10 October 2012

Moses


To be honest, I hate cartoons about Moses.  They are entirely predictable (lemme guess, it's going to be about parting the water), and they are theologically wrong.  Moses didn't part the Red Sea; God parted the Red Sea.  Let's roll the scroll: Then Moses stretched out his hand over the sea, and all that night the LORD drove the sea back with a strong east wind and turned it into dry land. The waters were divided, and the Israelites went through the sea on dry ground, with a wall of water on their right and on their left (Exodus 14:21-22, emphasis added).

So, enough already:


 




 

Timelines

Recently, I was looking at the timeline of a facebook friend when I noticed something strange.  The friend (a guy) was gushing about the love of his life, and the lady he tagged was not the person to whom I thought he was married.  I began to scroll down his page and saw that, indeed, he was not talking about his wife (to whom he had been married only a few years and with whom he had recently had a child) but someone new.  In between were some status updates about being "sick of all the drama" and stuff like that.  I don't know what's going on there, but it was sad to see.  

Maybe they split for good reasons (and there are VERY few of those), maybe not.  Being "sick of all the drama" doesn't sound very legit as an excuse for divorce, and it's even more sad that there are children whose entire lives will be affected negatively by grown-ups acting like junior-highers.   (I encourage you right now to open a new tab and Google "effects of divorce on children")  And it's all right there, on facebook, for the world to observe. 

It sure doesn't help that he is proudly Christian.  He describes himself as "Christ-centered" and active in an accountability group.  It doesn't help because this is the exact type of thing the rest of the world sees and thinks, I knew Christianity doesn't make a difference.  They're just the same as the rest of us.  But that's simply not true.  Having Jesus, not self, at the center of one's life is the greatest decision a person can make.  It changes everything...if you don't resist the work of the Holy Spirit in your life.  When we were baptized, "all of us who were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death.   We were therefore buried with him through baptism into death in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, we too may live a new life" (Romans 6:3-4).  Something fundamental about you changed when you were baptized, and it ought to show in the way you live your life: "faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead" (James 2:17).

As much as I hate to see Christians acting like the world, I understand that we currently live in enemy territory and have to fight hard just to keep the ground that Christ has won (see Ephesians 6:10-13).  I know that "there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus" (Romans 8:1).  Divorce, even if it's your stupid fault, doesn't send a Christian to hell.  All our sins, even future ones, stand forgiven; however, let's not use that as an excuse to give up the fight as if we aren't going to be judged by our works.  Oh yes, our works matter - not for salvation, but for the rewards we'll receive in Heaven: "For no one can lay any foundation other than the one already laid, which is Jesus Christ.  If any man builds on this foundation using gold, silver, costly stones, wood, hay or straw,  his work will be shown for what it is, because the Day will bring it to light. It will be revealed with fire, and the fire will test the quality of each man's work.  If what he has built survives, he will receive his reward.  If it is burned up, he will suffer loss; he himself will be saved, but only as one escaping through the flames" (1 Corinthians 3:11-15; see also Revelation 20:12 and 22:12).

So let's not live out what Philip Yancey once lamented: “All too often the church holds up a mirror reflecting back the society around it, rather than a window revealing a different way.”

24 August 2012

Why I Run (and Pay to Run)

Note: I just found this post in my Drafts folder, and I think it was a couple of years old, certainly written before my two marathon experiences (see #2 below).  Anyway, enjoy!

A thoughtful friend flabbergastedly states the same thing every time I talk about running in an upcoming race: "I don't see why anyone would pay money to run on streets my tax dollars pay for" or something like that. It's a good question, and I've been thinking about why I run and why I actually pay money (half and full marathons are not cheap, by the way) to run in a race when I can run anywhere and anytime I want to for FREE. Here are some of my reasons mixed with some of my followup questions for those who can't understand why:
  1. Signing up for a race (which includes paying money) keeps me accountable: I had better train since I paid for the race.
  2. It's motivating: I want to finish the race strongly, not wheezing and crawling on my hands and knees.
  3. Having a deadline helps me to train on a schedule in a focused way that not having a deadline cannot accomplish. If there's no deadline, no distance goal, no time goal, then what am I running for?
  4. Running for purely health reasons isn't enough for me. I would probably quit running if there were no other reason to run. Entering and paying to race is another reason to stick with it.
  5. Why pay money to go to a gym when you can exercise (including resistance training) for FREE? Because it's a place to meet other lifters. Because you gain access to experts in the field. Because it keeps you accountable. Because it is encouraging to you as a lifter. Because it is helpful to know that other people are interested in the same thing as you. Because it is invigorating to go to a place where others are cheering for you and are interested in you doing your best. Now, substitute "runner" for "lifter."
  6. Anything that's worth anything in life will cost you something. Running is worth a lot: there are many health benefits, it has a calming effect on your mind and body (after the run, that is), it's a place to achieve more than you thought possible. It costs you time, money (shoes and stuff), sweat, occasional pain, energy, and commitment, but it pays you back in joy, sense of accomplishment, visible results (more muscular legs and a thinner waist for starters), measurable results, and a new component to your identity, that of "runner."
  7. When else do police block off streets just for you?
  8. Because of the pre-race expo, where you can find all things running and meet and speak with experts in shoes, apparel, nutrition, injury prevention and treatment, etc. You don't meet these people on the street.
  9. Because always training and never showcasing is boring.
  10. How can you criticize it if you've never done it?
I mean these points in all gentleness and respect to my friend and anyone else who don't see running like runners do. Like many things in life, to experience it is much better than to simply witness it. Pro football is much more exciting at the stadium than on TV (this is especially true for baseball). Either way, the same thing happens; it's the experiencing of it in person that makes the difference. When you walk into the stadium, you think Wow, this place is incredible. I can feel the energy. It's like that at a race: you feel an energy, a sense of awe at the magnitude of the event, and a little bit of fear about the race itself that you just don't get running sidewalks by yourself.

For me personally (as you can see from the reasons above) it boils down to the intangibles. Yes, the health benefits are the same whether you run by yourself at the park or run in a race, but the emotional and experiential benefits cannot even be touched by always running by yourself in training mode.

10 August 2012

Rainbows, shirts, and resurrection of the dead

This evening, it rained, something we desperately needed.  The rain was short-lived, unfortunately, but the sudden breakthrough of sunshine created a beautiful, complete rainbow, the third I've seen since we moved here in March. Michael and I sat on the front step and talked about the rainbow, its meaning according to Scripture, and things related to VBS, which was Michael's first.

Today's VBS theme was "sad news, glad news," and the lesson taught about Jesus' death (sad news) and resurrection (glad news).  Michael mentioned the crown of thorns and how it was sad news.  He then asked why the "bad guys" took off Jesus' shirt and "put marks on him" and "died him on the cross."  [Can I just take this moment to say how amazed I am at how much Michael is learning and growing?  He's very observant and wants to know about everything.  It's so fun to watch!]  

I answered the question about them taking off Jesus' shirt by saying that the bad guys wanted to hurt Jesus and embarrass him; that's why they took off his shirt.  I asked him what the glad news was.  He thought for a second and said, "God put his shirt back on."  (In the illustrations of today's lesson, Jesus rises from the dead dressed in clean clothes.)  I love it; if the taking off of his shirt symbolized the "bad guys" trying to hurt and embarrass Jesus, God putting Jesus' shirt back on him symbolized God restoring Jesus' honor, and vindicating his death.  Not that Michael meant all that, but I'd like to think that if he had the words, that's what he meant.

I love those moments in life when you can hear your child say something about Jesus and you can say, "That's right."

18 May 2012

Provocation for the day


"[People] don't deny objective truth when it comes to sticks and stones, only when it comes to morality.  And even in morality, they don't deny objective truth about good and evil when it comes to anything else but sex.  They don't defend rape or pillage or slavery or oppression or theft or nuclear war or embezzlement or racism – or even smoking!  But they defend divorce and fornication and masturbation and contraception and abortion and sodomy and bestiality and bisexuality and cross-dressing.  'Anything goes' is their morality if and only if it has anything to do with sex.
            For instance, they don't defend murder, except murder in the name of sex.  That name is 'abortion,' of course.  If abortion had nothing to do with sex, we could never have sold it.  If storks brought babies, there would be no Planned Parenthood.  Abortion is backup birth control, of course, and birth control means the demand to have sex without having babies."
- Peter Kreeft, How to Win the Culture War, 75-76

     Understand a few things about Kreeft: 1) He is Catholic, so his stance on birth control is stronger than many other Christians', 2) The chapter from which this comes is a chapter written from the perspective of demons, and is presented tongue-in-cheek-but-serious-about-the-truth by Kreeft (which is why it speaks of "they" [humans] and "we" [demons]), and 3) though harsh, there is a lot of truth to his words.  Those who tend to be pro-choice tend to favor a hands-on approach from their government in nearly every area of their lives but their sexuality (think abortion and gay marriage), which makes certain attempts at ridiculing pro-life ethics ironic: they say, "no big government" when it comes to abortion.       
     Pro-lifers understand the "no big government" notion, but apply it to most other things some people want the government to do, which is laughed at by liberal politicians.  WHY don't they want "big government" when it comes to abortion?  "Because it's MY body; I should do what I want with it."  Substitute "taxes" for "abortion" and "money" for "body," and you've just summed up a conservative view on taxes.  
     What I'm saying is that pro-choicers are very conservative in their thinking on abortion...to a point.  Pro-choicers don't care what the human life inside the pro-choice woman would think about that logic.  In their thinking, it seems, because the baby can't speak up, s/he can be killed.
     Try to make it about women's health.  Try to make it about an alleged choice.  Try to make it about the pregnant lady.  Those aren't the real deciding factors.  Abortion will never cease to be about the baby.

06 March 2012

Child-like Faith

Mark 10:13-15  13 People were bringing little children to Jesus to have him touch them, but the disciples rebuked them.  14 When Jesus saw this, he was indignant. He said to them, "Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of God belongs to such as these.  15 I tell you the truth, anyone who will not receive the kingdom of God like a little child will never enter it."

Tonight, Michael's tummy didn't feel good.  I think he might have a cold or the same bug I had last week: tiredness, congestion, and a little uneasy stomach.  As I rocked with him in the rocking chair, him laying across my lap, we said our bedtime prayers.  This time, I asked Michael if it was all right if I prayed for God to help his tummy feel better.  Michael nodded.  After I finished the prayer and said "amen," Michael said, "but my tummy still doesn't feel good."  He truly believed that Jesus was going to heal his tummy immediately.  Didn't you? you might ask. 

Well, yes . . . sort of.  Michael's theology is a little uninformed, but yet his faith is profound.  Jesus is our healer; however, he doesn't always heal everything every time we ask, no matter what.  That would make Jesus some sort of robot or vending machine, where every time we pull the lever or insert the "money" (read: prayer), Jesus automatically must do what we say.  I believe that Jesus will heal every disease, injury, deformity, wrinkle, etc.  The question is not, "will he?" but "when will he?"  Our answer is found in 1 Corinthians 15:

1 Corinthians 15:42-58  42 So will it be with the resurrection of the dead. The body that is sown is perishable, it is raised imperishable;  43 it is sown in dishonor, it is raised in glory; it is sown in weakness, it is raised in power;  44 it is sown a natural body, it is raised a spiritual body. If there is a natural body, there is also a spiritual body.  45 So it is written: "The first man Adam became a living being"; the last Adam, a life-giving spirit.  46 The spiritual did not come first, but the natural, and after that the spiritual.  47 The first man was of the dust of the earth, the second man from heaven.  48 As was the earthly man, so are those who are of the earth; and as is the man from heaven, so also are those who are of heaven.  49 And just as we have borne the likeness of the earthly man, so shall we bear the likeness of the man from heaven.  50 I declare to you, brothers, that flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God, nor does the perishable inherit the imperishable.  51 Listen, I tell you a mystery: We will not all sleep, but we will all be changed--  52 in a flash, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet. For the trumpet will sound, the dead will be raised imperishable, and we will be changed.  53 For the perishable must clothe itself with the imperishable, and the mortal with immortality.  54 When the perishable has been clothed with the imperishable, and the mortal with immortality, then the saying that is written will come true: "Death has been swallowed up in victory."  55 "Where, O death, is your victory? Where, O death, is your sting?"  56 The sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law.  57 But thanks be to God! He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.  58 Therefore, my dear brothers, stand firm. Let nothing move you.
Explain that to a three-year-old.  My answer to Michael's statement was, "well, buddy, sometimes it just takes time to heal."  God made our bodies to repair and maintain themselves pretty well most of the time.  So, indirectly, God does heal even trivial sickness, because He made us and our bodies in such a way that they heal themselves.

But I digress....  What I love about Michael's complaint was his belief that Jesus would heal him immediately.  Oh how I wish I had that kind of childlike, uncomplicated faith for every situation.

As I write this, I can hear Michael starting to cry in his bed.  I guess it's time for him to teach me some more. . . .

14 February 2012

At Last

Tonight I perused older entries in my blog, and one recurring theme was my lack of satisfaction with regard to my employment.  Here's a recap of the jobs I've had since 2005: FedEx Ground (working in a warehouse), and Target Distribution Center (working in a warehouse).  Part of the angst came from the disparity between my education (both a bachelor's degree and a master's degree in theology) and my employment.  Part of it came from a lack of clarity in God's leading in my life: should I pursue a PhD? move? enter ministry?  send resumes to Bible colleges? 

As it turns out, the only one of those questions I didn't answer "yes" to was the PhD.  After three years of sending out resumes to churches and getting very few replies, I am finally able to say that I am in the ministry!  Martelle Christian Church in Martelle, IA, is where I will be the Senior Minister starting this weekend.  Well, sort of.  I will start preaching there this Sunday, but will not be full-time until we move.  We won't move until the parsonage is ready and we have given (and fulfilled) our two weeks' notice to our employers.

I find the story of how we landed in Martelle fascinating.  My good friend (and ministry mentor) Tim Platt one day casually told me that the church in Martelle is in need of a Senior Minister.  They already have a great Youth Minister, but have been without a Senior Minister for the better part of six months (this was last fall).  I followed up with the contact he gave me, intending only to preach there a few times to help fill in.  After a couple of visits, however, I felt a peace about being there, a sense of at-homeness that was subtle, but noticeable.  A couple of members of the search team asked if I would give my resume, and the next time down, I did. 

I should pause here and mention that the number one problem I had with getting into a ministry was lack of full-time, stateside experience.  I had lots of missions experience, and some part-time ministries while in college, but all of it added up paled in comparison to the experience of many people who sent resumes to Martelle and wherever else I sent mine.  More than once I was not even considered (or if I was, I never made it past the "first round" of the hiring process) because of my "lack" of experience.  My expectations of hearing back from anyone were low.

In early December 2011, I received a call from a guy named Paul from MCC, wanting to set up a phone interview, which took place the following Monday.  The week after that, Paul called me back to let me know that they wanted me and my family to come down for a weekend because I was their top candidate!  So we went down January 14-15, and the weekend went extremely well.  Both Heidi and I felt that the opportunities there were amazing and God gave us both a peace about being there, which in itself was a huge answer to prayer.   One week later, I found out that all votes were affirmative and we were on our way.

Through this process God has worked on our family to prepare us for this transition.  Why did I spend so much time not in ministry?  I don't know yet, but I know it has served to teach me patience and trust in God.  Five years ago, I never would have considered sending a resume to a church in a town of 245 people in a place I had never heard of, but going there and meeting people and seeing what is happening there changed all that. 

MCC is full of vibrant, kind people who love Jesus dearly, and I can't wait to get started joining them in their ministry to Martelle and surrounding areas.  I already like them: I have more blog readers from MCC than from anywhere else! :)  Beyond that, though, I have seen kindness and sincerity in them that I can immensely appreciate.

Let it begin soon.  Thank you, Jesus.