Category Archives: CEB Blog Tour: Thank You, Come Again

On Tolerance, Bigotry, and Hatred

For those of my readers who are not from Middle Tennessee, this may not make a whole lot of sense but I want to react to a recent court ruling involving in the Islamic Center of Murfreesboro. It seems that some members of the local community were opposed to having a mosque built in their community. They have fought it with arson, with protests, with hatred, and ultimately law suits. Yesterday, a judge said that the building permit was void because not enough notice was given to the community regarding the construction of this facility.

Before I go any farther, I want to emphasize that the views in this post (and the rest of my blog) are my own.

I wonder if a lack of notice would have been an issue if this was a church or a synagogue? Would anyone care or notice? My gut feeling is no they wouldn’t. They would likely welcome a church as a sign of God’s love for the community. No one would feel any fear or concern about a church yet some of our churches can be the most hateful places on earth with their messages of intolerance. But it would be okay to have a church as opposed to a mosque.

I wonder what Jesus would say to us if he were walking around today. I wonder if he would side with the group opposed to the mosque or would he reach out to the members of the Islamic community with love? I am horrified at what we do in Jesus’ name (and I am pretty sure Jesus is too). We have driven people to suicide because of their sexual orientation; we have driven people out of our communities because we don’t agree with their faith; and we use words like sharia law and terrorists to keep mosques out of our community.

Yes, I am aware of sharia law but I am fairly certain that local laws, state constitutions, and the US Constitution would tr ump sharia law in the local communities. It would take an act of Congress (literally) to change the law so the tenets of sharia law remain illegal. In the same case, the Bible mandates publicly stoning adulterers and while I could follow the Bible, I am fairly certain I will be arrested for stoning someone.

I think what is happening is fear and ignorance. People have heard bits and pieces of Islam and have taken them out of context (or have had them taken out of context for them) and so they are fearful of what is coming. They see terrorists gathering in their backyard where there are people gathering together to share their faith and community. They see a take over of our country where there are people gathered who had to flee violence and oppression in their own country. They fear people who are different.

I think dialogue is always the answer. Jesus reached out to those who opposed him and tried to have a conversation with them. He spent time talking and teaching but most importantly loving people. Mother Teresa said: “If you judge people, you have no time to love them.”

Why do you see the splinter that’s in your brother’s or sister’s eye, but don’t notice the log in your own eye? How can you say to your brother or sister, ‘Let me take the splinter out of your eye,’ when there’s a log in your eye? You deceive yourself! First take the log out of your eye, and then you’ll see clearly to take the splinter out of your brother’s or sister’s eye. -Matthew 7:3-5 (CEB)

I have been told that I am naive and even ignorant over my defense of Muslims but I don’t think I am. I am living out Jesus’ commandment to love your neighbors as yourself.  My neighbors may be different than me and may believe differently than me but unless I love them, I will never know them. If I spend my time hating and fearing them, am I really any different than what I believe about them?

The Watchful Servants

A reading from Luke 12 (CEB):

“Be dressed for service and keep your lamps lit. Be like people waiting for their master to come home from a wedding celebration, who can immediately open the door for him when he arrives and knocks on the door. Happy are those servants whom the master finds waiting up when he arrives. I assure you that, when he arrives, he will dress himself to serve, seat them at the table as honored guests, and wait on them. Happy are those whom he finds alert, even if he comes at midnight or just before dawn. But know this, if the homeowner had known what time the thief was coming, he wouldn’t have allowed his home to be broken into. You also must be ready, because the Human One is coming at a time when you don’t expect him.”

I scratch my head at this parable. What does it mean? The Greek translation of the first part literally says “the loins having been girded.” The text also talks about masters and slaves; does this image work for us? This world we live in is obviously much different from that of first-century Christians. The focus of this text is the repetition of the word “come/coming” in Greek. The word shows up in five of six verses in this parable. Read the passage again with the emphasis on the word “come.”

I often ask young people this question: “If Jesus were to come to town tomorrow, would you go visit?” After the logistics of securing a plane flight, certainty is a requirement to make the trip. As you ponder if you would go, start with this question: “Have we learned how to be prepared for The Human One’s unexpected return?”

The first step in being prepared is to expect it. We live as if Jesus were already here. We understand as God’s people that the Jesus who is going to come in the future is the Jesus who came in the past and who comes in the present as we gather to proclaim the Gospel and share in the sacrament.

Being prepared means to let Jesus prepare us for the coming. In this season of Lent, we gather in preparation. We do this not by making sure we are dressed for battle or by putting locks on our homes. We prepare ourselves with the small piece of bread and tiny glass of wine that we receive as a gift from God. We prepare for the unexpected hour when he will come to host the heavenly feast.

Gracious God, as we prepare for your coming through the sacrament of Communion and by your word, let us not be like the homeowner with destructive consequences, but as a servant… ready. We proclaim the Gospel and gather in the preparation of the coming of Jesus, your Son. Amen

Boots on the Ground: A Ministry of Presence

“Boots on the ground” is a phrase the Army uses to describe a ministry of presence. Chaplains are encouraged to go with the soldiers where they go. Besides the obvious benefit of earning “street cred”, there is another benefit. A ministry of presence provides an opportunity to be there just when someone needs you most. Think about that, if you are close by when someone needs you most, it will be easier (and faster) to find you to provide ministry. In this case, forget about the street cred and go right for the idea of being present. There are countless examples in the Bible of ministry of presence but here is a small sampling: When Jesus came to that spot, he looked up and said, “Zacchaeus, come down at once. I must stay in your home today.” -Luke 19:5 (CEB) Look! A virgin will become pregnant and give birth to a son, And they will call him, Emmanuel. (Emmanuel means “God with us.”) -Matthew 1:23 (CEB) Those are two good examples and of course, we have the entire 11th chapter of John where Jesus travels to Mary and Martha’s house. All of these call us to go and be present in the lives of others.

Today, I had the opportunity to experience a different kind of ministry of presence but one that is just as important. I spent the day as a rider with the Metro Nashville Police Department. The ride along gave me a chance to experience what the police do from their point of view and to have a great day of conversation (and learning) with a police officer. I was not sure what I would encounter but what I found was a ministry of presence. In much the same vein as boots on the ground, the police are providing protection by being there. They are easily accessible and available when they are needed. In many cases, they are in the right place at the right time. I will admit that much of the day was spent driving around in a particular zone looking to see that everything was okay but then there were the waves and smiles and nods towards the officer. They were simple gestures of appreciation (and I suppose comfort as well because the people were glad to see the officer). There is something comforting knowing that you have someone watching over you. Of course, there were also interactions with the public through stops and questions but all involved a ministry of presence.

So how do I get from the Army Chaplaincy to Metro Police to Lent? Lent is always a time to stop and reflect on your life and on things we need to change. I learned a lot today about police work and procedures but the biggest lesson is one I have already mentioned: being there. We need to be in our communities and we need to be visible. St. Francis of Assisi said, “It is no use walking anywhere to preach unless our walking is our preaching.” It is one thing for an Army Chaplain to claim to have a boots on the ground ministry and an altogether different thing to actually have one. It is one thing for the police to say they are present and visible and an altogether different thing to be present and visible. It is one thing for the church to say they love and serve Jesus and an altogether different thing to actually love and serve Jesus. I think it is time that we begin to become involved in the world around us and share in each other’s lives.

We live in a culture where people come home and stay inside. Decks and porches face the backyards rather than the neighbors. We live behind fences and alarms. We close our curtains so no one can see inside – ever. We are not aware of the suffering around our own communities. I think, and the lessons from today support this, that we need to become involved again. We need to share in each other’s lives and be part of the greater community. I am not suggesting that we begin to nose around other people’s lives but imagine what would happen if we waved and smiled at our neighbors? They might be having a bad day and the smile is just what they need. Maybe the smile will encourage them to share what is troubling them. Expand it beyond your immediate neighbors and become aware of your community. What about the troubled young man who is hanging out on the corner? Do you ignore him or do you wave? Have you asked him what is troubling him? Do you even care? I believe we can make the jobs of the police easier by simply having a presence in our community, interacting with our neighbors, and being outside. Humans are social creatures and interactions let others know you care. Interactions also make you more visible and could keep people from targeting you as well. It is harder for crime and mischief to happen in an area with lots of aware people.

Boots on the ground calls us to become involved and be present in our community and world – just as Jesus did. We lived in a unsettled world full of chaos, anger, and violence. We can’t fix everything (it is impossible) but we can improve the area around us in small ways that can expand. Henri Nouwen wrote:“More and more, the desire grows in me simply to walk around, greet people, enter their homes, sit on their doorsteps, play ball, throw water, and be known as someone who wants to live with them. It is a privilege to have the time to practice this simple ministry of presence. Still, it is not as simple as it seems. My own desire to be useful, to do something significant, or to be part of some impressive project is so strong that soon my time is taken up by meetings, conferences, study groups, and workshops that prevent me from walking the streets. It is difficult not to have plans, not to organize people around an urgent cause, and not to feel that you are working directly for social progress. But I wonder more and more if the first thing shouldn’t be to know people by name, to eat and drink with them, to listen to their stories and tell your own, and to let them know with words, handshakes, and hugs that you do not simply like them, but truly love them. “It is a great thought but I think the officer I rode with today said it better. He told me he knows he cannot change the world but he can make a small difference and leave the world a bit better than it was at the start of the day. A great thought for Lent. Let’s strive not to change the world but to leave it a bit better than it was this morning.

Running God’s Race

Here is today’s sermon for the 6th Sunday after Epiphany based on 1 Corinthians 9:24-27. I preached it at Mt. Denson Cumberland Presbyterian Church.

Don’t you know that all the runners in the stadium run, but only one gets the prize? So run to win. Everyone who competes practices self-discipline in everything. The runners do this to get a crown of leaves that shrivel up and die, but we do it to receive a crown that never dies. So now this is how I run—not without a clear goal in sight. I fight like a boxer in the ring, not like someone who is shadowboxing. Rather I’m landing punches on my own body and subduing it like a slave. I do this to be sure that I myself won’t be disqualified after preaching to others. -1 Corinthians 9:24-27 (CEB)

I am a reluctant runner. I hate running. I hate every single step I take while I am running each morning. I dread each run and I am grateful when I am finished. Why do it, you may ask? It’s Simple. The Army says I will be able to run two miles in less than 17 minutes. A happy bonus is coming up on my next birthday because I can run it in less than 18 minutes. So I run 6 days a week – reluctantly. But you know what? The Army says so is not a good enough reason. I could simply prepare for a PT test a few weeks ahead of time and pass and go back to walking. The Army says so is not enough. My motivation to keep running, my motivation to take the next step, and my motivation to push myself beyond what I think I can do is God. Because you see, it is not about me, it is not about the Army, it is about God. For my own race and for yours…

  •       God provides the purpose and the prize
    • Context: Putting ourselves into the 1stCentury dirt
      • Corinth was host to the Isthmian Games
      • Important part of life in Corinth
      • Second only to the Olympics
    • Paul addresses the runners
      • Training for these games was very important
      • Some athletes trained all day – every day
      • Why?
        • To win the one and only prize
        • A crown of olive leaves
        • Temporary, fading, and perishable glory
    • Our world is not concerned with God’s race but with the rat race
      • Humanity offers that crown of olive leaves in the form of money, fame, glory, wealth
      • All temporary according to Paul and not worth the time or effort given the true prize
      • “And when the chief shepherd appears, you will receive an unfading crown of glory.” – 1 Peter 5:4 (CEB)
    • So how do we stay focused on training for God’s race?
      • Look ahead in our planning and living
      • Example of running down the greenway
      • “Instead, desire first and foremost God’s kingdom and God’s righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.” –Matthew 6:33 (CEB)
      • Pagans in Paul’s day sough riches glory first while believers sough God first.
    • Through grace, God has called us all to run the race

And so believers run God’s race and God provides the purpose and the prize but

  • God <also> supplies the strength and the success
    • More running story: breaking down the run into smaller pieces to find the endurance and strength to keep going
    • Paul understood that all strength and success came from God
      • Paul was called when he wasn’t seeking
      • Paul was given strength to survive beatings, stoning, and rejections
      • Paul knew he could not rely on his own strength
    • Through God, Paul was able to do all things
      • Paul became all things to reach out to all people – a Gentile among Gentiles.
      • Paul was more concerned with others than himself
    • There are many things that distract us along the way
      • Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote: ““Whatever course you decide upon, there is always someone to tell you that you are wrong. There are always difficulties arising which tempt you to believe that your critics are right. To map out a course of action and follow it to an end requires courage.”
      • Our calling is our race – some think our calling is crazy and discourage us
      • Our own doubts and fears
      • Our sin
    • We have to train to run the race
      • I can’t run a marathon today (if ever!)
      • I need to prepare with extensive training
      • Paul says we should train for things that matter: following God
      • Reading Scripture, praying, sharing the Good news, and most importantly living

An amazing thing happens when I take my focus off me while I am running and begin to look around me and focus on God. It no  longer is a burden nor does it hurt to run so much. My focus is on God and I know that I am running God’s race. It’s not about me, it’s not about the Army or even running, it’s all about God

Today’s worship bulletin can be found here.

A Glimpse of Heaven at the Bird Feeder

All of you who were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ. There is neither Jew nor Greek; there is neither slave nor free; nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus. Now if you belong to Christ, then indeed you are Abraham’s descendants, heirs according to the promise. -Galatians 3:27-29 (CEB)

This morning is a cold morning here in Nashville. My backyard thermometer is reading 18 degrees. Sitting here wrapped up in a blanket, I am watching the birds gather around our backyard bird feeder eating their fill to keep warm. I spend time each day in front of the window just watching the birds and they are fascinating to watch. In return for a steady supply of food, they grace us with their presence and beauty.

Lately, I have been frustrated with comments and actions of people. I know it is our nature and I know I frustrate other people as well but it has really been getting to me. I read with disgust the comments our future presidential candidates make towards each other. I read comments people make about our current and future president. I read comments people make about the military. I read comments people make about Tim Tebow and his faith (no opinion just observations). Then there are comments about other religious groups and faith traditions. It is just one thing after another and it makes me want to pull out my hair and scream!

Then this morning, I am sitting here watching the birds at the bird feeder and I see a lesson from God. There are cardinals, blue jays, wrens, sparrows, doves, a finch, and even a woodpecker. They are all eating but an amazing thing is happening. The smaller birds are knocking seeds down so the bigger birds (who can’t fit in our feeder) can eat as well. They are working together and sharing food (granted it is out of necessity) despite their obvious differences. I normally see blue jays as aggressive and dominating but not today – they are sharing the food with smaller (and maybe weaker birds).  There is no difference to the birds as they are all focused on eating and surviving.

Hatred paralyzes life; love releases it. Hatred confuses life; love harmonizes it. Hatred darkens life; love illuminates it. -Martin Luther King, Jr.

You are probably thinking what this has to do with all the hateful comments I mentioned earlier. Well, as the quote above illustrates, hatred only paralyzes life or confuses it or darkens it. Hatred keeps us from doing what we are called to do and be. When we focus on those things that are different, we separate ourselves and paralyze ourselves. When we focus on hatred, love stops.

As Paul writes, in Christ, there are no differences – we are all just children of God. Does God see the differences in us that we see in each other? The birds don’t seem to notice the differences between themselves as they are focused on feeding. What would happen if we focused on God and loving each other in the name of God. It brings me to the rest of the quote from Martin Luther King – love would bring harmony and light and peace. Let’s learn from the birds – overlook our differences and begin to see what makes us alike. We have more in common than we have different.

The birds at the feeder give me a glimpse of heaven. They are all together focused on one thing – in this case feeding. Heaven will be a place where we all gather together and are focused on thing – God.

May it be.

Decisions for God

  The next day Jesus wanted to go into Galilee, and he found Philip. Jesus said to him, “Follow me.” Philip was from Bethsaida, the hometown of Andrew and Peter. Philip found Nathanael and said to him, “We have found the one Moses wrote about in the Law and the Prophets: Jesus, Joseph’s son, from Nazareth.” Nathanael responded, “Can anything from Nazareth be good?” Philip said, “Come and see.” Jesus saw Nathanael coming toward him and said about him, “Here is a genuine Israelite in whom there is no deceit.” Nathanael asked him, “How do you know me?” Jesus answered, “Before Philip called you, I saw you under the fig tree.” Nathanael replied, “Rabbi, you are God’s Son. You are the king of Israel.” Jesus answered, “Do you believe because I told you that I saw you under the fig tree? You will see greater things than these! I assure you that you will see heaven open and God’s angels going up to heaven and down to earth on the Human One. -John 1:43-51 (CEB)

Such vision required the unfolding of the full narrative of Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection. In the signs that follow in the Gospel, particularly the pivotal sign of cross, the heavens are indeed opened. The disciples will see the divine glory fully only when the work of crucifixion and resurrection is completed. The unveiling of the glory of God occurs in the history of Jesus, in the mysterious conjunction of crucifixion and exaltation.

This story begins with Jesus making a decision. It is comforting to remember that even Jesus, though utterly Spirit-filled and completely in tune with God’s will, had to sort out his options and make his own decisions. God thus honors the gift of individual freedom.

Nathanael is excellent disciple material because he is without guile. Nathanael would make a terrible poker player but a wonderful friend. God thus honors the qualities of honesty, genuineness, integrity, and open-mindedness. This is not one of those cases where God takes a miserable sinner and turns him into a saint. This is one of those equally remarkable cases where God takes a person who is humanly praiseworthy in every way and makes of him something even more—a disciple.

Our relationship with God is a two-way street, both parties talking and listening and reaching out to each other.

Do you call yourself a disciple? What qualifications for this calling are necessary, as far as you are concerned?

 

Torn Apart Forever

Here is my sermon (not preached) for the Baptism of the Lord.  I continue to keep up the discipline of writing and preparing a sermon every Sunday even if I don’t preach.

John was in the wilderness calling for people to be baptized to show that they were changing their hearts and lives and wanted God to forgive their sins. Everyone in Judea and all the people of Jerusalem went out to the Jordan River and were being baptized by John as they confessed their sins. John wore clothes made of camel’s hair, with a leather belt around his waist. He ate locusts and wild honey. He announced, “One stronger than I am is coming after me. I’m not even worthy to bend over and loosen the strap of his sandals. I baptize you with water, but he will baptize you with the Holy Spirit.” About that time, Jesus came from Nazareth of Galilee, and John baptized him in the Jordan River. While he was coming up out of the water, Jesus saw heaven splitting open and the Spirit, like a dove, coming down on him. And there was a voice from heaven: “You are my Son, whom I dearly love; in you I find happiness.” -Mark 1:4-11

No shepherds. No angels. No Magi. No star. No stable. Not a word about Mary and Joseph. Mark’s story of Jesus begins at the river: “In those days Jesus came from Nazareth of Galilee and was baptized by John in the Jordan.” There’s no list of ancestors. None of the cosmic wonder that opens John’s Gospel: “In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God.” Mark’s word is far more ordinary and direct” “In those days Jesus came from Nazareth of Galilee and was baptized by John in the Jordan.” Jesus entered the river with others to be washed in a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. In Matthew’s Gospel John argues with Jesus: “Oh, I should be baptized by you,” he said.

Some of us may join that argument worried about what people might think if Jesus submits to a baptism of repentance. But this is where Jesus would spend his earthly life–in the midst of sinners–eating with them, talking with them, healing them, calling them. Why should his baptism be any different? Jesus went under the waters of the Jordan as the others had–under the waters his ancestors crossed after 40 years of wilderness wandering. Historic waters, yet they looked quite ordinary.

Did Jesus look up at the sky before he went under the water? The narrator doesn’t say, but when Jesus came up out of the water, wet from the Jordan, he did look up, and he saw the heavens torn apart and the Spirit descending on him like a dove.

There’s no indication that others saw this–only Jesus. He saw the heavens torn apart, not opened as in Matthew or Luke, but torn apart. The Greek word there is a form of the verb schitzo as in schism or schizophrenia. It is not the same word as open. I open the door. I close the door. The door looks the same, but something torn apart is not easily closed again. The ragged edges never go back together as they were. Mark wasn’t careless in using that word: schitzo. He remembered Isaiah’s plea centuries before when the prophet cried out to God, “Oh, that you would tear the heavens open and come down to make your name known to your enemies and make the nations tremble at your presence.”

Now Jesus stood in the Jordan, dripping wet, without a hint that anyone else saw the heavens torn apart or saw the dove or heard the voice. And there wasn’t a clue that the nations were trembling. But that did not mean that nothing had changed. Though we usually imagine God speaking in a booming voice, resonant and deep, that voice is more often heard in movies than in Scripture. God’s voice can be a whisper, a breath, quiet as the still small voice that reached Elijah hiding in his cave.

At the Jordan the voice that came from heaven spoke to Jesus alone. It was intimate, direct. “You are my Son, the Beloved. With you I am happy. In you my Spirit will be present on the earth in a new way.” The heavens were torn apart, and they would never close again.

But the torn place is where God comes through, the place that never again closes as neatly as before. From the day he saw the heavens torn apart, Jesus began tearing apart the pictures of whom Messiah was supposed to be–

  • Tearing apart the social fabric that separated rich from poor.
  • Breaking through hardness of heart to bring forth compassion.
  • Breaking through rituals that had grown rigid or routine.
  • Tearing apart the chains that bound some in the demon’s power.

Tearing apart the notions of what it means to be God’s Beloved Son.

Nothing would ever be the same, for the heavens would never again close so tightly.

At the end of his life Jesus hung on a cross between heaven and earth, and when he breathed his last, the curtain of the temple was torn in two from top to bottom, torn apart as the heavens had been torn apart. The holy of holies no longer separated the sanctuary from the people. The curtain could never be repaired. There was no voice from the darkened heavens that day. God was silent, not even a whisper.

But there was a voice not far off but close. Not up but down. A centurion soldier stood at the foot of the cross keeping order, marking time, waiting to pronounce death. When he saw that Jesus had breathed his last, he said, “Truly this man was God’s Son.” Who gave him that word? Heaven knows. That soldier had somehow heard for himself the words whispered to Jesus alone at the Jordan. The word came through the torn place in the sky, through the torn curtain: “This is my Son, the Beloved, with whom I am well pleased.”

Is there a torn place in your life? I remember a story a friend of mine told me once about a young woman, thirty-something I think she was. As my friend tells it: We sat talking in my office at the church. She told me that when she was seven or eight, her mother gave her a book of Bible stories. She loved that book, and she read it over and over again. In fact, she read it so much that her mother feared that she was becoming a religious fanatic. So one day her mother took the book away and told her to read other things. Not wanting to upset her mother, the girl left the stories of God behind–all though school, all through college. Years later, her life was falling apart. What she wanted to tell me about that day was about her Good Friday–not that she had gone to church. She remembered it was Good Friday because she had the afternoon off from work. Her hopes for a career in music were going nowhere, and the man she loved had just ended their relationship. So that afternoon, she went into her apartment and locked the door. She went into her bedroom, turned off the lights, pulled down the shades, and put some music on the stereo. She couldn’t remember for sure–she thought it was Bach, maybe the St. Matthew Passion–after all, it was Good Friday. In the darkness, she lay down to try to forget everything, to shut out everything but the music. Then suddenly, she told me, the room was filled with light. She couldn’t explain it. The room was dark. The shades were down, but the room was filled with light. She wasn’t near death or hallucinating. She wasn’t feeling sick. She only knew that the room was filled with light. It was for her a turning point, the first step back to the stories that had been torn from her hands as a young girl. It was the presence of God coming through the torn places in her own life. A year later she was baptized at the Easter vigil surrounded by a circle of candlelight. Under the water, under the Word: “You are my own Beloved Child.”

The torn place was still there, but God was in it.

 

In the Broader and Proper Context of Life

 I have the freedom to do anything, but not everything is helpful. I have the freedom to do anything, but I won’t be controlled by anything. Food is for the stomach and the stomach is for food, and yet God will do away with both. The body isn’t for sexual immorality but for the Lord, and the Lord is for the body. God has raised the Lord and will raise us through his power. Don’t you know that your bodies are parts of Christ? So then, should I take parts of Christ and make them a part of someone who is sleeping around? No way! Don’t you know that anyone who is joined to someone who is sleeping around is one body with that person? The scripture says, The two will become one flesh.The one who is joined to the Lord is one spirit with him. Avoid sexual immorality! Every sin that a person can do is committed outside the body, except those who engage in sexual immorality commit sin against their own bodies. Or don’t you know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit who is in you? Don’t you know that you have the Holy Spirit from God, and you don’t belong to yourselves? You have been bought and paid for, so honor God with your body. -1 Corinthians 6:12-20 (CEB)

Our lives may be ordered by commitments to many different things: career, wealth, power, reputation, sex, nation, church, tribe, or ethnic group. But we are not meant only for these things. We are not fitted to live only for these things. These things, important as they are, need to be fitted into a broader context. They need to be put into their proper places. Indeed, when we are oriented toward these things alone, when our attitude and disposition is not adjusted by an appreciation for and loyalty to some greater and grander reality, we become skewed and enslaved. Then we do things that are neither beneficial nor helpful.

Paul’s teachings remind today’s churches that the body and sex are good and that what we do with them matters. To be made as physical and sexual beings is to be given a powerful means of finding physical and spiritual union with other beings. However, this goodness and power also give us a profound responsibility to live in our bodies and express our sexuality in ways that glorify God and build up our communities. What might it mean for us to glorify God with our bodies, especially in the expression of our sexuality? What might it mean to think of our bodies as belonging to Christ and of sexual acts as done with Christ and to Christ?

Tingling Ears

Now the boy Samuel was serving the LORD under Eli. The LORD’s word was rare at that time, and visions weren’t widely known.One day Eli, whose eyes had grown so weak he was unable to see, was lying down in his room. God’s lamp hadn’t gone out yet, and Samuel was lying down in the LORD’s temple, where God’s chest was. The LORD called to Samuel. “I’m here,” he said. Samuel hurried to Eli and said, “I’m here. You called me?” “I didn’t call you,” Eli replied. “Go lie down.” So he did. Again the LORD called Samuel, so Samuel got up, went to Eli, and said, “I’m here. You called me?” “I didn’t call, my son,” Eli replied. “Go and lie down.” ( Now Samuel didn’t yet know the LORD, and the LORD’s word hadn’t yet been revealed to him.) A third time the LORD called Samuel. He got up, went to Eli, and said, “I’m here. You called me?”  Then Eli realized that it was the LORD who was calling the boy. So Eli said to Samuel, “Go and lie down. If he calls you, say, ‘Speak, LORD. Your servant is listening.’” So Samuel went and lay down where he’d been. Then the LORD came and stood there, calling just as before, “Samuel, Samuel!”  Samuel said, “Speak. Your servant is listening.” -1 Samuel 3:1-10 (CEB)

Imagine a world beyond gimmicks, with no gotchas, a world that restores the dash between “noblesse” and “oblige,” a world where things are fair, where you are well, where those you love are well, where swords have become art schools and weapons have become warming centers for the elderly. . . .

Imagine a world of enchantment, where you look outside at a child playing on a safe street, where good public transportation pulls up to take you to a good job, where economic obsession is gone and decent salaries replace it. Imagine a world where health is insured and life is insured and you have decent choices at the end to do what is right for you and your family. Imagine hospitals as good as homes and hospices as good as hospitals. Imagine good things and then believe that they are coming. God has plans, already executed in Jesus, to do good things. The way to tingle is to open both of your eyes and look around. Look under the hassock, look back to the Scripture, look forward in hope. Open both of your ears. Soon they will tingle.

 

The Magi Have Come

After Jesus was born in Bethlehem in the territory of Judea during the rule of King Herod, magi came from the east to Jerusalem.They asked, “Where is the newborn king of the Jews? We’ve seen his star in the east, and we’ve come to honor him.” When King Herod heard this, he was troubled, and everyone in Jerusalem was troubled with him. He gathered all the chief priests and the legal experts and asked them where the Christ was to be born. They said, “In Bethlehem of Judea, for this is what the prophet wrote: You, Bethlehem, land of Judah, by no means are you least among the rulers of Judah, because from you will come one who governs, who will shepherd my people Israel.” Then Herod secretly called for the magi and found out from them the time when the star had first appeared. He sent them to Bethlehem, saying, “Go and search carefully for the child. When you’ve found him, report to me so that I too may go and honor him.” When they heard the king, they went; and look, the star they had seen in the east went ahead of them until it stood over the place where the child was. When they saw the star, they were filled with joy. They entered the house and saw the child with Mary his mother. Falling to their knees, they honored him. Then they opened their treasure chests and presented him with gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh. Because they were warned in a dream not to return to Herod, they went back to their own country by another route. -Matthew 2:1-12 (CEB)

The magi did not come to study Jesus. They came to worship a newborn king by following a special star. Sacrificing time and comfort, they brought gifts to a baby who demonstrated no outward signs of prophetic confirmation. They held no assurance of how the story would end. All they had was prophetic knowledge of a star and a coming messiah. Reflected in their eyes was an economically limited toddler, in modest surroundings, lying in a teen mother’s arms. To the intellectually perceptive, this scene was not a scholar’s formula for future success. Yet, by grace, the magi had the faith to experience unbridled joy. They beheld the substance of things hoped for and humbled themselves to worship the gift of God. Jesus was the promise of salvation for the world and the gift of joy that sent the wise home by another way.

The Magi came asking, “Where is the child who has been born king of the Jews?” Tradition has it that there were three Magi, probably because the Bible account names three gifts (gold, frankincense, and myrrh.) The names used for these Magi are Caspar, Melchior, and Balthasar, and tradition also says that they are of three different ethnic groups, signifying that Christ comes not just for one nation but for all people.

In fact, that is what we celebrate in January at Epiphany: Jesus Christ as the Light of the world. We celebrate Christ as Light to the whole world, not as the Light to one small group in the world.

Arise! Shine! Your light has come; the LORD’s glory has shone upon you. Though darkness covers the earth and gloom the nations, the LORD will shine upon you; God’s glory will appear over you. Nations will come to your light and kings to your dawning radiance. Lift up your eyes and look all around: they are all gathered;  they have come to you. Your sons will come from far away, and your daughters on caregivers’ hips. Then you will see and be radiant; your heart will tremble and open wide, because the sea’s abundance will be turned over to you; the nations’ wealth will come to you. Countless camels will cover your land,  young camels from Midian and Ephah. They will all come from Sheba, carrying gold and incense, proclaiming the LORD’s praises. -Isaiah 60:1-6 (CEB)

Many Christians mark Epiphany in only cursory ways, as if everything about Christmas ends at midnight on December 25. We do seem in a hurry sometimes to put away Christmas. … Most of us stop playing Christmas music, too, as if the songs are inappropriate at any other time of the year. …

Commentators have said we seem in a hurry after Christmas to box up once again our patience, our tolerance, our generosity and put them back in the attic, as if we can sustain good behavior for a few weeks but wouldn’t want to risk making it a way of life. We may also put away our willingness to give a bit more, to be more forgiving, even to be more patient in traffic as we often are during the holidays. Perhaps we even box up our desires to hope and our openness to miracles and mystery, as if the messages of the Christmas stories can’t quite survive the rigors of real life in the rest of the year. The Magi call us to continue our observance of Christ’s coming after December is over.

What If It’s Not What It Seems?

My New Year’s resolution was to spend more time in deep reflection – both personal and scriptural. I wanted to think deeper on things instead of giving everything a quick glance and then either keeping it or dismissing it. I realize that five days into the New Year, many people are abandoning resolutions to pray or read the Bible because things haven’t changed. Life is no better than it was on December 31. The world is still in turmoil and perhaps our own lives are in turmoil and we are looking for a way out.

I was thinking about this as I was running this morning and then I heard Blessings by Laura’s Story. I had one of those moments as I was listening to this song (if only I could do what a song does in 3 minutes during a 15 minute sermon!).  This song really made me think and realize that what we see as trials and tough times may not be trials at all. These low times may really be God’s mercies in disguise. We have had low times recently and it is hard to see any shining light or rainbows or chances of times getting better. Then we hear how what we thought would have been a good thing turns out to not be something we need or want to be involved.

‘Cause what if Your blessings come through raindrops
What if Your healing comes through tears?
And what if a thousand sleepless nights
Are what it takes to know You’re near?
What if trials of this life are your mercies in disguise?

The words to this song made me cry. There are so many times I can remember over the past few years that I was faced with what seemed like a huge trial…The trials I have been through in my life have always caused my eyes to look up. Whenever I would look up, God would reveal himself to me. I have learned so many things about God through the trials I have walked through. If we can learn to pull ourselves above the circumstances, out of the self pity, out of the pain, out of the anger and confusion and simply look up to God, we will find a blessing. The blessing of knowing he is near. The blessing of learning a greater aspect of who he is in the midst of the storm. The blessing in finding out that there is a greater purpose to life and that this place is not our home. Somehow…looking up has eased the pain and sorrow I feel. Looking up has filled me with the blessing of joy. This earth could not satisfy my pain and heartache I was feeling…but God could and he did. He filled my heart with a greater knowledge of his promises. He built me back up and strengthened me with the blessing of HOPE.

We know that God works all things together for good for the ones who love God, for those who are called according to his purpose. We know this because God knew them in advance, and he decided in advance that they would be conformed to the image of his Son. That way his Son would be the first of many brothers and sisters. Those who God decided in advance would be conformed to his Son, he also called. Those whom he called, he also made righteous. Those whom he made righteous, he also glorified. So what are we going to say about these things? If God is for us, who is against us? He didn’t spare his own Son but gave him up for us all. Won’t he also freely give us all things with him? Who will bring a charge against God’s elect people? It is God who acquits them. Who is going to convict them? It is Christ Jesus who died, even more, who was raised, and who also is at God’s right side. It is Christ Jesus who also pleads our case for us. Who will separate us from Christ’s love? Will we be separated by trouble, or distress, or harassment, or famine, or nakedness, or danger, or sword? As it is written, We are being put to death all day long for your sake. We are treated like sheep for slaughter. But in all these things we win a sweeping victory through the one who loved us. I’m convinced that nothing can separate us from God’s love in Christ Jesus our Lord: not death or life, not angels or rulers, not present things or future things, not powers or height or depth, or any other thing that is created. -Romans 8:28-29 (CEB)

I have been a christian for  years now. I can honestly say that I have learned the most about God through the storms in my life. Many times my healing has come through tears as I have cried out to God. Gods mercies are new every morning…he is always waiting to pour them out over us as we look to him in all situations.

Today I am free! No hardship or trial in this world can hold me down because I know that it is just for a moment, after all..this place is not my home. My God will never leave my side. He is always near.

Sometimes the greatest blessings are found in the greatest trials we go through. Perhaps that should be my new New Year’s resolution – to look differently at trials – not as a trials but blessings and mercies in disguise!

Being Wise Women and Men

Christmas is great and all. It represents the celebration of the incarnation of God into the world but that wasn’t enough. What if God came and no one realized it. As we approach Epiphany, we realize that it wasn’t enough for God to just come to us – God had to reveal himself to us and save us from ourselves.

This is why I, Paul, am a prisoner of Christ for you Gentiles. You’ve heard, of course, about the responsibility to distribute God’s grace, which God gave to me for you, right? God showed me his secret plan in a revelation, as I mentioned briefly before (when you read this, you’ll understand my insight into the secret plan about Christ). Earlier generations didn’t know this hidden plan that God has now revealed to his holy apostles and prophets through the Spirit. This plan is that the Gentiles would be coheirs and parts of the same body, and that they would share with the Jews in the promises of God in Christ Jesus through the gospel. I became a servant of the gospel because of the grace that God showed me through the exercise of his power. God gave his grace to me, the least of all God’s people, to preach the good news about the immeasurable riches of Christ to the Gentiles. God sent me to reveal the secret plan that had been hidden since the beginning of time by God, who created everything. God’s purpose is now to show the rulers and powers in the heavens the many different varieties of his wisdom through the church. This was consistent with the plan he had from the beginning of time that he accomplished through Christ Jesus our Lord. In Christ we have bold and confident access to God through faith in him. -Ephesians 3:1-12 (CEB)

Perhaps the greatest mystery of faith is why Christ would choose to make us his servants in the first place, we who would be in the last place when compared to greater saints, we who are sinners, we who consistently break the laws of God. The mystery of faith is not a case to be solved, nor a problem seeking solution, nor a contest of wills. Paul’s mystery reaches its pinnacle at the precise moment we understand there is no game. The contest is already won. Epiphany.  The comprehension of Christ’s entry into our lives is a moment of purest epiphany. We become wise men and women, not when we find the baby Jesus, but when we realize the crucified Jesus has found us.

 

The Light of the Glory of the Lord

Arise! Shine! Your light has come; the LORD’s glory has shone upon you. Though darkness covers the earth and gloom the nations, the LORD will shine upon you; God’s glory will appear over you. Nations will come to your light and kings to your dawning radiance. Lift up your eyes and look all around: they are all gathered; they have come to you. Your sons will come from far away, and your daughters on caregivers’ hips. Then you will see and be radiant; your heart will tremble and open wide, because the sea’s abundance will be turned over to you; the nations’ wealth will come to you. Countless camels will cover your land, young camels from Midian and Ephah. They will all come from Sheba, carrying gold and incense, proclaiming the LORD’s praises. -Isaiah 60:1-6 (CEB)

We are just a week or so past the celebration of the incarnation of God into the world. We talked about, sang about, and prayed about light coming into the world and being all around us. We spent four weeks in the darkness as we journeyed towards the light.

The light of the glory of the Lord is akin to the kingdom of heaven: it is already breaking into reality around us, but we often fail to see it. Insofar as the light is also identified with Christ, one might also reflect on Matthew 25’s description of Jesus as present all around us in the hungry, sick, and imprisoned, but recognized in none of these forms. During the holiday season, rather than being too downcast to lift our eyes, we may instead be too busy and distracted, and may thus miss the true light of the world.

  “Now when the Human One comes in his majesty and all his angels are with him, he will sit on his majestic throne. All the nations will be gathered in front of him. He will separate them from each other, just as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats. He will put the sheep on his right side. But the goats he will put on his left. “Then the king will say to those on his right, ‘Come, you who will receive good things from my Father. Inherit the kingdom that was prepared for you before the world began. I was hungry and you gave me food to eat. I was thirsty and you gave me a drink. I was a stranger and you welcomed me. I was naked and you gave me clothes to wear. I was sick and you took care of me. I was in prison and you visited me.’ “Then those who are righteous will reply to him, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you a drink? When did we see you as a stranger and welcome you, or naked and give you clothes to wear? When did we see you sick or in prison and visit you?’ “Then the king will reply to them, ‘I assure you that when you have done it for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you have done it for me.’ -Matthew 25:31-40 (CEB)

These revelations of increasing light, in Jerusalem and in the Christ, draw us closer to the nature of God and allow us to see ourselves more clearly. Indeed, we might ask ourselves: How do I respond to God’s initiative of grace? What gift do I bring to the Christ and to this congregation gathered in his name? How is the global church drawn together in adoration of the Christ? What do the “outsiders” in the passages from Isaiah and Matthew’s Gospel teach us about who we are and who Jesus is?

Consider this question today:  what gift(s) do you bring to Christ through participation in a specific congregation or in the world as a whole?

Ever Watchful and Thankful

Here we are on the other side of Christmas and the New Year. Of course, today is still technically a holiday for some folks since the New Year fell on a Sunday but for most people, the holidays are over and there is a sense of finality as decorations come down and life returns to normal. The hopes, joys, and peace of Christmas (that we have been preparing for since October!) is suddenly gone and we are left with this idea of what to do now.

Of course, the fun isn’t over yet because there are many people who believe that Jesus will come this year and could even come today! It should not matter to us whether he comes this day, this year, or in 20 years as long as we are prepared and watching for his coming. After all, we are told to be ever watchful and thankful in our actions, thoughts, and lives.

Intriguing instruction to be watchful and thankful in prayer. I mean, these aren’t two words one would normally put together for something as benign-seeming as prayer. And yet, it’s not the first time Paul speaks of danger in the prayer closet or the necessity for alertness.

Keep on praying and guard your prayers with thanksgiving. -Colossians 4:2 (CEB)

But is there danger in my prayers? Not hardly. At least, not at first blush. I rarely consider myself to be in deep spiritual battle. Or am I?

Is it possible that mere steadfastness, faithfulness, and consistency can make waves in the spiritual realm? Is it possible that I am part of the “transformational” by holding up my friends and family in the Light of the Christ? Is it possible that my quiet moments of deep connection to the Spirit have resounding impact? And if that is so, is it possible that there is push back that manifests in ways I do not realize?

Perhaps this is what it means to be watchful in prayer: becoming aware of the imprint of God. Watch for movement in the spirit realm. Allow the spiritual senses to become alive in prayer: not just seeing with the inner eye, but also hearing, tasting, smelling, and feeling.

I followed the devotional You Set My Spirit Free: A 40-Day Journey in the Company of John of the Cross, which was arranged and paraphrased by David Hazard. In the devotional, he writes,  “He creates in you the desire to find Him [the Spirit] and run after Him–to follow wherever He leads you, and to press peacefully against His heart wherever He is . . . Press, and keep pressing into His heart, until you have pressed the image of His invisible nature into the substance of your soul.”

Be watchful. When this happens, there could be fireworks.

We are told in various places throughout the New Testament to give thanks:

Someone who thinks that a day is sacred, thinks that way for the Lord. Those who eat, eat for the Lord, because they thank God. And those who don’t eat, don’t eat for the Lord, and they thank the Lord too. -Romans 14:6 (CEB)

Give thanks in every situation because this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus. -1 Thessalonians 5:18 (CEB)

They said, “We give thanks to you, Lord God Almighty, who is and was, for you have taken your great power and enforced your rule. -Revelation 11:17 (CEB)

Give thanks.

I have always thought of this as something I must do willfully and consciously, but today I imagine what it would be like to be overcome with a spirit of thanksgiving. To give thanks out of a heart overflowing with an appreciation for the presence of God.

So then, the essence is to “be watchful” in order to experience the fullness of the Spirit which automatically leads to thankfulness. That’s good.

Do You Know What You Are Doing?

 When the time came, Jesus took his place at the table, and the apostles joined him. He said to them, “I have earnestly desired to eat this Passover with you before I suffer. I tell you, I won’t eat it until it is fulfilled in God’s kingdom.” After taking a cup and giving thanks, he said, “Take this and share it among yourselves. I tell you that from now on I won’t drink from the fruit of the vine until God’s kingdom has come.” After taking the bread and giving thanks, he broke it and gave it to them, saying, “This is my body, which is given for you. Do this in remembrance of me.” In the same way, he took the cup after the meal and said, “This cup is the new covenant by my blood, which is poured out for you. “But, look! My betrayer is with me; his hand is on this table. The Human One goes just as it has been determined. But how terrible it is for that person who betrays him.” They began to argue among themselves about which of them it could possibly be who would do this. -Luke 22:14-23 (CEB)

Today is the first day of 2012. I am sure you know that and I am sure you are puzzled why I would pick the Lord’s Supper for a scripture to reflect on the New Year. I am glad you asked. Today is the day when people begin to honor their resolutions for the coming year. We all make them and most of  us end up failing to keep them much longer than a few weeks (or even days).

That brings me to this scripture. In my tradition, we have communion on the first Sunday of the month and today was that Sunday (as well as the first Sunday of the year). We come forward to receive communion but do we ever think about what we are doing. Read the words above again and focus on Jesus’ words.  He is talking about breaking his body and shedding his blood for you and for me. I can make a statement like that too – I say I would rather die than do something (like break my word) but I have yet to actually die. In Jesus’ case, his body was broken and his blood was shed for you and for me. His actions supported his words. When we go to receive communion, we are not only remembering his words but we are remembering his sacrifice. Again, in my tradition, the communion table is open for anyone who is a Christian – someone who has accepted Jesus. In my mind, each time we receive communion, we are remembering that we have stood up to be Christians which is not an easy thing to do at all.

Which brings me back to my opening words. Today is the day when we make resolutions for the new year. I invite you to remember Jesus’ words today and remember your baptism and your commitment to be a Christian. When the time comes that we break our resolutions this year, may we remember our commitment to be a Christian.

Jesus said to everyone, “All who want to come after me must say no to themselves, take up their cross daily, and follow me. -Luke 9:23 (CEB)

Taking up our cross can take many forms and mean many things. It can be as simple as making a commitment to read the Bible on a daily basis; spending time with a friend or neighbor or family member who is sick; and going to church. It can also mean a bigger sacrifice like being a missionary, joining the Army, or going into ministry. In the end, it means being different than the world around us. It means being a Christian all the time – both publicly and privately.

Remember your baptism today as we celebrate a new year let’s celebrate our Savior as well.

Name Above All Names

She will give birth to a son, and you will call him Jesus, because he will save his people from their sins. -Matthew 1:21 (CEB)

Today we jump back a few weeks before Mary and Joseph brought Jesus to the temple for His presentation. We look at Jesus’ eighth day when He was circumcised and named. We will speak of the significance of His circumcision in tomorrow’s devotion, but today we speak of the importance of His Name.

Does a name mean much to you? To the people of Israel and to God a name was extremely important. Each name carried its own meaning and became an integral part of that child’s life, often describing the character of that child. An Israelite boy’s name was very significant, and it was usually given on the eighth day when he was circumcised. So on the eighth day when the Christ Child was circumcised, He was given the name Jesus, just as the angel had instructed Joseph and Mary.

What a deep and profound Name! Jesus means “The LORD saves.” It describes the purpose for which He descended from heaven and became human. As the angel told Joseph, Jesus would save His people from their sins. His Name perfectly fits who He was and that which He had come to do for us all.

As we close out the year 2011, it is fitting to look back on the last 365 days and take account of our lives. What great things has God done for you or through you in this year? Give Him praise.

On the other hand, what regrets do you have? What problems in your life are the still strong echoes of sinful and foolish choices you have made?

At the beginning of this coming New Year we all want to wipe the slate clean and start 2011 with a fresh start. But neither regret nor resolution can wipe our slate clean. Only Jesus can do that.

This is why many churches open their doors this night to hold New Year’s Eve services-often with Holy Communion. As we receive the very same body and blood which Jesus took on Himself at His conception, the same body which was laid in the manger at His birth, the same blood which was poured out for us on the cross, our sins are taken away, our slate is washed clean, and we are at peace with God our Father. That peace is not only for day one of 2012, but for every day that remains in this life and for all eternity.

Knowing God’s Will

We are quickly approaching the end of this year. People reflect on the past year and look forward to the new year. People often make resolutions to lose weight, quit smoking, or something like that. I am making a different kind of resolution this year.

Here it is, something to ask God to do for me every day: fill me with the knowledge of His will. Think about it! The perfect solution to every situation, every setback, every decision, and every sorrow embedded in the knowing of His will. This is my new “catch-all” when I am overwhelmed.

 Because of this, since the day we heard about you, we haven’t stopped praying for you and asking for you to be filled with the knowledge of God’s will, with all wisdom and spiritual understanding. -Colossians 1:9 (CEB)

There is a second fall-back scripture for me in times of trouble, “. . . We do not know what we ought to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us with groans that words cannot express.”  I allow the Spirit to guide in these circumstances.

In the same way, the Spirit comes to help our weakness. We don’t know what we should pray, but the Spirit himself pleads our case with unexpressed groans. -Romans 8:26 (CEB)

But now I have this other way, this simple prayer for knowledge of his will. And I’m pretty sure I won’t have a conscious awareness of the knowing. Instead, I will have the effects of it (Matthew 7:18): the fruits of the spirit (Galatians 5:22-23), the ability to endure and to be patient and to manifest a spirit of thanksgiving in all things [1 Thessalonians 5:18].

This is a prayer God will always answer. It’s not one of those “yes, no, or maybe” prayers. Paul prayed in this fashion for others. I can do the same and I can pray it for myself.

When Paul was “kicking against the goads”, he was going against the will of God in such a dramatic and determined way that he experienced a physical miracle — and not a pleasant one, no matter how “spiritual” we’d like to make it sound. He was thrown from his horse, lost his sight, heard voices, and had to be led to Damascus in disgrace. After that, he didn’t eat or drink for 3 days. He despaired and expected his own death.

I think I have experienced my own version of going against God’s will, I can tell by the fruits of it: impatience, anger, discontent, harshness, and even cruelty. When my mouth and mind engage in all those sorrows and negativity, I am operating in a vacuum and missing God’s will.

Fill me today, Lord. Fill me to overflowing that the knowledge of your will becomes a sweet aroma to others. Amen.

Life’s Big Moments and the Bible

Today is my wife’s 32nd birthday. As we celebrate, I am reminded of the big moments that have happened to me this year. I completed and graduated from seminary in May. I joined the Army and survived Chaplain school. I left one church and briefly served another before we parted ways because of the uncertainty of Army life. These are all significant events and I see God’s presence in each one of them – including my wife’s birthday. God guides us if we take the time to listen and hear.

Which is why I am reminded that the Bible also contains big moments in the life of God’s people. We have Abraham and the first covenant. Noah and the flood. Moses leading God’s people out of Egypt. Joshua choosing God. David and Solomon. Jesus calling the twelve. Paul and Timothy. So many lives that reflect a faith, love, and trust in God. The Bible literally shows us the way to go if we look at how other people handled the big moments in their lives as shared in the Bible.

Your word is a lamp before my feet and a light for my journey. -Psalm 119:105 (CEB)

I have heard Psalm 119 quoted many times as people reflect that the Bible guides us on life’s journey. I agree. Many of the major events in my life have a counterpart in the Bible and I can read and reflect on how someone else handled it. Yes, I am aware that the Bible does not have modern examples in it but that doesn’t mean I can’t find guidance with in the pages of the books as I go through life. It is a lamp, a road map, a compass, a bridge, a path, and so many other things to life.

…because God’s word is living, active, and sharper than any two-edged sword. It penetrates to the point that it separates the soul from the spirit and the joints from the marrow. It’s able to judge the heart’s thoughts and intentions. -Hebrews 4:12 (CEB)

Have you ever thought about the Bible being living and active? I have seen Bibles that are not living or active – they are covered with dust and look brand new hardly used. Then I have seen Bibles that have no covers, worn pages, tears, and lots of notes. Those are the living Bibles – the ones that have been on the journey with someone for years and years. It is not enough to just own a Bible – you have to use it as well. You have to spend time reading it, studying it, meditating on it, and praying over it. I believe the more familiar you are with the Bible (I am not talking about memorizing verses but you can; I am terrible at it) then you will know where to turn in the Bible when you need to read something for a situation.

So back to life’s big moments and the Bible. We are going to experience great moments of joy and great moments of sadness. In between, there will be times of peace and silence and times of uncertainty. Through it all, God’s word will be a constant for us because it never changes. Through all of life’s moments, we have God and God’s word to guide us.

The grass dries up; the flower withers, but our God’s word will exist forever. -Isaiah 49:8 (CEB

So my advice this morning as I prepare to celebrate with my wife has several pieces.

  1. Find a good Bible translation that is easy to read and one that you want to read. I am part of the Common English Bible tour (and I actually like it!) so I will recommend that translation. It is written in modern language and is easy to read and understand. You can also pick up a copy of the NIV which is also easy to read and understand. Whatever you choose, open the Bible and read it every day as you go through life’s moments.
  2. Once you have a good translation, actually read it. Find a good reading plan or devotional and follow it. Here is a 90 Day Reading Plan that takes you through two chapters of the New Testament each day. Whatever plan you choose, stick with it but if you miss a day, don’t sweat it. Pick up the next day and keep reading. You will be amazed at how relevant the Bible is to your life.

But you must continue with the things you have learned and found convincing. You know who taught you. Since childhood you have known the holy scriptures that help you to be wise in a way that leads to salvation through faith that is in Christ Jesus.Every scripture is inspired by God and is useful for teaching, for showing mistakes, for correcting, and for training character, so that the person who belongs to God can be equipped to do everything that is good. -2 Timothy 3:14-17

More Reflections on This Year and the Next

As I was reflecting upon the years of my life this morning, it is obvious that there have been profound years and fairly mundane years. Without exception, the years which were the most profound, amazing, wonderful and spectacular were ones I had absolutely no anticipation of on January 1st.

For many years of my life I was fully indoctrinated in the mistaken belief system that it is up to us to make our life profitable, abundant and great. I used to sit down on January 1st each year and map out MY goals, MY ambitions, MY resolutions and MY desires. Due to what I was taught, I thought I was doing a good thing when I did this. I saw a number of years ago that it is NOT.

All of us have years that we look back upon with either great thankfulness and joy or the general feeling of wanting to forget they ever took place. Personally there are certainly some very profound years that totally shaped my life in a positive way. Without exception, each one of those years held no promise of what was coming as I awoke on January 1st. In fact, I can think of numerous years where what I determined was going to happen that year turned out to be just the opposite.

Who are we, as mere mortals, to think that we can pre-determine on the first day of a new year what that year will bring? It is in many ways the height of arrogance to believe that we hold within ourselves the ability to influence the events the next 365 days hold. None of us know for sure what this day will bring when you get right down to it.

I understand that businesses and politicians need to work off a plan and to some degree I believe all of us need to also. But, when the plan becomes immutable, then the will of God becomes null and void in our lives. Plans and goals are great but they absolutely must be subject to the will of God as it becomes apparent day by day.

I am quite sure that Noah did not make a New Years resolution to build an ark. To the contrary, he was minding his own business when suddenly God told him to do something that completely changed his life. The same thing happened to Abraham, Joseph, Moses, David and countless others mentioned prominently in the Bible.

God seems to have a unique way of surprising us with His will many times. Just when we think we have Him and His plan for our lives all figured out, God will pull up in a huge truck with a whole new life for us to sort through and fulfill. Can you imagine how Peter, James, John and the other disciples felt as everything they had worked for and done in their lives was uprooted and discarded as they took heed to the simple request of Jesus to “Follow Me”? What about me taking heed for Jesus’ call? What about you?

“Come, follow me,” he said, “and I’ll show you how to fish for people.” – Matthew 4:19 (CEB)

 After calling the crowd together with his disciples, Jesus said to them, “All who want to come after me must say no to themselves, take up their cross, and follow me. -Mark 8:34 (CEB)

Whoever serves me must follow me. Wherever I am, there my servant will also be. My Father will honor whoever serves me. -John 12:26 (CEB)

As this new year dawns, I pray we all take a few moments to re-confirm the desire in our hearts to do whatever God tells us to do, go wherever God tells us to go and accept whatever the will of God is in our lives, knowing it is good, acceptable and perfect. Child like trust and simple obedience are two of the greatest attributes we can strive to attain in our lives. The willingness to lay down OUR WILL and accept the WILL OF GOD in our lives enables us to see happen in our lives what God wants and not what we want.

It’s Reflection Time

We are quickly approaching a new year as this winds to a close. It is common for people to take time to look back over the past year and make some resolutions for the year. In order to embrace the new, we must release the old. A trapeze artist cannot swing from one bar to another without letting go. An important part of preparing for the New Year is to review the past year—to release it—and to learn from it.…

The following questions should stimulate your thinking for this process. I hope that you take time out of your busy schedule this holiday season to ponder where you are and where you’ve been. Talk with people you care about. Write out your thoughts and feelings. Do some journaling. Consider writing a letter—an end-of the-year-epistle to yourself. It could be profound to write it and valuable to read it in the years ahead.

Reflect upon what you did, how you felt, what you liked, what you didn’t and what you learned. Try to look at yourself and your experience with as much objectivity as you can—much like a biographer would.

Here are some suggestions to get you started in mulling over the past year—perhaps the last decade. Feel free to add your own.

  1. What did I learn? (skills, knowledge, awareness, etc.)
  2. What did I accomplish? A list of my wins and achievements.
  3. What would I have done differently? Why?
  4. What did I complete or release? What still feels incomplete to me?
  5. What were the most significant events of the year past? List the top three.
  6. What did I do right? What do I feel especially good about? What was my greatest contribution?
  7. What were the fun things I did? What were the not-so-fun?
  8. What were my biggest challenges/roadblocks/difficulties?
  9. How am I different this year than last?
  10. For what am I particularly grateful?

Consider listing all the things in your life of which you’d like to let go—anything you no longer want. Give thanks for what they’ve brought you in terms of learning and usefulness and then burn the list. It’s a symbolic gesture to help you release the old and be open to the new. The next step is to list what you do want—experiences, knowledge, material things, relationships, healings, whatever.…

I’m confident that anything you can do to make this year-end more dramatic in terms of your own personal and spiritual growth will be valuable.

Of course, in the end, remember that God is control and it is not always good to dwell in the past so much.  We need to look forward as well. Reflect on the year and learn but move on and embrace the future.

The LORD says— who makes a way in the sea and a path in the mighty waters, Don’t remember the prior things; don’t ponder ancient history. Look! I’m doing a new thing; now it sprouts up; don’t you recognize it? I’m making a way in the desert, paths in the wilderness. -Isaiah 43:16, 18-19 (CEB)

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