Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Transformation

I have struggled with transformation, both leading it as a Pastor and experiencing it as a Christian.  Even today's sermon dealt with my desire to have a total "ABOUT FACE" in my faith so that, instead of moments of holiness in a life filled with distractions I might have moments of distractions in a life filled with holiness.  It's rough.  And, I'm not sure I'm doing such a good job leading the transformation as well.

So, I stumbled over to Soul City Church's website.  They're a church starting up in Chicago that would be fun to check out.

When looking at their VALUES, I found the following under "Transformation" that caught my attention:
At Soul City church everyone is accepted, but everyone is expected.  We believe that God created us to transform and through the power of the gospel God changes every element of our lives from the inside out.  We believe that as we are transformed into our true identity we experience freedom that liberates us to love our community in a way that promotes peace and health that can bring transformation to our neighborhoods, city, and the world. 
“You must display a new nature because you are a new person,
created in God’s likeness-righteous, holy and true.”

Ephesians 4:24 
I love that first sentence there.... "everyone is accepted, but everyone is expected."
We don't expect much from most folks...even ourselves.  That's a great reminder there.  They even have the following video to drive the point home:

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Sunday, August 22, 2010

The Church Has Left the Building

When we come together for worship, we are "the church gathered."  When we leave from that place, going out into the world, to enter into discussion and activity and service and work with others in the world, we are "the church scattered."

We never stop being the church.  We are always the church.   Church is not the place we gather or what takes place on Sunday mornings within a few short hours.  No, church is what we are...together and apart.

Today, we practice being the "scattered church" in our "[CHURCH] is a VERB Sunday."  We go out into the world, representing Christ through acts of service and outreach.

Today is an important day.  May it be a witness of who we are to our community.  May it be a reminder of who we are to ourselves.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Attendees or Disciples

Steeple, Trinity Episcopal church, Abbeville, ...Image by Martin LaBar via Flickr
There's a nice post on church planting by Brad Ruggles, a church planter who is starting a new plant in Indiana.  He talks about how he's interested in having a church full of disciples and not a church full of attendees and will be working hard to keep it that way.

I found the following comment by Brian Detzel, another church planter now in Cincinnati, to summarize some of my own perceptions of church PLANTING and (from my own experience) church BUILDING.
To be honest, and this is coming from an experienced church planter who has said the very same thing…I think it’s extremely common to say that we’re not interested in human numbers. That’s what hip/young disciple makers say.
The real challenge is sticking to your guns when you can’t rub two nickles together for gas money to “go and make disciples”. The time will come, and it will come quickly, where you want to give away bibles. Where you want to provide help to the poor. Where you want to purchase something that God is calling you to purchase and when you see the lack of money there, you will make the transition to a multiplication attitude. An attitude that says, more people = more money. Then you will move to the point of justification by saying more people = more impact for the Kingdom…but we all know it can quickly become about the numbers.
Fight that.
Fight the desire for more and hold ferociously to the call for true discipleship…and don’t be afraid if God blesses that and things begin to multiply. This is one of the hardest things for pastors and apostles (who I believe are typically church planters…apostles that is). It’s worth it.
I've been struggling with the call for discipleship amidst our construction process.  It is hard.  Whether you're planting or growing.
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Wednesday, August 18, 2010

"[CHURCH] is a VERB" -- Sermon for August 15, 2010



Text:  Matthew 28:16-20 & Luke 10:1-12
Title:  “[CHURCH] Is a VERB”

My first church out of seminary was in __________, Indiana.  There were some good people in that church…really good people.  Some of you know that I've talked openly about how that was a hard place to start out in ministry for a couple different reasons.  And, so, when I say "there were some really good people there" you might expect me to follow it with the traditional Southern, "Bless their hearts."  Sometimes, perhaps stereotypically, Southerners will say something like “Jimmy Ray Miller (bless his heart)…” and then follow it with all the horrible stuff they were going to tell you about Jimmy Ray Miller and the only reason their saying "bless his heart" at all is so they don't feel bad about talking bad about him.

But there were some really good people in that church.  There really were.  In fact Julie and the kids were able to go visit a few of them when they were down in Indiana…although they attend a different church now.  There were, and I'm sure still ARE, some wonderful people in that church.


But I did come out of that church with some stories that have been instrumental in my understanding of what it means to be a church and what it means to reach out, as I am want to say, "IN CONCERN AND SERVICE FOR THE WORLD."

I know many of you have heard this story before.  But, you’re going to hear it again.

See, when I got to the church, one of the first Sundays I was there, one of the folks who had been around awhile said, “Preacher, you know what your job is here.”  My ears perked up, thinking this could be pretty important.  He said, “Your job here is to bring in young people…and make sure they’re upwardly mobile.”  In an economically depressed county seat town in Indiana, he wanted me to find the one or two twenty-somethings who were moving up a corporate ladder somewhere and hadn’t moved out of that town and make them members.  It was going to be a challenge to meet that job requirement.

But that comment wasn't meant to be rude or mean or anything.  It was because the church was hurtin’ for young people in the pews.  Those referred to as “the young women” by the elders of the church were now approaching 60.  And the older ladies were approaching 80.  Most of the kids of those 60 and 80 year old persons had moved away, seeking greener economic pastures.  And the church found almost no one to fill the void.  They weren’t an unfriendly bunch.  They had some studies going on.  There was a lot of experience in the congregation.   That gentleman who gave me my job description was merely putting some words to what, I think, a lot of folks were feeling when they had a 22 year old pastor show up with his young wife to serve a congregation with a lot of graying hair.

While we can have lots of discussions about mission and evangelism and hospitality that this all points to, I want to say that this particular church in ______, Indiana was suffering from BAD GRAMMAR.

See, back in the fifties, after World War II, those returning veterans with their lovely young wives...they were full of energy.  They were planning families.  And they wanted to build a church.  They got together and they worked and they planned and they sacrificed and they built a rather large stone church with a  whole neighborhood around it.

At this time, the church adopted a BEHIVE as their symbol—each worker bee assigned a task in order to raise up a hive…a church…a spiritual home for all of those bees.  It’s no mistake I think that the Freemasons see a beehive as a symbol of industry.  There were a lot of masons among the older members of the church and they were clearly industrious.

Now I’m extrapolating from my own history there as these events took place long before I got there in 1994.  But, I think all of that DOING had one goal…BEING.  There were a group of people who were, by God, going to build and BE the Methodist Church in that neighborhood.  They had young families and they had a facility and the assumption was that persons would be drawn to that place like…well, bees to honey.

And, perhaps it worked for a little while.  The “if you build it, they will come” mentality works well for a while.  The latest new thing always gets a little bit more attention.

But somewhere along the line…they were no longer DOING church.  They merely WERE the church.  All those action words that had described them during their years of construction and growth stopped.  It was all stuff from their PAST.

Their church became a NOUN.  It was a building.  Yes, it was a building where they had friends and had funeral dinners to support the loved ones after a funeral for those who had died in the community.   Yes, they had their Sunday School classes.  And, yes those older women and younger women, who were rapidly increasing in age over the years, supported missionaries far and wide.

But very few people ever set foot in their building, except for Sunday mornings.  For many in the community, it was just that church building over by Lincoln School.  And, by the time I had gotten there, and walked around the community, I found many of the neighbors didn’t even know it was a church.  Because of their need to protect their building…because of a self-satisfaction that comes from being around people just like you that you just really like…because they had gotten undisciplined in their discipleship…they HAD church, all right…but they were failing at DOING church in their community and in the world.

In all fairness, this is way oversimplified.  Factor in an economic depression, an influx of Hispanic workers, and the exodus of young adults from the community and you can see there were other factors involved.  A fifty year history of a midwestern church in a midwestern town can't be condensed down to a 20 minute sermon illustration without using some very broad strokes.

But it’s clear from my time there, that church was NO LONGER AN ACTION WORD.

Two quick stories that get at this:

First, there was a story about why the boy scouts were no longer able to use the building.  I think I remember it correctly at this time.  Apparently, when meeting up on the third floor…long before I got there since I never saw the third floor used but twice…when meeting up on the third floor, one of the boy scouts started a fire in the garbage can.  I understand that this is behavior you don’t want repeated, but the response of the church was excessive.  They determined that no outside groups were going to use their church, particularly not the Boy Scouts.  And I have no idea how long that had gone on before I got there, but they had a facility that had, easily triple the floor space of our new facility we're building over there and it was only regularly used Sunday morning for worship and Sunday school, Thursday morning for “[Older] Women's Bible Study” (and I loved those ladies), and Thursday evening for choir practice…four hours a week.  But they kept it clean and protected it from any fires up on the third floor.

Secondly, and I’ve shared this here, when I got to the church and saw that it was right across the street from Lincoln School, I wanted to know about outreach and ministry with the kids or teachers at the school.  The conversation went something like this:

“So, I notice, we are right across the street from Lincoln School.  So what types of ministries have you all done with the school over the years?”

“What do you mean?

“I mean, have you had any kids clubs or tutoring or have you done something special for the teachers on the first day of school, like a breakfast or something, or brought over gifts at the holidays.”

“No.”

“How long have you been across from the school?”

“Forty years.”

“You mean this church has been sitting directly across the street from an Elementary School for forty years and we’ve never done anything to be in ministry with them or to them?  Well, we should start something!”

“Well, the school is closing down this year.”


And it did.

There was a kid walking home from school right before summer vacation and I was inviting him to the first Vacation Bible School that church had had in years.  I was telling him where it was going to be and pointed to our church which we were standing in front of, and he said he had no idea that it was a church at all.  The church could have evaporated into thin air, right there on the spot, and it wouldn't have made a lick of difference to him...or perhaps his parents...or perhaps many other folks in that town.  That's not just sad.  It's not right.

Many churches, for years, have operated from the ATTRACTIONAL MODEL—meaning churches have felt “if we build it, they will come.”  Churches have felt that all we needed to do was put up pretty signs and have the most awesome praise band and make sure the Yellow Pages (that’s a phone book, kids.  You may not use one), make sure the Yellow Pages listed you as a “FRIENDLY CHURCH.”  And people were going to be ATTRACTED to the church merely because it was the church…it was THERE.  It had persons.  It was a place.  It was a thing.  It was a noun.

And, you know, golly, when you’re working in an environment that is religiously sensitive, where activities revolve around church activities, where persons are being born in the church and raised in the church and married in the church and taught in the church and buried in the church—or nearby it—this just might work for a little while.  Just make the neon sign a little larger than the church next door and you’ll be fine.

But, you know, it just doesn’t work this way.  I know that when I go outside and speak to supporting churches and show them the artist’s rendering of our new facility and show them all the people that are walking in through the front doors I joke that we didn’t have just an artist but a prophet, too…he could see all the people that were going to come to us once we build this place. 

Our shiny new doors aren’t going to reach people for Christ.  And, I’m happy to say, I’M not going to reach people for Christ.  WE ARE.   And to do so, we will need to be sent out through those shiny new doors, to love the people where we are…our neighbors, our coworkers, our teammates.

People will hear the gospel message, they will find comfort in times of trouble, they will have their minds blown by the amazing grace of God, they will find that there are Christians whose company they can enjoy and have fun with…because, instead of an ATTRACTIONAL MODEL of ministry, we have a MISSIONAL model.  We’re not a noun.  We’re a verb.  We’re an action, a ministry, an outreach.  We are a people who do not SIT, we are a people who are SENT.  Amen?

It’s probably about time for a little Bible now.  And, these aren’t hard, friends.

Matthew 28…the Great Commission.

Then the eleven disciples went to Galilee, to the mountain where Jesus had told them to go.  When they saw him, they worshiped him; but some doubted.  Then Jesus came to them and said, "All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me.  Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age."

Go.  Baptize.  Teach.  Verbs!

Luke 10:1-12, known as the sending of the 70 (or 72, depending on the manuscript):

He told them, "The harvest is plentiful, but the workers are few. Ask the Lord of the harvest, therefore, to send out workers into his harvest field.  Go! I am sending you out like lambs among wolves.  Do not take a purse or bag or sandals; and do not greet anyone on the road.

Go.  I’m sending you out.  Go be VERBS!

It was said by one of my teachers down in Nashville, that while much of discussion of mission in the church has revolved around Matthew 28, Luke 10 may be closer to what the church needs today.  We’re not looking for vast hordes of Christians to go out and harvest like a swarm of locusts eating crops.  We need folks to do out two by two…into the places where the unchurched people are--as your friends--and eat and stay and be with them…trying to be good witness in their presence and…over time…through relationship share the story of Jesus...or what Jesus means to you.

Look, next week is our CHURCH IS A VERB SUNDAY.  We're going to be doing service projects in the community again.  But, I don't want to close out the sermon by just listing them.  I want to give you an illustration about what it looks like when a church starts being a VERB.  It’s an illustration I heard from Rev. Sharma Lewis, a United Methodist District Superintendent from Georgia and thought it was so awesome, I put in on my blog.

There was a church (as often these stories go)….

There was a church in a downtown area of some town somewhere and it might have had some resemblance to that church in Indiana that I had been sent to—not much going on, the community not knowing it was even there, and if it had burned down only the people who were there on Sunday morning would have missed it.

In this "somewhere church" there was fire that broke out on a Sunday evening.  Some trustees of this church were in the area and saw the smoke coming out through the old stained glass windows.  The trustees ran in to the building thinking that they could AT LEAST save a picture of Jesus hanging down in fellowship hall.

Now, this was a pretty traditional picture of Jesus and had been in the congregation, hanging on the same wall of the fellowship hall, for 25 years.  It had been painted around, straightened when it got a little crooked, occasionally dusted.  Persons had eaten many a doughnut and drunk many a cup of coffee at its feet.  Children had run wild.  Youth had held lock ins.  All with little regard to its presence in their midst.  But that was many years before.  Recently it had just been dusted around.

Then the fire came.

Well, those trustees raced into the church, raced downstairs into fellowship hall, and raced on out with the picture of Jesus.

There wasn't much else that could be saved that day.  Those two trustees, some other members who got the phone call about the fire, and a lot of the people from the neighborhood gathered around and watched the church slowly burn to the ground.  It was a community event.

As they stood there and watched the church burn, they looked at the picture of Jesus in their midst.  It was traditional.  Jesus was a traditional lily-white, gazing up to heaven.  But there was a beauty about him.  Someone noted an irony of "saving Jesus from the fire."  The trustees got to share why it is that they would run in and save this one thing and why it was important.  Church members got to talk about some of the great, holy, life-changing events that had happened in that little church, even if it had been a long time ago.  And persons, some of whom had been in the community for years, heard about the saving power of this "saved" Jesus for the first time.

We need to be about the business of taking Jesus out onto the streets.  We need to take the message out on the highways and byways…to the neighborhoods and coffee shops and bars and parks and homes and businesses and lives around us.  We CANNOT keep our Jesus confined to our fellowship halls and our libraries and sanctuaries and church offices.  We CANNOT keep our Jesus inside our 30-foot by 30-foot leaky-roofed box of a church or our 126-seat sanctuary church we hope to be in.  We have a world out there that needs to hear about and be transformed by our Jesus.  It may take a spiritual fire to make it happen, but we pray it doesn't take a physical one.

We need to go and preach and teach and love and serve and work and relate and share and play and heal and love.

Because CHURCH IS A VERB.  We are an ACTION WORD FOR JESUS.  Let's GO.

In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Woman At The Well -- A Modern Retelling

A couple of my friends on Facebook posted this video.  It's a good one.  It takes that famous story in John 4:3-30 and, well, completely modernizes it from the perspective of the woman.  It has a "poetry slam" style to it.  There is a rhythm to it.  There are cadences.  There's a style.

Very dramatic.

Very moving.

Very creative.

Watch.

Enjoy.


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Tuesday, August 10, 2010

"When Love Comes to Town" -- Sermon for 8 August 2010

Jesus Carrying the Cross. Illustration by El G...Image via Wikipedia
Note:  This sermon was inspired by my time away from my congregation.  It seems whenever I return from my various trips, my sermons always start with something that says how much I missed the people here.  This holds true to form.  The last illustration, personifying Christ as "Love," is inspired by a keynote address by Pastor Rudy Rasmus of St. John UMC in Downtown Houston, TX.  I got to hear Pastor Rudy a couple of times on Monday, August 2nd and thought his ministry and perspective were awesome.

Text:  1 Corinthians 13 & John 1:1-18
Title:  “When Love Comes to Town”

I’ve been gone for three weeks, in case you noticed I was gone.  Two of the weeks were spent in Indiana, visiting Julie’s family—or families.  Then I spent five days in Nashville at a conference, along with Sheila ______ from our church.  This time around I had trouble finding a guest preacher for one of the Sundays and our Superintendent Dave _____ said he would do it.  But, when Dave got the offer of going to his high school reunion, he hooked us up with Drew ______ who is working at Turnagain United Methodist Church for the summer.

I had never met Drew and he had never met any of you.  So, when he asked a bunch of questions, I sent him an e-mail trying to describe this congregation.  While it doesn’t really pertain to the sermon at all, I thought I’d let you know what it is that I told him.


Drew, thanks for preaching.  Dave ________ had been the 9th person I had checked.  You're #10 (but first in my heart for being able!).
 

The Congregation:  Small, informal feel, very forgiving, able to roll with punches.  You can check out our website for things that are important to us or my blog to get a sense of their pastor.  This is a church that Superintendent Dennis _____ "barked" during a sermon several years ago because it's the first church he felt comfortable enough in which to do so.  He thought we could handle it.

It's a congregation that has some very liberal and very conservative folks.  It's a congregation that ASKED for communion to be held every week 12 years ago and it is done with joy...people smiling, people laughing, and kids asking for "a big piece" of bread.  They allow me to be very colloquial and I've been able to tackle some difficult issues with, I hope, love.  We use a traditional format but it feels very laid back...really it does.   Honest!

We have focused a lot on ministry in the community but confess that our building process has sapped a lot of energy from us over the last 6 years.  It's been a long road and we celebrate every step that gets us closer to the new building being occupied.

We have an 8:30 AM service (which averages about 5 in attendance and I love them) and a 10 AM which averages about 60-70 (but will be smaller with the 7 Doepkens out of town).
 
I want to reiterate that this is a congregation that will go with whatever.  They laugh at jokes.  They'll respond to your questions if you want them to be thinking about points.  They are game for video (although probably not what you want as a guest preacher).  If you have a fun youth song you'd like to do for children's time or a song you'd like to teach them, great.  If you want to bear your soul, they'll listen.  They appreciate heartfelt prayer and they know how to both praise God and offer up some difficult questions.  It's a good place to lead worship.

I just thought you might like to know that.

But, as we get to the sermon I want to tell you that, while Drew was preaching here, I was learning a lot in Nashville.  I heard a lot.  I experienced a lot.  Great stories.  Great preaching.  A lot of African American worship leaders and a whole lot of “Amens.”  And all along I got to hear how it is that communities of faith, across the nation and, indeed, around the world, are trying to live out God’s love with those they come into contact with on a daily basis.

I wish this wasn’t a novel idea.  (Amen?)  I wish this wasn’t something we need to be reminded of.  (Amen?)   I wish this was something that was just second nature to us.  (Amen?)

But it’s not.  (Congregation, on their own, responded with "AMEN!")  We need to be reminded.  We need to be reminded to love.

That scripture passage from 1 Corinthians which we read this morning.  It’s a pretty passage.  It’s a “nice” passage.  For those of us who have had it read at our weddings (which is a whole lot of us) when we hear “and the greatest of these is love” we can turn to that special someone in our lives and go… “Ahh…”  And for the married folk, we can think to our own little selves, “He’s talkin’ about us, darlin’.”

And that’s what we often think of as love in this world.

But the “love” that Paul talks about here is not some ooey, gooey, puddle of self-satisfied love.  No, it’s hard-hittin’ revolutionary stuff.  (Amen?  Amen!)

If I speak in the tongues of mortals and of angels, but do not have love, I am a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal.  And if I have prophetic powers, and understand all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but do not have love, I am nothing.  If I give away all my possessions, and if I hand over my body so that I may boast, but do not have love, I gain nothing.

Love is patient; love is kind; love is not envious or boastful or arrogant or rude. It does not insist on its own way; it is not irritable or resentful; it does not rejoice in wrongdoing, but rejoices in the truth.  It bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.

Love never ends.

Got that?

This is love WAY beyond a dozen roses.  This is the kind of love that changes people…that changes situations…that changes the world.

And it’s hard.

The last night in Nashville, all that love discussion under my belt and hearing about leadership in the small church and schmoozing with church leaders and getting’ ready to hear Tony Campolo speak, I went out to dinner with Sheila and Leila _____ from our conference.  That afternoon Sheila and I had gone to a ministry in a poor section of Nashville where a church from the suburbs had sent in a pastor to live in that poor section and be in ministry with the underprivileged, forgotten, hurt people and work for economic justice and social justice...putting feet on their love in a difficult neighborhood.  

But before we went into the city, we went to the suburbs for worship at the parent church.  They were huge…about eight-thousand members.  Something like that.  I don't know.  And their contemporary service had a band that was awesome.  On the way to dinner that night, I was trying to describe the band to Leila and I said it was “tight” and “crazy good” and “sick.”

The only problem was there was a gentleman in front of us who overheard part of this conversation.  I assume was homeless and I assume had some emotional issues going on.  I think he thought my mention of “sick” was referring to him.  And he turned and he yelled.  And he was angry.  And I was nervous.  And I was trying to find a way just to get around him and get to the restaurant without really having to look him in the eyes.   And I did.

There was no “patient and kind” from me at that time.  My love didn’t “bear all things, believe all things, hope all things.”  My love only endured to the point that I started to feel uncomfortable.

After dinner, I was first out of the restaurant.  There was a beggar on the street.  The beggar looked at me, wearing my $14 straw hat I picked up on the trip, and said, “Nice hat.  Are you a minister?”  I don’t know if he had seen a lot of ministers over those few days or I was looking particularly clerical that evening.  Maybe it was the hat.  But, since he now knew I was a Christian…and more…a MINISTER…I felt like I should show what love I could at that time.  I couldn’t address the underlying reasons for his presence on the street that night.  I don't know what job he may have had and lost.  I don't know what ailment had him fall on hard times.  I don't know what REALLY was going on.  But I could give him some money…in the hopes that it went toward some food.

Love is hard.

Girdwood is not Nashville.  And, thank God, Girdwood doesn’t have Nashville’s heat right now.  It was 90 degrees and humid the whole time I was gone.  But we do have among us those who are challenging to love at times.  And, if we’re truly honest with ourselves, we will be among those who are “challenging to love at times.”  (Amen?  Amen.)

Each of us has our circles…our friends and relationships…our comfort zones.  They are the people who may work where we work or who have kids the same age as our kids or who have lived in the community about the same amount of time as we have.  They may be the people we serve on committees with (Lions Club has their Humpy Fest next week!)  They may be the people we run with or party with or look like or vote like or think like or live with.

And, getting outside of that safe area can be a challenge.  How do we reach out to them?   What would love look like?

We say, in this place, that we want to be followers of Jesus.  That’s nice.  

We are those who believe in a God of love.  That’s nice.  

We think service is a good idea and that we are the ones who benefit, really, when we act like Jesus…love like Jesus…to those around us.  That’s nice.  

We have a church that has a mission statement of “Love God.  Love others.  Change the world.” And we say that we want love to come to town…to this town through the presence and action of this church in this place.  And that we want to see a change because of this.  That’s...nice.

But we can be pretty lousy with love…not just with those who look different or think different or talk different or smell different or who act different.  Sometimes we’re pretty lousy with love in our own families…in how we treat our spouses…in how we treat our kids…in what we say behind people’s back.  And we can be pretty lousy with it in our love for God.  We, very rarely, are the people God would like us to be.  We’re lousy lovers.

And we have good company.  We, collectively, have a history here.

From the moment Adam and Eve ate some fruit, the story was set in motion that we’d have issues with love.  Then Cain kills Abel out of Jealousy.  Josephs brothers sell him into slavery.  David kills a man for the affections of his wife.

And even though our God would say about himself in Exodus 34:6:  "The LORD, the LORD, the compassionate and gracious God, slow to anger, abounding in love and faithfulness” almost all of our story is about how unloving we have been.  Jeremiah notes how we loved foreign gods.  Isaiah talks of how we loved bribes and treated the poor poorly.  Micah even needed to remind us to love mercy.

We lied about our love.  We twisted our love.  Our love was self-serving.  It wasn’t love at all.  How could we learn about love?  How could we see it in action?  How could we experience it anew?  What could God do with us or for us or...even more...IN US.

John’s gospel includes that famous television-ready Bible verse, “For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believes in him will not perish but have eternal life.”

Earlier it says this (John 1:14-18):

And the Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory, the glory as of a father’s only son, full of grace and truth.  (John testified to him and cried out, ‘This was he of whom I said, “He who comes after me ranks ahead of me because he was before me.” ’)  From his fullness we have all received, grace upon grace.  The law indeed was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus Christ.  No one has ever seen God. It is God the only Son, who is close to the Father’s heart, who has made him known.

I love how Peterson’s The Message translation puts it here:

The Word became flesh and blood,
      and moved into the neighborhood.
   We saw the glory with our own eyes,
      the one-of-a-kind glory,
      like Father, like Son,
   Generous inside and out,
      true from start to finish.

Like the hymn that says, “Love Came Down at Christmas,” it’s here that “Love Comes to Town.”   Love moves into the neighborhood.   Love puts on flesh and walks among us.  Love was born of a poor woman in an obscure Middle Eastern town.   Love was tempted not to love.  Love turned water into wine to save a wedding feast.  Love healed a crippled man who was lowered through a roof.  Love walked on water.  Love reached out to a woman, an unclean woman who had been bleeding for years.  Love challenged Nicodemus at night to be born again and Love reached out to a despised Samaritan woman at the well and offered her “living water.”

Love made lunch with just a few fishes and loaves.  Love spoke from a Mountain to say that it’s peacemakers who are blessed and those who are poor and hungry and weeping…and you know these are hard words to hear when you are rich and full and happy.  Love took bread and broke it and a cup and blessed it.  It was given to the whole world.  Love in action.  Love in the flesh.  Love in word and deed.

Love came to town and the town rose up against Love.  We put Love on trial.  We convicted Love.  We whipped and beat love.  We abused Love.  We mocked Love.  We marched Love up to Calvary and we nailed Love to the cross for all the world to see…to see just what it is that we do to Love

And Love died.

We had been killing Love for thousands of years…through action and inaction.  And now that God’s love was made manifest in God’s very own Son, we killed it off.  Didn’t want any of it.  Didn’t want the challenge.  We had other things we sure liked a whole lot better than love.  Easier things.

We buried Love and Love stayed in the grave for three days…just long enough to let everyone know that Love was dead…that we had given it our best...and our best was the absolute worst you can imagine............

But...Love...doesn’t...die.  

Three days later Love gets up.  Love walks around.  Love teaches again.  Love preaches again.  Love breaks bread again.  Love pulls together.  Love builds up.  And Love says, I am going to live in each and every one of you.  YOU will have my love.  You will be my Love.  YOU be the Love that comes to your town.  YOU will be the Love that comes to THIS town.  Amen?  Amen.

Look, I want us to love this town and the people here.   I want us to love our spouses more fully.  I want us to love our kids and try to teach them and raise them in such a way that they learn about Love and learn to Love…maybe not how we do…but how Jesus did himself.  I'm a long way from that myself. 

Can we love like that?

In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen.
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Saturday, August 7, 2010

John 1:1-18 (From The Message)

His Only-begotten Son and the Word of God 1885...Image via Wikipedia
1-2 The Word was first,
      the Word present to God,
      God present to the Word.
   The Word was God,
      in readiness for God from day one.

 3-5Everything was created through him;
      nothing—not one thing!—
      came into being without him.
   What came into existence was Life,
      and the Life was Light to live by.
   The Life-Light blazed out of the darkness;
      the darkness couldn't put it out.

 6-8There once was a man, his name John, sent by God to point out the way to the Life-Light. He came to show everyone where to look, who to believe in. John was not himself the Light; he was there to show the way to the Light.

 9-13The Life-Light was the real thing:
      Every person entering Life
      he brings into Light.
   He was in the world,
      the world was there through him,
      and yet the world didn't even notice.
   He came to his own people,
      but they didn't want him.
   But whoever did want him,
      who believed he was who he claimed
      and would do what he said,
   He made to be their true selves,
      their child-of-God selves.
   These are the God-begotten,
      not blood-begotten,
      not flesh-begotten,
      not sex-begotten.
 14The Word became flesh and blood,
      and moved into the neighborhood.
   We saw the glory with our own eyes,
      the one-of-a-kind glory,
      like Father, like Son,
   Generous inside and out,
      true from start to finish.

 15John pointed him out and called, "This is the One! The One I told you was coming after me but in fact was ahead of me. He has always been ahead of me, has always had the first word."

 16-18We all live off his generous bounty,
      gift after gift after gift.
   We got the basics from Moses,
      and then this exuberant giving and receiving,
   This endless knowing and understanding—
      all this came through Jesus, the Messiah.
   No one has ever seen God,
      not so much as a glimpse.
   This one-of-a-kind God-Expression,
      who exists at the very heart of the Father,
      has made him plain as day.
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Friday, August 6, 2010

Working Without the Holy Spirit

Holy Spirit paintingImage by hickory hardscrabble via Flickr
It has been repeated in some circles that a Korean pastor once visited the United States and remarked at the end of his stay, "It's amazing what you people can do without the Holy Spirit."

I like to think that I can do a lot as well...but without the Holy Spirit it's all in vain.

How can I be open to the Spirit's movement in my life?  How can I receive and be blessed by its power?  How can I move from relying upon myself?

I don't want to work without the Holy Spirit.

Come, Holy Spirit.

I need you.
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Monday, August 2, 2010

Getting Mission Work Wrong -- Listening to Tony Campolo

Tony Campolo
Image by marshillonline via Flickr 


Heard Tony Campolo speak night in Nashville.  He's a challenging person when it comes to issues of politics and justice and living as "A Red Letter Christian."  He's dynamic.  He's funny.  And he is truly trying to live out the faith as best as he can.  This was a benefit for Haiti (earthquake) and Nashville (flood).

Great music.  Great preaching.  His talk focussed on mission work and what we've done wrong, in addition to what it means to live the  words of Jesus and what it means for the United Methodist Church to address a lot of the issues that face today's world and to address young persons who struggle with what it means to be Christian…or at least how Christians have been perceived in today's world.

I want to take a moment to talk about mission work.  Now, I say this all as a pastor of a church that has benefited…greatly…from mission teams.  But, Tony talked about how much of the mission work Christians have been doing around the world have had a negative effect on the persons for whom and to whom and with whom we've been in mission.  We've not been empowering anyone.  Instead of HAND-UPS we've given HAND-OUTS that, particularly outside of crises situations, has ended up hurting.


Here's a normal mission trip scenario.  We send a team to Central America or to Haiti or to wherever it is that we're going to send them and we build a school for them.  That's great.  But, part of the reason those folks need a school is because they're too poor to afford one.  And the reason they are too poor to afford one is because they don't have paying jobs the get the money to afford said school.  And, the very process of persons (mostly rich white people) going down there or over there or up there to build a school for them means that we've taken away jobs that could have gone to indigenous persons.   What if, instead, we provided money (our greatest resource in the US that is lacking in Third World Countries) to pay persons to do the work--essentially creating jobs which created the schools.  Our normal method of operation has been to go on trips to do what persons should have probably been doing for themselves if only there was the funding to make it possible.

It is for this reason that Tony Campolo and Eastern University (an American Baptist School) has birthed a program that goes to developing countries to help persons start up cottage industries to create jobs rather than just going and doing FOR the indigenous people.

Another problem Campolo mentioned is what has happened in Haiti after the earthquake.  There is a crisis there that needs to be addressed and one of the ways it needs to be addressed is the infusion of food into the country.  People are hungry.  They need food.  But, we need to provide that food in such a way that we don't end up putting farmers out of business because they can't sell any food because persons are all getting free food.   A similar problem is appearing with the clothing industry.  There used to be, according to Tony, a clothing industry in Haiti.  But, what's happened since the earthquake is there is such a glut of second hand clothing that no one can sell clothing to the persons in the country.  They have been given free clothes.  Anyone involved with the clothing industry (manufacturing, distribution, or sale) is struggling.  And so more jobs are lost and the people remain in poverty.

Mission work can go wrong.  It can be done in such a way that fails to lift up the very people it was intended to help.

So, what about Girdwood Chapel?  What about all the mission teams that have come up over the years?  Could this have been done differently?  Were teams doing FOR US that which we should have done FOR OURSELVES?  Maybe.  But, what I think is true is that we have treasured the relationships that have built up over time with all of those work teams.  They have done great work for us and with us and I do not want to lessen the "sweat equity" put in by members of our own congregation.  What they have done is move us forward farther and faster than we could have done by ourselves...which is scary considering how long this has taken.

Maybe this is a cop-out.  I don't know. 

But it is well worth questioning whether we could have gotten more financial commitment and time commitment and labor commitment from our own folks if others had not been so generous.  I'm just not picture where we might be today if not for the ways all of the mission work we've received has gone right...not wrong.

Thanks, Tony Campolo, for making me think.
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Getting Mission Work Wrong -- Listening to Tony Campolo

Tony Campolo
Image by marshillonline via Flickr 


Heard Tony Campolo speak night in Nashville.  He's a challenging person when it comes to issues of politics and justice and living as "A Red Letter Christian."  He's dynamic.  He's funny.  And he is truly trying to live out the faith as best as he can.  This was a benefit for Haiti (earthquake) and Nashville (flood).

Great music.  Great preaching.  His talk focussed on mission work and what we've done wrong, in addition to what it means to live the  words of Jesus and what it means for the United Methodist Church to address a lot of the issues that face today's world and to address young persons who struggle with what it means to be Christian…or at least how Christians have been perceived in today's world.

I want to take a moment to talk about mission work.  Now, I say this all as a pastor of a church that has benefited…greatly…from mission teams.  But, Tony talked about how much of the mission work Christians have been doing around the world have had a negative effect on the persons for whom and to whom and with whom we've been in mission.  We've not been empowering anyone.  Instead of HAND-UPS we've given HAND-OUTS that, particularly outside of crises situations, has ended up hurting.


Here's a normal mission trip scenario.  We send a team to Central America or to Haiti or to wherever it is that we're going to send them and we build a school for them.  That's great.  But, part of the reason those folks need a school is because they're too poor to afford one.  And the reason they are too poor to afford one is because they don't have paying jobs the get the money to afford said school.  And, the very process of persons (mostly rich white people) going down there or over there or up there to build a school for them means that we've taken away jobs that could have gone to indigenous persons.   What if, instead, we provided money (our greatest resource in the US that is lacking in Third World Countries) to pay persons to do the work--essentially creating jobs which created the schools.  Our normal method of operation has been to go on trips to do what persons should have probably been doing for themselves if only there was the funding to make it possible.

It is for this reason that Tony Campolo and Eastern University (an American Baptist School) has birthed a program that goes to developing countries to help persons start up cottage industries to create jobs rather than just going and doing FOR the indigenous people.

Another problem Campolo mentioned is what has happened in Haiti after the earthquake.  There is a crisis there that needs to be addressed and one of the ways it needs to be addressed is the infusion of food into the country.  People are hungry.  They need food.  But, we need to provide that food in such a way that we don't end up putting farmers out of business because they can't sell any food because persons are all getting free food.   A similar problem is appearing with the clothing industry.  There used to be, according to Tony, a clothing industry in Haiti.  But, what's happened since the earthquake is there is such a glut of second hand clothing that no one can sell clothing to the persons in the country.  They have been given free clothes.  Anyone involved with the clothing industry (manufacturing, distribution, or sale) is struggling.  And so more jobs are lost and the people remain in poverty.

Mission work can go wrong.  It can be done in such a way that fails to lift up the very people it was intended to help.

So, what about Girdwood Chapel?  What about all the mission teams that have come up over the years?  Could this have been done differently?  Were teams doing FOR US that which we should have done FOR OURSELVES?  Maybe.  But, what I think is true is that we have treasured the relationships that have built up over time with all of those work teams.  They have done great work for us and with us and I do not want to lessen the "sweat equity" put in by members of our own congregation.  What they have done is move us forward farther and faster than we could have done by ourselves...which is scary considering how long this has taken.

Maybe this is a cop-out.  I don't know. 

But it is well worth questioning whether we could have gotten more financial commitment and time commitment and labor commitment from our own folks if others had not been so generous.  I'm just not picture where we might be today if not for the ways all of the mission work we've received has gone right...not wrong.

Thanks, Tony Campolo, for making me think.
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