Monday, March 30, 2015

I'm Very Lucky

I was reminded this evening that I am a very lucky person. So often I get weighed down by worries and concerns that sometimes plague my heart as well as my mind. Right now has been a period of life that is little different. However, there still has been a lot of excitement and expectancy for what the future holds.

Putting that aside for a second, it was very nice to sit around the table with a great group of people for a special dinner and take a moment to think about how much the Lord has blessed me these last few years. It's a marvelous thing to look around a table and think, "wow, I really care about these people. I'm really blessed and very thankful that the Lord has put them in my life." 

In fact, they are quite the group from all different backgrounds and I have known them for varying amounts of times, but the Lord has blessed me through them in different ways. I pray that I never take them for granted and lose sight of how much they mean. I hope I can continue to show them how much they mean. That's big.

My other hope is that all of us might continue building and lifting each other up as we pursue our relationships with the Lord, because fellowship is a big deal and vital to a healthy spiritual life. 

I am very lucky indeed. All the glory to Him.

Friday, March 27, 2015

Indelible Grace Music

Here are some songs courtesy of Indelible Grace Music. I would definitely encourage everyone to check out their music. 







Sunday, March 22, 2015

Church: God Meets Us Wherever

Today I got to return to my home church at Redeemer and it felt strangely as if it had been a very long time. You might have called it a typical Sunday service, but then again I guess no service is truly typical. Needless to say I was struck with the realization that I have been at the same church for well nigh 10 years -- maybe even a little more. We have seen many great people, who I can confidently call my brothers and sisters, cycle in an out of the church, most often than not because God has called them into a new season of life in new places with new jobs.

Over the last 10 years God has also seemingly gone after me too with His love. I am far from the kid I was back then, growing in many ways along this road, and yet I still have had my trials and tribulations. Still do. Not only me but as a church family we have had troubles. It seems rather mundane to think about these things now, because time has either slowly erased them from my memory or lessened the hurt. Even people, members of our community, have slowly faded away. Many I am thankful I remember, but still others were easily forgotten. But our Lord has not forgotten them and He has not forgotten me even though I am not always a Redeemer regular now. He will meet me wherever I come to worship Him and there is something comforting in that which we often seem to forget.

For right now I was thankful to be back at Redeemer taking part in the liturgy, hymns, and the like. One lyric that particularly resonated today was from the hymn "Before the Throne of God"

"Behold Him there the risen Lamb,
My perfect spotless righteousness,
The great unchangeable I AM,
The King of glory and of grace,
One in Himself I cannot die.
My soul is purchased by His blood,
My life is hid with Christ on high,
With Christ my Savior and my God"

All the glory be His

Monday, March 16, 2015

Weakness

I have come to the conclusion many times this school year that humans have a lot of weakness. I am reminded of it constantly. We so often are physically weak. Our bodies give out on us over time and even before then our backs ache and our bones are sore. Humans are weak. We can be very easily dissuaded from our convictions. We can become discouraged, confused and completely befuddled. We can succumb to laziness, avarice, corruption and egotism. No wonder the road leading to heaven is narrow, because when I look at myself and what's going on around me there are a lot of broken people who give into pettiness and dissension as much as their bodies give into worldly stresses. It's a part of this life we lead.

We are seemingly far from being magnificent creatures. And yet that is just the point, because otherwise I would be a complete cynic, existentialist or fatalist. Instead I am a Christ follower. Because of Christ the rules have been changed on our behalf. The rules that say this life is wholly corrupted and meaningless. But that is a lie that Christ came to allay with his conquering of death.

As C.S. Lewis wrote in the Great Divorce we are "half-hearted creatures" right now. Just wait until the day when we will see humans in their true form --with fully glorified bodies. We might be tempted to bow down and worship one another because it will be such an extraordinary sight for our eyes. So it's true that humanity can be hopeless at times and we can look wretched indeed.

"What a wretched man I am! Who will rescue me from this body that is subject to death? Thanks be to God, who delivers me through Jesus Christ our Lord! - Romans 7

That's the good news that I will constantly go back to.

"God creates out of nothing. Wonderful you say. yes, to be sure, but he does what is still more wonderful: he makes saints out of sinners." - Soren Kierkegaard

All the glory be his.

Thursday, March 5, 2015

Thoughts on Jon Foreman and Creating Culture

I haven't kept hidden my admiration for Jon Foreman front man of Switchfoot, a half of Fiction Family and soon to be coming out with a long awaited solo project. Foreman is not just another musician, a rocker or singer/songwriter. He's a surfer certainly and yet he has the poetic lyricism of a modern bard. He often rocks out like Led Zeppelin and can write verse like Dylan at times, and that is an interesting combo. 

When I was younger his heavier stuff with big riffs and catchy tunes is what brought Switchfoot to the forefront of my mind. Now as I have matured, I would like to think my musical tastes have evolved as well. Now there is an even greater admiration for the words that this man puts down on the page. That's the beauty of a Foreman song, because sometimes I don't care for a tune (which isn't often), but when I do more often than not the lyrics still resonate with me. 

On the surface he might look like just another Beach Boy, but pretty soon after you here him throwing out references to Kiergegaard, John M. Perkins as well as Scripture, it easy to tell that this man is no joke. He is a deep thinker, who asks real questions, using the music that he has created to expose others to the world as he sees it. 

That's why I have even greater respect for Foreman when I read this passage he wrote awhile back. In fact, it should be noted that he often has very insightful contributions to Huffington Post when he's not touring or making music. He was once given the question of whether or not Switchfoot was a "Christian" band and here is his thoughtfully eloquent answer:

"Does Lewis or Tolkien mention Christ in any of their fictional series? Are Bach’s sonata’s Christian? What is more Christ-like, feeding the poor, making furniture, cleaning bathrooms, or painting a sunset? There is a schism between the sacred and the secular in all of our modern minds. The view that a pastor is more ‘Christian’ than a girls volleyball coach is flawed and heretical. The stance that a worship leader is more spiritual than a janitor is condescending and flawed. These different callings and purposes further demonstrate God’s sovereignty. Many songs are worthy of being written.

Switchfoot will write some, Keith Green, Bach, and perhaps yourself have written others. Some of these songs are about redemption, others about the sunrise, others about nothing in particular: written for the simple joy of music. None of these songs has been born again, and to that end there is no such thing as Christian music. 

No. Christ didn’t come and die for my songs, he came for me. Yes. My songs are a part of my life. But judging from scripture I can only conclude that our God is much more interested in how I treat the poor and the broken and the hungry than the personal pronouns I use when I sing. I am a believer. Many of these songs talk about this belief. An obligation to say this or do that does not sound like the glorious freedom that Christ died to afford me. I do have an obligation, however, a debt that cannot be settled by my lyrical decisions. My life will be judged by my obedience, not my ability to confine my lyrics to this box or that. 

We all have a different calling; Switchfoot is trying to be obedient to who we are called to be. We’re not trying to be Audio A or U2 or POD or Bach: we’re trying to be Switchfoot. You see, a song that has the words: ‘Jesus Christ’ is no more or less ‘Christian’ than an instrumental piece. (I’ve heard lots of people say Jesus Christ and they weren’t talking about their redeemer.) You see, Jesus didn’t die for any of my tunes. So there is no hierarchy of life or songs or occupation only obedience. We have a call to take up our cross and follow. We can be sure that these roads will be different for all of us. Just as you have one body and every part has a different function, so in Christ we who are many form one body and each of us belongs to all the others. Please be slow to judge ‘brothers’ who have a different calling.”

For me Foreman makes me want to think more deeply about how Christians can influence and ultimately create culture that will break into all confines of the secular world to spread a little more light. This might be in music, film, photography, whatever. Foreman's the kind of individual who can look at a song like Sorrow by Bad Religion, which is hardly a Christian band, and find beauty in their work all the same. 

 Would it not be amazing if Christians were once again helping dictate the culture for good and living out life as Christ called us? As it says in Matthew chapter 25, "Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine you did for me." How Christian something is should not be our main concern, but instead how we are going out on a daily basis to love our neighbors well. One way we can do that is by developing culture that asks the kind of questions that all humanity is aching to have an answer to. It doesn't need to be a dichotomy between Christian and secular. They can intersect and that's the kind of world we want. Jesus broke through all social constructions and made the issue the hearts of every person he ever cam in contact with. 

That's something to really think about. I certainly don't have many answers and I have a lot of questions just like Jon Foreman, but I think that's a starting point and hopefully we can move forward from there. All the glory be His.