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Archive for the ‘Formation’ Category

God’s First Language

I am packing up this morning to head back home.  I took three days of vacation to escort my wife to Houston for a conference.  It has given us time to be together – just the two of us and I thought it would give me some down time to catch up on some reading and to spend some time in prayer.

Unfortunately, one afternoon of “downtime” hardly seems enough.  But it was good to be able to unplug even for an afternoon.

Now I start the 11 hour drive home – alone.  Yeah!

At any rate, I wanted to share with you an experience I had yesterday in my reading and prayer time.  As I sat and prayed and read, I was hoping for a revelation from God – an answer to my prayer.

Have you ever had the experience of feeling like your prayers go unheard?  That maybe your prayers are bouncing off the ceiling?

I read this quote and it reminded me of something.  I am reading through Ben Johnson’s book, Time Away, and in the book he quotes John of the Cross.  The quote is this, “Silence is God’s first language.”  Ben goes on to elaborate on this quote by saying that if we are going to hear God, we first “must learn to turn down the noise in our lives.”

In other words, we must learn to become comfortable sitting in silence before God.  It is in resting in God that we experience peace – and that just might be the answer we are looking for.

Be blessed today!

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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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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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Stand Up For Your Faith

Today is a cool day!  All over the country, students are meeting around the flag pole at their schools to pray for their teachers, their schools, their communities and one another.  What makes this event even more special is that it is completely student lead.  In other words, this is all their effort.

As a pastor, I never know what to expect each year as to how many students will make the effort and when they are there, how many will take it seriously.  But today, at both our middle school and high school, there were great groups – singing and praying and standing up for their faith.  It was an amazing sight.

I am proud of our kids!  But just as importantly, I am challenged by them.  How am I going to stand up for my faith today?

I’ll ask you the same question – how will you stand up for your faith today?

Be blessed!

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Enduring With Hope

During my prayer and reading time this morning I was drawn back to a verse I read last week and never fully internalized.  Romans 15:4 says, “For everything that was written in the past was written to teach us, so that through endurance and the encouragement of the Scriptures we might have hope.”

There is a lot to think about in this one verse.  We could focus on the importance of all those who have gone before us and the wisdom they left behind and how that can help us.  We could also think about the teaching aspect of scripture.

But my focus today is on our part in the process of having hope.  The apostle Paul (author of Romans) tells us that scripture has been written to instruct us on how we should live.  It is also filled with insight into the nature and character of God.  But also in this verse, we see Paul telling us that we must have endurance.

What I take from this verse is that life is not always going to be easy.  Things aren’t always going to happen on my time schedule.  But I must endure – I must carry on and never give up!

Instead, in the process of enduring we are to look to scripture for guidance and encouragement for there in we will find hope.  Jeremiah 29:11 always gives me encouragement – especially during times I am having to “endure.”

No matter what you may be going through today, hang on – endure – and look to scripture for your hope.

What scriptures do you turn to?

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I Am Amazed!

Today, as I waited on my youngest to finish cross country practice, I listened to the Pray-As-You-Go devotional podcast.

The scripture reading was familiar from the Gospel of Luke chapter 2.  You can read it here.

As I listened to these words read, I pictured Simeon in the temple, meeting Jesus, the Messiah, as an infant.  I thought about the overwhelming joy he must have felt – the wonder and amazement that the chosen One of God was in his very arms.

In the translation read on the podcast, the word “amazed” was used to describe the reaction of Joseph and Mary at what they were hearing about Jesus.

Then the question came from the guide, “Are you amazed by Jesus?”

That question has been lingering in my mind ever since.

As I have thought about that question, there are many things that have come to mind as to the amazement I feel because of Jesus.

The most amazing thing is that he has called me out – that he chose me and gave me a new life – I would be wandering through life with no direction and no purpose if not for Jesus’ amazing and magnificent grace!

What about you – do you find Jesus amazing?

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Earth’s crammed with heaven,

And every common bush afire with God:

But only he who sees, takes off his shoes,

The rest sit round it, and pluck blackberries


(Elizabeth Barrett Browning – from Aurora Leigh – 1857)

I had read this before, but ran across it yesterday and had to stop and pray.  The reference is to Moses and his experience of meeting God in a burning bush that was not consumed.

Browning has the uncanny ability to get right to the heart of the matter with eloquence and simplicity.  Her point – God is all around us, in everything we see.  Our problem is that we are too pre-occupied with our lives and our schedules to realize it.

Those who stop and notice God at work in little things like the bloom of a flower or the laughter of children will experience a little glimpse of God – of heaven.

The rest of us go about our busy lives oblivious to God’s movement.

So here is my question for you today:  Will you go about your day intentionally looking for God, or will you simply go pick blackberries?

I would love to hear how you see God today – leave me a comment or send me an email.

Have a blessed day today!

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I just dropped our youngest son at football practice (yes on the Labor Day holiday) and as I returned home, I turned on the radio.  There was a song playing that seemed familiar but, as is the case with me much of the time, I had not really listened to the words.

The song was More Like Falling In Love by Jason Gray.  One of the verses says, “Cause all religion ever made me was just a sinner with a stone tied to my feet, it never set me free.”  Then the chorus says this, “More like falling in love than something to believe in, more like losing my heart than giving my allegiance.”

Those words really hit home.  I am not sure that my faith hasn’t become more of a belief system than a love affair.  One of my strong suits is loyalty and allegiance, but if that is all my relationship with Jesus is now days, then something has to change.  I know that Jesus wants more!  He died for you and me out of love, surely he deserves more from me than allegiance.  He desires a passionate relationship.

My prayer for you and myself today is this: Jesus, I don’t want just something to believe in I want to fall in love with you all over again.  Give me the desire and drive to know you more fully and love you more deeply than ever before!    Amen

I challenge you to make that your prayer today.

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A Time To Celebrate

My youngest runs cross country and on Fridays he has to be at practice at 5:45 am.  This particular practice is typically only 20 minutes or so.  So today, I decided to sit in the car and wait rather than drive home and start the coffee and then turn around and drive right back to pick him up.

As I sat there in the car, I listened to the Pray-As-You-Go prayer and reading for today.  The text came from Luke 5.  Jesus was being questioned by the Pharisees as to why John’s disciples fasted and prayed and his disciples didn’t.  Take a look at Jesus’ response:

33 They said to him, “John’s disciples often fast and pray, and so do the disciples of the Pharisees, but yours go on eating and drinking.” 34 Jesus answered, “Can you make the guests of the bridegroom fast while he is with them?  35 But the time will come when the bridegroom will be taken from them; in those days they will fast.”

I have read this many times before but before today – before the question was asked by the speaker in the guided prayer portion of the podcast – I have never thought about these verses in this way.  The speaker pointed out that in our lives there are times for prayer and fasting and there are times for celebration.  Then he asked, “What time is it for you?”

Jesus’ point was that there would be a time for his disciples to fast and pray, but while he was with them, it would be a time of celebration.

Do we celebrate times when we feel God’s presence in a fresh way?  Do we seek out time alone with Jesus and then celebrate that time?

What do you have to celebrate today?

I encourage you to take some time to celebrate this weekend.

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The Land Between

Have you ever found yourself in limbo.  Maybe it was between jobs or between relationships.  Or maybe you have found yourself in difficult times financially.

Maybe you are in the middle of something right now.

Last week I finished a book by Jeff Manion entitled, The Land Between: Finding God in Difficult Transitions.  It has kept me thinking for quite some time now.

In the book, Manion illustrates his points by pointing to the people of Israel and their journey through the wilderness.  They had been enslaved in Egypt for years and had been crying out to God to set them free.  So God used Moses to lead them out of that captivity and across the desert to the land of Canaan.  Unfortunately, because of the people’s lack of trust, this journey took 40 years.  That is a long time to spend in the land between!

Manion uses their story to point out that all of us experience periods of being in the land between.  But it is in this land between that God can use the experience to grow our faith.  Unfortunately, this same land between can drive us away from God as well.  God’s design is to allow us to choose how we will come out on the other side of this land between.

We can choose to trust God and believe that God will walk with us every step of the way or we can become bitter that we are having to go through trials.  The choice is up to us.  Coming from someone who has been in the land between before and in even as I write this am there again, it is not an easy choice to make.  There are days when we don’t want to be here.  There are days that it would be easy to complain and become angry with God.  But the answer is to trust.

As long as we know that God is walking with us and that there is a plan for us, then choosing to trust God comes easier.

If today, you find yourself in that land between, remember, this time can make you stronger in your faith or it can drive you away from God – it is your choice.

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