Friday, March 29, 2013

Do You Get It?

We are at the greatest holiday in Christendom this morning: Easter Sunday, Resurrection Day!  The importance of what we celebrate couldn’t be overstated!  N.T. Wright sees Easter as not simply a grand story, but a clash between two dominant ideas—a world run by God and a world determined to run God out.  As Wright says,
“What is at stake is the clash between a worldview that allows for a God of creation and justice and worldviews that don’t.”  
With the empty tomb of Jesus, the Christian faith says that there is a hope beyond anything our reason, our research or our political events could possibly promise.  The resurrection tells us of a world that will one day be renewed and restored and a life that lives within that world that never sees death again.  

The question God would ask us is simply this: “Do you get it?”

Friday, March 22, 2013

God's Radical Surgery

On Palm Sunday we will look at the famous triumphal entry passage as we continue on the road toward the cross.  There is much that is misunderstood about this passage: the idea that Jesus “cleansed” the temple (He was picturing its destruction, not its purification), the cursing of the fig tree (people sometimes see Jesus as a bit capricious because they miss what He is trying to say about a dead religious system), the prayer that can move mountains (some still think this is a prayer to fulfill personal wants).  

But, I think we really miss how this whole episode portrays what God wants to do inside each and every one of our hearts.  It seems so harsh, that God wishes to kill the old us and bring to life a “new us”.  And yet, it is the only way.  As I was reading this week,
“This is the wearying power of sin in the believer; it won’t accept a cease-fire, much less a peace treaty.”  
And God’s solution is radical surgery—to kill our old lives and to begin to create new life through Christ.  This is a road that must lead us to the cross, a road that points out our utter sinfulness, our utter helplessness and the utter greatness of God through Jesus Christ in His mercy on display.

Friday, March 15, 2013

Getting It

We begin down the road, so to speak, towards the cross and the empty tomb where our faith finds its duel footholds: the death of Jesus and the resurrection of Jesus.  The gospel we will be following on Sundays is Mark’s gospel, which is in my top four favorite gospels! :-)

What I love about Mark is how he prods us, the reader.  When Jesus stills the storm and the disciples ask, “Who is this man?”, Mark is asking us if we truly get it.  When Jesus feeds the 5,000 and then the 4,000 and the disciples are not understanding plain Aramaic (they didn’t speak “plain English”), Mark asks us, “Yes, but do you understand?”  

This Lenten season is a wonderful time to really, prayerfully concentrate on the meaning of the cross and the resurrection.  I pray you will not yawn at a well-known story, but instead follow the road Mark lays out for us and get to know this story better!!

Friday, March 8, 2013

Everyday Spirituality

In my habits for an everyday spirituality, I try to read something quite unrelated to my sermon preparation.  Sometimes, I get so focused on completing a task that I miss the potential growth opportunities.  So, I try to read something outside of the task just to keep a balance.  This week, I was reading A.W. Tozer’s wonderful little book, “The Knowledge of the Holy” and I was struck by a comment made by the ever-quotable Tozer.  He wrote:
“Because man is born a rebel, he is unaware that he is one.  His constant assertion of self, as far as he thinks of it at all, appears to him a perfectly normal thing.  He is willing to share himself, sometimes even to sacrifice himself for a desired end, but never to dethrone himself.”  
That is, of course, our daily call.  The complement of surrendering to God is the dethroning of ourselves.  If you want a biblical spirituality, that is a great place to start!

Friday, March 1, 2013

The Story

Last week, I was in Dallas and I had an opportunity to speak with the leader of the conference I was attending.  As we chatted, he mentioned another conference that he insisted I needed to go to.  “Wow, it’s that important?”, I asked.  “Yes!  This man is the guru to all the screenplay writers and he specializes in story-telling.  In fact, he is an atheist, but he starts his seminar with these words: ‘God put you on this earth to tell a story’.”  Even an atheist has a hard time getting around the idea that there is a larger story that weaves us together and a God behind that story.  

And he is right!  We are all here to tell the story of God’s love and purposes for humanity.  I hope you are getting ever better at knowing that story, telling that story and praying for opportunities to share that story!