Friday, October 25, 2013

Worship and Resources

Tim Keller once did a men’s study on the seven deadly sins.  His wife Kathy told him, “I bet the day you deal with greed you will have your lowest attendance.”  And she was right.  People packed it out for “lust”, “wrath”, even “pride”.  But, as Keller writes, “nobody thinks they are greedy…I cannot recall anyone ever coming to me and saying, ‘I spend too much money on myself…the money god’s modus operandi includes blindness to your own heart’.” 
As we finish our focus on worship and resources, it has become painfully apparent that we in America have a real “stuff” issue that needs to be surrendered to God.  I am confident that if we make the commitment to let go, what we will next experience is incredible freedom.  And that is a topic worthy of packing out the room.

Monday, October 21, 2013

Money and Happiness

It is a curious thing - according to one study, we have spent more money as Americans than any generation prior to us and yet, that same study declares that we are also the most unhappy generation of Americans thus far.  

When the Bible speaks of serving God or money, it seems to me that it is more than simply a call to devotion.  It is a call to happiness.  Or, as one pastor puts it, “Whenever God says ‘don’t’, He means, ‘don’t hurt yourself’.”  

Could it be that God drives His followers away from a preoccupation of “stuff” not simply to purify their worship, but to free them to live lives of joy?

Friday, October 11, 2013

Worship and Resources

It is an insightful thing to ask what words we all first learn after “mama” and “dada”.  Soon after those two words escape the lips of your typical two-year-old, the next ones are “no” and “mine” - words that, however cute they sound from a small child, nevertheless symbolize our penchant for rebellion (“no”) and our struggle to give (“mine”).  And yet, as John Ortberg points out in his book, When The Game Is Over, It All Goes Back In The Box, we all know that the two-year-old did not really earn any of their stuff.  It was a gift from someone much larger and wiser.  

Two-year-olds can be so deluded, can’t they?  Oh…that’s right.  I am like that more than I care to admit.  Chances are likely that you and I are in that same boat.  So, what a wonderful expression of worship to begin to shift the way we think about stuff - that we are not the owners of it, but the managers of God’s stuff, which He has graciously entrusted us with for His purposes.  Perhaps we will start unlearning that mindset we picked up so early on by adopting two new words: “yes” and “Yours”.

Friday, October 4, 2013

Missional Living and Worship

One of the most impactful books that I have read in the last five years was entitled The Dangerous Act of Worship, by a pastor named Mark Labberton.  He wrote this memorable statement: 
“The perception that issues of worship and issues of justice are separate or sequential or easily distinguishable shows the inadequacy of our theology, both of worship and of justice.” 
What he meant was that living missionally in regards to establishing justice and offering compassion for the downtrodden IS worship…much like what we read in Amos 5:21-24 (and what Martin Luther King preached in his magnificent “I Have a Dream” sermon on this passage).  We offer the kingdom of God - forgiveness in Christ through the cross and what life under Christ’s rulership should look like.  It is one of the ways in which we worship Christ with a full-bodied allegiance!

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Reflections on "Breaking Bad"

With the final episode of one of the most viewed and talked about shows in television history having aired on September 29, 2013, Breaking Bad brought an end to its captivating, haunting, brutally stark story.  It is the story of a man named Walter White - a high school chemistry teacher who, when he discovers that he has inoperable lung cancer and perhaps a year to live, makes the horrible choice of putting his chemist’s skills to use by making crystal-meth in the hopes of earning a large sum of money fast enough to beat the clock on his own mortality so that his family is provided for after he is gone.  But, the choice to take a step over the line and into the darkness proves fateful as he is drawn deeper and deeper into the death-drenched underworld that crawls out of its pit and tears his own normal world apart.

I must admit, the subject is quite dark and disturbing, but it is also such an honest look at reality that it deserves notice, even if it is a notice that is accompanied by a warning.  I was first alerted to the show at a “Story Seminar” by renowned screenplay writer Robert McKee, who lamented at one point in his lectures about the lack of good storytelling in the current slate of movies.  The bright side, according to McKee, was that good story-telling was making a comeback on TV and that the best-told, best-acted story out there was Breaking Bad.  So I watched the first four or five episodes from Season One on DVD.  Pardon the pun, but soon I was addicted, despite the fact that I found myself quite upset at the graphic nature of this morbid saga.  But, then again, the story-teller, Vince Gilligan, refused to make it pretty.  This business of drugs and addiction-for-profit is an ugly, dangerous world and tragic things happen often in such a place.  Indeed, the premise of the show, according to Gilligan, was that not everyone goes to heaven.  Some people are so bad, they deserve to go to Hell.

There is so much to say about a show with such depth of characters and plot and reality, that one post will not do it justice.  Nevertheless, I would like to pose a few gleanings from this story that, despite the anti-hero plot, falls somewhere within the larger story of God.

·         Gleaning #1: Sin cannot be toyed with!  Like many of the Coen Brothers movies (e.g. Fargo, True Grit), once the main character begins entering into the world of darkness and sin, he or she finds that you do not simply step back out without being in some way marred…or killed.  Walt’s ultimate motives do not make his choices any less ignoble (indeed, he admits that his motives changed and were quite selfish by the end).  To help his family, he ends up destroying his family and even getting his brother-in-law killed.  By the time it is over, Walt has so much blood on his hands that he is inescapably condemned by even the most loyal of viewers who find sympathy for his character.  Every time Walt tries to walk away, he is pulled back in by some loose end.  Such is the sinister trap of sinful choices. We think we can control it, but that is a naïve and foolish estimation on our part.  Like an insect struggling to get free from a spider’s web, sin will always entangle us more troublingly and complexly than we can imagine.
 
·         Gleaning #2: All of us have that darkness in us!  One of the striking features in Breaking Bad is that almost none of the characters were wholly good.  With the exception of his infant daughter Holly and his son, Flynn (Walt Jr.), Walt’s sin begins to turn those around him as well.  His wife, Skyler, becomes involved in money laundering.  Walt’s impact on his assistant “cook”, Jesse - a former student of his - is to draw him even deeper into this horrible pit.  Hank is a relentless pursuer of crime, but he has an edge of arrogance to him.  And the baby-faced sociopath, Todd, tells us that evil sometimes has the most innocent of faces.  This is a hard reality to confront, but we tend to avoid looking at the ugly underbelly of our souls because sometimes it is too painful to see just how selfish, how thoughtless, how vindictive we can be.

·         Gleaning #3: There are glimpses of a world that once was juxtaposed with the present prison of awful choices!  In the last episode, we have a tragically tender scene involving Jesse as he flashes back to a time before drugs and murder and the crushing weight of guilt that lies across his slim shoulders.  Before the “fall”, we see Jesse doing what he once loved - working with wood.  We see him skillfully and carefully sanding and staining a box that he had alluded to in one of the early seasons of the show.  His gentle smile, as he enjoys the simple pleasure of beauty, is suddenly scrubbed away as he jumps back to the present by the cable that keeps him in the lab, slavishly cooking meth for Todd and the Aryan Brotherhood.  As the cable goes taut and jerks him backwards, he is yanked back to reality, cruelly reminded that he no longer lives in that one-time world of shalom.  That world is gone now.  His choices have violently thrown him down, literally, into a pit from which there is no escape.  Sometimes, our busyness distracts us from this similar reality, though admittedly, most do not live in a dungeon so stark.  Yet, we do carry the pain of a thousand little choices that sink us deeper into the hole of sorrow and regrets and brokenness.  But then we have those momentary glimpses of a world that once was, and a cruel reminder that such a world no longer exists.  It too is gone and now we live here - in the midst of broken relationships and cancer diagnoses and betrayal and innocent childhoods stolen.

·         Gleaning #4: Gilligan is wrong.  It’s not that some deserve Hell.  It’s that all deserve Hell!  The end of the show comes when the bullet that Walt took while shielding Jesse from a remote-control gatling gun in the trunk of his car finally takes his life.  Everyone is dead.  Jesse has fled.  And Walt stands for a moment alone in the shadowy, empty meth lab in the Aryan Brotherhood’s compound, kindly patting the stainless steel of one of the vats when the loss of blood finally catches up to his state of consciousness and he falls to the floor dead while Badfinger’s song, “Baby Blue” intones the very first lyrics of the song - “I guess I got what I deserved…”.  Gilligan apparently assumes that God grades on a curve and that if you are REALLY bad, then you go to Hell.  The truth is, we are all much badder than we think and God’s laws do not allow for mulligans and bad deeds with good intentions.  All have sinned, say the Psalms and the letter to the Romans, and all (me and you) deserve punishment, not just the Walter Whites of the world.  Clint Eastwood’s character (Will Munny) in Unforgiven had it closer when one of his fellow assassins declared that the men they killed for a bounty at least “got what they had comin’”.  “We all got it comin’, kid”, Munny grumbles between swigs of whiskey. 

·       Gleaning #5: Even in this dark story, there is redemption and salvation!  All great hero stories end with the hero either offering his (or her) life for another’s life or actually making the ultimate sacrifice.  And even in this anti-hero movie, in the end, Walter White brings a certain measure of justice and salvation to those who would threaten his family and even Jesse, whom he saves at the cost of his own life.  Splintered as the story of Christ is in such a macabre tale, there it is - one man giving his life to save others.  Jesse is pulled out from the pit and freed.  Skyler, Flynn, and Holly will no longer have to look over their shoulders in fear because Walt has sacrificially removed all danger from those who would do them harm.  Those are the basics of the cross, after all - that Jesus removed the fear of death, disarmed the enemies which would threaten us, pulling us out of our dark pits and into the light and into freedom!!  Walter White was a very fractured picture of Jesus, but in the end, even the anti-hero displays for us the ultimate Hero.

What I found missing in this tale was the potential for forgiveness.  Walt neither asked for it, nor did anyone offer it.  Skyler likewise struggles to ask for her sister’s forgiveness, though the sister offers a truce at the end despite Skyler’s participation in activities that led to her husband’s murder.  Sadly, such an omission is the gaping hole in the story, for just as all deserve Hell, all are offered forgiveness.  We can never be good enough to make God love us anymore, but we cannot ever be bad enough to escape His grace.  

Despite this missing piece, I am grateful that Breaking Bad spoke truth about how bad “bad” really is while opening the door for those who know God’s over-arching story of redemption to fill in the blanks of God’s love and a world of shalom that will one day be restored through Jesus Christ, His self-sacrifice on the cross and His death-defying resurrection!  Such a story invokes a turnaround of sorts for those who are pulled from the pit of their own destructive decisions.  Maybe we could call it, “Breaking Good”.