A Letter to My Future Wife on June 18

I was strolling down Main Street in Downtown Franklin today, admiring all the old buildings, when I had an epiphany. It was about you.

I think I realize that all the times I thought I was interested in someone, what I saw in them was a little of you. Maybe it was a smile. Maybe it was a laugh. Maybe it was a compassionate heart or a kind soul. Whatever it was, it was a sneak preview of you.

I haven’t written you in a while, but that certainly doesn’t mean I haven’t been thinking about you. I have grown up a little since the last time I wrote you. I’ve seen more of myself that I don’t like, but I’ve seen that if I am willing, God can heal and change me. And He is.

Maybe what so many others have said is true, and I will find you when I’m not looking for you. I don’t know. Maybe we’ll both be 80 and living in a nursing home, sharing a can of Ensure. That would be odd, and a little disturbing, but also a little romantic, too.

I don’t have much to write. Just pray that I won’t give up or settle or lose heart, and I pray you won’t either. Of all I’ve seen and done in this life, I know that life rarely ever turns out the way I planned, but usually what God gives me is much better in the end. Remember that and don’t ever stop chasing after God and wrestling with Him for answers and resting in His tender care.

Thanks for waiting for me. It’ll be worth it one day.

Some Theology from Woody Allen

Today, I saw my first Woody Allen movie in a theatre. The movie was Midnight in Paris, about a guy who through some odd loop in time gets to go back to the ’20s and hang out with Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Pablo Picasso, Gertrude Stein, and Cole Porter, among others.

He almost gets to where he prefers the past to the present. If he could only live in that golden age, he would be happier. But this is where Woody Allen the theologian kicks in.

The main character finds out that some living in that ideal time wish they could go back to an earlier time they feel to be a golden age. He learns that given enough time, a so-called golden age loses its luster and has its own set of problems.

I have found myself wishing I could have lived in a earlier era, thinking how much easier it would be. I’m learning that even if I got my wish, I ultimately wouldn’t be satisfied. The grass really isn’t all that greener on the other side. That place or that person or that position you so desperately want won’t be a panacea fix-all to all your problems.

The best cure is to embrace where you are and live there. Love the people you’re with and pray for open eyes to all that God is doing around you.

Ferris Bueller was right. Life is short. If you don’t stop and take time to look around, you could miss it. You could miss the beautiful sunsets and sunrises, rainbows, flowers blooming, changing leaves, and so many small wonders.

Learn to be thankful that you are where you are. If you can name ten things each day that you’re thankful for, pretty soon you’ll have a different outlook.

Thanks, Woody Allen, for that life lesson. Thank you, God, for blessing me and loving me right where I am in the middle of my mess and my confusion. Wherever You are is where I want to be from now on.

Yet Another Aimless Blog

One of the joys of writing a daily blog is when I run out of ideas. Some days, I sit down in front of my computer with no idea what I’m going to write about. I just start writing, and the results always amaze me. Sometimes, they kind of give me the wiggins, too. But it’s mostly amazing.

I don’t try to be original. Like the song Mockingbird by Derek Webb, “I just tell you what I’ve heard.” Honestly, there are probably a hundred other blogs out there that are better written and have more readers. That’s okay. More power to them.

I just want to write something down every day for my own benefit. God has taught me a lot through these blogs already since I started in July, almost a year ago. And one day, I just might blog about how fast time flies.

So at the moment what I know, aside from the fact that I am extremely tired from being up since 4:50 am, is that regardless of how my feelings fluctuate or how my perceptions of the world around me change, I know God is for me. His plans may not look like I want them to look, but they are always good and good for me.

By the way, if any one wants to pay me to blog, I totally would go for that. But I’d also do it for free, because it’s something I love to do. I also love reading, watching movies, photography, music, moonlit walks on the beach . . . and cats. But not as much as that girl from the infamous eharmony video that’s circulating on youtube (check it out and let me know if you think it’s for real).

So, my night consisted of watching Shawshank Redemption again. I really love that movie. There’s a Shawshank blog coming one day soon. I will end this disjointed blog with one of my favorite lines from the movie.

“Hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies.”

Yeah, I believe that. Sometimes it’s hard, but I still believe that even now. Good night, my loyal readers. May your hope remain strong in the God who is unswervingly faithful and true.

What’s It Worth to You?

I look at most of the people who call themselves Christians (including me) and I immediately have a question. What is this Jesus that we claim to love and serve so much actually worth to us? How much are we willing to sacrifice to follow Him?

For the most part, Christianity is a facebook status. Born again means being politically conservative. Faith for the most part is hypothetical and theoretical, but hardly ever lived out.

If I am all about Jesus on Sunday, but all about me on Monday, what does that say about how much I love Jesus? We may not think so, but the chasm between the way we speak and the way we live speaks volumes and people are listening.

So many times, we look at sin as a line not to cross. We are so obsessed with how close to the line we can get without actually going over. The famous example is always how far a couple can go when dating but not actually have sex. Or how much can we drink without getting drunk and it still be acceptable?

At the same time, we look at Jesus and ask, “What is the minimal effort I need to have a relationship with Jesus? How much do I need to read my Bible to be able to mark that off the checklist and how much do I have to pray for that to count in my favor?”

That outlook betrays where our hearts are. It shows that we love sin more than we love Jesus. If we loved Jesus more, we would see how far we could stay from the line of sin and how much we could do to be more like Jesus and know Him more.

There’s good news in this. God won’t ever abandon or forsake His people, whether their passionately seeking Him or straddling the line of sin. The best answer is this: give up. Quit trying to fix yourself and manage your sin and make yourself better. You can’t. Only God can.

If you see only your own sin and failure, you’ll be tempted to give up. But if you see how good and faithful God has been and keep your eyes on that (and Him), you will be encouraged and strengthened.

But you can’t play both sides anymore. It’s either following what society and culture and the media and the masses say, or following what Jesus says. You can’t follow both.

As for me and my house, I will follow Jesus, only by His help and the support of His people. We do need each other.

 So how much is Jesus worth to me? Maybe not what He should be worth to me, but more than He was to me yesterday. Definitely more than a month ago, or a year ago. And that’s the important part.

A Blog About Divorce

As I am writing this, I am well aware of my lack of expertise in this area. For me as a single, never-married person to blog about divorce is like a vegan telling someone the best way to baste a rack of ribs.

I do know this. God hates divorce. Not in the way so many fundamentalist Bible-bashing believers have led you to believe. God hates what it does to you and to your children. No one comes out scot-free. Everyone leaves wounded and scarred.

I’m not going to say that the Bible ever condones divorce. I will say that it is not the unpardonable sin. Not even close.

I think that if you’ve been down this road, you shouldn’t be punished forever for a mistake you made once (or that someone else made that hurt you).

I know that for a marriage to work, there have to be both spouses willing to work for it. You can’t make the other care if he or she doesn’t want to. One person alone can’t save a marriage. But God can. It’s never too late for Him to change or save or redeem anything. Period.

I do think that no one should stay in a marriage where they or their children are in physical or emotional danger. Staying in that case does no one any good. Get out.

I know that God is a God of second, third, and fourth chances. He’s a God of 1,000,000th chances. You never run out when you come to Him seeking Him.

I know I have done and said and thought things that should have gotten me booted for good from God’s good graces. I should be in hell for all my sinfulness. The same goes for anyone who ever lived, if they are honest.

That’s why I am one of the biggest fans you will ever find of grace and forgiveness. No one is ever beyond the reach of God extending either of these to them. Never. At any time.

I know that God is for you, no matter what you’ve done or what’s been done for you. He won’t ever stop rooting for you, cheering for you, singing over you, and loving you wildly. That’s who He is.

I know that when I get married, it won’t be something I enter into lightly. It will be “all in”. and if I can’t be “all in”, then I probably need to stick with my cat. Marriage is a beautiful picture of God’s love for His people and it takes a buttload of work.

I pray you will read these words as one finite fallen man’s thoughts on the subject. I know I still have a lot to learn, but I am more and more convinced that my God is worth everything, every cost and every sacrifice, to know and make known. He’s just that good.

Thoughts that Won’t Let Me Sleep

Sometimes, your thoughts are like a child that won’t lie down and go to sleep. You can’t quiet your mind and find rest. That’s me tonight, for some reason.

I don’t normally blog twice in less than 24 hours, but if I don’t, I will be up all night.

Have you ever had friends that you talked to or texted with or facebooked with that, for whatever reason, have stopped talking back?

Do you feel like sometimes that person suddenly decided you weren’t worth the effort anymore?

I have had those feelings, too.

Do you know that God looked down and thought you were worth whatever effort it took to win your heart?

Do you understand that in the times when He’s seemingly gone silent on you and quit responding to you, He’s giving you more than an answer. He’s giving you the precious gift of Himself.

He’s promised never to bail on you. Even when the world turns its back on you, He never will. That’s as good a promise as God is good.

I also have come to realize that those people I used to think had bailed on me or given up on me hadn’t. They just had their own lives to live and problems to solve and fears to face. Like the fear of abandonment.

Sure, some will bail on you. Let them go. The ones worth having are the ones who stick around and refuse to leave when your world comes unraveled. Like Jesus.

And if I am anything like Jesus, I won’t hit the back door when troubles knock on your front door. I won’t duck down the alleyway when storms come down your street. A good friend sticks around, regardless.

Ok, I’m going to try this sleep thing one more time. But I leave you with this: don’t make up your mind about anybody or anything when you’re tired. Trust God enough to leave it in His hands. Then you can sleep like a baby.

Radical: A Review

I am re-reading Radical a chapter at a time as I facilitate a group study on the book (me and 2 others counts as a group, right?) Again, I find myself convicted by the book at how very much un-radical I am in my faith, to coin a new word. This is not a book review, but more of a review of how the book is impacting me.

I’m thinking of the SS United States, built as a troop carrier, but used as a luxury liner. I think how Platt parallels that to the present American Church (for the most part). How we are called to a battle, but live as though we’re on a cruise.

I’m thinking about all those people who went to dangerous places to take Jesus to people who hadn’t heard His name before. Some suffered. Some even paid with their own lives. One missionary couple was killed and cannibalized, but the next missionaries saw the entire tribe come to faith in Christ.

What will it take for me to stop talking and writing about faith and then going AWOL on that faith so often. What will it take for us to really live Jesus to the world. Not live out a list of what and who we think God hates, or the how breaking these certain rules and secret codes will land you in hell, but real, revolutionary, radical grace and mercy.

But the Jesus who did not think His own life too high a price to pay for His enemies, so that they could have peace with God.

Not a Christianity that says. “God loves you and has a wonderful plan for your life where you get to be the focus,” but one that says, “God loves you and has invited you to join Him in His advancing His own kingdom over all the earth and making His name glorious in every part of the world.”

I want that. Deep down. Underneath all the other things I chase, but once I catch them lose their appeal. I need God to change my heart to beat with His heartbeat.

Again, I ask, “Who is with me? Who wants to stop going to church and playing religion, and start being the Church and showing love and mercy and grace that the world so desparately needs.

I close with something Jesus said. I like the way the Message renders it. I’m not exactly sure where it is located in the gospels, but here it goes:

“Jesus, overhearing, shot back, ‘Who needs a doctor: the healthy or the sick? Go figure out what this Scripture means: ‘I’m after mercy, not religion.’ I’m here to invite outsides, not coddle insiders.'”

The Glory Departed

As a kid, I used to really like the Bible stories of the Old Testament characters (even though they all pretty much look the same in flannel). I especially liked the one about Daniel and the lion’s den. The one that makes me sad a bit is the one about Sampson, especially where the Bible tells us that “he did not know that the LORD had left him.” That’s a rather sobering statement for any of us (especially me) who takes God’s presence and blessing and favor for granted and expects it almost as a right.

I think about the churches I have worshipped with in the Nashville area. To say there is an abundance of musical and ministerial talent in this area is a vast understatement. I think where some places grow cotton and soybean, Nashville grows musicians and preachers. It’s our staple crop.

But I wonder with all that talent and technology and creative planning if we haven’t programmed out any room for the Holy Spirit. We can invoke moods and emotions and stir up people, but do they really go away transformed or do they just go away hyped and high off the lastest spiritual fix?

If the presence and glory of God departed from our services and worship events, would we even know? Would anything be different? Would we still go on just the same, having the form of worship, but lacking the power of true worship to affect any real change?

I am more and more convicted that unless we as the Church come to a place of desperation for God to really manifest His presence, we won’t really see wholesale changes. Unless we can really go out in faith to a place where either God comes through or we crash and burn spectacularly, we won’t really see the glory fall and the building shaken.

As a believer, I have to come to a place where it’s no longer about being safe and successful, but about really being willing to risk my reputation, my good standing, and (if it comes to it) my very life for the purposes and calling of the Kingdom. Not just me, but all who profess the name of Jesus as Lord.

I believe now more than ever God is calling us to a place where we fall on our faces and beg Him with tears and sighs (and maybe even with fasting) to come. We need to repent of trusting in our cleverness and talent to draw people to God and let the real Power work through our honest confession of spiritual bankruptcy and brokenness.

Again I ask, “Who’s with me?”

If we don’t awaken from our spiritual stupor, one day the glory and manifesting presence of God really will depart from us and we won’t even know it’s gone until it’s much too late.

What I Don’t Know

Contrary to popular opinion, I don’t know everything. Ok, I’m sure I’m not popular, so I probably don’t have a popular opinion, but even I know that I don’t even come close to knowing everything.

I have so many questions. Why do little children get sick and die? Why do some babies die before they are even born? Why are there places in the world where just being born is a death sentence, where there is no clean water, proper food, medical care, or any of those things we in this country take for granted?

Why will so many people die without ever having heard of the good news of Jesus? Why do some people seem to have everything handed to them and others have to work so very hard for every little thing they get?

Why does life not seem to work like it should? Why do the guys who seem like the most marrigable people never finding love while the ones who seem least marriageable finding it? Why are the dreams I believe God has put into my heart so far from coming true?

I have a thousand more questions I can’t answer. I have a thousand more that I can’t even put into words. I may never be able to.

I do know this. God is good. God is in control. I don’t have to know all the answers or even the questions. I do have to know and trust and love the God who does.

I already know how this all ends. Everything wrong is made right, all that’s broken will be mended, and all the pieces will fit back together again. I know because it’s all written down.

I’ve heard it so many times lately, but what I think and feel will lie to me and trick me much of the time. What I think I know and what I see with my eyes will blind me.

What’s true is what God has spoken. Who God is is what matters, not what I see Him doing. And like the old prayer says, “God is great and God is good.” That I know because I’ve seen it in me and in so many others. And because God said it.

On a side note, I have got to stop waiting so late at night to write these blogs. But I’d rather stay up 30 minutes later and share what God put on my heart than get that extra sleep.

And what God told me to tell you is that He’s good and He’s got this. He’s not asking you to understand everything or have answers, but to simply have the faith of a child and believe. That’s all.

 

Thanks

I feel like that guy that just won the Oscar for Best Actor reading the obligatory list of people to thank. I didn’t win an Oscar, but I do have some people to thank:

1) Thanks to all of you who keep reading my blog. I know you may not read every single one, but the fact that you read any at all is an honor. I am blessed to have you as readers.

2) Thanks to Kairos for being a big part of the transformation that God has been working in me the last 2 or 3 years. Especially, thanks to the greeter team for keeping me around and still letting me volunteer.

3) Thanks to all my facebook friends. You’ve stuck with me through some awkward (and some really dumb) posts. You’ve let me rant at times and throw my self-pity parties and haven’t defriended (or is it unfriended? I’m shaky on my proper facebook terminology) me yet.

4) Thanks to my family. You guys rock.

5) Thanks to Sweet CeCe’s for occasionally having Red Velvet, though not as often as I would like.

6) Thanks to Starbucks for the many drinks I have tried there, and especially for the organic chocolate milk that I had Thursday. It was pretty close to supernatural.

7) Thanks to Mike Glenn, Lloyd Shadrach, Michael Easley, Bill Wellons, Pete Wilson, Aaron Bryant, and Bryan Ball for some really good teaching and biblical application. All of you know how to rightly divide the Word of God. Plus, thanks to the multitude of writers that have helped change the way I see God, myself, and my world.

8) Thanks to God for Jesus. Because of Him, I’m alive and not the worst sort of criminal or pervert or louse I could be. Because of Him, I am something new.

9) Thanks to God also for the Holy Spirit who constantly reminds me of all the good things I know but sometimes forget and for also reminding me that who I am is not a sinner, but a son adopted by God and made righteous by Jesus and pleasing to both.

10) Last, but only because I didn’t think of it until now, thanks to wordpress for putting my blog out there for the world to see. Ok, for 20 people to see. But hopefully God uses what I’ve said to make a world of difference to somebody somewhere out there.