Posted in Different Scriptures, Uncategorized

reformation not reset.

Reformation Day is October 31st. On it, we remember Martin Luther nailing his 95 Theses to the door of the castle church door. It was not done in anger or division. It was done in Love, inviting others to come and have dialogue about these particular topics. The goal was to hold all other things loosely, as we held onto Jesus firmly. To seek a living and faithful vision of being the body of Christ.

I still remember the words of an older woman at a previous church. We were having a discussion about the grace of God, and being thankful. I believe her intention was to illustrate just how gracious she believed our God was. But the statement she made caught me off guard: “I believe there will even be Catholics in heaven.” I stumbled through a knee-jerk response about yes of course, because Jesus and all that.

Discussions about Heaven vs. New Creation aside for now, I remember trying to control the contortions of my eyes in that moment. I wanted to affirm the graciousness of God, and also knew this was not the place to point out the oddness of her statement. But it has stuck with me. In over 2 decades of ministry now, I can verify – she’s not alone in her view, unfortunately. She’s probably not even to blame for some of the residual anti-Catholicism (Catholiphobia?) woven into the fabric of her faith. I’ve read at least one account of Christian missionaries from the late 1800’s heading overseas to minister in areas overrun with “Muslims and Catholics”. We have had some unfortunate missed opportunities to work together for the Loving purposes of Jesus. But we’re all responsible for what we’re actively weaving today, and so it seems worth this reminder.

A reminder that seems obvious: What we now call “The Catholic Church” was the primary/largest body of Christ-followers for at least the first 1,500 years. (There have continued to be great contributions to our shared inheritance in Christ after that as well – but that’s for another blog post.) That means there are treasure troves of writing, worship, art, theology, and testimonies from faithful women and men who were pursuing life by the Holy Spirit of God sent by the resurrected Jesus Christ. To assume the Protestant Reformation started the “one true Church”, is to turn our backs on incredibly rich history, gifts of wisdom, and beautiful words of devotion by those who wrestled with and enjoyed their faith in Jesus. The historic Church gave us gifts like The Didache, The Patristic texts/Desert Fathers, Apostle’s Creed & Nicene Creed. We have artistic expressions like ancient Icons, Beowulf, the Book of Kells, and illustrated manuscripts. We have practices like Breath Prayers, Fasting, the Eucharist, Confession (to one another), Lectio Divina, Annoining with Oil, Prayer Labyrinths, Visio Divina, Ora et Labora, and plenty of others to draw from – like different shaped buckets all uniquely great at dipping into the refreshing (& transformational) Living Well our Father has revealed in Jesus and made available by His Holy Spirit.

This week invites us to step, even if cautiously and experimentally, into those deep waters as we recognize “All Saints’ Day” (November 1st). While all around us we have silly costumes, candy, and celebrations of harvesttime – we followers of Jesus have a unique ability to embrace these moments for something greater. How often can you so easily approach any of your neighbors to say hello, learn more about each other, and express gratitude for their presence? If you’ve already spent time building relationships, what a great opportunity for us to be purposeful in mentioning, “My faith tradition has a celebration this week of the ‘saints’ – people who lived in ways that exemplified the Love revealed in Jesus. Who is someone you’re thankful for – as a person who revealed Love to you?” Take a moment to listen to their heart. Share your own memories of someone who shared the Love of Jesus in your own life. Talk about how such Love brings healing, and offer to pray for any areas of their life in need of healing.

In Mark 9, John approaches Jesus and says, “Teacher, we saw someone casting out demons in your name, and we tried to stop him because he was not following us.” But Jesus said, “Do not stop him, for no one who does a deed of power in my name will be able soon afterward to speak evil of me. Whoever is not against us is for us. For truly I tell you, whoever gives you a cup of water to drink because you bear the name of Christ will by no means lose the reward.” (Mark 9:38-41)

There are so many more words we could say. There is much wisdom in we Protestant brothers and sisters re-cognizing (to “know again”) the importance of “Confession” in our spiritual practices. The amount of healing God has wired such moments for in our brains, especially as these things occur in the power of His presence….Lord, help us to remember. If you want to rediscover “Confession” without going to a “Confessional”, check out www.discipleshipbands.com. It’s an incredibly valuable practice for our spiritual, emotional, mental, and relational health.

All of this to say – let’s share more fully in the rich inheritance of Jesus, all of His followers, and His Kingdom together.

We fam. 🙂

Posted in Different Scriptures, Different Thoughts

effective (mens/womens) ministry

“Revival will not come through your children’s ministry….Revival will not come through your women’s ministry….Revival will come when we turn the hearts of men back to God.” (source purposefully not mentioned)

These were from the final moments of a recent message I listened to. Maybe you agree and are passionate about these words. Maybe you hear the imbalance in them, as I did. I was given this message by a dear friend, who was excited to share. I listened because I trust his heart. In the first few moments of the message, and several points throughout, I wanted to turn it off. Complaints about the “feminization of the church”. Complaints about poetic songs about “Drowning in an ocean of His Love”. Complaints about flowers and fonts/colors that are too soft and effeminate, accusing these things as the reason men are no longer drawn to local churches. My Bible sure seems to have some beautiful poetic images (the speaker himself even talks about us being the “poiema” of God), words about noticing the flowers, and descriptions of colors.

He then went on to make a list of 3 “Voids” that exist in men today, declaring as if prophetically that if churches addressed these specific needs for men we would see a new revival of God’s Spirit in our churches. I’m glad I kept listening to the message, because I believe he’s right. Although not in the way he might think. I hear his accusations of the ineffectiveness of silos in ministry like “Children’s” or “Women’s” (or “Youth Group” or “Young Adult” or “Singles”, et al). But I don’t believe addressing the silo of “Men’s” ministry will do anything beyond manufacturing the same sort of “boost” (even with amazing limited impacts) any of these ministries offer.

Yet there is still a powerful truth in the 3 “Void’s” he identifies. I believe these voids exist not just for men, however. I believe these are 3 powerful avenues of healing needed for all men, women, and children in our world today. The speaker was spot on when he focused on different generations connecting in deep, Jesus-honoring relationships. I believe if a church can connect younger men with older men, and younger women with older women, and nurture confessional communities where “Truth-telling”, forgiveness, and prayer are part of our DNA, the Holy work of the Spirit of God will breathe a revival deeply needed for the healing of the nations.

  1. First he mentioned an “Affirmation Void”. Specifically he talked about young men whose fathers never communicated their love for them. I don’t need to prove to you, this is not a male-centered experience of life. Plenty of young women would have loved to hear “I know and love you. I’m proud of you. I enjoy time with you.” Each generation of parenting has focused on different things. As parents, we feel the pressures of the world around us and we want to prepare our children for success. When we move away from a trusting relationship with God and our own Belovedness, our children become “products” we help create, or “proof” of why we should be valued/affirmed in a world we seek the approval of. Whether we’re strict and value their success, or we’re relaxed and value their freedoms to experiment, we can focus so intently on resourcing what they’re becoming that we forget to focus on loving who they’re becoming.
    • So how do we respond? We purposefully become and nurture spaces/times where affirmation is practiced, strengthened, and experienced (Ephesians 4:29), especially across generations. We help all our generations become aware of their feelings, in order to examine our emotional responses. As I become more “attached” to the Love of God both directly, and indirectly through others, I have more freedom to love my children for who they are – separate from any of my identity coming from theirs. We foster moments where connections are happening between generations – inspiring older generations to continue dreaming and younger generations to have visions for who they can become. (Acts 2:17)
  2. Second he mentioned a “Community Void”. He talked about men feeling alone, like no one else knows them, or know one else experiences life like they do. It probably isn’t surprising to anyone to hear, with so much being said about our current “lonliness epidemic”, that there’s only a 1% difference between the experienced lonliness of men and women (Even with women being perceived as having the ability to share more deeply about their emotions.). Our world is just not conducive to building and sustaining intimate committed friendships across time. My wife is ridiculously gifted at this, and I’m so thankful for the ways she has set an example for me, and continues to invite me to consider my own friendships. Our world offers unlimited shallow connectivity with just enough dopamine and cycles of activity to make us feel like we’re generating authentic community. One of the lies of our world is that intimacy can only come through sexual relationships, which has become the source of so much disintegration in those seeking intimacy. But connection, even sexual, is not relationship – we know this by now, when we’re willing to be a Truth-telling community. We have huge amounts of activities (even as churches) that do not deepen our experiences of knowing, being known, loving and being loved. The speaker pointed at all the young men addicted to pornography and video games as proof. I believe him, but I don’t believe young women are doing any better just because they turn to different false sources of connection.
    • So how do we respond? We purposefully become and nurture places where authentic intimate relationships can happen. We talk about, and give a shared vocabulary to our need for the healing intimacy that can only be found as we’re reconciled to God in Jesus by His Holy Spirit. We offer and encourage things like “Discipleship Bands” (John Wesley called these “Band Meetings” for banded discipleship) where Truth-telling, forgiveness, and prayer together help make our Beloved-ness something tangibly experienced. We offer co-ed “Small Groups” (John Wesley called them “Class Meetings“, you might call them “Transformation Groups”.) As this kind of relational intimacy becomes part of our DNA, we will not only experience healing for ourselves, but we become a source of healing for our communities. This is a shared biological need, the need for felt connection. So we can trust that a Jesus who desires healing (the root meaning of the word “salvation”) will always join us by His Spirit when we as the Church seek to invite others to this.
  3. The Third and final “Void” he mentions (though I’m sure there could be more) is what he called the “Agency/Authority Void”. By this he means, we have so many young men who feel stuck in cycles of sin, powerless to advance in their spiritual life. I write this as a man, but I’m pretty confident the modern approaches many of us grew up with, left many of us of both genders feeling this way. Many of us were told what sin was, and to avoid it. We were given unlimited content, apologetics, and even today have access to the most inspirational presenters from across the world. The assumption was, the more correct and encouraging information we can put in our brains, the more transformation will occur. Unfortunately we can end up drowning in content, feeling no more deeply attached to the Love of God in our soul’s deepest sense of self. Both current neurological research and ancient spiritual practices proclaim we are less influenced by what we think than what/who we love.
    • So how do we respond? I believe the ways we addressed the first two “Voids” above will automatically contribute greatly to this third area. I also believe we must become places and nurture experiences of God’s perfecting Love alongside the Lordship of Jesus Christ. Our world often believes the loving approach to any particular is to reduce the expectations, boundaries, or limits. But with less integrity in our boundaries, it makes sense we would see increased dis-integration in our world. The good news of Jesus Christ is that we have received a Lord who became like us, served us to the point of it killing Him, and conquered even death itself in order to join and empower us. By His Holy Spirit, He shares that victory with us, reconciling us to relationship with God. We can deepen not just our knowledge, but our experience of that relationship in Spiritual Disciplines. From within that relationship in Jesus’ name, we share His authority over all the forces of darkness we do not understand. We are set free not only from impact of others’ sin, or the guilt of our own sin, but also freed from the power of continued cycles of sin. John Wesley called this “Entire Sanctification”, which the speaker also alluded to in his message. I believe if our local churches become communities who preach/live this message not as a judgmental indictment, but as a loving confession and invitation toward healing – we will humbly invite a revival the Holy Spirit has already begun and desires to accomplish in our midst.

May it continue to happen in my heart. May it happen through our Churches, and for the sake of our neighbors. May His Kingdom come, on earth as it is in heaven. Amen.

Posted in Different Scriptures

Pentecost as Revival of Relationship

            When have you wanted the Holy Spirit to do something powerful in your life? Perhaps you wanted the healing power of the Holy Spirit, or the miraculous ability to translate foreign tongues. Maybe you wanted the power of God for understanding the future, or a prophetic Word that would speak precisely what God’s heart desires for a given moment or season.
          All of this to say – I think we often approach the Holy Spirit, and even passages like Acts 2:1-21, considering all the Holy Spirit enables the people of God to do. But what if we chose to focus specifically on the person of the Holy Spirit, as we read some of these passages?
         We regularly state that we believe in a Triune God. This is a mysterious Truth from how God has revealed God’s self throughout scripture. In the Nicene creed, after mentioning God the Father, and God the Son, we confess “We believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the giver of life, who proceeds from the Father and the Son. With the Father and the Son he is worshiped and glorified. He has spoken through the Prophets.
         Jesus mentions in Acts 1:8 that we will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes, to be His witnesses. Our world builds so much on power – on seeking it, keeping it, and protecting it. So often we hear about the power here, and become so focused on empowerment, we miss out on the person. Focusing only on the power of the Holy Spirit over the Person of the Trinity, causes us to seek a temporary tool instead of an eternal relationship. In scripture, the acts of power are always as a sign of a relationship now available.

            As we read passages like this, what if we held in mind – not “empowerment” as if these followers are all “leveling up” in some cosmic video game – gaining new abilities…but what if we listened to the description as God’s people are entering into relationship with the Holy Spirit as a person, one person of the fullness of God?
In these moments, God is revealing what has changed as we are brought to New Life by the arrival and indwelling of the person of the Holy Spirit.
             In John 14:16-18, Jesus says “I will ask the Father, and he will send another Companion (comforter/advocate), who will be with you forever. This Companion is the Spirit of Truth, whom the world can’t receive because it neither sees him nor recognizes him. You know him, because he lives with you and will be in you.

        Our God wants us to know Him intimately, as He already knows us intimately. Here are some things I believe we learn about the person of the Holy Spirit in Acts 2:1-21:

  1. The Holy Spirit comes from heaven.   Verse 2 – “from heaven there came a sound..” Heaven is where God is, and here is the source of what arrives. Luke 24:49 tells us the Holy Spirit is sent by Jesus and promised by the Father.
    Are we being attentive for God to respond from His presence, or are we waiting for His help and response to arrive from the sources/systems of this world?
  2. The Holy Spirit is revealed as uncontrollable wind and yet also purposeful fire. 
    The wind arrives, and fills the entire place. The Spirit is all-encompassing, arriving in ways that fill every corner of our being and our space.  The fire arrives, but doesn’t fill the entire place. Instead, it divided so that it rested on each of them. The purifying Spirit of God is purposeful and personal.  How are you in need of the Holy Spirit to arrive in your life today?
  3. The Holy Spirit enables living according to His reality. The breath of God always brings New Life. This IS Holiness: abiding in the Love of and living in the ways of God. In the presence of God, all are united as one. Language is not a barrier. This was obviously unexpected by those observing what was happening, as Luke describes them as being bewildered, amazed, and astonished.
    Filled and being used by God for His purposes – they are being made Holy. This is His desire for our lives as well – that we would experience being so filled with His Love and Spirit, that our purposes and hearts are refined to fully reflect His own.  In what ways could the realities of God arrive as unexpected in your life?
  4. The Holy Spirit makes right what humanity has made wrong.
    There’s confusion and bewilderment here, as languages unexpectedly come together. The same confusion happened in Genesis 11:7 in the opposite direction, when God scattered the people into different languages due to their prideful ways at Babel.  In order to humble them enough that they might reach out to God (remain in relationship), God had scattered them.  Here, as relationship is restored – there is a safe place for global healing.
  5. The Holy Spirit brings glory to God – not the individual.
    They were used to prophets, priests, and kings – individuals who represented God’s Reign and Rule. Even when Jesus was with them, there were arguments about which of them would be recognized as closest to Him.
    Here they were all speaking about the mighty acts of God.
    Now the promise of Jeremiah was being fulfilled: “..this is the covenant that I will make with the people of Israel after that time, declares the Lord. I will put my Instructions within them and engrave them on their hearts. I will be their God, and they will be my people. They will no longer need to teach each other to say, “Know the Lord!” because they will all know me, from the least of them to the greatest, declares the Lord; for I will forgive their wrongdoing and never again remember their sins.” (Jeremiah 31:33-34)
  6. The Holy Spirit brings fulfillment of God’s promises.
    Peter quotes the prophet Joel, reminding them of the words they were now seeing fulfilled.  In Joel chapter 2, he calls on a people who are experiencing the judgment of God to repent. To humble themselves, turning away from their own desires and toward God. He prophecies that God will respond with rescue and redemption, and then these words that His Spirit will be poured out on all people – yes even people precisely like YOU – in ways that ripple out to impact all of creation.  Scripture proclaims no one can say, “Jesus is Lord,” except by the Holy Spirit (1 Corinthians 12:3b).  John Wesley wrote, “Every true Christian now “receives the Holy Ghost,” as the Paraclete or Comforter promised by our Lord.” (Wesley, “A Farther Appeal to Men of Reason and Religion”)  We understand that we are included in those Joel talks about as able to receive the Spirit of God. We include all those we would normally overlook as those with potential to be those who speak for God…even the self we see in the mirror.

To what end? The final verse – Acts 2:21 reveals to us the most important way that we “expect the unexpected”.  Who might experience salvation?

The expectations of our world says things like:
Everyone who is born into the right circumstances..
Everyone who makes good decisions..
Everyone who achieves enough in Jesus’ name..
Everyone who lives a really really good life..
Everyone who _______ (other reasons we think God will accept us)..

Instead – “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.”

This is an invitation into relationship…the one in need of salvation knowing and being known by the one saving. There are no requirements of proving any sort of ability in order to come and receive.

Do you desire the Holy Spirit – who is our living invitation into the power of relationship here and now with the Triune God? This IS Salvation. Come and receive. Come and be received by the power of the Holy Spirit, into right relationship with God.