In this second part of our new series, Pursue: Chasing God in a Godless World, we deal with a bit of reality. The reality is that sometimes we get as prepared as we can be for the challenges that a godless world might throw into our paths as followers of Jesus and they just don’t seem to matter. What are we supposed to do when that happens? Keep reading to find out.
Calling on God
Do you remember a time when you felt completely overwhelmed by some situation you were facing? Now, it’s one thing to feel like that when you came into a situation totally unprepared. But it’s a bit scarier when you have prepared really well. It’s scary to realize the challenge is going to be even beyond what you thought it might. Read the rest…
This past Sunday we kicked off a brand-new series called Pursue: Chasing God in a Godless World. For the next few weeks, with the story of King Asa in 2 Chronicles 14-16 as our guide, we’re going to talk about this very thing. How can we be bold followers of Jesus in a culture where such a thing isn’t nearly as acceptable as it once was? In this first part we lay the foundation for what follows. If we’re going to run after Jesus, it’s going to take looking like God. Thanks for reading.
Pursue Godliness
This past week was an anniversary of sorts, although probably not one you’ve ever heard of before. Fifty-five years ago this past Friday, Walter Ciszek was released from prison in Soviet Russia and returned to the United Stated after more than 20 years in captivity. As a young man in the 1930s, Ciszek, a Catholic, felt a call to ministry. Specifically, he felt a call to the mission field. So, stepping out on his faith, Ciszek headed for the U.S.S.R. He was in Poland training for the work to which he had been called when Russia invaded. Recognizing how perilous was the situation he was facing in Poland, Ciszek did what any bold, young missionary would do in his position, he head further east to serve in the Ural Mountains in central Russia. In 1941, he was arrested and sentenced to five years in prison—much of it in solitary confinement. While serving this sentence, he was sentenced to an additional 15 years in the Gulag, several years of which included hard labor. Even once his hard labor term was complete, however, he was still held as a prisoner, now forced to work as a mechanic. Read the rest…
In this final part of our series, Gravity: Overcoming the Weight of Our Stuff, we talk about one last, powerful way to break free from the pull our stuff otherwise naturally has on our lives. Along the way, I offer a three step process for how to begin building the practice of sacrificial generosity into our lives, an example of what generosity can do, and a chance to respond. Thanks for reading and blessings as you make your plan to break free from the gravity of your stuff.
Breaking Free
Have you noticed that one of Disney’s goals lately seems to be to make live-action remakes of all their classic animated films? We’ve so far seen Cinderella, Beauty and the Beast, The Jungle Book, Maleficent, Pete’s Dragon, and Christopher Robin, with films like Dumbo, Mulan, the Lion King, and Aladdin on the near horizon. A bit of research allowed me to discover that there are also tentative plans to redo other classic films such as Snow White, Robinhood, The Sword in the Stone, and Pinocchio. Read the rest…
In this third part of our series, Gravity: Overcoming the Weight of Our Stuff, we talk about another way to reduce its pull on us. Once we know who is the real owner of the stuff we normally call “ours,” what comes next? Simply put: We have to learn how to use it like He would. To find out how that is and what we should do about it, keep reading.
Zero G’s
We recently watched the Oscar-nominated film, The Martian, starring Matt Damon. It really was a great movie. It’s about a team of astronauts who have established a little outpost on Mars. During their research, however, a wild storm moves in and they have to abandon the post, at which point they decide to begin their year-long return to earth. In the chaos of trying to get on their escape vessel as the storm rages around them, however, Matt Damon’s character gets separated from the group. Presuming him dead, the group’s leader makes the agonizing decision to return without him. I’ll stop the synopsis there so as to not give anything away if you haven’t seen it, but needless to say, the film includes quite a few scenes of the astronauts doing life on their enormous ship. With the exception of a section of the ship in which they have somehow simulated gravity, all the movements about the ship take place in the weightlessness of space. In order to film most of the scenes the actors were put on wires or else pantomimed being weightless in outer space while balancing on one foot. Read the rest…
In this second part of our new teaching series, Gravity: Overcoming the Weight of Our Stuff, we begin talking about some of the ways to do just that. The first way we can make our stuff small in our lives is to begin to develop an attitude of gratitude about it. For the whys and hows check out the text below. Thanks, as always.
You Don’t Own Me
Have you ever experienced the change of attitude that can come from being grateful for something? Whether they knew it or not, when your parents and grandparents and teachers and any other busy-body adults you’ve had in your life taught you to say, “thank you,” when someone has done something for you, they were not just teaching you good manners. They were actually giving you some powerful spiritual advice. There’s something about developing a grateful heart that can cause changes in our outlook on just about everything. Think about it like this: Have you ever had a really bad attitude about something? Of course you have. The better question is when was the last time you had a really bad attitude about something? Read the rest…