• Our hope-filled future is bound up in sharing the story of Jesus, in discipling others, in bringing those disciples together into communities of believers, and in developing and releasing those believers to create other communities... till Jesus the King comes again!

How to not let the Gospel change our hearts

As I wrote last week, complacency can easily blur our vision, rob us of the joy we have in Christ and make us weary and tired saints.control

However, there are other ways which inhibit the impact of the Gospel in our lives; that cause us to be unconsciously learning day by day how not to let the Gospel change our lives.

While sitting with a colleague in the emergency room on Monday, he made a simple yet insightful comment as he thanked me for driving him to the hospital.  He said, “It’s always easier to do things for others than to have to depend upon others for help.”  None of us would ever say it outright, but we prefer to be the givers rather than the receivers. We long to be in control of situations because the search for power over our world runs deep in our hearts.  We enjoy feeding on ‘self’ more than on Christ.  Even in our desire to minister to another may lurk a drive to put oneself forward rather than the Father.

But he said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.”  Therefore I will boast all the more gladly of my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may rest upon me.”

Marva Dawn, in commenting on this text in 2 Corinthians 12:9, put it this way: “His (Christ’s) power begins when our power comes to a complete end.”  We can understand this intellectually.  We know that Christ and His power need to be lifted up over ourselves.  However, we can feel ‘power-less’ to actually see any movement on this front.

Part of the answer was right there in the ER.  We were there together.  By being together, we could serve each other. By being together, we could ‘push’ one another towards the only resources we needed, toward the only power that could address our ‘self’ centredness.  We need to loosen our ‘control’ in order to allow God, through others, to remind us of the deep truths of the Gospel for our lives today.

 

Standing at the window of complacency

complacent425I received the note below from a WT colleague in response to my post on “how not to let the Gospel change our hearts”.  I thought it was a powerful reminder of how the Gospel works deeply in our hearts and so I share it with you, with the permission of the author:

 

“Yesterday as I stood at our window I felt a heart of gratitude for the reprieve of the past two weeks. The weather grew a few degrees cooler and a sweet breeze swept into our 37th floor windows. I had been getting so low emotionally due to the heat that it had taken the wind out of my sails and I was left feeling rather defeated and dazed, unable to move forward in any direction that would lead to any productivity.

Then the whirlwind of the holidays came and it forced me to move forward-sweeping me quickly and completely  into ministry hospitality mode; but just two days after Christmas I got sick and had to slow again to a crawl but this crawl was not one of complacency but one of necessity and blessing. I began to rest physically and also rest spiritually. I reached for the Word to find delight. Between resting, reading and good conversations with my husband I began to take a look backwards and forwards. I looked backwards to where I have been this past year in my walk with the Lord and I looked forward to a new place of where I felt the Father longed for me to reside.

Today the heat is back but so is a fresh passion and desire to fall in step with the Father on His Kingdom journey.

I sense God is moving me into something new. I can’t totally place my finger on what this is; but I sense it is a time in my life to go deeper into the Word, and to live in the fullness of the Word of Truth of what I already know and to be watching for whom God will bring my way to live the life of the Gospel with.

Several years ago I felt bound up in the rules of the church that I had grown up in. I was tired of the guilt I felt when I didn’t have my “devotional” time, and then felt God was pleased with me when I  checked off each time I read the Bible and prayed. I knew that time in the Word was needful for my spiritual growth, but I wanted to flee from the oppression I felt of having to earn God’s favor. I remember very clearly making a decision that I would not read my Bible unless my heart hungered and yearned for God.

I can see God smiling at my decision. Over the years I have read the Word and I have read it often. God was faithful to woo me and draw me in to Himself with a hunger for righteousness; but lately, these many years later I have come to a new place of thirst. As I reflect on this past year I praise God that despite my human efforts at trying to quell my legalistic bent- He loves me enough to pour into me a thirst that can only be filled with communion with Him and time spent in His Word.

I resonated deeply with the quote that David R. recently put in his Thoughts Along The Journey.

John Calvin wrote these penetrating words back in the 1500s: “Complacency can exist even without any belief in works.  For many sinners are so drunk with the sweetness of their vices that they think not upon God’s judgment but lie dazed, as it were, in a sort of drowsiness, and do not aspire to the mercy offered to them.  Such sloth is no less to be shaken off than any confidence in ourselves is to be cast away in order that we may without hindrance hasten to Christ, and empty and hungering, may be filled with his good things.”

As we take a quick glimpse back at this past year and place our gaze forward for what 2014 holds, I wonder where we have become complacent. What areas of our lives have we drowsily gone through the motions but have not experienced the depth of the sweetness of God?  What area of our lives has become rote, where we find that our robotic motions hold no luster of the richness of the Gospel or passion for the lost?

I would urge each of us to ask God to give us a new hunger and thirst for righteousness this year, so that we don’t lose the window into the world in which God has called us to reach. I feel compelled to ask myself and to invite you to ask God to draw each of us out of our complacency and fill us with the sweet-richness of all God longs to show us about Him and to move us in step with His Story and where we fit in this dialog with the world around us.

Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be filled.” Matthew 5:6-16”

How to not let the Gospel change our hearts

We often use the phrase: “Preach the Gospel to oneself” as an encouragement to appropriate anew each day the truth of the Gospel for our lives.  However, as I have been mulling over the Gospel the past few months, I have begun to see a number of ways by which inhibit the impact of the Gospel in our lives.  To put it in other words, we may be unconsciously learning day by day how not to let the Gospel change our lives.Complacency

Upon our return from a recent trip to Australia, I exchanged my summer running gear for my winter running gear, and continued my weekly running cycle.  I did only one run before getting sick.  It wasn’t the flu, but I was dragging and decided to hold off on the running.  One week went by, then two, then three without starting up my running again.  By the fourth week, I was now so out of my cycle that the thought of just getting out the door again in the early AM kept me from running.

Complacency had set in, big time.  Maybe I should say that it crept up on me and once it got a hold, it grew like zucchini in the summer garden.

So can it happen in our spiritual journey.  Complacency, through one means or another, can rob us of the joy we have in Christ and make us weary and tired saints.

John Calvin wrote these penetrating words back in the 1500s: “Complacency can exist even without any belief in works.  For many sinners are so drunk with the sweetness of their vices that they think not upon God’s judgment but lie dazed, as it were, in a sort of drowsiness, and do not aspire to the mercy offered to them.  Such sloth is no less to be shaken off than any confidence in ourselves is to be cast away in order that we may without hindrance hasten to Christ, and empty and hungering, may be filled with his good things.”

What shook me out of my physical complacency was my son-in-law inviting me one day in early January to go running with him. We can be shaken out of our spiritual complacency by allowing others to “preach the Gospel” to us and lead us back to the Father.

My gift to you

CB100380Our family over the past few years has chosen to have each member give a Christmas gift to just one other member in the extended family.  Often we select a theme for those gifts such as music or a donation to a humanitarian aid project.  Lots of time, prayer and energy go into selecting just the ‘right’ gift to offer to that one person.  When we finally exchange our gifts with one another, there is an incredible sense of excitement and joy, in large part because each of us is truly giving something of himself/herself to the other.  All the time, prayer and energy which went into the choice of the gift, finds its fullest expression in the simple joy of giving to another.

At the close of 2013, I wrote: “If there is one heart direction that God desires to characterize us in the coming year, towards which we should strive with all our heart, it should be trust.”

I long for this to be the gift that we give to one another this year!  Obviously, we can’t offer this gift to every member of World Team at one time.  However, we could certainly begin by extending trust to one other fellow worker, colleague or leader.  Imagine the transformation that would occur in our communities if we were to joyfully offer this gift to another, investing the time, prayer and energy into considering how best to share and express that trust with another.

I am always amazed at the creativity that is released when we do such a gift exchange among our family. I am also amazed at how many family members begin thinking about next year’s gift exchange before we have even finished this year.

The gift of trust permeating a community such as ours would release greater creativity, innovation and collaboration.  Then we would truly become a World Team community.

What are we going to do next year?

build trustThis is the time of the year that many of us will reflect on the impact of Gospel in our lives: how Jesus as the “God among us” stirs and transforms our life and work.  It is also the time when many of us will “remember” what God has done over this past year in us and through us.  The goal of that reflection or assessment is to consider what God longs for us to do in the year to come.

I’m not talking about setting New Year’s resolutions, but about establishing one’s heart direction for the coming year.  In other words, thinking how that heart direction might express itself in one’s life and work.  Paraphrasing Galatians 5:6, we could put the question this way: what will faith expressing itself through love look like this year?

As I thought about World Team and what we might do in the coming year, what God longs to do in and through us, a host of words and ideas came to mind.  For example: transformational communities; church multiplication; greater accountability and follow through; delegation; facilitating others in ministry; and deepening relationships between workers.

However, when I asked the question, what will faith expressing itself through love look like, one word, one heart direction rose quickly to the top of the pile.  That word was: trust.

If there is one heart direction that God desires to characterize us in the coming year, towards which we should strive with all our heart, it should be trust.

I recognize that trust can be easily broken, but I often wonder if we prefer to keep people in a low trust or no trust category because it keeps us from the hurt, pain and struggle of engaging that fellow worker again and looking to Christ for the strength and courage to learn to love well and work together more deeply.

Trust may not be easy, but it begins by each of us offering that trust again to one another.

Wise and competent

Old Testament scholar, Gerhard Von Rad once wrote that wisdom means becoming competent with regard to the realities of life: how things really happen, how things really are, and what to do about it.  Wisdom is not just knowing the principles and rules to live by, or to minister by, but it is knowing how to apply biblical principles and values in changing contexts.wisdom1

It involves becoming ‘competent’, that is becoming skilled and experienced, in both character and work.  That dual balance is a necessity for all of us.

The one without the other leaves us limping through our work or creating havoc in our lives and the lives of others.

Solid character, built on the wisdom of God and worked out in community, is essential.  However, solid character with low work competence limits a person’s capacity to influence and train others.

Solid work skills, formed through input and on the ground training, are vital.  However, solid work skills coupled with poor character leads to dangerous contexts that cause negative impact in others’ lives.

Growing in this kind of biblical wisdom involves community.  Just read through the book of Proverbs and you are struck by how often growth in wisdom occurs in a collective or community context.

We all need a community that not only nurtures us, but actually transforms us when it comes to learning and applying of biblical wisdom to our lives and ministries.