Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Irrational Passion

     Growing up in a Christian household was pretty tame (not in a bad way Mum if you're reading this...) so I  often went looking for fun and excitement elsewhere. My parents had fairly strict rules to keep me and my brother safe (thank you) but outside the house was a little bit of a different story. Climbing on things, sneaking into places, breaking stuff and being chased by dogs were regular features in my childhood. The thrill of doing things that were a little bit dangerous and maybe would be frowned upon definitely filled a hole in me. I "prayed a prayer" at about age 6 or 7 but like so many others I really gave my life to Jesus later in life when I was 12 at a youth camp (shout out to ma youth camp peeps! holla!). I'm 24 now and in the last 12 or so years * I've experienced the ebbs and flows of Christian life and the "normal" ups and downs. I've had times when I've thought I could not be more in love with Jesus and I want to spend the night on the streets with Him and the homeless people and then I've had times when in my mind reading a chapter of the Bible is considered my "good deed for the day". Yikes

     Since going to university in 2007 I've hung out with lots of different kinds of Christians from all sorts of backgrounds, denominations and ages and watched their lives and allowed lots of them to influence mine. Some of these influences have been massively beneficial and have created in me a greater hunger and desire for Jesus and I'm so grateful for those people! Seriously! I hope you know who you are!! I've seen people handle their faith and their relationship with God in very different ways with some considering it to be an almost secret and personal matter while others travel the globe to shout about it.
     Where I am on my own journey I've decided that there's no other satisfying way for me to live but in passionate, life-consuming love with Jesus. I believe as Christians we all carry this DEEP longing to give our all to Him and spend our life on Him and Him alone whatever that looks like. We may not always be aware of it but it's definitely there, deep crying out to deep! Something in our core stands in awe and greatly admires the lives of our heroes of the faith, past and present that are totally sold out and laid down in love before God. Their  unthinkable sacrifice for the cause of Christ resounds with something in our own spirits. We (dare I say it) jealously desire to know the intimacy they shared with God, the clarity with which they heard His voice and the incomparable power and conviction they found in Him to do what seemed impossible. As we hear these stories our hearts burn within us but there's a voice that speaks often with the accent of wisdom that tells us to "calm down" or "be reasonable" or for those of us who're younger to "wait until we're older". I don't dispute that this voice often comes from well-meaning sources and is sometimes apt but I would like to respectfully challenge it as I also believe in some cases its source is not Divine. Since I believe that there is a root of wisdom in that voice I'm not going to deny it entirely but I am going to give a pretty one-sided perspective. I hope that's ok with you friend : )

     I don't know about you but personally I am amazing at excusing my lukewarmness and lack of passion for Christ and apathetic attitude and calling it patience, wisdom or even maturity when really it's just apathy. I've been to Bible College so on a regular basis I can probably even whip out some Scripture to back me up and validate my avoidance of giving any more of myself or my life to God to do as He pleases. Part of my problem is though, the longer I spend in the Word, the more I find words and phrases that start to make me uncomfortable and make it difficult for me to enjoy my lukewarm bubble bath. Whispers of something greater, deeper and wilder turn my hot tub into an ice bath. I'll share some of them with you and what they mean to me since you're here...

"Sacrifice"
     In English we understand this word to pretty much mean giving something up for the sake of something or someone else at your own expense. We're called to be a living sacrifice. I understand that I am in Christ so in Him I have everything I need and the Father will take care of me but I also understand that I belong to Him and everything I have is His. Because of this I've had a few moments in my life in which I've felt the Holy Spirit prompt me to give away something that I like or that I think I need to someone who doesn't have that thing (or who does) or to buy something for someone even sometimes when materially I don't have much myself. Honestly, at the time I often don't like doing this and it's usually preceded by a "Kevin the Teenager" style whining argument from me. "But Looooooooord..." etc. After I've done it however guess what happens?
I get flooded with the peace and joy of God because Christ in me got to enjoy being Himself and He's very happy about it! I realise that giving of myself sometimes even to a painful degree is in my DNA now because it's in His. The Saviour was marked by a life of sacrifice. 
Sometimes He finds a way to give me back what I gave away and more but sometimes it doesn't go down like that but He says that when we serve others we serve Him right? (Prov 19:17) Why would you expect something back from someone you're serving...? I know a certain couple who at one time in their life knew that some people living nearby didn't have any food or money to buy it and so they decided to start giving most of their food to these people and would themselves go days without eating!! Some of us already have that voice speaking up in our heads "That's not wise!" "You really have to hear the Lord on that one..." Let me repeat that I don't necessarily think that this advice is wrong, I just believe that sacrifice is core to Christianity and sacrifice by its very nature, costs us something. If it doesn't cost us anything, it's not a sacrifice. On that note, let's move on. : )

"Count the Cost"
     Luke 14:25-33 makes me cringe when I read it. If you can't be bothered to look it up (I probably wouldn't) here it is in the NIV:

      25Now large crowds were going along with Him; and He turned and said to them,26“If anyone comes to Me, and does not hate his own father and mother and wife and children and brothers and sisters, yes, and even his own life, he cannot be My disciple.27“Whoever does not carry his own cross and come after Me cannot be My disciple.28“For which one of you, when he wants to build a tower, does not first sit down and calculate the cost to see if he has enough to complete it?29“Otherwise, when he has laid a foundation and is not able to finish, all who observe it begin to ridicule him,30saying, ‘This man began to build and was not able to finish.’31“Or what king, when he sets out to meet another king in battle, will not first sit down and consider whether he is strong enough with ten thousand men to encounter the one coming against him with twenty thousand?32“Or else, while the other is still far away, he sends a delegation and asks for terms of peace.33“So then, none of you can be My disciple who does not give up all his own possessions.
Luke 14:25-33 (NIV)


Jesus talks here about thinking about how much you'll have to surrender if you decide to actually walk out this Christianity thing. Banning Liebscher, a Christian leader and a hero of mine while preaching said "Salvation is free right? Yes, it just costs you your whole life." I'm not talking about earning your salvation or "striving" here. Jesus is the only one who can save. But He's pretty clearly saying here that life with Him and life without Him are as different as Life and Death. To walk with Him is to join Him in His suffering as well as in His victory. I'm talking about the heart of David that refuses to offer God something that cost him nothing (1Chron 21:24). Banning who predominantly ministers to teenagers and young adults went on to say "I am increasingly concerned with a generation whose Christianity has cost them nothing." Here's a link to Banning's preach. Listen to him, he's amazing - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ekKgF8jxlk

     As I said before I've grown up in the church and a lot has been handed to me. I love my church and our leaders and so much great teaching has just been handed to me since I was a child. Some people become Christians and get mocked by their friends or thrown out of their families or worse! I've fought many battles against God when He's asked me to lay things down that I love and enjoy. I can remember a friend of mine who wasn't a Christian highlighting a song in my itunes and saying "You shouldn't be listening to that." Ouch! I had to admit she was right and on several occasions I had to painfully go through my playlist with the Holy Spirit and it got A LOT smaller. He didn't stop there however. I started to find that films and TV shows that I used to watch and love had to go as well. Again the voice of reason jumps up and says "Hey you can listen to whatever music you want, you're free in Christ." "God doesn't care what you watch as long as you live right." I think there's some real truth in there and I'm not trying to make a point about what anyone should and shouldn't listen to or watch or whatever.
I had to ask myself some questions about whether or not I was willing and why it was so difficult for me to give up those things and let them go. This was a very small cost that was required of me and it makes me wonder if I've counted the cost at all since giving my life to Him. I was privileged to speak to a young man who'd just been in a scrap with a member of his youth group about self-control and managing your emotions. He said something I found pretty profound. He simply said "Christianity is hard." I think sometimes we can get so into teaching people that "God is a God of love" (which is true) and that "the Holy Spirit is a gentleman" that we end up accidentally telling them that God won't ask them to do anything they don't want to or that will cause them great discomfort. That's simply not true and a quick reading of Scripture will prove that. I really don't think "take up your cross" is a particularly pleasant invitation.

 "You knew one thing about a man you saw carrying a cross, he wasn't coming back."
A.W Tozer

"Love the Lord"
     Classic bit of Scripture this. Jesus says that the most important thing God has ever told us to do is love God with our whole mind, heart and soul and with all of our strength (Luke 10:27, Mark 12:30, Matt 22:37). Wow! This is one of those verses I think that you can hear so much growing up in the church that it loses its outrageousness and just becomes something that's nice to do haha! I don't really want to go too deep in this blog into the ins and outs of what it means to love God with our whole mind, heart and soul (except to say that I don't think I'm doing it) but I would like to point something out I noticed about strength. If you were asked to do a physical activity with all of your strength, you'd understand that you were required to do it until you were exhausted right? Either until you were working at maximum capacity or until you had no strength left. If you've ever lifted weights in the gym there comes a point when you're no longer capable of lifting anything more and your muscles max out. This is how you get your muscles to grow bigger and stronger. I think we're on to something with that. Loving the Lord with all our strength leads to an increase in our capacity to love Him. 

     Personally I think the words "I love you" should never come as a surprise but rather should confirm the experience someone has already of you in their life because Love is a verb, a "doing word". It should be like walking up to your employer after working for them for 20 years and saying "I work for you." What's my point? Erm......hang on...... OH YEAH! Telling God that we love Him is not the same as loving Him. Jesus makes it clear that loving God is caring about and acting based on what is important to His heart (John 14:15). Try and think back to a time when you've given of your physical or emotional strength and energy to accomplish something that you knew was dear to God's heart and by the time you finished it you were absolutely shattered! (don't feel bad if you can't think of a time like that, just look forward to one!) Even though you felt like your arms or legs or whatever muscle operates your emotions was about to fall off, I bet you felt His pleasure! While it was going on I bet you were wondering where you were finding the strength! (I reckon that's where running and not growing weary comes in) A few years ago I went on a 2 week mission trip to the Welsh valleys and would collapse into bed each night totally spent but to this day I still feel God's delight for the people who were touched and changed and saved during that time. Thoughts about "not spreading yourself too thin" creep to mind and of course it's "easy for you to say, you're an energetic young man". Fair enough. I just think that rationalising passion is like putting a basket on a flame. One of two things may happen. Either the flame will go out altogether or it will burn away the basket. There's something about love that is fierce and untameable while not lacking discipline. To me, rational passion looks like dead religion. I'm not talking about being foolish but I am saying that the foolishness of God is wiser than man's wisdom (1Cor 1:25) and that we need to increase in discerning the difference.

"Pretty much anything Jesus said about how to treat other people..."
     Jackie Pullinger, another hero of the faith said that it was still difficult for Jesus to lay His life down even though He spent His whole life practising. But how crazy is that?! He spent His whole life practising! Anyway that is how He was able to get away with saying so many things that I find damaging to my own self interest! These things just do not compute with me!! If someone demands your coat, give them your shirt as well?!? (Luke 6:29) You what?? Not even asks, demands!! How does that make sense?? How about love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you?? (Matt 5:44) That's waaay beyond passivity, tolerance and restraint. That's pretty much "Dear Lord, please heal Jonny's knuckles that he just broke on my face, amen." Then there's that old favourite when someone strikes you on the cheek, offer them the other one also (Luke 6:29). I'll stop there. Whether or not you agree with the literal applications of these commands, the heart behind them speaks of a love for God and for people that reminds me a lot of insanity! That voice pipes up "Hey, God doesn't want you to be a doormat, you're the head and not the tail."
But this love says "I won't just be a doormat, I'll be a staircase. If you want, you can walk all over me but I will do everything in my power to make sure that when you're done, you've been blessed, elevated, propelled forward and you've seen something of Jesus." Clearly a life implementing this kind of love requires supernatural power. Where does that power come from? What do we do about the other voice?

Final Thoughts
     Truthfully? I don't know. Everything I've shared with you is from thoughts that I am having and convictions that I'm feeling so I'm not going to pretend to have the answers. I'm still on a quest with all of this like everyone else but I'm starting to understand that I am far more able to be intentional about it than I'd like to admit! I know that I've said practically nothing of the rewards of running hard after God but I think we've got a pretty good grasp of that already. I hope that you can appreciate and maybe even identify with my experience, my honesty and my very one-sided thinking. If you feel like I've offended you in any way that is not my intention, I just want to be honest and move forward with anyone else that wants to. I don't want to rationalise my passion for God because I'd rather err on the side of going overboard for Jesus than staying in the boat and never walking on water with Him, even if it's only for a second. I want to be clear that I believe in being wise about things, I believe in not thrusting ourselves into danger for the sake of it or wiping ourselves out to the point that we can no longer function. I think that the voice I mentioned at times can be straight from the mouth of God through Godly people but at other times can be employed by the enemy or our own love of comfort to keep us as individuals and as the Church from entering into a greater manifestation of Christ in our lives. When we don't know the overshadowing and enveloping love of the Father by intellect and experience we can be tempted to create doctrines and interpret Scripture in a way that will protect us and make us feel safe and secure in case God doesn't, forgetting that the Holy Spirit is our Comforter because our lives are made to be uncomfortable. I do however think that we need to learn how to ask and trust God as our loving Father to set limits for us so that we can go wild in expressing our love for Him while being conscious of our limitations instead of setting our own limitations, living only within our finite means of love, grace, energy etc and cutting ourselves off from having to rely on Him.

     For some people reading this, it will sound like utter madness and that's fine. I'm only 24 and I'm sure my thoughts and opinions will change on certain things over time so if what I've said doesn't stir anything in your heart and the Holy Spirit doesn't speak to you, ok. I can't force my convictions on you because I didn't even get them for myself but I pray we'll all come into a greater experience of Christ-likeness and raw life-consuming love for God in our Christianity. But let me talk to the people who are either stirred, excited or just plain frothing at the mouth while reading this! FAN THAT FLAME!! Sit and think about the excitement of throwing your whole life at Jesus in whatever way He wants and then pray and ask Him how to do it!! Find people, books, films and podcasts that don't massage your apathy but rip it out of you and stuff your soul full of dynamite!!! BURN BABY BURN!!! Don't allow people around you to quench your fire!! Honour every person for where they're at in their relationship with God, don't judge them, be gracious to them but don't you dare settle for less than what He's put in your heart! Press yourself into the secret place and ask God to impart His heart to you continually to keep transforming you to be more like Jesus!! Don't give in after 2 weeks when it seems like nothing has changed. Press in!! Ask God to link you with others who are jumping out of the lukewarm bubble bath and putting on their robes of radical righteousness!! Our God is an all-consuming fire and you know you want your whole life to burn for Him!!

     In the Luke 14 passage Jesus uses the example of a man building a tower to describe what it's like to count the cost of giving our lives to Him. This tells me that after I've made the decision to follow Christ, there is a process I go through (building) in establishing a new life. How long does it take to build a tower? How long is a piece of string? Continually and intentionally building with the Chief Architect is what's important. Why didn't Jesus say a man building a house? I reckon that this continual building and laying down of bricks (or idols, whatever) should eventually lead to a life that is fortified against negative outside influence and that has a higher and greater perspective of the world than before. We're all at different stages in this process. Some of us will be laying the foundations of our faith, understanding our new identity in Christ, others will be placing bricks,  laying to rest old habits, attitudes and ways of life and some of us are figuring out whether or not we've got the correct change to make this decision to follow Christ and start building at all. Maybe you've given up altogether but could be persuaded to start again... Wherever you're at, be honest about where you're at and don't convince yourself that you're further on simply because yours is the tallest tower around you. Every house cat think it's a tiger : ) Remember that His yoke is easy and His burden is light because He gives us the strength to carry it.

I pray that we will fully use the freedom we have been given in Christ to love God and that the Holy Spirit would enable us to pursue Him with unbridled passion like a wild stallion and that the Father would be free to tell us when we're loving too much.

Thanks for reading!

"Set me as a seal upon your heart, as a seal upon your arm, for love is strong as death, jealousy is fierce as the grace. Its flashes are flashes of fire, the very flame of the LORD. Many waters cannot quench love, neither can floods drown it. If a man offered for love all the wealth of his house, he would be utterly despised."
Song of Solomon 8:6-7 (ESV)

If you read all this way and didn't go listen to Banning, you want to. Here he is again! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ekKgF8jxlk

End Notes
*I realised when I wrote this that I've been a Christian for half my life! That made me really happy! It also made me a little sad that in 12 years time I won't be able to say I've been a Christian my whole life...

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Telling Stories to Children

“Much that once was, is lost for none now live who remember it.” - Galadriel


Thursday, January 24, 2013

Real People, Real Relationships - Vulnerability

This is a post I've been waiting to write for a while. I really hope it helps you and brings you freedom.

Wounds from a friend can be trusted, but an enemy multiplies kisses.
Proverbs 27:6 (NIV)


But the LORD God called to the man, "Where are you?"
Genesis 3:9 (NIV)

     I've gotten quite passionate about vulnerability in the last year. I looked up the origin of the word vulnerable and it comes from the same word as "wound". Vulnerability is basically the ability to be wounded or harmed. I'm currently on a quest (I prefer the word quest to journey because it has a definite purpose and just sounds more exciting!) learning about the power and significance of vulnerability in my life and how it is linked to true love, true intimacy and true freedom. I'm not talking about being the scrawny kid who gets picked on because he can't defend himself. I'm talking more about the decision to make yourself vulnerable to God and to others. I'm saying that vulnerability is not a weakness but a display of strength. I was thinking one day about whether or not God is vulnerable because we're (Christians) supposed to act like Him right? I was struck with the thought that Jesus modelled vulnerability to the max by setting aside Heaven and His immortality to come close to us. Close enough for us to touch Him with our hands. Close enough for us to kill Him. While He was on the Earth even though He knew all of His disciples would abandon Him, He brought them close to Him (Mark 14:27). He even made Judas the betrayer a disciple and allowed Him to share in His incredible life for 3 years!! Jesus' example of vulnerability shows that it is a risk because of what people are like but it's also completely necessary to have real depth in any relationship.

     I'll explain a little more of what I mean by vulnerability because clearly I'm not saying "hey let's all go hang out with people we think might want us dead..." By vulnerability I mean opening our hearts, our thoughts and emotions to people and giving them the power to analyse and accept, reject or correct them. It's about living your life in such a way that those close to you can see into your heart and express to you what they think about it. I find this can be the scariest thing in the world but it's completely necessary if I want to have real relationships with real people. Without this my relationships remain superficial and I can never really connect on a deeper level. I firmly believe that Intimacy doesn't exist without vulnerability.

     When I was a kid my brother and I used to break things quite regularly. We were pretty hyper kids so we'd be climbing all over everything and swinging from everything and throwing everything around! Eventually the inevitable would happen and we'd have to find a way to fix it or hide it before our parents returned home. We actually got better and better at this as we got older! When it comes to worship and encountering God vulnerability is again completely essential. I've definitely had times in my life where I've tried to come to sing to God in church or wherever when in my heart I've been doing everything I can to make sure He doesn't see that issue or that attitude I'm trying to hide from Him because "I know what He'll say." I want to try and fix it myself or just hide it from Him and distract Him with my loud singing. As a result I would go a long time never really connecting with God. My thoughts about myself would change because I wouldn't be making room in my heart to listen to what He was saying about me. My thoughts about Him would change too and become warped. It's like trying to keep track of a friend's life through facebook without actually speaking to them! You get a distorted image. When I would eventually come to Him and lay my heart open and be honest about all that I was going through and make a conscious decision to verbalise it to Him (even though I know He knows) it would make room for Him to step in and do something. It's just quitting pretending that I don't know He sees it anyway and giving Him the freedom to say what He wants to say to me about it and to help me deal with it. This is where Proverbs 27:6 comes in. What greater friend is there than Him? He may have to wound me where necessary e.g. in my pride in order to cut out what is damaging to me but I know that He will build me up and encourage me, replacing lies I've believed with His truth and wash me clean with His word. I like to call this open-heart surgery : )

     In  1Samuel 19, Saul tries to kill David but comes into the presence of God and ends up stripping off his armour and prophesying all day and all night. I believe this is like an example for us of what can happen when we come into God's presence. We remove our armour and the things we use to protect ourselves and make us appear strong and we surrender to His unrelenting love and choose to speak only what He says about us all day and all night. This is true worship. When we come before Him as we are, warts and all but choose to say what He says and see what He sees. As we experience His love and His forgiveness it drives us into a deeper place of worship where even more healing and building up can be done. When Adam sinned and hid himself God called to him and asked him where he was at. This was God offering Adam the opportunity to be vulnerable and so restore intimacy to their relationship. Adam started off well "I heard you in the garden, and I was afraid because I was naked; so I hid." but he then shifted the blame to God and to Eve "The woman YOU put here with here with me..." God is always offering us the chance to live in intimacy with Him through vulnerability. Let's come to Him without excuses and lay our hearts open before Him knowing that the One who knows us best loves us most.

     In the song "I Bruise Easily" by Natasha Beddingfield she makes a pretty deep statement that reminds us that our vulnerability should be guided by wisdom: "Anyone who can touch you can hurt you or heal you."  I know plenty of people who've been hurt by being open with people in the past and as a result no longer want to. The trouble is our vulnerability actually protects us in the long run.I really want to emphasise how important it is for us to have intimate relationships that are guided by wisdom. If we throw our hearts open to anyone and everyone we meet we'll end up with a lot of wounds that are unnecessary and unhelpful and we may then become bitter towards the thought of being vulnerable at all. I should also say however that a resistance to being vulnerable with people can also come from a place of simply wanting to do what you want as Proverbs 18:1 says: "Whoever isolates himself seeks his own desire; he breaks out against all sound judgement."

     Think about Jesus and His disciples. He followed everywhere by crowds but He had His specially selected 12. Within the 12 he had His specially selected 3, Peter James and John. When Jesus was going to be betrayed He told all the disciples to pray but He took Peter James and John further on into the garden to pray and then it says that He then displayed what was really in His heart (Matthew 26:37) Having people in our lives that we can be completely open and honest with is huge! These should be people who over time have demonstrated that they're committed to our well-being and our personal and spiritual development and not just telling us that we're right all the time. People that will challenge us in love and help us to stay in humility. I think it's important to partner with the Holy Spirit and ask Him who He has put in our lives for this purpose and to pursue them!

     As I mentioned Jesus' vulnerability and His closeness to us also meant that we could kill Him but it also meant that people could come close enough to touch Him and be healed! Vulnerability also makes it possible for us to share the good things that are in us with other people! It's really important that we are vulnerable with people in our lives as well as with God partly because they well enable to see things with their added perspective and different experiences of life but also because the good things that God has put in our hearts flow out when we make ourselves vulnerable. Accountability is a buzz word that gets thrown around in the Christian world a lot but essentially it means being vulnerable, living your life in such a way that you can be questioned and corrected by others because you are honest and open about what is going on in your heart. I think this is particularly important in the areas of our lives where we are leaders and have influence over others whether that's at home, in the Church or in the workplace. I was at a conference recently and I heard a leader say something like this: "When we learn to be vulnerable we create a safe space around us as leaders. People find it's ok to not be ok." I think that's awesome! I used to believe that if you're the one in charge it's important to maintain the illusion of control and I think there's an element of truth in that but I don't think it's the whole story. Whenever you have someone in charge who appears to be perfect a culture of performance can quickly develop around them as everyone under them tries to be perfect too. People are empowered and released when leaders demonstrate that it's possible to function in the kingdom and be accepted and used by God while you're still working with Him to sort through your mess! However if people discover that they're leaders aren't perfect and have created the illusion that they are they turn on them very quickly. We've all seen and heard about the different scandals and most of them come from a lack of vulnerability with God and with people. Ian Rossol says: "Accountability isn't just about someone pointing out your faults, it's about someone holding you to your calling." Vulnerable relationships are mutually beneficial.

     In conclusion, vulnerability when done correctly is essential having real relationships with real people. I've really only scratched the surface here and there are many important things I've missed so I'd love to hear YOUR further thoughts about it.

Thanks for reading! I really hope this helps you on your quest. 

Sunday, December 16, 2012

Poem: Through the Brokenness


Sometimes we get hurt and then decide to lock ourselves away so that we can't be hurt again. Here's a little story. 

Blood runs down his arm from what’s left of the heart he once wore on his sleeve
A gentle spirit is now imprisoned in an icy palace of indifference
A heart once so trusting is now given to lusting after items to build the walls higher
The women and the drinks, the motions and the winks making people think he cares for nothing
His spirit shivers in its cold prison dreaming of daylight
Hateful glances and cold, harsh sentences patrol the perimeters to ensure no one gets in.
Or out
The distant drums of a siege echo in the surrounding valleys

Hours, days and years pass by as the walls grow taller. And yet, weaker
The piled up sexual relationships, the empty bottles, the glass promises shattered to bits
All packed together, impenetrable
His spirit is becoming restless, pining for outside daily now, visited only by loneliness
It writhes in a silent, melancholy, agony until the pressure of desperation squeezes a tiny cry from within that echoes through the palace walls and beyond
“Help me...”
The walls begin to tremble

Outer defences were weakened by cannonballs of encouragement
Catapults of promises from above brought him to his knees
Scowls fight with all their might but they’re falling fast and giving way to smiles
Random acts of kindness scale the towers of pessimistic expectation and raze them to the ground
Panic spreads among the palace guard
Hearing the sound of battle outside his spirit cried out again
“Help me, please”
The king of the attacking army rose from his throne
“Please I want to get out, I want to be free”
The king put on his armour
“I’m sorry I ever built this place, I’m sorry I ran away”
The king mounts his horse and begins his assault in the wake of his army
Walls become roads before the power of his charge
Barriers become pathways in the wake of love’s fury
His eyes of fire see right through the walls to the inner chamber

The man’s spirit trembles
Face to face with Grace’s embrace, his heart would race if it hadn’t already stopped
The love of Love looks him in the eyes seeing all that he is, sighs and says
Follow me

Sunday, December 9, 2012

Real People, Real Relationships - Weaknesses

     Continuing on the theme of people in the Church being real with each other, I'd like to bring up another issue that I've noticed in myself that keeps me from growing and perhaps someone else will be able to relate.

     I'm finding that if someone challenges me on something I do or say sometimes I can be lightning quick at shooting down their challenge with my laser-guided razor sharp justifications. Unfortunately for the person bringing the challenge, they just haven't realised how perfect and flawless I am yet (go back and read that with a tone of sarcasm) so it's my job to explain to them that the weakness they think they've seen is actually one of my greatest strengths! Still don't know what I mean? Maybe an example will help:

Friend: "Hey Bob I was hoping I'd catch you today, I just wanted to share a little something with you because you know I love you and I feel like I should point out something you might not be aware of."

Bob: "Of course friend, you know I love and appreciate your wisdom in my life. What is it?"

Friend: "Well I've noticed that you have a bit of a habit of talking a lot about people when they're not there and speculating as to what is going on in their life. I've seen you do this on a number of occasions and some were particularly harsh and negative. I know you wouldn't do this intentionally but I think you have a problem with gossiping." 

Bob: "Haha! I'm so glad you brought this up! I can totally see where you're coming from but let me explain. You see I'm just a very caring person and so I care what's going on in other people's lives. I also have the gift of discernment so I can usually tell what's happening in others' lives. I'm an external processor so I have to think out loud so talking to people helps me to think. So you see there's nothing to worry about."

Friend: "..."

Bob: "I'm glad we were able to clear that up. This was a good chat."

    Any of that sound familiar? Now I'm not for a second saying that Bob's response couldn't hold an element of truth in it, I just wanted to expose what the surface level of this issue could look and sound like. Bob is likely to start conversations with "I probably shouldn't tell you this but..." or "I'm only telling you this so don't tell anyone but..." Bob clearly has an issue with gossip but he's learned how to dress it up in Christian terms so that he doesn't have to recognise or deal with it and he may even convince his friend of this so the challenge won't be repeated. In fact the more he does it the easier it gets as his conscience gets "seared" leading to a deadening of his conviction (1Tim 4:2) to avoid gossip.

I'll try another example.

Friend: "Don't take this the wrong way Terry but I think  you are quite aggressive and controlling in group settings. It's like we always have to do what you want to do or you get into a mood or try to make us feel bad."

Terry: "Come on friend, don't be such a wimp! You know what I'm like, I'm just a passionate and decisive person! So much of the time everybody is just faffing around someone needs to make a decision so I do. I don't always have to have my way.

Friend: "Last week you said if we didn't play articulate you were going to leave."

Terry: "I was just joking..."

Friend: "You sulked in the kitchen the rest of the night... Was that a joke too?"

Terry: "Well articulate is just better than all the other options."

     Does any of that sounds familiar? When Terry's friend has tried to point out a weakness (aggressive and controlling), Terry has turned it round into an apparent strength (passionate and decisive). Terry's behaviour at the party is the sort of behaviour you'd expect from a toddler but his ability to cover it over with excuses makes it difficult for his friend to get through to him how he is making people feel.

     I think that we all have weaknesses and our ability to recognise those weakness in ourselves or when others bring them up is key us being able to grow together as a church community. I think we need to never get beyond the point where we're willing to have people challenge our behaviour and thoughtfully consider what they say and ask the Holy Spirit to help us take a proper look at ourselves. This takes a massive amount of humility and maturity especially if it's not brought in the way you'd prefer. God sometimes challenges our humility and maturity by sending messages through means that we don't like. For further information see the way Israel's prophets spoke to them... Proverbs 27:6 says that you can trust wounds from trusted friends. I totally believe that but I think we can go too far with that and start to disallow anyone else to speak into our lives. After all our friends won't always be right. We can be tempted to hide away in an ivory tower and surround ourselves with friends that know love us but that we also know largely agree with us and perhaps trap ourselves and end up protecting ourselves from receiving truth which of course is stupid. Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying let's have everybody speaking into everybody else's life, although there will be times when people bring us challenges out of the blue who have little or no relationship with us and instead of writing them off straight away we'll need to be in a place where we can hear them out with true wisdom and discernment. I am saying that we should be approachable though. I went through a time in my life where no one would confront me because I gave off a vibe that a) I am pretty perfect and b) You aren't nearly spiritual enough to challenge me. I'm still on a journey of breaking that down but I'm feeling the benefits! I think remembering that God speaks through people will really help us  in this.

     There's also a responsibility on those bringing challenges to be bursting at the seams with grace and love so that they do all that is in their power to ensure that a word of correction is well-received. I've heard a lot of people (including myself) bring direct and accusative challenges to other brothers or sisters under the banner of "tough love" expecting people to listen to them and change. In the second above example, Terry was likely to feel somewhat under attack from the way his friend challenged him and that put him on the defensive. Danny Silk, an american minister would say that the goal of any confrontation among friends should be intimacy or in-to-me-you-see. That is, is challenging one another's behaviour our first objective should be to allow the other person to see how their behaviour is affecting us (or others) on the inside. A simple way to think about this is not starting our sentences with "YOU". "You are selfish and evil." But rather starting them with "I". "I feel like sometimes you make yourself and what you want more important than me and that hurts." This means we accept that our perception might not fully reflect reality but we're showing it to our friend who believe cares how we feel and allowing them to process it. (Gents this isn't going to win you any MAN OF THE YEAR awards in the world but you'll definitely be a candidate for sonship Matthew 5:9)

     Lastly I think remembering that no-one has it altogether keeps us from being afraid of exposing our weaknesses to ourselves and to others. I've found it hugely liberating and empowering to discover that other people in the Church have issues that they're are still working through and God still loves them, speaks to them and uses them! Without making a parade out of I think exposing our weaknesses also encourages others to work through theirs. An English minister Christen Forster said something like "When we hide from God we hide from ourselves, when we hide from ourselves we hide from each other and then we end up thinking we're pretty righteous." Let's not run from truth and transformation because we don't like the packaging it came in. See the Pharisees for further details. and let's encourage and empower each other to grow and become more like Jesus by being challenging one another with boundless grace.

Final thought: "Accountability is not just someone pointing out your faults, it's about someone holding you to your calling." - Ian Rossol

Do have a read of the post "Real People, Real Relationships - Honesty" for further thoughts on this area.
http://tony-campbell.blogspot.co.uk/2012/09/real-people-real-relationships-honesty.html

Sunday, November 25, 2012

Poem:Love Stories

I used to love writing love stories and plotting them out in my mind
Star-crossed lovers or long-lost brothers, stories of every kind
Tales of legendary deeds performed by ordinary men
I used to think I was the author, now I'm finding I'm the pen.

The greatest Poet ever known has taken hold of me
And dipped my heart in His liquid love so that every eye can see
The way He moves my life across the pages that I meet
Enabling me to demonstrate the love that poured from His hands and feet.

His hands, his hands, that heal the sick and bind up the broken-hearted
That stretch out so warmly to embrace those whose loved ones have departed.
As His life pumps within my veins I get to feel His pleasure
Each time I come face to face with another who is His treasure.

He places me right where I need to be with extreme precision and skill
To see Earth just like Heaven perfectly reflecting His will
Re-writing people's history, His light banishes the dark
Signing each situation with love He always leaves His mark.

Holy Spirit help me to submit to the Author and Perfecter
The Cameraman, the Leading Role, the Producer and Director.
Jesus live Your life in me, I'll keep my eyes fixed above
And look forward to the next person I meet who's written into Your story of love.


Jesus loves you, that's why you met me :-)

Friday, September 7, 2012

Real People, Real Relationships - Honesty

John 1:14 - "And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we have seen his glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father, full of grace and truth."

Proverbs 16:24 - "Gracious words are like a honeycomb, sweetness to the soul and health to the body."

I'm trying to think of a better opening line than "They say honesty is the best policy" but I really can't so just imagine I said something really profound and slightly amusing. Truth is, it is!! So much of what goes wrong in our relationships with each other comes from an inability to be honest and open about what's going on with us. When people hurt us or annoy us we have a tendency to do one of two things: conceal it and ignore it or express it through our behaviour instead of communicating it through words. I've been listening to a series called "People Helping People" by a man called Danny Silk and his wife Sheri. He really emphasises the need to be honest about our thoughts and feelings with those around us and especially those close to us through words instead of actions that are confusing and easily misunderstood. It can be hard to find the right words to bring correction or a challenge to someone and so changing your behaviour is often the easy option. I don't actually think that what we say is the issue. I think it's more about what's going on in our hearts. The mouth says what fills the heart right? (Luke 6:45)

I love the way John describes Jesus as being full of grace and truth. He brought truth which is honesty but he wasn't just filled with truth. The word grace there is also the word for kindness and I think this where we can learn a lot about how to be honest with another. Sometimes we decide to be harsh and "honest" with people who've crossed us and we call it honesty or enough "tough love". I do think love needs to be the starting place for everything we do including our honesty so the way we deal in honesty needs to be intentional and not flippant. If honesty comes out of us from a place of frustration it can miss the mark and do damage. Proverbs 27:6 says that wounds from a friend are better than kisses from an enemy so if we're wielding the sword of truth it needs to be tempered and guided by love. If friends are opening their hearts to us we can't afford to bring truth to them out of our frustration. Kingdom honesty is not the constant display of internal emotions. Our emotions need be kept in check and we've been given the power, love and self-control we need to do that (2Tim 1:7).

Before we decide to be "honest" with someone that we have an issue with I think checking the state of our hearts is pretty important. Being honest for honesty's sake is not nearly as good as being honest for the sake of love. I often find I want to be "honest" with someone to get them off my back about something or simply because they're bothering me. In such cases my desire for honesty isn't for the development of that person's life but rather for my own selfishness and comfort. My "honesty" therefore is more likely to come out sharply and with little thought or consideration of the feelings of others and it doesn't bring peace to the person I'm sharing with.

I really believe that the principle of honesty does not negate our personal responsibility to exercise self-control to temper what we say with love and with wisdom. In Romans 12:18 Paul says "If possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all." so there comes a point where we can't be responsible for the reactions of others but we have plenty of power to present our honesty fully and completely but with grace to bring peace instead of conflict. Honesty should always be allowed to marinate in love before it is served. It tastes better, it goes down easier and it leaves people wanting more. Although we may sometimes have the right to rebuke people or command them to do something, I think we can all learn a lesson from Philemon who said "Therefore, although in Christ I could be bold and order you to do what you ought to do, yet I appeal to you on the basis of love." (Philemon 1:8-9)

Kingdom honesty is an act of love and a means of grace for spiritual growth and relational development. Let's figure out how to do it right and build each other up.

Thanks for reading.