Category "Uncategorized"

Do We Have Practicing Faith Or Plasticy Faith?

- - Uncategorized

 

Sometimes I think the church is just as guilty as marketing experts who create ads to sell products on false promises…

Buy our product and you will be happy, rich, skinny, popular, beautiful, successful, and loved.

Drink our beer and you will get the girl of your dreams and be surrounded by happy friends with great teeth.

Use our lotion and you will look 10 years younger in just 5 weeks.

Spray yourself with Axe and women will find you irresistible.

Wear our shoes and your butt will shape up.

Drive our car and your life will be exciting.

I think we can agree: rarely are the ads honest.

Speaking of honest advertising, I’m reminded of the 1990 movie Crazy People. Dudley Moore plays a bitter advertising exec who reaches his breaking point and ends up in a mental institution—where, with the help of the other patients, begins to create “honest” advertising…

Buy Volvos. They’re boxy but they’re good.

Your fear of flying may be valid. United Airlines: most of our passengers get there alive.

Metamucil—It helps you go to the toilet. If you don’t use it, you will get cancer and die.

Forget Paris. The French can be annoying. Come to Greece. We’re nicer.

Ya gotta admit, the thought of honest advertising is pretty refreshing and funny.

I don’t like it when Christianity comes across as fake, plasticy, and pimping a product on false promises.

We shouldn’t have to.

Does the greatest Message really need spin to make it sound better?

Does the Good News need a celebrity endorsement to make it significant?

Is the kingdom of God about success, riches, fame, power, and having all your wildest dreams come true?

Does being a Christian make us perfect, struggle-free, and without questions or doubts? Uh, I hope not—because I am none of those things.

When I meet Christians who are (perfect, struggle-free, and without questions or doubts), I see plastic…

Fake.

An ad campaign.

Maybe somebody is buying what they’re selling, but God isn’t. He sees through the Photoshop layers. He knows what we really look like, act like, think like. And He loves us—not the perfect version of us, but the real us. No need for hype or spin. We can stop drinking our own Kool-Aid.

It’s much better for us to have a practicing (work-in-progress) faith than a plasticy (shiny, perfect, fake) faith.

A practicing faith…

One that is growing in honest, heart-felt, and continued trust of God.

 

crazy people ad volvo t-shirt-back-resized

 

imagine life overflowing 2013 work no 2

Fumbles, Flops, And Faith Overflowing

- - Uncategorized

 

I love how the Bible doesn’t give us heroes of the faith all monochromatic, with Photoshop touch-ups and filters applied—looking all shiny and perfect.

Instead, the Bible gives us heroes portrayed in full color, with every blemish, crack, and stain left in plain sight. These heroes are known as much for their fumbles and flops as they are for their overflowing faith.

They have patina—that green tarnish that forms naturally because of exposure to the elements.

Hebrews chapter 11 lists some of the great champions of the faith…

Heroes like Noah—who trusted God, built an ark, saved his family, and was used by God to start things over. He’s a champion of the faith.

And Noah had a drinking problem—not way back in the day, but actually, this is one of the last things the Bible tells us about Noah. Fumbles, flops, and faith overflowing.

Heroes like Abraham who followed God’s call to pick-up and launch into unknown territory. He went—he trusted God. He’s a champion of the faith.

He also lied to save his bacon. Twice. And this wasn’t years before he trusted God and stepped out in faith—it was deep in the middle of it. Fumbles, flops, and faith overflowing.

This list of flawed heroes goes on: Sarah, Jacob, Moses, Rahab the prostitute, Samson, David…

Their portraits aren’t shiny and perfect. Instead, they are displayed as they are: imperfect and marked by patina. Fumbles, flops, and faith overflowing.

So, what about us?

Are we shiny and perfect?

I won’t speak for you, but I’ll be quick to identify my own patina. I don’t just have fumbles and flops from days long-ago—I have them now, consistently, predictably, repeatedly. I’m a piece of work, and I’m a man of faith. How ya like that?

The book of James encourages us…

Elijah was as human as we are, and yet when he prayed earnestly that no rain would fall, none fell for three and a half years! Then, when he prayed again, the sky sent down rain and the earth began to yield its crops. —James 5.17, 18 NLT

I hope you caught those first few words of that verse.

Elijah was as human as we are.

Covered with patina.

Fumbles, flops, and faith overflowing.

This so encourages me. God’s not looking for shiny, perfect people.

Instead, He uses the ordinary, the flawed, the scarred, and the stained. He uses people…

People like us.

 

imagine life overflowing 2013 work no 2

An April Showers Friday Fun & Free Stuff

 

It’s raining and I’m in the mood for something fun. Hope you are too!

 

# 1. FREE BOOK—Tattoos On The Heart: The Power of Boundless Compassion by Gregory Boyle.

Um, wow. This book! Here’s what Anne Lamott said about it, “An astonishing book… about suffering and dignity, death and resurrection, one of my favorite books in years. It is lovely and tough and tender beyond my ability to describe and left me in tears of both sorrow and laughter.” Language warning: it’s PG-13. If you don’t win the book, check out Gregory Boyle’s TED Talk (also PG-13). Be the first one to comment on this blog post & I’ll send you a copy (scroll down to the bottom of this page to comment).

 

#2. FREE BOOK—Beauty Will Save The World by Brian Zahnd.

Here’s a book I really enjoyed this past year – it’s about rediscovering the allure and mystery of Christianity. Be the first one to comment on this blog post & I’ll send you a copy (scroll down to the bottom of this page to comment). Also—follow Brian Zahnd on Twitter. You’ll be glad you did.

 

#3. VIDEO—A Cat With A Vacuum.

YouTube Preview Image

 

#4. VIDEO—The Wife Song by Tim Hawkins.

YouTube Preview Image

 

#5. VIDEO—It’s The Dad Life.

YouTube Preview Image

 

#6. VIDEO—New Order’s 2nd Reunion Tour.

I’m a child of the ’80′s and I listened to New Order back in the day. I saw them perform on Jimmy Kimmel the other night and couldn’t believe how awkward this looked. I almost thought it was a spoof.

YouTube Preview Image

 

#7. VIDEO—New Order 27 Years Ago Same Song.

Not a thrilling performance. Apparently stage presence isn’t his thing – but I do prefer this (closed eyes, no movement at all) over what it looked like more recently. What do you think?

YouTube Preview Image

 

Like this post? You should also check out:

Friday Fun & Free Stuff Archive

 

free_28

 

Is Our Model Of Success Anything Close To God’s?

- - Uncategorized

 

Winning. The American Dream.

Fame. Riches. Power—on the cover of a magazine.

Contract for beating competitors on reality TV.

Last man standing—errbody wants to be me.

Yeah, that’s a championship ring—bling.

Bow down now ’cause I am king.

 

Talking about and thinking about success…

Makes me wonder: is our model of success anything close to God’s?

It seems to me, our model of success looks a lot like the “king of the mountain” game we played as kids on the tractor tire in our elementary school playground. Push everyone else down and raise my hands in victory—they lose, I win. Success!

I believe our model of success is largely shaped by jealousy—wanting what others have, and selfish ambition—what’s best for me is what drives me.

Is our model of success anything close to God’s or does our “success” move us in the opposite direction from where He wants us to be?

James chapter 3 frames wisdom from above (God’s kind of wisdom) and wisdom from below (our kind of wisdom) as completely different.

Our kind of wisdom—what makes sense to us and sounds like a good idea is…

Overflowing with jealousy and selfishness. —James 3.15, 16

God’s kind of wisdom—what He values, gives, and wants from us is…

Overflowing with mercy and blessings. —James 3.17

Quite the contrast.

A flood of jealousy and selfishness is all about ME.

A flood of mercy and blessings is all about OTHERS.

Unfortunately, we live in a world that worships and idolizes the takers.

As God’s people, we must move away from this kind of “wisdom” because it’s from below.

And as we move away from overflowing jealousy and selfish ambition, we move towards the wisdom from above—God’s kind of wisdom—which overflows with mercy and blessings.

Q. Which model of success will you move towards today?

 

imagine life overflowing 2013 work no 2

Wouldn’t Be Prudent At This Juncture

- - Uncategorized

 

In the 90′s, when George Bush Sr. was president, Dana Carvey played his comedic impersonator on Saturday Night Live. In addition to imitating his voice and facial expressions, he used words and phrases that were common to George H. W. Bush – especially the phrase “Wouldn’t be prudent.”

The word “prudent” has strong ties to the concept of wisdom. Being prudent means,

To be marked by wisdom or judiciousness. Wise in handling practical matters, exercising good judgement or common sense. Careful in regards to one’s own interests.

Being prudent and wise sounds good, but I wonder, is the commonly understood definition of wisdom (good sense, good judgement) in sync with the kind of wisdom God has?

Are we seeking after a wisdom from above or from below?

I often think about what a lawyer, risk management expert, counselor, accountant, or consultant would say to God as He explained his plan to unleash grace upon the earth—paying the price for our sins, cancelling our debt forever on the cross, and giving us a place in His family as sons and daughters.

Serious, what would they say?

“This is not a wise investment.”

“Wouldn’t be prudent at this juncture.”

“You need to think about yourself, what’s best for you.”

But that’s not God’s kind of wisdom. That’s wisdom from below, not wisdom from above.

So what does God’s kind of wisdom sound like?

Real wisdom, God’s wisdom, begins with a holy life and is characterized by getting along with others. It is gentle and reasonable, overflowing with mercy and blessings, not hot one day and cold the next, not two-faced. You can develop a healthy, robust community that lives right with God and enjoy its results only if you do the hard work of getting along with each other, treating each other with dignity and honor. —James 3.17-18 MSG

Wisdom from above is characterized by…

  • Getting along with others
  • It is gentle and reasonable
  • Overflowing with mercy and blessings
  • Not being hot one day and cold the next, not two-faced
  • Treating each other with dignity and honor.

Let me zero in on one phrase in the description of how God’s wisdom is characterized:

OVERFLOWING WITH MERCY AND BLESSINGS.

I hope this is consistent with your understanding of God—that He is characterized by overflowing mercy and blessings.

We live in this overflow.

And here we have peace, joy, rest, confidence—we know that we are loved by Him.

This kind of wisdom, God’s wisdom, is not the same as the “wise investment, prudent at this juncture, what’s best for you” type of wisdom. Not at all.

James talks about the “wisdom” that isn’t God’s kind of wisdom…

Jealousy and selfishness are not God’s kind of wisdom. Such things are earthly, unspiritual, and demonic. For wherever there is jealousy and selfish ambition, there you find disorder and evil of every kind. —James 3.15-16 NLT

When we live by the wisdom from below, we have disorder and evil of every kind. Yuk!

In stark contrast, wisdom from above is overflowing with mercy and blessings.

That means people around us are living in the overflow.

As we understand that the wisdom of God (wisdom from above) is very different from our default kind of wisdom (wisdom from below), we can make the conscious decision to move away from “wisdom from below” – and towards “wisdom from above.”

It’s not about what’s prudent at this juncture.

It’s about living in the overflow, and becoming part of that flow…

Overflowing with mercy and blessings.

 

YouTube Preview Image

 

imagine life overflowing 2013 work no 2

Friday Fun & Free Stuff 4U

 

Happy Friday! Hope you have a great weekend. Let’s kick it off the right way, with some fun and free stuff…

 

# 1. FREE BOOK—Tattoos On The Heart: The Power of Boundless Compassion by Gregory Boyle.

Um, wow. This book! Here’s what Anne Lamott said about it, “An astonishing book… about suffering and dignity, death and resurrection, one of my favorite books in years. It is lovely and tough and tender beyond my ability to describe and left me in tears of both sorrow and laughter.” Language warning: it’s PG-13. If you don’t win the book, check out Gregory Boyle’s TED Talk (also PG-13). Be the first one to comment on this blog post & I’ll send you a copy (scroll down to the bottom of this page to comment).

 

# 2. PICTURES—Where Children Sleep by James Mollison.

English-born photographer James Mollison’s photographs of children’s bedrooms around the world – from the U.S.A., Mexico, Brazil, England, Italy, Israel and the West Bank, Kenya, Senegal, Lesotho, Nepal, China and India – alongside portraits of the children themselves. “I hope the book gives a glimpse into the lives some children are living in very diverse situations around the world; a chance to reflect on the inequality that exists, and realize just how lucky most of us in the developed world are.” —James Mollison

LINK TO IMAGES // LINK TO BOOK

where-children-sleep-james-mollison-6-2

 

#3. VIDEO—Secrets From The Potato Chip Factory.

A behind-the-scenes look at a potato chip factory.

 

#4. VIDEO—Kenya Chords.

A beautifully serene remix of children singing in Kenya.

YouTube Preview Image

 

#5. VIDEO—Flight Patterns Color.

See where the airplanes are going.

 

See you next Friday! Like this post? You should also check out:

Friday Fun & Free Stuff Archive

 

free_28

We Are The Perfect Ones

- - Uncategorized

 

On Sunday, Pastor Andy Jones shared a powerfully moving message on overflowing and invading joy. He asked this question: “Where does joy come from in the midst of terrible circumstances?”

His answer was personal.

He said, “For me, it comes from the core belief that God is with me and he is for me.”

Don’t be afraid, for I am with you. Don’t be discouraged, for I am your God. I will strengthen you and help you. I will hold you up with my victorious right hand. —Isaiah 41.10 NLT

By now, we’ve figured out that everything in life DOES NOT always go according to our plans. Hello!

However, even when deep in the middle of “plan B,” we experience an overflowing joy because we, at our very core, believe God is with us and he is for us.

There was a group of people in the Bible who were experiencing incredible hardship, yet demonstrated a joy that seemed shockingly out of place…

Now I want you to know, dear brothers and sisters, what God in his kindness has done through the churches in Macedonia. They are being tested by many troubles and they are very poor. But they are also filled with abundant joy, which has overflowed in rich generosity. For I can testify that they gave not only what they could afford, but far more. And they did it of their own free will. They begged us again and again for the privilege of sharing in the gift for the believers in Jerusalem. —2 Corinthians 8.1-4 NLT

This is quite the juxtaposition.

On one hand, you have the reporting of circumstances that the Macedonians were facing—they were being tested by many troubles and they were very poor.

On the other hand, you have the description of what was in them and coming out of them—they were filled with abundant joy, which overflowed in rich generosity.

You’ve probably heard the expression “hurting people hurt people.” I suppose there are times when this saying is true. But I’d like to suggest another expression that is true more frequently…

Hurting people bring healing to people.

There is a kinship, a deep sense of understanding and empathy, a solidarity that naturally rises in the hearts of those who understand—from their own personal experience—the pain that someone else is living with.

Henri Nouwen called this “The Wounded Healer.” Quoting Nouwen,

The great illusion of leadership is to think that man can be led out of the desert by someone who has never been there.

The people in Macedonia, although facing their own difficulty and shortage, WERE THE PERFECT ONES to care for, and bless, those who were going through a similar trial in Jerusalem. And they were happy to do it! In fact, they were so eager, they begged for the opportunity to give.

The Macedonians, at their core, believed that God was with them and for them. This core belief produced an overflowing joy—which resulted in significant generosity.

The evidence of their joy? They gave. They gave although they didn’t have enough themselves. Living in middle of their own “plan B,” they gave to help others who also had great needs.

I doubt that any of us are living out our perfect “plan A’s.”

Something tells me we have plenty of hurts, shortages, challenges, and troubles. Am I wrong?

And we are a people with the core belief that God is with us and he is for us. We have overflowing joy.

So WE ARE THE PERFECT ONES to step up and give from our hurts, shortages, challenges, and troubles in order to bless, strengthen, encourage, help, restore, and heal others who are going through a similar trial today.

We might be deep in “plan B,” but WE ARE THE PERFECT ONES for the task God has given us.

He has given us the opportunity to be part of the miracle. Why?

Because—WE ARE THE PERFECT ONES.

 

imagine life overflowing 2013 work no 2

“Blessings” That Amount To A Load Of Crap

- - Popular, Uncategorized

 

I’ve noticed something that we Americans, especially American Christians, do frequently:

When being asked something that feels too “personal” and invades our private sensibilities, we shift into giving sweeping generalizations, philosophical ramblings, and ambiguous blessings.

Here are some examples:

Q. Do you give money to beggars?

A. That’s a tough one. I’ve heard that some of these guys actually make more money in a day standing at an intersection holding a sign than they would if they went out and got a legitimate job… Read More

Your Problem Is My Problem

- - Uncategorized

 

I love those stories of family, friends, colleagues, co-workers, or classmates, who—in an act of solidarity with one who has lost all their hair because of cancer and radiation treatments—shave their heads too.

It’s such a visual and tangible representation of “We’re standing with you in this.”

Solidarity is a chosen unity that produces shared interests and objectives.

In other words, solidarity says..

Your problem is our problem.

Your victory is our victory.

Your need is our need.

Your joy is our joy.

Your lack is our lack.

Your gain is our gain.

Your sorrow is our sorrow.

Your celebration is our celebration.

Jesus is the perfect example of this solidarity that says, “I am with you in this.” He came and lived—as one of us. He came in compassion—to heal us. He came in mercy—to pay for our sins. He came in love—to make it possible for us to be the family, the family of God.

The actions of Jesus said, “Your problem is my problem.”

Now, as the family of God, we are called to this same way of living…

Solidarity with others—with the least of these. We enlarge our circle to include; we are one. This is the kingdom way.

The Bible warns us against creating small circles of insiders, vigilantly protecting the exclusive membership roster. There is no “us and them.” There is only “us.”

My dear brothers and sisters, how can you claim to have faith in our glorious Lord Jesus Christ if you favor some people over others? If you favor some people over others, you are committing a sin. —James 2.1, 9 NLT

Jesus, just before going to the cross, prayed for us. In this prayer, he repeatedly asks that we “Be one.” Interestingly, He wasn’t praying for a particular number of people—but an ever-increasing, enlarging circle of people—that we “Be one.”

I am praying not only for these disciples but also for all who will ever believe in me through their message. I pray that they will all be one, just as you and I are one. —John 17.20, 21 NLT

I recently finished Gregory Boyle’s book Tattoos On The Heart: The Power Of Boundless Compassion. He is a Jesuit priest, and founder of Homeboy Industries—a gang intervention program located in the Boyle Heights neighborhood in Los Angeles, the gang capital of the world.

The final chapter of his book is titled: Kinship. The following are excerpts…

_________________________________

Mother Teresa diagnosed the world’s ills in this way: we’ve just “forgotten that we belong to each other.” Kinship is what happens to us when we refuse to let that happen.

No daylight to separate—just “us.” Exactly what God had in mind.

Often we strike the high moral distance that separates “us” from “them,” and yet it is God’s dream come true when we recognize that there exists no daylight between us. Serving others is good. It’s a start. But it’s just the hallway that leads to the Grand Ballroom: Kinship—not serving the other, but being one with the other. Jesus was not “a man for others” – He was one with them. There is a world of difference in that.

No daylight separates us.

Only kinship. Inching ourselves closer to create a community of kinship such that God might recognize it. Soon we imagine, with God, this circle of compassion. Then we imagine no one standing outside of that circle, moving ourselves closer to the margins so that the margins themselves will be erased.

The wrong idea has taken root in the world. And the idea is this: there might be lives out there that matter less than other lives.

We stand there with those whose dignity has been denied. We locate ourselves with the poor and the powerless and the voiceless. At the edges, we join the easily despised and the readily left out. We stand with the demonized so that the demonizing will stop. We situate ourselves right next to the disposable so that the day will come when we stop throwing people away.

Kinship is what God presses us on to.

_________________________________

Solidarity.

This is exactly what God has done for us.

And it is exactly what he wants from us—that we stand with others, declaring…

Your problem is my problem.

If we don’t, we have a powerless religion—and we are just full of hot air.

Anyone who sets himself up as “religious” by talking a good game is self-deceived. This kind of religion is hot air and only hot air. —James 1.26 MSG

Words aren’t enough. Simply praying that hurts would be healed and the hungry would be fed just doesn’t cut it. We must stand with the hurting and the hungry in solidarity because they are “us” and this is our problem.

Isn’t it obvious that God-talk without God-acts is outrageous nonsense? —James 2.17 MSG

Pure and genuine religion in the sight of God the Father means caring for orphans and widows in their distress. —James 1.27 NLT

In God’s family, the orphans are our children and the widows are our mothers. They are “us.”

Wrapping up, just a little more from Gregory Boyle’s book…

The strategy of Jesus is not centered in taking the right stand on issues, but rather in standing in the right place—with the outcast and those relegated to the margins. Compassion is always, at its most authentic, about a shift from the cramped world of self-preoccupation into a more expansive place of fellowship, of true kinship.

 

imagine life overflowing 2013 work no 2