Top 5 Posts of 2009

top5 Top 5 Posts of 2009
These five are listed by the number of comments each received.

1. Sharing My Story

Last night I had the opportunity to share the story of my recovery, transformation, and how I came to turn my will and my life over to the care of God as we understand him (step 3). However, I did not get to finish. Four people listening to me speak, interrupted me and ask me to stop because I could not talk about Jesus – the God of my understanding.
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2. A self admitted rant

You are an object to be pursued. You are not a person, but another mark on our bed posts – pun intended. We don’t want to really be your friend, but we are good at pretending like we are. We don’t really care about you or all of your silly problems, but we will listen – up to a point. You’re not like us.
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3. Sunday Reflections

Ever wondered why people choose to come to your church? I do. One reason that I do is that I take a look around at other churches. I do this, not to compare ourselves, not because I am envious, and not because we are trying to be like them. Rather, I take a look around and wonder. I wonder why do people come to this church?
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4. Sharing My Story (2)

As I posted on Tuesday, I had the opportunity (I was asked) to share the story of my transformation from a junkie because of my decision to follow Jesus at a local narcotics anonymous meeting. During my talk, I was interrupted and could not continue. I knew that this group of people are antagonistic to the Gospel at best and welcomed this chance to speak of my relationship with Jesus.
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5. Law and Gospel

Today I am working on some final edits of my sermon for Sunday – part 4 of The Gospel Centered Life Series: “Law and Gospel.” We are considering the Gospel’s relationship to the law asking questions like: What is the law? Does God expect me to obey it? What is the purpose of the law? How does the law help me to believe the Gospel? How does the Gospel help me obey the law? These are the Guestions before us tonight.
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A self admitted rant

You are an object to be pursued. You are not a person, but another mark on our bed posts – pun intended. We don’t want to really be your friend, but we are good at pretending like we are. We don’t really care about you or all of your silly problems, but we will listen – up to a point. You’re not like us. We just want your butt in one of these perfectly aligned chairs every Sunday with your wallet open. Not to worry though, we don’t care enough to pursue any kind of relationship with you unless of course you miss a Sunday. Then we will send out our form e-letter that we download from the latest “Make Your Ministry Great” web site and filled in the appropriate information. We definitely can’t be seen with you outside of this church building because who knows what you were doing Friday night and that will make us look bad. We are sure you have some lousy friends. We don’t care that you have know them all of your natural life, loose them and come hang with us.

Come see, come see, come see the Sunday show. Step right up and listen to our band – we call it worship. Step right up and listen to some relevant preaching. We’re cool.

Unfortunately, this is the perceived message of the church by many with whom I spend a considerable amount of time with each and every day. Most church leaders have a huge passion for reaching generations of people, but do not have any real meaningful relationships with them. If they do, they are superficial at best. Instead of investing in the lives of people, churches invest in marketing and programs to appeal to the “needs” of spiritual consumers and call it creative arts and ministry.

theworship A self admitted rant

Now this is a self admitted rant on my part. I’m not anti traditional church or anti any church for that matter. I love the church, but think about how many times you’ve heard “mature” believers say…. “I just don’t get anything out of worship.”

Is there a way forward? Yes. I hope to over the next couple of post offer some practical suggestions. But for now this rant is all I can offer. So what would you say is the way forward? What suggestions would you offer?

Christmas is over

santa 300x300 Christmas is overIt’s over … it’s done. Christmas is over. Did you get what you wanted? Did you get what you needed? Are you full or empty? What were you expecting?

When Jesus was born, things weren’t going very well for the nation of Israel. They hadn’t heard from God in a long time. Under the rule of the Roman government, Israel had lost their political independence and their power. They lived in fear of the very crafty and oftentimes very cruel King Herod. Many were yearning – longing, aching, hungering – for God to free them. Many were yearning for God to send someone, something, to bring about change, to bring comfort and healing.

It seems to me that this feeling – this yearning for more – is fairly universal. We all struggle with loneliness, emptiness, insecurity, even desperation. And for some, the Christmas season makes it that much harder.

So we shout in frustration, “When is God going to show up?” But what are we waiting for? An angel? A God that has a magic wand like a fairy godmother? Poof! Are we waiting for the heavens to open and for big hands attached to big arms to come out of skies and say “I’m here and I will smite your enemies.”

That seems like a pretty bad Monty Python movie, if you ask me. Yet that is often our question: “When and how is God going to show up? When will God’s light overcome the darkness? When will my emptiness be filled? When will my yearning, searching, aching soul be settled?”

The message of Christmas, however, is fairly simple and straightforward. What we’re waiting for has already happened. The miracle has already taken place . . . 2000 some odd years ago. A baby was born.

simeon Christmas is overI like how the story of Simeon and Anna round out the Christmas story (Luke 2:21-40). Simeon is an old man, yearning to see the Messiah, yearning to see the change God has in store for God’s people. He didn’t see any miracles, he didn’t see any signs, he didn’t see any wonders. He simply saw the baby Jesus and said, “God, take me now because with my own eyes I have seen your salvation.” No miracles. No signs. No wonders. Just a baby and Simeon believed and that was enough. And Anna, an old woman, a faithful old woman. For her there were no miracles, no signs, no wonders. She saw the child and celebrated. Her yearning, searching, aching soul was filled with joy because she, too, saw the child and believed. Both Simeon and Anna saw the plan and purpose of God in the ordinary.

When our yearning hearts are looking for, waiting for, and anticipating the presence and intervention of God in the common, ordinary events of our daily lives, God shows up! When we expect something more, we often miss out.

So, where have you seen God at work today?
Where have you seen God at work this past week? This past year?

Christmas is not over. The story has just begun.

Merry Christmas

This year give PRESENCE

nativity icon incarnation of the lord jesus christ 784x1024 Merry Christmas

“Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, who, though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men. And being found in human form, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross. Therefore God has highly exalted him and bestowed on him the name that is above every name, so that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.”

- Philippians 2:5-11

Tea Bagging and Health Care

This post is off topic, but I got such a good laugh last night I thought I would share this here. The best news commentary has to be The Daily Show with Jon Stewart. As always with The Daily Show, I begin laughing, but then I just want to throw something.

The show last night featured demonstrators who held their last “tea party” of the year in Washington D.C. Tuesday to protest Democrats’ attempts to reform the health care system. Wednesday Jon Stewart took notice of some of the more humorous aspects of the event.

“We cannot allow the pen to be mightier than the sword,” said one tea party speaker.

Stewart was dumbstruck. “We can’t let the pen be mightier than the sword because that’s only the basis of our civilization.”

This clip ends with Laura Ingraham paraphrasing a famous Holocaust poem to complain about the government possibly raising the marginal tax rate to fund health care. When did universal health care = holocaust?

Sunday Reflections – Ordinary

 Sunday Reflections   OrdinaryOften times, when we wrap up a Sunday evening together as a community, I begin to wonder. I wonder if those who stood before an audience of 200, 400, 1000 would feel the same excitement sitting around a table with 20? Now before you get your church growth panties in a wad, do not hear what I am NOT saying. I am not saying that large churches are un-biblical and that small church communities are the only biblical way to “do” church. I am NOT wising I was more like [insert celebrity pastor here]. What I am saying is that I know the sheer adrenaline rush and energy that is created when large groups gather. I know it how it feels to be on the stage and in the middle of a large audience and feel like God is somehow moving. I have also been guilty of believing that unless a large crowd gathers then somehow God is absent. In other words, the more people equaled God’s blessing with the opposite being true as well. This line of thinking, however, feeds the beast of bigger = better causing an unhealthy obsession with numbers. Just ask a pastor sometime about Sunday. You will probably here something like: “We had a great service with 400 in worship.” This is especially true around holidays like Christmas because more people go to a church building.

Alan Roxburgh reminds us that the Christmas story should cause us to pause and reflect on the ordinary. Even though Jesus was immaculately conceived, the characters are very ordinary. There is Mary - a young virgin, Zecharias - an old, retired, shamed priest, Simeon - an old man awaiting God’s action after most others had given up on that story, Anna - a forgotten old woman hidden inside the world of a religious building thinking of God’s future, and shepherds wandering in the dark of the hills. All of these names of people who would never appear on the cover of a magazine or be featured at the latest conference. These are the nobodies, the regular, the ordinary people living in regular ordinary places. They are neither powerful nor influential. However, these are the people full of anticipation; these are the ones expecting the intervention of God.

But we forget that God’s story is continually breaking out in the midst of the ordinary and unexpected. This cannot be said clearly enough, because in our time, this is precisely what is discounted, discredited and overlooked. There is almost a disdain for these little places of ordinariness. Yet, ordinary is at the heart of Advent. I’m glad my church community is ordinary, often overlooked, and dismissed. I’m am glad I get the same rush, feel the same excitement, and know that God is present in each of the faces I see as I look around the table. I see God in the ordinariness of their stories and in their everyday lives in a way that could never be seen standing on a stage before an audience of 200, 400, 1000. Seeing God in the ordinary – sharing a meal with 20 people on a journey with God – is what the local church is about.

Because I told you so

3042908300 3595d14813 300x199 Because I told you soGrowing up my favorite question was “Why?” I especially liked this question when my parents told me I could not do something. The typical conversation went something like this: Can I go to the movies? No! Why? Because I told you so. Because I told you so? What kind of answer is that? A good answer would have been, “It will be late when the movie lets out and we have to get up early.” Or, “The movies that are playing are inappropriate for someone you age to see and this is why . . .” But “Because I told you so.”? That answer never resonated with my teenage mind.

As a child of God and a follower of Christ we are supposed to be obedient. But why should we obey God? Because he told us so? There has to be more to obeying God than that. We often feel frustrated to think that all we get by way of answer to the question, Why should I obey God? is the response, because he says so. But this is deliberate. We are not given directions, but direction. That direction can be summarized as the process of conforming our character to that of God. God wants more from us than simple adherence to a set of rules.

When my parents told me I could not go to the movies because they told me so, they were giving me a command that they wanted me to obey. My parents were being about the process of shaping me. And at the end of the day they did not want me to obey just because they said so, but because I recognized that my parents always had my best interest in mind. Their rules were given to guide my behavior, but they were also meant to be internalized as guiding norms, not just as external sanctions and prohibitions. The point of the God’s commands is not to get us to start doing a number of things simply for the sake of doing them, but to live as Jesus lived.

An Upsidedown Christmas

advent1 300x178 An Upsidedown Christmas
This Sunday we will be taking a look at three videos that the folks over at The Work of the People have put together that are meant to facilitate discussion around the upside down, subversive themes of the Advent season. From the site:

Jesus’ birth ushers in a new Kingdom, an upside down Kingdom. A Kingdom where weakness wins over power, where the first are last, where death is life. Jesus lives out a radically new way of living. He proclaims this way of living is the way God intended for us, he Torah pointed to and was an invitation to this way of living and Jesus’ life, death and resurrection are a living example of the power of this way of living. This way-The Way-isn’t easy. It involves a radically counter-cultural generosity. Not just a generosity with money, but a giving away of one’s very self. The upside down Kingdom Jesus ushered in is one in which the Creator of the Universe comes to us as a suffering servant, and asks us to do likewise. As you lead your group through these videos may you find the time and space to live truly upside down, counter to our culture of consumption, power and entitlement.

Here is a preview of From Now On:

For the discussion guide click here ->: An Upside Down Christmas

All three videos can be previewed/purchased here.

Sunday Reflections – Immanuel

Nativity 268LG 300x219 Sunday Reflections   ImmanuelChristmas. When God became God with us.

Immanuel.

That should change everything.

When when are taken captive by Jesus who was conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of the virgin Mary, we will, first of all, see God differently. Rather than seeing God as a loving but distant Father who directs the affairs of history from on high, we will begin to see God as near, as integrally involved in our lives; in effect, we will begin to see God as one who sends himself to us rather than waiting for us to come to him.

God is with us – that changes everything.

Sketchy Santa

Growing up, I was deathly afraid of Santa Claus. The whole idea of a magical overweight man sneaking into my house and eating up all of my chocolate chip cookies and drinking up all the milk so that I couldn’t eat my morning bowl of sweetened cereal goodness didn’t do too much for me except keep me awake on Christmas Eve because of the nightmares involving Santa, reindeer, cookies, and milk. Besides this, I would find myself wrecked with anxiety over whether or not I had been naughty or nice. On top of all that, I was expected to actually go to a crowded mall and actually sit in his lap prior to this horror filled night. Then I found out I had actually been lied too all of those years. Don’t get me wrong, I enjoyed the family time, the excitement of finding out what had been left under the tree, but I didn’t want to meet this man.

The pictures below go to show that I was not alone in my fears and that they were grounded in at least some reality.
49 santa guy Sketchy Santajessica santa Sketchy Santa

So what Christmas fears, if any, did you have?
Do you remember when/how you found out Santa did not exist?

Feel free to comment.