Thursday, November 18, 2010

They Shall Not Suffer Alone




In October gunmen forced their way into Our Lady of Salvation Church and killed at least 58 people. There implied message was that Christians are not safe or welcome in Iraq.

It is ironic that one of the legacy of the war in Iraq is the extinction of one of the oldest Christian communities in the world. Before the Gulf War in 1991, Christians numbered about one million. According to the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, the population of Iraqi Christians is 500,000 with thousands leaving every month. More than 46 churches and monasteries have been bombed since the start of the Iraq war.

Before the Gulf War, the secular government of Saddam Hussein did not persecute Christians in the way it did the Kurds and some Shia communities. In 1978 Saddam Hussein changed the Iraqi constitution stating that only two peoples lived in Iraq: Kurds and Arabs. The Assyrians, the indigenous population of Iraq were to be called Christians Kurds or Christians Arabs. Those who accepted the change were allowed to exercise their freedom. Those who resisted the change and wanted to maintain their Assyrian identity were persecuted. Christians live in Baghdad and are also concentrated in the northern cities of Kirkul, Irbil and Mosul. This northern area was known in biblical times as Nineveh.

The Christians in Iraq are mainly Chaldean, some who still speak the language of Jesus, Aramaic, and Assyrians. The Assyrians are descendants of the ancient empires of Assyria and Babylon. They embraced Christianity in the 1st Century AD. Other ancient Christians traditions exist in Iraq include: Syrian Catholics, Armenian Orthodox, Armenian Catholic Christians. There are also small numbers of Anglicans and Evangelicals.

Besides prayer, what else can the church in the West do to assist our brothers and sisters in Iraq? How do we come along side them in their persecution? Should they suffer alone?

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Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Spittin' Image


I have been told that my youngest son is a "spittin' image" of his father. Now my son is a handsome looking four-year-old so I am taking that as a full compliment. It is amazing how our children grow up to look like us. My oldest son has similar characteristics of his mother. Walk into a childcare center and you watch as parents arrive and you can match up the kids to their parents pretty easily. I even met a woman one time who considered her dogs as her children. She called them her children. And you know what? After visiting with her, her dogs actually did look like her.

One of the rituals of the traditional church is the children's moments. It is that time in the service where the pastor calls all the children down front and at the same time the parents are squirming on the edge of their seat fearful of what their child will blurt out. One common children's lesson is how we are created in the image of God and how all of are a reflection of God. The pastor may use the illustration of how children look like their parents.

We don't do children's moments in our service and it is a good thing because this lesson would never work. We have children who looking nothing like their parents. Children and parents whose race don't match up. We have siblings who sit beside each other and you never consider them brother and sister. The gene pool of the child who calls the adult mom or dad doesn't match. Why? Because we have taken parenting to another level with the act of adoption. we have brought adoption out of the periphery of society. We have made a conscious decision not to consider adoptive children as second class citizens. Adoption is a reality in our faith community because we understand ourselves as a Kingdom of rescued orphans.

In order for us to take seriously the call of adoption we must first understand our own adoption in the eyes of God. Romans 8:14ff says, "For all who are led by the Spirit of God are children of God. So you have not received a spirit that makes you fearful slaves. Instead, you received God’s Spirit when he adopted you as his own children.Now we call him, “Abba, Father.” For his Spirit joins with our spirit to affirm that we are God’s children" (New Living Translation)

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The Sacrifice

There are five basic tenets of Islam that Muslims are required to observe. These five pillars are found in the Qur'an. In most of the Muslim world these five pillars are considered mandatory. One of the pillars of the Islamic faith is the pilgrimage or Hajj. All Muslims who are able are required to make a journey to Mecca.

This year over two million pilgrims participated in the Hajj which included a week-long schedule of events. One of the events that comes at the close of the Hajj is Eid-Ul-Zuha or the Festival of Sacrifices. The festival commences as pilgrims return home from Mecca. For three-days Muslims will gather with family and friends to remember Abraham's willingness to sacrifice his son. According to the Qur'an, Ibrahim (Abraham) was willing to sacrifice his son, Isma'il (Ishmael) in an act of obedience to God. Because Ibrahim was willing to put God before those he loved, God allowed him to sacrifice a ram instead.

To remember this event, Muslim families who can afford to sacrifice an animal will host a festival at their house where they will invite family and friends over. A portion of the sacrifice will be given to the poor.

Islam is based largely on works. As in many religions (and for some Christians), there is not alway a passion for genuine spirituality. In Islam it is the fear of God's wrath and the consequences of angering him that serves as a motive for their devotion. As believers, we have devotions that we insist are as important as well. We pray, fast, participate in a community of faith, read our bibles, etc but we do it not to appease God but that we may be drawn closer to Jesus Christ.

This is a great time to have a discussion (not debate or argument) with a Muslim regarding the sacrifice of Abraham and the parrellel of the sacrifice of Jesus.
Join me in praying that during this intense time of religious devotions for Muslims they may come to discover the straight path to the Kingdom of God through Isa Al Masih (Jesus the Christ).

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Room At The Table

My wife recently found a table on Craigslist. Our current table has four chairs. The new table has six chairs. The other night as the family gathered around the new table for dinner it appeared to me that we now have room for two more people at our table. So silently I have been praying who God might send to fill those two chairs.

"Do you have room at your table?" Before you answer that question remember who you are. Remember that you are a child of God who declares that there is always room at His table. At some point in your life God pulled a chair up to His table and invited you to dine. None of us are natural-born children of God. We are all adopted by the grace of God through Jesus Christ.

There are thousands of orphaned children in our world today that need to feel welcome at a family table. This blog is a beginning on the theology, missional, and ethical dimensions of adoption. I would love to hear your feedback and receive any comments that you may have.
Contact:

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Wednesday, November 10, 2010

A Squirrel On the Lose

One time when I was little I decided to catch a squirrel. I set a live trap one afternoon and sure enough it was not long that I had me a squirrel. I had not thought it through long enough to decide what I was going to do with it once it was caught. So I decided to put it in an old shoe box. So I forced it in the shoe box with a stick and slammed the lid down. I covered it in duck tape certain that the squirrel could not get out. I put it in my dads building until next morning.

The next morning I suspected the squirrel was hungry so I took it some corn shucks. But to my surprise the squirrel had chewed through the cardboard box and gotten loose in my dads workshop. The only way out of this workshop was through an open window or the open door. So I opened the door and windows. I waited and all of a sudden I saw the squirrel sitting on the ledge of the window sill. Taking a deep breath of air, he jumped down and ran up the nearest tree. I related this story to my grandpa and told him how upset I was that the squirrel did not want to by my pet. He said, “Squirrels are made to be free and in order for them to fulfill the reason they exist they have to roam wild.” God must be left to be free and wild. God must be allowed to roam in and out of your life. God must be given room to work. God cannot be localized, limited, or manipulated.

When things are going well in our lives is when we are most tempted to put God in a box. Maybe it is the human desire to keep things as they are. We are safe as long as God is in a box. Let God out and we don’t know what God will ask of us. Let God roam wild in our lives and we may end up in Africa, Venezuela, or New Orleans. Let God run wild in our lives and we may have to tell the truth. Let God run wild in our lives and we may have to stand up against injustice. Let God run wild in our lives and we may have to answer the call. Let God run wild in our lives and we may have to teach Sunday School, preach the gospel, or witness to a neighbor. Let God run wild in our lives and we may have to start taking our faith walk serious. Let God run wild in our lives and we may experience grace. We may be called to love our enemies. We may be challenged to stand when others are quiet. We may be called upon to serve. The only way to truly know this God of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Ruth, Esther, the disciples and Paul is to let God roam free in your life. The only way to experience the freedom of Christ is letting Christ have freedom in your life.

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Do Not Be Afraid

“Do not be afraid.” For any student of the bible who has wandered through the pages of Scripture, the words, Do not be afraid should create an unsettled feeling deep in our gut. Our exegetical red flags should signal something is about to happen. God is about to act in a decisive way. God is about to do something that will leave the person or persons receiving the message totally changed. There will be no going back to the old way of life. A new course is about to be plotted out. God is about to turn everything upside down. Do not be afraid, God said and then Moses found himself leading the Israelites through the desert for forty years. Do not be afraid, said the prophet Elijah and then he asked the widow of Zerepath to give up her last morsel of food. Do not be afraid Jesus said and then he invited Peter to step out onto the water. Do not be afraid, said Gabriel, and then an unmarried girl became pregnant through the power of the Holy Spirit.

Do not be afraid, God said to me years ago when God called me into the ministry. Do not be afraid, God told a couple when God lead them into a foreign land. Do not be afraid, God said when God closed one door and opened up another for you. Do not be afraid, God said when God asked you to serve in the church. Do not be afraid, was the words you heard when you found yourself in an uncomfortable position for the sake of the gospel. Do not be afraid, was shouted deep in your soul when you were challenged to step out of your comfort zone to share the love of Christ.

If you have never heard those words or its been a while since you have, then don’t be surprised if they come to you at unexpected moments. Don’t be surprised if you wake up in the middle of the night with the urge to do something different. Don’t be surprised if you are sitting in church one Sunday morning trying not to fall asleep when all of a sudden God knocks you out of your pew. Don’t be surprised if you find your self in a situation and something tells you that is what you were made for. Don’t be surprised if you hear the words, “Do not be afraid!” And find your world turned upside down. Don’t be surprised because God is a God of surprises. God loves to surprise ordinary common folk with impossible tasks. Do not be afraid, is a signal that you are about to be taken on a wild ride with the One for whom nothing is impossible!

It was the message given to Mary by the Angel and it is the Good News given to us. “Do not be afraid, for you have found favor with God,” is our invitation to act courageously for the sake of the Gospel. It is the invitation to believe the incredible, to accept the inconceivable, and to embrace the impossible. It is a call to begin a journey that demands all our courage, all our strength, all our faith. It is a summons to plunge headlong into the unknown. It is the call to travel unfamiliar territory. The request to love neighbor, love enemy, and to live for the Kingdom of God. It is an enticement to use our talents, treasure, and time for the purpose of God’s Kingdom. Do not be afraid, God is with you! Be a neighbor to someone in need! Do not be afraid, God is with you! Find time to minister to the hundreds of teenagers in our community who are searching for role models. Do not be afraid, God is with you! Invest in God’s kingdom. Do not be afraid, God is with you! Be a peacemaker instead of violence. Do not be afraid, God is with you! Answer the call into the ministry. Do not be afraid, God is with you! Respond to the voice that calls forth overseas to missions. Do not be afraid, God is with you! Pray for a friend. Do not be afraid, God is with you! Offer forgiveness to an enemy. Do not be afraid, God is with you! Keep promises, speak the truth. Do not be afraid, God is with you! Visit a new neighbor, invite them to church, build a relationship. Do not be afraid, God is with you!

Monday, November 8, 2010

Let's Talk About Sex

Our sub-Christian culture has confused secrecy with privacy when it comes to talking about sex. Keeping sexuality secret has created harm when it comes to discussing important moral/ethical issues that revolve around sex. Secrecy enables sexual misconduct among clergy, misconduct of political leaders to control through sex, and even child pornography to become a serious reality in our culture. Treating sexuality in a secretive way also creates challenges to discussing the topic among our children. In discussions of sexuality privacy plays an important role, secrecy should not.

According to Genesis 1:31, "When God saw everything he had made, and indeed, it was very good." This includes sexuality. Sexuality is a part of God's creation and God's creation is very good. The Genesis account says, "So God created humankind in his image, in the image of God he created them; male and female he created them"(1:27). Sexual distinctions are a part of God's creation.

Some argue that the main purpose of sex is procreation. They quote, "God blessed them, and God said to them, 'Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth and subdue it . . .'"(1:28). What is interesting in this passage is that procreation is seen as a blessing of God a part from being created in the image of God. Procreation is an added blessing of God's design for human sexuality. It is not the sole purpose of sexual relationships. The birds of the air are also told to "be fruitful and multiply" but they are not made in the image God.

God does not create a need for which their is no fulfillment. Before the woman existed was man some type of asexual (androgynous) being? It seems apparent from the text in Genesis 2 that nothing changed in the man before the creation of the woman or after the creation. (Other than a loss of a rib). Adam was created in anticipation of the future. He was created with sexual desires. He looks out over the landscape of creation and a "helper" could not be found. When he is introduced to the woman he fully realizes his sexuality in his sexual counterpart. Sexual desire, sexual appetite, is a God-given gift to be enjoyed between husband and wife.

Not So Silent

Silent night, holy night. All is calm, all is bright round yon virgin mother and child. Holy infant, so tender and mild, sleep in heavenly peace…

One of the reasons this hymn is so popular is because it paints an image of a “perfect” Christmas. It is the kind of Christmas we all say we want but often never get.

We all know the reality of Christmas is far from perfect. Children who get up at the crack of dawn are cranky by 10 a.m. In receiving guests you quickly realize you forgot a gift and go rushing to the bedroom looking for something that looks new and can be disguised behind wrapping paper. After all those guests are gone, the sink is piled high with dirty dishes. And the worst, the toy does not fit together the way explained in the instructions. Silent night, holy night, all is calm, all is bright . . .

The good news is that Christmas does not need to be perfect to be Christmas. God does not wait around until our lives are perfect to give us the gift of Christmas. The gift of Christmas comes regardless of and in the very midst of our imperfect, incomplete, and disordered life. Casseroles burn. A not so friendly game of family feud erupts. Perfectly decorated and cleaned homes look like war zones after all the presents are unwrapped. A baby is still born.

On that first Christmas morning, it is anything but calm. Bethlehem is overcrowded. Israel is being occupied by an outside force whose version of peace was ushered in through military oppression. The city is in an uproar. The people are anxious and fearful. A baby will be born regardless of the housing conditions. Shepherds leave their flocks and search through the chaos for a newborn.

We seek God through the special, the peaceful, and the calmly prepared moments. Instead God comes to us in the ordinary distractions of life. God comes to us in the busyness. God comes in the midst of our struggles. God comes in the midst of our mistakes. Life is not perfect. Christmas is not perfect. But peace is announced and a baby is born. This Christmas may not be silent, but it can still be holy.


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Brown Jacket


I have a brown jacket. I love my brown jacket. As I see it the only good thing about cold weather is I get to pull my brown jacket out of the closet. I don't know why I have such an affection for my brown jacket. I have never really been a coat wearing kind of guy. Maybe brown is my color.
Not everyone feels the same way about my brown jacket. The office staff where I work actually convinced my wife into a scheme of kidnapping my brown jacket. One morning she stuffed it down in a bag and brought the innocent jacket to my work and gave it to the ladies in the office. For days I wondered the house hunting for my brown jacket. I tore through my closet on the hunt for my brown jacket. I asked my wife if she had seen my jacket. I asked my children if they had been playing with my jacket. I was grieving over my jacket. I have other coats in the closet but they are not brown. Finally, the day came when the evil plot was revealed and the jacket was returned to me in all of its brownness.
For good or bad, I have become identified with my brown jacket. What identifies you? When your name is spoken in a crowd what do people say? Hopefully, it is more than the dude wearing the brown jacket.

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Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Self-Preserving Politics

Self-preservation is the behavior that ensures the survival of an organism. For example, if something causes us pain then we will try to find what it is that is causing the pain and put a stop to it. If we become afraid, we will turn away from whatever is causing the fear. We will seek safety. Self-preservation is not just for the living. It is for the dead as well.

In Ancient Egypt, the mummy and the pyramid were elaborate attempts at self-preservation. One of the first things that a pharaoh would do when taking the throne was to draw up the plans for his burial place. To construct a pyramid, stones averaging 2.5 tons had to be hewn out of rock quarries by laborers with hand tools, hauled across the desert, and carried up ramps to be put into place. Archaeologists estimate the Pyramids at Giza took around 25,000 workers 80 years to build. The primary purpose of the extravagant pyramids was to protect the Pharaoh’s body. The body itself was mummified for maximum preservation. A team of 70 embalmers spent 70 days performing the task of preparing the Pharaoh’s body for burial.

The pharaohs used large amounts of their kingdom’s wealth and work force to preserve themselves. They act of self-preservation contributed to the downfall of the Egyptian kingdom.

The only thing that has changed with political leaders mummifying themselves is that now they do it while they are alive. Politics is about self-preservation. The ads we see on television are about either preserving their position in politics or putting themselves in a position to later preserve their position in politics. Self-preservation in politics leads to the reality that persons desire to rule over their fellow humans no matter what form of government. Jesus says, "you know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their great ones are tyrants over them" (Matt. 20:25). In this passage Jesus does not condemn the fact that some "lord" over others. He just states the fact of reality. So even if Lincoln can stand in a field in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania and declare we are "government of the people, by the people, for the people," it doesn't mean that we are governing ourselves. It means for democratic rule that those we elect in office, the rulers who "lord" it over us, will hopefully listen to us. At least that is the hope of my participation in democracy.

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Cry For Her

last Sunday a family from my church were making their way home from service when at a busy intersection they noticed a lady kneeling down in the middle of the road. Cars were passing and no one was stopping. I am not sure the full story, but this family stopped their car, the wife got out and joined the woman in the middle of the road. She convinced the woman to walk with her across the street to the gas station. They spent some time with the woman and eventually it became evident that she was addicted to drugs. The family called the paramedics and waited until they arrived.
They continued their family drive to Subway but the daugther was visibly shaken. As the daughter and father stood in the parking lot. She told her father, "I just think this woman needed someone to cry for her."

How many addicted to drugs and alcohol? How many lost and abandoned? How many hurting and hopeless? Just need someone to cry for them. We may not can free them from their addiction or release them from their abandonment but we can cry for them. Compassion comes from the Latin word that means "co-suffering." We are told in the Bible that God is full of compassion (Psalm 86:15). Jesus seeing the multitudes of people "was moved with compassion for them, because they were weary and scattered, like sheep having no shepherd" (Matt.9:36).

Compassion starts by being willing to "co-suffer" with the other person or as the teenager from my church said, "be willing to cry for the other person." It starts in simplicity: Smile, say a kind word, offer to do a chore or run an errand, or just be willing to listen. What does compassion mean to you? Have you been shown compassion? Have you had the opportunity to show compassion? Share your thoughts here or on Facebook (www.facebook.com/jamey.prickett)

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Grace-Beggars


A few years ago I preached a sermon at Metro State Prison in Atlanta. Metro is a state penitentiary for women. I had been going to the prison once a week counseling with two women. One was a drug addict and the other was a murderer. I had heard the stories of some of the other women through my colleagues. After the sermon I helped serve Holy Communion. I would say the words that we have become familiar with as I gave the bread, “The body of Christ broken for you.” The first lady up was a lady who was a former prostitute who was addicted to crack cocaine. “The body of Christ broken for you,” I would say. Another lady had murdered her husband out of rage after years of abuse. “The body of Christ broken for you.” The lady behind her had sold her children in order to buy more drugs. “The body of Christ broken for you.” Some where down the line was a twenty year old who as a part of a gang initiation that had murdered a member of a rival gang. “The body of Christ broken for you.” Behind her was someone who was formerly part of a white supremacy group that had terrorized portions of the Southeast. “The body of Christ broken for you.” What better can the church offer such people other than grace?

Dr. Tom Long, homiletics professor tells a story: “A student of mine went jogging with his father in their urban neighborhood. As they ran, the son shared what he was learning in seminary about urban ministry, and the father, an inner city pastor, related experiences of his own. At the halfway point in their jog, they decided to phone ahead for a home delivered pizza. As they headed for the phone, however, a homeless man approached them, asking for spare change. The father reached into the pockets of his sweat pants and pulled out two handfuls of coins. ‘Here,’ he said to the homeless man. ‘Take what you need.”

The homeless man, hardly believing his good fortune, said, “I’ll take it all,” scooped the coins into his own hands, and went his way. It only took a second for the father to realize that he now had no change for the phone. ‘Pardon me,’ he beckoned to the homeless man. ‘I need to make a call. Can you spare some change?’ The homeless man turned and held out the two handfuls of coins. ‘Here,’ he said. ‘Take what you need.” We are all grace-beggars extending the grace of God to other vagabonds. Homeless without the grace of God. Hopeless without the grace of God.

Amazing grace, how sweet the sound that saved a wretch like me! I once was lost but now am found – Was blind, but now I see.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Living As a Fatty

My mom makes a special dessert for me on every birthday and every Christmas. I say it is for me because no one else eats it. It is a rich dessert that works like magic on the taste buds. It is called “magic cookie bars.” Now this past Christmas as before I was privileged to take the whole pan home. I can devour a whole pan of that stuff in two days.

The Center for Disease Control estimates that 64 percent of adults age 20 years or older are considered overweight or obese. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has found that approximately 14 million Americans – 7.4 percent of the population – meet the diagnostic criteria for alcohol abuse. A 1998 Purdue University study found that religious people are more likely to be overweight than other Americans – too many potlucks! Gluttonous is attributed to food and alcohol but it would be a mistake to consider those the only culprits of this vicious sin.

Glutton is all about excess. It is the urge to overindulge in anything: owning 60 pair of shoes,buying a house too big for your budget, buying a large car that is not necessary. It is not only the overindulging in food but also the obsession with losing weight. We are daily confronted with ads for bacon cheeseburgers and soda and beer. And on the other hand, we’re confronted with losing weight and keeping up appearances. A glutton consumes without considering the consequences. He eats too much, talks too much, and demands too much. Around a thousand years ago, Thomas Aquainas taught that at the center of gluttony is the concept of “too,” as in “too soon, too expensive, too much, too eager, and making to much fuss.” The glutton never gets enough to fully enjoy and in the end kills the very pleasure it seeks. Lonliness can be attributed to the sin of gluttony. Lonely because they don’t care about the needs of others and that has left them shallow on the inside. For the gluttonous it is all about me and what I can get out of life. The person dealing with gluttony is so consumed about themselves that they use others for their own gain. They are surface people not caring about the feelings of others. They are too immersed in themselves to know how their words really affect others outside of themselves. Gluttony kills the soul first, and eventually the body follows.

How do we get ourselves out of this “too much, too soon, too eager, too expensive, too much fuss” side of life? The Wisdom writers of Scripture believed that by using the mind that God gave us we could find a better alternative. Proverb 23:19 begins, “Hear, my child, and be wise, and direct your mind in the way.” The danger of gluttony is that it dulls the minds ability to reason and decreases the ability to guard against temptation. Gaining all the pleasure you can from one object has consumed your mind at the expense of your soul. We live beyond the deadly sin of gluttony by being mindful of what is before us. Temperance helps us to realize that pleasure is found through greater awareness, not necessarily greater consumption. When you think of temperance what comes to mind? “Oh no they going to take away my pleasures!” Or a movement to take away alcohol. Or that grumpy neighbor who never laughs, always looks depressed, and we think is out to stone us at the least little move we make. While temperance can involve a degree of restriction, the early Christians associated temperance with gaining freedom and joy. How could they not? Was it not Jesus who turned water to wine at a wedding feast? Was it not Jesus who was accused by the Pharisees or being a “glutton and drunkard?” Jesus seemed to enjoy good food and good wine. What Jesus, his disciples, and early Christians knew that we have forgotten is that there are ways of eating, drinking, and consuming life that actually goes against gluttony.

The goal is being mindful of what is before us. Mindfulness is the discipline of being as fully aware as possible of what is before you – be it food and drink, or any other material good, or even another person. When we are fully attentive, we avoid the danger of over consuming and we enjoy freedom and pleasures of life more. The challenge before us this morning is becoming more conscious of what we consume: in regards to our means of living, food, alcohol, activities such as iPods, TV, internet, or sports, or other people. As you become more mindful you begin to struggle with the “why” questions of life. “Why am I eating?” Is it to fill some lonliness inside. “Why do I need bigger house?” Is it an ego thing? “Why do I watch so much TV?” Is it because I am lazy and don’t want to challenge myself? Being mindful is a frightening thing but it leads to greater freedom.

Monday, October 25, 2010

Comfort Zone or Danger Zone


Comfort is getting in the car and driving five minutes to Publix when you realize that you are out of the chocolate ice cream that you have been craving. Comfort is sleeping in a pillow top mattress. Comfort is adjusting the settings on your thermostat to provide cool air in the summer and warm heat in the winter. Comfort is knowing that I get two weeks of vacation a year. Comfort is coming home to a good meal every night. Comfort is being able to pick up the phone to let your children talk to their grandparents whenever they want. Comfort is living in a house that is not to big that I can’t clean and not too small where I can send my kids to their room.

We all have things that make us comfortable. What is your comfort zone? The couch? Your job? Your family? Your income? Your car? The word comfortable means “cozy, snug, sheltered, and homelike.” Sounds good. Sounds relaxing. Sound like being at ease. When we get into our comfort zone we don’t want to be messed with. The husband who has been working all day comes home and flops in the recliner with a beer in one hand and the remote in the other. The wife knows he is in his comfort zone. Sitting out by the pool with a good book in her hand mom is in her comfort zone – don’t disturb. Do you want to see how devoted we are to comfort? Walk into the average American home and hide the remote control, and watch what happens. Life without the remote control is unbearable.

Comfort can be and usually is an obstacle to living life to the fullest. Life is an adventure to be lived. It is a journey. Most would rather have their comfort than the blessings that come from living life to the fullest. Life will never be discovered in the Lazy-Chair. Make a commitment to not live the "when-then" game. When I have more courage, then I’ll try using this gift. When I get a new boss that is more supportive, then I’ll express fresh ideas. When I retire, then I’ll get involved in volunteering. When my spouse becomes more appreciative, then I’ll start acting like I care. We will play the “when-then game” so long that the only thing left will be the “if only” game. If only I had loved more. If only I had listened. If only I had followed God’s dream for my life.

What decions do you need to make today? What steps do you need to take? What actions do you need to act on? So that you will not have to look back and one day say, "If only . ."

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Looking Stupid

My father and brothers should have been cavemen. If they don’t catch it or hunt it and kill it they don’t eat it. Well maybe not that bad! But we have had wild turkey for the past three Thanksgiving meals. One day in off-season they set out to capture bears on video. So early in the morning they hid in some tall grass. They waited. Finally a mother bear and her cub begin walking through the tall grass field. With the video running my brother was able to capture the bear and her cubs in there natural environment. What my brother didn’t suspect though was somehow he and my father came between the mama bear and her cub. Mama wasn’t happy! She let out a growl and the chase was on. On video all you see is tall grass falling and two feet moving at the speed of light.
Besides the image of four legs knocking down grass, the video is really cool as it shows a bear in its natural habitat. There is an important lesson in this video. It takes courage to look stupid and to be successful we have to be willing to look stupid. So go ahead and do something that makes you look stupid. Take ball-room dance lessons even if you can’t dance. Sing along with karaoke even if you can’t sing. Ask that person out on a date even if you think she is out of your league. Be willing to be wrong, to fail, or to make a mistake and you might just learn to succeed. And if not, at least you have made the world an entertaining place.

Monday, October 18, 2010

The Fox and The Hen

My great-grandmother lived in Cleveland, Georgia. She was a beautiful woman. She was a wonderful storyteller. Her house was a converted barn with a wood stove that sat in the middle room. There were two doors at each end of the house that stayed opened most months unless the weather outside was too much. We would visit her almost weekly on Saturday’s and as a child my brothers and I loved to explore all the wonderful things on the farm. She always had chickens that roam the yard, not only the yard but the house. They would walk in one door and strut through the house as though they lived there and eventually making there way out the other door. It was always a funny site. Sometimes those chickens would have chicks. And those chicks would always follow close behind. Wherever mama went the chicks were sure to follow. If the mother hen sensed danger she would squat, spread her wings and by instinct the little chicks would take shelter under the mother’s wings. All the mother hen had to provide in the form of protection was shelter. In that position she became most vulnerable. Spread out, hard to move, and yet the chicks felt as though they were hiding under a boulder of love. The scene reminds me of a passage from Scripture, “For he will hide me in his shelter in the day of trouble; he will conceal me under the cover of his tent” (Psalm 27:5).

If Jesus would have grown-up in my house he would have gotten his mouth washed out with soap a few times. He was not afraid to call people names. In Luke 13 Jesus calls Herod a fox. Our children books paint the picture of a fox as a sly, sneaky, and dangerous animal. We focus on the threat that the fox brings to the ones it is pursuing. Jesus and the Hebrew listeners had a slightly different view of the fox. By calling Herod a fox Jesus is not saying necessarily that Herod is sly and sneaky. He implies that the way that Herod conducts business is under the table. Jesus was commenting on Herod’s inability to control. Herod was an outsider with no power. In the eyes of Jesus he was ultimately powerless. He does not mess with those who are of equal or greater power than he has instead he picks on the most vulnerable. The fox preys on the chicks. The most vulnerable.

The modern day fox does the same. He exploits the immigrant. He takes advantage of the widow. He robs the innocence of children. The modern day fox prowls around offering great promises under the disguise of destruction. He takes away a woman’s self-worth. He judges based on color. The modern fox preys on those who are vulnerable because in reality he has no power. His power comes by means of dominance over others. If you took away his control over those lesser than he, you would be left with nothing. There is no soul, no heart, and no love. His main objective is to destroy or else he may self-destruct.

Jesus offers protection from the fox. It is not a protection that guarantees our complete safety. We may have to suffer. It is a nurtured protection: a protection that speaks to the reality that foxes exist in the world trying to rob us of our love. And yet at the same time extends to us an offer of inner peace, grace, and hope. The stretched out arms of Jesus speak to us as an offer of undeserved love. He extends an offer to receive a peace that passes all understanding, a peace that remains through the fears of life. Living in His Kingdom gives hope that the fox will not have the final word. A better day is dawning. God’s justice will flood the streets. Jesus desires, long, and seeks to provide nurture for all our weary souls.

Barbara Brown Taylor gives us further insight in this idea of the fox and the hen when she says, "In some way we are all vulnerable. Even the fox. We are all little yellow chicks running around chirping for security and a sense of meaning. We are all in need of something. You may be the chick that feels disconnected. You look different than the rest and that makes you stand out uncomfortably. You may be that little chick that tries to cover up her insecurity with a sense of self-pride. Only to see your true self when you look in the mud puddles of life. You may be that little chick that was born last. The runt of the litter. You may be the little yellow chick disguised as a fox. You took on that disguise because you have been living with the foxes for too long and that is the only way you know how to survive. But instead it is becoming the death of you.

If the fox wants the chicks, he will have to kill the hen first. Which he does, as it turns out. He slides up on her one night in the yard while all the babies are asleep. When her cry wakens them, they scatter. She dies the next day where both foxes and chickens can see her -- wings spread, breast exposed -- without a single chick beneath her feathers. It breaks her heart, but it does not change a thing. If you mean what you say, then this is how you stand."

Barbara Brown Taylor teaches at Piedmont College in Demorest, Ga. This article appeared in The Christian Century, February 25, 1986, page 201; copyright by the Christian Century Foundation.

Monday, October 11, 2010

Trusting God

There was a man who got lost in the desert. After wandering around for a long time his throat became very dry, about that time he saw a little shack in the distance.
He made his way over to the shack and found a water pump with a small jug of water and a note. The note read: "pour all the water into the top of the pump to prime it, if you do this you will get all the water you need". Now the man had a choice to make, if he trusted the note and poured the water in and it worked he would have all the water he needed. If it didn’t work he would still be thirsty and he might die. Or he could choose to drink the water in the jug and get immediate satisfaction, but it might not be enough and he still might die. After thinking about it the man decided to risk it. He poured the entire jug into the pump and began to work the handle, at first nothing happened and he got a little scared but he kept going and water started coming out. So much water came out he drank all he wanted, took a shower, and filled all the containers he could find. Because he was willing to give up momentary satisfaction, he got all the water he needed. Now the note also said: after you have finished, please refill the jug for the next traveller.” The man refilled the jug and added to the note: “ Please prime the pump, believe me it works”!

Is not that where we are all at? We are all standing at a crossroads reading a note asking ourselves, “Is it trustworthy?” The serpent in the Garden of Eden is a facilitator of possibilities. The serpent is anything in God’s creation that forces us to question God’s ability or God’s goodness. We have been given a piece of knowledge, an apple has been placed in our hand, what will we do with it? You know what I have discovered? Sometimes it is easier to trust God with the things we cannot control- things like our health, the future, or the decisions of others. Those things are out of our control anyway so we just let God deal with them. It is easier to trust things that we cannot control than it is with the things we feel that we have some control over. I can trust God with my future but my finances – I don’t know. I can trust God with my future but my career – I don’t know. It is easier to trust God with things that are out of my control than it is with the things that I think I can somewhat control.

What in your life do you need to trust God with? What is one thing that you are trying to control that you need to turn over to God?

Proverbs 3:5-6 (New International Version)
5 Trust in the LORD with all your heart
and lean not on your own understanding;
6 in all your ways acknowledge him,
and he will make your paths straight.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

My Most Serious Injury

In summer of 1983 we had driven up to Vogel State Park for a family reunion. My father was working so it was my mom and my two younger brothers.Family reunions can always be interesting. Going to my family reunion is like being at a casting of Hee Haw or at the very least a Hank Williams Jr concert. Courtney Cox did not invent the term "cougar" for older women who like to date younger guys. She got it from visiting my family reunion.

I was eight years old that summer. After lunch my cousins and I went to play in the creeks. I don't remember how it happen but one moment I was standing on a bridge that ran across the creek and the next I was laying face down in the creek with blood gushing from my head. Somehow I had slipped through the side railings and fell into the creek hitting a sharp rock below. Blood was pouring from my head when my mom arrived. She took a table-cloth stained with fried chicken, macaroni & cheese, and green beans and wrapped it over my head to stop the bleeding. We drove to the nearest hospital. It was determined by the staff that unless a plastic surgeon did the sewing up that I would be left with a large scar. There was not a plastic surgeon on staff. So they temporarily patched me up and sent me down to Gainesville, Georgia to Northeast Georgia Medical Center. They pulled my skin back over my brain and all that remains is a little scar in the center of my forehead.

Dogs like to leave there mark for other dogs by peeing on rocks. At my family reunion I decided to leave my mark by bleeding on the rocks and the fried chicken.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Bullying is Wrong

Jenny McCarthy tells Ellen Degeneres that being bullied led her to get a boob job. Bullying makes people do things to their bodies and lives that are damaging and life-threatening. In January, Phoebe Prince, 15yrs old, hanged herself after she was bullied by six teenagers at South Hadley High School in western Massachusetts. Her family had recently moved from Ireland. On April 9, 2009 an 11yr old middle-school student hanged himself after bullying from classmates. The boys mom pleaded weekly with the school to address the issue. Tyler Clementi, 18yr-old freshman at Rutgers University, jumped off the George Washington Bridge into the Hudson River after being humiliated by a roommate.

Bullying comes in the form of physical/verbal altercations on the school grounds and through cyber-bullying. What should be the response of a person who follows Jesus to bullying? Gay advocate groups want to legislate laws against bullying that is specifically targeting homosexuals. Some evangelical Christians are cautious to support such legislation in that the law may lead to the approval of a lifestyle that they believe the bible disapproves.

I believe we need to set aside all ideologies and remind ourselves that God values human life. In Proverbs 31:8 we are told to "speak out for those who cannot speak." As those who have been reconciled by God we are called to the ministry of reconciliation (2 Cor. 5:18 - 19). This means we must confront all that is contrary to the reconciling presence of Jesus Christ. Bullying devalues a person whom God loves. As a follower of Jesus that is unacceptable. The faith community is called to follow the Prince of Peace and this means take a stand against violence.

Use this as an opportunity to pray for all our youth and get involved as a mentor in a big brother/big sister program or in your church's youth group.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Atheist Are Smarter Than Christians

"I gave my daughter a bible. That's how you make an athiest," Dave Silverman, president of American Atheists, tells the New York Times. In a recent poll published by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, atheists and agnostics scored highest when it comes to religious knowledge. When it came to core beliefs and important people and places of religious history, the atheist out-scored Protestants and Catholics. On average, the survey says, Protestants correctly answered 16 of the 32 religious knowledge questions and Catholics averaged 14.7 right answers. But atheists and agnostics average 20.9 answers correctly, which was close to what Jews and Mormons got correct.

America is one of the most religious nations in the world and yet we know nothing of the religion we profess. This is more serious than knowing where the story of Daniel and the Lion's Den is found in the bible. It is about allowing Glenn Beck to be the spokesperson for evangelical Christianity when Glenn Beck himself is a self-professed Mormon. Mormons profess the belief of Joseph Smith who taught that God was a man who achieved divinity, came to earth, fathered Jesus and his brother Satan (www.lds.org).

In an era where post-modern spiritualism has muddied the waters of religous beliefs and doctrine it is difficult to know what one believes. Daniel Dennett, Philosopher at Tufts University, argues that what the poll suggests is "many of those who have thought long and hard about religions - and hence know the answers - don't actually believe the doctrines that they rightly identify as belonging to the church they are affiliated with" (www.nydailynews.com). This creates a crisis in faith for many. What are your thoughts? Why have we become a nation of the religious ignorant? Why do athiest no more about matters of religion and faith than those who profess?

You can post here or on facebook at: www.facebook.com/jamey.prickett

Monday, October 4, 2010

God's Story

I am skeptical of anyone who turns scripture into principles. It is true that certain principles can be gleaned from scripture. But there can only be so many sermons that speak to three ways to raise a child, five points on a godly marriage, or three steps to a stress-free life that one can exegete out of the pages of the bible.

Instead I approach the scripture as a story. By calling scripture a "story," I am not implying it is fiction. It is affirming that God meets us in history and speaks to us as one who has been involved in history. Narrative theology affirms that God really became involved in our world and that God continues to work in our world. Often, people approach scripture with the impression that God has presented us with a set of ideas and if we can just push aside the story we can get to the real meaning. The story is the real meaning. God's story intersects with our story. The gospels are not primarily a set of ethical principles. Instead it is an encounter with God in Jesus upon the lives of individuals. God in God's infinite wisdom used the narrative form to allow the reader to see the story from God's perspective in hopes that we may get caught up in the story and live our lives from God's perspective.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Applauding Ourselves

When Ronald Reagan was still governor of California he was asked to give a speech in Mexico City. Reagan writes: “After I had finished speaking, I sat down to rather unenthusiastic applause, and I was a little embarrassed. The speaker who followed me spoke in Spanish – which I don’t understand – and he was being applauded almost at every paragraph. Well, to hide my embarrassment, I started clapping when he spoke – before everyone else and longer than everyone else – until our ambassador leaned over and said, ‘I wouldn’t do that if I were you, Mr. Reagan. You see, that man is interpreting your speech.’”

We may hide our pride for a while but eventually it makes us stand out as fools. The danger of pride is that it feeds on our goodness. Pride reveals itself in vanity. Max Lucado writes about this particular aspect of pride when he says, “Suppose you are in a group photo. The first time you see the picture where do you look? And if you look good, do you like the picture? If you are the only one who looks good, do you still like the picture? If some are cross-eyed and others have spinach in their teeth – but you still look good – do you like the picture? If that’s what makes you like it even more, you’ve got a bad case of pride.” Pride is about comparing ourselves with others. How can there be a number one without a number two?

The key to living beyond pride is not taking your self so serious. Humility is not about convincing ourselves that we are unattractive or that we are incompetent. It’s not about trying to make ourselves into nothing. Humility has to do with a submitted willingness, a healthy self-forgetfulness. Real humility is not thinking poorly of yourself. It is just thinking more about other people. It’s getting the focus off of my needs, my desires, my hurts, my wants, and putting the focus on what other people need. Humility is not thinking less of yourself; it is simply thinking less about yourself.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Dead or Alive

Out of fear many of us will stay behind. Jesus has come calling, “Follow me” and many of us have chosen to remain on the shore. The shore is secure. It never changes. It is stable. It is safe. The deep gets shaky. The deep seems too far out. The deep is too unstable. The deep has too many unknowns. I may get wet in the deep. The problem is not that we are afraid of death it is that many of us are afraid of being resurrected. The greater fear for some of us is the fear of being raised from the dead. We like being dead because at least nothing is expected of me. We like being dead because I don’t have to commit. I like being dead because I don’t have to feel emotion, I don’t have to get involved, and I don’t have to run the risk of getting hurt. At the same time being dead is just that being dead! It is not life. It is not love. It is not faith. Jesus comes along and says, “Follow me” and you say, “Nah, I think I’ll settle for my dead existence.”

Accepting the words of Jesus, “Follow me” is an invitation to rise from the dead. It is being filled with life. It is being given a purpose. It is finding in life the treasure that has been hidden for so long. If people do not follow, they remain behind. We must get out of our situation and allow God to put us into a situation where faith is possible. We must be willing to go into the deep with Jesus. This means leaving everything that would hinder responding to the call. It means selling out. It means giving up. It means letting go. The point is: the disobedient cannot have faith. Peter could not convert himself but he could leave his nets. By leaving his nets he was willing to put himself into a situation to be used by God. The road of faith passes through obedience to the call of Christ.

Monday, September 13, 2010

Community of Cracked Pots

I worship with a bunch of cracked pots. Paul says in 2 Corinthians 4: 7, “We have this treasure in clay jars . ..” By divine design, the mysteries of God have been entrusted to a community of clay jars. Not perfect clay pots but cracked pots. The beauty and wonder of God has been entrusted to us – cracked pots. We, cracked pots, are recipients of the grace of God. I hope you can get a small glimpse of that image. We, cracked pots, are in possession of something we don’t deserve nor can hardly contain because of our brokenness. I believe that is the point. We are not suppose to contain it. We are suppose to allow the love of God leak out from the cracks that exist in us.

We all have our brokenness. But it is from within our brokenness that the grace of God is allowed to flow.God knows that we are all broken. God loves us because God is love and loving is what He does. God can take our broken pieces and make something beautiful. Here is a principle that is worth remembering: Brokenness is God’s requirement for usefulness. 2 Corinthians 12:9 God says, "My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness." Then Paul says, “Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ's power may rest on me.” It isn’t when you are at your strongest that people can see God’s power. It is through your weakness that God’s power is made evident. The greatest place you and I can be is the place of vulnerability. It is the place where we are no longer self-sufficient but relying on God.

Many of us work really hard to try to hide our cracks. We put on a front that everything is okay. We constantly work at covering up our cracks. But remember that God uses broken things.

Here is a prayer:

Dear Lord, My brokenness,
leads me back to you.
Renew my heart.
Mold me and shape me.
Not my will but yours be done.
Into your hands I commit my life. Amen.

Friday, September 10, 2010

Love Your Enemies

A pastor in Florida is making news by spreading hate. He is threatening to burn The Quran on September 11th. As a result he is inciting hate. He is also transforming his call to Gospel ministry into a political tool instead of preaching "Christ crucified." I wonder how he sleeps at night knowing that his actions have put thousands of American Soldiers at risk? How does he feel knowing that years of incarnational ministry among Muslims is going to be threatened because of this simple publicity stunt? How can he claim to be a follower of Jesus when Jesus says, "Love your enemies?"

Dr. Timothy Tennet, President of Asbury Seminary, says, "In 1900 34% of the world population called themselves Christian. In 2000 33% of the world population called themselves Christian. The figures demonstrate that Christianity simply kept steady with the population growth of the world. In 1900 12% of the world population called themselves Muslim. In 2000 20% of the world population called themselves Muslim. The Muslim faith grew 8% over the rate of population growth. This makes Islam the fastest growing religion in the world." In the 18th and 19th century, Judaism was the second largest religious group outside of Christianity in the United States. Currently Islam is on the same level as Judaism and is expected to surpass Judaism in the United States for the title of second largest religion within a decade. Islam is a highly misunderstood and feared religion by many of us in the West. Yet we are moving into an era where we will have neighbors that are of the Muslim faith. Our children will sit beside children of the Islamic faith in school. We visit restaurants where the owners are Muslim. It is becoming more common everyday to come across and interact with a person of the Muslim faith. We can choose to ignore the fact. We can refuse the Scripture’s mandate to love and just turn our backs on our neighbors or we can begin to have a conversation.

As parting words, Jesus tells his disciples and us, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything that I have commanded you. And remember, I am with you always, to the end of the age” (Matt. 28:18ff). The word “nations” in the Greek is not what we consider when we think of nations. It does not mean nation-states with borders and boundaries. “Nations” in this passage refers to ethnic groups. There are approximately 24,000 ethnic groups in the world today. 10,0000 of those belong to a world religion outside of Christianity. 4,000 ethnic groups currently belong to Islam. If we are going to be faithful to the command of Jesus we must reach out to the Muslims. If we chose to leave out any people group simply because they seem difficult, unreachable, or none of our concern then we are not faithful to Christ. Our call is to invite all Muslims into a personal relationship with Jesus Christ. Our invitation is to all peoples to be followers of Jesus.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

How Am I Investing My Time?

In a lifetime the average North American will spend: Six months sitting at stoplights, Eight months opening junk mail, One year looking for misplaced objects, 2years unsuccessfully returning phone calls, 5 years waiting in line, 6 years eating, and 21 years watching television. An article was once published entitled, “If You Are 35, You Have 500 Days To Live.” The article went on to contend that when you subtract the time you spend sleeping, working, tending to personal matters, eating, traveling, doing chores, attending to personal hygiene, and add in the miscellaneous time stealers, in the next 36 years you will have only 500 days to spend as you wish. Think about how you spend your time. When all of the necessary things are done, how much time is left?

God did not give us all the same amount of talent. I believe we all have gifts but it seems that some are more gifted than others. God did not give us all the same amount of wealth. Some have more money than others. But God has given us each the same amount of time. Each person started the day with the same amount of hours as the next person. We each have twenty-four hours to spend today. Imagine a bank depositing $86,400.00 in your account at the start of each day. No balance is carried over from day to day. Any balance is deleted in the evening. What would you do if you knew that you would have money left over at the end of the day? You would do a withdrawal.

In a way we do have this kind of bank. It is called the First Bank of Father Time. Everyday we are credited 86,400 seconds. Every night, that which we don’t use is debited from our account. The bank of Father Time does not allow for overdrafts, there is no going back to deposit more into the account. It does not allow you to borrow from tomorrow. All we have is what we have at this moment. We say time is money.

But in reality time is not money. If you lose money, you can always make it some other way. We can never regain lost time. Whatever time we lose we can never get back. So the greatest investment we can make is not with money but with time. One of the greatest value based questions we can ask is “how am I investing my time?”

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Who is Jesus?

Who do I claim Jesus to be? As I examine scripture I have to admit that I don’t get the same view of Jesus that I grew up with. I have grown up with this cultural view of Jesus that has colored my view of who Jesus is. I am afraid that I have not let Jesus speak for himself. It’s not because I don’t see it. It’s because I don’t want to see it. I like the Jesus of pot luck suppers after church. I like the Jesus who rides around on bumper stickers. I am like Peter I can confess that Jesus is the Son of the Living God but only because I have my own definition of what that suppose to mean. For Peter, as we see later it didn’t mean that the Christ would suffer and die. It meant from Peter’s view that he was going to be victorious and triumphant. Which he was and is but not from Peter’s perspective. We must ask ourselves this morning what do we mean when we confess Jesus as Lord and Savior? Depends on who we are talking about when we say Jesus!

Many of us have equated our faith with common decency. We have confused faith with moral upright living. Philip Yancey says, “Somehow we have created a community of respectability in the church. The down-and-out, who flocked to Jesus when he lived on earth, no longer feel welcome.” Anyone can be moral and still not have a faith. Living morally is not the same thing as living faithfully. Morality and ethics are a result of a life lived following Christ. It is easy to confess Jesus as the Messiah, the Son of the living God, within the confines of the church. But what if we took our faith into the streets, workplace, and homes? What would it mean to profess your belief in Jesus there as well as at church?

Being a person of faith is about following Jesus, doing what Jesus did, speaking as Jesus spoke. So belief in Jesus is a way of life. It is more than reciting a creed. I would go as far as to say that simply reciting a creed is not really claiming anything. Following Jesus is the precondition for knowing Jesus. You want to know who Jesus is love your enemies, feed the hungry, clothe the naked, visit the prisoner, proclaim the good news to the poor. If you are not doing those things then you don’t know Jesus no matter what you claim to profess in church. I am speaking to those of you who have been a part of the church for generations. For those of you like me who have read scripture through the lense of culture. For those of you who like me think you know who Jesus is. Just because you go to church, live upright, and don’t commit illegal acts does not make you a follower of Jesus. It is about a relationship. Will Willimon says, “Being Christian is about the challenging, life-long struggle to be friends with Jesus and to allow him to be friends with you.” Jesus, your friend asks, “Who do you say that I am?” Have you answered that question lately?

Friday, August 27, 2010

Change the World



Helen Keller was asked one time what would be worse than being born blind. She quickly replied, “To have sight and no vision.” Our world is full of people who see only the immediate. These are people who go for the convenient. They never look beyond themselves. They never imagine what they could be. They never dream. We have them in all walks of life: school teachers, construction workers, business women, truck drivers, salesmen. If you don’t have a dream you’re never going to become what you could become. Robert Kennedy said, “Some people look at things as they are and say, why? Some people look at things as they could be and say, why not?” As followers of Jesus we have looked beyond the stone and are able to say, “Why not?”

Followers of Jesus live out their God-dreams. Followers of the resurrected Savior dream dreams that are bigger than themselves. Jesus says, “If you keep your life you will lose it, and if you lose your life you will keep it” (Luke 9:24).

Light has invaded darkness. Hope has overcome despair. Death has lost its sting. Dare to dream. Dream of a world where cancer, heart disease, and AIDS do not exist. Dare to dream. Dream of a world where soup kitchens and homeless shelters do not exist. Dare to dream. Dream of a world where rehab centers and divorce courts are all empty. Dare to dream. Dream of a world where we are free from racism, free from lonliness, free from guilt, free from bondage to anything or anybody. Go and live your dream!

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Beauty, part two

A children’s book entitled “The Beautiful Princess Without a Face” written by April, Jay, and Celeste Robins speaks to the issue of real beauty. The book tells the story of Sarah, a young girl concerned with her appearance. “Fascinated by the gorgeous beauty queen riding on a float during a New Year’s Day Parade, Sarah begins to wonder if she too is beautiful. She drifts off into a dreamlike state across Moonbeams to Doll Land, where she relives a folktale as a beautiful Native American doll named Princess-Loves-the-Pond. Princess-loves-the-Pond is obsessed with being beautiful. She is so concerned with her own appearance, that she totally ignores the beauty surrounding her in Doll Land: Princess-loves-the-Pond always asked the pond, ‘Am I beautiful?” The pond always replied, ‘Yes, my Princess. One day the princess bent over to see her reflection. She slipped on a stone and fell into the pond. A gush of water washed away her delicate face. She no longer had eyes, ears, nose or a mouth. Without a face, the princess is only left with the ability to feel. She realizes more and more what she can no longer see, hear, taste, or smell. She realizes that there is a beautiful world around her.

We need to do the same. As God works to restore creation, we need him to restore some of us. We need to have our eyes renewed and see the beauty all around us. We need to have him wipe away the cynicism from our heart and give us a heart of joy. We need him to close our ears to criticism and give us ears that hear the sound of beauty. Imagine a world where we strived to create beauty instead of working to destroy it. Today we can have hope for such a world because God has invited us into the beauty of His holiness.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Longing For Beauty



I think all baby pictures are cute but there is a picture of a toddler in Cracker Barrel that scares me. The baby is in a portrait with his family and it looks like they put make-up on this little boy for his family picture. I’m thinking to myself I would never do that to my child. Don’t criticize me. We have been told that beauty is in the eye of the beholder, or is it something more?

Most of us are taught that beauty is a matter of taste.My great uncle liked listening to big band type music. He loved music of the 20’s and 30’s. I think it is just racket. So when I had to ride with him up to Tennessee one time, I showed up early and took out the fuse that was connected to his radio. He thought it was just broke. A math teacher looks at Algebra problems as the greatest piece of masterpiece ever written, I want to puke every time I see an equation.

Beauty can also be a matter of perspective. I am always captured by the beauty of the ocean. But watch in horror as the same waters can destroy thousands of lives in a Tsunami. It is an awesome display of beauty to watch a volcano erupt from a distance but when you turn and notice a village lying in its path the beauty disappears. Beauty fades so quickly. What role does beauty play in our lives? It is so powerful that it evokes deep feelings of awe, wonder, and gratitude. What is this longing that I have in my heart to be captured by beauty. We all find different things beautiful. We have all experienced beauty in some way we will never forget; beauty that has brought longing to our hearts. In one sense I think that beauty is found in the sense of the longing, the kind of pleasure which is wonderful and yet leaves us unsatisfied. An example is in the way we view fake flowers. I was in a restaurant the other day and looking at this beautiful arrangement of flowers by the front door. They were exquisite. I was convinced that they were real. As I left the restaurant I reached out and touched the flowers only to discover they were fake. I felt let down, betrayed, and yet was convinced just a few moments earlier that I could smell the aroma coming from those flowers. The sunset is soon over. Fall colors will freeze. Spring flowers will dry in the summer heat. The world is full of beauty, but the beauty is incomplete. I believe that is the way God intended for it to be.

The poets who penned some of the psalms speaks of the earth being full of God’s glory. The term “glory” is sometimes translated beauty. As a believer in God, I believe that true beauty belongs to the Lord. It is his voice that we hear in the rise of the sun. It is his power we feel in the crashing of the waves. It is his beauty we see reflected in a thousand colors. The earth is full of the beauty of the Lord, a beauty that cannot be reduced to the terms of our senses. The full extent of true beauty can only be experienced in relationship with the Creator.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Unfinished Work

Why did God take a day off? Did God need to rest? Was God exhausted after creation? Maybe or maybe not. But I don’t think God rested because God was tired. He rested because he was done. The scripture says, “And on the seventh day God finished all the work that he had done, and he rested on the seventh day from all the work that he had done”(Genesis 2:2). The work had been completed. God was able to enjoy His work because His work of creating was completed. Some of us don’t know what that is. We have never finished anything. Here is something to remember: We can’t bless what we have not finished. Unfinished work becomes a curse. There must be a point where we stand back from our work and rest from our labors. We cannot bless what we have not finished. Rest is important for our health. It is crucial for our well-being but if we never finish what we start then we will never get to a place of rest.
God still loves us in spite of our busyness but he must get frustrated with our work and/or rest habits. How do we start taking rest seriously? There is a couple of things we can do.

First, we can take a clue from God. In his work of creation the day begins not with morning but with evening. At the end of each day at the beginning of creation God says, “And there was evening and there was morning, . . .” The day begins the evening before and not the morning we wake up. So the day starts with us resting. It is a reminder that whatever happens the next twenty four hours ultimately God is in control. We start the day in vulnerability – asleep resting in the arms of God and not in the busyness of the morning hour.

The second thing we can do is change the name of that buzzing noise that wakes us up in the morning. We call it the “alarm” clock. What does that imply? Be alert, be on the look out, something or someone is lurching around the corner to devour you. At least this is the way I feel when I hear the sound of the alarm clock. So instead of an alarm clock you will from now on have a “resurrection” clock. It is God waking you up to live the gift of a new day.

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Sunday at The Mill

* Sunday Small Group was great. I love teaching the bible.
* I am interested in building bridges with Muslims and what does God do? He sends a lady to church who has interviewed the Hezbollah. I am reading a book called "Tea with Hezbollah: Sitting at the Enemies Table Our Journey Through the Middle East"
* D.S. visited today. I really appreciate his leadership.
* A lot of guests today. I love guests.
* Servant/Volunteers made it happen today!\
* I learned the Care Minister on staff enjoyed "cow tipping" in her younger years (I bet she still does it as a stress reliever) The last time I went cow tipping I got shot at and running for cover I did a face plant in a big pile of cow poo. (This is not cow tipping: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=51PxXxnzdFY )
* We had some special guests from our former church visit. It was great seeing The Gooby's.
* Message was on finding time to rest. My day of rest is Friday. "Our work will remain a curse if we don’t take time to rest." "Work without rest is slavery. Choosing to rest is a matter of justice. It is declaring our freedom." "We can’t bless what we have not finished."
* Had lunch w/ the Gooby's.
* Drove to Clermont, GA (my hometown) for a b-day party. Hung out at the pool w/ the family.
* SPRC Meeting back at the church. Liberty Hill has a great SPRC Team. They rock!
* Picked up road signs. I got some help from my homeless friend Edgar.
* Met a lady taking pictures of her children outside the building. Showed her inside the building for more pictures. Invited her to church. Heard her story. Praying for God to do a work in her life.
*Getting ready to welcome in a new day!

Friday, August 20, 2010

The Life of the Party

Why did Jesus choose a wedding as the place to perform his first miracle? (Read John 2:1 - 11). Why was it in the midst of this party that Jesus gives the world a sign of his true identity? I am not sure if I know the answer. But I do believe that the story teaches us that joy comes when God has broken into the routine experiences of our daily existence. Throughout the scriptures we find Jesus taking bad moments and making them redeemable moments. John Ortberg says, "Jesus makes good things better." Everything is made better when Jesus is involved. We serve a God who is full of joy. Joy resides in the heart of God. When God looks out over creation he rejoices (Ps. 104:31; Gen. 1:31). He rejoices over the good found in his people (Deut. 30:9; Zeph. 3:17). Jesus declares, that his joy may be in us and “that our joy may be complete” (Jn 15:11). According to Jesus, the problem with people is not that we are too happy for God’s taste, but that we are not happy enough. The Hebrew word for joy is “simhah” which is understood as “to be bright” or “to shine.” Joy is at the center of God’s character. God is the happiest being in the universe. His desire is that we would radiate that joy in our own lives.

Scripture tells us that joy of the Lord is our strength (Neh. 8:10). Celebrating the small things in life brings joy into life, and joy makes us strong. Joy is a part of the fruit of the Spirit (Gal. 5:22). Joy produces energy. Joy makes us strong. The absence of joy brings weakness. Many of us give into sin because we lack true joy. We think the person, thing, or desire that we are being tempted with will somehow bring us joy. But if we are already living in joy then we have no reason to turn to something or someone to give us joy. What Jesus has come to bring is freedom. Freedom to enjoy life and to live in happiness. Being a follower of Christ is like going to a Jewish wedding. It is a celebration. To know Christ is to taste new wine. The teachings of Jesus were like new wine for all those that had been drinking out of the bottle of legalism. The call of discipleship with all its challenges and struggles is a call to experience the joy of life. Like turning water into wine, Jesus takes our lives and puts into us celebration. It is interesting how this story plays out. If the wine had ran out the party would have been over. Everyone would have said their goodbye’s and went home. Instead by turning the water into wine Jesus extends the party. He keeps the party going. Now that is an interesting way to look at Jesus? Invite Jesus to your party and He might keep it going into the long hours of the night.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Crossing the River

In the North Georgia Mountains are small streams that are ideal for trout fishing. They are not too big that you cannot cross. They are not too deep that you cannot just stand in and fish. But somewhere down the way those streams turn into brooks. The brooks turn into rivers which eventually flow into the ocean. So the best time to cross the river is before it gets to big.

The same is true in life. It is easier to change the course of your life before it gets to complicated. Like a river, our lives can get fixed as the years go by. We get in a rut and it is hard to get out. We start doing things out of habit instead of out of purpose.

I am not sure if it is true or not but the theory is that the "seventh-inning" stretch began when President William Howard Taft was attending a baseball game in Washington. Just after the seventh-inning the President stood up to stretch. The fans thinking he was leaving stood up out of respect. But the President sat back down and continue watching the game. the "seventh-inning" stretch is as much a part of baseball as yelling at the umpire and trying to keep fly balls from landing in your beer.

Patterns become habits and habits keep us in ruts. It is easier to cross the river when the waters are low and the rush is slower. The Good News is that there are no hopeless situations. The river never gets so wide that we cannot make changes. We can't always start over but we can start from where we are. The time for most of us to cross the river is before it gets to wide. In case you need some help I know someone who walks on water.

Monday, August 16, 2010

Listen to the Voice of God

Pay attention to your prayers. The way you pray will say a lot if you actually expect God to hear your prayers and respond. Have you ever heard the voice of God? I know this sounds like the preacher has gone crazy. He is now talking about God actually speaking. But why not? God spoke to Adam and Eve in the garden. God spoke to Noah and told him to build a boat. God spoke to Moses through a burning bush. God spoke to Abraham about a promise. God spoke through the prophets. One of those prophets was Jeremiah and through Jeremiah God says, “Call to me and I will answer you; and will tell you great and hidden things that you have not known” (Jeremiah 33:3). Jesus talking about his followers says, “My sheep hear my voice. I know them, and they follow me” (John 10: 27). God is still speaking. He speaks through direct revelation, through dreams, written words, prophets, and the Holy Spirit. The four basic ways that God speaks to us today is through His Word, the Holy Spirit, circumstances, and other people. Why would God still speak to us? God loves us as much as he did the people of the Old and New Testament. We need God’s direction for our lives as much as Moses and Joshua. God knows we need the comfort and assurance of his presence. And, God wants us to know him. This is the nature of our God. He spoke the world into existence and he continues to speak hopes and dreams into existence today. He says, “Call to me and I will answer you, and will tell you great and hidden things that you have not known” (Jeremiah 33:3). When was the last time you called to him expecting him to answer?

Sunday, August 15, 2010

Sunday At The Mill

* Acoustic worship was good. It was appropriate for today's service.
* I spoke on "discerning the voice of God" and sense that some folks were really struggling with issues where they needed to hear the voice of God.
* Prayer warriors gathered in prayer room.
* Children's ministry continues to rock! - Even w/ a children's minister who was a former Miss Kennesaw :)
* Went to lunch w/ Randy and his sister to discuss how to "market" the Mill. Smart people!
* Sharon is excited about being able to pour into some teenage girls.
* Picked up signs and about got ran over by a dude on a bicycle because I wasn't watching where I was walking.
* Prayed over my truck and drove it back home (we will see!)
* Cut grass. Is it bad to cut grass on Sunday if you actually enjoy it?
* Boys played in the mud and brought some inside the house.
* Called all our guests.
* Prepared to speak at the Monday Outreach. Preaching in English through a Spanish translator.
* Excited about Monday Night Family Small Group.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

On Your Tombstone?

The other day I visited the Georgia Military Cemetery located on Hwy 20. It was interesting reading the epitaphs. One said, "Going to my Last Party." Another one said, "Sailing Away." I connected to the one that said, "Steal Drums and Sandy Beaches are Calling." As I wondered through the tombstones I came across a man with my name. It is kind of odd reading your own epitaph. Of course I wasn't born in 1934 and have never fought in a World War.

I was reminded of a story about Alfred Nobel. One morning Mr. Nobel picked up a newspaper and read an account of his own death. It seems that a relative had died and the reporter mistakenly assumed it was the famous inventor. As he read the article, he was disturbed about the way he was being remembered. He resolved to use the remainder of his days to change the way people would remember him. Not many remember him as the inventor of dynamite, but we all know about the Nobel Peace Prize.

"How do you want people to remember you?" It may be morbid to think about but every now and then we need to ask ourselves how will I be remembered. It seems that there are only three possibilities.

First, we can have a negative effect on the world. Like scavengers, we live off the labors of others. We exploit others. Secondly, we can have a neutral effect on the world. In the New Testament there is a story of some people who lived in the ancient city of Laodicea. Jesus said about these people, "I know your works. You are neither hot nor cold." These people lived in a time when positioned needed to be taken. They were called to make decisions. They chose to remain neutral. Thirdly, we can have a positive effect on the world. Lincoln was asked how he would like people to remember him. He did not ask history to remember his as president or a great leader. He said he wanted to be known as a man who "plucked a thistle and planted a flower where a flower would grow."

I have decided what I want on my tomb when I die: "He danced and he taught others to dance." This says a lot because I have not yet found my rhythm.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Cohen and Toy Story


Cohen comes home from pre-k and says, "My teacher likes my Woody." Of course, I have a puzzled look on my face. "Your what," I ask? He holds up his Toy Story character and says, "My Woody."

It got me thinking about the role of context in communication. Only those who have access to privileged knowledge (i.e., The Toy Story movie) may interpret the context. I did not understand the context of Cohen's statement which left me in the dark as to what he was saying. The reason many missionary/church movements have broken down over the centuries is because we have forgotten about context. We have attempted to transmit the Gospel outside of understanding context. It is important to remember that Jesus' birth, death, and resurrection took place within a particular context and so today the Gospel must me translated in a particular context: political, social, economic, and religious.

Engaging in sharing the gospel in different context requires a discerning of the signs of the times and an openness to understanding the context that one is attempting to communicate the gospel. We must seek to figure out what God is doing in that particular context and get on board with God's mission.

It is also a good reminded that I do theology (my understanding of God, myself, and the world) from a particular context. This keeps me open to hear from indigenous voices and gain a deeper understanding of God's mission in the world.

Paying attention to context is always a good idea. As I learned with Cohen, it can keep your mind out of the gutter!

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Sunday at The Mill

* The worship was awesome today! The worship team was in the Holy Spirit zone.
* Children's ministry was packed out.
* Met a lot of new people today who visited with us.
* Message: "We will be remembered for the relationships we did or did not develop."
* Servants stepped up to pull out more chairs and even gave up their seats.
* I have a great staff.
* Brett Kelsey gave me "Last Supper Mints." Afraid to see how they taste.
* Brent Abernathy worked a miracle turning a blank screen to a video.
* 17 members of my family worshipped with us.
* Great time at the house w/ family.
* During clean-up Cohen, Sharon, and I get stung by bees.
* Cohen wanted to watch "Frosty the Snowman"
* Benadryl making me sleepy!
* Reminded how beautiful my wife is.

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Jesus focus on the Important

Rick Warren says, “We have just enough time to do God’s will while you’re on earth.” When we try to do more than God planned for us, it is natural that you feel stressed out or always out of time. If it doesn’t fit the purpose of your life then God doesn’t want you to do it.

Jesus understood the difference between importance and urgency. It is amazing that Jesus’ life was not consumed by the urgent. Here is the Son of Man, the miracle worker, walking among the people. I am sure every person had a need that needed to be met. A son who needed healing, a daughter who was sick, a leg that needed to be fixed, eyesight that needed restoring, a relationship that needed mending, finances that needed fixing, problem after problem. But when you look closer at the scriptures it is clear that Jesus chose not to live in urgent mode. He lived with greater importance. In the gospel of Luke chapter nine Jesus’ ministry takes a turn. It says in verse 51, “When the days drew near for him to be taken up, he set his face to go to Jerusalem.” Up to this point he had been hanging out in Galilee. Now he knew that it was time to fulfill what he came to do. So starting in chapter nine we read over and over how he was determined to go to Jerusalem. It was in Jerusalem that he would complete his mission of redemption for the whole world. Listen to a few verses. In 9:51, he writes, “When the days drew near for him to be taken up, he set his face to go to Jerusalem.” In 10:1, “After this the Lord appointed seventy others and sent them on ahead of him in pairs to every town and place where he himself intended to go.” In 13:22, “Jesus went through one town and village after another, teaching as he made his way to Jerusalem.” In 13:33, “Yet today, tomorrow and the next day, I must be on my way, because it is impossible for a prophet to be killed outside of Jerusalem.” In 17:11, “On the way to Jerusalem, Jesus was going through the region between Samaria and Galilee.” In 18:31, “Then he took the twelve aside and said to them, ‘See, we are going up to Jerusalem, and everything that is written about the Son of Man by the prophets will be accomplished.’” In 18:35, “As he approached Jericho, a blind man was sitting by the roadside begging.” In 19:1, “He entered Jericho and was passing through it. In 19:11, “As they were listening to this, he went on to tell a parable, because he was near Jerusalem.” And in 19:28, “After he had said this, he went on ahead, going up to Jerusalem.”

In between these moments Jesus takes time to teach and tell stories. He performs a healing and cleanses some lepers. He even takes time to stop and bless children. He takes a day and has dinner in the house of Zachaeus. He finds time for prayer. He finds time to spend with just his disciples. Jesus does ministry while on his way. He responds to the urgency on his way up to Jerusalem. But he doesn’t let the urgency take away from what is important. Jesus reminds us it’s not just about going; it’s about going with purpose.

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Important Vs. Urgent, part two

How do you know if you are living life in urgent mode? Stephen Covey has some good questions that are helpful for us: "Are there things you’d like to do that you can’t do because you feel tired or out of shape? Are you in debt, working-long hours, and barely scraping by? Do you feel alienated and alone; unable to spend quality time with the people you love? Do you feel stagnant? Are you being held back in career advancement because you lack the education? Do you feel vague about what’s important and unclear about what you want to do with your life?" Any of the questions that you answered “yes” to means that you are probably living in urgent mode in any of those circumstances. Do you feel that your life is being lived for you? If so, then urgency is the dominant factor in your life.

Some things demand our attention. Urgency is a part of life. A car needs repairing, an illness occurs, a teacher walks in class and says, “We are having a pop quiz,” death comes to every family, someone losses a job, a friend needs a place to stay; a family member needs to borrow some money. Urgency shows up in every life. It is a fact of life. The problem is when urgency becomes the dominant force in our life.


Urgent things will always fight for the attention of your schedule. Important things will stand by and wait for you to make them important. Never let important things wait until you get the urgent out of the way. There will always be something pressing for your time. We cannot manage time. We will always have twenty-four hours to work with. What we can manage is the choices we make in regards to how we use our time.

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Important vs. Urgent

One of the lessons of life we need to learn is the difference between what is important and what is urgent. It is a lesson that I am still trying to learn. It is essential that we get this because if we always live our life in urgent mode then we really don’t live. Life in urgent mode is always life in response to crisis. The more urgency we have in our lives the less we are focused on what is important.

Urgent things are stressful. Living life in urgent mode can also be adrenaline driven. We feel useful or validated when we go around putting out fires all the time. It makes us feel powerful. We become a super-hero that flies in and saves the day. The problem is super-hero’s are always lonely people.

Living life in urgency mode is also a good excuse for not dealing with the important things in your life. How many people have you spoken with at the end of their life say that they wish they had spent more time at the office?

Monday, August 2, 2010

Time of Your Life

For the past month I have not been wearing a watch. Since I quit wearing a watch I have learned a lot about time. I have learned that not all time is identical. Some minutes are not identical. An afternoon in a doctor’s office is eternity compared to an afternoon spent with my family by the pool. Two hours watching the Braves at Turner Stadium is nothing compared to two hours watching the Sound of Music (sorry not my thing).

Different cultures treat time differently. When I visit a South American country and invited over to a house for dinner at eight, if I arrived at eight I would be early. The host would not even be ready. If I arrived at nine I would still be one of the first one’s to arrive. Around ten the party would just be getting started. However, in America, time is a commodity. We talk about “spending” time or “wasting” time. We must have something to show for our time. We spend money on gadgets that help us to manage our time because nothing is worse than to “waste” our time.

Most of the decisions we make in life revolve around time. What will I do this year? Is it time to change careers? Is this the season for a child? Is this decision going to take away time from the family? Decisions would be a lot easier if somehow we could control time.

Jesus starts his ministry by saying, “The time is fulfilled” (Mark 1:15). The Greek word for time is kairos. It means a decisive moment, a turning point, or a time of fulfillment. In another book of the bible the word is used to describe that precise moment when the grapes are ready for picking (Matt. 21:34).

Kairos is that moment that is interjected into the chronology of our time. It is that moment when there is not enough hours in the day to get everything done and all of a sudden you run into a long-time friend and time stops. Kairos is that moment when supper has to be on the table, baths have to be given, and bills paid and your child comes down stairs dressed as a pirate and wants you to be the captain of his ship. In the course of our day God interjects into our life kairos moments. May we never be so busy that we miss them. The young struggling diabetic Shelby, in the movie Steel Magnolias (1989) muses, “I would rather have thirty minutes of wonderful than a lifetime of nothing special.” Wonderful is all around. I started noticing it when I stopped asking, “What time is it?”

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

A Squirrel in a Cardboard Box

The gods of the Canaanites could be controlled because they lived in “houses” built by them. The Canaanite gods could be shaped into the belief system instead of having their belief system shaped by God. Their religious life had become an accessory or add-on. The danger was if David built a house for God that Yahweh would also become manipulated. Instead God chose to remain free. God desired to be the one who built the houses. We manipulate God when we view our faith as an accessory to our already complicated life. The commitment that God desires is a life commitment. There is no way to manipulate God when our lives are surrendered to God and God is the guiding force of our thoughts and actions. When we give our lives over to God’s agenda we have no room to manipulate God instead we can expect to be used in the service of God’s kingdom. I had to learn this lesson. When God called me into the ministry I begin to bargain with God. I would say well God if you want me to do this or be this then I need you to do this. But I was quick to learn that I was in no position to offer God a bargaining plan. As long as you view your faith as an added accessory you will be tempted to manipulate God, you will always think that you have the ability to bargain, you will always think that there is something in your life that does not belong to God. You can keep your money because you earned it. You can keep your house because you built it. You can keep your career because you climbed the ladder. All of these things become bargaining chips. We cannot manipulate God. To be a follower of Jesus Christ is to surrender our rights. To be a follower of Jesus Christ is to let God have full reign. To be a follower of Jesus Christ is to be in a self-surrender relationship with God. But as long as you think that you can twist God’s arm then you will never experience that life-changing, world transforming relationship.

One time when I was little I decided to catch a squirrel. I set a live trap one afternoon and sure enough it wasn’t long that I had me a squirrel. Now I hadn’t thought it through long enough to decide what I was going to do with it when I caught it. So I decided to put it in an old shoe box. So I forced it in the shoe box with a stick and slammed the lid down. I covered it in duck tape certain that the squirrel could not get out. I put it in my dads building until next morning. The next morning I though the squirrel was probably hungry so I took it some corn shucks. But to my surprise the squirrel had chewed through the cardboard box and gotten loose in my dads workshop. The only way out of this workshop was through an open window or the open door. So I opened the door and windows. I waited and all of a sudden I saw the squirrel sitting on the ledge of the window sill. And it seemed like he was taking a deep breath of air, he jumped down and ran up the nearest tree. I related this story to my grandpa and told him how upset I was that the squirrel did not want to by my pet. He said, “Squirrels are made to be free and in order for them to fulfill the reason they exist they have to roam wild.” My friend, in order for you to be blessed by God, God must be left to be free and wild. God must be allowed to roam in and out of your life. God must be given room to work. God cannot be localized, limited, or manipulated. When things are going well in our lives is when we are most tempted to put God in a box. Maybe it is the human desire to keep things as they are. We are safe as long as God is in a box. Let God out and we don’t know what God will ask of us. Let God roam wild in our lives and we may end up in Africa, Venezuela, or New Orleans. Let God run wild in our lives and we may have to tell the truth. Let God run wild in our lives and we may have to stand up for justice. Let God run wild in our lives and we may have to answer the call. Let God run wild in our lives and we may have to teach Sunday School, preach the gospel, or witness to a neighbor. Let God run wild in our lives and we may have to start taking our faith walk serious. Let God run wild in our lives and we may experience grace. We may be called to love our enemies. We may be challenged to stand when others are quiet. We may be called upon to serve. The only way to truly know this God of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, and Paul is to let God roam free in your life.