Thursday, August 28, 2008

A Lesson from Politics

It's interesting to watch the growing profile of the upcoming presidential election. The conventions increase this. It is on everyone's mind, if only a little more than usual, for the next two months or so. And it all ends in a choice. This means that everything we hear from every source is designed to convince us to vote for one candidate or the other. In fact, we're told repeatedly that this one choice we make is critical. Faith is often presented this way, with the choice of Jesus as Savior presented as the touchpoint. Certainly, it is. Less so, but still important, is the choice America makes in November between Obama and McCain. There's more to the future, however, than just one day's choice. Here's where elections and altar calls fail us. There's always a day after. There are always more choices. The election results in November are limited in their ability to reveal what the future will bring. Candidates change once they are elected. No one, not even the candidate, can predict what these changes will be or what they will bring. I've watched many people come to Christ over the years. Putting aside theological considerations, let me make a statement: some make it and some don't. You just can't tell if the tear-filled eyes of a new convert to Christ will see a life of faithfulness to Christ. Perhaps they will look elsewhere and move on. So many do. This is a lesson politics teaches us. The direction of all our decisions confirms or denies the direction of one decision, even a decision for Christ. What are your thoughts on this? What decisions are you making today and what do they say about what you really believe?   

Monday, August 25, 2008

Reading

Reading is the key to learning and knowledge. Reading the Bible is literally as important to me as eating food or breathing air. I need it to live. Other reading - the reading of good books - is also tremendously important to me. I moved from preaching 4 services a weekend to 6 in February 2008, as part of what we're calling a "60 week sacrifice." By Easter 2009 we hope to be in our new building; we won't have so many services then, at least not so many that I preach at. Since the "60 week sacrifice" began, I've noticed a reduction in the amount of other reading I do. I hope to counter this soon.

Here's 4 reasons why this other reading matters to me: 

1) When I read a well written book, I get the best of what that author has to give me. No other media can hope to offer as much in quality and heart as literature. Film, internet, music and anything else that requires electricity to work can and usually does get caught up in itself.  A book must deliver. Its content must validate it. Only cool cover art can help it, otherwise.

2) Reading is thinking. Most of us, when we read, actually think through the words that our eyes are passing over. If we don't, we miss it. Media like television are not so demanding. One can easily turn one's brain off to enjoy television. Books, on the other hand, never reward a blank stare.

3) Reading is feeling. Instead of the background music telling you how to feel, like in television or film, you have to conjure up the emotions yourself when you are reading. The emotional interaction with a book, then, is authentic. This authenticity is not only good for your brain, but also good for your soul.

4) Reading is relating. We read to know we are not alone. Reading, like nothing else, staves off experiences of loneliness. Other media offer better escape and entertainment, but do nothing for one's sense of being alone. Every good author writes for only one reader at a time. The connection a reader and an author make is undeniably credible, especially when the book is good.

What are your thoughts and experiences of reading? Is what you're doing now reading? Does the internet rise to this level? I hope so.

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

God's Vice President

God has no vice president. He doesn't need to find just the right one to make up for His perceived weaknesses or vulnerabilities. He doesn't need ensure that His number two is vetted and media tested. He has no need for a vice president, since no assassin can begin to imagine harming Him in any way. In a world of imperfection, where the writer of Ecclesiastes is right to say that we despise wisdom even after benefitting from it (9:13-18), it is good to know that there is One who needs no support or vote of confidence. Much talk about mixing politics and religion has been inspired by Rick Warren's TV show featuring both Presidential candidates. It is interesting. Still, it's reassuring to look up and see no changes in Heaven. There are no debates in God's courts. There are no contenders for His position. Whatever answers He gives to whatever questions we have are so right that they must be recorded forever as absolute truth. God asks no one for permission to be God. God has no term limits. He never needs to see how things "play in Peoria." He never needs a spin doctor, even though this is exactly what some who operate in His Name seem to act like. He doesn't need secret service agents or a bullet proof car. He doesn't need, period. 

God doesn't need a vice president, but, if you spend enough time in His Word, it almost feels like He's looking for one anyway. The extent to which He wants to operate with and through forgiven believers is astounding, don't you think? Do you ever wonder why He straps His agenda and glory to the exploits of the kind of people we see roaming around our churches, the kind of people we are? Just look at His choice of apostles. Who were these guys? Jesus did the opposite of what we see our nation doing in the presidential race. Did He choose only those who failed a background check? And then the authority and position He gave to them was downright frightening. He seems to have done more than make each one vice president. He said in John 14:12: "I tell you the truth, anyone who has faith in me will do what I have been doing. He will do even greater things than these ..." Wow.

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

A Theology of Rest

I'm on vacation for a while now and have a two month sabbatical coming up at the beginning of next year. Both vacations and sabbaticals look great from a distance. When they actually begin, things look different. What do I do now? One thing I know: doing nothing is not restful. Rest is not inactivity. Rest is something which must be planned and engaged in. My 19-day vacation is one thing. A 60-day sabbatical is entirely another. There are all kinds of things on my to-do and goal lists: ministry at church, in the Air Force, via writing projects. All are challenging and involved. None, for me, come close to the challenge of rest. The Elders at Goodwill didn't know it when they "ordered" me to schedule a sabbatical, but they are forcing me to develop a theology of rest. Here's what I think I know so far about it:
1) The Bible concept of Sabbath is not marginal to healthy faith. It is central.
2) God, who doesn't need rest like He's designed us to, nevertheless, rests.
3) Rest and sabbath remind us that we are not in control, we are not indispensable, we are not what we do, we are not here forever, we can't keep up any pace forever, we can't maintain any activity forever, and we can't ignore the real cost of living: the spiritual-emotional cost each of us pays every hour of every day during life on this earth.
4) Rest doesn't have to be fun to be rest, especially at first.
5) Sabbath is designed by God to be part of a rhythm of life. He commands us to have this rhythm in life. Chaos and confusion are never His preference and often a warning that we have drifted too far away from Him.
6) God (like the Session of Goodwill Church!) will force rest on those who do not take it. 

What do you think? Do you have any contributions or thoughts concerning a theology of rest?  

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Olympic Pressure and the Power of Nerves

The Olympics are fascinating. Watching the women's gymnastic competition (via "Tivo" since I fell asleep for it last night), I noticed the negative power of nerves. If you watch Michael Phelps swim, you see a calm demeanor combined with a relentless focus. The commentators even talk about how his face is relaxed and how important this is. The now famous loss of the French to the Americans in that amazing relay race is also credited to the French anchor tensing up in his last lap. Last night (or yesterday in China), Alicia Sacramone of the American gymnastics team fell off the balance beam and never regained her composure. She tried so hard. She tried too hard. She stopped having fun. You could see it in her face. It had nothing to do with her ability; she's clearly one of the best gymnasts in the world. The Chinese didn't beat her, her nerves did. It's an amazing lesson that sports at the Olympic level teaches us. The best performance always comes with being relaxed, not tense. Victory comes with the marriage of intense focus and deep mental peace. In Isaiah 30:15 it says that "in repentance and rest is your salvation, in quietness and trust is your strength." Being quiet and being strong go together. When we're uptight, we lose focus, and not just on the balance beam or in the swimming pool. When we're not quiet on the inside, we can't do our best on the outside. Nothing weakens us like the noise of nerves. If we don't have a peace that transcends our circumstances, our circumstances get the upper hand. May God make you quiet today and may all of us be able to see it on your face.    

Friday, August 8, 2008

Thoughts on the Military

Looking through a pile of memorabilia yesterday, I stumbled across a few medals of mine from a few years ago. One detailed that I had been part of the support team for 19 military-related mass casualty incidents. It reminded me of all that I have seen over the years, especially since 9/11/01. Here are various things related to this that most people might not know:

1) When a bomb explodes, people don't fly through the air, like in the movies. Instead, it's pieces of people.
2) Statements of support for people serving in the military often sound better to those offering them than those receiving them.
3) Most of the best stories of honor and heroism in the military remain untold. For example, the mortuary at Dover is the scene of almost daily honor. People working there do their utmost to offer behind-the-scenes comfort to families of fallen soldiers, airmen, sailors, and Marines. No one knows.
4) For many, it's impossible to re-enter life after being deployed. Instead, they have to put together a new life using the ingredients of the one they left behind. Someone who has seen combat or who has had related experiences should not be expected or told to "get over it."
5) All have Post Traumatic Stress (PTS). It's the "D" in PTSD that's the problem. The "D" stands for disorder.
6) Much of military service is routine. It's about filling out forms and waiting in line more often than the media portrays.
7) So far, with today's wars, most people in the military are safe. They won't be killed or wounded, but they will still pay a price that many people back home simply will never understand.
8) The families left back home need much more love, care, and attention than they are getting. If we "support the troops," we should show it by supporting their families more.
9) There are many parts of military service that are more significant, exciting, challenging, and satisfying than they look in the media. For many people, it's a life calling they hold close to their hearts. There really are still patriots.

What are your thoughts on all this?         

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Vision and Information

Many people seek more information about something they feel a calling to. Education is seen as the key to progress. Excess information and education, however, often turn out to be fatal to vision. I have often watched this cycle: 1)Someone gets hold of something God wants them to do; 2)They research it, which, because of the availability and amount of information and education available today, becomes a time-consuming task; 3)They get mired down in a high volume of information, education, and options; 4)The process looses steam. It's hard to do one thing to help one person when your mind is full of information about people all over the world who need all kinds of help. Having too many options is paralyzing. 

I've found that sometimes it's fear that inspires a quest for more information. If you have a call on your life, respond by seeking action first, not information. You don't need to learn more to obey God. You will learn as you obey God. Be more afraid of not starting than of making mistakes. I write this not for people who are wondering about career choices, but more for people like myself, who are all set to "do something" for God. Sometimes, I feel stuck because there is so much to do. If I'm lost in options, I have to stop, go back, and hear again from God with a will poised to respond immediately with action. If I'm chasing more information like a dog chases his tail, I have to get my eyes back on Christ and off of my tail! Courage comes in the doing, not in the planning. Education is not a replacement for character. There are times when gathering more information is merely a form of procrastination.   

Saturday, August 2, 2008

Ten Years

Today, August 2nd, is the ten year anniversary of my ordination and installation as pastor of Goodwill Church in Montgomery, NY. (I feel like I've already talked too much about this.) I served communion twice tonight, and will five times tomorrow - once at a military base for only a handful gathered to worship. It's a humbling, yet satisfying thing. It may seem small to others, but it can't for me. This weekend, I preach the word of God: Habakkuk 1. I pray. I greet people at the door. I am a simple Christian pastor. Today and tomorrow together I will be so for about a thousand people in total, I suppose.