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Moving from Independence back to Dependence

All Duke Divinity students are required to participate in regular discussion and reflection during their Field Education placements.  Below is a theological reflection I recently shared with the school and my friends on the trip:

The night I arrived in Quetzaltenango (Xela), Guatemala, it was dark and raining, and I was scared.  As I stood in the rain, Robert, who had traveled with me from Atlanta, departed with his host family, and I was left alone with the director of the Spanish school to wait for my host family.  The only Spanish words and phrases I knew were the handful that I had learned from Rosetta Stone and a book I studied on the plane.  Naturally, there was a great deal of silence as we stood waiting.

During these moments of silence, I looked up into the stormy night and prayed, “God, if there were ever times when I felt like I could make it on my own, this is not one of them.  I desperately need you right now to give me strength, courage, and patience.  Your Word says that in our weakness your power is made perfect.  Let that promise become real to me this day and throughout this trip.”  Directly after saying this prayer I noticed an illuminated cross on the skyline — it was the cross from the Cathedral of the Sacred Spirit in the heart of the city.  The cross reminded me that in the midst of my fear, cultural isolation, and feelings of inadequacy, God would be faithful and work all things for his glory – even when I was not able to see beyond the darkness, the rain, and the language barrier.

The Cathedral of the Sacred SpiritI spent my first few weeks in Xela with this knowledge and feeling of my utter dependence on God.  In the mornings, I regularly prayed for strength and wisdom before I set off for class.  In the afternoons, I prayed with a heart of thanksgiving for the beauty of the country, the people, and everything I was experiencing.  In the evenings, I prayed with joy for the faithfulness of God in my new situation.  Yet, as I grew more comfortable in the city and more confident in my budding Spanish abilities, my feelings of dependence on God began to fade.  And so did my prayers.

The shift from dependence to independence is a recurring theme in my life.  When times are difficult, it is easy for me to feel incapable and to feel the need to rest in the strength of God.  And when times are easy, I am tempted to think that I can make it on my own, and that I am capable of all things.

The shift from dependence to independence is also a recurring theme throughout the Bible.  A desire for independence is what causes Adam and Eve to disobey God’s commands and to sin against God.  Independence is the root of Peter’s fear when he is walking on the water looking towards Jesus.  Feelings of independence are what cause a group of people who need a savior to spit, mock, and crucify him.

However, a theme that is more powerful and more constant than my and humanity’s desire for independence is the holy love of God.  This love is stronger than my illusions and ill-directed desires.  And by God’s grace it constantly calls me, as it does the other characters in scripture, back into relationship with God in the midst of failure.  After Adam and Eve hid from God because of their sin, God went searching for them.  Each time the Israelites doubted, God proved his faithfulness.  After Peter began to sink, Jesus reached out his hand and caught him. After a few weeks of now feeling like I can hold my own in a country with a foreign language and culture, God’s grace is calling me back.  It is a call that reminds me that even as God’s power is made perfect in our weaknesses, God’s grace is the source of all of our abilities and gifts.  Therefore, his power must also be the basis for our confidence, joy, and strength.

"Christ is Coming" - A sign that sits atop Monte Sinai overlooking the city

What is the Gospel?

Last week I attended a conference put on by Advance the Church that centered around the theme of “The Revolutionary Gospel.”  The word “Gospel” is tossed around alot these days.  I’ve seen people freeze in class when asked to define it, I’ve heard two hour lectures on it, and I’ve seen myriads of books focused upon it.

I believe that a robust Gospel is important for the church moving into the future.  Yet in the Mainline churches I frequent, I fear that we often forget some of the basic truths about this message (1 Cor 15:1-8).  At the conference,  Tim Keller proposed a simple definition of the gospel which I believe is a great starting point as we seek to participate in God’s saving work throughout our world:

The gospel is that sinners are saved by Jesus’ work and not their own works.

Some other good quotes from the conference:

  • “Discipleship to what or whom? – How we answer this determines our lives.” – Alan Hirsch
  • “The gospel saves us to be disciples.  The great commission isn’t evangelism text but a discipleship text.” – Alan Hirsch
  • Jesus must be both Savior of your life and Lord of your life.  You can’t separate these two. – Alan Hirsch
  • “Law can tweak behavior but only the spirit can change the heart.” – Darrin Patrick
  • How do I know if I’m doing behavior modification or my character is being changed?  Answer this question: Who is more impressed with you right now, the people who know you the most or people who know you the least? – Darrin Patrick
  • If we aren’t led by the spirit then the result is self-righteousness and behavior modification – Darrin Patrick
  • We know how to market impact but we don’t know how to make impact.” – Eric Mason
  • We defend defend Christianity with urgency but do we live it out with passion? – JD Greear
  • “Many of us may not be doctrinally where Rob Bell is but we practically are where he is.” – JD Greear
  • “The disconnect isn’t between the power of God and the mission of God but between the people of God and the mission of God.” – JD Greear
  • “Until you know the size of the debt and the cost of the payer you don’t know whether to say thank you or to fall on the floor and say command me.” – Tim Keller
  • “There will be no joy in the grace of Jesus unless one sees that they are lost.” – Tim Keller
  • “If you can define the church without Jesus then you can do the church without Jesus.” – Alan Hirsch

Gospel

New Creation

New Creation

Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come.

Por lo tanto, si alguno está en Cristo, es una nueva creación. ¡Lo viejo ha pasado, ha llegado ya lo nuevo!

2 Corinthians 5:17

God has been doing some great things this winter.

A few weeks back I received a letter from Ruben (the child I sponsor through Compassion) which contained the sentence, “Te quiero decir que acepte al señor en una iglesia.”

I can’t read Spanish, but fortunately the letter came with a translation which read, “I want to tell you that I accepted the Lord at a Church.” My heart was filled with joy and thanksgiving as I thought about the life of faith ahead of Ruben as he grows in his relationship with Jesus and the church. He asked me to continue praying for his spiritual life, and I am asking you to pray for him as well.

After I took this photo a few weeks back thinking of Ruben and the new life he had been given, I found out that God had new things in store for me as well. This summer I will be heading to Guatemala and El Salvador with three of my best friends from Duke Divinity. In Guatemala we will be enrolled in language school in the city of Quetzaltenango (Xela) for four weeks and then we will move to El Salvador where we will be working with the Evangelical Methodist Church of El Salvador for the next six weeks. Please pray for my friends and me as we sharpen (or begin in my case) our Spanish, the church in El Salvador, and that God would begin preparing all of our hearts and lives for the beautiful things that he wants to happen in them this summer.

I look forward to the day when I can communicate and share God’s love with Ruben and others in their native tongue.

The Journey

Chapel Drive

This is an Advent devotional I wrote for Peachtree Road UMC’s Advent season devotional booklet Veiled in Flesh.

Do you remember listening to stories about the Magi’s visit to Jesus when you were a child? The star, the journey, and the gifts of these men were the main focal points of this story celebrating the Christ child’s birth.

Take a moment today and read this story in the Gospel of Matthew once again.  You can read the text here: Matthew 2:1-12

Certainly, the Magi are seen following a star with treasures of gold, incense, and myrrh packed away, but there is a whole subplot to this story that we often overlook.

Matthew tells us that Herod is disturbed that the King of the Jews is rumored to have been born near Jerusalem, and he calls the travelling Magi together for a meeting. Here, he gathers details about their journey and tells them to report back once they find the child so that he may go and “worship” him as well. The Magi do find Jesus and rejoice as they give him great gifts, yet soon after they are warned in a dream not to go back to Herod. The Magi might not have understood this warning at the time, but we are able to see God’s hand at work as it stifled Herod’s plan to kill Jesus.

Our journey this season has been similar to that of the Magi. We have been traveling towards the day that we celebrate God dwelling in this world with much excitement, and the day is almost near. As the Magi encountered and overcame obstacles in their last leg, let us also be open to the ways God may make us aware of and help us overcome obstacles – people, attitudes, malls, stress, and more – which seek to thwart His mission. Let us take a route free of distractions and full of joy as we prepare to encounter God in the flesh — the light and salvation of the world.

Playing it Safe

I’m photographing my first wedding this weekend. Whenever people ask me about it, I inform them that I was asked to shoot it and it is not something I solicited.  If I hadn’t been asked, I doubt that I ever would have photographed a wedding.

This is one of the most important days of their life and I’ve been entrusted to capture it all. What a huge burden of responsibility and a huge opportunity to fail.

Those are the initial thoughts that come to my mind whenever I’ve thought about photographing a wedding, and they’re the reason why I’d never taken on such a venture until asked.  Come to think of it, before I preached for the first time I had many of the same sentiments as well.

I like to play things safe.

Common in my thought process are things like: If we go on this bridge that says ‘no trespassing’ the cops may come. My season ticket to Duke basketball will be revoked if you use one of my friend’s student IDs to get into the game. If I go hang out with you guys I’ll have less time to study for the exam and I could do poorly. That idea will never work in this church.

And while sometimes playing it safe is a good thing, I’ve been convicted about some of my tendencies towards safety and stability, and fears of failure lately.  And today, I came across an article advocating this idea which hit me like a gust of freezing wind on a winter night:

Continue Reading…

Middle Schoolers on a Mission

Justin Bieber. Silly bands. Braces. Texting incessantly. Tween study Bibles. If you hadn’t guessed by this point, I have spent alot of time with middle schoolers lately.

This past week I traveled with 65 middle schoolers to ReCreation Ministries in Asheville, NC where we participated in missions by sharing the love of Christ through home repair. We painted, dug septic lines, roofed, and grew closer as a group and to God as we washed each other’s feet, had dance parties on the bus, and shared life with each other for a week.

As I returned and thought about our time there I was reminded of two verses:

The first provides a basic principle of how we should love:
“My command is this: Love each other as I have loved you.” – John 15:12

The second goes on to explain how God loved us:
“For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.” – John 3:16

Throughout the trip we tried to show this universal love to the widow whose house we were working on, the staff at ReCreation, and all others that we encountered. And as we looked around to see how God was working in our lives, we continually witnessed God’s universal and self-sacrificing love being revealed to us through these same people.



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