Friday, February 25, 2011

Don't Play it Safe . . .

"The ship is safest when it is in port. But that's not what ships were made for." - Paulo Coelho
I like things that are safe. I like things that I can count on. Being a pretty conservative person, I don't really like a lot of radical change or abrupt movement one way or the other. But the longer I follow Jesus the more I realize that being "safe" is not His way.

Look at Jesus' life in the Gospels. It was anything but "safe." He encountered all kinds of people and situations that were not "safe." Whether they were sick with an incurable disease, struggling under demonic influence, so socially outcast that they were just labeled with the reputation of "sinners," or trying to kill Him, Jesus was engaged with people and it wasn't "safe."

In the book of Acts we can see that the church carried on Jesus' work after he returned to Heaven and found that they would be placed in all kinds of situations that were anything but "safe" just like Jesus was.

What I get from all this is that I was made to be a part of something big that God is doing in the world. It is big and wonderful and, even if no one ever notices the part I get to play, I am blessed and honored beyond measure to be a part. And one more thing: any role I play serving God as I should will be a lot of things, but it won't be "safe."

It will be risky, challenging, hard, frustrating, dangerous, requiring great sacrifice, etc. It won't be "safe." But, if God is in it (and He promises that He will be), when we serve Him it will be worth it!

Where are you just playing it "safe?" Where does God want you to be?

Friday, February 18, 2011

Being fit for real . . .

I laughed at a coupon book we got in the mail last week. On the same page of this book were two half page adds right next to one another. One add was for a local fitness center with coupons and information about their personal trainer. Right above that was an advertisement for CiCi's Pizza Buffet. How ironic! To add insult to injury, two pages later they did it again. This time there was an ad for a weight loss center next to an ad for a Chinese buffet!

We want to be physically fit and free to gorge ourselves at the same time.

Sadly, this can be a metaphor for our lives with God. We want to be spiritually fit on the one hand and free to indulge in whatever catches our eye on the other.

When this doesn't work we never seem to understand why. For some reason, many of us have bought into the lie that we can solve any problem, including a spiritual one, by just having more. So we embark on a whole lot of consumption - food, clothes, toys, pleasure, etc. - hoping to fill the holes in our lives. Spiritually speaking, some of us fill our lives up with lots of religious observances and acts of piety, but never seem to fill the spiritual void that we know exists.

Alan Hirsch said, "We plainly cannot consume our way into discipleship." (The Forgotten Ways, pg. 45)

Whether we are aware of it or not, the only answer for us is found in surrender. We must become people who surrender our lives to Jesus in faith, trusting that He can care for our eternal soul and that His ways are the best ways for our present life as well. In that surrender, in that giving up of our agenda, we begin to realize that the answer we are looking for has been there all along. It is in the simple, day-to-day, following after Jesus. It is in inviting His Holy Spirit to control our lives and lead us to do what Jesus did and say what Jesus said in every aspect of our lives. That is the path to being spiritual fit for real.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

The last conversion . . .

Martin Luther once said:
“There are three conversions necessary: the conversion of the heart, the conversion of the mind, and the conversion of the purse. But for many of us, this is often the last thing to change.”
Why do you think it is so hard to us to surrender our finances to God?

Why does money have such a power over us?

What breaks the hold of money so that we can live in line with God's will and way?

Friday, February 4, 2011

Do you ever really think about grace?

I wan to share with you a note from a longtime friend and mentor or mine, Jerry Webb. He is a pastor in the Detroit, MI area. He writes:

Do you ever really think about grace?

Grace is experienced all of the time. Someone is forgiven for an unkind word spoken in anger. The supervisor chooses to overlook a costly error. A child forgives a parent who fails to keep a promise. You get the idea.


Grace is initially a God concept. It is His unwavering desire to forgive our sin. He revealed grace through Jesus Christ. We find the fullest expression of grace when we accept the forgiveness God offers by the sacrificial death and resurrection of Jesus.


Let these scriptures sink deeply into your thinking:


"The Lord is gracious and compassionate, slow to anger and rich in love." (Psalm 145:8)


"Yet the Lord longs to be gracious to you." Isaiah 30:18


"For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith - and this is not from yourselves, it is a gift of God - not by works, so that no one can boast." Ephesians 2:8-9


"For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life through Christ Jesus our Lord." Romans 6:23, NLT


"The law was given through Moses, but grace and truth came through Jesus Christ." John 1:17, NCV


"[Don't] treat the grace of God as meaningless. For if keeping the law could make us right with God, then there was no need for Christ to die." Galatians 2:21, NLT


We all need grace.


Several months ago Linda and I were able to watch a sneak preview of the new movie The Grace Card. We found it to be a good presentation of the real meaning of grace. We encourage you to go see it when it opens in local theatres February 25th.


Why not invite a friend to see The Grace Card with you? It will be an easy way to open a conversation with them about their need for grace. You can find out more at
http://www.thegracecardmovie.com.

Friday, January 28, 2011

A New Standard for the Debate

N.T. Wright makes the following critical comment about true worship:
Worship and mission are conjoined twins. They share a heart: the heart that loves God the triune creator and that loves, for his sake, the world he made and (particularly) the creatures that bear his image. (After You Believe, pg. 220)
So, all true worship leads outward. It doesn't stop with me, especially not inside of me.

If you follow his logic, that means if I have really been worshipping God other people, including strangers, should be able to tell. They should be able to tell because my character and countenance is different from those who are not worshippers of God. I should be reflecting Jesus to others in all kinds of ways.

If this becomes our standard, the worship debates have really changed. We have moved far away from the debates about music style, sermon length and dress codes, haven't we?

What do you think about all this?

What would it look like if we measured a worship service by the quality of love and mission for others it produced instead of some other measurement about how we feel or the things we prefer?

Friday, January 7, 2011

Here is a powerful illustration I have been thinking about lately in regards to faith.
Imagine you are on a high cliff and you lose your footing and begin to fall. Just beside you as you fall is a branch sticking out of the very edge of the cliff. It is your only hope and it is more than strong enough to support your weight. How can it save you? If your mind is filled with intellectual certainty that the branch can support you, but you don’t actually reach out and grab it, you are lost. If your mind is filled with doubts and uncertainty that the branch can hold you, but you reach out and grab it anyway, you will be saved. Why? It is not the strength of your faith but the object of your faith that actually saves you. Strong faith in a weak branch is fatally inferior to weak faith in a strong branch . . . It is not the depth and purity of your heart but the work of Jesus Christ on our behalf that saves us. (Tim Keller, The Reason for God, 244-245)
What do you think of it?

Thursday, December 23, 2010

"I lift up my eyes to the mountains — where does my help come from? My help comes from the LORD, the Maker of heaven and earth." - Psalm 121:1-2
This verse was the reading for the day in a Bible calendar I have. What a wonderful reminder of where our strength and power really comes from.

It is easy to think it comes from power, prestige, wealth or fame. That is what we can see and what our world thinks really matters, but that is not where our help really comes from.

As people of faith we know our help comes from the Lord.

To add one more thing: our help from the Lord does not come as a result of OUR great faith. No, it comes as a result of the GREAT ONE we place our faith in.

May that be a wonderful reminder to you of God's blessing and faithfulness.

Merry Christmas!