Theologicaledge

It is a strange world we live in

Archive for January, 2009

Strongly rooted=healthy Spirit January 13, 2008

More than a decade ago, Matt Thom, a few helpful young teens and me conceived of and set in motion a tree house for our back yard. The tree had a great section where branches came together but it wasn’t large enough for a good side platform. Instead, we placed four 12′ pressure treated 4×4’s around the tree. They were planted 3-4 feet deep and cemented into place. To these ran a set of 2×6 stringers, carriage bolted to the posts.

The end result was a platform that didn’t touch the tree but was amidst the branches. Everything added to it, from the stairway to the sidewalls were accomplished because we had a very solid base from which to build.

How important is a foundation? Psalm 1 tells us that those who are settled and blessed are those who are “planted” in a place where they are constantly fed by God’s word. Jesus describes a foolish and wise builder by the place on which they lay their foundation. Fools would settle for the smooth, fairly stone-free sandy base of the seasonal Wadis which were fine till the seasonal rainfall came. Then they were a lot like Vernonia or Tillamook in a flood. Wise builders put up with rocks, cleared the ground and worked hard to build a house that was out of harm’s way when the creeks rose.

In 2 Timothy, Paul writes to the young pastor of the congregations in Ephesus that, he, Timothy, should continue doing what he’d learned was right and true. What was Timothy’s source of knowledge? It was Paul’s life and experiences. It was his own life lived out under other believers and it was the Word of God that provides the means for “teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness.”

Today is the start of four weeks of looking at God’s Word—the what, why’s and how of reading it. We’re aiming at the February 11 kick-off of reading through the Bible in a year. And before I ask you to consider something that difficult you ought at least to understand the value of the Bible.

Jesus is the one we trust in life and death. But how do we know about Jesus? Someone tells us stories. We’ve been raised in church and, like a virus we caught Him. We listen to the sermon and watch Christian TV. Any of these can help us to understand Jesus but the only continual witness to Jesus is God’s Word. In classic theological language one talks about Jesus being the Word Incarnate or made flesh and Scripture as the written Word. Without trust in Jesus the Scripture remains a confusing, daunting book. Without Scripture, Jesus often becomes a misunderstood revolutionary or simply a good man who was caught up in the politics of His day and age.

God’s word is foundational to our understanding of who Jesus is and what His life, death, bodily resurrection and ascension mean for us today. It is the basis from which all ministry, service, work, evangelism, and mission in the name of Jesus proceed. But doesn’t this take place in every church, everywhere? You a very quick comment from Rev. Jim Berkeley show that some Christian leaders have a different view of what’s foundational for faith and life. Last January, Berkeley wrote for The Institute on Religion and Democracy about being an observer for IRD at a meeting between our denomination’s Committee on Social Witness Policy and National Council of Churches meeting in New York. Rev. Marcel Welty, NCC Associate for Research and Planning, attempted to make small talk with him. Here’s Jim Berkeley’s recollection of that:

“So, what do you think of President Bush?” he asked, with all the grace and delicacy of a drunken hippopotamus. Why politics came to his mind as a sociable topic of conversation with a guest, I’ll never know. Why not ask about my faith or my family for starters? Why home in on what to Welty just had to be an obvious bone of contention?”

It is because to such folks, politics are the foundation upon which they base their existence. Just so you know this can be true of progressive and evangelical as well. Scripture is the foundation upon which we base our knowledge of Jesus Christ (orthodoxy) and our behavior as a follower of Jesus Christ (orthopraxy).

Paul tells Timothy that God’s word is profitable for “teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness”. When it comes to our study of God our feelings or what we believe aren’t the final authority, it is what God says that goes. You are free to believe God wears pink bunny-rabbit slippers if you want but that doesn’t make it valid or true, in spite of our politically correct world. There seems to me a type of progression in these phrases. From understanding theology the Word of God rebukes. The Amplified Version uses the phrases, “for reproof and conviction of sin”. It is a correcting word. It tells someone that what they are doing is wrong. It points out the sin and, building on the teaching, it shows them from God’s word where it violates God’s standards. From this it moves on to correction. We might think of reproof and correction as the same word but the aim is totally different.

Correction seeks to make things right. The first time I helped my dad prep a car for painting I got the glamorous job of wet sanding it by hand. I got done, went in the house and my dad said, “Are you done?”

I got my usual senior high ego in a twist and said, “Of course. It wasn’t that hard.” After lunch, my dad went out to look at the car and soon called me over. One guess; do you think it was because I’d done such a good job that no one would ever sand a car again to that quality? Yeah! He ripped me up one side and down the other. I’d missed some places totally and went too deep in others. Then he did something that was embarrassing. He took the sandpaper and block, put them in my hand and with his hand on mine showed me what good sanding looked like. I hated it. It was demeaning. I felt like a fool. But I could probably still sand a car today because his correction gave me the right feel for the amount of pressure needed.

All of this, teaching, rebuking and correction lead to the goal of “training in righteousness (in holy living, in conformity to God’s will in thought, purpose, and action), so that the man and woman of God may be complete and proficient, well fitted and thoroughly equipped for every good work.” Amplified Version

Let me go back to Psalm 1 to do the work God created us to do is to bear fruit in the proper season. And to do that we are rooted, fed, watered, and made strong by our “delighting in God’s Word” and it is upon this law that we meditate, ponder, and study.

When our foundation is set in Christ we are secure and blessed. The tree house I mentioned at the start is coming down this spring. You see, the tree is splitting and sagging against the fort. Yet the fort still holds because it is rooted well. When the pressures around us fall on us will be a strongly founded on Christ?

Seasoning our Giving— January 6, 2008

Enjoy the tree because next week it will be gone, the garlands, nativity scene and memorial ornaments will be put away till next December 7 (which is the second Sunday in Advent). At our house we’ve left up some winter decorations but the bulk of our Christmas is down and in the garage. Yet, today is the actual end of the Christmas season. It is the celebration of the coming of magi from the East to Jesus. It is the giving of gold, frankincense and myrrh to this one who is “King, and God, and sacrifice.”

Matthew, who recounts this story from Jesus’ birth, doesn’t tell us much about these visitors. He never calls them kings. He doesn’t say how many there are let alone give us their names. The idea of kings may have come from the Old Testament where Psalm 72:10 and Isaiah 60:6 tell of the Kings of Tarshish bringing gifts and Sheba will bring gold and incense.

There is an early fourth century catacomb depiction of three men, dressed in Roman gear, bringing gifts to the baby Jesus. A lot of speculation exists about the “star”. Ideas from a comet, a worldwide visible event, to planetary alignments to a supernatural event all have their supporters and detractors.

Read Matthew’s account again and you’ll notice a couple of statements that will have you putting your nativity scene away. They entered a house and saw the young child. Yet all of this really is pretty unimportant when you catch the purpose behind Matthew’s telling this part of the birth story.

His point was that those who were watching for Messiah should have seen Him. Those who were suppose to be the worshipers of God had missed God’s greatest gift of love. Those who had the resources were upstaged by those on the outside, the pagan, the less-than’s of the world—the Magi.

Season our getting this New Year by not becoming complacent.

The sin of those scribes who told Herod about Bethlehem was complacency. They had grown so use to the way things were they couldn’t conceive of God really doing anything. The world was the way it was and that’s it. Rome was here to stay and would always be here. Here’s a sidelight to think about, Just before Jesus is born Augustus orders a census which puts Mary in the right place for God’s plans. Over the next couple of centuries Emperors like Nero and Diocletian systematically tried to eliminate this baby’s followers. But by 325 AD, Christ had become the de jure focus of the entire empire. Not bad for a kid born in a dirty, peasant, backwater, Judean village huh?

Watch for what God is doing in your life and the world around you. This happens best when you’re open to seeing God on His terms not yours. If you want to see God doing wonderful things in your family and you are constantly making excuses for bad choices by the same family members you are NOT seeing God at work. You’re fooling yourself. Being honest and humble is key to seeing God work.

Season our getting this New Year by seeking God.

If these Magi came from Iran to Jerusalem you’re talking about a thousand-mile trip from modern Tehran. That was on foot and camel, donkey or horse; not 737 or train. I personally like some of the liberties taken in The Nativity Story especially with the magi. There’s the scene when they figure out this king is going to be born and the one doesn’t want to come because he can’t take all his comforts of home. That sounds a bit like me at times.

I won’t BS you; seeking God is hard work. Too many people want a God who is there to make them feel good. The truth is God calls us to sacrifice, to live like Jesus, to care for others, to love our enemies and to do good to those who hate us. There is very little promise of the niceties of life for followers of Jesus. What there is though is joy that goes beyond the circumstances of life; peace that passes all understanding; and God’s Kingdom for those who keep on keeping on.

Here is a way to measure whether we seeking God or not. On what do you spend most of your time when you are not sleeping, at a job or school? This is because in our culture, free time is a valuable commodity and what we invest our free time in says a lot about us and our values.

After you answer that question go a step further. Of the total amount of this valuable commodity called free time, what percentage do I spend seeking God? This includes praying, reading the bible, reading Christian books, worship, telling others about Jesus etc. So if you’ve got five hours a day free time you’ve got 35 hours a week. That would mean that two hours here on Sunday account for a little over 5%. Do the same things for the time you pray, evangelism, and Bible study. If you’re like me you’ll be surprised if not shocked.

I’m asking this not to make us feel bad, but to make the point that we really do not seek God in a purposeful way. We go with the flow we don’t swim against the current. We are happy with the status quo we don’t want to be revolutionaries. We’re content with scraps we don’t want to feast with the King of Kings.

I hope you’re all up for a challenge this year. Beginning the first Monday of Lent, we going to attempt to read through the whole Bible in a year. We’ll have the texts available for you in a couple of weeks but for the next four weeks we’re going to be hitting hot and heavy the issue of the Word of God and why it’s foundational to our growth as Christ’s people.

This challenge is one way that you can step out in faith and attempt to seek God through His revealed Word. Another way is here before us in this bread and cup. Coming to this table is a living statement of faith and trust in Jesus and Jesus alone and so Paul tells those who would celebrate this to examine themselves and decide if they can truly come and proclaim Christ as Lord. You are invited to do so now as we come to the Lord’s supper.

Notes:
Psalm 72:10 The kings of Tarshish and of distant shores will bring tribute to him; the kings of Sheba and Seba will present him gifts.
Isaiah 60:6 Herds of camels will cover your land, young camels of Midian and Ephah. And all from Sheba will come, bearing gold and incense and proclaiming the praise of the LORD.

http://www29.homepage.villanova.edu/christopher.haas/EarlyChristian.htm

Thanks Rev. Fischler…

H/T to Dave Fischler over at The Reformed Pastor for the posting the great video and insight re: the arrangement of political constellations this past week. I’ll let you read his comments. You can watch the video either on his site of below.

Makes you sort of stop and think doesn’t it.

Peace
Alan

The Dream: a process of fulfillment…

I just finished watching CNN’s broadcast of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr’s “I Have a Dream Speech”. Listening to the entire speech several things struck me. First of all how much I appreciate the African-American style of preaching. Dr. King didn’t give a speech he preached a sermon. Secondly, I was struck how much of a prophet Dr. King was. He spoke of the “manacles of segregation and the chains of discrimination” which were/are a reality for the African-American.

Undoubtedly on his mind was one Gov. George Wallace of Alabama who declared in his inaugural speech in January of 1963, “In the name of the greatest people that have ever trod this earth, I draw the line in the dust and toss the gauntlet before the feet of tyranny, and I say segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever.” The photo of Gov. Wallace blocking the entrance to the school is an enduring reminder of the division that existed [and still exists to some extent] in our nation.

Dr. King’s prophetic gift is noted in how Gov. Wallace was transformed by suffering. In his message, Dr. King said, “Some of you have come here out of great trials and tribulations. Some of you have come fresh from narrow jail cells. Some of you have come from areas where your quest for freedom left you battered by the storms of persecution and staggered by the winds of police brutality. You have been the veterans of creative suffering. Continue to work with the faith that unearned suffering is redemptive” [Emphasis is mine].

A 1995 Washington Post article recounts how the suffering of Gov. Wallace, following his assignation attempt had opened the door for change. Stephen Lesher tells of a surprise visit to Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in 1979. This had been Martin Luther King’s congregation in the 50’s. Wallace reportedly said, “I have learned what suffering means. In a way that was impossible {before the shooting}, I think I can understand something of the pain black people have come to endure. I know I contributed to that pain, and I can only ask your forgiveness.” In 1995 he met with some 200 veterans of the Selma to Montgomery march and told them, “Much has transpired since those days. A great deal has been lost and a great deal gained, and here we are. My message to you today is, welcome to Montgomery. May your message be heard? May your lessons never be forgotten.” And as reported by the Washington Post reports he held hands with black southerners and sang “We Shall Overcome.”

I have no delusion about President Obama’s inauguration ending inequality for African-Americans, Latinos, Christians or any other group. That is a part of our fallen nature that will be overcome totally only when Christ Kingdom comes in its fullness. There will still be unneeded traffic stops in our fair city, hate crimes and stupid people who are allowed to voice their hatred and cast a ballot.

What I do have is a sense of God’s presence in all that has happened and will happen. I believe, and will pray for a community and nation in which justice and mercy, strength and steadfastness is forged in the lives of people throughout our nation without regard to looks and language.

Peace,
Alan

Imagine No Religion… huh!?!


Recently Portland got a booster shot of liberal/humanist hubris in the form o ten billboards from The Freedom From Religion’s, “Imagine No Religion” campaign. As one whose life and livelihood originates from and is centered in the area of religion let me respond to such an imagination.

Imagine no religion and you have to:

Imagine no civil rights movement…Let’s start with the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Rev. Ralph Abernathy, T.J. Jamison, Joseph Lowery, Fred Shuttleworth and Rev. Jesse Jackson to name a few. Without such people there would have been no non-violent protests voter rights or education for African-Americans. Go to 1775 when “Society for the Relief of Free Negroes Unlawfully Held in Bondage” was organized in Philadelphia having been founded by Quakers.

Imagine no Habitat for Humanity, Oxfam, Medical Teams International, or Christmas in Action…Start with Clarence Jordan, a Christian who began Koinonia Farm in Georgia in 1942. Add Millard and Linda Fuller, who left an affluent life for a place in which they could live out their Christian values and you have an organization which has dedicated over 300,000 homes and provided shelter to 1.5 million people around the world. Oxfam, began by Quakers, help people deal with disaster, warfare, labor rights issues and situations such as clean water and access to resources.

“Medical Teams International, formerly Northwest Medical Teams came about because of a business man’s TV viewing. He saw a young Cambodian refugee, about the age of his daughter, and wondered, “What if that refugee were my own daughter? He asked God about how he could make a difference and Ron Post was leading medical people overseas in less than a month.

Christmas in Action, formerly Christmas in April”, happened when 1972 Bobby Trimble took a Sunday school lesson at his Midland church to the extreme and started what would quickly become a national program benefiting thousands. “I was teaching from the second book of James, somewhere around the 14th verse,” Trimble said. “To paraphrase, it says if you see someone in need of food and clothing and you say, ‘I will pray for you,’ what good have you really done that person. I told the class that that’s what the churches were doing. So we started working on the homes of some of the women of the church.”

Imagine no relief efforts and crews in New Orleans and Texas following hurricanes. A year after Hurricane Katrina blew into New Orleans faith-based groups still hand out emergency food and items to those who live in the area. To this day Presbyterian Village continues to operate as a base from which crews of youth and families are sent out to make a difference in the New Orleans area.


Imagine the millions of children who would die without sponsorship from World Vision, Compassion International and other such groups
. Both these major organizations flowed from pastors and mission people seeing the need of hungry and orphaned children. Founded at the end of the Korean Conflict their focus was on Southeast Asia but has grown to include six continents.

ChhunNa an HIV/AIDS child in Cambodia receives “school materials, pen, bag and clothes” and even “a lovely bicycle from the project; I will ride a bicycle to school instead walking. The staff members give me and my family encouragement and strength”. In addition World Vision workers attempt to work in communities to end the discrimination for those with HIV/AIDS.


Anna, a six year old, in the Dominican Republic, who doesn’t smile and when her mother is asked what the Compassion team could pray about, said she didn’t “believe that God will answer any of her prayers or dreams for her children.” But because of one Christian she has as Brian Seay says, “Melanie [who sponsors Anna] is now one of the only people in Anna’s life that will consistently tell her she is loved and it’s ok to dream big dreams because God will hear her prayers.

More could be said about the Renaissance and keeping learning alive during the “dark ages”. Even more could be said about those who, because of their faith, were challenged to do what was right, [if you're an atheist I'm not sure what you base "rightness" upon] even though it was risky, dangerous or deadly. It is apparent to me that the pseudo-intellectual non-religious just don’t know about what they’re talking. I shouldn’t be surprised.

Peace,
Alan

Mac World rocks the church

With both MacWorld in San Franciso and CES in Las Vegas it is time to consider how the new technology will touch the work of God’s people in our daily life. Those in the pulpits and those on the pews both will have the chance to do some amazing things with these new innovations. Take a look at this new introduction from Apple and dream big people.

Peace,
Alan

Apple Introduces Revolutionary New Laptop With No Keyboard

LOL