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Archive for the ‘Community’ Category

Yesterday, I briefly preached on the importance of doing more in your faith community than just sit for an hour on Sunday morning.

In most churches, the next step is becoming involved in a small group.  It is in this smaller group that you will really dig into Bible study and begin to understand what God has given us in the Word.  It is also here that you will become part of a real community – not a perfect community but a real community.  You will begin to build relationships with these people and learn what it means to do life together.  In a small group you will also have opportunity to minister to one another and hopefully, outside your group as well, meeting needs and impacting the world.

So it is probably not hard to see that I am a big proponent of the small group ministry in churches.

But today, I want you to think “next step.”  I want you to think, “today.”

I ended the sermon yesterday with a quote from Ed Stetzer:  “the biggest sin in the church today is that we have made it OK to come and sit for an hour on Sunday and call that Christianity.”  If this quote hits you like it does me, what are you going to do with it – today?

How will you live out your faith on Monday . . . Tuesday . . . Thursday?

Think about it today – I’d love to hear your ideas!

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Today is Friday and on Friday, everyone starts thinking about some time off – the weekend.

Here are three musts to ensure you have a great weekend.

  1. Spend it with family. Time away from work or school is best spent with those you love.  Take advantage of this time this weekend to do something with your kids, your spouse or your parents.  You won’t always have this time.
  2. Take a Sabbath. The book of Genesis tells us that when God created the earth, the seventh day was set aside for rest.  God knows we need our rest – so make sure and make it a priority.
  3. Spend time with your faith community.  Most churches meet on Saturday or Sunday.  Make spending some time at church a priority this weekend.  If you don’t have a faith community and you are in the area, I would love to see you at our place this Sunday – I’ll be preaching on “Something More.”

I pray that your weekend is amazing!

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Radical Faith

I have had a little booklet sitting on my desk for a few months.  It is on a stack of books – my “To Read” stack.  I have had good intentions – it didn’t get chunked or shelved – its still in my stack of things I know I need to read.

This little booklet came in the mail and I thought, “Cool, a free book!”  But as I looked it over, I got the impression that it was just a teaser to get you to buy the real book.  So that turned me off and I put it on my stack.

Last weekend, I had a long conversation with a friend who is currently reading through the book and based on our discussion, I decided I needed to get the book and read it for myself.

Before I give you the title, let me warn you, it should be  rated MCA – Mature Christian Audience only.  Why you might ask?  Because it will mess you up if you are not willing to have the church you grew up with analyzed and dissected.

I believe that David Platt, in his book Radical: Taking Back Your Faith From the American Dream, is on the right track.  I have not finished the book (just picked it up yesterday afternoon), but it doesn’t take long to figure out what David is trying to say.  He says that we have taken the American Dream and approach to life and applied it to the church.  Here is what he says in one section of the book,

We Christians are living out the American dream in the context of our communities of faith.  We have convinced ourselves that if we can position our resources and organize our strategies, then in church as in every other sphere of life, we can accomplish anything we set our minds to.

But what is strangely lacking in the picture of performances, personalities, programs, and professionals is desperation for the power of God.

When is the last time you saw the power of God evidenced in your church?  My fear is that, as ministers and leaders in our churches, we have done just as David describes here – we have bought into the idea that God has gifted us with the ability to “grow” the church and by building structures and strategies and programs, we are serving God.  While, there is truth to that idea, what we have so often left out is any room for God to show up.  It is the attitude that we can do it.

David also says that along the way we have “missed what is radical about our faith and replaced it with what is comfortable.”   He goes on to say that we are “settling for a Christianity that revolves around catering to ourselves when the central message of Christianity is actually about abandoning ourselves.”

How radical is your faith?  Are you completely dependent on God – or is your faith more safe, more sterile?

Jesus said “if you will follow me, you must deny yourself and take up your cross daily.”  Is that your faith?

I’m not convinced it describes mine – but I want it to.

Think about it today!

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I saw a headline this morning in a Christian leadership magazine.  It said, “People Are Resources.”

I understand the intent of the article.  Each and every person has been gifted by God with skills, and talents and passions that God intends for service in Kingdom work.  As a minister, a large part of my job is to help people realize their God-given gifts and then equip and empower them to use those gifts to honor God and fulfill their purpose in life.  It is easy to allow this part of my job to be twisted into something different.  Sometimes, when the pressure is on, it is tempting to see people as resources for allocation to fulfill needs in the church that I am responsible for filling.

But I think we all do that – don’t you?  How many times have you needed something done either at work, or at school or at home and you set out to find the person you could enlist to carry out what you need done?  I am not saying there is anything inherently wrong with this idea – that is how things get done.

But what I am saying is that if we ever allow people to be seen only as resources and for what they can do for us, then we have missed the bigger picture all together.  People are God’s creation and meant for relationships.

Take some time today to focus on your relationships.  That is what God really intends.

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Yesterday I had the privilege of attending a workshop covering web development and branding.  Our presenter was from Canada by way of North Carolina.  At lunch we were discussing the weather patterns of west Texas.  We explained that for us, a normal day is a day in which the wind blows a gentle breeze of 10 to 15 miles per hour.  We also told him that 20 to 30 mile per hour winds would be pretty normal for a windy day.  But then there are often 4 or 5 days per year in which the winds blow so hard that when you walk outside, the sky looks similar to a watered down glass of Diet Coke.

After giving the descriptions of the wind in west Texas, our presenter asked, “Why would you want to live here?”

There are a number of great reasons that I could list for wanting to live here: the people, the wide open spaces or many others.  But I think a picture is worth a thousand words when God decides to show off a little.

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It’s early Thursday morning and I am out on the back deck with a fire in the chimnea – lots on my mind I suppose.  As I sit watching the fire, I watch the flame build and die down.  As I add wood to the fire, the flame builds back up again.  But underneath the flame is where the real fire is – a bed of coals that keeps the fire going.  As I watch the fire I am reminded of a story I heard recently of an Oklahoma pastor named Otto Goins.  You can read his story here.

He is 100 years old.  He preached his first sermon in the summer of 1930.  Now, 80 years later, he is still preaching – and now, right back in the same building he helped build in 1940.  He now lives in a retirement home, but every week his neighbor drives him to church so he can preach.

It is burning coals like Otto that keep the flame going.  Yes, God keeps adding new fuel to the fire in the way of new ministers and leaders, but we must never forget those who have gone before who have kept the fire burning in our churches.

This story also reminds me that even though we may age and reach a point that we retire from our careers, we never retire from serving God.  As a minister, I have heard countless people tell me, “I have served in this capacity for plenty of years, it is time for the younger folks to step up and pull their weight.”  While this is often true, it should never be an excuse for retiring from being a committed believer.  Look at Otto, he is still preaching after 80 years of ministry.

We need the coals to keep the fire going!

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Last night, my youngest son was doing homework and he asked me for a little help.  I have to be honest, there is very little homework these days with which I can actually help.  He asked me to define a deferent society.  I had to admit to him that I had heard the word but could not recall what it means.  So we looked it up together and I learned that it means mutually respectful – a tendency to yield to the will of another.  So a deferent society would be one in which everyone gets along because each person would be equally concerned about others’ feelings and desires.  Sounds good to me.  Unfortunately, sin has thrown a kink in that plan.

But it got me to thinking about the family of Christ followers – the church.  Surely, as believers, we could realize such a community.  Unfortunately, as followers of the Way, we are not immune to sin and selfishness.  We allow our own desires of getting ahead and getting the things we want to supersede our relationships.

Possibly even worse is when we allow our beliefs to drive wedges in our relationships within the family.  This morning I was reading in Romans 14 (yep, I’m still in Romans) about a different kind of problem we face in the church.  The problem of being judgmental – of drawing our circles of what is acceptable smaller and smaller – until we are the only ones left inside.

Paul says this in Romans 14:1-4

1 Accept him whose faith is weak, without passing judgment on disputable matters. 2 One man’s faith allows him to eat everything, but another man, whose faith is weak, eats only vegetables. 3 The man who eats everything must not look down on him who does not, and the man who does not eat everything must not condemn the man who does, for God has accepted him. 4 Who are you to judge someone else’s servant? To his own master he stands or falls. And he will stand, for the Lord is able to make him stand.

Accept him whose faith is weak and don’t pass judgment when it comes to issues that are matters of opinion.

Now I realize that the issues I deem as disputable may not be issues someone else sees as disputable.  But what I understand Paul to be saying is that we should have respect for others and their opinions.  Ultimately, it is God that we will all answer to anyway.

If the church could truly grasp this concept and begin to live it, I believe we would see a community of mutual respect and love, just as Jesus intended.  That would be a deferent community – one the world needs – one for which people are longing.

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Talking to the Football Team

I have the opportunity to speak to the high school varsity football team this morning.  The coach asked me to come and do a devotional for them.  I am pumped.  However, he said he wanted me to talk for 30 minutes.  People in church don’t listen for 30 minutes, how in the world am I going to keep the attention of high school guys for 30 minutes.

The good thing is, I have a couple of football stories from my school days – that should buy me 5 minutes.  Now – what to do for the other 25?!

Seriously, I covet your prayers as I head off to talk to them.  I pray that God will use this opportunity to touch some lives today.

I’ll let you know how it goes.

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Don’t Be a Faker

One of the best movies I have seen in recent years (yes, years) is To Save a Life (for more info on the movie click here).  It is a story of a high school senior who comes to realize that there is more to life than being popular and having fun.  He and a childhood friend had become estranged.  He had gone the popularity route and his friend had been left behind and shunned.  After years of being alone, the friend took his own life.  At that point, the main character realizes that there has to be more to life than what he is experiencing.

He begins to give God a try – trying out a youth group in a local church.  But there he finds a bunch of kids who are just playing at being Christ followers.  In one scene, out of frustration he asks the youth pastor why the church is full of of fakers.

That scene still haunts my thoughts and burdens my heart.  Why?  Because it is true.  People are hurting and even dying all around our manicured lawns and pristine buildings while we sit inside and play Christian so that we can feel better about ourselves for another week.

Wow, that was harsh!  But please understand my heart in saying it.  God has no plan B.  God’s one and only plan is for Jesus followers to be salt and light in a world that is tasteless and dark.  If people are going to be drawn to God then Jesus must be lifted up and if Jesus is to be lifted up, that must happen through us – the way we live, the way we love, the way relate to others.

I realize, if you have even made it to this point in this post, that I may have offended you to the point that you never visit this blog again.  I certainly pray that is not the case.  Rather, my prayer is that every person who reads my ramblings here would take this as a challenge to be real.  Jesus would rather have followers who are passionate – the lukewarm are of no use to him (Take a look at Revelation 3:15-17).

God has created the church of this generation for this particular time and place.  Are we as a church doing what God expects?  Are you as a Jesus follower doing what God expects.  It’s time to be real.  Don’t be a faker.

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Fresh Starts

Today is the first day of public school here in our town.  As I dropped my 8th grade son off at the middle school, it dawned on me that he is now in the top grade of the school.  This is a new experience for him.  It is the same school as last year but now, because of his age he is in a new place.  In some ways, it is a new beginning.  Really, all the students have a fresh start today – an opportunity to do things differently this year – to try harder – to make an impact.

The beginning  of the school year, in some ways, brings a fresh start for parents as well.  Our schedule has changed –  again!  But it is our opportunity to approach our kids and parenting with a fresh perspective.  What can you do this year to make your child more successful.  What can you do differently to impact your child’s relationship with Jesus.

Your mission, if you choose to accept it, is to spend the next 9 months focused on your own relationship with Jesus.  Then allow that vibrant relationship to impact your relationship with your children with the intent of seeing their relationship with Jesus flourish.

We can do this!

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