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Speak(ing)

Thursday, September 10, 2009


If I could capsulize yesterday in a couple Bible verses, the following two would be a great start:

"Do not let your hearts be troubled. Trust in God; trust also in me." (John 14.1)

"Remain in me, and I will remain in you. No branch can bear fruit by itself; it must remain in the vine. Neither can you bear fruit unless you remain in me." (John 15.4)

Maybe a few of you can receive hope from them, too.

1 contributions

First Day of PreSchool

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

This morning, we sent our son off to preschool. He was so excited and couldn't stop talking about the playground. I had to remind him that he might have to hang out in the classroom some to learn a few things. He had no trouble kissing us goodbye and playing with his new friends.



 

 

 

p.s. This kid has an incredible mother. After dropping him off at school for the first time, she spent the initial two hours of her morning doing ministry and sacrificially impacting the lives of three other moms. Way to go! 
1 contributions

Fearless

Tuesday, September 8, 2009


The latest book from Max Lucado hits bookstores today. Fearless: Imagine Your Life Without Fear tackles that which “has taken a hundred-year lease on the building next door and set up shop.” (5) Fear. As Lucado points out, “We fear being sued, finishing last, going broke; we fear the mole on the back, the new kid on the block, the sound of the clock as it ticks us closer to the grave.” (5) Fearless leads us into our fears by helping us admit their existence, captivating and inviting narratives, and an intense focus on Jesus. I would highly recommend the book to anyone looking for a handle on fear.

First, in Fearless, Lucado helps us stare our fears in the face. In the fifteen chapters, we encounter the following fears: insignificance, disappointing God, health, kids, challenges, worst-case scenarios, violence, death, what’s next, God’s absence, global catastrophes, and God getting out of our boxes. Whether I thought I struggled with the specific fear mentioned in a chapter or not, there was something in each chapter that helped me recognize ways in which I am susceptible to fear that I did not realize. I appreciated Lucado’s inclusion of fears specific to individuals or individual families and fears on national or global scales. He understands the global and local characteristics of the 21st century. Fearless honestly unveils a wide spectrum of fears, and does not allow the reader to sidestep any of them.

Second, in typical Max Lucado style, Fearless shares powerful narratives that allow readers to laugh, cry, contemplate, anticipate, and join the storyline of the book. Whether it is the opening story of his brother’s death, the twist-at-the-end story of the conversion of “Jack,” or the story of the woman who did not believe the man standing in front of her was Max Lucado, each narrative presents an opportunity for the reader to identify with the characters, consider their own reactions to the plot, and enter into a readiness to deal with the specific fear being presented. Lucado’s books always offer inviting stories, and Fearless does not disappoint.

Third, Fearless moves effectively from welcoming narratives to biblical narratives often involving Jesus and his disciples. In each biblical narrative presented, Jesus is the star of the story, and Lucado reveals how he confronts and overcomes any and all forms of fear. We experience Christ walking on water, feeding thousands, calming storms, and transfiguring on Mount Hermon. Lucado challenges and encourages readers by exposing the disciples’ fears and Jesus’ reassurances. Also, on several occasions, in the midst of these biblical narratives, Lucado provides bullet lists of Scriptures that readers might want to post on their bathroom mirrors or car dashboards. The biblical narratives lead readers to Jesus, the One who reassures us: “Don’t let your hearts be troubled. Trust in God, and trust also in me.”

Like a light shining into the darkness of a world filled with terror threats, financial collapses, and unsightly doctor’s reports, through honesty, stories, and an eye toward Christ, Fearless empowers readers to fear less. The book is a quick, piercing read that I highly recommend.
1 contributions

Happy Birthday Son!

Saturday, September 5, 2009



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
2 contributions

I love my kids, but I need help!

Tuesday, September 1, 2009


As many of you know, Heidi and I became parents to a 3rd child over the summer. Words can not describe my emotions, thoughts, joys, and fears occurring simultaneously as Hudbud experienced life beyond the womb.

Today, I'm reminded that he won't always be a newborn. In fact, he turned one month old a couple days ago, and has already entered the realm of 3-6 month clothing. Furthermore, both of my other children have birthdays this month, and my own rolling over to 32 is but a few months away.

Simply stated, parenting ain't easy. There's much to worry about, much to be sorry for, and much that will not be revealed until it's too late to fix! On the other hand, there is much to celebrate, much to fondly remember, and much to look forward to!

With all that in mind, I wonder how the individualism of our suburban culture affects our parental abilities. In other words, how many of us are bearing the burdens of parenting in isolation secluded from the prayers, resources, hugs, suggestions, and support of others?

In our training with Mission Alive, the following motto is hammered into us domestic missionaries: "No one should church plant alone." Perhaps the same statement holds true for the parent. Whether there are two parents in the same household, two parents sharing responsibilities while living in separate households, or one parent attempting to shepherd their children, perhaps no one should parent alone. Our kids are gifts from the Lord, and gifts are meant to be shared. Maybe we need each other.

I had an hour-long conversation with two parents today: one with children long out of the house, and one with children in elementary school. We brainstormed ideas for connecting with local parents who may be carrying their parenting responsibilities by themselves.


At the beginning of our time together, we conversed introspectively discussing the following question: "As a parent, with what do you need immediate help?" Spawning from this question were sub-questions such as: "How might I discipline my children in productive and formative ways?" "What are the best ways to tackle homework?" "What do my children need in terms of nutrition and exercise?" "How can I encourage my child to spend more time playing outside and less time in front of the television?"

With these questions as primers to the pump, as a parent, with what do you need immediate help? How can I assist you in pursuing the help you desire?
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Get Yo Grub On

Monday, August 31, 2009


A couple of months ago, the Burleson Star started publishing weekly reviews of local restaurants. As a family, until recently, we probably ate out a little too much, so this has been a fun addition to the paper for us. Recently, the Star ran a review of Tuscany Italian Bistro, a new restaurant close to the HWY 1187/FM 731 intersection in southeast Crowley. As a result, we jumped in the Uplander to check it out.

Previously this storefront location housed a family sports restaurant. It wasn't really a full-fledged sports bar, but did offer televisions, lots of fried foods, and decor featuring local sports teams, local collegiate teams, and DFW professional teams. However, unbeknownst to us until we read the Star's review, the sports bar had been transformed into an Italian garden. Now, the walls are decorated with scenes of villas, canals, and a map of Italy featuring Rome, Vienna, and Tuscany. The railing near the ceiling, and the red brick wall are nice touches as well.

As far as the food was concerned, there was an abundance of complimentary fresh bread available. Heidi and I shared a large plate of Chicken Marsala complete with spaghetti, mushrooms, black olives, and a creamy alfredo sauce. We also shared a Dr. Pepper and let the kids share an order of spaghetti with meat sauce. The service was excellent, and with tip, we were out of there for around $20. I would highly recommend the Tuscany Italian Bistro @ 824 S Crowley RD #22 in Crowley.

A couple questions:

1) Have you tried any "new-to-you" local restaurants lately? If so, describe your experience.

2) What's your favorite local restaurant?
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Back to School

Friday, August 28, 2009


This week, Heidi and I sent our baby off to 3rd grade. I still remember her first day of preschool, and now we are only three years removed from middle school. I have to be honest...I'm a little nervous about third grade. I'm a little nervous, because I remember some of my own third grade experiences. Every morning, my friend Johnny and I would get to school a little early to hang out in the back of the classroom and listen to the Licensed To Ill album by the Beastie Boys on our teacher's tape player. I can still hear it: "Now, here's a little story I gots to tell..." Also, in third grade, I had my first little league basketball meltdown, and my first glimpse of a condom that a boy in my class named Alex brought to school. For an unrelated sidenote, my third grade teacher lived next door to Brian Bosworth...no kidding!

Anyway, as a result of all this, Heidi and I have had a couple "concern-sharing conversations" in terms of sending our daughter off to third grade. This has got me wondering: many of you have been watching your child or children head off to school each day this week...some of you for the very first time(s). Others of you work in professions that nurture, teach, and care for children before and after school. Would you chime in with your "back to school" celebrations, anticipations, and trepidations? Please post comments on any or all of them.

Here are some questions to get us started:
1) What excites you about the new school year?
2) What concerns you about the new school year?
3) How can we encourage our children as missionaries to their schools?
4) What funny stories could you tell from your own elementary school experiences?
4 contributions

A Little Blue Ball & An Ecclesiological Conversation

Thursday, August 27, 2009


Over the last month, God has richly offered, blessed, and grown racquetball relationships for Bret and me. Although you probably can not tell by my physique, Bret and I have been playing 20+ games of racquetball per week at Huguley Fitness Center since October 2008. Lately though, we have begun playing singles, cut-throat, and doubles with a group of 5-7 folks. One lady regularly reserves a court and whoever shows up on a particular morning breaks into teams and then we play for an hour or so.

Even going back to the seven months I worked with Charles, I have always been hesitant to initiate relationships at the health club, mostly because I don't want to be "that guy." (lol.) Maybe I'm making it more than it has to be, but it seems a little weird for a 31-year old married father of 3 to attempt to strike up health club conversations with women, and most men have that "leave me alone" look and vibe going, because they are concentrating on lifting weights or running. However, through the common ground of racquetball, these relationship are a fun and emerging expression of God breaking into the health club. Maybe racquetball is a missional sport: "No one should play racquetball alone." (Sorry...that was a Mission Alive joke.)

Anyway, yesterday during a break between cut-throat games, a friend of mine mentioned that she grew up playing golf for the national team of her South American country of origin. She remarked at how pressure-filled and performance-driven those days were, and how calming and fun it is to laugh and compete at racquetball without the unbearable stress of her golf days.

I took this as an opportunity to ask her about her upbringing, so I responded with: "What were the main religious influences around you growing up?" She mentioned that her South American country was primarily Catholic with a minor Jewish influence as well. In a couple sentences, she shared how she was turned off from the religious influences of her childhood because they were boring, difficult to understand, and made no impact on her life. Instead, she stated that she has decided that God is God and there is only one God, (I'm not sure what she meant by that.) and because of that, it doesn't matter where she or anyone else went to church. As long as her kids had fun, it was fine with her. At this point, I haven't invited her or even talked to her about Christ Journey, so I'm guessing her comments were a reaction to the prominent church of her childhood and her desire to participate in a faith community of her own choosing.

I enjoy my growing relationships at Huguley, because my friends are teaching me much almost every single day. In our Bible belt suburban context where we might just be a little "over-churched," I have found the "church doesn't matter" perspective before, and I'm wondering if you have too.

My questions for you are below. Please chime in with comments on either or all of them.

1) What next steps should I pursue in this particular conversation and friendship?

2) Do you have any reactions to the "church doesn't matter" perspective?

3) How have the religious influences of your youth impacted your adult faith?

4) In terms of church participation, what sacrifices are you making for your children?
1 contributions

Read and Share Toddler Bible

Monday, August 10, 2009

A month ago, my friend Steve told me about the Thomas Nelson Book Review Bloggers opportunity. After signing up, my first book choice was the Read and Share Toddler Bible by Gwen Ellis. At first, that may seem like an odd selection; however, I am Dad to an 8-year old, 2-year old, and an 11-day old. In addition, I am a participant in a 4-year old church plant with several young couples who have young children. Consequently, I expect to turn the pages of the Read and Share Toddler Bible quite often. In this review, I will summarize the strengths and limitations of the Toddler Bible and provide additional “likes and suggestions” at the end.

There are many strengths to the Read and Share Toddler Bible. First, Gwen Ellis’ active writing style is a dramatic strength of the work. For example, in “Noah and the Big Boat,” Ellis tells the story in the following manner, “[Noah] found some boards and his saw. Then Noah went to work. Pound! Pound! Saw! Saw!...Crrrrrreak! Crrrrrreak! God shut the door of the boat. It started to rain. Pitter-patter. Pitter-patter. The wind blew. Oooo! Ooooo!...” (25 & 29) When reading aloud to my 2-year old son, he enjoys chiming in with the story whenever an action word comes along. Second, the illustrations throughout the book are just as inviting as the active writing style. We live in a time where images are quickly taking the place of words as conveyors of truth, meaning, and information. Therefore, especially in a toddler Bible, the images must be large, sharp, detailed, colorful, and powerful tellers of the story. Steve Smallman does all of that and more. Furthermore, he creatively includes small animals like rabbits and birds in many of the pictures that draw the attention of toddlers and add a nice touch to the stories. Additional strengths to the Read and Share Toddler Bible are the parent/child activities at the conclusion of each story. They provide opportunities for reflection, conversation, and action involving both parent and child. Finally, I appreciate the inclusion of the Scripture references for the Bible stories. Many of the parents that I work with or am reaching out to through our church plant do not know most of the Bible stories that many who have grown up in church have been exposed to time and again. As a result, including the Scripture references to the stories becomes extremely important, because I am hopeful that as parents are reading these 40 stories to their children, they are also cracking open their “not-so-toddler” Bibles to engage the stories by themselves or with others. In my opinion, the Read and Share Toddler Bible does well with all of the above.

The Read and Share Toddler Bible has limitations as well. First, to me, the overall vibe of the work seems heavily centered on the toddler. If I were you, at this point I would be shaking my head at the computer screen saying, “Isn’t the book a toddler Bible?” My response here is one of understanding; however, after finishing the book, I felt a tension revealed in the following question: How do we convey identity, worth, the goodness of God, security with God, love, acceptance, forgiveness, and inclusion to toddlers while also portraying a life with God to be lived for the sake of others? For example, minus the “Jesus Loves You” ending, the grand crescendo of the book is the story entitled “Jesus Goes to Heaven.” In my opinion, the story misses the point by concluding with the following section, “We are still waiting for our Best Friend, Jesus, to come back. He will come, and when He does, we will be with Him forever!” Is it too far-fetched to think that a toddler may respond with the following question: “If Jesus is my best friend, why isn’t he here with me?” What if the finale story of the book were a call to mission? Especially when utilizing the Acts 1:6-11 text, what if we introduced and called our toddlers and their mommies and daddies to a Spirit-empowered life of mission where we don’t sit around and “imagine heaven,” but we participate as little Christs with God breaking into the hear and now with glimpses of heaven? My toddler doesn’t need any help viewing the world as all about him. Instead, he needs his parents, grandparents, siblings, church, friends, and Bible to open his eyes to others in need, pain, brokenness, poverty, and sorrow. Throughout the Read and Share Toddler Bible, I did not experience a call to live with God for the sake of others. Second, the two garden stories miss the point also. Adam and Eve’s waywardness in the Garden is much more than a “no-no.” What if the story was framed less as a “no-no,” and more as a rejection of relationship with God? Toddlers can understand rejection and broken relationships, and this seems to be the bigger theme taking shape in the story. Why does the “Adam and Eve and the Sneaky Snake” story end with “Out you go...You can’t live in the garden anymore” (21) instead of a retelling of Genesis 3:21? At this point in the Story, community between God and humans, humans and humans, and humans and creation have been severed; however, God does not relent in his pursuit of relationship with humanity. Finally, I felt like the Toddler Bible struggled in the area of incarnation. Okay, I’m not advocating that the word “incarnation” should have been used in the work; however, tell my toddler a little more about who Jesus is. For example, in “Sleepy Sleepy Shepherds,” the story concludes, “There in the straw is a tiny, wee one. It is the Savior. It is God’s Baby Son.” What does “Savior” and “God’s Baby Son” mean? Are there ways of explaining “Messiah-Jesus” to toddlers? This leads me to a subset of this limitation: the cross seemed to be an add-on to the “Jesus and His Donkey” story. On pages 174-175, the people are celebrating Jesus and on page 176, all of a sudden, “Jesus had something important to do.” This seems confusing. My toddler son and I have had conversations about Jesus’ death and resurrection, and I would have preferred a more prominent telling of the story. There are a few limitations to the Read and Share Toddler Bible.

The Read and Share Toddler Bible was an eye-catcher for me. In our church plant, at least one woman has been pregnant at any given time since April 2005. As you can see, we have toddlers everywhere! In addition, I have a toddler of my own, an 8-year old, and a newborn. Therefore, I was eager to read, reflect upon, and review the Toddler Bible. I have not gone through such a process with a toddler Bible before, and I must say that it was quite enjoyable. Throughout this process, my 8-year old read the Read and Share Toddler Bible from cover to cover as well, and we have been reading through it on most nights with all of our kids. As with any book, there are strengths and limitations to the Toddler Bible; however, I would recommend it for use in our church and home. Below, I have includes additional “likes and suggestions,” and a review-oriented comment from my 8-year old.

Additional Likes
*The Noah stories were my favorites.

*The Jericho and shepherd David stories were fun as well.

*Color-coding the page numbers was creative.

*The “Word to Parents” was thoughtful and inciteful as to Gwen Ellis' ideas in writing the stories.

Suggestions
*Include a “God said that it was good” comment in the “In the Beginning” story.

*Leave the “Out of the Garden” story out.

*“Moses Leads the People” should include the people in slavery and crying out to God for deliverance.

*What about share your fish sticks with your neighbors and/or friends as an addition to the parent/child activity at the end of “A Little Boy with a Lunch?”

*Tell us more about Zacchaeus.

My 8-year old was most impressed by the colorful story headings and the illustrations.

Thomas Nelson's Product Details
Format: Hardcover w/DVD

Trim Size: 6.10 x 7.10 x 0.9

Page Count: 192

Retail Price: $14.99

ISBN-10: 140031464X

ISBN-13: 978-1400314645

Have you read this book? Are you considering a read of this book? Are you interested in sparking a discussion of the themes, points, critiques, and challenges of this book? Do you have questions or counterpoints of assertions from this book? Post a comment and join the conversation.
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Beyond Belief

Sunday, August 9, 2009


Hamilton, Josh. Beyond Belief: Finding the Strength to Come Back. New York, NY: Faith Words, 2008.

Over the past two years, my family and I have become strong fans of the Texas Rangers. Having lived in the DFW Metroplex since 1982, I have always followed (sometimes up-close and sometimes from a distance) the Rangers; however, recently the youth, potential, homerun power, pitching (Did I just type that?), and ticket specials of the team have prompted loyalty from my household. As a result, we have stumbled upon several opportunities to utilize free tickets, and have taken advantage of numerous specials including $10 Friday night fireworks tickets, Free Kids Tuesday nights, and most recently, six tickets for the price of one. We’ve probably been to 10-15 games over the past two years.

During this time, we got to know Josh Hamilton as a fantastic 3-hole hitter and centerfielder. Last year, he had 95 RBIs by the All-Star break, and even though he has struggled to stay healthy and productive this year, the last game I went to with my daughter, he crushed a huge homerun to right field. There is no doubt that Hamilton is my kids' favorite player, and as a result of his looks, my wife's favorite player, too. It was after watching Josh Hamilton the baseball player that we were introduced to his amazing, inspiring, and in-process story. After hearing bits and pieces, I purchased Beyond Belief and read the entire book last Friday.

On the back cover, the book is classified as a “Sports/Memoir,” and that’s a good description of the style and content of the work. Beyond Belief is written by Josh Hamilton and Tim Keown from ESPN The Magazine, and the significance of the book can be found in its narrative structure, authenticity, and insider access to the world of professional baseball. In this review, I will summarize the importance of these three categories as revealed in Beyond Belief.

First, the narrative structure of the book makes for a compelling read. This is the story of Josh Hamilton’s life up to this point, and as a result, it’s easy for the reader to accept the invitation to enter into the narrative. Story drives the world we live in. From our favorite television shows to our employment histories to the current school year experiences of our children, stories that reveal the colorful pages of our lives are taking place all around us. Stories shape the way we view, interact with, and contribute to the world. Typically, in stories, we ultimately learn about ourselves, because we identify with the plight of a prominent character. As a result, we join with them in comparing their experiences with our own. With Beyond Belief, the storytelling quality of the book allows the reader to do just that. In the Epilogue, Hamilton recounts a time when a fan brought his sister to a ballgame in the hopes of having Hamilton say words of encouragement to her in the hopes of stopping her drug abuse. Hamilton reflects on the experience by saying, “There are so many people out there searching. So many people who struggle and want to do better but can’t find the strength. So many confused, sad, desperate people who need the right kind of guidance to change their lives. People just like me.” (256) Many of the themes discussed in the book: family, work ethic, parenting, pressure, jobs, relationships, temptations, faith, boundaries, forgiveness, repentance, transgressions, on-going transformation are all aspects of life that each of us encounter almost everyday, and Hamilton’s ability to share his life in a narrative fashion offers opportunities for others to join the story by reflecting on these issues in their own lives.

Along with sharing his story, Hamilton and Keown write with a high level of authenticity. Even today, as news of his January 2009 relapse surfaces, Hamilton does not shy away from responsibility or confession, and Beyond Belief continues the precedent. Whether it was the time as a 7-year old that he hit a homerun off a 12-year old, the time he relinquished his wife’s wedding ring as collateral for drugs, the time he passed out on the floor of Murd, Leon, and Lester’s trailer, the time he snorted an 8th of an ounce of cocaine all at once, the time he hit a 549 ft home run, or the personal emotions associated with Ian Kinsler, Michael Young, and Hank Blalock showing up at his first Texas Rangers’ press conference, Hamilton holds back little in an effort to authentically share his struggles and successes. As C.J. Wilson, Texas Rangers’ relief pitcher, tweeted today, “I’ll say this only once about Josh so listen up- he’s a bigger man than anyone I know. Who else can admit EVERY mistake they’ve ever made?”

Finally, Beyond Belief is worth your time, because of the insider access into the world of professional baseball offered throughout the book. Whether it’s a batting practice homerun contest with Jose Canseco his rookie year, his travels through the minor leagues, his conversation with the Tampa Bay Devil Rays’ General Manager in regards to his reinstatement, or his feelings during the 2008 Home Run Derby in the old Yankee Stadium, getting a behind-the-scenes look at life in Major League Baseball through the eyes of Josh Hamilton is a rare and fascinating opportunity.

Beyond Belief is a quick and worthwhile read for anyone interested in baseball, Josh Hamilton, or life in rural North Carolina. In addition, if you are even partially impacted by drug abuse, the book is a must. Hamilton attributes his new life, sobriety, and professional platform to Jesus Christ; and perhaps, through Beyond Belief, you might encounter Him, too. The book is significant because it is in story form, authentic, and a first-person account of life in and around professional baseball. I would recommend reading Beyond Belief: Finding the Strength to Come Back as a great way to spend a couple hours.

Amazon.com's Product Details
Hardcover: 272 pages
Publisher: FaithWords (October 13, 2008)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1599951614
ISBN-13: 978-1599951614
Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 5.9 x 1 inches
Shipping Weight: 1 pound

Have you read this book? Are you considering a read of this book? Are you interested in sparking a discussion of the themes, points, critiques, and challenges of this book? Do you have questions or counterpoints of assertions from this book? Post a comment and join the conversation.

Next, I will review Thomas Nelson Publisher's Read and Share Toddler Bible by Gwen Ellis with illustrations by Steve Smallman as part of my participation in this opportunity.
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Evangelism after Christendom

Saturday, August 8, 2009


Stone, Bryan. Evangelism After Christendom. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Brazos Press, 2007.

A Review of Evangelism after Christendom: The Theology and Practice of Christian Witness by Bryan Stone

Evangelism after Christendom is a comprehensive treatment of the definitions, histories, contexts, subversions, environments, and virtues that shape, nurture, and challenge evangelistic practice. The book is significant, because of its thorough review of appropriate literature, movement from theology to practice, and emphasis on the “evangelizing community” and the virtues that originate within this community. Throughout this review, through the purview of reflective critique and agreement, I will summarize the basic arguments of the book and apply these arguments to my context of North American church planting.

Initially, Evangelism after Christendom serves as a prophetic call to the church to reclaim its true and intended evangelistic identity. In the book’s introduction, author Bryan Stone states, “The thesis of this book is that the most evangelistic thing the church can do today is to be the church—” (15) Moreover, he provides a specific framework for how this might take shape. Stone continues, “…to be formed imaginatively by the Holy Spirit through core practices such as worship, forgiveness, hospitality, and economic sharing into a distinctive people in the world, a new social option, the body of Christ.” (15) For Stone, this is the nature of evangelism.
Furthermore, these descriptions serve to construct the framework of what Stone, later in the book, frequently refers to as the ecclesia. However, Stone’s attention toward ecclesia begins with a theological foundation of evangelism as practice. Stone uses the work of Alasdair MacIntyre to purport, “A practice is especially important in MacIntyre’s overall argument, for it provides the context in which the identity of a tradition is constituted, the narrative meaning of human life is enacted, and the character, virtues, and skills for journeying toward that meaning are displayed and refined.” (30) However, as he builds the argument, Stone succinctly asks, “Is evangelism a practice? To the extent that it may be so understood, it likewise employs a number of varying skills, arts, techniques, and activities. But if evangelism is a practice, it is never reducible to any of these…” (31) Next, Stone clarifies his reference to MacIntyre by involving James McClendon’s description of a “game.” I found this metaphor to be quite helpful in describing evangelism as practice. Stone unpacks evangelistic practice through the lens of McClendon’s “four necessary elements to a game: (a) an end or goal, (b) the means to that end, (c) the rules by which the game is played, and (d) the proper attitude in playing.” (32) Finally, throughout the rest of the book, Stone structures his assertion of evangelism as practice upon the pillars of narrative, social context, and virtue.

In Evangelism after Christendom, Bryan Stone assembles a case for evangelism taking place in a narrative context. In other words, as Stone articulates, “This story [the story of the people of God], with its various characters, subplots, twists, turns, and surprises, literally ‘makes sense’ out of the Christian life by depicting its beginning, way, and end and thereby orienting us on a journey.” (55) At this point, however, I would take slight exception with Stone’s description. Perhaps, it is not the story of the people of God, but instead, the story of the God of the people. As Gary Holloway and Earl Lavender state in their book, Living God’s Love: An Invitation to Christian Spirituality, “…the main character in my autobiography is not me, but God.” Nevertheless, during this portion of the book, with outstanding thoroughness and meaning, Stone walks the reader through the stories of Israel, Jesus, and the early church. As an underlying form of foreshadowing, through his articulation of “the story of the people of God,” Stone lays the foundations for his later call to ecclesia.

Before Stone arrives at his call to ecclesia, his pilgrimage winds through potential rival narratives of “the story of the people of God.” For the purposes of his book, he tells the story of two main rivals: “The Constantinian Story” and “The Story of Modernity.” For me, this was a meaningful portion of the book, because of the immediate application to my context of North American church planting. I find myself as a resident in a church culture that still bears many marks of Christendom, and a suburban culture that reflects the categories of secularization, religious pluralism, and consumerism as described by Stone. In response to these cultural frameworks, Stone asserts, "Only insofar as the church is itself a visible communion, a material culture, a form of life, an embodied social imagination, a public, a politics and economics in its own right, will it pose a threat to the individualization and subsequent massification of persons inherent in the modern invention of sociality and its institutional offspring." (170) With experience to reflect upon, I concur with Stone’s assessment. Furthermore, for Stone, the church embodies this description by communally subversive means choosing not to opt into a dominate culture of individualism, marketing, and choice. In rebuttal to the dominate culture, Stone writes, “The question we must ask is whether the church is the eschatological sign and living demonstration that the end of time has come or whether it is to be viewed in strictly functional terms…” (168) Throughout this section of the book, Stone remains true to his prophetic calling toward the church to be the church.

Next, as a specific element within Stone’s calling toward the church to be the church, he launches a section of the book in which he unpacks the ecclesia as witness and invitation. First of all, the ecclesia serves as a witness to the reign of God. In support of this point, Stone says, “The new creation to which evangelism witnesses is God’s peaceable reign—a work of prophetic imagination that both demands and makes possible a distinctive reordering of loyalties, priorities, and relationships and of the way power and resources are shared and distributed.” (177) For me, this prophetic call, or maybe better stated, a prophetic community living out this way of life (“God’s peaceable reign”), is much needed in my suburban context. Ironically, for Stone, the second service of ecclesia involves invitation. As Stone reveals, “The practice of evangelism announces and embodies this imaginary even as it seeks to invite and initiate persons into it through a fully material formation into a people, a Spirit-created social option in space and time.” (177) Stone continues to describe witness and invitation in terms of cruciform politics and economics. In other words, his suggestions for evangelism after Christendom find root in the practices of ecclesia instead of the propositional truth and scientific methods of modernity. As a result, conversion must be viewed in terms of process or being continually converted. In a conversation about the measurability of evangelism, Stone concludes, “If evangelism can be ‘measured’ at all, perhaps it can best be measured by how well a community prepares a place at its table for those who are not there yet, for those who have not even heard, much less heeded, its invitation.” (274) In Evangelism after Christendom, the ecclesia embodies and invites people into “God’s peaceable reign.”

Finally, in what, in my opinion, is actually a discussion about spiritual formation, the author digs into the character of the evangelist who would proclaim (or live out) such a life (“God’s peaceable reign”) in ecclesia. Basically, Stone summarizes the “martyrdom and virtue” of the evangelist in the following four characteristics: presence, patience, courage, and humility. I found the “churchwomen,” Oscar Romero, and the Common Cathedral to be prophetic exemplars of Stone’s description of the evangelist, and consequently, stories saturated with conviction. This portion of the book left me introspective as to how I, through the power of the Holy Spirit, might exhibit such virtues in my church planting context. These pages of Evangelism after Christendom and my Tuesday night covenant group’s study through Discipleship Essentials by Greg Ogden simultaneously ushered me into Jesus’ words in Luke 9.23-24: “If anyone would come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me. For whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for me will save it.” As evangelists who are also participants in ecclesia may we “come after” Jesus with such Spirit-fueled intensity that our evangelistic practice spreads through the virtues of presence, patience, courage, and humility.

Evangelism after Christendom provides an extensive theological framework for discussion concerning evangelism in a post-Christendom context. I would recommend it as a worthy, cost-effective investment for any church leader discerning God’s prophetic call toward the engagement of such a post-Christendom culture with the story of God or desiring a full description of evangelistic practice. Bryan Stone’s treatment of practice, narrative, history, ecclesia, and virtue contribute thorough scholarship, thoughtful critiques, and meaningful applications in the context of any discussion concerning evangelism. Teleologically speaking, Stone set a course to prophetically challenge the church to be the church, and in Evangelism after Christendom, he remains true to this end.

Amazon.com's Product Details
Paperback: 336 pages
Publisher: Brazos Press (March 1, 2007)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1587431947
ISBN-13: 978-1587431944
Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6 x 1 inches
Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds

Have you read this book? Are you considering a read of this book? Are you interested in sparking a discussion of the themes, points, critiques, and challenges of this book? Do you have questions or counterpoints of assertions from this book? Post a comment and join the conversation.

Next, I will review Beyond Belief: Finding the Strength to Come Back by Josh Hamilton and Tim Keown.
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Neighbor's Lunch

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Originally, the idea ignited through these sparks from my boy, Charlie K. Then, this was added to fuel the flames. For the last 31.5 years of my life, when approaching the pantry in my kitchen, the first question that entered my mind has been "What should I eat?" It has never been, "Will I find anything to eat?" We are realizing that the pertinent question for many in our region is the latter.

So, in the suburban southwest corner of the DFW Metroplex, what would it look like for us to share in a "Neighbor's Lunch?" How might we offer the hospitality of Table, conversation, and friendship?

Next, we turned to our friends at Harvest House, a local, 25-year old benevolence agency providing food, clothing, and emergency financial assistance for folks in our area. After a half-hour talk with the director, she was willing to give "Neighbor's Lunch" a try. The plan was to invite any and all Harvest House employees, volunteers, clients, and friends to join with participants in and friends of the Christ Journey community for Taco Tuesdays at Rosa's Mexican Cafe on the last Tuesday of each month.

That's it. Christ Journey does not do this so that clients of the Harvest House will "come to our church," and Harvest House does not do this as a client stipulation for assistance. We're just gathering around the table eating fantastic tacos and sharing life together. And so, we're growing in relationship with Sheila and her mother. We're getting to know Alice as a friend and not just the Executive Director of Harvest House. We've shared a meal with Ginger, and a couple other families. Who would've thought that service, justice, and friendship could happen through a plate of tacos, beans, and rice?

Thanks, Charles, for modeling such a gathering for us. Thanks, Christ Journey, for seeking to be known as a community of people living the with-God life throughout Burleson and the surrounding cities. Thanks, Harvest House, for shining the lights of hope, justice, and provision into the dark, hidden, and neglected lives of our town.

The mission of God is coming alive in the suburbs.
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Sing the Song

Sunday, April 26, 2009

What if it’s a song...a song that’s was written by someone else, but a song that we are privileged and invited to play? What if it’s a song...a song with different instruments, harmonies, and tempos? What if it’s a song with guitars, keyboards, and drums...with trumpets, flutes, and violins...with harps, oboes, and synthesizers? What if it’s a song...a song with choral vocals, lofty sopranos, and resounding bass? What if it’s a song...a song sung in English, Spanish, French, German, African dialects, Chinese, and Russian...a song played at all times in all corners of the world? What if it’s a song...the most beautiful song ever played...the most beautiful song ever sung...the most beautiful song ever heard?

What if we are privileged and invited to play the song...to pick up a cello, to sit down at the piano, to twirl a drumstick, to slap a bongo, to pluck a harp string? What if we are privileged and invited to sing the song...to hum quietly, or inject a range of harmonics, or step up to the microphone intensely inhaling all of the oxygen that we can stuff into every crack and crevice of our lungs and opening our mouth to the size of a basketball to sing the song with all our might? What if, although we did not write the song, the song is a gift to us for us to sing?

Psalm 92:1-4: “It is good to give thanks to the LORD, to sing praises to your name, O Most High; to declare your steadfast love in the morning, and your faithfulness by night, to the music of the lute and the harp, to the melody of the lyre. For you, O LORD, have made me glad by your work; at the works of your hands I sing for joy.”

What if it’s a song...a song, that sometimes, we are unable to hear...with melodies we sometimes forget and words that we jumble together in ways we are more comfortable with? What if it’s a song...a song that sometimes ends abruptly or builds to the crescendo only to come crashing in on itself...a cacophony in response to which the eardrums cry out: “Emergency!”, or a song where the bridge comes before the first verse or half the chorus is missing or the introduction is found in the middle? What if in playing, singing, and hearing the beautiful song, we are plunged into doubt, despair, and disappointment?

Luke 24:13-25: “Now on that same day (the first day of the week) two of them were going to a village called Emmaus, about seven miles from Jerusalem, and talking with each other about all these things that had happened. While they were talking and discussing, (the resurrected) Jesus himself came near and went with them, but their eyes were kept from recognizing him. And he said to them, ‘What are you discussing with each other while you walk along?’ They stood still, looking sad. Then one of them, whose name was Cleopas, answered him, ‘Are you the only stranger in Jerusalem who does not know the things that have taken place there in these days?’ He asked them, ‘What things?’ They replied, ‘The things about Jesus of Nazareth, who was a prophet mighty in deed and word before God and all the people, and how our chief priests and leaders handed him over to be condemned to death and crucified him. But we had hoped that he was the one to redeem Israel. Yes, and besides all this, it is now the third day since these things took place. Moreover, some women of our group astounded us. They were at the tomb early this morning, and when they did not find his body there, they came back and told us that they had indeed seen a vision of angels who said that he was alive. Some of those who were with us went to the tomb and found it just as the women had said; but they did not see him.’”

Do you understand how Cleopas and his traveling companion (probably his wife) felt? Their fervor zapped, and their hopes dashed, they are walking home distraught, dejected, and duped. They were promised an opportunity to play the song, and when it came time to receive their brand new his and her matching Fender Stratocasters, instead, they were given a couple of used, dented ukeleles both of which are without strings.

Verse 21 reveals the pit of their angst: “But we had hoped that he was the one to redeem Israel. Yes, and besides this, it is now the third day since these things took place.” We thought he was the one to lead us in triumphant defeat of our oppressors, but he was just another false messiah who was put to death. Plus, even though he said he would raise from the grave on the third day, it’s the third day, and we don’t see anything. Sometimes, it’s hard to hear the song, because it doesn’t sound like the other songs we are familiar with.

Luke 24:25-35: “Then he said to them, ‘Oh, how foolish you are, and how slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have declared! Was it not necessary that the Messiah should suffer these things and then enter into his glory?’ Then beginning with Moses and all the prophets, he interpreted to them the things about himself in all the scriptures. As they came near the village to which they were going, he walked ahead as if he were going on. But they urged him strongly, saying, ‘Stay with us, because it is almost evening and the day is now nearly over.’ So he went in to stay with them. When he was at the table with them, he took bread, blessed and broke it, and gave it to them. Then their eyes were opened, and they recognized him; and he vanished from their sight. They said to each other, ‘Were not our hearts burning within us while he was talking to us on the road, while he was opening the scriptures to us?’ That same hour they got up and returned to Jerusalem; and they found the eleven and their companions gathered together. They were saying, ‘The Lord has risen indeed, and he has appeared to Simon!’ Then they told what had happened on the road, and how he had been made known to them in the breaking of the bread."

As he walked and talked with them, he reminded them of the song. As he walked and talked with them, he reframed the song for them. As he walked and talked with them, he recast the song as the beautiful, harmonious, participatory music it was always intended to be. “Was it not necessary that the Messiah should suffer...?” You see, the Messiah’s way of conquering those who would write, sing, and play alternative songs was suffering and death...not inflicting suffer and death upon others through domination, manipulation, and forceful power, but through taking all suffering and death upon himself. And now, as a resurrected Messiah, on the “Lord’s Day,” the first day of the week, the first Easter Sunday, he has been resurrected to new life and is now beginning the process of new creation.

In John 20:15, the resurrected Jesus is mistaken as a gardener, and in John 20:22, the resurrected Jesus is breathing the Holy Spirit upon his disciples. Is that an accident? Is that just a literary happenstance? Jesus exhaling the Holy Spirit should remind us of God, the gardener of Genesis 2, breathing the breath of life into the nostrils of the man he had formed from the dust of the ground. So, what is John saying? “Peace be with you. As the Father has sent me, so I send you.”

That is the resurrection song we are invited to sing...a song of good news to the poor...a song of release to the captives...a song of sight for the blind...a song of freedom for the oppressed...a song of right relationship with God and each other.

So now, we come to our time to respond...to respond to the song. What does it sound like for us to play? If you are a teacher, how can you play the song? If you are a manager, how can you play the song? If you are a stay-at-home mother, how can you play the song? If you are an insurance agent, how can you play the song? If you are a coach, how can you play the song? If you load hazardous materials onto trucks, how can you play the song? If you install sound systems, how can you play the song? If workers at your company are considering a strike, how can you play the song? If you and your boss do not see eye to eye on a particular issue, how can you play the song? If you are in school, how can you play the song?

In the book, The Challenge of Jesus, author NT Wright provides more helpful questions, “If you work in information technology, how is your discipline slanted? Is it slanted toward the will to power or the will to love? Does it exhibit the signs of technology for technology’s sake, of information as a means of the oppression of those who do not have access to it by those who do? Is it developing in the service of true relationships, true stewardship, and even true worship, or is it feeding and encouraging a society in which everybody creates their own private, narcissistic, enclosed world?...If you are to shape your world (or as we have been saying this morning: “play this song”) in following Christ, it is not enough to say that being [the Church] is about high moral standards, using every opportunity to talk to people about Jesus, praying for or with your coworkers, and being fair and honest in your speaking. All that is vital and necessary, but you are called to something much, much more. You are called, prayerfully, to discern where your [occupation, neighborhood, participation in the PTA, little league coaching, community action] is showing signs...that declare that the powers have been defeated, that the kingdom has come in Jesus the Jewish Messiah, that the new way of being human has been unveiled, and to be prepared to tell the story [or in our case sing the song] that explains what [all this is about.]"

In other words, as the Church, we are singing, playing, rehearsing, and performing the Spirit-filled song of Christ, a song of hope, justice, compassion, humility, suffering, joy, faith, peace, community, and love to God’s world, and that happens when you are a voice for a neglected or undervalued coworker...that happens when you share food and conversation with those who live next door to you...that happens when you refuse to sleep in on a Saturday morning to help Harvest House serve the poor of our city...that happens when become the neighborhood hangout...not just for the “church kids,” but truly for your neighborhood...that happens when you share a shoulder welcoming tears of despair...that happens when our lives lift up the Son of Man that he might draw all people to himself.

It’s the most beautiful song ever played. Do you hear it?
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You: Only Better

Saturday, April 18, 2009

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Loving Pursuit and the Other Direction

Friday, April 17, 2009

God is the ultimate missionary. Existing in community, He has worked throughout time to share that community with all creation. After reflecting on the quickly spreading problems of Genesis 1-11, Christopher J.H. Wright in The Mission of God: Unlocking the Bible’s Grand Narrative, paints the following picture of our missionary God:

"What can God do next? Something that only God could
have thought of. He sees an elderly, childless couple in the land
of Babel and decides to make them the fountainhead, the launch
pad of his whole mission of cosmic redemption. We can almost
hear the sharp intake of breath among the heavenly hosts when
the astonishing plan was revealed. They knew...the sheer scale
of devastation the serpentine evil and human recalcitrance have
wrought in God’s creation...The call of Abram is the beginning
of God’s answer to the evil of human hearts, the strife of nations,
and the groaning brokenness of his whole creation." (p. 199)

In addition, as we see from the story of Abram, God calls and sends his people to participate in his mission. Again from Jesus Wants to Save Christians by Rob Bell and Don Golden, “God always hears the cries of the oppressed. God cares about human suffering and the conditions that cause it. God is searching for a body, a community of people to care for the things God cares about. God gives power and blessing so that justice and righteousness will be upheld for those who are denied them. This is what God is like. This is what God is about. This is who God is.” (p. 44)

This is church. We are not a building. We are not a social club. We are not a list of programs. We are not a safe alternative to the perils of the world. We are “...a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people belonging to God, that [we] may declare the praises of him who called [us] out of darkness into his wonderful light.” (1 Peter 2:9-10 NIV) And just like our Father Abraham, we have been sent out by God to shine that light into all the darkness we discover.

We are living in communal covenant relationship with God and each other: a communal covenant relationship where the cries of the oppressed are heard, where the torn are knitted back together, where the rejected are invited into family, where the broken receive healing, where the fallen are helped up, where those on the bottom of the corporate totem pole sit down at the head of the table, and where prodigals are rushed to and receivers of a grand “welcome home” parade. Whether we share in the story of Abraham and Sarah, Moses, David, Esther, Zerubbabel, Micah, Jesus, John, Peter, or Paul, we are experiencing God’s mission for God’s glory, and sharing his love with the world. God is the original missionary, and his loving pursuit of creation never fails.

That’s why, for us, our process for growing in Christ-likeness begins with seeking God communally (and individually, but the individual is always brought before some form of the community) through prayer, Scripture reading, spiritual disciplines, etc. As growing followers of Jesus, we are called into the Spirit-empowered life of our missionary God. Therefore, we seek to enter into his mission, because God initiates and reveals connections with others and we respond to his ongoing work

However, the point of this post is not so much to layout a missionary view of God nor to describe our spiritual formation process. It’s to reflect on my own participation (or lack thereof) in said process. Lately, I have been drawn to Ephesians 6, and Paul’s summarizing crescendo in verses 10-20. In Ephesians 6:11-13, the text reads, “Put on the full armor of God so that you can take your stand against the devil’s schemes. For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms. Therefore put on the full armor of God so that when the day of evil comes, you may be able to stand your ground, and after you have done everything, to stand.” As I have reflected and talked with others about these verses in the context of our desire to be Christ-formed people of God’s mission, two conclusions have surfaced.

First, I recognize God’s initiation of mission all around me, but am not consistently praying for opportunities to enter his mission. Prayer isn’t just asking God to do things for me. Prayer is asking God to awaken me to his recreative work here in Burleson and the surrounding cities; here on Nathan Street and the people with whom we share a street. Prayer forms us into saying, “God, I recognize you to be at work in and around me. Please show me how and where to join you.” Therefore, I long to be transformed into a person regularly seeking the Lord in prayer for opportunities to join him in mission.

Second, in the midst of the Ephesians 6 text, verse 12 continues this calling to prayer. Ephesans 6:12 states, “ For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms.” If I had the space and time, we look at this verse (and section) in light of all Paul has written thusfar in Ephesians. However, no one is grading this post (that I know of), so I’ll take the “minimalist” approach. lol. The original word that the NIV translates as “struggle” speaks to hand-to-hand combat (perhaps wrestling) where both participants are grappling and clawing at each other in an “up close and personal” fight. How many opportunities to participate in the mission of God have passed me by, because I was so focused on the receptivity or lack of receptivity of others that I forgot that we are involved in hand-to-hand combat and therefore must seek the Lord against the “authorities,” “powers,” and “spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms.” I’m not saying there is a “devil around every corner,” or that personality flaws, poor decisions, and behavioral struggles are always caused the the “spirit” of something. However, I recognize (at least some of) the systemic injustices of our world, the advancing forces of evil at work around us, and even my own tendency toward the “devilish.” Could it be that part of the missional prayer of asking God to reveal the locations, people, and situations in which he is at work (so that we may join him) involves an appeal for the shining of light into darkness, and the eradication of the clutches of the “authorities,” “powers,” and “spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms?” I am not writing to postulate about or describe these “spiritual forces.” I’m just trying to say that there is a dominion (seen and unseen) that stands opposed to the Kingdom of God; that stands opposed to love, mercy, forgiveness, justice, hope, community, and peace. The way we rise up against this dominion is not by attacking another brother or sister in Christ, but instead, through going after the “authorities,” “powers,” and “spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms” through prayer appealing to the power of God at work through the Holy Spirit. Then, in prayer, as God reveals opportunities for mission in locations, people, and situations which are under assault from the “spiritual forces of evil,” we go after division, hopelessness, abuse, hatred, greed, legalism, and dehumanization.


I guess my point here is that I’m not engaging in either prayer; and Ephesians 6 calls me to conviction, confession, repentance, and newness of life.
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Church and World

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

1) Is shifting from figure #1 to figure #2 a good idea?

2) If so, how do we get there?

3) If not, what's the alternative?



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The Game

Friday, January 30, 2009








We had a blast last night at the Harlem Ambassadors' game! We got to play basketball, dance, watch some hilarious antics (musical chairs, 6'4'' Kevin Lombard being tackled by 5'4'' Ashley, the Burleson Mayor trying to shoot free throws, and a brief football game on the basketball court), and #21 had a few sweet dunks.

The game was a lot of fun for kids, parents, and even those of us on the opposing team. The "Burleson Lions Pride All-Stars" consisted of Burleson Firemen, local pastors, other friends of the Burleson Lions Club, and the Burleson Mayor. We lost 76-20, but at the start of the 3rd quarter, the Ambassadors gave us 49 points, so at the end of the game, the scoreboard read 76-69. By the way, during the 3rd quarter, the Ambassadors outscored us 30-2. Yikes!

For those of you who drafted me for your fantasy basketball teams, here's my statline:

5 mins played
0-0 FGs
0-0 FTs
2 turnovers
1 block
1 volleyball spike
2 muscle-man poses
0 trips to the hospital

Thanks to everyone who was a part of a great night!
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Community

Friday, January 23, 2009

Below is most of a presentation that Heidi and I are sharing in Coppell tonight.

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“In the beginning, when God created the heavens and the earth, the earth was a formless void and darkness covered the face of the deep, while a wind from God swept over the face of the waters.” The book of beginnings begins with the pinnacle character and Author of the story. The Great Initiator; the Wind Sender; the Pot Stirrer; the Great Almighty Himself; Elohim, God, the One and Only.

God creates. The word here in the original language of the story is bara. Throughout the first or Old Testament, God is the only one to bara. God creates out of nothing, and God also orders pre-existing chaos. Without hesitation, God jumps into the tohu and bohu; the chaos and waste. God sends His Spirit hovering over the waters of the deep revealing an act of divine expectation; something is happening.

Then, God speaks. At the sound of His voice; by His Word, the universe springs into action: light, sky, land, seas, vegetation, plants, trees, fruit, day, night, fish, birds, livestock, creatures that move along the ground, and wild animals. The Psalmist celebrates the creative Word of God by proclaiming: “By the word of the Lord, all the heavens were made, and all their hosts by the breath of his mouth.”

“Then God said, ‘Let us make man in our image, in our likeness, and let them rule over the fish of the sea and the birds of the air, over the livestock, over all the earth, and over the creatures that move along the ground.’ So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them. God blessed them and said to them, ‘Be fruitful and increase in number; fill the earth and subdue it. Rule over the fish of the sea and the birds of the air and over every living creature that moves on the ground...’” God saw all that he had made, and it was very good.

How are we to describe this God who is the only one powerful enough to bara, who also exists in some form of Spirit, and yet, by His Word jolts the cosmos into being? How are we to describe this God who describes Himself as “us?” In the book, The Shack, author William P. Young describes God this way: “We are not three gods, and we are not talking about one god with three attitudes, like a man who is a husband, father, and worker. I am one God and I am three persons, and each of the three is fully and entirely the one…If I were simply One God and only One Person, then you would find yourself in this Creation without something wonderful, without something essential even. And I would be utterly other than I am [which is] love and relationship. All love and relationship is possible for you only because it already exists within Me, within God myself. Love is not the limitation; love is the flying. I am love.” Could it be that this Divine Creator; the One who bara(s), sends His Spirit, and crafts the universe by His Word does not just place relationship high on a personal priority list, but actually, exists in perfect, harmonious, and loving community? Could it be that this God is understood as a community of persons revealing the perfect model of loving community? Leonard Allen, author of The Cruciform Church says, “The doctrine of the Trinity is shorthand for God’s relational character. Get rid of the arithmetic. It’s a mystery of God’s nature.”

Therefore, as community, God does what community does, and extends the invitation of community to others. As a result, God forms the apex of His creation. In Chapter 1 of the book of beginnings, God is transcendent, beyond, powerful, distant, holy, and other; however, in Chapter 2, God takes on human forms such as: gardener, sculptor, and surgeon. In Chapter 2, he is imminent, involved, personal, and near. Chapter 2:7 reads, “...then the LORD God formed man from the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and the man became a living being.” So, here, between the accounts from Genesis 1 and 2, we have man described as a “living being,” or in Hebrew, nephish chaya (which is also a descriptor for the animals), and also, as made in the image of God. Interestingly, back in Genesis 1, after God creates male and female in his image, he blesses them, and sends them out to rule.

In their book, Living God’s Love, Gary Holloway and Earl Lavender state, “The creation story in the first three chapters of Genesis reveals humanity’s purpose. After lovingly creating humans in his image, God placed them in a beautiful garden and willingly supplied their every need. He called them to care for the garden, to rule over living things, to multiply and fill the earth, and to exercise dominion—all activities of God himself. Humans were to exercise dominion over the world not in a careless and selfish way, but in the loving, caring way that God rules his world.” In other words, God extended himself in community by creating and entering into relationship with humans. Furthermore, as he had shared community with humanity, in turn, he sent them to share community with creation.

However, community is difficult. Community is costly. Community requires us to lay down our lives for others time and time again. Over the last year or so, Heidi and I have been in consistent prayer for our neighborhood. Can we truly be church planters, and not even know the names of our neighbors? How are we to balance the tension of desiring and expecting the Kingdom of God to break into our town, but not participate with God in breaking into the lives of those we live around? Be careful what you pray for. God listens, and God responds, and with his work comes the call for us to lay down our lives.

Unfortunately, far too frequently, we do not receive, live, or extend community in the way of God. In fact, our story can be found in Chapter 3 of the book of beginnings, because we, too, have chosen our own ways and rejected relationship with God. Too often, we refuse God, the ulimate Hosea to chase after our self-guided Gomer-like lives. But God is too persistent. I guess “Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It is not rude, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. [It] does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth...always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres. Love never fails.” And so, God, the One who exists as loving community, sends himself into the Garden crying out in search of his beloved: “Where are you?” Amazingly, by the end of the chapter, God becomes a seamstress making garments for the man and his wife.

In Chapter 12 of the book of beginnings, God covenants with his people through a man named Abram. “Now the LORD said to Abram, ‘Go from your country and your kindred and your father’s house to the land that I will show you. I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you, and make your name great, so that you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you, and the one who curses you I will curse; and in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.’” In these three verses, God promises four blessings for Abram: 1) personal blessing (“I will bless you”), 2) universal blessing (“I will make your name great”), 3) the blessing of a child (“I will make of you a great nation”), and 4) the blessing of land (“...to the land that I will show you”) But why? Why these four blessings? “...so that you will be a blessing...[so that] in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.”

However, as the covenant story continues, the children of Father Abraham find themselves subject to the oppression of a superpower: “Now a new king arose over Egypt, who did not know Joseph...[He] set taskmasters over [the Israelites] to oppress them with forced labor...The Egyptians became ruthless in imposing tasks on the Israelites, and made their lives bitter with hard service in mortar and brick and in every kind of field labor.” But, remember, “Love never fails.” “After a long time the king of Egypt died. The Israelites groaned under their slavery, and cried out. Out of the slavery their cry for help rose up to God. God heard their groaning, and God remembered his covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. God looked upon the Israelites, and God took notice of them.”

God remembered his communal covenant with his people. In fact, in Exodus 3:7-9, God told Moses, “I have observed the misery of my people who are in Egypt; I have heard their cry on account of their taskmasters. Indeed, I know their sufferings, and I have come down to deliver them from the Egyptians, and to bring them up out of that land to a good and broad land, a land flowing with milk and honey...The cry of the Israelites has now come to me.”

As told in the book, Jesus Wants to Save Christians, “God sends a shepherd named Moses to lead them out of Egypt. Moses challenges Pharaoh, they go back and forth over who exactly this God is and why Pharaoh should even listen, and eventually the night comes when they gather up their things and leave Egypt. Three days later the Israelites cross a sea, an event which is later referred to as the baptism of Moses, and on the shore they dance in celebration of their liberation.” (p. 28)

Although this part of the story could be seen as the end, instead, it is actually the beginning...again. Finally, at Mount Sinai, God speaks again. The same book describes the happening this way: “So when Moses tells the people at Sinai to ‘prepare yourselves’ and then leads them out of the camp ‘to meet with God’ this is about way more than a group of wilderness wanderers gathering for a message from the heavens. This is about humanity estranged from its maker. This is about the primal distance that exists between the divine and the human, the gap deep in the soul of humanity. Sinai is an answer to God’s question to Adam, ‘Where are you?’ This moment at Sinai is about the reversal of the consequences of Eden. Sinai is the breaking of the silence. God is near. God is about to speak.”

And, as they were in the beginning, things were good for a while. Israel, the delivered people remembered their God, the One who brought them out of Egypt. However, their journey from Sinai ended up in Jerusalem, and so we fast-forward to King Solomon. At the time, Jerusalem looked a lot like Egypt.

Again, from the same book, “Sinai was a marriage covenant between God and the people, a coming together of the divine and the human. And so the first commandment was that people couldn’t have other lovers. The relationship simply wouldn’t work if they were unfaithful. Solomon’s many wives and his infidelity to God are representative of the infidelity of all the people - they’ve turned from God.” Again, community had been spurned for a self-guided, self-gratifying, and ultimately empty existence. Where does life outside of community end up? Babylon.

My final quote from Jesus Wants to Save Christians, “The Hebrew Scriptures have a very simple and direct message: God always hears the cry of the oppressed; God cares about human suffering and the conditions that cause it. God is searching for a body, a community (emphasis mine) of people to care for the things God cares about. God gives power and blessing so that justice and righteousness will be upheld for those who are denied them. This is what God is like. This is what God is about. This is who God is...At the height of their power, Israel misconstrued God’s blessings as favoritism and entitlement. They became indifferent to God and to their priestly calling to bring liberation to others.” (p. 44) You know, it sounds to me like God called and sent the Israelites to do much of the same things he wanted accomplished at the end of Genesis 1: extend my community to the world as I have extended it to you. Instead, I guess you could say they sat down to dinner with Adam and Eve pulling the fruit off the tree, passing it around to make sure everyone got a bite, and, together, ate to their heart’s content. Welcome to Babylon, or better said, Welcome back to Egypt.

Maybe community doesn’t work. Maybe community makes claims we can’t handle. Maybe community is just too much trouble.

If you haven’t figured it out yet, community is hard work. It’s deeper than saying “hello” at the church potluck, or having a Bible study in your home. While these are important contributors toward community, they fall drastically short of capturing the entire picture.

Thankfully, God does not leave us in Babylon. “[You see], Christ arrives right on time to make this happen. He didn’t, and doesn’t, wait for us to get ready. He presented himself for this sacrificial death when we were far too weak and rebellious to do anything to get ourselves ready. And even if we hadn’t been so weak, we wouldn’t have known what to do anyway. We can understand someone dying for a person worth dying for, and we can understand how someone good and noble could inspire us to selfless sacrifice. But God put his love on the line for us by offering his Son in sacrificial death while we were of no use whatsoever to him.” (Romans 5:6-8) Again, “love never fails,” and God never ceases extending Himself, community, to His Creation.

Now, tonight, God approaches us with the same challenge He presented in the Garden; the same challenge He gave on Sinai; the same challenge He embraced and modeled through death, burial, and resurrection.

“God spoke: ‘Let us make human beings in our image, make them reflecting our nature So they can be responsible for the fish in the sea, the birds in the air, the cattle, And, yes, Earth itself, and every animal that moves on the face of Earth.’ God created human beings; he created them godlike, Reflecting God’s nature. He created them male and female. God blessed them: ‘Prosper! Reproduce! Fill Earth! Take charge! [Live out my Kingdom inviting others into community with me and each other.’]

This is church. We are not a building. We are not a worship service. We are not a social club. We are not a list of programs. We are not a “safe alternative to the perils of the world.” We are “...a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people belonging to God, that [we] may declare the praises of him who called [us] out of darkness into his wonderful light. Once [we] were not a people, but now [we] are the people of God; once [we] had not received mercy, but now [we] have received mercy.” (1 Peter 2:9-10) And just like our Father Abraham, we have been sent out by God to extend that mercy to all we come into contact with. We are living in communal covenant relationship with God and each other; a communal covenant relationship where the cries of the oppressed are heard, where the torn are knitted back together; where the rejected find a place; where the broken receive healing; where fallen are helped up; where those on the bottom of the corporate totem pole sit down at the head of the table; where prodigals are rushed to and receivers of a grand “welcome home” parade as fine china comes out of the cabinet, ribeye steak is slapped on the grill, your Momma’s best mashed potato recipe is whipped up, and the wells of Chicken Express sweet tea overflow with no end, because the one that was lost has been found; the one who had left has now returned, and taken a rightful place back in the family. Small group leaders, with the power of the Holy Spirit, you have the opportunity to cultivate such communities; communities of hope, reconciliation, and peace.

Over the past few weeks in our house church, we have been journeying through a series entitled: “Navigating the Suburban Wilderness.” Each week, we are looking at a “toxin” of life in the suburbs, and reflecting upon the way of Jesus and spiritual practices that might challenge and help us in overcoming the toxin. Last week, the toxin was: “What will this relationship do for me?” and the spiritual practice was truly seeking to enter into non-transactional community with others. I know, for me, I, oftentimes, think of what others could be doing for me or Christ Journey or the community, and forget to rest in deep, meaningful relationships void of transactions or expectations. While wrestling with the content of the week, Heidi came to a few intense conclusions about some broken relationships in her life.

Tonight, our task was to share with you a theology of community. As you have noticed by now, our methodology involved narrative, experience, reflection, Scripture, other resources, and pieces from our lives. We could have given you an outline, taken a point-by-point approach, and filled the projector screen with bullet points. Instead, we wanted to sit down with you and talk. You are invited into the grand story of a God who will not back down from redeeming everyone and everything unto Himself; a God who will not back down until community is restored once and for all. However, in addition, you are invited to tell and live such a story: not just when you come together inside this building, but in your living rooms, department meetings, front yards, public parks, and grocery stores...extending community to Coppell and the surrounding cities.

As we conclude our time together, I would like to pray an adaptation of St. Patrick’s Breastplate Prayer as a blessing over you.

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“We arise tonight through a mighty strength, the invocation of the Trinity, through the belief in the threeness, through the confession of the oneness of the Creator of Creation. May you arise tomorrow through God’s strength to pilot you: God’s might to uphold you, God’s wisdom to guide you, God’s eye to look before you, God’s ear to hear you, God’s word to speak for you, God’s hand to guard you, God’s way to lie before you, God’s shield to protect you, God’s host to save you from snares of demons, from temptations of vices, from everyone who shall wish you ill, afar and near, alone and in multitude.

Christ to shield you against poison, against burning, against drowning, against wounding, So that there may come to you abundance of reward. Christ with you, Christ before you, Christ behind you, Christ in you, Christ beneath you, Christ above you, Christ on your right, Christ on your left, Christ when you lie down, Christ when you sit down, Christ when you arise, Christ in the heart of everyone who thinks of you, Christ in the mouth of everyone who speaks of you, Christ in every eye that sees you, Christ in ever ear that hears you.

We arise tonight through a mighty strength, the invocation of the Trinity, through belief in the threeness, through confession of the oneness of the Creator of Creation. Amen.”