Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Formation’ Category

Yesterday, I experienced something that has reminded me of the importance of my calling – and the calling of every believer.  I had the opportunity to walk among the forgotten.

As I walked down a 3 block area of Hastings Street in downtown Vancouver, British Columbia, I witnessed drugs passing openly.  Homeless and desperate people bartered and sold things they had found on the street trying to get enough money scraped together for their next hit.  There were little shops set up in abandoned buildings where clean needles could be acquired.

It is not that I have not looked into the eyes of poverty or addiction before.  Honestly, I am saddened to say, it was not as shocking as I had been led to believe it would be before making the trek.  I guess the experience was just a reminder for me.

As I have processed this experience, what is the most overwhelming to me is the question: “What can I do about it?”

We all face this question in large or small ways.  Each and every day we come into contact with desperate people.  The difference is that the folks I saw yesterday are the forgotten ones.  Most of the desperation we see is masked with a smile.

The answer to the question of what can be done is the same for all of us.  I think it can be simplified into three words – Show them Jesus.  And the way you do that is to 1) Live your faith and 2) Tell your story.

Jesus has made all the difference in my life.  My story can help others see what Jesus can do in their lives.

As we look into the eyes of poverty or hurt or desperation today – the answer is not welfare.  The answer is not a handout.  The answer is not even encouragement.

The answer is Jesus!

Be a blessing today!

Read Full Post »

As believers and followers of the Way, we say we believe that there is one God.  We hold to the truth that Jesus is God’s one and only son.  We accept the fact that Jesus came to earth, showed us how to live and to love and then died in our place on a cross.  We celebrate the fact that on the third day after the cross event, Jesus walked out of that borrowed tomb – alive and well.

We say we believe these things – these basic elements of our faith.

But I wonder what our churches – what our communities – what our world would look like if we lived like we truly believe these things.

Just wondering!

Read Full Post »

I’ve been thinking a lot this week about the aftermath of Easter.  We spent weeks moving up to that glorious day.  We spent days during Holy Week stopping at the foot of the cross and looking straight into the face of Jesus as he suffered and died.  And then Resurrection day finally came and we celebrated the fact that there is an empty tomb – Jesus is alive – he is alive indeed.

But now we find ourselves back in the routine.  Life as normal has replaced intense focus on Jesus.

So my question is “Were we serious about Jesus last week or was it just holiday hype?”

I ran across a quote yesterday from Jim Denison.  He made the statement that “Easter is not intended to be an event but a lifestyle.”   What a great way to state it.  We have life today because of the resurrection.  We have hope today because death couldn’t hold him.  We can’t hold these truths of our faith hostage to a holiday that happens once per year.  We have to live as if we believe it every single day.

Live your life today as if Jesus is alive.

Because he is!

 

Read Full Post »

Can you hear the laughter?  Can you see the excitement on their faces?  The guys just watched him run those money hungry worship distorters from the courts of the temple.  They can sense that it is happening (of course, they don’t really know what “it” is).  Finally, after three years, Jesus is going to usher in his rule – his kingdom.  All their sacrifice, all their time spent learning from this great man is about to pay off.

Now he tells them to get ready for the big celebration meal.  He gives instructions for what they need and sends a few of them off to get started.  In a few hours they will gather in the vacant room and celebrate together.

Listen to the excitement in their voices.  It’s happening – it’s finally happening.

But what comes next sets them back.

Walk with them today and try and feel what they felt.

It will be a very long day!

Read Full Post »

If God Were Human

If God were human, would God . . .

age?

feel pain?

feel joy?

feel sorrow?

get frustrated?

get hungry?

get tired?

die?

The answer to each of these questions is YES!  I know this because God did become human.  Jesus – God’s one and only son – took on flesh and walked this earth as a man.  He experienced every emotion and temptation we face – but did it without falter and with no sin.

Jesus felt frustrated, even anger at times.  He felt joy and fatigue.  But the one emotion we need to focus on at this time of year is that Jesus felt sorrow.

Jesus knew the cross was God’s plan.  He knew that to fulfill his mission on earth, he had to endure the shame, humiliation and pain that came with such an agonizing death.  But he had a choice.  At any point, he could have decided humanity was just not worth it.

But through that emotional agony and deep sorrow, he focused on the joy of what fulfilling his mission would bring.

As we approach Easter and look forward to the celebration of an empty tomb, don’t rush too quickly past the pain and suffering that Christ endured for you and for me on his way to that empty tomb.

Be blessed!

Read Full Post »

A Breath of Peace

It’s Thursday – that day when we are beginning to feel the wear of the week.  We ramp up all week and get busier and busier as we go.  By the time we get to Thursday, everything becomes a blur.  The pressures of the day become more difficult to handle.  We think, “If one more thing gets added to my plate I may just lose it!”

If I just described you today, take heart.  Paul reminds us of something important in Colossians 3.

In verses 1 and 2 of that chapter, Paul says this:

Since, then, you have been raised with Christ, set your hearts on things above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God.  Set your minds on things above, not on earthly things.

And then he goes further later in the chapter and says this in verse 15:

Let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts, since as members of one body you were called to peace. And be thankful.

Here is what this means for us – the break-neck doers of the world.  When we remember the fact that, as believers, we are no longer residents of this world but rather just journeying through it, when we remember that real life comes only in Christ, then the pressures of this world melt away – they don’t disappear but their significance becomes manageable.  When our focus is on Christ, our lives take on proper perspective.  And when that happens, we realize that the peace that can only come from Jesus washes all over us.  All of the sudden, like a slow, deep, cleansing breath – we feel different – the day is not impossible any longer.

There is an old hymn that comes to mind.  The chorus of that hymn says this:

Turn your eyes upon Jesus, look full in his wonderful face, and the things of earth will grow strangely dim in the light of his glory and grace.

May you find room to breathe today.  May you find peace.  May you rest in the arms of the only one who can offer you that peace.

Be blessed – – and breathe!

Read Full Post »

A New Day

Today is a new day.  I got to the office early this morning so I took my coffee and my Bible up to the roof.  As crazy as that may sound to some, I do this when I can.  I feel at peace when I can see the world from a different perspective.  Sunrise 3-18

This was the seen from atop the church today.  As I watched the sun rise through the clouds, my mind was drawn to Psalm 51, particularly verse 10:  “Create in me a pure heart, O God, and renew a steadfast spirit within me.”

What the Psalmist experienced was a new dawning – a realization that God is not after what we can do or how hard we can work.  God does not take pleasure in how good we can be or the accolades we can pile up for ourselves.  God is not even honored in empty words sung in worship or spoken from a pulpit.

What is pleasing is a pure heart – open and transparent to God.  When our hearts are right, then all the things listed above do honor God.  With a heart that is focused only on God – humbled and broken – our lives take on new meaning.

Praise God that every morning God’s mercies are new and fresh.

Today is a new day.

How is your heart?

Read Full Post »

Your Choice

Genesis teaches us that God created humankind for relationships.  When man was created, God then created woman so that the man would not be lonely.  But even beyond the relationship between man and woman, both were created for relationship with God.

But in order for this to be a true and authentic relationship, humans needed a choice.  If the first man did not have a choice but to love God, then the relationship wouldn’t be real?  In order for the relationship to be meaningful, God allowed an option.  Humans could choose to have a relationship with the creator but they could just as readily choose to ignore the creator.

When we choose to ignore God and go it on our own, we fall prey to our own selfishness and that leads to sin.  Sin then creates a barrier between us and God.

Throughout the generations since that first man and woman, sin has continued to move humankind farther and farther from God.

But God’s plan to redeem humankind back to the relationship for which we were created meant something drastic had to be done.  God had to put on skin and walk among us to show us the path back to where we were intended to be from the beginning.  So Jesus emptied himself and came to earth to teach us what it means to have a relationship with God.

But there was still the issue of sin and the way it had deformed the creation.  Something had to be done about that.  The barrier created by sin had to be pulled down.  The greatest lesson had to be taught.  The only way to defeat sin and pull the barrier down was a sacrifice.  So Jesus went to the cross to defeat sin.  He offered himself as payment for sin – and not just some sin, all sin!

What we learn from this lesson is that in order to fully live in authentic relationship with God, we must die to our sin – die to our self-centered mentality and lifestyle.  When we do, and focus our lives on living for God we begin to experience the life God intended – the relationship that God has desired from the start.  But this only possible through the gift of grace Jesus gave us through his sacrifice.

God invites each of us into this relationship.  But we are given a choice.  We can choose to go it our own way – or we can choose to surrender our desires to the one who created us and knows our needs better than we know them ourselves.

Your choice.

Read Full Post »

Path

Today, this post marks a milestone in my ramblings here at Clay In The Hands.  Next month, I will have been posting my thoughts and struggles, joys and heartaches here for five years.  Today is the 800th post.  So as I have thought about this post, what keeps coming to mind is the journey I have been on over these last 800 posts.

I have come to believe that we drastically overestimate the change that will come in a year, but just as drastically underestimate the change we will see in five.  As leaders, we see things that need to happen and we work toward those endeavors with passion believing we will see immediate results.  However, normally, as the days wear on, it seems nothing is happening.  We look toward the goal and feel we are making no ground at all.  It can be frustrating, draining and discouraging.

But then you hit a milestone and you turn around and look back and realize, it may not have come in a year but the distance covered in five years is astounding.  I look back on where I was five years ago and to be honest, I am not sure I could have ever seen then where God has me now.  God has led me these past five years – sometimes kicking and screaming – and sometimes letting me think it was my idea – but God has been with me every step of the way.

“So the point of all this is?” you may be asking.  The point is that we are in the midst of a journey on The Way that should be seen as a marathon and not a sprint.  Just look back at your own life.  It should not be hard to realize the progress you have made over an extended period of time.

Regardless of where you are on this path, God is at work.  As long as you are striving each day to be more like Jesus and to live for him, you are moving forward.  Even when it may not seem there is any progress at all, God is forming you.

Stay with it.

God is faithful.

Read Full Post »

I have had the blessing of being able to attend a preaching conference at Truett Seminary on Baylor’s campus this week.  The environment of being back on a college campus is always refreshing but the conference was especially meaningful this year.  We had the privilege to sit and listen to one of the country’s premier orators – Dr. Robert Smith, preaching professor at Beason Divinity School in Alabama.   Each session I made my way out of the chapel inspired and depressed at the same time.

Inspired by his words and his passion for the Word.  I walked out of there with a renewed passion for speaking God’s truth.  But I also walked out a bit dejected in knowing I most likely will never be able to deliver a message with the excitement and eloquence of Dr. Smith.  He is a true communicator and I am glad I have had the privilege to sit at the feet of an artist that can paint with words.

But here is what I am thinking about this morning as a prepare for my long drive.  I am thinking about how Dr. Smith defined the goal of preaching.  He said the goal is to take the ink of doctrine and turn it into the blood of life.

I should stop there and let you join me in meditating on that statement.  In fact, I do challenge you to meditate on that thought today.  But I challenge you to take it out of the context of preaching and think about our role as followers in the Way.

Shouldn’t that be our goal each and every day as we get out of bed and prepare for our hurried life?  Shouldn’t our goal be to take what we say we believe and put it to practice.  Shouldn’t the pages of our doctrine, our beliefs – the Bible – take on human form and action?

Our understanding of Jesus – as limited as it is – should course through our veins as the very blood that gives life.

Today, as you rush through your To Do list and responsibilities, how is your belief in Jesus going to affect what you do, what you say and with whom you interact?

Think about it.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »