March 9, 2009

Words

Filed under: Spirituality — Tags: , — admin @ 4:53 pm

Words. Some say they’re “a-dime-a-dozen” or “cheap!” Lots of banter, hot air and (to quote the Grinch) “noise, noise, noise!” With all of this talking, you’d think that we would be a well-engaged, highly-socialized society. As it turns out, contact and retention is often the victim of quantity. Some have called it “information overload.”  Others would point to an overly stimulated version of attention deficit disorder. Wives often wish their husbands would listen to them…and actually remember what they said! Perhaps that’s what sparked this observation from Gworge Bernard Shaw; he said “The single biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place.”

Oh to be like Samuel! As Samuel grew up, the Bible tells us, “The Lord was with him and let none of his words fall to the ground” (1 Samuel 3:19).  Every pastor dreams of becoming an effective communicator. Not only do we want to preach, lead and counsel well (meaning with force, conviction, persuasion and inspiration), our ultimate desire is that our words would matter. But this is true of everyone. No one desires to spend breath merely to fill dead air space. How can our words matter?

Do you feel like your words are “falling to the ground” (or on “deaf-ears” as we say)? Why not try praying before, during and after you speak to ask the Lord to “translate” what you have spoken into discernable, understandable and meaningful communication to the recipients. I do this every Sunday morning before I get up to preach. Only God can rescue our words and complete the communication cycle. Maybe on our part, less really is more! Maybe that’s why Solomon advised us, “Let your words be few” (Ecclesiastes 5:2). Make sure every word you speak is bathed in grace, spoken in love and supported by prayer.

Pastor David Parker

Made for a Mission

Filed under: Mission — admin @ 4:52 pm

Excessively busy, physically fatigued, emotionally drained and information overloaded — But enough about me, how has your week been? J “Similar,” you say? These wagon-wheel ruts are getting deep in our culture’s well-worn paths on our maddening journey toward lifestyle management and standard of living maximization! Three-cheers for the American dream! Isn’t it time for what motivational author and consultant Laurie Beth Jones calls a “pattern interrupt”? It’s time for us to stop, slow down and help the world.

Jesus spoke of coming to set the captives free (Luke 4:18). That “other-centered” mission took him out of cultures well-worn paths of personal concern and into trail-blazing ventures of life-altering significance. We are all called to be world changers. John Wesley once said, “There is no holiness but social holiness.” By that, he meant true Christian piety leaves footprints of social and spiritual transformation everywhere – undeniable evidence that Jesus has “been in the neighborhood!” We leave our homes every day to go to work, shop, bank, taxi kids around, enjoy a dinner or evening out, maybe (hopefully) even attend church. What kind of footprints are we leaving? After we’ve “come-and-gone,” who might they say has “been in the hood?”

Pastor Rick Warren likes to say, “you were made for a mission.” John Wesley captured the essence and spirit of this sense of total deployment of “my” life for others: “Do all the good you can, by all the means you can, in all the ways you can, in all the places you can, at all the times you can, to all the people you can, as long as ever you can.” I realize that’s a lot of “cans” to meet. But Paul does remind us, “I can do all things through him who strengthens me” (Philippians 4:13 ESV). So, here’s what you can do to change the world and join Jesus in his mission to set people free.

Christians are called to pray and act simultaneously. Log on to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum’s website (ushmn.org) and take action to speak out on the human genocide currently progressing in Darfur of Sudan. Join the ONE campaign (one.org) to help advocate to make extreme poverty, aids and malaria history. Read E. Benjamin Skinner’s exposé on the modern day slavery we call human trafficking entitled “A Crime So Monstrous.” Pray for the persecuted church internationally and become informed of their plight with Voice of the Martyrs (persecution.com).

Know that true liberation only comes through the Holy Spirit. Discover that global Pentecostalism is now the largest and fastest growing expression of Protestant Christianity in the world. Once chided and snickered at as “strange and bizarre people,” Pentecostals (ala Miller and Yamaori in their book “Global Pentecostalism”) are now being experienced around the world as the new “compassionate conservatives.” Not only are their hands up in the air, but also extended out to the poor, disenfranchised, hungry, sick and hurting. People are being healed, liberated, set free and made whole. Sounds like Jesus is showing up (Isaiah 61:1-3).

Learn to know, understand, live and give your faith away with others in safe and nurturing relationships like in the Alpha movement (alphana.org). Help our overly addicted culture escape the grip of habits and heart-breaking actions that destroy self and others through partnership with organizations such as Teen Challenge (teenchallengeusa.com), Pure Warrior ministries (purewarrior.org) and Celebrate Recovery (celebraterecovery.com).

Where will you be walking this week? Make sure that you are leaving tracks for Jesus!

Pastor David Parker

Deep

Filed under: Spirituality — admin @ 4:50 pm

Deep.  I suppose you could say it’s that end of a pool that people dive into.  If you like music, you might remember a famous 1991 Pearl Jam song by the same title.  Movie buffs would recognize this title from the 1977 film of a fortune-seeking, Bermuda-reef suspense thriller genre.  Readers would remember reading Isaac Asimov’s 1952 science fiction novel.  Star gazers might think of a highly specialized program described in an acronym for the Deep Extragalactic Evolutionary Probe (DEEP) using Hubble and other deep space telescopes for a large-scale survey of distant, faint-field galaxies.

While all of these are descriptions of DEEP, none of them are even close to the real depths that anchor life I meaning.  The Bible reminds us of an even greater depth in life that comes from spiritual connection.  “No eye has seen, no ear has heard, no mind has conceived what God has prepared for those who love him — but God has revealed it to us by his Spirit” (1 Corinthians 2:9-10).

I find myself hungry for more depth and less surface.  So much of life is lived on the top two inches at 150 mph.  We call that hydroplaning.  God wants us to live deep and go slower and become comfortable in places of intense pressure.  We call that submarining.  Two different vehicles, two different approaches to living.  Only one takes us where we need to go!  Where are you heading these days?

Pastor David Parker