Monday, December 22, 2014

Christmas from Below

"It's like an angel starts singing
An old gospel song
In that part of town where
No angel belongs"
                           - Over the Rhine "First Snowfall"

With only days till Christmas many of us are thinking about that first Noel and imagining idealistic scenes of Jesus' birth.  However, the reality may have been different.  Jesus was likely born into the chaos of a typical Jewish home - right into the busyness of life.  The first people that came to witness the nativity and spread the word were people that had no voice in the culture - shepherds.  The later visitors from the East were likely decedents from Israel's most hated enemies the Assyrian Empire.  Those facts alone might cause us to view Jesus' birth as a bit more of an arrival in our world than a Hallmark card nativity.

If there is room at Jesus birth for His enemies, can we make room for ours?
If those without a voice were first to speak of the new born king, then who in our world, that is not listened to, might have something to say that we need to hear?
If Jesus was birthed into busyness and chaos, can we find him in our busyness and chaos?

In among the wave of Christmas cards I have have pulled out of the mailbox this holiday season was a message from my friends over at www.streetpsalms.org in which they invited the readers to think about Jesus, and Christmas, from below.  I am passing it along to you as a gift and a place to reflect about a Jesus who "Became flesh and blood, and moved into the neighborhood" (John 1:14 - the Message).

Merry Christmas!
Joel K


ASIAN-BORN
Middle East is Asiatic
Nearly 60% of the world is Asian born.*

MIXED RACE HERITAGE
Tamar and Rahab were Canaanites
Ruth is Moabite
Bathsheba is Hittite
“Multi-racial” is the fastest growing demographic in the U.S.

GRAND MOTHERS of CHRISTMAS
Tamar – prostitute
Rahab – prostitute
Ruth – legacy of incest
Bathsheba – murderous affair
4 million women and children are victims of the sex trade worldwide each year.

SHAMEFUL BIRTH
Not everyone bought the birth story
79% of births to teenagers in U.S. are outside of marriage, often resulting in the stigma of being a “bastard” child.

TEENAGE MOTHER
Mary was probably 13
One million teenagers become pregnant each year in the U.S.

POOR
Temple offering of the poor
1.7 million U.S. children live in families that earn less than $6,645 a year (family of five).

POLITICAL REFUGEE
Flees persecution to Egypt
50 million people in the world have been forced to flee their homes in the last 10 years.

IMMIGRANT
Returns to Isreal
8.7 million undocumented immigrants live in the U.S.

DRUNKARD AND GLUTTON
A friend of “sinners”
8 million suffer from alcoholism and another 15 million with drug dependency.

MENTALLY ILL
His family thought he was out of his mind
15% suffer from serious mental disorders in U.S.

URBAN
Went through the “cities” of Galilee
More than 50% of the world lives in cities.  By 2050, 70% will be urban, young, and poor.

HOMELESS
No place to lay his head
3 million men, women and children were homeless last year in the U.S.

OUTLAW
Broke Sabbath laws
2.3 million are in prison in the U.S., up form 300,000 in 1976.  One in three black male babies are expected to be in prison during his lifetime.

DESPISED AND REJECTED
Seen as cursed by God
Leading motivations for hate crimes in U.S. are race (53%), religion (16%), sexual orientation (15%).

INNOCENT VICTIM
Blameless
Every 11 minutes a child is reported abused or neglected, nearly 3 million.

FORSAKEN BY FATHER
My God, My God
Almost 25% of 72 million young people in the U.S. live without their fathers.  The percentage is 50% for African Americans.

MURDER VICTIM
Crucified
Black males (14-24) make up 1% of the U.S. population but 30% of all homicides.

RESURRECTED AS A
WOUNDED HEALER
Shows Thomas his eternal wounds
50% of U.S. citizens suffer a chronic medical condition.  5 million suffer from chronic pain.  15% of veterans suffer severe depresson/PTSD.


*Statistics and individual citations can be found in Geography of Grace, Chapter 2 (Rocke and Van Dyke, Street Psalms Press 2012)

Thursday, December 4, 2014

In Praise of Advent OR Why You Should Not Be Singing Christmas Songs Three Days After Thanksgiving

"O come, O Come, Emmanuel"

Last weekend Saturday Night Live re-ran an episode from earlier this season with host Chris Rock.  In Rock's opening monologue he rants about how we Americans commercialize everything - even the "Jesus Birthday Season" that celebrates the "least materialistic person that ever lived" with greed and consumerism. (You can watch the whole rant at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gYZLKqGhSZs - the Christmas section runs from apx. 4:20 to 6:18).  While the observation on consumerism is a wonderful point, it is the highlighting of the "Jesus Birthday Season" that really caught my attention.  While we have that season as a culture, we don't have it in the church calendar.  Lent, the weeks leading up to Christmas, are about longing for Jesus to come into the world, into our lives, into all the places we have a hard time imagining He can arrive.  Advent is about admitting that Jesus needs to come into our world and that the world is not the way it should be - it is about Jesus needing to enter our lives and that our lives are not the way they should be.


Rob Bell in an excellent article, Why Should We Care About Advent? (1), notes: 
"Advent, then, is a season. Lots of people know about holidays—one day a year set apart. 
The church calendar is about seasons, 
whole periods of time we enter into with a specific cry, 
a particular intention, for a reason.

Advent is about anticipating the birth of Christ.
It’s about longing, desire, that which is yet to come.
That which isn’t here yet. 
And so we wait, expectantly. Together. With an ache. 
Because all is not right. Something is missing."

The idea of waiting is not part of our cultural Christmas experience.  The local Christmas music radio station in Anchorage began playing 24-hour Christmas music on November 4 this year.  Christmas decorations were on offer in stores and holiday ads were running on TV before Halloween even happened.  Our culture lures us into beginning Christmas earlier and earlier so that we can cram all the warm-hearted feelings, good will, joyful celebration, and holiday goodness into the longest possible "Jesus Birthday Season" without the waiting, the longing, and the reality of of our world and our lives needing the arrival of Jesus.  We remove a season of waiting for a season of having.


During last weeks episode of the Homebrewed Christianity podcast (2) host Bo Sanders expressed that the church should be the least "Christmasy" place during Advent because we should be calling people back from the instant gratification of a prolonged Christmas to Advent, a season of waiting and anticipating.  However, in many churches the singing of Christmas songs begins only a couple days after Thanksgiving (my favorite Holiday, which is in jeopardy of becoming extinct in the midst of a prolonged Halloween "season," early-onset Christmas, and the crush of an ever-expanding Black Friday).  Sanders further noted on his blog that "Consumerism, has a numbing effect that dulls our senses and saps our energy. This happens in 3 predictable phases.
·  Alienation
·  Disillusionment
·  Resignation."

He went on to explain that "Alienation is the result of humans being commodified and thus separated from that which they produce. It also isolates us from one another as we are simultaneously objectified as consumers and subjected to an onslaught of ads that inform us we are not good enough, we don’t have enough and that the thing we don’t have would make us happy-attractive-successful.  This leads to disillusionment because we buy stuff, we pay for services, we upgrade, we super-size … and yet it does not satisfy...The final stage is resignation. The machine is too big. It feels like we are just cogs in a giant mechanism of consumption, corruption and growing disparity. The game is rigged and we know it. But we need stuff so we work more than we ever have and are less satisfied. We watch the news and see how bad is out there and we want to retreat into our screens and games. From Candy Crush to Fantasy Football we are active participants relegated to passive spectators." (read the entire blog at: http://homebrewedchristianity.com/2014/11/27/wake-up-its-time-for-advent/)

So as we move steadily into the Advent Season we have a choice - rush to Christmas or linger in Advent.  We can wisk away the waiting or linger in the longing for Jesus to come into our world and lives to be Emmanuel, God with us.  We can have an Advent season and a Christmas day or the "Jesus Birthday Season."  It is our choice.

 Joel K

"The Waiting is the hardest part."
- Tom Petty


(1)  Read more at: http://www.relevantmagazine.com/god/deeper-walk/features/23640-why-advent#jx0UVcrcmkpAcX6H.99

(2) Listen to the full Podcast at: http://homebrewedchristianity.com/2014/11/26/eat-more-turkey-here-is-some-sermon-prep/

Monday, December 1, 2014

Will the real community please stand up, please stand up, please stand up? (Part 2)

Having now developed the theology of sharing social space as it relates to community (see Part 1) let us look at the second half of Volf’s statement - taking responsibility for the other. The question then becomes in what ways does Scripture encourage us to take responsibility for the other? It is clear that the answer to this question is found in loving, practicing humility, speaking the truth, being direct, and carrying each other’s burdens.

Loving

Loving is the root of each of the actions we are exploring - nothing of value in the other areas, or in community at all, can be done without love being present. Mark 12:28-31 records:

One of the teachers of the law came and heard them debating. 
Noticing that Jesus had given them a good answer, he asked him, 
“Of all the commandments, which is the most important?” 
“The most important one,” answered Jesus, 
“is this: ‘Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is one. 
Love the Lord your God with all your heart 
and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength. 
The second is this: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself. 
There is no commandment greater than these.

In Jesus’ summary of the Mitzvah [1] (using an expanded Shema (2)), love is of central importance in the understanding of how to follow God and how to interact with each other. If the entire Old Testament can be summarized in love then approaching life, ministry, and community should be characterized by love as well. Jesus says as much when he tells his disciples, “By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.” (John 13:35). Each of the other actions involved in taking responsibility for the other grow out of love.

Practicing Humility

Paul in Philippians 2:1-11 encourages his readers by saying:

If you have any encouragement from being united with Christ, 
if any comfort from his love, if any fellowship with the Spirit, 
if any tenderness and compassion, then make my joy complete by being like-minded, having the same love, being one in spirit and purpose. 
Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit, 
but in humility consider others better than yourselves. 
Each of you should look not only to your own interests, but also to the interests of others.
Your attitude should be the same as that of Christ Jesus: 

Who, being in very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the very nature of a servant, 
being made in human likeness. And being found in appearance as a man, 
he humbled himself and became obedient to death—even death on a cross!
Therefore God exalted him to the highest place 
and gave him the name that is above every name, 
that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, 
in heaven and on earth and under the earth, 
and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.

Paul’s encouragement offers another foundational component to taking responsibility for the other – humility. One is reminded in these words not to view one’s self as better than others. In a world where winning is paramount and individual rights are supreme, this action of humility becomes as important as the core principle of love. One simply cannot love if they believe themselves to be superior to the other. In community a sense of superiority can become lethal to the relationship(s) as one quickly slides into believing that they can “save” people and rescue them from their inferior ways.

Speaking the Truth

Another encouragement from Paul is recorded in Ephesians 4:11-16. Paul encourages his readers to speak the truth to each other:

It was he who gave some to be apostles, some to be prophets, 
some to be evangelists, and some to be pastors and teachers, 
to prepare God’s people for works of service, 
so that the body of Christ may be built up until we all reach unity in the faith 
and in the knowledge of the Son of God and become mature, 
attaining to the whole measure of the fullness of Christ.
Then we will no longer be infants, tossed back and forth by the waves, 
and blown here and there by every wind of teaching 
and by the cunning and craftiness of men in their deceitful scheming. 
Instead, speaking the truth in love, 
we will in all things grow up into him who is the Head, that is, Christ. 
From him the whole body, joined and held together by every supporting ligament, 
grows and builds itself up in love, as each part does its work.

In this passage it is interesting to note that unity is seen as the end product of maturity. Continuing on, Paul explains that maturity is displayed by speaking the truth to each other in love. While this encouragement seems on the surface to be an easy task, upon close examination one begins to see that it is not in difficult situations. Speaking the truth in difficult situations can be a challenge. Often in difficult situations it is far easier to not say something for fear of making the matter worse. Another complication to speaking the truth is starting a conversation at all. Many people, myself included, would rather avoid tough issues than begin a dialogue. Thus, speaking the truth becomes a challenge.

In addition, speaking the truth with love is a challenge in difficult situations. Particularly when the discussion becomes heated, many have a tendency to use the truth as a weapon, seeking not to restore but to destroy the other or simply to feel a sense of superiority. Many feel that if it is true that one has the right to speak the truth without considering if it is done in a loving way or not. Taking responsibility for the other means that from time to time one will be compelled to enter into difficult situations and conversations when called upon to speak the truth and with love. Scripture does not describe how to avoid difficult situations, but encourages its reader to correct each other in a loving way.

Being Direct

Similar to speaking the truth in love is the act of being direct. In any difficult situation the human tendency is to avoid the person with whom there is a conflict and to only speak to those who would be sympathetic. What humans are loathe to do is go to the person directly and discuss the matter. However, this is exactly the approach taught by Jesus:

If your brother sins against you, go and show him his fault, just between the two of you. 
If he listens to you, you have won your brother over. 
But if he will not listen, take one or two others along, 
so that every matter may be established by the testimony of two or three witnesses. 
If he refuses to listen to them, tell it to the church; 
and if he refuses to listen even to the church, 
treat him as you would a pagan or a tax collector (Matt. 18:15-17).

Jesus’ instructions here are possibly the single weakest practice in the church today. Much could be avoided in the way of conflict and interpersonal pain if people would simply go to those with whom they have an issue. Jesus offers here a protocol based in community. First of all, Christians are to seek to deal with an issue head-on by going to the person directly and thus avoiding splitting the community with gossip and side discussions. Second, Christians are to involve the community in their efforts at resolution and reconciliation. Last, Christians are to continue to remain in community with those who have offended them. The third step may come as a surprise because a surface reading of the text seems to lead to a place where the offending person may be shunned. However, one must ask how Jesus treated tax-collectors and pagans. Throughout the gospel he fellowships with, visits the homes of, eats with, and is a friend to both groups of outcasts, even including former tax-collectors and pagans as his followers. If Jesus is asking his followers to treat an offending person as he treated tax-collectors and pagans, it is my understanding that his followers must continue on in fellowship with those with whom they disagree despite their differences.

Carrying Each Others Burdens

In 2 Corinthians 11:28-29, Paul writes: “Besides everything else, I face daily the pressure of my concern for all the churches. Who is weak, and I do not feel weak? Who is led into sin, and I do not inwardly burn?” In this statement the depth with which Paul both enters into community as well as the dedication he has to carrying the burdens of the other. Followers of Jesus are called upon to help carry each other’s burdens. This is a matter of being deeply honest with one another, providing support, and offering up prayers on each other’s behalf. Carrying each other’s burdens means entering into the messiness of the lives of the people with whom they are in community and taking responsibility for those things going on in each other’s lives.

Conclusion

In a world where the word community is used/misused often, we must consider what a true community is.  I'm not sure I can provide a good definition, but rather will provide a couple tests - questions you can ask to find true community in your life:

Who are the people in your world that you goto when the poop hits the propeller?  
Who do you run to when your broken, hurting, in need of comfort or support?  
Who's got your back no matter what?  
I believe that those people are your community and I'm willing to bet your share social space with them as often as you are able.

Who are the people in your life that humbly love you?  
Who speaks the truth to you?  
Who is direct with you?  
Who carries your burdens?  
Those are the people who are taking responsibility for you - that, I propose, is your community.

Will the real community please stand up, please stand up, please stand up?

Monday, November 24, 2014

Will the real community please stand up, please stand up, please stand up? (Part 1)

For a number of years now I have been walking through a blizzard of the word community.  That word seems to be EVERYWHERE.  I read books about community, am part of a number of on-line communities, I go to a community church, politicians talk about community, I even wrote my Masters thesis (in part) about community.  However, I think the word community no longer means anything.  


People throw around the word community like we all agree on what it means.  Most of the time when I hear the word community being used it could easily be replaced with acquaintances, group of people, or at best fellowship.  It seems to me that community is much, much more than just having similar interests, using the same website or app, or sharing a location on a regular basis.  

Some of the most egregious abusers of the word community can be found in the Christian world.  In this sphere community flows out of the mouths of leaders and drips off the pages of books with rarely a thought to what it really means.  For Christians seeking to engage the world in a Biblical way, a theology of community grounded in Scripture is invaluable. Without a clear understanding of the nature of community in Scripture, we can quickly end up providing/experiencing only shallow interactions or services – neither of which truly fosters biblical community.

Genesis 4:1-11 provides a scriptural basis for a practical theology of community.  This passage, the story of Cain and Abel, is about the first murder and seems like an unlikely place to discover a truth about community. In fact, a surface reading of the story fails to capture the corporate truth contained in the exchange of questions between Cain and God. After killing his brother over worship practices and the perception of God’s favor (making our modern worship wars look penny-ante), Cain is confronted by God, “Cain, where is your brother?” To which the Cain replies, “Am I my brother’s keeper?” In the hermeneutical understanding of Miroslav Volf, this short exchange teaches us that “life in community means sharing a common social space and taking responsibility for the other.”[1]

Taking Volf’s explanation of community as a guide in formulating a theology of community, we must first begin by asking what a shared social space is and how can one foster an environment where that situation can exist and flourish. From the very beginning (Gen. 1:18-21) Scripture shows that it is not good for man (humans) to be alone. Furthermore, Acts 2 displays the new followers of Jesus as being very communal. They met together daily, shared everything in common, ate together and worshiped together. This passage exposes the very early Christian church as a tight knit group that shared a common social space daily. In a related passage the writer of Hebrews reminds the followers of Christ to not give up meeting together (Heb. 10:19-25), acknowledging the tendency of people to neglect communal gatherings although shared social space is necessary for true Christian community to exist. The Apostle Paul also reflects this sense of community. Paul’s understanding of community is deeply based in the belief that God is assembling a people to live among and work through and is not just saving individuals from hell. Writing on this topic, Gordon Fee states that “though entered individually, the church as a whole is the object of God’s saving activity in Christ. God is choosing and saving a people for his name.”[2] Fee as a Pentecostal scholar is touching on a truth that is vital in the Eastern branch of the church.  Russian Orthodox Archpreist Michael Oleksa states it this way: “No one is ‘saved’ or justified as an isolated individual. Each person is transformed in community, in and through loving, eternal relationships to others.”[3] This thought is also part of the African understanding of community and the nature of being human. For example, Archbishop Desmond Tutu often speaks of this: “I am what I am because of who we all are,”[4] “A person is a person through other persons,”[5] and “If I diminish you, I diminish myself.”[6] In each of these statements is a profound sense of community.

In spite of this insightful understanding of community in Paul’s writings, the Eastern Church, and in the African tradition, for many mainstream North American Christians community amounts to nothing more than fellowship.  While sitting around a campfire a few years ago this truth became extremely clear to me.  A friend was explaining how she and her husband had decided on which church to attend.  Ending her story she said, “It’s really about where you find your fellowship.” I disagreed saying that I believed that it’s a matter of where you find your community.  She shot back, “Well, those words mean the same thing.” Many Christians believe as does my friend does that community and fellowship are the same thing. However, there is a difference. For me, it is possible to fellowship with a great many different kinds of people but those folks have no right to speak into my life because we lack a depth of relationship. However, my community is the people I share my life with, the good and the bad parts. In those relationships, there is a shared social space and experience and also a sense of taking responsibility for one another. This is biblical community.  Far too often in our contemporary world we are so hungry for meaningful interactions that we settle for believing that any and every gathering of people is a community, when many (even those found at church) are fellowship at best.

In addition to seeing community and fellowship as the same thing, there is also the tendency in the church to view community as a program. One joins a small group to experience community. In preparation for my Masters thesis I led a discussion of the topic of Christian community with the local evangelical pastors fellowship.[7] During this discussion it was interesting to observe that the pastors were almost completely unable to discuss the nature of Christian community outside the context of the local church and its programs. While unquantified and anecdotal, the discussion reinforced my position that in the Christian world today community is seen as a program one enters into and not a living reality of the resurrection.

The barrier to Biblical community I hear the most often is that people are too busy to share a social space together which in turn makes it nearly impossible to take responsibility for one another.  However, I believe that busyness is an excuse and that the real reasons for not entering into true biblical community with one another are individualism, fear of others, and a lack of understanding our own personal identities. Writing on the topic of community, Gordon Fee states that the holy trinity of relativism, secularism, and individualism is at work in modern life. He concludes that the “individual is the be-all and end-all of everything; subservience of individual rights to the common good has become the new ‘heresy’ to be rejected at all costs.”[8] Discussing this topic with a few members of my community a friend remarked, “Community is more than grabbing a few beers.”

While misunderstandings about and barriers to community exist in the church today, one must understand that the Scripture is dripping with images of community. Rob Bell offers this insight:

The Bible is a communal book. It came from people writing in communities, and it was often written to communities... For most of church history, people heard the Bible read aloud in a room full of people. You heard it, discussed it, studied it, argued about it, and made decisions about it as a group, a community.[9]

Addressing the modern church’s objections to community, Henri J.M. Nouwen writes:
We keep forgetting that we are being sent out two by two. We cannot bring good news on our own. We are called to proclaim the Gospel together, in community…I have found over and over again how hard it is to be truly faithful to Jesus when I am alone…We should not only live in community, but also minister in community.[10]  Simply put, “We’ve just forgotten that we belong to each other.”[11]

Returning to Volf’s understanding of community – “sharing a common social space and taking responsibility for the other”[12] – it is important to understand the pervasive theme of God’s incarnation before proceeding from the idea of shared social space to the matter of taking responsibility for each other. God’s consistent incarnational approach to his people, reflected in his abiding solidarity, is the key model of community in Scripture, which starts in the beginning with a God who creates humans with whom to be in community. Then God daily enters into his creation to take daily walks with the humans he has created. When Adam and Eve chose to disobey God, he went looking for them and made coverings for them to hide their nakedness. God came to Abraham, wrestled with Jacob, and lived alongside his people in a tent for forty years as they wandered in the desert. The prophets, while being God’s presence with the people, continually point to a time when God would come and be with them. When Jesus arrives he comes in the form of a created human living in the creation of God. Jesus enters into the experience of being human in every way, even dying – the ultimate state of any human. At the moment of the cross, Jesus moves from being with us to inviting us into himself in an even higher level of community. Speaking of this truth Miroslav Volf writes, “On the cross the dancing circle of self-giving and mutually indwelling divine persons opens up for the enemy; in the agony of the passion the movement stops for a brief moment a fissure appears so that sinful humanity can join in.”[13] Even when Jesus leaves the created earth physically he leaves behind his Spirit and in that way continues to dwell with his people. The pages of Scripture teach us that God is with His people. If one is to follow God they will seek to be a reflection of this reality by intentional and incarnationally sharing social space with others.

In my frustration with the overuse of the word community, I wonder if our desire to label every interpersonal interaction (no matter how small) as community is a reflection on the fact that so few of us experience any social space where we take care of each other?  In the end community seems elusive.  Will the real community please stand up, please stand up, please stand up?

Joel K
twitter:  @joel_kiek

"Sometimes you can't make it on your own"
- U2



(1) Volf, Exclusion and Embrace, 98.
(2) Gordon D. Fee, Paul, the Spirit, and the People of God (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers, 1996), 65.
(3) Oleksa, Orthodox Alaska, 51.
(4) Desmond Tutu, Believe: The Words and Inspiration of Desmond Tutu (Boulder, CO: Blue Mountain Press, 2007), back cover.
(5) Ibid., 33.
(6) Ibid., 3.
(7) Anchorage Evangelical Pastors Fellowship, Parachutes Teen-Club and Resource Center, 29 April 2010.
(8) Fee, Paul, The Spirit and the People of God, 63.
(9) Bell, Velvet Elvis, 51, 52.
(10) Nouwen, The Way of Jesus, 40-42.
(11) Boyle, Tattoos on the Heart, 187.
(12) Volf, 98.
(13) Volf, 129.

Follow The Trailer Park Levite on Twitter: @joel_kiek

Friday, November 21, 2014

Longevity: Staying Put for the Glory of God

Next semester I am teaching a class on Youth Ministry for Alaska Bible College.  So I have been pouring over the existing syllabus and thinking through what I would add to the content.  The course has been built around the 9 Core Realities of Youth Ministry that Mike Yaconelli outlined in his book The Core Realities of Youth Ministry: Nine Biblical Principles That Mark Healthy Youth Ministries.  Yaconelli's list includes: veracity, authenticity, audacity, humility, diversity, sanctuary, intimacy, mystery, and creativity.  I've been a fan of Mike's for years, and that book offers a wonderful list, but I noticed one core value I hold in high esteem missing - longevity.


Longevity was modeled for me by my father.  Dad was a Youth Pastor for over 30 years and I saw in his life many, many times the benefit of staying in one area for a long time and maintaining relationships that moved from youth group through college and into adulthood.  He even noted to me at times that it takes a long time for good things to happen.  Looking back I think I gathered from him that longevity is the living out of the reality that things happen on God's time schedule.
  
For 11 years I literally stood in the same spot in my city.  I was in the Dimond Center Mall basically everyday for 13 years and for 11 of those I was in Parachutes Teen Club and Resource Center.  The benefit of that long term dedication to a location and a population (in this case high-risk and street-involved teens) is that I have the privilege of knowing a bunch of teens and young adults I would have never known had I only stayed for the 18 months to two years that most remain in a Youth Ministry position.  I've seen the value of longevity in my life as it has opened the door to relationships and transformation.  Often the youth we serve don't divulge to the realities of their lives and needs till years have passed.  


I don't write this from the position of someone who has this figured out, is blowing his own horn, or is pointing the finger at those that have left ministry positions after short periods of time.  Longevity is something I am still learning.  I often think about moving on.  I have gone through long periods of time where I have begged God to give me something else to do or a new place to be.  But I think God is teaching me that there is power in not moving.


I'd already been thinking about this topic for a couple of days when yesterday I read When Risking it All for God Means Staying Where You Are.  In that article the author writes:


"I can say that the risks I’ve taken to follow God have come in many forms and actions. I’ve quit a job and moved to another state to pursue a calling to ministry by going to seminary. I’ve stayed put in a place during a very difficult time when it would have been easier to go—and now look back to see the fruit God was bearing. I’ve jumped for the sake of “taking a risk for God” and found that I was really just following my own desire to be somebody—and landed flat on my face. I’ve stayed in a place when, looking back, it was clear God wanted me to move on—but I was too scared to do so. In any case, God used my decision, my risk, my going and staying, and I learned something through it, something about myself, something about Him."



I agree that there are lots of risks we can take for God, but we don't often see those that stay put and stay steady as risking anything.  We want to see risk takers in life and in ministry, but how often do we applaud those that embed in a place, with a people, and stay for a long time?  What if we started to see longevity, not as an abnormality or oddity, but as one of the options for how we live a risky life of following Jesus?  What if we see both Paul's approach to ministry (moving from city to city traveling and taking risks - the action packed stories that fill the Book of Acts) and Phillip's approach to ministry (staying in Caesarea teaching his four daughters to be prophets and barely being mentioned in the book of Acts {21:8&9}) as valid?  


Mike Yaconelli once wrote an article titled "Getting fired for the glory of God,"  can we also stay put for the glory of God?

Joel K

"Got to get behind the Mule

In the morning and plow

Got to get behind the Mule
In the morning and plow...


Pin your ear to the wisdom post

Pin your eye to the line

Never let the weeds get higher
 than the garden

Always keep a sapphire in your mind

Always keep a diamond in your mind...


Got to get behind the Mule

In the morning and plow

Got to get behind the Mule

In the morning and plow..."


~ Tom Waits Get Behind The Mule

Sunday, November 9, 2014

St. Vincent and a Theology of Imperfection


The Glory of God is humanity fully alive.
- St. Irenaeus

One of the communities I am a part of, Street Psalms (http://www.streetpsalms.org), talks a good bit about the spirituality of imperfection.  In fact one of quotes that still rattles around my brain years after taking part in classes with that grassroots ministry training organization is "I don't trust my strengths anymore.  I trust my weaknesses, they are more honest."  In a world where everything is "strength-based" this type of thinking is like a foreign language to our ears.  Most of us are familiar with seeking to maximize our strengths and minimize our weaknesses.  The stark reality is that beyond maximizing what we are good at, we'd do well to NEVER expose any weakness - certainly not in public.  We have all seen it before a leader has a public gaffe or admits a shortcoming and their position as a leader disappears.  This is most true for leaders in faith communities where being overly transparent is both scarce and scary.  Pastors and other leaders of faith tend to guard their imperfections from those they lead for fear of losing their ability to minister.  Often, being seen as "too human" is a condition that makes the "product" they are producing seem suspect to those consuming it.

In the middle of this dependance on duplicity for those dedicated and devoted (even mastering) divinity is the reality that we are all broken people.  All of us have weaknesses.  However, Sainthood it seems does not want to see the imperfections, just the inspiration.  Mother Teresa did not want the personal letters that became the book "Come Be My Light" which chronicled her vivid feelings of estrangement from God to be released.  In the end her letters of lack of faith were published and she went on being lauded for her work among the poor, not her honesty about the struggle of faith.

Yesterday night I sat in a movie theater and cried.  I don't often cry at movies, but I sat in the dark next to my wife and daughters and choked back tears as I watched St. Vincent.  In fact I did more than choke back tears, I did the work of making sure that I, a full-grown man, did not blubber like a toddler in public.  The story on the screen was the best example of the reality of the Spirituality of Imperfection I have ever seen.  In short Bill Murray's character, the "seriously flawed" Vincent is nominated for Saint Hood by his young neighbor.  While Vincent is an alcohol bathed curmudgeon who is a victim of many vices, he also turns out to be a man who cares for people (and his cat) and loves life.  He is about as flawed as a person can be, but he is a saint.  Just like you and me...if we can stop fooling ourselves and those around us long enough to be honest.

Another quote that follows me around is one of my instructors saying, "maybe we care more about what we do than God does."  That statement messed me up for a long time because so much of what we do is tied to how we see people, but as time wears on I wonder if it is more about we humans looking at the outward appearance and God looking at the heart.  Toward the end of another piece of film I love Bruce Springsteen says, "I think whatever divinity we can claim to is hidden in the core of our humanity, and when we let go, when we let our compassion go, we let go of what little claim we have to the divine."  I thick Bruce is right, whatever divinity we can put our hands on is buried deep inside our humanity.  When we admit our humanness, our brokeness, our need for God - then God comes near.  When we stop trying to be perfect and expecting those around us to be flawless we see God acting in our midst.  We are all sinners and saints.

"flowers growing out of the desert
flowers out of parched ground
flowers coming right up through the cracks
of the pavement in your old town
flowering's not a science
it's more like a fine art
flowers coming right up through the cracks
of our broke up little hearts

we all need new beginnings
the first steps make you better
maybe you're just a prayer away
from getting your shit together"

~ Flowers by Bill Mallonee

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

New Sermon

I had the privilege to preach this past Sunday at Crosspoint Community Church in Anchorage, AK (my home congregation) on the topic "Why are you called Christian?"  You can hear it at:  http://www.crosspointcommunity.com/sermons/  (part of the Q&A series - week 2)

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Stretch Armstrong

October 14, 2014

I am writing this in a coffee shop.  Hanging outside on the wall of the multi-use building where this coffee shop is contained is a sign the reads “conflict resolution center.”  As I drove up this morning I noticed the sign and instantly thought of the lyrics of a brand new U2 song – The Troubles – where Bono sings:

“You think it’s easier 

To put your finger on the trouble

When the trouble is you

And you think it’s easier

To know your own tricks

Well it’s the hardest thing you’ll ever do…

You think it’s easier 

To give up on the trouble

If the trouble is destroying you

You think it’s easier

But before you threw me a rope 

It was the one thing I could hold on to.” 

Maybe it was the fact I had just stopped at the store to pick up a physical copy of Songs of Innocence (on its release day), but it think it is more likely the living through/in a week of some of the poorest mental health of my life.  The flash of thought that contained the connection to Bono’s internal conflict was blended with the waves of internal conflict that have been battering me much like the storms that I witnessed as a boy thrashing against the breakwater at the end of the pier in Holland, MI. 

While the image of the breakwater works for how it feels inside my head these days, it was a much smaller amount of water that touched the storm in the first place. As I headed to bed a little over a week ago I stepped on something wet with my last step before jumping into bed.  Bedroom floors are not supposed to be wet I thought.  After a few minutes of investigation Stacey and I discovered that a pipe in the wall between our bedroom and the bathroom was leaking and had been for sometime.  The floor in our room, and the bathroom was wet.  Who knew what else was wet?  So I went into the belly of the beast.  It was not a good time.  The water damage from this episode is not easily distinguished from previous water damage.  The trip also yielded a couple of other issues needing to be addressed.  As I write this I still have no clear idea what to do…

What I do know is that all the feelings I thought were 8 years dead (check out the post “Flashback”) came flooding back like a dike bursting.  As I crawled beneath my families home in a space filled with cobwebs, musty smells, water, and the soft muddy ground on which our ramshackle “foundation” rests I just kept hearing a voice telling me that this is not a suitable place for my family to live.  Another voice repeatedly interrogated me with the question “is the best you can do?”  After a short period of time I climbed out of the hole and the thought of leaving the trailer park – just selling this home and moving – crossed my mind and with a second wave of insecure wondering.  This time centered on what I really believe.  We moved to the park because we felt called here and I have taught for years about the idea of living among those we are called to serve.  Thoughts of leaving made me feel like a quitter, a phony, and an imposter.

So it happened again today my life was called into question, and I crawled into the hole again.  Eight years ago we felt like God was calling us to the trailer park.  We sold our house and moved.  We took our three girls (then 8, 6, and 4 years old).  We bet it all on that call.  Now looking back from nearly a decade later I wonder if it has been worth it.  I spent the entire first summer in our new home waking up and thinking in a mild depression “S#@!, I live in a trailer.”  Over the years I have grown to love my neighborhood, but don’t feel like I have made much progress in tearing down the wall of feelings that accompany physically living in sub-standard housing causes me.  Some of it is me needing to let go of my middle-class expectations and over-educated expectations about what I deserve in life.  That grandiose sense of entitlement makes me sick, but not enough to change apparently.  Making matters worse is a discomfort I feel when interacting with people called to minister among those who our world sees as the lowest, least and last that don’t live among the very people to whom they profess to be called.  That type of un-incarnational existence troubles me.  So the second I feel like selling the trailer and moving away a wave of feelings slams into me telling me that I am giving up on the people God is calling me to - not specifically people in the trailer park - but those who are the most vulnerable in society. 

When we first moved in my wife had time to do the community development she really felt called to, but as the family grew she needed to go back to work.  Now the days of kids filling our house for dinner, advocating for those in the park at the elementary school, and generally being involved in our neighborhood have given way to a pace of life that finds us living at the trailer park and not in the trailer park.  On a good day I think we are OK with this because we needed to do something different to care for our family, but on bad days – like the days you have to crawl under the trailer – it just feels like we sold out to maintain our middle class needs and wants.

Then there is the conflict, accelerating over the years, that we are caught between two worlds.  Never is this more apparent than at 6:50am.  At that time of the day my two oldest girls sprint out the door to jump on the bus that will drive them up the hillside to South Anchorage High School seven miles away.  South is the most wealthy and least diverse high school in Anchorage.  The majority of the ethnic and economic diversity comes from the trailer park where we live.  The diversity is literally bussed in (or drawn in).  The buses my girls ride to and from school are referred to at both the Jr. High and High School as the “ghetto” bus.  However, my girls are not typical of our neighborhood in a variety of ways and easily pass for kids who do not arrive on the “ghetto bus.”  My girls are caught between two cultures all day long, and our family is in many, many ways as well.  As my wife talked to a friend yesterday she told her, “It’s like your being stretched in two different directions, and your not that flexible.”  As I have reflected on that statement I have begun to see our family much like that old toy Stretch Armstrong that you could pull in a bunch of different directions and he would snap back into shape.  I just wonder if in our case we are pulled all over and are beginning to not be able to bounce back.

So as I gazed upon the “Conflict Resolution Center” sign I saw this morning I said a little prayer that the conflict inside of me might find some resolution.

Joel K

“and you know the thing is sleeping a scratch below your skin

and God knows if you wake it up you gotta calm it down again

and I wonder what it felt like when the waters flooded in

and it got too hard to swim”

             Lucifer – By Bill Mallonee