Monday, May 19, 2008

An Ontime God

A few weeks ago, Kitten and I were stressed. Okay, we were wigging out. We were wondering how we would pay our mortgage payment when we entered the world of unemployment. My dad kept encouraging me to remember that God was an on-time God.


In the last 7 days a lot has changed. We sold our house last Monday and expect to close in the next couple of weeks. I also got a call today that I have a job. I'll be working for Bob's Gym in management. Never doubt...God is good, all the time. He might take us to the brink, but He always shows up. He shows up and He shows off.

Saturday, May 10, 2008

People of the Book (part four)

In the end, the summary of the article is that we must fall in love with the book. We must return to being a "people of the book." Like the Israelites, we should rise with a desire to hear from God afresh each day. We should listen to Him as He speaks into our lives. We must direct our attention and our affection to the One worthy of both. We must develop an insatiable appetite, an unquenchable thirst for the Word of God.

Friday, May 9, 2008

People of the Book (part three)


John Ortberg describes the prophets as the "orginal performance artists." God would give them a message, but also creative ways in which to live out that message. To illustrate the desperate situation that would be the siege and exile, He commanded one prophet to make bread over a fire fueled by excrement. He commanded the prophet Hosea to marry a prostitute named Gomer (to which the only appropriate reply must have been..."Golly.")


Today, as we share the message of Scripture, as we teach and live it, how are we bringing the gospel into three-dimensional reality for those around us? We must find creative and powerful ways to communicate the love of a creative and powerful God. I believe that this should include the use of video, media, art, photography, drama, comedy, poetry, prose and a variety of other expressions.

Thursday, May 8, 2008

People of the Book (part two)

"In many ways our situation is increasingly like that of the early church. The gospel had to compete in a multi-religious, pluralistic environment where, as Edward Gibbon put it, "the masses considered all religions equally true, the philosophers considered them equally false, and the politicians considered them equally useful." Historians like Rodney Stark say that the reason the church exploded across the ancient world was, to a large extent it was because the church incarnated the word—cared for the poor, fed the hungry, embraced the orphan, risked sheltering the sick." (People of the Book)

As I read those words, the truths and maxims came rushing back:

  • "They do not care how much you know, until they know how much you care."
  • "You are the only Bible some people will ever read."
  • "If you were charged with being a Christian, is there enough evidence to convict?"
  • "I would have became a Christian if I ever met one."

How is that we allow the gospel to be proclaimed on Sunday morning, yet stay dormant within our lives the rest of the week? How can we talk about how Jesus cared for the poor, the broken, the hurting as we retreat to our middle-class, suburbian like dwellings? How can we claim God as our Father, Christ as our Lord, the Spirit as our Counselor and not care for the very same people that they care for, the widowed, the orphaned, the immigrants?

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

God & Politics


In light of the Indiana primaries that just occurred, I found this story particularly interesting. It seems that after years of being tightly linked to the Republican party that many evangelicals are shying away from politics altogether. The signers of this new manifesto are some of the leaders in the evangelical world, including my former ethics teacher: David Gushee.

What's your thoughts? What role should the church play in politics? What about individual Christians? What is their responsibility?

People of the Book (part one)

Just finished reading an article by John Ortberg entitled People of the Book. It caused a rush of thought and questions. Over the next four days, I'll unpack some of the ways that it knocked me around and the questions it raised.

First: the issue of passion for Scriptures within the church I serve starts with me. In our Student Ministry at Olivet, the middle school and high school students are not going to revere the Word unless they see that modeled in my life. At Discovery, the passion that I bring to my personal study of Scripture will be translated in the rest of the community. When my time with God is shallow, rushed or non-existent, how can I expect anything less from those in the pews (or in Discovery's case...the theater-seating). When I spend time in God's Word, it is a rush of exhiliration. I learn so much about who God is and what He has done throughout history and how He is moving in the future.


"By myself I have sworn, my mouth has uttered in all integrity, a word that will not be revoked: before me every knee will bow; by me every tongue will swear." -- Isaiah 45:23

Monday, May 5, 2008

Home Page Sneek Peak

Many of you end up here from the church urls. Soon, you'll have to come in through another portal. Why? Because within the next month, the Discovery Church website will be going live. The team at Details Communication has been working hard to put together an awesome tool for us. Here's a sneak peak of the screen capture for you.

Friday, May 2, 2008

Communion Confusion



How do those who do not go to church react to the language we use in a communion service? What do they hear when we say this is the body and blood of Christ? Here's a hint from indexed.

Perhaps we need to give more explanation or find another way in which to receive this sacrament. Could it be that because we fail to accurately explain the background and the reasoning behind our actions that we have people thinking this?