Monday, December 28, 2015

Christmas Rest

(Gransdson and Grandpa on Christmas Eve)

O ye, beneath life's crushing load,
Whose forms are bending low
Who toil along the climbing way
With painful steps and slow.

Look now for glad and golden hours
Come swiftly on the wing
O rest beside the weary road
And hear the angels sing. (Edmund Sears)

For my yoke is easy; And my burden is light. (Matthew 11:30)


I love Christmas Eve. The church is decked. The hymns are beautiful. Christmas is upon us whether we are ready or not.  There is no more making ready for Jesus.  No more wrapping of gifts. No more trips to the post office. No more swiping of the credit card. The baby comes and again He makes His home in our hearts.

And it is just the beginning...

Because then there is Christmas day.  It is full of wide-eyed wonder.  The anticipation of weeks and weeks finally arrives. Families gather and presents are presented.  Gifts are given and gifts are received and unwrapped.  And after the gifts are opened, we prepare food, we assemble toys, we clean up, we do the dishes...and, then, the beautiful hymns come reverberating through our head, "O rest beside the weary road and hear the angels sing."

But there is no time to listen, let alone to rest beside the weary road.

Soon, we will be boxing up the Christmas decorations. The season of Christmas will slide into Epiphany.   The Christmas tree will come down and the elf will go back on the shelf.  We will drift into ordinary time and back to work and our forms will, once again, be bending low...

And I am convinced that all of this why our Savior came. God wants more for us in life than painful steps and slow. God desires for us to see the light and experience the wonder and enjoy our families gathering and gifts given and received, and not just at Christmas, but all year long.  And if it sounds exhausting, it's not that we don't desire Jesus to come and live in our hearts, we just realize that we don't have the time and resources to make Christmas happen more than one day a year.  Not like this.  In our labor, we miss the promise and the real Christmas magic: The yoke is easy and the burden is light and glad and golden hours come swiftly on the wing.

We can do Christmas differently. My wife and I are already talking about simplifying next year. We are getting rid of some old stuff, and God has snowed us in.  I believe it is God's way of telling us to rest beside the weary road and let the Savior come again in to our overwrought hearts. In fact, it is my prayer for me, our family, your family, and Christ's church to dare to take time in the midst of it all, to stop, to wonder, to see the beauty, and hear the angels sing. 

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!



Monday, December 21, 2015

White Wave Manifesto: The House of God


(Our "Restoration House")

·                     All the believers were together and had everything in common. They sold property and possessions to give to anyone who had need. (Acts 2:45)

                     Do you not know that your bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom you have received from God? You are not your own; (1 Corinthians 6:19)

*          Thus says the Lord: "Heaven is my throne and the earth is my footstool' what is the house which you would build for me, and what is place of my rest? All these things my hand has made, and all these things are mine," says the Lord. (Isaiah 6:1-2a)

Stephen quotes and exegetes the Isaiah passage (above) in Acts 7 and is promptly stoned to death.  And even today, the suggestion that the church can be healthy without a building, in many circles, is met with stony anger.

Our family lives in an older home in an older neighborhood. It seems that the domicile is in constant need of repair. A friend has christened it, "Restoration House." The name is not quite as cool as "Wuthering Heights" or "Misselthwaite Manor", but it is apropos.  There are, of course, the immediate needs...a leak in the sink, and a back door that doesn't work right, and a water heater that doesn't heat water.  And there are the needs that we know are coming and we pray won't happen today...an ancient furnace that needs replaced. A sewer line that is crumbling with the weight of fifty years of earth.  It takes a lot of time and energy to keep up with the Restoration House.

It also takes a lot of time and energy to keep up with the house of God.  And that isn't a bad thing, until it begins to erode the main thing.

Sometimes, when I am working on the bathroom or even mowing the lawn or cleaning up the kitchen, one of our sons will come in and ask, "Daddy, will you play with me?" The miracle is that they keep asking even though they know the usual rejoinder, "I'd love to, buddy, but I have to finish fixing the chicken coop."

We do the same thing in church. We get busy painting bathrooms and vacuuming the carpet and cleaning the windows. We replace gutters and we plant, weed, and water the front flower bed. And there is nothing wrong with these things, until they erode the main thing.  "Love the Lord with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength, and love your neighbor as yourselves." (Luke 10:27)

Our relationship with the house of God can just as easily become a substitute for God as our relationship with our house can become a substitute for our family. I've sometimes wondered what would happen if we were to sell our churches.  What would happen if we were to sell our homes? In the short-term, there might be flashes of anger and tears of disappointment.  Stones might be thrown.  But in the long run, my suspicion is that neither the body of Christ or my own children would suffer greatly. In fact, we might just rediscover the main thing.

Church Stopping. Less Doing. More Being.


Sunday, December 13, 2015

White Wave Manifest: Friends for the Journey

Will...and a couple of friends.

*          Do you not know that your bodies are members of Christ? (I Corinthians 6:15a)



*          It was not because you were more in number than any other people that the Lord set his love on you
and chose you, for you were the fewest of all peoples...(Deuteronomy 7:7)

As a parent, I admit, it is easy to get distracted by the accomplishments of other parents' children.  "My son just made first chair cello in high school...and the varsity swim team...and is fluent in ancient Aramaic. We always knew that he was gifted.  After all, he was potty-trained at ten months." Then, I think of my own child, who does an awesome "pencil" on the diving board, loves to bang on the drums with his friend David, and is fluent in Laffy Taffy jokes. Is that so bad?  And if it isn't, why do I feel so inadequate as a parent?

And as a pastor, I admit, it was easy for me to get distracted by the accomplishments of other pastor's churches. "We just broke ground on our new arena...and we baptized 300 last week...and we are sending three million dollars to international missions this year alone!" Then I think of my own church. We stripped-out our angel tree, one  year, by the third week in Advent!  And I remember making a hospital visit and found three other parishioners had already been there that morning. One year, our membership didn't decline by a single person. Is that so bad? And if it isn't, why do I feel so inadequate as a pastor?   

For parents and for pastors, in families and in churches, the problem is that we often put our emphasis on the wrong things.  As parents, we celebrate what our children do, not who they are. As churches, we celebrate the numbers and tally up our successes and pay no mind to what really counts.

I remember one fall, we took our children out of all fall activities. No more soccer. No more cub scouts. No more Aramaic. There was school and church and lots of fun climbing trees, and building awesome Lego creations.  Most importantly, our sons figured out again what it was like to have friends for the journey.

What if we did the same thing as a church?  What if we quit counting members?  What if we actually deleted the membership roles all together? Would things change? Could things get any worse?
* Only 10% of all Christians possess a biblical worldview that informs their thinking and behavior. (Barna, George, The Habits of Highly Effective Churches)
* Of the 38% of Americans that attend worship, only 22% of them engage in any additional  Christian education.(Willimon, William, The Theology and Practice of Ordained Ministry)

So, maybe it is a time to quit counting and discover, again, those things that are really important; things like visiting church members in the hospital, spreading a little light in dark places, and climbing trees.  Maybe we, as a church, can quit counting and figure out again what it is like to have good friends along for the journey.

Church Stopping. More being. Less doing.















Sunday, December 6, 2015

White Wave Manifest: Household Chores



(Sam, mowing. Now, about the leaves.)

And let them judge the people at all times. Every great matter they shall bring to you, but any small matter they shall decide themselves. So it will be easier for you, and they will bear the burden with you. If you do this, God will direct you, you will be able to endure, and all the people also will go to their place in peace." (Exodus 18:22-23)

For though by this time you ought to be teachers, you need someone to tech you again the basic principles of the oracles of God. You need milk, not solid food. (Hebrews 5:12)

In our home, there are household chores.  My wife and I will drive to the bus stop and run the chain saw, but the boys are expected to run the vacuum and put the dishes away.  Instead of constant reminders and supervision, it would be easier, sometimes, for us to just take care of it; mow the lawn, take out the garbage when it is overflowing, or wash the dishes.  My wife is very capable of setting the table and feeding the chickens and splitting the wood herself, and there would be less headache for her if she did just that.  If our boys weren't expected to pack their own lunch, life would be much easier for the two of us and more comfortable for them.

However, being comfortable and easy is not the goal.

Jethro, Moses' father-in law, told Moses to appoint other leaders to help judge the people, not so that they could remain comfortable in the desert, but so that they could 'go to their place in peace.'

In the New Testament, the early church is reminded that they need to teach others the faith and care for new believers, not constantly need someone to feed them.

We still need these reminders today; no one person should be expected to do everything and we all need to share in teaching others the faith.  Sometimes, we seek to stay comfortable where we are.  We are comfortable in hiring someone to preach, teach, and outreach for us. Sometimes, we hire more than one person.  It allows us to say where we are and drink milk. And for church staff, it is often easier for them to do the preaching, teaching, and outreaching for us rather than train, equip and nag us to do it ourselves. 

However, being comfortable and easy is not the goal.

But what if we hired part-time staff?  What if we hired the human resources executive to handle payroll and the college professor to teach Sunday School?  What if there was a stay-at-home mother or a retired Grandfather with lots of experience with young children and we employed them to run the children's ministries?  

Most of the time, our churches don't need more full-time ministers. They need less.  Jesus chose tax-collectors, fishermen, and harlots over professionally trained priests, lawyers and clergy.

I am not suggesting that we fire our full-time pastors, just that we don't think of them as full-time. Rather, we should think of them as part-time preachers and part-time chaplains, and part-time visionairies.  This leaves room for others that might be called to preach, or call on shut-ins, or dream big dreams for the church.  

It won't be easy, for church members or for pastors, to share the household chores, but being comfortable and easy is not the goal. It is time for us to eat a little solid food.

Church Stopping. Less Doing. More Being.  
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