Simple Refreshment

“How good and pleasant it is when brothers live together in unity! It is like precious oil poured on the head, running down on the beard, running down on Aaron’s beard, down upon the collar of his robes. It is as if the dew of Hermon were falling on Mount Zion. For there the LORD bestows his blessing, even life forevermore.” (Psalm 133:1-3, NIV)

As summer approaches, I have clear memories of drinking my grandmother’s iced tea on hot afternoons. It really wasn’t all that special; it was Nestea instant iced tea, but it was just the way she made it that was truly refreshing. I could drink a whole pitcher at one sitting after mowing the lawn or just playing in the yard. If you remember the Nestea commercials, I could relate to the “Nestea Plunge,” when people would fall backwards into a pool of water after drinking just a sip of tea.

That’s the image I get from this Psalm of David. That’s the image I get when I think of the unity of the church. As we plunge into June and the sermon series and service projects of One Prayer, I have the feeling of being refreshed as the church comes together to learn more about God and his love and as we serve together showing God’s love to our neighbors.

We might miss the imagery of David’s picture of oil being poured over Aaron. This is the special anointing of the priesthood, setting Aaron apart to serve God and to serve God’s people. First Peter 2:9 tells us that we are the “royal priesthood.” So we should feel the same kind of refreshment that David describes as the anointing of God not only touches our heads but runs down our faces and onto our clothes, covering all of us. It is meant to set us apart for God’s work, and it is meant to refresh us.

Connecting people to God and to other people and helping them to grow in their faith and knowledge of Jesus Christ can be hard work. As we work together, let us be refreshed by God.


Creative Malaise

When I graduated from high school, all I wanted to do was write, teach, and preach. Even though I had committed myself to “full-time Christian ministry,” I had not determined that I would be a full-time Christian minister. It didn’t matter how I paid the bills, as long as I was able to write, teach, and preach.

I haven’t been able to do much of that lately. I haven’t been able to preach since March, and my writing has been limited to church newsletter articles. I don’t even get to teach that often, which is frightening, considering that I’m the “adult education minister” of the church.

I think I’m in a creative funk. I have all kinds of ideas, but I just don’t have the gumption even to write them down in a journal, just to log them for future use. To be honest, I think I just need some time to sit back and listen.

I need to listen to what God is telling me through his Word. I need to pay closer attention to what my body is telling me (less caffeine, carbs, and cable). I need to listen for the unspoken messages from my wife and kids, my coworkers, my church family, my friends, and even total strangers.

Enough said for now.

I'm Just Cleaning…

I like a bargain, just like anyone else, but I don’t see the appeal in surfing the local neighborhoods looking for yard sales and garage sales. It just seems counterintuitive to me to spend the time and gas driving around looking for someone’s hand-me-downs and/or trash, only to have to spend a few dollars to fix it up or spruce it up, just to save a few bucks. Sure, I have picked up a few things over the past few years, like my charcoal smoker, that I enjoy, but it seems like an obsession that has little pay off.

Over Memorial Day weekend, we decided to clean out our garage. So we dragged everything out into the front yard. We started drawing looky-lous the way a dead oppossum draws flies on the side of the road. The street in front of our house has a speed limit of 45 m.p.h., but folks were crawling past our yard all afternoon. We had a few people stop and rummage through our stuff, until I told them I was simply cleaning out the garage.

Eventually I took a plank and spray painted “CLEANING” on it, and used it and a couple of sawhorses to block the driveway. One guy stopped 10 minutes later and pulled into what was left of the driveway, leaving his van to stick out into the street. “I’m just cleaning my garage.” “But this stuff is for sale, right?” You’ve got to be kidding me. Not 2 minutes later, a lady parked in the next driveway, but before she could get halfway across the yard, I said, “I’m just cleaning my garage.” “Oh, that’s why you have the sign that says ‘CLEANING.'”

I couldn’t make this up.

Simple Service

In Ephesians 4:11, Paul writes: “It was he who gave some to be apostles, some to be prophets, some to be evangelists, and some to be pastors and teachers.” We get that. We understand that there are people called and gifted to do what we call “ministry.” However, most of us aren’t employed by the church as staff ministers. Most of us aren’t elders, deacons, or even teachers within the church. So what about the rest of the body? Are we off the hook if we don’t have to give a report at the annual meeting? Of course not.

Verse 12 continues, telling us that these people are gifted to lead in order “to prepare God’s people for works of service.” It’s actually pretty simple; we’re all called to serve. Everyone within the body of Christ has work to do. While some are called to prepare the rest of us to do works of service, all of us are called to do the work.

While some might bristle at the thought of some being called to lead while others are called to work, verses 12 and 13 complete the thought; some are called to prepare others, but all of us are called to work “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.” The fact of the matter is that we are all called to the same work: to build up the body of Christ. There are no substantial differences between those who are called to set up the chairs before the service and those who lead the singing or who preach in the service. There is no difference between those who teach the lessons and those who clean the classrooms or who open their home to host the small group where the lesson is taught.

As we look forward to the month of June, when we will be working together every Saturday, let’s put aside thoughts of who has the better job and focus on building up this body. Then we will experience “the whole measure of the fullness of Christ.”


Simple Weight Loss

I hate exercising for the sake of exercising. Unfortunately, the majority of my day doesn’t include activities that cause me to use my body in such a way that burns calories effectively, and so I must purposefully add exercise to my schedule. Since “misery loves company,” we started dragging the kids to the gym with us, and they walk the track with me. Even though it’s usually a hassle to get everyone moving in the morning-myself included-it is getting easier every morning simply because we’re doing it together, and we’re starting to see results together.

It’s the same with the church. In Hebrews 11, the writer goes through a list of the people of God throughout history who, despite their sins, lived by faith. The writer’s purpose is to encourage the church to remain faithful despite the troubles of life, their sin, and the persecution they were facing. In Hebrews 12:1 we read: “Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles, and let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us.”

Even though each of us must “run the race” as an individual, we are running it together. Even though each of us has our individual sins with which we struggle, the writer of Hebrews wants us to be encouraged by the cloud of witnesses so that we can lose the weight of our sin.

Sometimes it’s discouraging that, while we are forgiven in Christ, we continue to struggle with sin. Just as when we make the conscious decision to eat better and to exercise more, we don’t automatically drop the weight we want to get rid of. It takes time and effort, and with the right encouragement, we continue in our health regimen, practically throwing the weight aside. As we all head toward the goal of life with God forever in heaven, we must encourage each other and find encouragement from the Scriptures as we study together. Then we can help each other to throw off the sin that trips us up, and we will run together toward the prize.


Simple Submission

When Paul wrote in Philippians 2:5 that our “attitude should be the same as that of Christ Jesus,” what was he expecting us to do? We usually respond, “Be humble like Jesus,” but what does that mean? Too often we reduce humility to the idea of simply not taking credit for something we’ve done or to brush off compliments or the thanks that others want to give us. We know we’ve done something well, and it makes us feel just a bit better to say, “It was no big deal.” But that doesn’t seem like the response we would get from Jesus, considering the praise he receives in Revelation 5:12: “Worthy is the Lamb, who was slain, to receive power and wealth and wisdom and strength and honor and glory and praise!”

In Philippians 2:6-8, Paul uses the words servant and obedient. To Jesus, humility is a matter of obedience. Although Jesus is God, he took himself out of his role as the supreme authority over all of creation and became a servant. This is a largely foreign concept to many of us, but servants take orders. Good servants obey orders. Someone once said, “The true test of a servant is how you react when someone treats you like one.” How do you respond to the appeals to help around the church? Are there needs you’d rather not meet? Do you step up to help out even when you really don’t want to? That kind of submission is true humility.

We are called to be servants. The Great Commission explains that part of the process of making disciples is to teach people to obey everything that Jesus commanded. Jesus himself said in John 14:15, “If you love me, you will obey what I command.” Jesus ties our love for God, our love for other people, and our purpose as his disciples to simple obedience.

As we work together as the body of Christ, as brothers and sisters in Christ, we must not forget that we are all servants of Christ. While our attitudes ought to be reflect “it was no big deal” whenever we serve, that attitude must come from a submissive, obedient spirit.


Simple Humility


There’s nothing like the events of Jesus’ last week to put the Christian life into perspective. From the beginning of the week, when Jesus entered Jerusalem on a donkey, to the last supper, when Jesus washed his disciples feet, to the garden, when Jesus prayed for his disciples, Jesus shows us clearly that everything he did was for our benefit. While the events of the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus were done to secure our salvation, it was done out of simple humility.

In Philippians 2:5, Paul wrote: “Your attitude should be the same as that of Christ Jesus.” How do we exhibit the same kind of simple humility that Jesus showed? Paul had already explained it in verses 3 and 4: “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.” This is humility: that Jesus, who Paul tells us in verse 6 is God, considered our need for forgiveness, salvation, and transformation above his own need to be glorified, praised, and worshiped and took on the punishment for our sins by dying on the cross. We know that he didn’t necessarily want to face the physical torture, but he did it, for God’s sake and for our own.

To be honest, I think we’re getting it. We can praise God that he has given this body of believers the faith to pledge more than what has been budgeted for the missions we support-remember, those who haven’t yet made their pledges can continue to give! With the economy the way it is, with people losing jobs and worrying about losing jobs, it would make sense that we might fall short, but we didn’t. This is humility: that God’s people, who have been blessed with forgiveness in the here and now and with the hope of eternity, would consider the needs of others around the world to hear the Good News of forgiveness and salvation through Jesus and give, probably beyond what they know they can give.


A New Look

Obviously, it’s been a while since I’ve updated anything around here. So, I thought I’d roll out a new design.

I’ve been playing with Artisteer 2.0, and I like it, so far. I bought version 1.0 late last year, hoping to update the church’s WordPress theme. But then I started playing with Drupal and Joomla, and I kind of left it alone. Then I got an email announcing an upgrade to 2.0, which now includes exporting to Drupal and Joomla. The best part is how Artisteer creates the whole package, putting all the files together the right way. Then, all I have to do is tweak the CSS. Sweet!

Anyway, you know I love coffee, so my first real attempt was this design. I call it “EggMonkey Retro Diner.” I may have over done it with the photo icons everywhere, but I love the coffee ring stain icons.

Simple Unity

Believe it or not, Easter is just around the corner. The traditions I remember growing up are among my favorite. From the sunrise service to the breakfast that followed to the amazing celebration in worship to the family get-togethers that lasted through the afternoon, Easter has always been an extended family reunion.

But it is so much more than that. Our family has had reunions over the years, but our focus for gathering was simply because we shared a common name. That’s not a bad place to start. Paul wrote in Philippians 2:1, “If you have any encouragement from being united with Christ”; that’s the common name we share within the church. Our simple unity within the church begins at the point where we share Christ’s name.

But it is so much more than that. The unity we have goes beyond our name. Paul continues: “If you have… any comfort from his love, if any fellowship with the Spirit, if any tenderness and compassion”; our unity in Christ includes our common condition in Christ. We share comfort from God’s love; we share fellowship with the Holy Spirit; and we share tenderness and compassion among ourselves. Our simple unity is a matter of sharing the same “spiritual DNA” because of our individual relationships with God through Jesus.

But it is so much more than that. Our simple unity gives us a common purpose. Paul ends verse two stating: “Make my joy complete by being like-minded, having the same love, being one in spirit and purpose.” Our unity in Christ goes beyond the simple name “Christian.” Because of Jesus’ death and resurrection, we are united by being forgiven through Christ’s blood; we are united by being transformed daily by the Holy Spirit; and we are united in a common purpose: to bring others into that same unified, transformational relationship with God. That’s something to celebrate!


Simple Program

It’s cool to be a parent and to be able to say, “Because I said so.” Whether my kids do what I say is another story, but it’s a simple concept to grasp. There’s a benefit of being under that kind of authority as well. Whether you agree or not, you know immediately what you are expected to do. I know that it usually made my life easier simply to do what my parents told me to do.

Life within the church, would be easier if we would simply do what Jesus told us to do. The clearest example of this is the Great Commission in Matthew 28:18-20: “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you.”

If there’s ever a question about what we should be doing as the church, this is the one place where Jesus comes right out and says, “This is what you need to do, because I said so.” So when we begin to wonder what we ought to be doing, we need to remember that Jesus gave us a simple program: make disciples, that is, make more followers of Jesus.

How? First, he tells us to go. The church must be active, and we simply cannot be tied to the building we call “the church.” Second, he tells us to baptize. This is part of the process of evangelism. In Mark 16:15, 16, Jesus tells us that preaching the Good News about God’s forgiveness through Jesus and baptism go hand-in-hand. Third, he tells us to teach everything that he commanded. Being a Christian is more than doing what Jesus would have us do, but we cannot do even that if we don’t know what Jesus said and did; so we must teach.

Just as a parent is careful to help their child as they grow up, Jesus promises: “And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.” While the program is pretty simple, the job is pretty big, but Jesus promises to be with us. So let’s get to work!