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Tuesday, April 17, 2018
Friday, February 23, 2018
The Perfect Me
I was
reading “UnBranding” a clever and informative book by Scott & Alison
Stratten.
(I could go
on gushing about how much I enjoyed the book but you don’t know me so my
recommendation means nothing to you… unless… you do know me in which case you’ve
already stopped reading this and are off to find a copy☻)
People didn’t
start trying to project the perfect image of them selves with the advent of
social media. (That’s not a direct quote
but it’s pretty close).
Trying to
pawn ourselves off as better than we are is as old as the human race. What’s different, what technology allows us
to do, is to project an image of ourselves far beyond the circle of people who
know us.

Why are we
ranking ourselves and others? Why are we
creating 4-point, 5-point and 10-point scales by which to imprison our exceptional
individual personalities? How have we
become so deceived as to believe our humanity, our uniqueness can be contained,
reduced, enslaved by an arbitrary number.
The God I
believe in created you to be you! …to be uniquely you. Of the 7.44 billion people on the planet (and
the billions of others who have lived and died) there has never been and will
never be another you. EVER! (this is the real tragedy of abortion) You might
find your doppelganger… you might find a soulmate who is so-o-o similar you
feel you’ve known each other since forever… you might even be an identical twin…
but they are not YOU! …they will never
be you.
You cannot
compare your ‘rating’ to anyone else’s because no two people occupy the same scale. God did not create you to sit in a balance
judged by or against those around you…
He placed
you, His child, in a swing because He loves to hear your giggles and laughter
as you fly back and forth.
my 2c...
Thursday, January 25, 2018
Wednesday, December 13, 2017
Mangers and Crosses
Protestants take great pride in their symbolic piety… or
lack thereof.
In recent years we’ve abandoned the table… removed the cross…
hymnals and bibles and stain-glassed windows…
“It’s not about the symbols” we’ve said, “It’s the truths
they represent! As followers of Christ,”
we’ve continued, “we live the truths of the
symbols!”
(…I’m not sure that’s true but we like how spiritual it
sounds and anyways that isn’t the theme of this post so I’ll let it slide).
In truth, the symbols simply cost too much in time, energy
and money to maintain… and we have other things (better things?) to do with our
time… our energy… our money…
...it’s convenient how God no longer expects me to make a
sacrifice of the things that I want for myself (that’s a different post too… I’ll
let it slide).
Get to the point!
Surely, you’ve noticed how the protestant cross is always
empty. Catholics use a crucifix – a cross
with an likeness of Christ still attached.
Protestants insist, “He is no longer on the cross!” So, we shun crucifixes. Some go so far as to call them idolatrous.
…which is ironic given our love of placing some sort of
likeness in mangers at Christmas.
We prefer the baby Jesus to the crucified Christ.
Is that because we imagine we prefer a god we can
control? Because a manger-bound baby is
safer? Because a god-in-a-manger won’t
challenge my attitudes, my spending, my busy-ness, my reveling, …and if he does
I can always coo-coo-coo and pretend I don’t understand.
Christ on the cross confronts my lust and greed and selfishness
and busyness and pride and…. Christ on
the cross reminds me, “This is for you!”
Christ in a manger? …He’s cute
and cuddly and don’t you just want to pinch His cheeks as you scurry off to buy
something else that you don’t need in order to impress people who don’t even
know you exist?
Listen, I believe the cross… and the tomb are empty. He IS risen!
…but the manger is empty too…
my 2c
Monday, December 4, 2017
Celebrating Advent
Your local Christian
bookstore should have lots of Advent tools like devotionals, calendars, cards
and family activities for families at various stages… and of course there are a
lot of great tools available online (some crazy nonsense too so be discerning☻)
Here is one very simple tool that can be easily adjusted for
your family.
You’ll need:
·
Five candles
·
A designated time once/week for the whole family
to gather
·
A Bible (age appropriate for your family)
·
A fireplace to sit around (just kidding… unless
you have one☻)
·
Set aside one night a week. I suggest right after supper.
·
Gather the family together around the candles (If
possible leave the candles (unlit) in place all week as a constant reminder.)
·
If you are on weeks 2-4 you may wish to light
the previous week’s candles at this point.
For example, on week two you might light week one’s candle at this
point. On week three you would light two
candles – one for the first week and one for the second, etc.
·
Read a few verses of the Christmas story as a
family. You can have the same person
read each week but it might be nice to use all of your family’s readers over
the course of the season. Here are some
possible selections to read:
o An
angel visits Mary – Luke 1:26-38
o Mary
visits Elizabeth – Luke 1:39-45
o Mary’s
Song – Luke 1:46-56
o Joseph
– Matthew 1:18-25
o The
Trip to Bethlehem – Luke 2:1-7
o The
shepherds – Luke 2:8-20
o The
Magi – Matthew 2:1-12
o Simeon
– Luke 2:25-35
o Anna
– Luke 2:36-40
·
After the reader(s) is finished light the candle
for that week. (The fifth candle is for Christmas day)
·
Offer a brief prayer inviting Christ to be a
part of your holiday rhythm. You may
wish to have a different person assigned to pray each week.
No, this is not the strict liturgical way of engaging in
Advent but this isn’t about liturgy this is about remembering and inviting
Christ into our lives. Of course this isn’t
the only way and you’ve probably got some wildly creative children in your
family that can create an Advent tradition that works for you. Try to include these three things.
Remember – Advent is about remembering Jesus. Your Advent activities should work to remind
you of the following.
·
Who Jesus is…
·
What Jesus has done…
·
What Jesus is doing in your life, family and the
world
·
What Jesus has promised to do
Secondly, this is supposed to be fun so celebrate Jesus!
·
Why not have a party for Jesus. I’m sure He’d be OK with you celebrating
early. Bake and eat a cake together as a
family. Play some games together conscious
of His presence in the laughter and joy.
Finally, share Jesus’ love with others
·
Meet a need in the community – Volunteer with
Salvation Army, a local Food bank or a soup kitchen. Do you know a person or family in need? Take them a meal, or invite them over to
share one with you. Drop off an
anonymous gift/giftcard, etc.
Advent! It’s as easy as 1, 2, 3.
1.
Remember
2.
Celebrate
3.
Share
Wednesday, October 18, 2017
Gotta Serve Somebody
Our Lord’s first obedience was to the will of His Father,
not to the needs of men; the saving of men was the natural outcome of His
obedience to the Father. (From: Chambers, O. (1986). My Utmost For His Highest: Selections For
The Year)
It’s hard not to get overwhelmed.
Everywhere you turn there are multiplied needs. You don’t have to be a Christian or a
religious person to see it…
…simply human.
It’s on every channel of TV (so I’m told), it’s on the
radio, in the margins of your browser, check your twitter feed, CBC, CTV,
GLOBALnews…
…#troubleintheworld
(I don’t know what that is …it just seemed to fit☻)
I can’t imagine what it must be like to be a police officer
(an early dream), Fire and Rescue, Paramedic, Nurse, Doctor… I have challenge
enough just trying to journey with people through spiritual challenges! (…and
let’s be honest, for the most part those are easy to hide so I’m sure I don’t
see more than 10% of those).
So-o-o-o many needy people
So how did Jesus manage?
The first in all of history who could meet every need He saw… heal every
disease… cure every illness… restore every broken, lifeless, fragile heart.
John, the gospel-writer, records an incident in which Jesus visited a place
that was crowded with the needy.
According to John 5:3, “a multitude of sick-blind, lame and paralyzed”. That is to say – the needy, the powerless, the
broken, the weak, the feeble and so-on.
Jesus, John records, steps through this multitude and heals one man… a
single person from the crowd.
We all think, “If that were me, I would have waved my hand
and healed them all!”
…because we are slaves to our own neediness.
Christ served not the needy… but the Father.
That’s the point Chambers is trying to make in that opening
quote.
The theological knots in this are perhaps beyond my
pay-grade but the basic question is one we all need to wrestle through…
Who you gonna serve?
…as Dylan said… You gotta serve somebody…
…just sayin’
Wednesday, October 11, 2017
Holding Nothing Back
A number of years ago I wrote a book. It was called “When the Leaders Led”. I wrote it mainly because a number of folks
kept encouraging me to put some of the stuff I was teaching into a format that
could be used by churches and ministries.
In my mind it was designed to be a practical tool to help worship and
music ministries.
It’s sold out and out of print now but back in the day I
remember reading comments on a worship website where someone quoted my
book. They got the words right but
totally missed the point I was trying to make… I think my reaction may have
involved some shouting at the screen and pacing about the room …followed by the
realization that once you put something out there you can’t control how it’s
going to be used.
All of that to say this: Here are some words from Oswald
Chambers.
“Never reserve anything. Pour out the best you have, and
always be poor.”
Those words have had kind of a ringing effect on me. They keep echoing through my thinking. I confess I may not be thinking exactly what
the author was thinking when he wrote those words but he does mention in the following
in the same section:
“The grace you had yesterday will not do for to-day. Grace
is the overflowing favour of God; you can always reckon it is there to draw
upon.”
This morning my reading came from Exodus 16. That’s the story of God’s provision of manna
to His people in the desert. Each family
was supposed to gather just enough food for the day… and trust that God would
provide tomorrow’s food… tomorrow.
Can I trust God to provide what I need when I need it, or do
I insist on a safety net. “Look, God I’m
sure You can provide what I will need tomorrow but just in case
You get busy and forget… or get angry… let
me take a little extra.”
I wonder if we sometimes try to store up grace just in case
it runs out. Not like runs out exactly but… you know… maybe
God forgets… gets too busy… or too angry to give us more.
When we horde grace we call God a liar… a poor provider… a
covenant breaker. His promise is grace
beyond measure. Grace never-ending!
Unlike manna that only came at certain times of the day…
Unlike manna that I had to go out to collect…
His totally sufficient grace is ever-ready and
overwhelmingly available every- and anytime I need it.
…I suppose that’s what makes it grace.
So that grace that you have?
Don’t try to reserve or save it. Poor
it all out… ALL of it… try to be “grace-poor”! God has promised that can never… will never
happen so stop being so stingy with it!
…just sayin’
(Oswald Chamber quotes from My Utmost for His Highest)
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