Thursday, November 3, 2011

My passion



This week I began working on a new approach to my quiet time with God. Several weeks back a guest pastor suggested that our group try something new and yet very simple. Our instructions included reading Scripture until we felt God pressing into us a specific verse. God seemed to be pressing me to start with 1 Corinthians and read the letters of Paul with fresh eyes. So that's what I did. And this first time, it sure didn't take long to get that verse that the Spirit was emphasizing.

I Conrinthians 1:10 "I appeal to you, brothers, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ that all of you agree with one another so that there may be no divisions among you and that you may be perfectly united in mind and thought..... Is Christ divided?"

With all of the external pressures that the church in Corinth was struggling with from their surrounding culture - corruption, idolatry, sexual immorality - Paul first addresses the division in the church in Corinth. He's calling for unity. And this hit a chord in me. I see markers in my life over the last four years where God has been softening me. I spent a good portion of my early Christian years concentrating on what separated my beliefs from others. Then things started to change. Those issues that seemed so critical weren't in areas that were primary to faith and relationship with God. So God started showing me how we were more alike than different. Not only was I beginning to see bridges across denominations, but I was starting to travel them regularly with joy and love in my heart.

God is giving me a passion for unity. Disunity and casual comments about why ours is better than yours or sarcastic or joking remarks about other practices in other churches are hurtful and damaging. And I've been on both sides of that. Learning and respecting each other will breed something special and vastly powerful. Can we use the best of what we do to teach others across denominations? Can we build relationships past larger organizations? It's happening. I know some of you are doing it regularly.

Jesus gave us an enormous job to do as his hands and feet with the Great Commission. It seems very clear that we should be in lock step with other followers. I will be praying that the Spirit shows me where to go next with this passion for unity. What about you? Are you with me? How can we do this better? What barriers will we face?

Friday, September 16, 2011

Say Yes to God

About a month ago a very wise woman suggested that I sign up for this devotional by Kay Warren, wife of Purpose Driven Life's author, Rick Warren. I hesitated for a week or so but finally got around to signing up for the daily email reminder. One lesson was all it took for me to eagerly await my next installment - and tell friends and family. You can sign up here http://kaywarren.com/30-day-adventure-say-yes-to-god-signup/ and each day Kay Warren will share with you in a very authentic way how you can walk down the adventurous path of saying yes to God. The path of dangerous surrender. She's very honest that it isn't easy. She's equally as honest that she has not always listened and that honesty is refreshing. She hasn't always thought or said the right things. Whew. What a relief - because neither have I. Each session is a video somewhere between 2 and 5 minutes long and I'm betting it will have you considering how you can say yes to God too. If you sign up, I'd love to hear what you think.

Monday, September 12, 2011

Take Good Care of My Heart

Last week my husband and I celebrated our 13th wedding anniversary. It was great for lots of reasons but I mention it because I often wax nostalgic around then. So this year, for several days after, I found myself strangely humming a tune from the 80's - Take Good Care of My Heart - a song from Whitney Houston's debut album and a duet with Jermaine Jackson. I think I played that cassette until the tape snapped. No idea how the tune got there or where it came from. But everytime I caught myself humming it I sighed, smiled and shook my head. "Take good care of my heart......" - right. I knew that at 15 I sang that to a boy somewhere that I just knew I was mad about. At 15 I was a hopeless romantic who believed every happily ever after story - Disney would write my great romance. But now, many years later, I think about how ridiculous it was to think that ANY human being would be able to take good care of my heart..... Let alone someone as young and as messed up as me. I get now that God placed that longing inside of all of us - for that complete love - so that HE could take that place. So He could hold our hearts. And it only took me 25 years and lots of heartache to see that God is the very best part of every relationship I have now - ESPECIALLY my marriage.

But here's why I thought it was blog worthy. Do you think it's possible to communicate any part of that to young women and men in their teens? As my nieces and nephews approach this age, I am longing for a way to share with them and maybe help them understand that God takes care of my heart even when my husband is the love of my life. Are they doomed to trial and error like I was? Is sharing with them what I've learned going to fall on deaf ears? Or maybe I just need to be praying and make sure that I'm asking God to take good care of their hearts until they can take care of their own....

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Job

I heard a great message delivered by David Platt to his congregation in Birmingham, Alabama. Their area has been ravaged by the tornadoes that we've seen on the news recently. What a difficult message that must have been to deliver or even to come up with since so many in their faith family were hurting and experiencing devastating loss.

His message was on Job, the ultimate example of the sufferer. Job - the man who never knew about that conversation between God and Satan that resulted in his loss of so much. From Job's perspective, he loses everything and is given no purpose in it. There's no indication that Job ever knows about that conversation between God and Satan. He loses loved ones and property and even his health and then the loss of support from his wife and his friends. Those calling him friends go on and on for endless chapters doubting that he is faultless in his pain. Then in chapter 40 God speaks. He is poised to answer the question of why we humans must suffer and why bad things happen to good people and ...................... God proceeds to respond by asking 60-some questions of Job. He doesn't answer. The answer is this - He is God and He was with Job through all of it. The supreme God of the Universe who omnisciently knows all the answers, does not answer with the kind of answers we want. He answers with Himself.

And that got me thinking. My whole spiritual journey has led to that same point. I sought concrete answers for so long. I want to know exactly the answer to this theological controversy or that. Why did I have to go through this hardship or that one? And then not so long ago, I stopped needing answers in the way I once imagined an answer. What I longed for more than anything was His Power and His Presence in my world and in me. At first I thought I might be compromising in some way - maybe I was broken. But the longer this goes, the more REAL answers I get. The peace that He is giving me is far beyond anything I had when I got the answers. I am so grateful that He knows better than I do PRECISELY what I need. His Power, Presence and Grace are more than enough.

Resonance

Merriam Webster defines resonance as a quality of evoking a response. I once saw someone liken our relationship with God in terms of resonance and the comparison stuck with me. They invited a singer on stage to sing a strong C note. As that singer sang that note the camera zoomed in and showed the strings of the nearby grand piano. And as that singer belted out the C note, that C string on the piano recognized its own and ever so slightly vibrated. I was fascinated. But even more so with the application to our relationship with God. When we are pressed into God and the Holy Spirit is moving in us and Christ is in us working freely to shine through us, as God does His work around us, that resonates in us and evokes a response. In other words, we know it's God and we MUST act. I heard a wonderful reminder of that several days ago.

My thirteen year old niece, Molly attended a weekend retreat at her church where the theme was "Hearing from God." The larger group gathered together in preparation for some outreach opportunities at local stores and they were asked to spend some time in prayer asking God to give them an idea of what they were supposed to do or look for as they spent their time serving. Kids were supposed to keep an open mind and see if God gave them a specific picture or words or directions about what they would find while serving. When they were done with their group prayer, they spent some time praying alone and then listening to God. Molly came away from that time with a vivid picture of a man helping an elderly man. When Molly related this to her mom, I can tell you my sister was skeptical. Really? Would God give a picture like that?Sounded - well, weird.

Well, the youth group headed out to the Giant Eagle to purchase some supplies and as they were headed back out into the parking lot, Molly stopped. There in front of her were two men - an elderly man being helped out of the car by another younger man. She quickly grabbed the arm of a friend, told her about the picture God gave her and asked her to go with her. They walked over to the men and asked if they needed any help and made some small talk. Then they asked if there was anything that they could pray about for them. And the man's response? "Well it's strange that you should ask that. We found out today that my son was killed in Afghanistan." The girls prayed with the men and were moved to tears.

I'm moved to tears even retelling that. God resonated in the heart of my dear young niece. She was tuned in to His divinely sung note - when He gave her that picture, when she saw those men, and when she obeyed His request. My sister spoke the words that I'm sure many parents long to say, "God talked to my baby today." But do you know that it's even better than that? For all of us? He talks to us EVERY single day. ALL THE TIME. But we don't hear because we aren't in tune with the note He's singing in our lives. We aren't talking to Him or studying His Words to us. The best part of what happened to Molly was not that He spoke to her. It was that she knew Him, was pressed into Him, and loved His voice so much that she knew her Jesus was speaking into her life and using her to heal another hurting soul. I long for that for all of us.


Thursday, March 24, 2011

Some thinking

I've been inundated in the last few months with the concept of salvation - when it happens, how it happens, how we can tell if it has happened. Seems like everywhere I turn another source is showing me a different facet - something I hadn't thought about, a question I had never considered. These are things that I have always thought were black and white. I might have run from these discussions at an earlier time - fearful or insecure that someone might shake my resolve. But I've been finding that God has graciously given me a peace about approaching the discussions and even about the unresolved questions they bring up.

Perhaps you have heard about the New York Times Best Seller, Radical, by David Platt, pastor of a large church in Birmingham, Alabama. Last week our small group hit chapter seven where he suggests that there are a billion people who have never heard of the name of Jesus and these people are condemned to hell if we don't do obediently answer the call of the Great Commission. Platt suggests that many of us don't actively believe in universalism but we act like we do when we ignore that millions of people haven't heard the gospel.

Then I read something about this new book - not even released yet - by Rob Bell, pastor of a Michigan megachurch, called Love Wins. Early reviews of the book have brought a firestorm of criticism about his views on universalism. From the reviews, it appears he questions the consequences of a life lived in denial of Jesus Christ. That not as many are going to hell as we think.

As one of my earlier posts eluded to, I don't love having my long held beliefs shaken or even challenged. Seems the older I get, the more God places those situations in my path. Strangely, the Holy Spirit has been giving me a calm in inquiring, pondering and discovering. I've thought a lot about this over the last several months. I seem to have reached a point in reading about theologies where I don't need to agree with them to garner nuggets of usefulness for my spiritual journey.

Is it naive to feel that God is giving me a peace in NOT knowing the answer? Is it in humility that I am accepting these things or ignorance? I think this is a growing maturity - peace in fleshing out the details and feeling confident in the God I serve to allow those other perspectives in and in the end finding that I trust in Him enough to not know the answer.

One thing I know for certain, is that I don't want myself so wrapped up in holding on tightly to beliefs I've always known that I'm afraid for them to be tested. For years I lived there and I had a faith that I couldn't share as easily. God is bigger than that and He can handle the scrutiny. That is something I can't help but share.




Monday, March 14, 2011

KAIROS of Ohio

I was recently witness to something that has left me without adequate words to explain. But because of it's power and impact, I have to try. So here goes.

My dad began talking about prison ministry over a year ago when he signed up for participation in a correspondence bible study program. He didn't talk about it much - I had to ask him to tell me about it, which is weird. My dad is a talker and he likes to tell his daughters about things that are going on with him. Once I asked, he was more than happy to share. Then shortly before Christmas I heard a mention of him participating in something bigger - a different program. Not written - a visit to the prison. Once again, he didn't talk about it that much or make a big thing of it, which again is strange because we are a talking family. So in the beginning of February when I began hearing about the scope of this new endeavor, we all started to see the effect it was having on my dad. This was big. Bigger than he'd let on. He would be part of a team of men going into the prison from Thursday evening through Sunday night (staying at a nearby church at night) ministering to 30 some prisoners in a medium to high security facility. It would require 30 hours of training leading up to the weekend, serious prayer commitment, posters and placemats made, and 150 dozen cookies. KAIROS is known throughout the country for their cookies. Check it out online and you'll find references to KAIROS cookies. They take cookies into the facility and every resident and staff member gets at least 2 dozen homemade cookies from KAIROS with a hand delivered blessing from God.

Hearing about the cookies was the first inkling I had to the impact of this adventure. My dad and NOT my mom had not signed up for this. And I still wish I had been there to see when Dad first told her that this was a confirmed requirement. 150 dozen cookies. Seriously. I'm surprised she didn't kawhomp him with a frying pan - or a cookie sheet. My mom LOVES being inconvenienced for something my dad has planned..... ;) reunions, dinners, business trips.... yikes. She loves my dad but she doesn't hold back the fury. And I'll bet this was a doozey at first :) But strangely, by the time I talked to her, she had found some peace about it. My sisters and I prayed hard that week. Eventually we found that she wasn't mad - overwhelmed maybe - but totally acknowledging that God was in control of this and He was calling them to get involved with a church body. Still very hesitant to ask for help, though. By the following week she was determined and with some help from my sister, her family and a friend, and the strength of the Holy Spirit to keep them going, she was astounded that they had nearly enough baked already. They were both surprised that I had friends from church and bible studies that would be willing to commit to pray and bake cookies without even knowing my parents! Not out of obligation but willingness to serve God. God was speaking in every offered prayer and cookie.

When I headed up to Ohio to drop off the cookies at the end of February, I was listening and practicing our reflection song for the upcoming week's worship. The bridge says, "send us out to be, your hands and feet" over and over. And I got all teary, that more than anyone in our family, my father was obeying that call from God - sent out to be His hands and feet. And that lives would be changed that weekend for the glory of God. My dad was truly doing something radical that could result in the gospel going forth to all the world. Who sees that kind of change in their parents in their life? My parents gave us a tremendous hunger for the Word of God and were experiencing that unsettling feeling that God wasn't done. He wanted them to share from their overflow of blessing. How awesome that Kairos is the Greek word meaning a moment or undetermined period of time in which something special happens. It wasn't just the weekend that was turning out to be special. Something bigger was happening. To my dad and my mom and even to our whole family.

So it's finally Sunday afternoon and mom and I pull up to the entrance to Trumbull Correctional Institute at nearly the same time and drove into the parking lot. I had been looking forward to this time for nearly 6 weeks and it had finally arrived. I was not even a little apprehensive - was I just weird? Mom caught me up on dad's recent phone calls. Everything he had to say was positive. His host at TCI was talkative and receptive. It was strange deciding what to wear to avoid metal of any kind but I guess I did okay. No beeping as I passed through the metal detector. We waited with a bunch of folks to make the walk over to the gymnasium where the ceremony would take place.

So much about the ceremony was familiar. It was a gym, filled with 200-250 folding chairs, a podium, a microphone, a songbook of praise lyrics. It was so hard to remember that the men that sat in the rows just in front (previous graduates of KAIROS) were incarcerated for some serious things. It was far easier to remember that they were praising God with me as brothers in Christ.

My life has been so unreasonably blessed that so much of this took time to process. Every single solitary celebratable event in my life was met with smiles, love, food, and proud hugs from my father and mother and sisters and as much extended family as would fit in the house. Birthdays, graduations, new jobs, promotions, anniversaries. As these men walked in to all of us singing "When the Saints Come Marching In" maybe that was the most celebration that any of them had ever enjoyed in support of something they did. I recalled how shocking it was as a teacher in a school of at risk children to learn that so many of my students had parents who cared so little about how they were doing in school. Many of those kids could have grown up into these men. Never celebrated. Never encouraged. So it wasn't hard to smile at them. It wasn't hard to clap until your hands hurt. It was awfully hard not to hug them. These guys - no matter where this weekend landed them on the spectrum were moving toward receiving the gift of salvation. They were on their way. And some of them were now my brothers. I wanted to whoop like we were at a Steeler's game. But I didn't. :) I thought they might remove me.... :)

I have to tell you the truth. The thing that packed the biggest wallop was my dad. And that surprised me. Just to give you a background, my father has no tolerance for misbehavior. Little tolerance for arrogance and swagger. Frankly, sassing was one fast way to get him riled up when I was a kid - heck, it still works today. Disrespect from the grandkids even unsettles him. So this was a little weird - these guys had swagger to spare. I guess part of me held my breath a little. Residents were not to thank the volunteers. No performances. Keep it short. They had rules and they were just dying to break them. :) I kind of wondered what he thought when they danced across the line of the rules. I saw some inkling that he at least noticed. But as we talked later, over dinner, I would find out that he had none of the reactions I expected. His love for Jesus and these men had made all of that intolerance fly right out the window. More than anything, as I saw him talk about these men, I saw in my father gentleness, compassion, and tenderness. And while I never doubted the love of my dad once in life, I was floored by this. He had learned so much about what brought these men to this point and had come to grips with his own sinful nature to such a degree, that there was now no condemnation in him for them. I was truly seeing the reflection of my savior in my earthly dad. Praise God....

Ironically, peer pressure appeared to spur many of the men to get up and talk. A few whoops and hollers from their fellow residents and they would give. And while on the surface it looked, well - like peer pressure, I've laughed since then thinking - what the heck! When has peer pressure ever resulted in something so good in their lives?? Go, peer pressure!!!! They still had to get up there and say something..... And speak they did.

I cried a lot less than I expected. I guess a part of me expected heartfelt confessions and tearfully empassioned testimony. But in the hours since, I have thought a lot about what I heard and what I didn't hear that night. These men have spent lifetimes guarding their feelings and afraid of being vulnerable. And placing the words they shared in that context changes everything. "I have a lot to think about." "I've never felt more love than I did from these total strangers." "I need Jesus." "I don't want to forget how I feel." "I love these guys." That is powerful when you consider what their default behavior and feelings probably would be. And who they've had to be to survive - in life and in prison. Those words aren't just surprising - they're supernatural.

But surprisingly, this wasn't what broke my heart either. There is a video that plays in my head.

Part 1 - Levort Block was my dad's host for the weekend. I see my dad straining as Levort walks in. Dad's neck literally looks longer trying to find Levort. Daddy excitedly points him out to us - he has a ballcap on. Levort doesn't see him. Levort's not very tall and he wanders to a seat in the far back - nearly as far away from us as possible. And as everyone else settles and quiets, Levort calls out and waves to my dad. And my dad - the guy who never likes to do anything that might make him look like a rule breaker or embarrass himself- shoots his hand up and I'm pretty sure I'd swear yells something out...... what the heck... :)

Part 2 - Levort walks up to the mic during their open mic time and says some words. He's not to thank anyone. But at one point he stops looks at Daddy and thanks his sponsor and holds out his hand in dad's direction. I turn to Daddy and his hand is over his mouth and his reddened eyes are looking down. Having a hard time keeping it together. This man has touched the heart of my father.

Part 3 - The program is over and everyone visiting the prison is asked to leave. It's not a request. We have to go. So we stand up and move across the room. Daddy hesitates from his stormtrooper walk. He stands on his toes and strains his neck again to see if he can find Levort. My father simply cannot leave that room without saying goodbye to Levort. And despite knowing what he's done, my dad wants - no needs him to meet my mom and I. Daddy introduces us. We shake his hand with smiles and warmth and love - I restrain my desire to hug this man who has given my father such a gift. Daddy hugs him and we leave. My dad has been moved by the supernatural power of the Spirit.

And if all that isn't enough, Daddy has committed to attending the KAIROS night on Thursdays at the prison, over an hour away from home. At first he thought it just might be a couple of times but after this last Thursday, he knows that it is just as important as the time he spent with the residents over that weekend. My dad is mentoring and discipling. Somehow, as his daughter and a woman who proudly bears the seal of the Spirit in part due to the kind of father he is, I can think of no better way to honor Jesus Christ than for him to use his gift of leadership and love to mentor another child in our royal family.... My dad has love to spare and so does our Heavenly Father. To God be the Glory.





Monday, February 7, 2011

Radical


I just began reading this book by David Platt, and with only the first chapter under my belt, I have so much to consider. You want challenging?…this book is it. It is so challenging that one quote from the front of the book (where one generally finds rave reviews), Russell D. Moore warns that while some books are commended, saying ”you won’t want to put it down” the enemy is begging for us to put this book down. And you may feel compelled to listen. It’s hard and already uncomfortable but surprisingly resonates so true so in the pursuit of truth you read on. Apart from the power of Christ in me, this call is completely unreasonable. But it begs me to contemplate how simple it would be to be radical in the culture. The way we live is so much in opposition to so much of what Jesus called us to practice. And yet, my life is NOT radical right now and it makes me long for and pray for that change to His glory – not just in me but in all Christians.

The Small Stuff


Have you ever felt like you are having a terrible day when everything just refuses to go the way you planned? We all have those days when Murphy’s Law seems to trump everything.

My sister, Emily called me last week to chat and her first words were, “I’m having the worst day ever.” She was on her way home midday, driving a co-worker’s car so she could get an extra set of keys and then return to work to unlock her own vehicle, having spent 90 minutes in transit. Her day had already been a string of unfortunate mishaps and inconveniences when she quickly stopped in the restroom. All was going fine until she slung her purse over her shoulder and the keys sailed across the small space and plopped into the bowl……..of an already mid-flushing toilet. And all the keys, several metal keychains among them, disappeared into the great unknown…. REALLY – HOW DOES THAT HAPPEN! A visit to the janitor deepened her frustration as he tried to retrieve them with a magnetic snake apparatus all the while sharing his astonishment that she saw the keys and still flushed. She tried to make him understand it didn’t happen that way. But what was the use? The outcome was the same…..

So she called me to pass the time. I was glad. It gave me the chance to talk to her about the book she loaned me, Choosing to See by MaryBeth Chapman, wife of Steven Curtis Chapman and mother of Maria Sue, tragically lost in an accident in their driveway in May of 2008. I was surprised Emily had been able to get through the book as the mother of twin seven year olds. We talked about how real MaryBeth Chapman was and how frank she was about her struggles with things not going according to plan and her walk with God before and through the grief. And at one point my sister stopped. “God had me call you for just this. This truly is nothing like a bad day. He needed to remind me of that.”

Later she called me and laughed. She heard this song and it gave even further meaning to her day. God is so good to speak to us, through all the stuff. Even the little stuff.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pqqdA8LHN7I

Monday, January 24, 2011

The Real Church

It seems that wherever I am, I keep hearing conversations, messages or dialogue that center around what the church was designed by God to be versus what it has been made into by man. Last week I listened to some teaching that the Greek word for church used in the New Testament was the word EKKLESIA – translated church, but more accurately translated congregation.

And there you have it. Somewhere along the way, we humans made church into a building or a series of rituals or any number of other things. But it appears that all along the church was supposed to be a who rather than a what.

That has been a progression for me as an individual, which is likely why it strikes such a chord. As a young Christian, it was much easier to put the “what” of church in a box. It could be put away Sunday afternoon and pulled out of its box on various weekdays to take part in my life as I desired. Something I did because I knew I should because it made my life better and something I could check off on a list.

But who changes everything. Congregations are people. And being part of a living, breathing organism must change who I am. It makes me accountable. It motivates me to grow and share and build. Memorial Park Church is that kind of church - people who make up the family of God with a common love for Jesus. Not a building or a place or even limited to people you see on Sunday morning but a living, changing, growing group of people bound by love and sharing it with everyone possible . I know it’s been said before but changes like this seem big and exciting and remind me that when our God moves in ways this big, grab hold of something because it’s going to be a wild ride. I simply cannot wait to see what is next for His People – His Church…….