Posts Tagged 'Christianity'

study tools

There are a few tools I use nearly every time I study Scripture. I like them because they’re insightful, easy to access and (best of all) free.

  • YouVersion. I always start with different translations and YouVersion has done a great job of brining them together in a modern, easy to use way. Big plusses here: I can link back to my talks/blogs/videos and ease of use.
  • StudyLight’s Interlinear Study Bible. Although Bible colleges and seminaries snub using an interlinear Bible, it’s a great way to get a fast glance at the words and their meanings in a passage. For me this is a starting point before I break out the concordances, lexicons and original text. Plusses here are fast reference and easy to follow links.
  • NET Bible. So you’re looking for a little more information on a passage and don’t want to go to 15 sources? Look no further. The NET Bible is a theological gold mine for context, culture, syntax and all the hot issues highlighted for a particular passage. Plusses are quantity of information, simplicity in layout and downloadable version.
  • Dr. Constable’s Bible Commentary. This may be the best theological deal on the internet. Decades worth of study, and the entire content of over a dozen seminary classes, Dr. Constable’s commentary lays out each book in standard outline form and gives insight into how it relates to the rest of Scripture. Plusses are downloadable PDF (read: searchable) format, updated every year, seriously is the exact same content Dr. Constable teaches at Dallas Seminary each year and you don’t have to drop $350 a credit hour to get it.
What online tools do you use to study Scripture?

hymns make me yawn

There, I said it.

It’s not a dig - I think there are some incredible hymns. Strong lyrics, deep theology, layered history - cool stuff. But hymns make me yawn (literally) - I usually don’t make it through the first verse before this involuntary response kicks in. My wife laughs at it, because I’ll make it through an entire church service - even the day - without yawning… unless we sing a hymn.

More than likely, the problem has less to do with my biology and more to do with my preference in music… but it’s entertaining to watch either way.

I used to really struggle with churches I didn’t view as contemporary. 

Struggle is actually a weak word - I used to hate churches I didn’t view as contemporary. I saw them as antiquated. I saw them as foolish. I talked about how they were doing damage to the body of Christ.

This stage in my life went on for years. I was near venomous towards “traditional” churches, their congregants and especially their leaders. I went to a “good church” where we sang songs that sounded like stuff on the radio and where our building looked like an airport or shopping mall, not (gasp) a church! The bottom line frustration: they did church different.

As I prayed about this, one phrase from Scripture came to mind: “Why do you persecute me?” My negativity was tearing apart the Body of Christ, and I thought somehow I was doing Jesus favors. I thought that if we all looked the same - if we all did church the same - if we all looked like my little part of the body - the world be a better place. In reality it was one part of the body shouting to a completely different part: Be like me!

It took me the better part of a year and the help of a close friend to work through this. I had to drop all my little quips against these churches. I had to apologize to some people. Most of all, I had to let God change my heart so I could see these churches as vital parts of the Body of Christ - even if they would never be my style.

The final test was if I was humble enough not just to keep myself from going negative, but to actually be a positive influence for them - to support other types of churches. That if I met someone who I knew would fit better in the part of the body that sings hymns, even thought that wasn’t my thing, that I would recommend a traditional church - even talk it up as much as I would talk up my own church.

Until I was comfortable enough to support the whole body, how could I be a beneficial part of it?

This is part of my journey - how about yours?

dtr

Normally dtr’s are for dating couples - but after yesterday’s post, I think I have some defining the relationship to do as well. (Questions are lifted from the comments section, as of this morning.)

Is an acquaintance a relationship (that you should approach if they are wrong)?

For me, I work with what I have. If I don’t know someone well, but have some sort of relationship with them and God has laid it on my heart to speak to them - I run with it. I’ll often admit I don’t know them well, but felt led to talk. I’ll encourage them to respond if they want to, but to take it all with the wisdom of what God is doing in their life, and what their close friends are telling them.

What about someone who serves as a volunteer?

This one is easier. If someone is involved in ministry, they have placed themselves under the authority of the pastor that leads that church and ministry. If the volunteer needs to be approached by a pastor, Scripture is clear this is part of the pastoral relationship. (That doesn’t make the conversation easy, just the mandate to talk to them.)

Should we confront people we do not know, as we are all members of the Body of Christ?

I think there is a lot of flexibility on this. Yesterday, as I was writing, I was thinking back to the times in my life where someone who has no connection with me has stepped in and blasted me. These are the people that think they are the moral police of the world. In this case, I stand firmly by what I wrote yesterday.

However, I think there may be circumstances where someone outside of relationship, but familiar with us, genuinely wants to talk to us - to address something out of love. While I would see this as a possibility, and accept it, I have not experienced it.

The main thing for me is love. We have to love one another enough to approach each other, as well as enough to celebrate our differences (even if we will never see eye to eye. 

I love the quote Henry left in the comments a few days ago:  ”We can still walk hand in hand without seeing eye to eye.”

What would you add?

when someone is wrong

Yesterday I talked through some of my struggles with unity. Today I want to look at how I can maintain unity with others when someone is wrong in what they are doing. In yesterday’s post, I called it category two - when someone really is wrong. So, this is my plan of attack:

  1. If I’m in relationship with this person, it is my duty as a brother in Christ to talk with them. It may be that there is more to the situation that I don’t understand. It may be that they need encouragement. Or correction. Or rebuking. 
  2. If I’m not in relationship with them, I need to start with prayer. If I have no relationship with them, I have no business trying to hold them accountable. 

This is why it is so important for leaders to have strong relationships and accountability in their lives. When someone outside of relationship tries to tell us what we are “doing wrong,” it is called judging. When someone in relationship show us where we are wrong, and then helps us get right, it is called love. 

There is a big difference in how these two will present. When people outside relationship approach someone with a problem, they typically want to do all the talking - to show the person how messed up they are. When people inside relationship approach their friend with a problem, they want to have a conversation - to help the person make changes and grow.

The key example here is the person who blasts someone on their blog and the person who prayerfully has a conversation with a person to incite change. One is completely out of relationship and obviously does nothing more than tear another person down, the other leverages the relationship for restoration.

This can also give leaders peace. Even when others are tearing a leader down for what they are called to do, if the idea was birthed in community, and guarded by accountability, the leader can move forward with confidence

Unity involves two things - relationship and prayer. It means I get down and dirty in the relational circle God has given me, and it means I pray my heart out when I see someone outside of relationship who is struggling. If God does not open a pathway for me to form a relationship with the person, I have no business stirring disunity within the body.

What do you think?

one body, many parts

I was reading in Ephesians chapter one this weekend and was struck by the simplicity of what Paul says the mystery of God’s will is. The thing everyone has been trying to figure out - the end game for the world - is unity. God wants all things to be united under Him. No more separation. No more splinter cells. No more arguing.

Unity.

The trouble for me is that no matter how much I talk about God’s plan for unity, some schmo always does something I perceive as wrong. And I don’t want to be united with people who do things wrong. I want to tear those people down. I  talk to others about how stupid it is that they do what they are doing. I shake my head in disapproval.

In these moments, I am an instrument of disunity.

There are a couple reasons I could perceive something as wrong:

  1. It is not right for the part of the body of Christ I’m a part of - so it looks wrong. But who am I to tell a different part of the body how to work?
  2. It really is wrong.

Category one is where most things fall for me. I am a knee and see a femur that just wont bend, budge or move - and I blast them for their inflexibility. Little do I realize, that femur is holding me in place. If their part of the body bent, they would snap, and if they snapped it’s my part of the body that would crash into the pavement first.

It is unity that holds us together. Unity that allows us to function as one body with many parts. Unity. I must not only be understanding, I must be supportive. I must be united.

I want to look at category two in another post, but for today - what are your experiences in category one? Has someone from a different part of the body judged you? Have you judged someone else?

my portion

The Bible draws a picture of the Lord as our portion. It’s an interesting thought: God is completely and totally all you need.

So many times in my life, God is not my portion, He plays a part of what I need, mixed in with everything else.

What would it look like if God was our portion? If everything we needed came from Him? Could it be we would go through a week without the empty longings for things in the world? Could it be we would feel freedom like never before from the things that hold us back? Could it be the guilt we carry from our past no longer crushes our spirit?

The problem we have when God is not our portion is that He cannot shape and bless our lives to the fullest because we have pushed Him out of so many places.

Living with God as our portion is all about pushing everything out we have come dependent on for our life, outside of God, to make room for our dependance on Him. It is finding the things we are dependent on and asking God to refocus our dependance on Him. It is finding the areas we are captive to and praying our hearts out for redemption. Living with God as our portion is about taking our focus off the small time we live here on earth and moving it to the greatness of God and the story of His kingdom.

For more see Psalm 119:57 and Psalm 142:5.

funny stuff

Been kind of a heavy week on the blog - I want to end on a light note. These are seriously some of the funniest videos I’ve seen in a while. Check them out!

You can check out the full You Tube Channel.

more than you dream of

I’m working on a talk for our student ministry right now. One of the key thoughts in the talk is a statement that helps me focus my life:

You can’t out-dream God.

God dreams for you. He has brilliant plans for your life. Some of them He weaves into the fabric of your being from the very beginning. Other’s He presents to you as you journey with Him.

Yet so many people try to out-dream the Dream-Giver. The danger is two-fold:

  • If you accomplish all of your dreams in life, but aren’t focused on God, you will find your dreams empty and meaningless. 
  • If all you do is accomplish only the dreams you have at this moment, you will miss out on so many of the massive things God dreams for you. 

We must stay focused on God, above our dreams - so the dreams He has entrusted to us from the beginning can come to life in ways we could never imagine. We must also stay flexible to the opportunities He will present to us on our journey - so the dreams God has for us, that are so much bigger than us, can redefine both the story of our lives and the legacy we will leave.

the glass

God treats his most faithful servants like crap. They suffer all the time. Go down the line:  Joseph (unjustly accused and thrown into prison), Moses (banished by God for 40 years into the desert for some “character development”), Samuel gives his life for his people and they never really listen to him, David constantly running for his life from a King God appointed, Solomon like his father had kids who hated him and hated each other, Jeremiah quite possibly a sufferer of clinical depression, Hosea is told to marry a whore so that Israel has a picture of God’s love, Ezekiel’s wife dies in the middle of his ministry.” (author withheld)

So the glass is half empty?

Never mind that Joseph, because of God’s desire to interpret dreams through him, rose to a level of power and authority in the world that no Hebrew could dream of.

Let’s not talk about how the creator and guider of the waters lead Moses’ basket into the arms of a Pharaoh’s daughter, split the waters at the touch of his staff or brought the entire Jewish legal system into existence through his relationship.

Don’t look at how Samuel’s entire life was anointed by God - that such a simple boy, from such an unlikely past, would become one of God’s most powerful voices in a dark and unjust time.

And David - you mean the Hebrew hillbilly who became the namesake king in the lineage of our Savior? His son Solomon, the wisest man ever to live - given his wisdom as a gift from God, unparallel to any other gift in Scripture.

Then, Jeremiah came along, the one man in all of time that God entrusted with His vision - not only for generations to come, but for all of humanity.

And Hosea, the man to whom God gave such a vivid and powerful message of His will that generations today are still gasping at his clarity, integrity and resolve.

But all these things are but waste compared to the unmachless reward these men receive because of their faith. It wasn’t the earthly rewards, the accolades of man or the promotion of self that drove any of these men - therefore the earthy struggles, insults from men and demotion of self did not deter them from their faith in God.

If the glass is half empty, it is only for the brief time these men served their God on earth. Now the glass is full - even overflowing.

——-

How we view things impacts how people around us view things. How we talk about God changes the way people who listen to our voice interact with God. It is critical we do not get caught up in negativity, but focus our lives on the greatness of God and the name of Jesus as the only truly good thing in life and the promise for all of creation’s restoration.

What are your thoughts? What would you change or add?

mentors and models

One of the keys to living life successfully is having a mentor to help you grow, and a strong base of models to challenge your thinking.

There is a difference between the two.

A mentor is a close friend, someone who has gone before you, who is strategically pouring into your life as you forge your journey. For me, I have had a couple different kinds of mentors.

  • My dad - the first, and most significant spiritual mentor on my life. My dad taught me what it means to be a Christian. He challenged me to memorize verses that were key to our faith, trained me to live as a Christian and helped me tame a wild tongue.
  • Scott - my first professional mentor, Scott was a former Dallas cop and a seasoned Paramedic, he taught me to be an aggressive paramedic - “There’s nothing you can do to someone you can’t undo with what’s in this box (ambulance), get to work and don’t second guess your training.” His carefully training made me a stronger paramedic than I ever could have been on my own.
Mentors are close, personal and (most of the time) in your grill whether you asked them to get there or not.
Models are a little different.
Because we live in a culture where we have access to people and information more than ever, we have the opportunity of sitting under some of the greatest teachers and leaders of all time. Models give us the opportunity, outside of relationship, to have our lives challenged and stretched by someone else. Many of my models are pastors who have shaped how I live as a Christian or how I pursue ministry.
  • Ed Young - Be yourself. Live creative. (Without Ed’s example I would probably have never considered full time ministry.)
  • Louie Giglio - Passion is the lost value of our culture. Light yourself on fire.
  • Craig Groeschel - Have a laser-sharp vision that God has placed on your life and pursue it with reckless abandon.
  • Rob Bell - Church can be revolutionary without a revolt. Don’t waste time consumed with what’s wrong with church, just go do it right.
It is essential our lives are filled with both mentors and models. For me following the right people is the difference between mediocrity and full on, passionate living.

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Welcome

You wont find much here. There is no product to buy, no club to join and no reason to send your money. This blog gives glimpses of my journey.
Pieces of my walk with God.
Echoes of redemption.
Hopefully my journey will help you on your journey.

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