Technology and Wisdom

Neil Postman over the years has been very helpful to me in thinking through how technology impacts culture. Postman's article on "Five Things we need to Know on Technological Change" is worth the read. Pastor Jeremy and I had a great conversation last night about how technology is not bad. . .but, technology without wisdom can be like an "ax in the hand of a psychopath" (to quote Einstein). I encourage you to read Postman's whole article (if this topic interests you. Below are the five basic ideas. The article fleshes each of these out in insightful and thoughtful ways.

First Idea
All technological change is a trade-off. Technology giveth and technology taketh away. This means that for every advantage a new technology offers, there is always a corresponding disadvantage. The disadvantage may exceed in importance the advantage, or the advantage may well be worth the cost.

Second Idea
The advantages and disadvantages of new technologies are never distributed evenly among the population. This means that every new technology benefits some and harms others.

Third Idea
Embedded in every technology there is a powerful idea, sometimes two or three powerful ideas. These ideas are often hidden from our view because they are of a somewhat abstract nature. But this should not be taken to mean that they do not have practical consequences.

Fourth Idea
Technological change is not additive; it is ecological. A new medium does not add something; it changes everything.


Fifth Idea
I come now to the fifth and final idea, which is that media tend to become mythic. The word "myth" to refer to a common tendency to think of our technological creations as if they were God-given, as if they were a part of the natural order of things".



Thursday, June 30, 2011

Redefining Progress



"When going back makes sense, you are going ahead."



Jeremiah 6:16 echos this maxim. God calling Israel to move forward by looking backward. The LORD exhorts Israel to "ask for the ancient paths, ask where the good way is. . . and walk in it." Sometimes moving forward in life means looking backwards at the conventional, collective wisdom of our ancestors. More often than not ancient wisdom is often more potent in our lives than faddish innovation.



Tuesday, June 28, 2011

What the Spirit Does

The Holy Spirit is sort of the enigma within the Trinity. We can wrap our minds around the Father. And, Jesus we "get". His divinity is cloaked in flesh and he looks, feels and relates like we do. We can at least begin to wrap our minds around that. But the Holy Spirit. . .or growing up Catholic, we would use the term "Holy Ghost". Now that's downright spooky, like something out of the Exorcist. After all, who or what is the Holy Spirit?

Well, despite the name it's reassuring to know that the Holy Spirit is referred to as a person in the Scriptures. The Holy Spirit is part of the God-head and is every bit as personal as the Father or Son. He is no more or no less "ghost" than the other members of the Trinity. Reassuring.

But, what does the Holy Spirit do?

This past week I was doing a Bible study with three theologians that I'm close to named Jackson, Caleb and Kate. And, we examined the role of the Holy Spirit in three important places in the Scripture: in the creation of the world, in the incarnation of Jesus Christ and in the new creation or the coming of the Spirit at Pentecost. Some interesting themes emerged.

Holy Spirit in Creation.
Genesis chapter one sets the stage. Interestingly, we see that "in the beginning God creates the heavens and the earth." But Genesis goes further and says that these heavens and earth were "formless, empty and dark". Ever think about that? God makes the cosmos, but it initially has no shape, no structure, no form, no light. Sort of like raw cosmic ball of goo. I don't know what this world God created looked like, but many scholars say that it was like a blank, black canvas that was ready for the artist. I like this assessment.

Then the next line casually slips in that "the Spirit of God was hovering over the waters". Enter God's Holy Spirit. God's Spirit is present and interceding or coming between God's purpose and design and the creation itself. Of course, the rest of Genesis 1 speak of form, order and texture arising out of formlessness, fullness out of emptiness and light blazing through darkness. We can interpret from this text that the Spirit of God is active in God's creation in bringing His light and life, texture and form, color and creativity to what is otherwise dark, formless and void.

Holy Spirit in the Incarnation
Turning to the first pages of the New Testament we read about the fulfillment a prophecy. One is to come into the world who is the Messiah. This King will be no ordinary King, but will be the "son of the Most High". An angel appears to Mary and tells her that she will bear this child. I'm not sure if sex education existed in the first century, but Mary is no dummy. She informs the angel that it's going to be a tall order to get pregnant since she's a virgin and not yet married. In essence, Mary is saying my womb is formless, empty and dark. There's no capacity for life in there. And, the angel responds with the most amazing statement. He says "the Holy Spirit will come upon you and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. . .and you will be with child."

Once again the Holy Spirit moves into a formless, empty and dark aspect of the creation (Mary's womb) and fulfills the divine plan of God with His super-natural creative power. I can't help but notice the similar feel of the spirit hovering over the dark waters in the creation and God's Spirit coming upon Mary and overshadowing Mary's dark womb. Both instances beget new life. They breed creative vitality and fulfillment where there was once nothing. Holy Brilliance and power at work!

Holy Spirit in New Creation
After Jesus was resurrected and ascended into heaven, Jesus promised that he would not leave his followers alone with the task of changing this world, but would send his promised Holy Spirit to be with them. Yet, this didn't happen immediately. There were several days between Jesus leaving and the coming of the Holy Spirit. During this time, the disciples understood the capacity of their mission, but lacked the capability to carry out that mission. We see them huddled together in Jerusalem praying and trying to make decisions. . .to muster up the wisdom what to do next. They were doing the right things, but didn't have the creative, life-giving power of God within them. There is no real form/substance, fullness or power in the church. . .yet. Then Acts 2 comes.

At Pentecost God's Spirit once again descends upon his creation filling those around, and doing what He does best. . .interceding with a super-natural, creative power that enables God's creation to come alive accomplishing the Father's purpose for the world. He brings form, fullness and light to God's people at Pentecost. First, form. After Pentecost, the church emerges with structure and a sense of order and super-natural unity. Second, fullness. God's people are filled with the mission of Jesus in a new way. They take on His passion and His boldness in a way that they could not without the Spirit's presence. Third, light. The post-Pentecost Church is not under the cloak of darkness, secretly hiding in upper rooms trying to survive on the victories of yesterday. No, the church with the Holy Spirit comes out of the shadows and into the light. Their unashamed boldness to reach the nations and be the light of the world becomes the theme of the post-Pentecost church and fills the remaining pages in the book of Acts.

So, what does the work of the Holy Spirit have to do with our lives today? Well, we see in the creation, the incarnation and in new creation that the Spirit likes to do his creative work in the formless, empty and void-ness of life. In essence, he likes to work within the barren and desolate places of life. Be it within cosmic confusion, a barren womb or a bunch frightened disciples, he delights to work within what's undone and dark to bring divine form, substance, fullness and light to God's world. Fascinating!

Soren Kierkegaard has this great quote that goes like this. "God creates everything out of nothing. And, everything which God is to use, he first reduces to nothing." Perhaps that's the heartbeat of the Holy Spirit. To work alongside the Father to make nothing into something great. If this is true, perhaps our take home point to a greater life in the Spirit is not trying to attain anything or "get" more of God's Spirit. Perhaps what God wants and His Spirit delights in is our willingness to admit our own formlessness, emptiness and darkness so that His Spirit can begin to work in us. While such an admission is an irritation to our pride, if my theology is right, it is an invitation to the Spirit to work His magic in our lives to the glory of God.

Monday, June 06, 2011

The Stories We Believe

"To heal the person, we must first heal the story they imagine themselves to be in".
-James Hillman


Saturday, June 04, 2011

Mission and Worship

"Mission exists because worship does not."

-John Piper


I appreciated this apt quote. It takes a little thinking to even understand it.

Sometimes we forget that the entire purpose of mission and ministry is to help people see, experience, love, adore, honor and glorify God. If all creation honored their Creator and gave Him themselves, there would be no need for mission.

Consider this. There will come a time when mission work is complete. It will be no more. But, there will never be a time when worship is complete. Mission will end, worship will last forever.

Therefore, worship must be the end to which we aspire and perspire in our life. Mission is merely the means, the outworking of our worship to God. Any mission work whose intent is not ultimately the worship and glorification of God, is mission gone sadly awry.

Sometimes we think of mission as the most thing in our lives that matters to God. It is not. Mission will come to an end one day, but worship will not. Of course, to truly worship God. . .to see what God sees. . .to delight in what God delights . . .to go where God goes. . . compels and thrusts us into mission.

But, let us not mistake the means from the end.

Thursday, June 02, 2011

The Gospel and its implications

What is the gospel?

Social justice, community reform, personal morality should never be mistaken as the gospel itself. They are actually the IMPLICATIONS of the gospel fleshed out into our life and world. Social Justice, for instance, is a tentacle, an extension, an outworking of the gospel of Jesus Christ. A tentacle is an attachment...something that grows out of the core substance of something. Like we find on a jellyfish. . .the tentacles grow out of the core and are connected to the core, but only represent a part or an extension of the whole.

I think the same is true of the gospel. When we trace our behaviors, values, choices, thoughts back to their source, everything should be sourced in the essence of the gospel: that God is rebuilding his Kingdom precisely through His own incarnation, suffering death and resurrection on behalf of mankind.

So, feeding the poor, helping a handicapped person, saying "no" to sexual temptation, attending church, handling personal rejection, or spending money...all of these things become natural implications in our lives of coming into a right relationship with the living God through Jesus. All of these things are the implications, the tentacles, of the all-encompassing gospel of Jesus, but they are NOT in themselves the gospel. Historically, liberal Christianity has mistaken the gospel for social justice. Conservative Christianity has mistaken the gospel for personal morality. Both sides have drank different flavors of the same poison. Neither social justice, nor personal morality are the gospel. Both, however are both implications of the gospel at work, and should be tentacles in a gospel centered life. But, they are not the gospel themselves.

Our problem today, whether on the left or the right, is the need to embrace the gospel and then think through the profound implications of the the gospel. As, Keller's quote below goes on to say...a central problem in our lives stems from not thinking, perceiving, contemplating how the gospel reorients all of life. He writes:

"The main problem, then, in the Christian life is that we have not thought out the deep implications of the gospel, we have not “used” the gospel in and on all parts of our life. Richard Lovelace says that most people’s problems are just a failure to be oriented to the gospel–a failure to grasp and believe it through and through. Luther says, “The truth of the Gospel is the principle article of all Christian doctrine. . . . Most necessary is it that we know this article well, teach it to others, and beat it into their heads continually.” The gospel is not easily comprehended. Paul says that the gospel only does its renewing work in us as we understand it in all its truth. All of us, to some degree live around the truth of the gospel but do not “get” it. So the key to continual and deeper spiritual renewal and revival is the continual re-discovery of the gospel. A stage of renewal is always the discovery of a new implication or application of the gospel–seeing more of its truth. This is true for either an individual or a church".

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

I was asked today in a ministry preparation class (which I was on the panel), what is your biggest discouragement/challenges in your area of ministry. I replied, "Consumerism in the culture and in the church". Western societies produce fully discipled consumers. Yes, consumerism actually disciples us. A person discipled on consumerism believes that they hold a plethora of seductive chalices in their own hands . . .and the more consumed, the better our lives. In stark contrast, Jesus Christ says there is but one cup we must drink from, and he holds the cup. The concoction in the cup? Absolute allegiance to Himself and a willingness to follow His path to the cross. He offers this cup to James and John near the end of his life. Jesus tells the brothers that he must drink of this cup, and his disciples must follow suit. He asks the bold Son's of Thunder, "Can you drink the cup that I drink from?" A daunting question. The two powerful men don't realize what's in the cup Jesus offers. You see, Jesus assumes that his disciples will drink from the same cup that he drinks. Today's dilemma is that the idol of consumerism also holds out many available cups, filled to the brim with promises that satiate our personal needs and desires. So, we are in a battle. A battle of deciding who is discipling us. . .A battle of what cup we will consume. Whose cup are you drinking from? Jesus' cup or the cultures cup? Both want your allegiance, yet you cannot proclaim loyalty to both. Both are seeking to make you their apprentice . . .to drink their concoction.

Are you willing to drink His cup?

Take a minute to watch this video by Allen Hirsch. It's only about 2 1/2 minutes and is about disciple-making and consumerism. Challenging and good.