Personal Authenticity and Spiritual Worldview
August 28, 2009
Filed under Bible, Biblical Worldview, Change Your Life, Christian Living, Christian Mission and Calling, Christianity, Church, Church Renewal, Church and Culture, Compassion, Contemplative Spirituality, Creation Centered Spirituality, Discipleship, Emerging Christianity, God's Kingdom, Grace, Holy Spirit, Identity In Christ, Incarnation, Inner Light, Issues in Transformation, Jesus, Jesus' Teaching, Kingdom of God, Mainline Denominations, Ministry, Mission and Calling, Morality and Values, Mystical Experience, Obedience, Paul's Teachings, Personal Discipline, Personal Growth, Personal Renewal, Renewal of the Mind, Sacred Character, Spiritual Disciplines, Spiritual Formation, Spiritual Practices, Worldview
Tags: Authentic Personhood, Biblical Living, Christian Living, Discipleship, Integrity, Jesus, Jesus' Teaching, Spiritual Formation, Spiritual Values
L. Dwight Turner
Spiritual transformation is not so much a process of creating a “new you” – but instead, is about becoming the “real you.” As we increasingly grow “in Christ” we are led by the Holy Spirit into a deeper level of self-evaluation and, as the Spirit reveals to us both our strong and weak points, we gain understanding into who we are and why we do what we do. It is sometimes a painful process as we begin to see who and what we are behind the various masks we create. Still, this is a part of the process that we must undergo if we are to become useful vessels in God’s kingdom.
In essence, it is all about becoming a person of “authenticity.” An authentic person is a person who is guileless and consistently exhibits impeccable integrity. If more of us displayed just these traits, an absence of guile and consistent integrity, think of how different life would be. Wouldn’t things be more pleasurable and less taxing emotionally if we consistently dealt with people who are trustworthy and responsible?
You see, that is exactly what would happen if we developed enough authenticity to operate without guile and lack of integrity. We could count on others being worthy of our trust and we could also reasonably expect them to do what they said they were going to do.
Many of you must be thinking that this is both naïve and unrealistic. In the real world where “look out for No. One” is the most fundamental moral principle, to think that people can be trusted or that we can expect them to be responsible is nothing more than pie-in-the-sky idealism. This is certainly a viable response, at least on the surface of things. However, I think we need to take a deeper look.
Think of it like this – if we can never expect people to become better than what the currently are, why bother? The fact is, people can become better, a good deal better. Spiritual growth is not only possible, it is practical and furthermore, we live in a universe that is both evolving and purposeful. As integral parts of that evolving universe, we humans, as a whole, are also subject to what amounts to a universal law: something either grows or it dies. As we look about the created order, we can see this principle at work. The minute something stops growing, it begins the process of disintegration. God created a purposeful world and that purpose is continuing to unfold. As part of that purposeful creation, we, too, must continue to grow.
I am always amazed at those people who contend that spiritual formation and the classical spiritual disciplines of the Christian faith are not “biblical.” The fact is, if we didn’t need to grow spiritually, we wouldn’t need a Bible. Further, the notion that we can do nothing to improve ourselves is, in my mind, the worst form of heresy. Not only does it confuse justification with sanctification, but it also slanders the consistent teaching of Jesus, Paul, and Peter. Moreover, it ignores the biblical fact that Jesus, Peter, Paul, and all the rest – prayed, fasted, meditated, and practiced spiritual disciplines such as solitude, celebration, and especially, selfless service to others.
At the end of the day, the purpose of spiritual transformation is to become more authentic and humankind is in the process, sometimes slowly and certainly with pockets of resistance, becoming more authentic.
If we are to, indeed, become more authentic persons the obvious question becomes, from a spiritual standpoint: How do I become more authentic?
Chances are if you ask this question of a dozen different people, you will get 12 different answers, depending on the spiritual framework or tradition a person identifies with and advocates. Still, I think it is vital that we find at least a few universal principles that will help us answer this important question. Regardless of our spiritual tradition, I tend to think we can begin our journey toward authenticity by laying the proper groundwork and this fundamental task is accomplished through the establishment of moral integrity filtered through a well-thought-out and internalized worldview.
Authentic personhood and its foundational spirituality begin and end with personal morality. As I have expressed in other writings, our own system of personal values and morals should serve as the foundation stone for our lives. For me, this means that I have to have a clearly defined worldview and, as part of that worldview, clarity of vision in terms of what is right and wrong. My personal value system serves as my North Star, guiding my actions and fostering better decision making as well as personal integrity. My personal worldview and its component system of morality serves as a matrix through which not only are decisions made, but also, a filter to determine and evaluate how disciplined I actually am. How consistent am I in terms of keeping my behavior in line with my system of personal morality?
A further connection between personal values and my overall worldview is the ability to judge behaviors, feelings, and thoughts in relation to my worldview. Is a particular action, for example, conducive to living by my code of ethics? Will a particular action or decision move me toward the goals that flow out of my worldview? In this sense, is a specific course of action productive or counter-productive in reaching my goals and manifesting my purpose and vision? In this sense, our worldview becomes the matrix through which we can filter our thoughts, feelings, actions, and the events we encounter in our daily lives.
As we have seen, the presence of an internalized system of values and moral integrity, coupled with and flowing from a well-reasoned, cogent worldview are necessary if we are to mature as authentic persons. All of these things, taken together, are intimately connected with one another and form a kind of “spiritual hologram.” By this I mean that each component, the value system, moral integrity, reasoned worldview, and authentic personhood, contains all the elements of the other components.
Granted, putting together a workable worldview involves dealing with intellectual abstractions, but even these cognitive pursuits have their base in every day living. For it is our worldview that gives our lives meaning, purpose, and direction. Further, it is our worldview that forms the basis for our decision making process. Few things are more “down to earth” than these issues.
Authentic personhood, personal responsibility, trustworthiness, and the other spiritual traits we have discussed all flow from the common source of moral integrity and this foundational integrity is anchored in our worldview. Without a worldview, we have no compass to guide our actions – no North Star to serve as a reference point as we attempt to navigate the uncharted waters of our current cultural drift. Using another analogy, it is like weightlessness. Using the metaphor of gravity, Elisabeth Elliot speaks to the importance of our calling to discipleship:
In space, astronauts experience the misery of having no reference point, no force that draws them to the center. The effort of performing ordinary activities without the help of that pull is often vastly greater than it would be under normal conditions (try pouring a glass of water, eating a sunny-side-up egg, or turning a screwdriver – water will not fall, the egg will not stay on your fork, the screwdriver will not revolve; you will). Where there is no “moral gravity” – that is, no force that draws us to the center – there is spiritual weightlessness. We float on feelings that will carry us where we never meant to go; we bubble with emotional experiences that we often take for spiritual ones; and we are puffed up with pride. Instead of seriousness, there is foolishness. Instead of gravity, flippancy. Sentimentality takes the place of theology. Our reference point will never serve to keep our feet on solid rock, for our reference point, until we answer God’s call, is merely ourselves. We cannot possibly tell which end is up. Paul calls them fools who “…measure themselves by themselves, to find in themselves their own standard of comparison.”
From what we have covered in this article, it should be apparent that we, as both a culture and a spiritual tradition, need more people who exhibit authentic personhood, personal integrity, and purposeful living. In fact, it is around such people that the emerging forms of the Body of Christ must be built. With Christ as the cornerstone and authentic people as the foundation, the church can not only survive – it can come alive and thrive.
© L.D. Turner 2009
Full Service Christianity: A Prophetic Call
August 19, 2009
Filed under Bible, Bible Study, Biblical Worldview, Change Your Life, Christian Kindness, Christian Living, Christian Mission and Calling, Church Renewal, Compassion, Discipleship, Emerging Christianity, Enthusiasm, Evangelism, Fruit of the Spirit, God's Kingdom, God's Story, Gospel, Grace, Holy Spirit, Identity In Christ, Incarnation, Jesus, Jesus' Teaching, Kingdom of God, Mission and Calling, Missions, Morality and Values, Obedience, Personal Renewal, Positive Faith, Positive Living, Prophecy, Purpose, Revival, Service, Spiritual Disciplines, Spiritual Formation
Tags: Christian Living, Christianity, Discipleship, Incarnational Christianity, Kingdom of God, Mission, Service, Service to Others
L. Dwight Turner
Imagine for a moment that you are one of Jesus’ twelve disciples and you, your band of rag tag friends, and the Master arrive at the Upper Room after a long, tedious, dusty day going about your business. You sit for a moment to catch your breath and unwind a few moments before you go wash up for the evening meal. You close your eyes for a few minutes, only to feel something or someone taking off your sandals. And to your utter disbelief, kneeling in front of you is the Master Jesus with a basin and a towel.
Never a supporter of lukewarm spirituality, Jesus taught his disciples a clear and concise example of the essence of spirituality: selfless service with a heart of humility. If only more of us, especially those who claim to be followers of Jesus, would take this lesson to heart, our world would have much less pain.
Incarnational Christianity is a faith with a heart of compassion and eyes of discernment, which are able to empathize with those in distress and see a vital need where others see nothing. It is an incarnational Christianity that Jesus described in the 25th chapter of Matthew, in that moving section where he describes the judgment seat and the separation of the sheep and the goats. As followers of the Master, we should always keep these words inscribed on the tablets of our hearts:
Truly I say to you, to the extent that you did it to one of these brothers of mine, even the least of them, you did it to me. (Matthew 25: 40)
I mention all of this because last night I saw an example of a Christian woman going about the business of being the hands, feet, and heart of Jesus. Her name is Margaret and she is now in her 80’s. Last night, one of the local news programs had a short feature on Margaret and the work she is doing. Unheralded and unknown, this octogenarian is an example of what incarnational faith is all about and is surely what the Apostle Paul called a “living epistle.”
Each Friday and Saturday Margaret does what quite a few folks in this part of the country do: she gets up at the crack of dawn and drives around the area visiting yard sales. Here in the South, yard sales, garage sales, and the like are very common and great bargains can be found, if you know where to look and how to negotiate. Margaret spends about four hours each Friday and Saturday shopping for the best bargains she can find.
The items Margaret buys, however, are not for her.
Instead, this spry lady in her 80’s shops for school supplies, backpacks, and clothing for underprivileged children in the local community. She has been doing this for over 40 years and says she has no intention of stopping. Her efforts are even more remarkable, considering the last two years have not been kind to Margaret. She has watched her husband and two children die slow, agonizing deaths from terminal illnesses.
Margaret’s efforts on behalf of the poor children in her community have gone largely unnoticed, except for the families that receive her help. According to her pastor, even most members of the congregation where she attends church are unaware of her activities.
Margaret is an example of what Christ was talking about when he gave that teaching about “doing it to the least of these.” This elderly lady is an inspiration and a blessing to those honored to know her and she is what incarnational Christianity is all about.
Incarnational Christianity is what James was talking about when he defined religion that was pure and undefiled. What did he say? Something about visiting widows and orphans, I think. Incarnational Christianity is what the prophet Isaiah, centuries before Jesus walked with us in the flesh, describes when he said:
Is this not the fast which I chose,
To loosen the bonds of wickedness,
To undo the bands of the yoke,
And let the oppressed go free
And break every yoke?
Is it not to divide your bread with the hungry,
And bring the homeless poor in the house;
When you see the naked, to cover him;
And not to hide yourself from your own flesh?
Then your light will break out like the dawn,
And your recovery will speedily spring forth;
And your righteousness will go before you;
The glory of the Lord will be your rear guard.
Then you will call, and the Lord will answer;
You will cry, and he will say, “Here I am.”
If you remove the yoke from your midst,
The pointing of the finger, and speaking wickedness,
And if you give yourself to the hungry,
And satisfy the desire of the afflicted,
Then your light will rise in the darkness
And your gloom will become like mid-day.
And the Lord will continually guide you,
And satisfy your desire in scorched places,
And give strength to your bones;
And you will be like a watered garden,
And like a spring of water whose waters do not fail.
And those from among you will rebuild the ancient ruins;
You will raise up the age-old foundations;
And you will be called the repairer of the breach,
The restorer of streets in which to dwell.
(Isa. 58: 6-12 NAS)
As I look around the globe these days, whether it be a few blocks from my home here in Tennessee or halfway around the world in China, where my wife is from, I see one glaring similarity. We need more people like Margaret – people with a heart of compassion and eyes of discernment. We need more people with a proactive commitment to live the teachings of Jesus, rather than pay lip service to the faith by warming a pew with their overly ample rear ends once a week. We need a genuine faith of service and compassion, a faith that is, in the final analysis, obedient to the call of Jesus. Our world and our churches can no longer afford a counterfeit Christianity that blows a lot of hot air about social, hot-button issues while two kids down the street go without breakfast and sleep with rats the size of Dachshunds. At the end of the day, my friends, we need a faith that is authentic. Larry Crabb, in his foreword to Siang-Yang Tan’s excellent book Full Service, makes the following cogent remarks about Christian servanthood:
True servanthood, the opposite of self-serve Christianity, grows out of a human spirit filled with God’s Spirit…..Self-serve Christianity, our pervasive perversion of the real thing, not only accommodates the flesh, it attempts to socialize it with external goodness and then pass it off as spiritual maturity. Beneath so much of what looks like good Christian living is the stubborn attitude that thinks God really exists to serve us. His pleasure isn’t the point. Ours is. And we think there’s a more direct and immediate way to secure our well-being than to live for his glory. Our felt desires now fill the spotlight. Our needs have assumed greater priority than his pleasure.
As I look around the world, including the church, and look into people’s hearts, including mine, I see no worse evil than self-obsession. It’s the root of every other expression of evil…And I see no greater battle in the regenerate human soul than the too often hidden conflict between self-obsession and God-obsession. It shows up in every relationship, every conversation, every sentence. And I believe that the only path to real victory in this fierce battle is to become true servants.
Crabb’s words are perhaps hard to take, but they are true and they are prophetic. And it is this very kind of prophetic voice we in the Body of Christ need now, more than ever. We need to be called back to the important business of the church. We need to be called back to Christian servanthood in the manner and model of the Savior himself. In essence, we need today’s prophetic voices to consistently call us back to our kingdom mission. And what is that mission? The answer is simple, really, and there is no need to complicate it with theological nitpicking or rhetorical cleverness. Why don’t we, following the example of the Master we profess to serve, state our mission just as he did?
The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me,
Because the Lord has anointed me to preach good tidings to the poor.
He has sent me to heal the brokenhearted,
To proclaim liberty to the captives,
And the opening of the prison to those who are bound.
To proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord,
And the day of vengeance of our God;
To comfort all who mourn,
To console those who mourn in Zion,
To give them beauty for ashes,
The oil of joy for mourning,
The garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness;
(Isa. 61: 1-3 NKJV)
One of the most encouraging signs of life in the church is the large number of younger Christians that are embracing a wider social agenda. Whereas issues like family values and pro-life issues remain highly important, these energetic believers have a less myopic view of our society and the long-standing problems that just won’t go away. What we are witnessing, and again it is very encouraging and vivifying for the Church as a whole, is nothing less that a rekindling of the social consciousness of a faith tradition that was born out of the compassion that God felt for his fallen and rebellious creation. I use the word “rekindling” because this tradition of selfless service is nothing new to Christianity. It is, as Michael Gerson said in an article in Newsweek way back in November, 2006:
A politically progressive evangelicalism is not an innovation, it is a revival; not a fresh track in the snow, but a rutted path of American history.
I pray daily for those front-line workers who are on the streets and in the fields, everywhere giving flesh to the compassionate grace that this faith calls them to. May they be blessed in every way as they, like their Master, carry forward the tradition of the towel and the basin.
© L.D. Turner 2009/All Rights Reserved
In Defense of Bishop Spong
July 9, 2009
Filed under Apologetics, Bible, Change Your Life, Christian Mission and Calling, Christianity, Church, Church Renewal, Church and Culture, Compassion, Cosmic Christ, Creation Centered Spirituality, Culture, Emerging Christianity, Global Church, God's Love, God's Story, Gospel, Grace, Issues in Transformation, Jesus, Jesus' Teaching, Kingdom of God
Tags: Apologetics, Bishop John Shelby Spong, Christianity, Discipleship, Liberal Theology, Practical Theology, Progressive Christianity, Theology
L. Dwight Turner
Few names can conjure up negative responses as that of retired Episcopalian Bishop John Shelby Spong. One of the leading advocates of contemporary liberal Christianity, Spong’s ideas have sent more than his share of conservatives and fundamentalists into fits of apoplexy.
Although I find myself disagreeing with some of Spong’s more radical ideas about the faith in general and about Jesus in particular, I find that my reaction to the writings of the good bishop to be less vitriolic. In fact, I find much of what Spong has to say to be both enlightening and highly pertinent. Further, I find Spong to be a man who thoroughly believes what he says and who has a genuine affection for the faith.
It is for these reasons that I encourage those readers who have an open mind to read the works of John Shelby Spong and to give this man a fair shake when it comes to his theology as well as his prescriptions for the church. Personally, I think Spong has much to offer the Body of Christ, if we will just put aside some of the things we have “heard” about him and discover for ourselves what he has to say.
For example, in the passage below Spong discusses how his concept of prayer has changed as he has adopted what he calls a “post-theistic” concept of God. On a personal level, he specifically discusses how his daily two-hour prayer sessions have been transformed into a far wider venue:
As I moved beyond theism to a post-theistic understanding of God, I discovered that my commitment to starting my day with this focused two-hour time slot did not change, but my understanding of what I was doing did – and dramatically. It made perhaps a 180-degree turn. The primary shift came in what I thought the prayer part of my day was. It ceased to be identified with these first two hours each morning and shifted to embrace the balance of the day. My actions, my engagement with people, the facing of concrete issues – all these became for me the real time of prayer. My prayer came to be identified with my living, my loving, my being, my meaning, my confronting, my struggles for justice, my desire to be an agent of the world’s transformation. That is where I met and communed with God. God was no longer found for me in the quiet places of retreat; now God was in the hurly-burly of a busy and sometimes troubling life. God was found not in the stable rocks but in the rushing rapids.
(from A New Christianity for a New World)
I find nothing in these words offensive or heretical. It seems the only folks that find the bulk of Spong’s work to be heresy are those believers, heretics themselves, who hold to the notion that the Bible is the Word of God and worthy of worship. I find bibliolatry to be a particularly vile form of apostasy, and a major cause of division and spiritual paralysis in the church. It is certainly far more deadly than what Spong is talking about.
(to be continued)
© L. Dwight Turner 2009/All Rights Reserved
An Effective Church: Consecrated, Gathered, and Synoptic
July 5, 2009
Filed under Apostle Paul, Biblical Worldview, Christian Education, Christian Kindness, Christian Living, Christian Mission and Calling, Christianity, Church, Church Renewal, Church and Culture, Clergy, Compassion, Culture, Discipleship, Emerging Christianity, Evangelism, Fruit of the Spirit, God's Kingdom, God's Love, God's Story, Gospel, Grace, Incarnation, Issues in Transformation, Jesus, Jesus' Teaching, Kingdom of God, Ministry, Mission and Calling, Missions, Morality and Values, Paul's Teachings, Personal Discipline, Renewal of the Mind, Service, Spiritual Disciplines, Spiritual Formation, Spiritual Quotations, Spirituality
Tags: Christian Discipleship, Christianity, Church Renewal, Effective Church, Emerging Church, Evangelism, Richard Foster, Service
L. Dwight Turner
Richard Foster, author of that landmark book on the classical spiritual disciplines, entitled, Celebration of Discipline, shares how he was honored with the opportunity and privilege to go about teaching and sharing his knowledge of the spiritual disciplines. In a subsequent article entitled, “A Renewed People for Our Time” Foster describes some of the realities he discovered regarding areas of spiritual deficiency among sincere Christians.
Briefly stated, Foster says that he saw three basic areas of spiritual deficiency and these were:
People Were Trying Rather Than Training
People Were Scattered Rather Than Gathered
Vision of People Was Myopic Rather Than Synoptic
I can say without reservation that over the years our work at LifeBrook International has borne out the validity of Foster’s assessment. We, too, have seen this trio of spiritual short falling and the subsequent litany of spiritual maladies that flow in its train. And like Foster, this has been an area of great frustration and disappointment.
I saw these things and I can’t tell you how discouraging this was to me. These good people honest people, sincere people were like sheep without a shepherd. And it led me to a period where I stopped all speaking and all writing. When I entered this time I did not know if I would ever write or speak again. I actually thought I would not.
Experience here at LifeBrook, especially in relation to intensive training in spiritual discipline, has revealed what I find at the core of the “trying rather than training” issue. People are initially well-meaning and the first fruits of their pursuits of spiritual disciplines tend to reward this initial burst of commitment with positive results. However, we have seen that many of these sincere seekers fail to understand the depth of our problem (Calvin would call it complete depravity, although I would not). As spiritual practice deepens our level of commitment must also take deeper root, otherwise we cannot bear up under the intensity of those unexpected hobgoblins that tend to rise up out of the dark silence of contemplation.
In actuality, these encounters are not all that bad and, in fact, can be both constructive and healing. The problem is, it seems, is that most of the folks who take up this disciplined lifestyle are either ill-informed or ill-prepared for some of the things they will encounter along the Yellow Brick Road. Lions and Tigers and Bears – (Oh My!) – seem to be the least of our worries. John of the Cross termed one of the stages of the mystical life “the dark night of the soul” for good reason.
Secondly, when a person is sincere about becoming a true spiritual aspirant rather than a pew warmer or pot luck patron, he or she is embarking upon a path that can be isolated and lonely. To emulate the lifestyle, the priorities, and the spiritual values of Jesus is not in keeping with mainstream American life, no matter what the Religious Right may tell you. To be like Jesus is to be weird, radical, and set apart.
To be like Jesus is, well, to use the correct biblical term, to be holy.
The following quotation by Houston Smith, although somewhat lengthy, is highly pertinent and illustrates vividly just how out of the box this business of Christ-following is:
…we have heard Jesus’ teachings so often that their edges have been worn smooth, dulling their glaring subversiveness. If we could recover their original impact, we too would be startled. Their beauty would not paper over the fact that they are “hard sayings,” presenting a scheme of values so counter to the usual as to shake us like the seismic collision of tectonic plates…We are told that we are not to resist evil but to turn the other cheek. The world assumes that evil must be resisted by every means available. We are told to love our enemies and bless those who curse us. The world assumes that friends are to be loved and enemies hated. We are told that the sun rises on the just and the unjust alike. The world considers this to be indiscriminating; it would like to see dark clouds withholding sunshine from evil people. We are told that outcasts and harlots enter the kingdom of God before many who are perfunctorily righteous. Unfair, we protest; respectable people should head the procession. We are told that the gate to salvation is narrow. The world would prefer it to be wide. We are told to be as carefree as birds and flowers. The world counsels prudence. We are told that it is more difficult for the rich to enter the kingdom than for a camel to pass through a needle’s eye. The world honors wealth. We are told that the happy people are those who are meek, who weep, who are merciful and pure in heart. The world assumes that it is the rich, the powerful, and the wellborn who should be happy. In all, a wind of freedom blows through these teachings that frightens the world and makes us want to deflect their effect by postponement – not yet, not yet! H.G. Wells was evidently right: either there was something mad about this man, or our hearts are still too small for his message.
To truly follow such a renegade can be a lonely enterprise. No wonder Jesus told his potential followers to count the cost before investing.
Finally, Foster’s observations regarding the myopic vision of many Christians is quite astute and based on the undeniable reality that many sincere Christians are raised in myopic traditions that see one aspect of the gospel message to the exclusion of others. The resultant lack of unity and commonality of purpose is obvious and pandemic. For too many years, charismatic, evangelical, incarnational, and social gospel traditions have come close to shunning each other, rather than utilizing their unique differences to augment and balance each others efforts in working to establish Christ’s kingdom here on earth.
Fortunately, the winds of change are blowing and seem to be picking up velocity. On both individual and corporate levels, the Body of Christ is beginning to grasp the reality that if one truly desires a deeper walk with the Master, it is going to require major life changes and shifts in perspective. The 21st Century church can no longer afford to offer up its traditional menu and hope to engage a culture that is far more sophisticated than it was just 20 years ago. Nor can the church put forth any variant of what J.I. Packer so wisely called “hot tub religion” and count on any degree of success except maybe among a few disillusioned prosperity gospel-teers.
No, any significant movement in the church that has a chance to succeed must begin with having potential adherents count the cost of what they are getting into. Only then can a realistic decision for Christ be made and only then can a genuine discipleship commence. We don’t need what many in South Florida call an “Everglades Christianity,” – which is 50 miles wide and an inch deep. Today, more than ever, we need a Consecrated Christianity, with educated rear ends warming the pews – educated in what it really means (and costs) to follow the Master.
Further, these newly committed and consecrated Christ-followers must band together in commonality of purpose. It should no longer be necessary for a sincere Christian to walk an incarnational path of worship, love, and service while feeling like the Lone Ranger. It is time for consecrated Christians to gather together in oneness, unity, and shared mission. And with this commonality of purpose comes a sharing of vision – a synoptic vision that embraces and welcomes all aspects of the Christian faith. There is great unity in our diversity, if only we would lower our noses long enough to catch a glimpse of the brother and sister standing next to us.
We are the church, the Bride of Christ – consecrated, gathered, and synoptic. If we truly work for, embrace, and ultimately manifest this vision for the church, nothing can stop us. And the Gates of Hell can’t stand against us.
© L. D. Turner 2009/ All Rights Reserved
Wise Words for Today
June 23, 2009
Filed under Change Your Life, Christian Kindness, Christian Living, Christian Mission and Calling, Christianity, Church, Church and Culture, Compassion, Discipleship, Discipline of Noticing, Emerging Christianity, God's Kingdom, God's Love, God's Story, Gospel, Grace, Holy Spirit, Issues in Transformation, Jesus, Jesus' Teaching, Kingdom of God, Mind of Christ, Wise Words for Today, Words To Ponder
Tags: Change Your Life, Christian Living, Compassion, Gary Thomas, Spiritual Quotations, Wise Words for Today
Have you ever offered your eyes to God? Have you ever asked him to pour his wisdom into your perception, his perspective into each gaze? Have you ever stepped back and prayed, “God, how does this look to you?” If you do, you’ll never look at others the same way again…..Without God’s eyes, people become invisible to me. The guy shining my shoes at the airport, the woman cleaning up my hotel room, the cashier at the grocery store, the police officer directing traffic in the rain – my human heart has little room for the barely seen. Not God’s! His heart overflows with concern for their welfare, and he wants to pass on to us the same concern and compassion.
Gary Thomas
(from The Beautiful Fight)
Incarnational Living
June 19, 2009
Filed under Apostle Paul, Bodhisattva, Change Your Life, Christian Living, Christian Mission and Calling, Christianity, Church, Church Renewal, Church and Culture, Compassion, Creation Centered Spirituality, Culture, Discipleship, Emerging Christianity, Enthusiasm, Evangelism, Global Church, God's Kingdom, God's Story, Gospel, Holy Spirit, Incarnation, Issues in Transformation, Jesus, Jesus' Teaching, Kingdom of God, Ministry, Mission and Calling, Missions, Morality and Values, Obedience, Optimism, Paul's Teachings, Personal Discipline, Personal Growth, Quaker Spirituality, Revival, Service, Spiritual Disciplines, Spiritual Formation, Trusting God, United Methodist Church, Words To Ponder
L. Dwight Turner
If we aspire to live an incarnational lifestyle, the starting point must be with Jesus. Jesus gives us the perfect prototype for incarnational living. We can learn so much for studying the life of the Master and through the blessings of the age in which we live, we have so many resources at our very fingertips that such study can be as broad and as deep as we wish. However, there is one caveat – one central fact that we have to understand and act on before we can become immersed in our study of the incarnational lifestyle of Jesus Christ. The central fact we must address and internalize may come as a surprise, but if you are a renegade, a radical, and a ragamuffin, it should not catch you off guard. If we want to truly become incarnational Christians we must:
Forget everything we have ever been taught about Jesus Christ.
………………………………………………..********………………………………………
To this you were called, because Christ suffered for you, leaving you an example, that you should follow in his steps. [1 Peter 2:21]
Follow my example, as I follow the example of Christ. [1 Cor. 11:1]
Jesus boldly commanded his listeners to take up their crosses and follow him. In the scriptural passages above, both Peter and Paul stress our divine calling to emulate the example of Jesus. This goes far deeper than the “What Would Jesus Do?” teaching of a few years ago. What Jesus, Peter, and Paul are telling us is that we not only need to behave in the ways that Jesus did, we need to become the type of person Jesus was.
Although this teaching may seem a bit overwhelming, it is what it is. Just because something seems exceedingly difficult for us to pull off; just because something seems beyond the pale of possibility for us to achieve – does not mean that the Master really didn’t mean what he said, or perhaps meant something else. To assume such a thing, and believe me, many Christians believe just that, is a mistake of tragic proportions. So right here from the get go know this: Jesus, Peter, Paul, and the Apostle John all meant exactly what they said about these things. There are no hidden, arcane Gnostic secrets here. We are to work diligently to become the kind of person Jesus was and is.
Michael Frost, in his wonderful book entitled, Exiles, says that in emulating Jesus in living an incarnational lifestyle, we should begin by following his attitudes regarding the world and the ego. Frost says we begin with a pair of principles that helped Jesus inaugurate and perpetuate his mission. These principles involve his ongoing commitment to identification and relinquishment.
…to follow Jesus’ example means that we should share his profoundly humble identification with sinful humankind. Second, those of us who wish to emulate Jesus should be aware of his equally humble willingness to empty himself and make himself nothing for the sake of God’s redemptive purposes…..
Back in the mid-90’s I was involved in the development and implementation of a radical and innovative program to address the issue of homelessness in Dade County, Florida. Appropriately named Community Partnership for Homeless, Inc. – our goal was to open three “Homeless Assistance Centers” at strategic locations in the Metro Miami area. As the group’s name implies, the concept of partnership was at the core of the entire project. One such partnership was between CPHI and the local faith community. Local churches signed on to provide meals for the residents of the Homeless Assistance Center and, in addition to providing and preparing the meal, would also serve the food.
The various churches were an integral part of the success of the homeless project and continue to make positive contributions in the present. I noticed several interesting things as I often welcomed the church members to the center and helped them get started in the kitchen. Often, these volunteer cooks, servers, and dishwashers served out of a genuine heart of love. Their actions spoke of a real sense of partnership with Jesus, the Master they gladly served. The expressions on their faces, the tones of their voices, and even the way they carried themselves all flowed easily from a genuine heart of Christian compassion.
Other groups, however, seemed to have a more mixed bag of motives. Rather than exhibiting behaviors consistent with a heart-felt desire to be servants of the Light, these folks seemed like something less sublime was spurring them on. Conversations with these Christians, most of them well-meaning and genuine, often revealed that they were serving out of feelings of pity, condescension, and even guilt. The difference between these believers and those described in the preceding paragraph was both drastic and noticeable. You can imagine which group had the more positive interactions with the residents. Further, those who brought a genuine heart of proactive compassion to the kitchen and dining room were more likely to gain the trust and the ears of those residents who desired assistance in finding a meaningful relationship with God.
Experience in a wide variety of service settings has consistently revealed that feelings like pity, guilt, and other negative emotions toward the recipients of Christian service provides little in the way of positive impact. Conversely, these feelings tend to create what we in the field of sociology term “barriers of resistance” on the part of those receiving assistance. Again, let’s listen to Michael Frost:
Pity, condescension, or paternalism misses the mark; only a compassion that acts is acceptable in incarnational ministry.
Frost then goes on to list four central aspects of the incarnational Christian witness:
An active sharing of life, participating in the fears, the frustrations, and afflictions of the host community. (Here it should be noted that for Frost, we Christians now live in a post-Christian world and we are therefore “exiles.” The culture at large is the “host community.”)
- An employment of the language and thought forms of those with whom we seek to share Jesus.
- A preparedness to go to the people, not expecting them to come to us.
- A confidence that the gospel can be communicated by ordinary means, through acts of servanthood, loving relationships, good deeds; in this way the exile becomes an extension of the incarnation in our time.
Frost’s third point is perhaps the most telling and the most crucial. The Body of Christ can no longer afford to remain aloof from the struggles of the real world and the all-too-real people who live in it. We must go out to these people because they are not going to come to us. More to the point, we need to go to these people because that is exactly what Christ did. Again, the Master set us the perfect example of what it is we are to do as “Followers of the Way.”
The old Bob Dylan song repeats the refrain, “The times, they are a’changin’.” Indeed they are my friend and more significantly, they already have.
© L.D. Turner 2009/All Rights Reserved