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A Little Vegas at the Cross

vegas dice

There, at the foot of the cross, while Jesus hung suffering and dying, the soldiers turned the scene into a little Vegas. Gambling away Jesus’ clothes in a game of chance.

What do people do when someone is dying? It isn’t only first-century soldiers that do monstrous things. Sometimes while a mother is dying, the children outside the hospital door are arguing over who will get the china and jewelry. Family members will sometimes place mom or dad in a nursing home, figuring they are never getting out, they are as good as dead, and then strip the home of all the valuables and maybe even go so far as to sell the home and take the assets all while telling mom or dad nothing of their actions. As far as they tell them, everything is as it was when they left and one day, when they get out, they can return to their home. A home in which another person is now living in.

It is not just families that behave this way. We have seen the crowds behave monstrously as well. A city is devastated by a fire, flood or tornado, and people will come into the area to dig through the debris, break into homes and business to take what they can get. They compound the tragedy all the while seemingly oblivious to the suffering that is occurring around them.

When Jesus died on the cross, all of heaven and hell stood still and watched with wonder. Time stood still except for a group of men, gambling away his clothes at the foot of the cross. Jesus had only a few pieces of clothing, but they didn’t wait for him to die. They divided his meager estate amongst themselves and gambled away what could not be divided.

These soldiers were not the only people at the foot of the cross that day. As Jesus writhed in agony, and they gambled away his clothes, close by was Jesus mother. As a parent, I cannot imagine what it would be like to witness the execution of my own child. It is a place my heart and mind cannot go. But there she was at the cross. Suffering. Why couldn’t they have given the tunic to her? The only thing left to hold onto, to remember her son. Wouldn’t you think the soldiers would have shown at least some mercy to Jesus’ mother? This was not her plan for her son to die this way. She had even on one occasion tried to come with Jesus’ brothers and take him home, figuring he was out of his mind. Mary tried to protect her son.

If we had the chance to question these man afterward they likely would have responded with puzzled bewilderment at our offense. They had a duty to be completed and their years of being soldiers made them indifferent to the suffering and agony going on around them. They were practical men. For them, a garment represented several days wages. These were not wealthy men. They were grunt soldiers in the Roman army. For us, we have closets full of clothes and the thought of wearing the clothes of an executed man is repulsive to our senses. But these men had very little. Likely only one or two garments to wear themselves. Clothes were a big financial investment. Even if they couldn’t wear the clothes of Jesus, they could, at least, sell them.

We are not really that different than them. We have all trained our minds to see somethings and to not see others. Most of the time we live our lives with our minds on automatic pilot. Without it, we would go crazy. But what are we missing while we are not seeing? Those soldiers had become conditioned to the filth, agony, and brutality of death on a cross. So much so they could play games at the foot of the cross.

The more we watch violence. We become accustomed to it and we are no longer shocked or disturbed by it. Therefore, to grab our attention video games and television writers have to push further and further the graphically explicit and violent envelope. It is the only way to stand out, the only way to get our attention because we have all seen it before. Playboy magazine no longer has nude models in the magazines. I am going to have to take their word for it. I have never opened the pages of a Playboy magazine and I am certainly not going to start now. But in giving their reason for making the change it was simple. Nudity and sexually charged images have become so common in our society that the pictures in their magazine failed to excite and their subscriptions were dropping off. The prevalence of pornography free available on-line has the product they are selling no longer worth looking at.

It is easy for us to pass judgment on past generations. We wonder how it was that nations could have allowed child labor to take place. How could people have become so immune to the death and mutilation of children in the mills and factories as the industrial revolution swelled? We stand in confusion our a person could sit in church and hear the message of God’s love for all. How could they hear the story of the good Samaritan and then go home to torture their slaves? Or how could people stand by and allow the Holocaust to happen? How could they see the train cars of people and yet not see what was happening?

Sometimes the answer is as simple and as complicated as to say, they acted according to the way they had been conditioned, acted according to the way they had trained their minds to work. How have we trained our minds to see somethings and to not see others? What will future generations look back on us and ask how it was that we could not see the suffering that was right before our eyes? What will they say about our ambivalence to the unborn or say about our growing billionaires on the backs of workers not being paid enough to live on? How have we become indifferent to those around us?

Stephen
Giving credit where it is due:
The concept for this series of blog posts and its accompanying sermon series draw from the masterful work, Seven Words to the Cross: A Lenten Study for Adults by J. Ellsworth Kalas.

Insiders and Outsiders

Hello Friends,

One of the greatest fallacies organizations and individuals come to believe is that the outsider does not really know or does not have an accurate picture. The fact is, in most cases, the outsider has a more accurate and clearer picture of how things really are than those who are in the middle of it. This is true of individuals and organizations. This is why organizations hire consultants and individuals hire life coaches and personal trainers. It’s why we go see a doctor, even though we know “everything is fine.” “Visioncasting will always include an element of waking people out of their apathy” (87). It is not easy and it is sometimes painful, but it is always necessary.

microscopeFor a short while I was in seminary I pastored a small church in Kentucky on edge of Appalachia. The area has a pervasive insider vs. outsider culture largely defined by where you were born. One of the things that helped build this wall between insiders and outsiders is the incredible amount of studies conducted one these people. Dozens and dozens of doctoral dissertations have been written about them, matched with a steady stream of people who come in with the answers to their problems. After a while, the people just got tired of being told what their problems were and how to fix them. The interesting thing is most of those studies and suggestions for solutions were accurate. The outside researcher was able to see what needed to be done to address the problems of the region. But for those who were inside, they had grown weary of the suggestions and formed a wall to making any more changes.

Individuals and churches can easily fall into the same trap. While the challenges may be obvious to those on the outside those in the inside get tired of being told what their problems are and hearing about a need to change. So we build a wall and close off our ears.

The challenge for the leader is to communicate the vision as a solution to a problem that must be addressed immediately and to do so in way that calls people to action rather than to retreat.

The seventh building block is to; communicate your vision as a solution to a problem that must be addressed immediately.

The four components of an effective vision include statements of:
1. The problem.
2. The solution.
3. The reason something must be done.
4. The reason something must be done now. (86)

Sometimes seeing it is better than talking about it. This is the vision statement for the basis for planting a new church in the Atlanta area:

“This city is quickly becoming a city of unchurched, undisciplined, biblically illiterate people-and there is a desperate need for churches geared to meet the spiritual needs of unchurched, undisciplined people. Churches that are a friendly rather than hostile environment for biblically challenged, skeptical, suspicious seekers. We have been commissioned to make disciples, and together, as a local church, we can do that far more effectively than each of us working on our own.” (91-92).

I don’t know about you, but a statement like this makes me excited. Can you see how it clarifies and focuses the ministry of the church? Think about how a church with such a vision would structure their discipleship, children’s programs, worship, sermons, leadership, and every area. Spend some time thinking about what some of the characteristics of such a church would be.

Blessings,
Pastor Stephen

 

—-

Quotations from:
Stanley, Andy. Visioneering. Sisters, Or: Multnomah Publishers, 2005.

The Midnight Ride

Dear Friends,

Nehemiah famously took a midnight ride. He journey to being the governor of the territory including Jerusalem began with a message from his brother about the terrible state of the city. “Those who survived the exile and are back in the province are in great trouble and disgrace. The wall of Jerusalem is broken down, and its gates have been burned with fire” (Nehemiah 1:3, NIV). At the time Nehemiah was serving as the cup bearer to the king . . . of Babylon: the occupying enemy nation. His heart was broken and God placed a vision in his heart to do something about it. After many months, and an unbelievable story of God’s providence and leading, which brought him to this point. Nehemiah still has one more thing to do before he went public with the full reason he had come to Jerusalem. He had a midnight ride to take.

Horse RideEach of us need to take our own midnight rides. Church planters, before throwing it all in and launching, will visit the city and neighborhood they are going to plant in. Missionaries will make exploratory trips to the country they are going to serve before going public with their plan. Pastor will sneak into town ahead of a candidating weekend. The purpose these clandestine activities are to investigate before they initiate. Is the place God has called them to, the place where his vision will grow and be refined. If it is not, it may be found to just be a good idea but not the vision or the way of the vision.

The sixth Building Block is to, Walk before you talk; investigate before you initiate.



Even after we have jumped all it is still possible we will find things will not go as we expect. Plans can still fail. Opportunities can still disappear. Funding may never come.

“Spiritually speaking, faith is confidence that God is who he says he is and that he will do what he has promised to do. Faith is not a power or a force. It is not a vehicle by which we can coerce God into something against his will. It is simply an expression of confidence in the person and character of God. It is the proper response to the promise or revelation of God” (63).

There is a time to investigate and move cautiously, there is a time to dive into the unknown. There is nothing wrong with failing, nothing wrong with changing our minds, but doing nothing is unacceptable. The purpose of investigation is to determine where to move not whether to move.

Blessing,
Pastor Stephen

 

 

Quotation taken from:
Stanley, Andy. Visioneering. Sisters, Or: Multnomah Publishers, 2005.

 

What God Originates

Dear Friends,

Having a clear vision and sense of direction from God does not eliminate the times of waiting in our lives. It will not keep us away from the desert moments when our soul will need to be converted once again to be ready for what lays ahead.

Andy Stanley’s fifth building block (and you thought I had forgotten about these . . . didn’t you?) is:

Building Block #5: What God originates, He orchestrates.

WaitingPaul’s vision to preach to the gentiles was clear, but he spent three years in the desert preparing. Moses’ vision to lead his people out of slavery in Egypt was clear, but he needed to spend forty years tending sheep in the desert before he was ready to lead the people. Joseph’s (the first one, not the father of Jesus) vision to lead his family was obvious, that the journey there would take him through slavery and an Egyptian prison was not. So it is for us. We must be willing to allow God’s timing to be God’s timing, no matter how much we may wish his timing looked a lot more like our timing. “Waiting time is not wasted time for anyone whose heart God has placed a vision. Difficult time. Painful time. Frustrating time. But not wasted time” (49).

“If the Old and New Testament teach us anything, they teach us that nothing is too difficult for God . . . When God puts something in your heart to do, he goes to work behind the scenes to ensure that it happens. In the meantime, we are to remain faithful to him and focused on the vision. You are not responsible for figuring out how to pull off God’s vision for your life. You are responsible to do what you know to do, what you can do. And then you must wait . . . If it is a just a good idea, you have to make it happen. When God gives you a vision, there’s a sense in which you stand back and watch it happen. The challenge is that sometimes you stand back for a long time” (56-57).

Staying and keeping focused on our vision keeps us focused on God as we are reminded that the only way this vision will be fulfilled is if God acts and orchestrates.

Blessings,
Stephen

===

Quotations taken from:
Stanley, Andy. Visioneering. Sisters, Or: Multnomah Publishers, 2005.

 

The Misdirected Leader

I like listening to podcasts. Though I have learned my attention span is about twenty minutes. After that, I am ready to move onto another.

A few of my favorites are: Entreleadership (Dave Ramsey), Cartalk, College Wesleyan Church (Steve DeNeff), Redeemer Presbyterian Church (Timothy Keller) and Rainer on Leadership. It is the last one that got me thinking recently. I was listening to a podcast on Eight Struggles Pastor Face. Thom Rainer shared about two kinds of pastors: Lazy pastors and workaholic pastors. Every pastor/leader at one time or another has felt the pull to either extreme and both can be destructive to a church and to the pastor.

As I reflected, I started to think there is another kind of pastor, the “misdirected” pastor. It is a deadly place to be at. Many misdirected leaders find themselves being accused of being lazy and yet feeling like they are about to burn out from workaholism. The reason is a lack of direction and vision.

Who is the misdirected leader? It is the pastor who is doing a lot, but doing a lot of the wrong things. These are the leaders who spend all of their time and energy maintaining the machine that is church. When you look at this persons week you see they are teaching the adult Sunday School class, preaching every Sunday morning and night, leading a Tuesday Bible study, Wednesday night study, cleaning the bathrooms, painting the classrooms, leading the singing, organizing the Thursday prayer meeting, planning every detail of the worship service, driving the bus pick up kids and the hearse to bury the dead, and organizing the Saturday morning men’s breakfast. And when you get done with those things pastor could you start an 8-track ministry?

Why is the pastor doing all these things? Because someone decided they need to be done and after all, “pastor, this is what we are paying you for.” John Wesley said to his ministers, “You have nothing to do but save souls.” Truth be told, almost none of it has anything to do with saving souls. We will give it fancy names so we can pretend it is about souls, but really it is about keeping the machine running keeping people happy. It is about doing what has always been done and hoping this time something will be different.

Bypass PrunersWe have all heard the saying “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.” There is also another saying just as valid, “if it ain’t broke, break it.” Sometimes we need to break the machine, stop doing what we have always done. The Bible uses an agricultural analogy. It’s called pruning. Do you want health in your life and church, start pruning. Here is the bad news: people will be mad. People will call you lazy. Some will leave the church. Others will stay so they can tell you stories about how “committed” your predecessor was. It is okay, quit anyway.

In the book Ministry Velocity by Wayne Schmidt he quotes the late Dr. Orval Butcher who said, “‘The problem with most Wesleyan churches is not who we are willing to win, but who we’re not willing to lose.’ It was his way of saying he’d seen churches completely lose their vision and momentum in an attempt to appease one powerful person or interest group in the church. Attempts to please all the people or meet every need drain energy that might otherwise be focused on moving the vision forward” (pg. 37).

In the great words of the immortal philosopher Red Green, “I’m pulling of your, we’re all in this together.”

Pastor Stephen

The Otherside of Planning

Of course, like nearly everything there is another side. This comes from a book by Mark Batterson, lead pastor of National Community Church in Washington D.C.:

“The longer I live the more I think that spiritual maturity is less about figuring out the future and more about a moment-by-moment sensitivity to the Spirit of God. I’m not saying we shouldn’t make plans. But you might want to use a pencil with an eraser and have a shredder handy . . . Most of you never would have guessed ten years ago that you’d be doing what you’re doing or living where you’re living. And while you may have plans for the future, you have no idea what life will look like ten years from now. But that’s okay. I just don’t think spiritual maturity results in higher degrees of predictability . . . I believe in planning. I believe in goal setting. But there are some things in life you can’t plan or predict. And that drives the obsessive compulsive part of us crazy. We want control, but the decision to follow Christ is a relinquishment of control. Following Christ is letting Jesus take the wheel. Of course, some of us act like backseat drivers. Or worse yet, we’re like little kids that make their parents crazy by asking one question over and over again: Are we there yet?

I honestly think that question reveals something genetically wired into the human psyche. It comes standard. And while we may stop pestering our parents, we never outgrow the desire to know exactly where we’re headed and exactly when we’ll get there. We want a complete itinerary with everything mapped out.

What I’m trying to say in a nice way is this: We’re control freaks. But faith involves a loss of control. And with the loss of control comes the loss of certainty. You never know when a five-hundred-pound lion may cross your path. And faith is the willingness and readiness to embrace those uncertainties” (86-87).

lion

Quotation from:
Batterson, Mark. In a Pit with a Lion on a Snowy Day How to Survive and Thrive When Opportunity Roars. Sisters: Multnomah, 2006. Print.

The Ordinary Plan

Why am I here? My life seems stuck. God get me out of this mess. How can I serve you when I am in this place?

All questions I have asked and statements I have made. There are some days I find it incredibly difficult to see beyond my present circumstances and to believe God might be up to something. Many a person has quoted Romans 8:28 in times of crisis and confusion. “And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose” (Romans 8:28, NIV). But if the passage is true in times of crisis is it not also just as true in the day to day monotony of life?

boredomBuilding Block #4: God is using our circumstances to position and prepare us to accomplish his vision for your life.

“Often there is no tangible connection between our circumstances and the vision God has given us” (44). Or at least that is how it may seem to us. God will use our current situation and circumstances as well as future circumstances to put in the place to accomplish his vision. In the short term current circumstances may seem to be moving us away from God’s vision.

“God ordained visions are always too big for us to handle. We shouldn’t be surprised. Consider the source. There are always more questions than answers when God births a vision in our hearts. There are always obstacles. There is always a lack of resources” (42).

Nehemiah was the cub-bearer to the king…of Babylon. But God had placed in his heart a vision for rebuilding the walls of Jerusalem. On the surface it would seem as though where he was at and what he was doing had absolutely nothing to do with God’s will for his life. But God knew better than Nehemiah. He had him in just the right place to fulfill the vision.

Reflection: What is the main thing about your current situation that makes it difficult for you to believe God is preparing you for his vision?

 

Blessings,
Stephen

 

Quotations taken from:
Stanley, Andy. Visioneering. Sisters, Or: Multnomah Publishers, 2005.

Waiting and Planning

Dear Friends,

One of the great challenges for college faculty is figuring out a way to manipulate . . . err . . . motivate students to participate in hours of seemly endless drudgery and pay for the privilege. If you happen to be a student in the religion department at a Nazarene institution, like I was, you can be sure quotes from the likes of John Wesley and Phineas F. Bresee,Breseefounder of the Church of the Nazarene, are certainly going to make their way into the motivational repertoire. One of those I heard frequently was a story of a person asking old Phiney what he would do if he were told he only had ten years to live. Phiney, lowering his voice and fixing his eyes on his poor unsuspecting inquisitor replied he would spend the first five years preparing for the last five. With that men came into the room and carried off the questioner to study in one of the many fine Nazarene institutions of higher learning. From then on no one dared asked Phiney any more questions.

Whether the story is true or legend it illustrates an important principle about the steps we take as a visions grows within our souls.

Building Block #3: Pray for opportunities and plan as if you expect God to answer your prayers.

“New visions die easily. And understandably so. There is little to go on. Praying and planning will help you keep your vision alive. And that is critical. When your vision dies, part of you dies as well. So pray. Pray for opportunities. Pray for the people who could help you launch your vision. And while you wait, plan! Develop a strategy. Dream on paper. Find the one or two things you can do and get busy” (38).

It may seem counterintuitive to pray and plan at the same time but planning is about putting ourselves in a position where we are able to respond to God when the time comes. Nehemiah had a vision for rebuilding the walls of Jerusalem, but he was the cup bearer to the King of Babylon. What are some the areas that Nehemiah would have been able to plan for? He could have planned how he would respond when God softened the King’s heart and opened a door for Nehemiah to travel to Jerusalem. He could have thought about what he was going to need, the letters for travel, the supplies, etc. He might have even looked into just how a wall is built. We know that there were non-Jewish people living in the land at the time. He could have studied their languages, at least enough the ask where the bathroom is at and the directions to the nearest McDonalds. These are just a few.
Even as we plan, we should not be surprised if God uses our plans in a way we never expected.

If the opportunity came today for you to move toward your vision would we be ready? What can you do to prepare?

Blessings,
Stephen

 

Quotations taken from:
Stanley, Andy. Visioneering. Sisters, Or: Multnomah Publishers, 2005.

Hyperactive Rabbits

We all want to be hyperactive rabbits lacing up our red lightning bolt jogging shoes, taking our place on the starting line waiting for the moment when the starter’s pistol fires and we can careen ahead to claim the glory of victory.

When that first vision of what could be, what should be, begins to become clear in our souls it can be like the sound of a starter’s pistol in our minds and bodies. We surge ahead to claim our destiny. But, as we all know, when the smoke clears it will not be the wild rabbit who wins the race but the steady, slow, tortoise.

Rabbit and TurtleBuilding Block #2: A vision does not necessarily require immediate action.

“A vision rarely requires immediate action. It always requires patience” (20). Charging out of the starting gate too early to fulfill, even a God-ordained vision, will always result in failure, discouragement, and disillusionment. While we will talk more about the specifics of what takes place while we wait when we discuss other building blocks, for now I will say that three things happen while we wait for the vision:

First, the vision matures in us. “For a vision to survive it must be mature and healthy before being exposed to the cynical, critical, stubborn environment in which it is expected to survive” (21).

Second, we mature in preparation for the vision. Think about the story of David. He had been anointed the King of Israel. He knew his vision. He knew God’s purposes for his life. Yet he still had many years of preparation and maturing before the vision would be.

Third, God is at work behind the scenes to prepare the way. “Ultimately we are taking part in a massive assault that began one dark afternoon on a hill just outside Jerusalem. God’s vision for your life is much bigger than you. Apart from his intervention and preparation, you and I are incapable of pulling off even our small part of the operation” (24). While the Hebrew people were in slavery in Egypt they cried out to God and it appeared that he was not listening. But with the birth of a baby to be named Moses and even his being sent away for 40 years to the land of Midian, we see that God was at work all the time, behind the scenes, to fulfill a vision for saving his people. For much of the time, though, it appeared as though God was not doing anything.

Blessings,
Pastor Stephen

 

Quotations taken from:
Stanley, Andy. Visioneering. Sisters, Or: Multnomah Publishers, 2005.

Fight, and you may die. Run, and you will live

Battle of Stirling

Dear Friends,

Today’s Milk Can continues a series exploring the questions; “What is vision?” and “How do we get it?”

In the movie Braveheart, William Wallace, played by Mel Gibson, a commoner, rallies his people in a war of independence from England. An ill equipped, untrained army stands on a battlefield facing the professional army of England. Fear begins to grip the Scotts when Wallace rides in front of the troops.

“I am William Wallace. And I see a whole army of my countrymen, here in defiance of tyranny! You’ve come to fight as free men, and free man you are! What will you do without freedom? Will you fight?”

One soldier answers, “Against that? No, we will run and we will live!”

“Yes,” Wallace replies, “fight, and you may die. Run, and you will live . . . at least awhile. And dying in your bed many years from now, would you be willing to trade all the days from this day to that for one chance—just one chance—to come back here and tell our enemies that they may take our lives but they’ll never take our freedom!”

You may watch the scene from the movie here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gr_OpFxCx-A

A God-given vision is bigger than us. A God-given vision will call for you to lay down your life, figuratively, and sometimes literally. But when we reach the end of our days. Do we want to look back with longing for the day when history could have been changed or do we want to be remembered for choosing to truly live? Jesus said, “For whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for me will find it” (Matthew 16:25, NIV).

Blessings,
Stephen

Story of William Wallace taken from the book:

Parrott, Les. You’re stronger than you think : the power to do what you feel you can’t. Carol Stream, Ill: Tyndale House Publishers, Inc, 2012. (Pages 172-173).

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