Tag Archives: Priorities

What Would Church Be Like?

I wonder what church would be like

if instead of thinking of it as an event on a checklist

we thought of it as family

and Sunday morning was just a reunion of cherished cousins.

I wonder what church would be like

if instead of acting like

church is the place that

once a week

we can shove life aside

sort of

and reconnect with God

kind of

we believed that it is a place

that once or twice or three times a week

we can connect with souls

and share with them the same God

who lives and breathes inside us

twenty-four/seven.

I wonder what church would be like

if instead of noticing everything that’s wrong

and demanding that the church leaders fix it

soon

or I’ll have to find another church

we fixed our eyes on Jesus,

the Author and Finisher of our faith,

Great Physician,

Bread of Life,

source of Living Water,

Prince of Peace,

the Beginning and the End,

the embodiment of Love,

the Great I Am.

I wonder what church would be like

if instead of walking in and saying

“I made it, Pastor, now fill me up…”

we said

“Here I am, Lord, I pour myself out!”

I wonder what church would be like

if instead of wondering

 

I just did it.

 

 

 

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A Tiny Cloud in a Vast Sky

Tiny cloud
Image by Håkan Dahlström via Flickr

I’ve been wrestling lately with what is very likely a common (if not universal) and basic issue: I want to make a difference in the world. Most people would consider this a healthy, even honorable, ambition. On the surface it’s selfless and giving and good.

What I wrestle with, though, is that I want to make a difference in the world. The reality is that it’s not as selfless as it seems. I want to see the results: to know that I am making an impact, that I can make the world—or at least part of it—a better place. I want to be recognized for my efforts and the good that I’m doing. I want to know that other people see how much I care. I’ve said as long as I’ve been a teacher that if I can make a difference in only one person’s life, it was worth it, but if I’m honest with myself, I wish I could make a much bigger difference than that.

But what if I don’t make any difference at all? Then what? Lately I feel as though I’m a miniscule cloud in a vast sky. Even if I could make some rain, and even if it didn’t evaporate on the way down, what good would those few drops make?

I am learning that my significance doesn’t come from how big a splash I make or how many people see that splash. It comes from the fact that I am a child of God, loved by the Creator of the Universe who has chosen to live inside me and allow me to be a part of his body. That fact alone humbles me; it should be enough.

And it is. Yet it’s not.

When I look at it from the other side, I see several things. God has given me gifts and talents, as he has everyone. And those gifts have several purposes: to edify and help others, and to glorify God. God does want us to use the gifts we have for the benefit of other people—he wants us to make a difference. Over and over again in Scripture we are commanded to take care of one another in so many ways. In the parable of the talents, it is clear that we are not to hide what has been given to us, but rather to use it, to nurture it, to grow it.

God has also given me a calling: I am a teacher. And one way that manifests is that I want to see other people learn and grow. It is natural, isn’t it, that a teacher wants to see the results of his teaching? It would seem to me that God wouldn’t give me this gift and calling, expect me to use it, and never know if it was accomplishing anything. (But then who am I to second-guess God’s purposes?)

I suppose I find at least part of the answer in 1 Corinthians 12. Paul is, of course, talking about the gifts and about how each one of us gets a portion. He also talks about how different portions are given to each of us, and that all the gifts are only a part of the whole:

I want you to think about how all this makes you more significant, not less. A body isn’t just a single part blown up into something huge. It’s all the different-but-similar parts arranged and functioning together. (1 Cor 12:14, MSG)

But there is a danger, too:

But I also want you to think about how this keeps your significance from getting blown up into self-importance. For no matter how significant you are, it is only because of what you are a part of. An enormous eye or a gigantic hand wouldn’t be a body, but a monster. (1 Cor 12:19, MSG)

So my struggle is really rooted in the world’s belief that significance and self-importance are one and the same. I’ve bought into that belief. The only cure is stepping back and reminding myself that I am making a difference—as long as I’m following God, faithfully working out his plan for my life, and doing everything I can to bring glory and honor to his name, not mine.

My significance comes from my relationship with him, not from my effect on the world. Is it possible that he will use me in enormous ways to touch large numbers of people? Of course it is. But that can’t be my goal. My only goal can be to do everything I can with what God has given me, to give him the credit for my successes, and take responsibility for my failures.

The results I must leave in his hands. I may be a tiny cloud, and my rain may not reach the ground. But God can change the winds, bring together enough clouds, and put us in exactly the spot where the rain will do the most good. We may not become a notable storm, or even warrant a mention on the local weather, but if it accomplishes something in God’s plan, then it is significant. And so am I.

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Who Do You Follow?

Follow JesusI’m a big fan of blogs and social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter. Through them, I’ve been able to expand my “PLN” (Personal Learning Network) and connect with interesting people around the country and the world who share my profession and interests. The conversations I’m having enrich my life and stretch my thinking on a fascinating and eclectic variety of topics.

As I get to know new people through the Internet, most of whom I’ve never met in person, I’m realizing that just as with face to face relationships, there are levels to the connections I have with people, and there are parallels to my relationship with Christ.

  1. I subscribe to their blogs. These are people in my network who I know have ideas that reflect my own point of view, or who can challenge my perspective in ways that grow me. They have no idea who I am, and on a given day I may read what they write or ignore it, depending on time and my mood.
  2. I comment on their blogs. These people have ideas that resonate with me to the point that I want to respond. They are now aware of me, but they may or may not respond back, and from their point of view I’m likely just one of a crowd of people who make up their audience.
  3. I follow them on Twitter. I’m intrigued enough by these people that I want to know more of the experiences, conversations, and raw thinking that eventually lead to the more thoughtful and polished blog posts. These glimpses into daily life give an interesting perspective, too, and help me to see more of the context around their blogs.
  4. I engage them in professional conversation. Through Twitter and blog comments, I pursue a two-way conversation about topics of mutual interest. We respond to each other and generate discussion that extends and expands over time.
  5. I engage in personal discussion. These are people who I have let into a more exclusive corner of my world, and who have invited me into theirs. We know and care about the little details, not just the big ones.
  6. We seek each other out. These are the people who are always on my radar. They are the ones whose Tweets I specifically look for, whose blog posts I make a point to read daily, and with whom I won’t hesitate to share when something interesting happens to me. These are the people I will go out of  my way to help and to celebrate with.

There are people who subscribe to Jesus’s blog—they attend church, maybe even read the Bible—but that doesn’t mean they know him, and there is certainly no relationship to speak of. Then there are those who comment on that blog: they shoot up the occasional prayer, hoping that the comment will make it through the spam filter and wondering if the blogger even reads all the comments that come in.

Of course, there are plenty of Christ followers. In Twitter, you can follow someone simply by clicking on the Follow button. Click, done: they’re in your list, and now all of their tweets come into your personal collection. Following Jesus really is that easy. Ask, done.

The problem is, too many people are satisfied to stay there. It’s not what God wants. The whole point of discipleship is to take us deeper, to bring us to the point where we converse and eventually seek each other out. If I’m honest with myself about my own relationship with God, it’s probably closer to the Follow level than it is to that deepest level.

But when I consider this long enough, I come to an amazing realization. I didn’t suddenly come to God’s attention by clicking that Follow button. Christ was on my list of followers long before I was on his—in fact, long before anyone else was even on my list. God has followed me from the day he created me, and he has patiently sought me out. It’s not up to me to somehow say something relevant or witty enough to get his attention. I already have it. I just have to listen and engage in the conversation with him, open my whole life up, and seek him out, to develop the depth that he desires.

@jesus Welcome to my PLN. Thanks for following me! Sorry it took me so long to return the favor. I guess we have some catching up to do...

Reaching Out

Last week in our small group, we did a study by John Ortberg called “God is Closer Than You Think.” In it, he talks about how we often think of God as being incredibly far away. I often feel as if God is so distant from me I’ll never be able to close the gap and find Him again.

Creation of Adam by MichelangeloThen he points to Michelangelo’s painting of the Creation of Adam on the ceiling of the Cistine Chapel. God is reaching out to Adam who is rather nonchalantly lounging with his hand lazily outstretched. What a picture of how I have tended to treat my relationship with God!

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