tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-39760633105466024672024-03-05T00:12:05.059-06:00The Beggar's TableDespite how good we try to make ourselves look, the truth is we are all really wretched, miserable, poor, and blind. We are all beggars, whether we know it or not. When you boil it down, life is basically one beggar telling another beggar where to find the Bread. Pull up a chair to the table and enjoy the meal.Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.comBlogger27125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-10636074954435968862008-12-01T13:54:00.001-06:002008-12-01T13:55:26.963-06:00Moving In To New DigsThings have been pretty quiet around here lately. Not that I haven't had anything to say - its just that I got tired of running too many blogs, and I got in to some major re-design projects for some websites I run. Most of those re-design projects are winding down. But I was still wondering what to do with my personal blogs and the two people that read them :) So, I decided to condense about 4-5 personal blogs or half-started and abandoned blogs into one blog over at WordPress.com:<br /><br /><a href="http://grandeped.wordpress.com/">Matt's Musings and Meanderings</a><br /><br />WP has a few less features, but cooler looking skins and constant updates. I have placed all of the posts from this blog in to one category, and you can see new posts that fits with this blogs theme by clicking here:<br /><br /><a href="http://grandeped.wordpress.com/category/the-beggars-table/">The Beggar's Table category listing</a><br /><br />Someday soon I may also see if I can get the postings from that category fed in to this blog, just to keep the design up. Until then, enjoy the new digs....Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-84900047455645028852008-07-17T17:00:00.003-05:002008-07-17T17:20:53.877-05:00Diversity is the Spice of LifeWe had a birthday/Ph.D. graduation party for my wife last week, and decided to invite all of friends from all or our various spheres of life. Work, church, other random friends, etc. My wife and I know a diverse group of people. I was kind of glad that the anti-Obama guy didn't ever get in to a conversation with the Obama lover, or the universal-health-care-hater didn't find out that there were Canadians in the room that love the health care in Canada. Although, I would love to see those conversations happen - just not at a birthday party :)<br /><br />Of course, looking at this group of people, and how racially diverse it was in addition to being idealogically and theologically diverse, made me glad to have such cool friends.<br /><br />Of course, I don't think many people in church realize how homogenous the church really is. When I read some blogs about cool, hip, "modern" churches, I get discouraged at how really clueless so many of them are. And they justify what they do in Church by what "non-Christians" tell them after the service... about how cool their service was. I call them the "non-Christian pastoral ego strokers" because, well - that is what they do: tell the pastor that everything they are doing is cool and perfect.<br /><br />The problem is - if they are telling the pastor the truth - wouldn't there be a lot more of them than a handful? I mean... if these "seeker-friendly" churches are getting it so right - wouldn't there be thousands more people coming to church. Because it is so cool?<br /><br />I don't think they realize that these N.C.P.E.S.'s they often have at their services are not as un-churched as they claim to be. You see, they tend to say stuff that is radically different than my real-life non-Christian friends say about the same church services - the ones that go to these churches once and never return. I did some investigative journalism once, and found that many of these N.C.P.E.S.'s are actually professional church visitors. We've all heard of professional church hopers, right? We'll, these N.C.P.E.S.'s are just a step down from that. They go around to all these different churches to feel "positive energy", to encourage the churches that are not that spritiual or Godly (their words, not mine), and then to hit another church the next time. Usually not the next week - just the next month or whever they hear of another feel-good church to go to.<br /><br />Personally, I really don't have a problem with people that do any of that (at least they are going to a church service from time to time) - just the pastors that use these peoples' comments as "proof" that they are doing the right thing in church.<br /><br />That is why I like my church - they are not afraid to tell you what they have done wrong or to try something new even of it is followed by a deafening, uncomfortable silence during the service. They want to give people a chance to speak out scriptures that they feel led to share after worship. And sometimes - no one shares anything. Not very seeker-friendly, but they still try it and I love it.<br /><br />Just rambling now, mainly because I haven't posted in a while.Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-56165890956418854602008-06-03T09:41:00.002-05:002008-06-03T10:04:07.826-05:00That's Not In The Bible? Really?Last night our local news interviewed a relative of one of those prosperity gospel preachers that are currently under investigation. This person works for the famous minister, and I think he was attempting to defend his ministry's position on the whole issue. I have no love for the prosperity gospel at all, but I at least try to give people a fair shake at explaining themselves.<br /><br />That is, if they actually use Biblical sense. You see, so many of these prosperity people like to go with this "having your finances scrutinized by a Senate sub-committee is not in the Bible" routine. I just get so tired of people that justify some modern activity with the reasoning that it is not "in the Bible." "Sending out millions of spam e-mail comments is not prohibited in the Bible, so I don't see what is wrong with it" and other such nonsense. Constitutionally-based democratic governments didn't exist during Biblical times... so of course your aren't going to find senate sub-committees in the Bible. Sheesh.<br /><br />Here is basic "Following Religious Texts 101" for ya - because this would really apply to any religious text and not just the Bible. If you are going to use the Bible for guidance, you are going to have to apply principles that are taught in the Bible and apply them to modern situations - not look for modern situations by name in the ancient text. What does the Bible have to say about relating to the government - any government? Plenty, actually, but I think Jesus pretty much summed it up with this: "Render unto Caesar that which is Caesars." A statement that actually directly deals with your financial records.<br /><br />I hate to break this to prosperity people - but the IRS is not the only agency that can get financial information from an institution (the Department of Labor anyone?). Senate sub-committees can, by law from what I recall, request financial statements. Render unto Caesar, dudes...<br /><br />One thing that really makes me sick is all of this "attack my personal religious beliefs" junk. In other words, the chair of the committee has a problem with the "prosperity gospel", and is attacking them because of that. Grow up already. This one is worse than the "race card" in my book. Any time your religious beliefs have anything to do with accepting money or other donations from people, the government has the right to investigate. I fully believe in that - but I also realize there is no perfect way to do that. But we have to try and find a way to make sure that people are not being taken advantage of.<br /><br />I just don't get how these prosperity gospel people can just skip so many scriptures in the Bible - like go and sell everything you have and give it to the poor and all? Every time Jesus met with a rich person in the Bible, the rich person didn't come away looking too good. You need that private jet to visit 19 countries to spread the Gospel? Really? Too good to actually mingle with real people in coach class? Because it takes a good 100 trips in coach class to even begin to justify the cost of a cheap personal plane.<br /><br />I do need to point out a mis-step that interviewer took last night - one bad question he had. He asked if people would give money to the ministry thinking it would go towards a lavish personal jet instead of going to feed the poor. The problem is - people do give to these ministries knowing that they are supporting a prosperity gospel half the time, so they know full well it goes to pay for mansions and such. Its the other half that don't know better than I am worried about.Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-31392143831922053372008-05-19T16:39:00.004-05:002008-05-19T17:06:46.389-05:00What is False Humility - Really?<span style="font-style: italic;">"This is a song God gave me, because He didn't really like it"<br />- Brian Healy of Dead Artist Syndrome,<br />Cornerstone Festival 2002</span><br /><br />Much has been said over the years about the irritation that some have over musicians and artists claiming that God "gave" them a song or painting or poem or whatever. This is false humility, or so some would claim - because such a bad piece of art could never come from God.<br /><br />I've been wondering - what the heck is false humility anyway? According to Wikipedia, "'false humility' consists of deprecating one's own sanctity, gifts, talents, and accomplishments for the sake of receiving praise or adulation from others." So, in other words, acting humble to get praise from God or people.<br /><br />So what does the Bible say on this subject? When reading <a href="http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Luke%2014:7-11;&version=31;">Luke 14:10</a> today, I had to do a double take on it: "<span id="en-NIV-25556" class="sup"></span>But when you are invited, take the lowest place, so that when your host comes, he will say to you, 'Friend, move up to a better place.' Then you will be honored in the presence of all your fellow guests."<br /><br />Is it just me, or does the Bible appear to encourage us to take a humble place just so that we will be exalted? Well, yeah - it kind of does. I searched through the Bible, and found that the term 'false humility' only appears in two places - Colossians 2:18 and 2:23. The problem is that in those two verses, the word false is not technically there. Some translations put the word false in there because the context implies it - but that is a controversial decision for many. And to be honest, neither of these verses really give a good definition of what 'false humility' really is.<br /><br />I think I like the Literal Version's translation of Luke 14:10 a little better: "...so that when he who has invited you may come, he may say to you..." In other words, you humble yourself so that you might get exalted - but there are no promises. But you still humble yourself anyways.<br /><br />If false humility is such a bad thing - wouldn't there be more in the Bible about it? Obviously, the Bible encourages us to be humble, so you don't want to be false at anything the Bible encourages us to do. But such an elaborate definition as one finds in Wikipedia just seems to go waaayyy beyond just being falsely humble.<br /><br />I've never felt comfortable with labeling certain actions so absolutely as "false" humility. To<br />me - false means to not be true. In other words, false humility - to me - means that you are acting humble but you really aren't. Of course, some people are really good actors... so there is no way to really tell who is "acting" humble. Only God would know. So why do we like to get so irritated at people that we think are "acting" humble? Especially when we have no way of really telling - even if we go by Wikipedia's definition?<br /><br />Maybe its our own lack of humility that is convicting us?Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-91643597114113542652008-05-12T11:34:00.004-05:002008-11-06T21:30:02.027-06:00The Man In White<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiz6K-9nR7tGuZaNjtbtS4JYdRCwdMbQxT5FY12VrL8SCiqLzjmwpMehbVi9ThpbKXYDwo8wIC4foHA94mAXUabx9IwWRzqgMPPMSCqGhk3qh8G03PXE0965wEJWm1XrH5cwSbwXGXMIME/s1600-h/cashwhite.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiz6K-9nR7tGuZaNjtbtS4JYdRCwdMbQxT5FY12VrL8SCiqLzjmwpMehbVi9ThpbKXYDwo8wIC4foHA94mAXUabx9IwWRzqgMPPMSCqGhk3qh8G03PXE0965wEJWm1XrH5cwSbwXGXMIME/s320/cashwhite.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5199533862305538498" border="0" /></a>So I have been gone for a while. To my three readers, sorry about that :) I am thinking about transferring all of my blogs in to one spot. Maybe not. We'll see. But that's not the reason for my absence. We recently lost my Mother-in-law to cancer. It has been a long, hard, year-long down hill fight for our family. Watching some one slowly deteriorate is a long hard process. Something I could never wish on any one. And something that challenges your beliefs in euthanasia. Maybe someday I will blog more on the whole experience.<br /><br />While we were in El Paso, I hit the local Family Bookstores for some reading materials. One book that I found in the clearance section was <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Man-White-Johnny-Cash/dp/159554237X/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1210610613&sr=1-1"><span style="font-style: italic;">Man in White</span></a> by Johnny Cash. I'm only about a third in to it, but so far it is an excellent read. Cash is a superb story teller as usually, but the subject matter really sets it apart. He is re-telling the story of the apostle Paul from a cultural and historical stand point. Just getting a glimpse in to what Saul's living quarters looked like, or what the Sanhedrin might have thought of him, or all the other historical and cultural insights is incredibly stimulating to me.<br /><br />I haven't finished it yet, but I can write more when I do. Where I am at now, Paul is still Saul and is chasing after the Christians to persecute and kill them. Cash paints him as one massively driven dude, and I love it.Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-75222187751380815262008-02-12T11:12:00.001-06:002008-02-12T11:29:32.363-06:00Enough Armchair Quarterbacking Already!A pastor of mine used to make fun of football fans. He is a football fan, but he thought it was funny to see mid-aged, overweight men yelling at the screen when a young, strong, in shape player made a bad judgment call. Like they could have done any better in the same situation. Of course, who cares about all of the good plays they had also accomplished up until then.<br /><br />I get pretty discouraged reading Christian blogs. All they seem to be able to focus on is something that some church somewhere is doing wrong. Usually, the blogger attended one service or listened to one sermon online and concluded that the whole church is not preaching the gospel, or preaching the "correct" style, or whatever - based on that one sermon.<br /><br />The whole thought that there is only one correct preaching style (expository, topical, parables, etc) that is absolutely the one best way to preach in all situations is pretty ludicrous. Jesus himself used all types pretty equally, so to say that expository preaching is the best way to preach is pretty anti-Biblical to me.<br /><br />Of course, how can we even tell how the preaching is at one church from just one or two sermons? If they are really following the example of Jesus, what if it is just that week that they decided to teach in parables and life application (like Jesus frequently did)?<br /><br />And to clear the record, "Gospel" is not a category of message in the Bible. Gospel is just the way we translate a Biblical word that really means "good news," not a category called "Good News." If someone found a sheep that they had lost, that was "good news" also - the same word would be used. ANYTHING that could be considered "good" could be considered "Gospel" by the Biblical use of the word. Jesus told us to preach the good news of the Kingdom of God. Paul would later just use "good news" when writing letters to people that he knew would know what "good news" he was talking about.<br /><br />But, really, you go to a church and claim that they don't preach what you call "the Gospel" ever based on one sermon?<br /><br />I find it funny that so many Christians today would probably go call Jesus a bad preacher that doesn't preach correctly if they went to see one of His sermons.<br /><br />I would love to just see a blog post about what some church did right somewhere, not the constant doom and gloom of every church every where is always getting it wrong drum beat that we see on so many blogs today. I've got a few ideas of what I could post on this area about my church, so I will get to posting that in the future.Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-24920902682315494142008-01-15T15:52:00.000-06:002008-01-15T16:36:45.726-06:00The Hypocrisy Problem in Church TodayLifeway released some interesting <a href="http://www.lifeway.com/lwc/article_main_page/0%2C1703%2CA%25253D166950%252526M%25253D200900%2C00.html?">survey results</a> recently. They basically surveyed specific attitudes of people that don't go to church. This was the stat that caught my attention:<br /><ul><li>72% of the people surveyed said that they thought the church was full of hypocrites.</li></ul>Well.... I never. While something like this can seem like an insult, I do have to admit that these people are correct. Churches are full of hypocrites. Before you think you can predict the rest of my thoughts here and think that I am going to decry the amount of hypocrisy in church today, I want to explore a slightly different path here.<br /><br />What is hypocrisy, anyway? We throw it around a lot - but what does it mean to be a hypocrite? You can basically look at hypocrisy as a lie - you say one thing and do another. This ties in with something else I read today: <a href="http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=508245&in_page_id=1770">a study</a> that claims that the average person tells almost 88,000 lies in their life time (3-5 times per day). So, the sad fact is - we are all hypocrites. Churches are full of hypocrites because the world is full of hypocrites.<br /><br />The real rub here is that one of the functions of a church is to reveal hypocrisy. And this is actually a good thing. Sure - you go to church to worship and pray. But you should also go to get your life examined from an outside perspective, so that your hypocrisy is exposed and you can actually <span style="font-style: italic;">change </span>it. Not to have fingers pointed at you or to get judged, but to actually help you become a better person. <br /><br />So what this all means is that people who don't go to church don't want to come, in part, because they see the hypocrisy in other people's lives that has already been exposed.<br /><br />Great. So.... what can you do about the fact that people don't want to come to church because the church is doing one of the things that the church is supposed to do? Beats me. It's this big lie that we all believe in America that hypocrisy is worse than any other mistake you can make, and that being a hypocrite means that what you believe in is wrong because of your hypocrisy and not because of any actual truth behind it. Or that you should avoid someone because they don't actually do what they say they believe. If this were true, I guess we would all have to lock ourselves in our houses, get online jobs, and never interact with other human beings.<br /><br />But such is the mindset that we have to work with in modern America. How to convince people that they actually need the very thing that is turning them off right now. Luckily, that's not the real issue here. But it's one that I'm sure will cause many discouraging conversations around the nation on a daily basis. Most churches will probably work to find a way to be less hypocritical. That's always a good goal, but one we will have to work on for the rest of our lives. And probably not the quickest way to convince people to visit your church.<br /><br />Come to think of it, realizing the truth about global hypocrisy, it kind of puts an interesting spin on all the churches that are trying to reach people by just "being real"? In "being real," wouldn't that mean they would be letting their hypocrisy hang out in the wind for everyone to see? Wouldn't that mean that they are actually pushing more people away - since so many people don't like the realness of hypocrisy? Just some things to ponder on, I guess.Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com9tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-50708661078495655642008-01-10T17:08:00.000-06:002008-01-14T12:01:12.797-06:00Nothing New Under the SonI've been working on this post for a while. I want to make this point without hacking anyone off. I know many people, many good friends (who luckily don't ever read any blogs) that do exactly what I am going to recommend not doing. But, I think this still warrants saying, so please realize that this is my two cents and you are free to disagree if you want.<br /><br />Katie and I have been going through some transitions recently. Our former church home was just too far away. We were able to find a great church nearer to us that shares the same vision and goals as our former church, so we made the eventual transition to this church. We visited several churches (including a scary large prosperity Gospel mega-McChurch that I've blogged about before) before settling on our current church.<br /><br />Sometimes I get to talking to people about why we didn't choose another newer church near us that has some great ideas and does some new, different things. It is a great church that I would be glad to go to. We go where we felt called. But here is my main issue with so many new churches: they try really hard to not be like existing churches. For me, I just can't get fully behind a church that is trying to <span style="font-style: italic;">not </span>be like others. I believe that a church should just be what they are called to be, and that's it. Don't worry if you do or don't look like someone else and just go for it with all of your heart.<br /><br />I believe that we need new churches. We need new styles of churches to reach different people. We need churches to stay at manageable sizes so that everyone gets plugged in and covered. I'm all for that. I just feel that new churches need to watch their attitudes about existing churches.<br /><br />I've seen many churches through the years try to be current and modern by avoiding "churchy" stuff. Slogans, structures, dress codes, songs, and anything else that smacks of traditional churchiness are all thrown out in favor of reaching people around them.<br /><br />Then, some kind of problem happens. You see this historically with every new church ever started. Some just fall apart when this happens. But most come up with some ideas of how to deal with problems, and implement these ideas. Once these ideas are implemented, the new church usually ends up looking just like some other established church somewhere else. Sure, they may look different than the church that they originally came from, but they still really haven't created anything new.<br /><br />And, hence my thought for the day - there really isn't anything new under the sun. It seems like for every church that tried something new, I eventually find someone else that was doing it before them. Things change, but most new stuff is really just a new combination of existing older stuff. And, like I said - I am all for that. I love that kind of stuff. As long as you are doing that because it is what you are led to do, not just because you are trying to <span style="font-style: italic;">not </span>be something else.<br /><br />Take for example, Vineyard churches. No one will deny that they really pushed "modern" worship into it's current level of popularity. But, if you look around hard enough, you will find churches that were doing "modern" style worship before Vineyard (or the churches that became Vineyard even) was even an idea. And the first churches that because Vineyard were not even aware of these other churches.<br /><br />Or another practical example I have seen: some Baptist members get tired of not being able to raise hands in their church, or maybe the fact that they don't reach people of other cultures, or whatever. So, with the blessing of their pastor, they start a new church to explore these things and reach the culture around them. They do some things that are great and ground breaking (to them), but then some problems arise. They come up with something that solves these problems, and a few years after they have started, they end up working just like a Vineyard church.<br /><br />Not that they is bad. It's just what I have noticed, and an example to make my point: follow God by actively doing what he calls you to, not by avoiding becoming someone else.Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-26832642226990547562007-12-02T17:27:00.000-06:002007-12-02T17:40:28.817-06:00Trolling the Bargin Bins at BookstoresI am one of those people, like many others, that takes a long time to read a book. Mainly because I start one and then forget to pick it up for weeks. So, my readings block won't change that fast.<br /><br />I also like to troll the clearance section of Christian bookstores. I never really buy anything from the stores, or even visit much. But the clearance sections are interesting mix of good and bad books.<br /><br />If a book is a hit in the Evangelipopcology market place, they won't go into the bargain bin. Which is fine by me - I don't need to know how to kiss my date goodbye or twist God's arm to bless me with money. Whenever a book does make a splash, you can usually expect a large number of copycats. The better ones of these make a good splash themselves, but some of them bomb. These end up in the bargain bins. That is the bad - so bad that I get a good laugh out of reading their cover summaries. So, I guess it does end up being 30 seconds of entertainment.<br /><br />The good is that when a book comes out that is too dense or quirky for the general public, it will also usually end up in the bargain bun. Those are the kind of books that I love to read. I just picked up a book that I am going to start reading recently on Jesus. Crazy, huh - a Christian bookstore book on Jesus? They can sometimes be rarer than you think. I can't remember who this one is by, but it takes all of the Gospels and combines them, and then the author added notes and side stories about the cultural atmosphere of the time. I'm sure some things will be off or wrong, but I look forward to getting this comprehensive picture. The Bible was written for people that lived in the time that it was written about, for people with a great understanding of the culture. The authors left a lot of explanation of the times out of there, basically because they had no need to explain it to their intended audience. I love reading anything that can restore that lost picture in my mind.Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-6193914033001179312007-11-20T14:03:00.000-06:002007-11-20T14:20:38.998-06:00Following God Even When It Is ToughThis was part of a sermon I preached recently, but the podcast guy is really behind in getting the mp3 up. I was talking about following God even when He asks us to do something hard, or we don't see an obvious positive outcome, or things just look bad. I used a clip from <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joan_of_arcadia">Joan of Arcadia</a> to illustrate the point. Joan of Arcadia was a television show where "god" appears to a teenage girl named Joan and asks her to do some tough things. Christians sometimes had a hard time with the show because "god" appeared as some weird people some times, and spoke in new-agey terms frequently. But if you got past the Yoda-isms of "god" in the series, they actually had some solid theology. Not <span style="font-style: italic;">always</span>, but better than most shows in Hollywood do.<br /><br />Anyway, here is the background to the clip I played:<br /><br />"Joan is asked (by "god") to take a reclusive bully (Ramsey) to the school dance instead of her boyfriend (Adam). While both her mother and the assistant principal object, Joan follows through with God's task. At the dance, it is revealed the bully has a bottle of alcohol with him but Joan convinces him not to open it. Despite this the assistant principal later reaches into his jacket and, finding the alcohol, expels him.<span style=""> </span>He runs away and Joan joins him.<span style=""> </span>The bully goes to a secluded area and begins playing with a gun.<span style=""> </span>Joan’s father, a police officer, is able to find the two and talk the bully away from the gun in a very dangerous and tense situation."<br /><br />The next day, Joan sees "god" (as a lady handing out cupcakes) in the halls in school and decides to confront her about ruining Joan's life:<br /><br /><object height="355" width="425"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/5g3m3Vvc6Qo&rel=1"><param name="wmode" value="transparent"><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/5g3m3Vvc6Qo&rel=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" height="355" width="425"></embed></object><br /><br />Our problem is, we don't get the nice TV wrap-up at the end. If we do the hard stuff that God asks us to, we may never know this side of heaven the impact that those choices had. We might only get to deal with the problems that come with the choice on our end. We may never know that our simple act of befriending the violent bully might have stopped the school shoot out. We might not ever know how taking a different exit on the way to work might stop an accident from happening. We might never know how sticking with church, even when it gets hard, or superficial, or confusing, might make the difference in someone else's life. Or even our own.Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-24977393423834346682007-11-19T10:31:00.000-06:002007-11-19T15:11:48.794-06:00So We Visited One of Those Prosperity Mega Churches This WeekendI've never heard the words 'blessing' and 'hallelujah' used so much in one sermon. To be fair, someone who used to go to this church said that it was just like an <a href="http://www.antiochcc.net/">Antioch</a> church (were we used to go to church when we lived in Wac0), and Antioch is pretty big, so we were hopeful that it wasn't a typical mega-church. That person was wrong about this church being like an Antioch church. Way off.<br /><br />I'm no expert on prosperity Gospel stuff. I've always known that I generally disagree with it. And the the whole mega-church mentality.<br /><br />As we enter into this massive building, we are pretty shocked by the amount of money that went into decorating the main hall. Neon signs, fancy stuff everywhere, tiled Baptismal pit (complete with free robes, towels, hair dryer, and heated water - we were told), and the stereo-typical coffee shop were all there. I took a quick glance at the prices in the coffee shop and decided to save some money and go to Starbucks later.<br /><br />Anyway, to be honest - they did preach the Gospel, repentance of sins, and the need to die to self. But that seemed to be the sub-points in the main point of God blessing you with finances and happiness if you are faithful. It was the message given right before the offering that made us squirm.<br /><br />Is there a new type of prosperity Gospel coming out now-a-days? There was a lot of true scripture being presented in there, but it was all sandwiched in with all kinds of "God is going to give you a lot of money and happiness" stuff in there. Like, A LOT of it. Should I really worry about the fact that they were all quoting scriptures correctly, but just over quoting ones about blessing, and kind of missing the whole point of what blessing means in the Bible?<br /><br />I think many people would say not to judge and not to worry as long as the Gospel was presented. And to be honest, all churches are imperfect. Just having something wrong with your theology does not mean that the spirit of God will not be present and move in your midst. if that was true, He would never visit any churches.<br /><br />But I gotta say - Katie and I couldn't find the exit door fast enough. Which is durn hard when you've got to fight past a thousand people making a B-line for the coffee shop.<br /><br />I make light of the coffee shop a lot - but am I the only one that gets uncomfortable about the whole "den of thieves" thing? And when the pastor and his wife are wearing outfits that probably cost more than my entire wardrobe.... weird.<br /><br />I gotta also ask about this whole "baptized in the Holy Spirit as evidenced by the speaking in tongues as seen in <a href="http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?book_id=51&chapter=2&verse=2&end_verse=4&version=31&context=context">Acts 2:2-4</a>." Acts 2:2-4 describes tongues of fire coming to rest on the believers - visible tongues of fire. Shouldn't it be "baptized in the Holy Spirit as evidenced by a visible tongue of fire and the speaking in tongues as seen in Acts 2:2-4"? Of course, I guess that means that most people wouldn't be baptized in the Holy Spirit. And that corrected statement doesn't roll off the tongue as easily....<a href="http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?book_id=51&chapter=2&verse=2&end_verse=4&version=31&context=context"><br /></a>Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-83760081779594922192007-11-12T14:12:00.000-06:002007-11-12T22:26:11.738-06:00Christian Artists: Giving Constructive CriticismRecently, I have been in many online and in-person discussions about Christians and art, or more specifically - why there is so much bad Christian art out there. I would argue that, ultimately, there is just bad art out there period, and getting saved doesn't automatically sanctify lack of talent or taste. My reasoning for the fact that bad Christian art continues after salvation is that we have so many Christian liars out there. People that say they like something (painting, song, band, poetry, whatever) when they really don't think it's that great. Liar is a strong word, but I can't think of anything else to call it - so please try not to be offended by my use of it. More on that in a minute. First of all, a few things to set-up.<br /><br />There are basically two types of Christian artists. First of all, there are those that make art for themselves. They don't intend to sell their art, get it displayed in galleries or played on the radio, etc. This is the kind of art that anyone participates in, and, in fact - I encourage everyone to do so. Being creative is something we can all do. If no on ever sees it - no need to be shy. The other type of artist is the one that tries to sell their art, even make a living off of it, or get it published, played, or displayed in public spaces. These are the ones I will refer to here from this point on as Christian Artists.<br /><br />Once you cross that line from personal artist to Christian Artist, a whole new world has to open up for you. You no longer can just do what feels right to you. You have to be mindful of your audience. The opinion of others is crucial at this stage, because they are the ones that will ultimately support you. The opinions of other artists are helpful, but you still have to know the opinion of the audience. You have to connect with them.<br /><br />This brings up the fact that there are three aspects of art that artists have to be concerned with. First, there is <span style="font-weight: bold;">ability</span> (skill, talent, etc). That is a given aspect, even if the artist doesn't have it. After that is the <span style="font-weight: bold;">communication</span> of the idea. Just having a lot of skill doesn't mean that you can communicate what is in your mind. And there are plenty of people out there that have found ways to communicate ideas in their head really well without any talent. The final aspect is the <span style="font-weight: bold;">connection</span> with audience. Having talent and the ability to communicate your ideas means nothing to the Christian Artist (or any professional artist) if you don't have the ability to connect with your audience. And, yes, there are those artists that don't have talent, do a bad job at communicating ideas, and yet still create stuff that connects with people.<br /><br />This is also where many artists tend to take a "meh" attitude towards people that went to fancy, highly rated art/music schools around the world. These schools teach people the skills and the means to communicate ideas, but then students graduate from the school and go work for some catalog publisher. They have to do this because (possibly) they lack the ability to connect with an audience. Most artists would rather connect with an audience than perfect a skill.<br /><br />Thus the rub of being a Christian artist. You need to know what others think of your work. Yes, you can pray and ask God and do what He wants regardless of what others think, but then there is that pesky deal of how God speaks to us through others.<br /><br />This is why I encourage people to be honest when a Christian Artist asks for an opinion of their art, and you don't like it. I have been in many situations where people lied and said that they liked something and they really didn't (they admitted this to me later). They felt they were being "kind-hearted," but I argue that a lie is a lie and can cause damage.<br /><br />You see, Christian Artists do believe that God speaks through others, and you never know if that "kind-hearted" word is the last word they get before they decide to do something radical, like quite jobs, or sell it all, and "go for it." I've know many people that actual do this (without praying - let's face it, we <span style="font-style: italic;">all</span> do this from time to time), and since all of the feedback they got was "kind hearted," they missed God's will and crashed big time.<br /><br />So, what to do when a Christian Artist asks for your opinion of something that you just don't like? Take a deep breath, and say four things:<br /><ol><li><span style="font-weight: bold;">Let them know your credentials up front.</span> If you have never studied art, music, poetry, etc, let them know it. They need that context to know how to file your opinion.</li><li><span style="font-weight: bold;">Find something positive to say about the work/song/story/etc.</span> For the Christian, this is usually the easiest part. Most Christian Artists mean well. It's not like they are out trying to subvert the word to serve the Anti-Christ. So, you can say something like "I can see that you had a good idea to show a spiritual truth here" or something like that.<br /></li><li><span style="font-weight: bold;">Give them an idea about what you didn't like about the art.</span> You probably want to be as general as you can here, but not open yourself up to further questions (let's face it, you wouldn't be going this route if you didn't want to lay out a list of all the problems with the art or didn't care about hurting feelings). Let them know that you don't go for the genre; or, if that is a lie - let them know that you just don't connect with it.</li><li><span style="font-weight: bold;">Encourage them to seek out more opinions.</span> It may just be that you don't get the genre that they are working in. You could be the one that is wrong. Or you could be that last straw that lets them know whether to ditch the day job and go full time or not. Let them know that you should not be the last opinion they get.</li></ol>In fact, I would argue that these four steps could be for giving feedback on art that you <span style="font-style: italic;">do </span>like - just replace step three with giving them specifics on what you did like.<br /><br />So, the way to give constructive feedback on, say, a painting that you don't like would be like this: "Well, please realize that I don't have any training in art. I like that you are communicating how prayer affects the world through this painting. For some reason, I just don't connect with the way that you are communicating, but I don't know exactly why. I think you should definitely seek the opinion of others on this and not just go by my word alone."<br /><br />And, yes, I know artists are sensitive. They might still take this hard. Communicate with love and they will not feel rejected by you. Remember that above all - <span style="font-weight: bold;">you still love the person, even if you don't go for the art.</span>Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-51192926894953489092007-11-05T11:33:00.001-06:002007-11-05T11:38:54.778-06:00More Money Equals Less Religion?I thought this was a funny, but sad article:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/03/technology/03online.html?ex=1351828800&en=74ce917a280880e9&ei=5124&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink">A GLOBAL survey recently conducted by the Pew Research Center shows that the wealthier you are, the less likely you are to be religious.<br /></a><br />Hmmmm.... food for thought.<br /><br />Anyway, I am prepping two lengthy posts in my mind. I have some thoughts on the end times that I will put up soon (since that seems to be the current topic at church). I also want to post something on Christian artists.<br /><br />Also, some day, I may get around to posting stuff on my views on the whole Calvinism vs. Arminism debate. If I ever get brave enough to go there :)Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-60106043795210775742007-10-30T09:28:00.000-05:002007-10-30T09:56:17.646-05:00In India, Poverty Inspires People to Action“In Redmond, you don’t see 7-year-olds begging on the street,” said Sean Blagsvedt (former Microsoft engineer).<br /><br />This statement refers to the difference between the streets of India and the streets around Microsoft's headquarters in the US. A growing trend in India is that wealthy workers are seeing the poverty around them and are being moved to do something with technology to help these people.<br /><br />Mr. Blagsvedt idea was to build a social networking site for poor street workers looking for employment. It seems that the rich complain about not having enough people to hire, and the poor complain about not having enough jobs. the problem was that there was no connection between the two. Mr. Blagsvedt answer? Technology!<br /><br />The biggest problem was the fact that the poor don't have access to computers, and the rich don't want to trust just anyone they find online. So, the design of <a href="http://babajob.com/">Babajob.com</a> was to pay the people with computer access to set up profiles for good workers that they have found. Fairly ingenious. You can see the whole article <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/30/technology/30poor.html?ex=1351483200&en=8de272ec33a79e28&ei=5124&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink">here</a>.<br /><br />If you have ever read the Bible, especially the New Testament, you might have been struck by the idea that we are supposed to do something about poverty. I've always wondered why so few of us do that. Heck - I've wondered why I have a hard time doing anything. I think some of it has to do with the attitudes of the most visible poor: the corner beggars. I've gone and talked to a few of them, even offered to help them apply for jobs. They aren't interested in doing that. Now, I know that those people represent less than 5% of the actual poor out there. But they are the 5% that most of us ever get to deal with, so I am assuming that they are (unfortunately) influencing our national attitudes toward the poor. Why would we want to help those that just want a free hand out?<br /><br />There has got to be a way to get something like this started here in the US. Some kind of site that links us needs with those willing to give. I am thinking mostly time here, and not money. I would love to go do something about poverty, if I could just find where to go on my free Saturday afternoons.Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-38186982320854146802007-10-15T14:48:00.001-05:002007-10-15T15:30:11.463-05:00The Whole Gospel From All AnglesA recent <a href="http://thinklings.org/?post_id=4173">post</a> at the Thinklings, as well as a session that my wife taught at a retreat this weekend (Holistic Health), got me thinking about the Gospel. The whole Gospel. Most spiritual people, even if they don't follow Jesus specifically, tend to be able to tell you what they think the Gospel is.<br /><br />The simple answer for most Christians is that the Gospel is the "Good News" of the gift of salvation through Jesus Christ. Some have been arguing that the Gospel is really something else - specifically, it is offering social justice to the oppressed. A few are slowly beginning to realize that it is both and even more.<br /><br />A few months ago, my wife and I attended a "community health evangelist" training at our old church back in Waco. The session started off by looking at Jesus' mission statement. When Jesus began his public ministry, you see him in the temple reading a specific passage from Isaiah (chapter 61, verse 1, but I have included more here):<br /><span id="en-NIV-18845" class="sup"></span><blockquote>The Spirit of the Sovereign LORD is on me,<br />because the LORD has anointed me<br />to preach good news to the poor.<br />He has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted,<br />to proclaim freedom for the captives<br />and release from darkness for the prisoners (or the blind), <p><span id="en-NIV-18846" class="sup"></span>to proclaim the year of the LORD's favor<br />and the day of vengeance of our God,<br />to comfort all who mourn, </p><p><span id="en-NIV-18847" class="sup"></span>and provide for those who grieve in Zion—<br />to bestow on them a crown of beauty<br />instead of ashes,<br />the oil of gladness<br />instead of mourning,<br />and a garment of praise<br />instead of a spirit of despair.<br />They will be called oaks of righteousness,<br />a planting of the LORD<br />for the display of his splendor. </p><span id="en-NIV-18848" class="sup"></span>They will rebuild the ancient ruins<br />and restore the places long devastated;<br />they will renew the ruined cities<br />that have been devastated for generations. </blockquote>Many people look at these verses from the spiritual angle. When He speaks of restoring sight for the blind, we think that God will give (in)sight to the spiritually blind. The interesting thing is, Jesus then went around physically healing the blind.<br /><br />The intent of The Gospel was to minister to the whole person - physically, mentally, emotionally, socially, and spiritually. And we see this is so in the verse from Isaiah above (with a smattering of social justice thrown in for good measure). Take a look at this part of the scriptures from a non-spiritual angle:<br /><ul><li>"to preach good news to the poor": what is better news for the poor than to know that their oppression is gone? That they can be free from debt maybe? There's your social justice.<br /></li><li>"He has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted": healing our emotional wounds and issues.</li><li>"to proclaim freedom for the captives and release from darkness for the prisoners": freedom from addictions (physical health), from oppressive relationships (social health), from destructive emotional conditions?</li><li>"to comfort all who mourn <span id="en-NIV-18847" class="sup"></span>and provide for those who grieve in Zion... and a garment of praise instead of a spirit of despair": emotional comfort in tragic situations.</li><li>"They will rebuild the ancient ruins and restore the places long devastated; they will renew the ruined cities that have been devastated for generations": rebuild devastated communities, or even social relationships.</li><li>"And you will be called priests of the LORD, you will be named ministers of our God": even when looking at this scripture from a non-spiritual angle, there is still an obvious reference to addressing spiritual issues.</li></ul>The interesting thing is that Jesus took this passage of scripture from both a spiritual and non-spiritual angle <span style="font-style: italic;">at the same time</span>, and lived his life fulfilling both angles daily.Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-48727931995873250252007-10-03T17:32:00.000-05:002007-10-03T17:43:25.461-05:00Song of SolomonWant to hear something crazy? I am preaching a sermon this Sunday. I've done some preaching in my life, but the last time I did was in 2002 in India. I still do some public speaking at conferences and other places for work, so I won't be totally rusty, I just still wonder if I have a good lesson in me now.<br /><br />The reason I wonder is that my church is going through the Song of Solomon right now. So I am working on something out of that. The deal with SoS is - I've never really had a problem with it. Many people do - they don't understand why it is in the Bible. And that's okay - most people have a book or two in the Bible that they have problems with. Martin Luther himself had problems with <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luther_Bible">several books</a> - James, Revelations, etc. So it's okay.<br /><br />But for me, I've always been okay with SoS being in there - even if you think it is strictly a love poem. You see, I have (for a long time) believed that God is concerned with every part of our lives. If you take SoS out of the Bible - there is a huge part of married life (the romantic part) that is missing from the Bible. I mean -- what else do you have in there? Sampson and Delila? Hosea? Even David's stories aren't that romantic.Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-34787650078729612512007-09-17T12:33:00.000-05:002007-09-17T12:35:29.569-05:00Blog Ecclesiastes, Chapter 67 All man's efforts are for his blog,<br /> yet his blog roll is never satisfied.<br /><br />8 What advantage has a Word Press site<br /> over a Blogger account?<br /> What does a poor lurker gain<br /> by knowing how to conduct himself before other commenters?<br /><br />9 Better what the eye sees<br /> than the roving of the aggregator.<br /> This too is meaningless,<br /> a chasing after the RSS feed.<br /><br />10 Whatever exists has already been blogged,<br /> and what man is has been archived;<br /> no man can contend<br /> with one who writes longer comments than he.<br /><br />11 The more the Google Ads,<br /> the less the blogosphere respect,<br /> and how does that profit anyone?Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-89818951266386444932007-09-12T10:04:00.000-05:002007-09-12T10:12:00.439-05:00One of Life's Mysteries SolvedThis hit me last night - an answer to one of life's biggest questions. (If this has been covered somewhere else, and I am just stealing someone else's idea here that I just can't remember.. I apologize). The big question:<br /><br />"Which came first - the chicken or the egg?"<br /><br />The answer is quite simple, but depends on if you are a creationist or an evolutionist. If you believe in creationism, then God created all animals first, so the chicken was created by God first, and then laid the first egg.<br /><br />If you are an evolutionist, then you believe the egg came first. Basically, as an evolutionist, you would believe that animals evolve and change over time - either as small changes in DNA slowly cause the creature to change, or major mutations cause quick changes every now and then (punctuated equilibrium). So, at some point you had a creature that was part chicken, but was still technically a majority of something else (lizard, some other bird, whatever). Then, this creature has a mutated egg that slightly or quickly pushes the amount of chicken in it's genes into the majority column, and survival of the fittest dictates that the new chicken creature survives extinction, while the pre-chicken beast is killed off by mother nature. So, the egg came first.<br /><br />Life's biggest question, answered. Where's my Nobel Prize?<br /><br />----------------<br />Now playing: <a href="http://www.foxytunes.com/artist/ocean+blue/track/ayn" title="'Ocean Blue - Ayn' - open on FoxyTunes Planet">Ocean Blue - Ayn</a><br /><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153); font-style: italic; font-size: 10px;">via <a style="color: rgb(102, 102, 102);" href="http://www.foxytunes.com/signatunes/" title="FoxyTunes - Web of music at your fingertips">FoxyTunes</a></span>Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-41147121248432384642007-08-28T12:36:00.000-05:002007-08-28T12:57:04.702-05:00Modern Day Warm and Well FedScripture Reference: <a href="http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=James%202;&version=31;">James 2</a><br /><br />Something hit me this morning. I tend to look at James 2:16 as being something I can only do to homeless and poor people around me:<br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">"If one of you says to him, "Go, I wish you well; keep warm and well fed," but does nothing about his physical needs, what good is it?"</span><br /><br />However, the whole point of the passage is to put your faith into practice, and to not just to mouth worthless clichés to get away from someone else's sob story. It's not (just) about homeless people. So, with that in mind, I realized that there is a modern day equivalent to this verse:<br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">"If one of you says to him, "Go, I wish you well; I'll pray for your need," but does nothing to help be an answer to that prayer, what good is it?"</span><br /><br />Some prayer requests - especially for those that require physical healing - are beyond our ability to do anything about. But what about those that we can do something about? What if someone is feeling lonely? What if they are struggling with self doubt? What if they are in need of anything that we have the ability to do something about?<br /><br />James goes on to say "do you want evidence that faith without deeds is useless?" Useless? Ouch. But... maybe... possibly.... is that why we pray for things for other people, and never see those prayers answered? Is it because we are supposed to be the answers, and our faithful prayer without deeds is turning up useless?<br /><br />Take the loneliness issue for an example. People usually don't come out and say "I'm lonely." They just start saying things like "I am not feeling very connected with any of the people around here." I've heard many people say this - and have even said it myself plenty of times. The typical reaction is "well, I'll pray for God to send some marvelous comrades your way, brother/sister." Several weeks go by, and the person is still feeling "disconnected." And the other person probably is still praying fruitless prayers, or has forgotten the whole issue by now. Hello! Pick up the phone and give the person a call? Is that so hard? I often wonder why so many people are so reluctant to become the answers to their own prayers.Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-60493499148332359202007-08-24T09:57:00.000-05:002007-08-24T10:26:57.366-05:00The Spirit That Changes Personality<div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">The Fruit of the Spirit in Real Life, Part Two</span><br /></div><br />Scriptural reference: <a href="http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Galatians%205:22-23;&version=31;">Galatians 5:22-23</a><br /><br />The fruit of the spirit: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. We all want those qualities in our lives. I've always seen these qualities as a temporary spiritual situation. If I have a good quiet time in the morning... maybe get a full hour of intense prayer (assuming that Reverend Pillow doesn't hold me over too long with his night-time sermon of "Resting in the Lord")... and then - BOOM! - fruit! I'll have some peace in my life. Until I drive to work, someone cuts me off, and I honk at them in anger. So much for my peace for that day. Hopefully, I'll be spiritual enough tomorrow to get that peace again.<br /><br />One thing that hit me the other day was that some of the fruits are personality traits: gentleness.... self control.... kindness. Then, I started to realize that they are <span style="font-style: italic;">all</span> personality traits. <span style="font-style: italic;">The fruit of the Spirit in our lives is a changed personality that begins to resemble the personality of Jesus.</span> It's not just some temporary actions that we can call up from time to time when are really being uber-spiritual. They are characteristics that can begin to describe our lives as we continually walk with God.<br /><br />I can see two sides, or excuses, to this thought:<br /><ol><li>"I am just blunt, loud, talkative, etc. I can't help it. It's just the way God made me." I say - Great! Being like this is not necessarily wrong. It's just that people who are blunt are usually also not very gentle about it. Those that are talkative are usually not very self-controlled about it. Those that are loud are not very peaceful about it. It is possible to be blunt and gentle - it's called telling the truth in love. Whatever your extroverted personality trait is - make sure it is surrounded in the fruit of the Spirit.<br /><br /></li><li>"I'm not perfect, but I am peaceful, gentle, kind, etc. So I don't need to worry about this anymore." Galatians says that against the fruits of the Spirit there is no law. That means there is no limit... no saying "I've got this down - on to the next lesson!" There is always more fruit to be had - so keep seeking!</li></ol>My life has been a testimony of how this is true. God willing, I'll get to that in Part Three.<br /><br />----------------<br />Now playing: <a href="http://www.foxytunes.com/artist/scott+bradley/track/sanctuary" title="'Scott Bradley - Sanctuary' - open on FoxyTunes Planet">Scott Bradley - Sanctuary</a><br /><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153); font-style: italic;font-size:10;" >via <a style="color: rgb(102, 102, 102);" href="http://www.foxytunes.com/signatunes/" title="FoxyTunes - Web of music at your fingertips">FoxyTunes</a></span>Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-1587956249926363452007-08-20T09:34:00.000-05:002007-08-20T11:27:38.888-05:00Bridging the Gap Between Heart & Reality<div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">The Fruit of the Spirit in Real Life, Part One</span><br /></div><br />Scriptural reference: <a href="http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Galatians%205:22-23;&version=31;">Galatians 5:22-23</a><br /><br />Very rarely do people ever sit down and talk about what is wrong with anything. When it does happen, eventually you have to look at the problems that certain people are causing. If you were to say something like "so-and-so comes across as cold, uncaring, or not interested in other people," a typical response would be "but I think their heart is to be nice and welcoming to people." Both parties would agree to that, and go on.<br /><br />I would really, really hate to hear that being said about me. Not the first part - where someone points out a problem that I have. I have them, and I need to hear them - so I need to get over it. What I would hate to hear would be the second part: "but I THINK their heart is _____." When I come to the end of my life, I don't want my heart to be in question. I want people to know beyond a shadow of a doubt what I felt in my heart. I want my heart to be my reality.<br /><br />When we refer to someone's heart in this context, I think what we mean is "the person that they really want to be, if they weren't inhibited by habits, familiar patterns, or flat out sin." So, if there is a noticeable difference between what is in my heart and how I come across to people, I have a serious problem. There is a serious flaw in my wiring somewhere.<br /><br />The problem that I see, in myself especially but also others, is that we seem to think that we are stuck with this flaw. And so, those long conversations that we have to have with people offended by our actions, the ones where we sit down and try to explain to the them what our heart really is, are going to be an inevitable part of life. Of course, once we get to the point of having one of those conversations, the hurt and damage are already done. The forgiveness and healing process, as slow as it can be sometimes, has to be set in motion. That is why I hate the theology of "it's better to ask for forgiveness than permission." Forgiveness can often be a long, painful process. We think that it is fine to be lazy and just not ask for permission in the first place?<br /><br />I think the problem that leads to this flaw begins with a misunderstanding of the <a href="http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Galatians%205:22-23;&version=31;">fruit of the Spirit</a>. I think most people know what they are - but its the application that we tend to miss. So, God willing, that is what I will look at in Part 2.<br /><br />----------------<br />Now playing: <a href="http://www.foxytunes.com/artist/neon+cross/track/frontline+life" title="'Neon Cross - Frontline Life' - open on FoxyTunes Planet">Neon Cross - Frontline Life</a><br /><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153); font-style: italic;font-size:10;" >via <a style="color: rgb(102, 102, 102);" href="http://www.foxytunes.com/signatunes/" title="FoxyTunes - Web of music at your fingertips">FoxyTunes</a></span>Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-70234204031688011342007-08-15T10:55:00.000-05:002007-08-15T11:07:53.401-05:00How Dangerous is a Piece of Paper?I love India. My wife is half-Indian. The image used as the banner for this site was taken on a trip we took to India. But sometimes, their laws make no sense.<br /><br />Take a recent incident in Kartanaka. A pastor and his wife were passing out Gospel tracts. Some people find these annoying, but like any literature - you can just ignore them. Someone saw the tracts, and attacked them. They were drug to the local police office, and charged with "inciting religious disharmony." They were sent to jail for a month for violating section 296 A of the Indian Penal Code.<br /><br />Now, I am no legal expert, but wasn't it the person that attacked them in the first place that was the one who "incited religious disharmony?" He could have just ignored the tracts.<br /><br />You see, the problem with India is that they are ruled by close-minded, undemocratic principles. I know they claim to be modern and democratic, but that is just a media propaganda front designed to placate the UN and major world governments. And they all accept it as true, without digging farther in to verify the claims. Every week I get e-mail reports on worldwide religious persecution, and every week they include multiple reports from India. To the UN, US, and other world powers - please open your eyes. Visit <a href="http://persecution.com/">persecution.com</a> for more information.Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-16774972927537061292007-08-09T14:48:00.000-05:002007-08-09T15:03:09.795-05:00Tired of Close-Minded Christians?A common argument/excuse that I hear about why people don't want to go to church is that they don't want to be around close-minded or hypocritical people. They want to interact with open-minded people, but not Christians, because they are close-minded. Isn't that a close-minded statement though? It's like saying "I am open to anything that anyone has to say, except for this rather large group over here." That, in itself, seems like a close-minded contradictory statement. Kind of like the statement "there are NO absolutes."<br /><br />More often than that, I frequently hear the hypocritical tag thrown around. Christians don't live what they believe, so we shouldn't listen to them - right? Well, right? Not quite. If your doctor smoked, would you ignore his advice about what is good for you? You could - but that would be dangerous for your health. We can gripe about hypocrisy all we want, but even though our doctor may not follow their own advice - it doesn't mean that they are clueless. They are probably telling us the right stuff. Somewhere along the line, the American culture has bought in to the lie that hypocrites are automatically wrong in everything they say, just because they are hypocritical. Of course, I could also go into how we are all hypocritical in some way, but that is another subject....<br /><br />When people throw around the hypocrisy tag, what they are really saying is "I want to ignore what God is saying and blame it on his followers, even though by calling them hypocrites I am acknowledging that they are not doing what God would want them to, anyway."Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-31016152524997911002007-07-24T10:07:00.001-05:002007-07-24T10:32:25.710-05:00Christianity: Religion or Relationship?"Christianity is not about religion, it's about relationship." Probably one of the evangelical church's most famous lines. Right up there with WWJD, FROG, etc, etc, (insert your favorite bumper sticker slogan here). Last week, I counted at least 5-10 times that I heard that statement come out of someone's mouth at church (and the person that I know to say it the most was out of town).<br /><br />The problem with that statement is that I don't exactly find it in the Bible. In fact, some passages seem to contradict that. Take <a href="http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=James%201:26-27;&version=31;">James 1:26-27</a>, for example. It speaks of pure religion. Wait a second - religion can be pure? Pure, as in, holy?<br /><br />My friend Chris (who hates blogs and will never read this) pointed out that Christianity is not about religion or relationship - it's about Jesus. Very true point - totally accurate. So, the real argument is probably about whether we classify how we follow Jesus as a religion or a relationship.<br /><br />I recently came across an article online called <a href="http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=James%201:26-27;&version=31;">Is Christianity a Religion?</a> It was written by a Catholic person (still can't find their name) as they were examining the evangelical church's fascination with "it's all about relationship!" theology. The article is a really good perspective from a non-evangelical voice. I don't agree with everything in the article, but some excellent points are raised:<br /><blockquote>'Yes, <i>God established a rather complex religion</i>, complete with ceremonies, clergy, heirarchy and plenty of "do's and dont's". But He never intended it as a substitute for a relationship with Him. Rather, the ancient Israelite religion was meant to be an <i>expression</i> of their covenant relationship with God. The Lord does not seem to see an innate conflict between "religion" and "relationship".'<br /></blockquote>An interesting thought - even if it is hard for us in the evangelical church to read through that without the "Gospel of Works!" flag going off in our mind. Let's not forget for a second that legalism is not just works but doing works to gain favor with God. If you do the works out of obedience and love - it's not legalism. In fact, I would submit that you can never observe a person and determine from the outside whether or not they are being legalistic. Whether you are doing some works to gain favor with God, or because you love Him and want to be obedient to Him - you are probably going to do the same actions on the outside. You might grumble and be miserable in your heart if you are just trying to gain favor - but that is easy enough to hide from others.Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3976063310546602467.post-34445386076425357622007-07-19T10:19:00.000-05:002007-07-19T10:39:05.072-05:00Social Action For the Common PersonLately, my wife and I have really been pondering and praying over the issue of social justice. Well, my wife has always been thinking about it, since she is working on a PhD in Community Health Education and all. But lately, I've been noticing that everything I get involved in has something to do with Health Education. Maybe God is trying to tell me something....<br /><br />I even went to a <a href="http://www.lifewind.org/">Community Health Evangelist</a> training session recently. One of the thoughts that really stirred me was the concept of Jesus' vision statement. He had one - the one that He began His ministry with:<br /><span id="en-NIV-25074" class="sup"> </span><blockquote>"The Spirit of the Lord is on me,<br /> because he has anointed me<br /> to preach good news to the poor.<br /> He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners<br /> and recovery of sight for the blind,<br /> to release the oppressed,<br /> <span id="en-NIV-25075" class="sup"></span>to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor." (Luke 4:18-19 NIV)</blockquote>This passage refers to spiritual as well as physical interpretations (even though most sermons I have heard focus on the spiritual interpretation). The big question for me is: how can I do any of this?<br /><br />The problem being that I work full time in the educational technology field. That is what I feel called to do, but it seems like ministering to the poor has to be your full time vocation. My free weekends are scattered. So, I can't sign up for something that happens every Saturday, because I might have to miss from time to time. My rational brain thinks that there is nothing to be done to help the poor at night, because they have already had dinner.<br /><br />I wish there was some type of resource that just lists ministries and opportunities in my community that anyone can jump in and serve as they can. Say, I have nothing to do Thursday night, and I look up my city on Thursday night and see where I can minister to the poor. Great idea for a website, but I wonder if it would work.Matt C.http://www.blogger.com/profile/06149780984366655963noreply@blogger.com0