Friday, October 29, 2010
Lukewarm
Friday, October 22, 2010
The Arena
I went in with a list of things that didn't make sense to me. I went in with a bunch of suggestions for God on how he could have handled this one differently. I went in thinking I should be exempt from having to be there again. I went in knowing I wasn't alone - but feeling like I was. Being answerless makes what I "feel" bigger than what I "know."
It is amazing to me how close we are to an angry response. Please know that God can handle our anger, but in most cases it's a huge waste of our energy. We get angry over what we can't change and don't like. The danger is that anger not given to God grows into a poison that infects all of our life and is usually expressed on innocent bystanders.
I couldn't count how many people were there. When I'm in the arena I'm not usually aware of anyone else. I see people, but I don't notice souls if I'm not careful. My questions become my identity and the absence of answers is my evil twin. We're not good for each other.
After I sit in my chair for a while and search for illusive answers I eventually notice that Someone is sitting close to me.
"But I don't have an answer yet," I reply refusing to get up.
"You know, you can leave without one don't you?" He kindly asks.
"But if I have questions doesn't that mean I am weak and have no faith?"
"No," He didn't hesitate to answer.
"Are you willing to keep walking without an answer? Are you bold enough to let my Father have the answers and not share them with you? Are you able to have faith and questions at the same time?" He asked the series of rapid fire questions not waiting for my response.
"Yah, I think I am." I finally said.
"I'd love to have a person like that walk with me," He smiled.
Friday, October 15, 2010
Rescuing the Church!
Rescuing the Church! I have watched with interest as the 33 miners from Chile have been rescued from their extended overtime (technically they were on the job the whole time, over 1600 hours - what's overtime pay in Chile?).
It was fascinating the story that the media is feeding us with a front end loader right now. Already the event itself is not news enough, now we hear all the scandal about individuals.
So far one line captivated me. As the rescue was happening someone was sharing that the key to survival for them was that everyone of them had a job. Everyone was involved in helping everyone live through the ordeal.
Petty opinions are of little value when you might die. Pride is revealed as shallow when it's about survival. Selfishness must evaporate when 32 people are counting on you to live.
I wonder about the church. We have become so program guided and oriented that we wait for a program to be implemented to do what is right to do. In light of that I have to be invited and sold on the program before I chip in.
So, I'm thinking about the church being a place where I belong and where I am active. Do people know you love them? Have you meet someone new? Have you asked how you could pray for a new friend this week? Have you taken someone out for a coffee? Have you made sure that person doesn't have to sit alone in church? Have you risked?
Everyone had a job. Everyone did the job. Everyone was rescued.
Thinking about all of us being rescued from ineffectiveness.
Praying for you,
Pastor Dave
Friday, October 8, 2010
In Awe
God: "Hey, look at that! See that baby in David's arms. I created them both, they are my creations and I can see myself in them. Look closer. Do you see the innocence of the souls? Look at what grace does! Can you smell the fragrance of dependance from that room - both of them are completely helpless without a provider. That's me! I'm their provider. Quick! Take a picture! Two of mine. I made them both. I did a great job."
Pastor Dave
Friday, October 1, 2010
Summer Reflections
It's much easier and safer to not "beat your head" with a bat over things you can't control. The Lord helped me to set aside my agenda and be ok with the fact that not everything runs the way I would like it to.
I'm not fond of getting a greater distance from thirty, yet the distance keeps growing. The hair on my head is thinner and the hair on my chin is grayer. While the world struggles to add years that have little meaning I'm learning to be sure that each one I have matters.
My relationship with God is more important than my relationship with my doctor. The end of the summer season included physical challenges that I would rather have skipped. But I know what matters most.
I just like being here. I like seeing people grow. I like meeting new people. I like hearing people sing. I like hearing the pages turn when I say, "turn with me in your Bibles to...." I like being a MFMCer.
I heard from the Lord this summer about my call - what it is and what it isn't. The Leadership Team and the Pastoral Staff are making adjustments so that we spend most of our time swimming in the ocean of God's call for us.
I've had some of the greatest times having dinner, playing games, drinking coffee - being with people. It's our error when we are too busy to be with people and risk building relationships.
Hint - Sunday we're looking at starting lines for individuals and our church. Come ready to be blessed by God's grace. Bring a friend who needs to start over.