Are your generationally deficient?

A huge component of the Christian experience is community.

Unfortunately, we live in a generation that claims to be spiritual, but highly values independance. We love statements like:

  • I’m not religious, but I am spiritual.
  • I love God, I just don’t like the church.
  • My beliefs are personal.
  • I’m closest to God when I’m by myself out on the lake.

There’s just one problem with phrases like these, and that problem is called the Bible. You can’t believe the above statements and the Bible at the same time.

Here’s what I mean:

I’m not religious, but I’m spiritual – anytime we try and distance ourselves from religion because some professor/teacher/friend told us religion and religious people were wrong/stupid/idiots, we deny what the Bible says: Hebrews 10:24-25 “And let us consider how to stir up one another to love and good works, not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near.” 

I love God I just don’t like the church – to say you love God, but don’t love the church is an insult to the God you say you love. In Revelation 21:9 there is a descriptive/allegorical reference to Christ and His church: “Then came one of the seven angels who had the seven bowls full of the seven last plagues and spoke to me, saying, “Come, I will show you the Bride, the wife of the Lamb.”” Throughout Scripture, the church is known as the Bride of Christ. To say you love God but don’t love the church is just like  looking at someone and saying, “I like you but I can’t stand your wife.” That’s bad form, my friend.

My beliefs are personal –  in a politically correct universe we are all allowed to have opinions, so long as we never let anyone know what they are. This has led us to the place of seeing our faith as a private matter that should never be spoken. Unfortunately, for the believer in God’s word, this is not possible. We see it clearly in Romans 10:9, “Because, if you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.” Obviously, a mandated component of faith is going public. In fact, it’s very difficult to find a biblical reference that tells you to keep anything quiet.

I’m closest to God when I’m by myself out on the lake – I think it’s possible to have moments of closeness to God in solitude, but most people use this line of thinking as an excuse to get out of being a part of the church. Colossians 3:16, “let the word of Christ dwell in you richly, teaching and admonishing one another…” First Corinthians 12:27, “Now you are the body of Christ and individually members of it.” Romans 12:5, “so we, though many, are one body in Christ, and individually members one of another.” Believe me, I could go on and on.

Truth is, if you’re going to be biblical about your Christianity you need to be part of the Body of Christ, a.k.a. church. Now, there are many churches and many people involved, but there is one additional element that takes that experience to a whole ‘nutha level!

In the contemporary church expereince you drop the babies off in the nursery, the kids in the children’s wing, shuttle the teenagers off to the youth service and the adults gather together for Sunday school or “big church.”

But time after time in Scripture we see that separating our churches by age, and keeping the older’s away from the youngers because they don’t like each other’s music or pop culture references, leads to one thing: an unhealthy church.

Titus 2 instructs the church to have the older man teach the younger man in the older women teach the younger women, to live life together. We call this, intergenerational ministry.

Intergenerational ministry is a two-way street; the older folks have to love the younger folks and be willing to put up with their shenanigans. And the younger folks must be taught to respect and cherish their elders. In this environment, real ministry takes place. Instead of communicating information in isolated age graded classes, intergenerational churches see real revelation in their teaching that erupts in transformation of real lives.

Our church has been struggling with this for years. We’ve instituted an annual Rite of Passage to elevate our children to adult status when they are ready. We’ve open the doors of service to a multiplicity of ages so that teenagers and seniors can serve side-by-side. We have broken down barriers of age grading allowing those in the church to be influenced, motivated and trained by people they differ from by decades.

Last Sunday evening, my Grow Group (life group, small group, cell group, pick your flavor, etc.) decided to integrate intergenerational life at that level.

We have just under a dozen kids between the ages of three and 11 that hang out in the basement during our Grow Group time.

It usually requires at least one or two parental visits downstairs to keep it in check. Practicing a stern face, the gritted teeth, and the quiet yelling as you descend the stairs, “I told you kids to keep it down!”, we had kind of fallen into this as a rut of normalcy.

So, we decided to eat together, study together and pray together like we always do, but this time with a little change up!

We ate first and made sure the kids didn’t run off to the basement, but kept them with us. Then, we moved prayer time from the end to the middle.

We kept the children with us and told them we wanted them to see what we did while they were playing. We explained that we were going to pray for each other, and that we often prayed for them.

Finally, we shared some Scripture about how important it was to live for the Lord and asked them if they had prayer concerns. Believe it or not, they did. Apparently grade school can be pretty stressful!

Then we all prayed together and dismissed them to go play while we finished with study.

Here’s the take away:

1. It was hard to get into that night’s Bible study since all the adults were talking about how awesome that was having their kids hear Scripture from other adults and be encouraged in prayer. There really were some giddy daddies in that Bible study.

2. Parents talked to their kids on the way home, and the consensus was those kids thought it was amazing, too. They were looking forward to doing it again.

No theologians… No trained children’s professionals… Just a room full of moms, dads, singles and grandparents who love Jesus and lived it out in front of other generations.

Let me encourage you to make sure that you are living the Christian life in community. And then go the extra mile, make sure that you are learning from those who’ve walked many more miles than you, and then make sure you are sharing with those who are trying to follow your footsteps.

Psalm 71:18 So even to old age and gray hairs, 

O God, do not forsake me, 

until I proclaim your might to another generation, 

your power to all those to come. 

 

The X Factor

catalyst |ˈkatl-ist| noun

1. a substance that increases the rate of a chemical reaction without itself undergoing any permanent chemical change.

2. a person or thing that precipitates an event: the governor’s speech acted as a catalyst for debate.

Everyone has a position of leadership and influence. Some influence a few lives, maybe from the home, and some influence the masses from whatever God-given role in which they have been placed. But, one thing is for sure… everyone leads someone.

For the Christian leader, that is not enough. To lead, even with character and integrity, falls short of the standard and potential that God asks of everyone who leads in His name.

I have heard a multiplicity of times over the years that God doesn’t care about results, just faithfulness.

That’s never settled quite right with me.

Faithfulness, for sure, is a part of the Christian leaders expectation, in fact, it is the foundation from which all other parts of leadership flow.

But too often I think we use faithfulness in lieu of effectiveness as an excuse. True, there have been some who are called to ineffective faithfulness, called to futile acts of service. For example, the prophet Isaiah:

Isaiah’s Commission from the Lord

6:8 And I heard the voice of the Lord saying, “Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?” Then I said, “Here I am! Send me.” 9 And he said, “Go, and say to this people: “ ‘Keep on hearing, but do not understand; keep on seeing, but do not perceive.’ 10 Make the heart of this people dull, and their ears heavy, and blind their eyes; lest they see with their eyes, and hear with their ears, and understand with their hearts, and turn and be healed.”

I don’t know about you, but that sounds like a pretty miserable calling to me. It must’ve sounded miserable to that prophet as well, since even though he was in the of visually impressive presence of God Himself, with angels roaring overhead, and the sound of worship so loud it shook the building, that his first response to this calling was, “ How long, O Lord?”

I have to think that an Isaiah calling is the exception to the rule. Not just because that seems like a gruesome way to live, but because Jesus seemed to set up another normative standard:

Matthew 12:33 “Either make the tree good and its fruit good, or make the tree bad and its fruit bad, for the tree is known by its fruit.

It appears that the standard for believers, leaders and anyone who calls themselves a follower of Christ is to bear fruit.

This is all background to let you know my personal philosophy which I carried with me into the reading of Joshua chapter 1. Many of you will remember this chapter as the “Be strong and courageous” passage.

I love the threefold call on Joshua, formerly second-in-command, to be strong and courageous and lead God’s people after their earthly leader Moses had passed away.  Three times he is told to be strong and courageous, is reminded that God would be with him as he was with Moses, and is promised that God will never leave nor forsake him.

In essence, this is the promise for all believers. If we are really “followers” of Jesus then it means he is going in front of us. He is the one pushing down the barricades, stepping into the shadows, doing the hard stuff… we are… following.

So, if He is doing all the heavy lifting up front, we should be strong and courageous bringing up the rear.

But, let’s get back to the issue of bearing fruit. One of these be strong statements is followed by an incredible phrase:

Joshua 1:6 Be strong and courageous, for you shall cause this people to inherit the land that I swore to their fathers to give them.

The above quotation is in the English Standard Version. I love it because it’s different than most translations which say Joshua will “lead this people” versus what it says in this version, that Joshua will “cause this people.”

A good biblical leader will cause his people:

  •  God is already doing something
  •  God has made promises He will keep
  •  God is leading, we are following
  •  God can use you as a cause agent, or catalyst to see His will done in this world and in many live

Whether you’re leading in your home, at work or school, in your community, or church, the role of the Christian leader is to be a cause agent for what God has promised and is already doing.

Joshua was given the task of seeing God’s promises fulfilled in the lives of many, simply because HE would believe God.

He could lead those people because He was following God… even if they struggled.

What is the missing element in your home, your church, your anywhere? Why are good people wandering in the desert, instead of taking the promise land?

Maybe you are the X factor… God is looking for that catalyst, that cause agent that will start a chain reaction manifesting the promises of God to become reality in many lives because YOU believed.

Be strong. Be courageous. Follow Him.

Check your footnotes

I freely admit it… I am a nerd.

I am often more comfortable around books than I am around people. I love digging into academic things, even when I am not being graded. And, I’d rather write an article than have a conversation (for example, this blog).

I’m not anti-social, I’m just pro-alone. Fair enough?

Out of this nerdom will sometimes come a thought or comment that cracks me up and I wonder if anyone else would think the same. However, because I know I’m a nerd, I often keep it to myself for fear of getting a cyber-wedgie, or an e-wet-willie from one of you online cool kids.

But, this time, I’m going to take the risk… here goes.

This past Christmas season I preached on the wise men of Matthew chapter 2:

2:2“Where is he who has been born king of the Jews? For we saw his star when it rose and have come to worship him.”

You know the story, these unknown wise guys see a star and somehow know the Child born under it is beyond significant and one of them yells, “ROADTRIP!”

They gas up the camels, shout out “Eat my dust,” and start the search. Cool story, but here’s where the nerd part kicks in…

In doing the original language study, to see if there was anything below the surface I should know or teach, I looked at the word “star.”Screen Shot 2013-01-11 at 10.39.04 AM

No big surprises really, the Greek for star means star. It could mean planet or constellation, but star really does the trick. Good job English translators.

The actual Greek is prononced astera (insert nerd transition engine ignition here). Here’s my stream of consciousness…

“Hmmm… didn’t I learn the Kansas state motto in grade school? Wasn’t it ‘Ad astra per aspera’?

But, that’s Latin, not Greek.

‘Ad astra per aspera’ means ‘to the stars through difficulties.’

Wait, Latin ‘astra’ and Greek ‘astera’ both mean star. Cool! The Latin must have stole it directly from the Greek.

I wonder if ‘astera’ made it to English? I mean if you put an ending on it like ‘ed, ‘ing, or…wait, no way…

(quick check of www.etymonline.com)

YES! Too cool, the modern English word asterisk is straight up Greek and/or Latin. It means little star, duh.

Yep, that little mark, symbol, or star that tells you to look at the bottom of the page for more information or check a footnote is the same root word from the Bible.

That’s when it hit me… (are you ready for it?)

I wonder if when the wise men saw the aster(isk), if they heard God saying, ” * See Jesus below “

I told you I was a nerd.

Still, the next time you see or use an asterisk, or for that matter, the next time you see a star… why don’t you look for Jesus?

Many blessings and thanks for letting me share some nerd humor.

Reading It Right

I’m very excited about a recent project I’ve been involved with regarding Bible study and our church. Let me introduce you to a new website called www.readingitright.com

This is a Bible study teaching format, and resource center that I wanted to share with you. Kind of cross pollinating between CrossEyedLife and this new website along with our church. Thanks for listening, and enjoy!

Reading It Right from Andy Addis on Vimeo.

 

YOU CAN DOWNLOAD THE CARD HERE: CLICK!

READING IT RIGHT…

Reading it Right is a Bible Study method based on the Bible’s own instruction of how it should be read as seen in 2 Timothy 3:16-17…

“All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work.”

 

FINDING THE KEY…

God’s Word is the most valuable gift that we can put into our hands. But, for many over the years, reading, understanding and applying it has been somewhat of a mystery.

However, if you will let the Bible itself teach you how it is to be read it’s like finding the legend on a map. Once you know the way you’re supposed to be reading, the content you should be finding, the application you should be making… the Bible will come alive!

Second Timothy 3:16-17 tells us that the Bible is “useful” for 4 significant things: teaching, reproofing, correcting, and training in righteousness. With this in mind, it becomes simple: God wants you to read his word for these four uses.

Give it a try and see what you can learn from God’s word when you READ IT RIGHT!

 

FIRST, THE BIBLE STUDY METHOD…

Did you know that the Bible gives us instruction on how to read it? Front of Card

2 Timothy 3:16 All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, 17 so that the man of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work.

This means every word of the Bible is designed to provide us 4 things: teaching, rebuking, correcting and training. So, reading the Bible becomes a conversation with God in which we discover what each passage means in line with these purposes.

Summarize– (teach) First, discover the basic teaching in the passage. It’s not about deep insight, or personal application. Simply, What is the headline, or the main thought in a nutshell.

Expose– (reproof) Next, get honest about how this passage evaluates our lives.  The Bible challenges thoughts and actions. When it happens you may feel vulnerable and exposed. Don’t be defensive, be real!

Change– (correct) The next step is to make adjustments. In light of God’s Word we discover some things we need to stop and some we need to start. Making these changes will be an uphill climb, but worth every step.

Prepare– (train) The end result of this process is being one step further in spiritual maturity. God has a plan for your life and the Bible is preparing you for something. Discover/dream/pray what it might be.

 

SECOND, BIBLE STUDY APPLIED…

Let’s Get Started…Back of Card
1.Find a quiet place without distraction. Bring a Bible, notebook, something to write with, and expectation!

2.Pray and ask God to speak to you from the Bible.

3.Read a short passage slowly and silently. Read it again out loud. Don’t rush the reading.

4.Use your journal to write down responses to the 4 purposes of the Bible.

5.Pray again:
• tell Him what changes you need to make after reading this passage
•worship Him by describing His greatness
•confess your sins
•thank Him for all He has already given/done
•make any requests for yourself and/or others

 

www.readingitright.com

 

2013… Happy New Year

 

Isaiah 43:19

Behold, I am doing a new thing;
    now it springs forth, do you not perceive it?
I will make a way in the wilderness
    and rivers in the desert.

Happy New Year!