Archive for November, 2009

Pray for your pastor


2009
11.30

This week I was shocked to hear 2 stories one a church planter in the Acts 29 network who committed suicide over the weekend & the other of one of my favorite preachers Matt Chandler from the Village church in Texas having some very serious  health issues.

After hearing this news, I was shook up a bit & simply took some time praying for my pastors Dave Stone & Kyle Idleman.  I prayed for my friends Paul Mumaw and Jim Lyon I prayed for my parents pastor Bob Moss and prayed for my best friends who lead the Post ministry with me. I don’t do it nearly as much as I should but I am committing this month to really pray for my pastors & my friends who are pastors.

I read this post from Perry Noble a pastor in South Carolina today.. Great thoughts & a good summary of why this is so important!

Whoever your pastor is pray for him often.  They need it & pastors never be afraid to ask for the prayers of others, it is not “self-serving” and you need it!

Letter to Non believers – What if Jesus meant all that stuff?


2009
11.29

Shane Claiborne in Esquire!

Great thoughts here!

Love Shane’s ministry & heart!

Enjoy & tell me your thoughts

The Weight of Creating


2009
11.27

This is an amazing clip from writer Elizabeth Gilbert @ the TED conference.  I am not sure where she is in her spiritual walk but I would love to sit down with her & talk about the H0ly Spirit.  If you have a free 15 minutes this video is worth watching & discussing with friends.  Particularly if you consider yourself an artist or a creator.

If you have the time tell me what you think.  There is some great discussion pieces here.  The Post team watched it a few weeks ago & it sparked a great discussion prayer time.

Thanksgiving Prayer


2009
11.27

Dear Lord:

Thank You for bearing with us for another year. Your mercy never ceases to amaze.

For those who continue to believe that human nature must be improved by effort and good intentions -– rather than redeemed by Your grace -– this year has been another case study in failure.

Given the choice between peace and violence, traditional enemies continue to fight. Hatreds persist with depressing reliability.

With few exceptions, nations still seek their own interests first and last, which is what nations have done throughout history. If others benefit, it’s often a happy accident, not a policy. Allies typically help each other because it is expedient, not because they love each other -– or You.

Nations act like people: Our individual lives follow the same pattern of self-interest and indifference toward others. We tend to look out for ourselves and our families -– and the devil take the rest (he is only too happy to oblige). All have gone their own way. None has sought after You. No, not even one.

In a land of riches, we, Your children, mostly seek our own desires. Once we obtain them, we call them Your blessings. We say we will use them to bless others, but we usually spend them on ourselves.

Is it Your will that we live in big houses and drive around in fancy cars, even as billions live and die in poverty? We’ve become experts in rationalizing it. Do You really desire the construction of a thousand more castle-like sanctuaries in America when entire people groups have never heard the name of Jesus?

And yet You remain faithful.

Where we hate, You love. Where we are indifferent, You are passionately concerned, even for those who worship other gods or no god. Just as You showed compassion for the 120,000 wicked Ninevites Jonah disdained, who didn’t “know the difference between their right and left hand” (Jonah 4:11), You care today for the many peoples who will repent –- if only we will tell them You are the way to salvation.

Thank You that You are the same yesterday, today and tomorrow. Have mercy upon us once again. Make our hearts like Yours. Teach us to be like You. Teach us to seek You first, not Your gifts and blessings. You are divinely jealous, Father. As Brother Lawrence said, You won’t allow a soul that is searching for You to be comforted by anything other than You.

Long ago, Thomas a Kempis warned in The Imitation of Christ: “He who seeks any other thing in religion than God alone and the salvation of his soul will find nothing but trouble and sorrow. He will not remain there long in peace and quiet who does not labor to be the least, and subject to all.”

How strange such words sound to us – almost as strange as the words of Christians in other lands who not only expect but welcome persecutions. We know we are not worthy of such brothers and sisters, Lord. Make us worthy, somehow, to share their sufferings, if only through the great privilege of praying for them.

As David sang in Psalm 16, You are our portion, Lord. We have no good thing besides You. In Your presence is fullness of joy, and in Your right hand are pleasures forever. Teach us in the coming year to be thankful for Your blessings, but to lay aside once and for all the notion that they are a substitute for You.

Teach us to bless You, Father. Teach us to praise You, to lift Your name among all the nations. For You are all in all!

Amen.

Prayer written by Erich Bridges a writer for Lifeway resources

Hope you all had as great a thanksgiving as we did!

Question of the week – Online Church


2009
11.16

CNN has been doing a lot of reporting of online churches.

Watch this 2 minute video & discuss what are your thoughts of online churches?

Biblical / Not biblical ?

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Healthy / unhealthy?

Is this a creative way to reach the lost or another way for people to separate further from the church, the body of Christ & real biblical community?

Living Things Grow


2009
11.12

My five year old son never sleeps. His tiny body is full of energy, sweat, laughter, and pure innocence. Every night it’s the same routine: we’ll sing a song, read a story, say a prayer. We’ve tried everything, but as soon as I leave the room, I hear the Thomas the Train theme being sung from his bedroom.

At least an hour will pass with no crying, no complaining…just the sounds of a young boy finding joy in life past his official bedtime. Eventually I go back into his room and sit on the edge of his bed. Often times, I have to remove action figures and battery-operated toy cars from underneath his pillow. But this has become my favorite moment in the day, because the conversations we have reflect an innocent heart and mind that is so precious to me.

We talk about the things little boys talk about—cars, wrestling moves, why we don’t hit our brother, our love for ice cream, and sometimes even God. At the end of each of our talks, I tell him that I have a secret. I lean in close to his ear and wait for the silence to break with a little giggle. The waiting is worth it, because this is quite possibly my favorite sound in the entire world.

“I love you,” I whisper to him. He giggles some more, and then leans into my ear.

“I wuv you too daddy.” He has a little trouble pronouncing the letter “L”, which could be due to the fact that he’s my only son born in Kentucky and has picked up a little southern twang.

But soon, the whispering won’t be as funny. The discussion on which superhero is best will have lost its intrigue. The Thomas songs won’t be as catchy (which wouldn’t be THAT bad). The small little mispronunciations will be gone. And I’m beginning to mourn the fact that his sleepless nights will no longer be caused by an overflow of energy, but an awareness of the weight the world carries with it and his own experiences with pain and disappointment and heartache.

It’s not just about the late night talks. It’s the fact that I know he is turning into a “big boy”; a boy that will, before I know it, become a man. I pray that each step along the way, we will still have talks…even though the topics of discussion will change. But I will always remember my little boy who never wanted to sleep, and whose lone act of defiance is humming a song about a blue train that fell off the track while he’s supposed to be sleeping.

The other day, with all of this on my mind, I simply asked him if he would stop growing for daddy. I told him I felt like he was getting too big, and that I wanted him to be my little boy forever. He thought about it for awhile, and then looked at me with a very solemn face.

“Daddy, living things have to grow!”

I’m not sure how my four year old has grasped this early on in his life, but it’s a profound truth. Maybe Dora the Explorer taught him along with other important Spanish phrases like, “I love my backpack.” Or maybe it’s just instinct. Either way, the implications of this simple statement spoke to me.

I long for a living faith–a faith that inspires, a faith that calls others to action, a faith that challenges, a faith that breathes life into those around me. But there’s been many days in my past where my faith has been, for lack of a better word, dead. There was no growth in my heart, no movement in my spirit towards loving God more, and no pouring out of love to those around me.

In Luke 13, Jesus is faced with a firestorm of tough questions about the headline news during this time. In the middle of ritual sacrifices in the temple, Pilate had ordered his soldiers to take up arms and fight. To make matters worse, a tragedy happened when 18 people were killed when the tower of Siloam fell on them. People everywhere were wondering how to reconcile the brokenness and pain that comes with this world. Jesus responded in verses 2-5 with this:

“Do you think that these Galileans were worse sinners than all the other Galileans because they suffered this way? I tell you, no! But unless you repent, you too will all perish. Or those eighteen who died when the tower in Siloam fell on them—do you think they were more guilty than all the others living in Jerusalem? I tell you, no! But unless you repent, you too will all perish.”

I think it’s obvious to see that we live in a culture that demands answers to a world filled with hurt. Many times, their questions are directed towards God, or a god of their choosing. Why do natural disasters happen? Why do good people suffer? Why can’t everyone just get along?

This wasn’t the first time Jesus spoke to the major social issues and tragic events of His time. Every time, there was a common theme: personal repentance. He points us back to our own hearts, to our own holiness, and to our own personal transformation…and He calls us to repent.

And in this, we see that Jesus was teaching us the reality that when the people of God fail to bear fruit, the world goes hungry. He knew the truth before my son did: that living things grow! Therefore, someone that isn’t being transformed by his love and grace is, quite simply put…dead.

Many of you are living on a campus that needs God’s restoration. You are surrounded by people that think living is as simple as waking up in the morning and following what their heart wants. They are busy chasing the American dream and living in the luxury of independence that they miss the reality of God’s abundant life that He desires for each one of us. As a Christian, it can be overwhelming, and often lead to compromise or discouragement. In this, many students decide the grass is greener on the other side, and enter into a place with so many rules that they lose their effectiveness in communicating with the world completely!  Other compromise all together and give up all God has for them and they pursue a life of comfort & chase all the world has to offer.

But wherever you are, I think Jesus has one message for you. Change. Become. Obey. Follow. GROW. We are called to a living faith.

My Fall Playlist


2009
11.03

Here is what I am wearing out in my ipod this fall!

Zach Williams – Great worship leader from New York – heard him @ Catalyst – Love his cd as well as his churches – Trinity Grace Church

Ben Rector – “Songs that Duke Wrote” – Great album – Creative & fresh – Good songwriting! My favorite new artist

David Gray – Draw the line – Gray is the only person in the world I would pay to see live – Great song writer

Jarrod Anderson - Live @ my church – I saw him in Denver while visiting his church & really love his stuff

Jacks Mannequin – The Glass passenger – Just doesn’t get old for me!

I am finding a lot of great artists on www.noisetrade.com – Check it out!

Who’s in your fall playlist?

The Gift of the Moment – “Sugar Highes, leaf raking & legalism”


2009
11.02

Sunday I was worn out!   I am preaching Tuesday on legalism & was studying with way too much to say & not enough time to prepare.  My kids were recovering from an absolute Halloween candy hangover!  The house work was piling up & my boys were being boys.  With laffy taffy on their fingers, pixi stick dust coming out their noses, and chocolate all over their face I made the lets rake leaves decision.  I thought it was better than the continual punching each other in the face that was happening in the house!

2 hours later we had this amazing family moment, including a back yard picnic, lots of leaf jumping, some burying little boys in the leaves, wrestling & some leaf angel making.  I was so happy!  So ready to prepare & study, so refreshed & so thankful for my family. Nothing really got done, the pile of leaves is still there, the sermon waited for a while but there was this moment where I know God had  just given me a great gift!  Where he looked down & encouraged my heart so I could be strengthened to do His work!

I don’t want to find myself in a place where I miss those moments, they are holy to me, my home is this sacred ground where I so often experience the love, grace, hope, joy and grace of my God simply by experiencing those tiny glimpses of what heaven must be like.

2 Thessalonians 2:15-17 – “May our Lord Jesus Christ himself and God our Father, who loved us and by his grace gave us eternal encouragement and good hope, encourage your hearts and strengthen you in every good deed and word.”

I pray you find those moments this week!