High Capacity from Andy Addis on Vimeo.
Keeping your tread depth for life
I am not mechanically inclined… at all.
That’s why I am extremely blessed to have friends who can fix stuff. I kind of have an unspoken deal with them; if they fix what’s broken around my place or in my car, I’ll conjugate any Greek verbs they need.
Seems to be working out really well for me so far.
It was even worse when I was younger. I remember being in high school and knowing very little about cars but thinking that they were trying to con me when they said I needed my tires aligned.
Sure, what’s next, am I low on blinker fluid?
Over the years, I’ve decided that a good tire alignment isn’t a bad deal.
In fact, the whole issue of alignment is a fantastic spiritual principle. So much of our lives are close, but just not quite there. You couldn’t see it by looking at it, but the unforeseen wear and tear on our lives and the unexpected reduction in performance let us know something is wrong.
We often have all the pieces we need, but we’re lacking some kind of cohesiveness, some kind of coherence that makes all the parts of our life work right. It’s like the old expression, I finally got it all together and then forgot where I put it.
Just like the tires on a vehicle, we also need spiritual alignment. In other words, we need to take the time and energy to make sure that our practices line up with what we know, that our thoughts reflect a pure heart and that our lives produce based on what we are putting in.
When our day-to-day lives tend to wear us out, when we don’t seem to get out of our lives what we are pouring in, and when we seem to be living two lives (the one that reflects the voice in our head and heart versus the one that we actually live out with her hands and feet) then we are probably in need of spiritual alignment.
An alignment means that we have it almost altogether, but the pieces are not working well as a team. This will cause frustration, breakdown and serious life damage.
Alignment means that we take what was close and say not good enough. We bring it into line and everything starts humming along just like it should.
Let me give you an example. The Addi are a pretty functional and healthy family unit, but like every family in America and I assume around world, things aren’t always perfect.
My wife and I after a discussion this very morning just desired to take it up a notch and become more of a family that God would want us to be. For me, this meant a return to the Scripture as I asked God to reveal how to align our family with Him.
I really believe he directed me, since I sat down to read Galatians 5 as it was on my daily reading plan and I just hoped God would intersect that random calendar with our specific need. I was halfway through the chapter when I realized I was in Ephesians 5… kind of a rookie mistake for a pastor, but it was just the chapter we needed for our realignment.
Thanks God.
Here’s what I found:
- verse 1 -don’t compare yourself to others, there are families that will make you feel bad about yours and and many that will make you feel better about yours. The standard though is to imitate God… remember life is not graded on a curve.
- verse 2 – walk in love. The fragrance of Christ is not worship music, strict obedience to behavioral steps or anything else very Christian/churchlike. We are to walk in love and let that verb consume us and our household.
- verse 3 -rid the house of any sexual immorality and greed. This shouldn’t even be hinted of in the believer’s home. What’s playing on our television set, what pops up on our computer screens, what rolls around in the mind, what’s valued and sought after, what becomes an obsession? All these are things that I have to answer for no matter who in my home is taking part. It’s our job to get rid of the junk.
- verse 4 – no filthy or foolish talk, especially crude joking. Instead it needs to be replaced with a consistent attitude and speech pattern of thankfulness.
- verse 6 – in the standards and practices of your home, be firm and steadfast. When you make a decision, stick with it.
- verse 10 – when looking for direction, think about what would make the Lord happy and walk there.
- verse 11 – expose what is wrong and do not cover over it. Problems do not go away, they must be dealt with.
- verse 14 – wake up! Quit sleep walking through the most important moments and decisions of your life. You can’t live on cruise control.
- verse 18 – be filled with the Holy Spirit and make worship a way of life. It’s not about the weekend stupid… God needs to be on the throne of your family seven days a week.
- verse 19 – submit to one another as a way to honor Jesus.
- verse 22 – wives submit, follow and respect your hubby.
- verse 23 – husbands, be worth submitting to, following and respecting. Love your wife more than you love yourself.
- verse 30 – make your immediate family, the family that you focus on.
- chapter 6, verse 1 – children obey your parents, just because it’s right. This is how you learn submission and trust.
- verse 4 – parent with skill and compassion. Learn how to discipline and not punish. Make your parenting what your kids need, not what they want.
Suddenly, I realize that things are good not great. That there is soooo much room to be where and what God wants us/me to be.
Most importantly, I realize that if I don’t change something, nothing is going to change.
One by one, The Addi will start to make the adjustments and align our home with God’s word.
Pretty soon, we’ll be running much better than we knew we could!
And, by the way, if you need any Greek conjugated… just let me know.
Opposite Attract
There is an old saying that opposites attract.
Often it is used in the awkwardly romantic, Paula Abdul-esque way to describe how couples…er, compliment one another.
- Mrs. Always Late marries Mr. Electronic Organizer
- Mr. Arm Chair Quarterback/Wanna-Be Gladiator marries Mrs. Doily Crocheter
- Mrs. Wakes With The Dawn marries Mr. Up By The Crack Of Noon
I guess it does happen from time to time, but honestly, I think the more common occurrence is in the attraction of opposites that truly are opposite. They don’t complement each other, in fact, they don’t even like each other. But, despite their disdain for one another they end up being just like the other.
- Republicans and Democrats
- Your NFL team and my NFL team
Just plug in any rivalry and you’ll see what I’m talking about. When opposites attract it usually is not a marriage of convenience, or even compatibility. Yet, it’s often amazing just how similar those opposites can be.
You’re just miserable
Here’s just a quick note on dealing with people, and dealing with ourselves.
I used Job 16:2 as the reference.
Just as a FYI… I shot this, edited, uploaded and posted on an iPhone… Just wanted to know if I could.
Miserable from Andy Addis on Vimeo.
Forgive
I wrote this article for the Hutch News and was published today. They usually provide a web copy on their site, so, I don’t double post.
But, it looks like there is no web version this time, so…
Enjoy and let me know what you think:
IT’S TIME TO FORGIVE
When is the hardest thing in the world to do, the best choice to make?
When it’s forgiveness.
You don’t have to be a church attendee to have this pounded into you; Dr Phil or Oprah get the job done there. Forgiveness restores relationships, brings peace amid conflict and changes the face of everything from family to politics.
While forgiveness is hard, it is exponentially amplified when you, the victim, had little to no part in the initial hurt:
- I mean he’s the one who walked away, right?
- She’s the one stabbed me in the back, remember?
- After what he did to me, he doesn’t deserve forgiveness!
That’s what makes verses like this so very hard: Bear with each other and forgive whatever grievances you may have against one another. Forgive as the Lord forgave you (Colossians 3:13).
Forgiving as Christ forgave means unconditional, undeserved, unrestrained forgiveness of those who hurt us most. There’s no call for confession, no sign of regret. Christ forgave us while we were still sinners, and He asks us to do the same.
I believe this particular theological principle is called “NoWayishJoseish” in most of our personal doctrines.
Friends and family won’t let us forget the hurt, little things like songs and calendar dates stir up the pain, and we’ve become so comfortable with the misery we really wouldn’t know what to do without it.
So, we just live with the turmoil and convince ourselves its just the way it is. We continue to make regular visits to the temples and shrines of our distress where we worship what we hate.
But, what if God gave us this incredibly difficult command to forgive, not only to fix others, but to restore the forgiver?
Imagine walking a hiking trail with some friends and you suddenly feel a stinging on your calf and hear the terrifying sound of a rattle rustling back into the bushes.
Your friends sprint into emergency mode, “We have to get you to a hospital!”
But, you refuse.
“I wasn’t doing anything wrong. I was on the path, right where I should be. I have been wronged! That snake was way out of line, and I am completely right. I refuse to leave this spot until that snake comes back and apologizes!”
Really?
You may be logical. You may be convincing. You may be 100% right.
You’re still going to die.
That snake is not coming back. And, you have to get the poison out of your system.
One of the benefits of forgiveness is that it releases you from the pain, the anger, the past and the poison.
It’s the hardest work you’ve ever done, but sometimes it’s the only way. Don’t forget, when you forgive the deepest wounds, it’s never one and done.
That kind of forgiveness requires multiple applications, but it’s worth it. This is your life we’re talking about!
That snake is not coming back, but we still have to get the poison out of your system.
It’s time to forgive.
Hello there myself, glad to meet me
When was your last ‘Aha” moment?
I love those, and… I hate those. When you have a real-deal “Aha” moment it can be incredible relief, even victory. Or, quite often it can plummet you into a spiral of depressive humility because of personal stupidity.
Guess it just depends on the particular “Aha” you are experiencing.
I love seeing these moments in my kids. I still remember watching ‘just past toddler’ Noah trying to pound a screw into some scrap wood with a hammer. When I introduced him to a screwdriver… I was a genius.
The Prodigal Son story is one of those stories that tends to lead people to their own “Aha” moment, generation after generation. Relationships restored, addictions admitted, hypocrisy revealed… the list goes on and on.
Ironically, it’s an “Aha” moment within the story itself that is at the heart of Jesus’ teaching. It’s not that the incredible love of the Father, or the overwhelming stupidity of the younger son, or the amazing hope of redemption take a back seat to anything else. But, they all pivot on the gut-wrenching “Aha” moment of this wayward, reckless kid!
Something to share
In our faith community at CrossPoint we’ve been talking alot about how much God values the lost, disconnected and hurt. But, its all just talk until we do something.
So, I’ve pulled out something from my past to share, in hopes that you will take it and turn around to share it yourself.
Back in the day I used to be a hardline HTML code writer and built websites for churches and ministries. I also toyed around with a little video animation. That’s when I came up with this video version of what is called One-Verse Evangelism… I prefer to call “God’s Plan, Simplified!”
Please watch it, download it, email it, embed it, post it… whatever you can do that you think might make an impact.
It’s just something I want to share with you, hoping you might share it with others. The download link is just above the video.
Lord Jesus, we are all broken, frail and messed, but in your hands we can be made to do mazing things. Please help today be the day that you start to use us to do amazing things in the life of someone else. In Jesus name, Amen.
By the way, if you have stumbled across this site and would like to make a change; if you need to turn things over to God, then pray the prayer at the end of the video and shoot me an email. I’d love to help get you started on the journey!
Right click the link below to download:
DOWNLOAD THIS VIDEO
Something to share from Andy Addis on Vimeo.
Don’t grow weary
I had the awesome opportunity to speak with and encourage the staff and volunteers of the Open Door Pregnancy Care Center in Hutchinson, Ks.
It was a small lunch gathering, but an awesome people and a great time.
Sorry about the backlight…. nothing I could do about the environment… just think of it as a podcast with moving shadows!
The teaching is from 2 Thessalonians 3
11 For we hear that some among you walk in idleness, not busy at work, but busybodies. 12 Now such persons we command and encourage in the Lord Jesus Christ to do their work quietly and to earn their own living. 13 As for you, brothers, do not grow weary in doing good.
Don’t Grow Weary from Andy Addis on Vimeo.
Where am I?
So, have you ever been lost? I mean flat out, turned around, no clue, GPS wouldn’t help lost.
I remember driving from Great Bend, Ks, to some secluded mountain park in Colorado that I couldn’t get you to today if you paid me a million dollars. I was an early grade schooler with the family at an annual family reunion.
At some point in the afternoon the kids were getting hungry and restless, but dinner was still a couple hours away. That’s when my step dad and uncle decided to take the kiddos on a little mountain hike.
You know, something just long enough to distract the kids and be back in time for the big ol’ potluck.
It was fun at first, and as a kiddo, I wasn’t keeping track of time, but even a mildly ADD child like myself could tell we’d been out there too long.
So, I started paying attention to some details before I made the discovery:
- Step dad and uncle kept having us rest while they stepped aside for a ‘whispered’ argument
- Uncle took off his T-shirt and started tearing strips off and tying them to trees
- The look of terror on their faces when we kept finding those pieces of his shirt
It all lead to my conclusive discovery: there was no denying it, we were lost!
Though the adults never admitted it, all the kiddos new we were lost when we emerged from the tree line just after dark and all the mommas lost it.
Lots of hugging’ and cussin’ (the former at the kids, the latter at the men).
It’s a painful thing to be lost. It’s a scary thing to be lost and not know it.
Still, lostness is one of the dominant issues of the gospel.
- The story of Genesis describes the beginning of our lostness.
- The Old Testament chronicles a people of lostness.
- The Gospels find the answer to lostness.
- The entirety of the New Testament is manual for lostness recovery.
In fact, Jesus gave His personal vision/mission statement in Luke 19:10 when He said, “The Son of Man came to seek and save that which was lost.”
That’s what Jesus is all about, the reason He came and the purpose of the cross and the grave. Lostness is a condition that is curable, and Jesus doesn’t have the answer, He is the Answer.
I don’t think there is a Christian alive who denies the centrality “lostness” as a biblical theme. We are even grateful, awestruck and worshipful about it. One of the church’s favorite songs includes the line, “I once was lost but now I’m found.”
The problem isn’t with our own appreciation for being found, forgiven, rescued and redeemed. The problem is the disconnect for those who are still lost.
Pastor Perry Noble has said, “Found people find people.”
Pastor Ed Young, Jr, echoed, “The radically rescued, rescue radically.”
We need to rekindle an urgency, a passion, a fire for reaching the lost!
It is our responsibility.
Our church is about to start a series called LOST focusing on the 3 parables of Jesus concerning lostness. We often see the parable of the lost sheep, the lost coin and the prodigal son as messages of grace and mercy for those who have wandered and squandered in life.
But, if you read closely, Jesus had a deeper meaning. Obviously, grace and mercy extended to the lost is an appropriate application of these stories.
However, the fact that Jesus told all three stories in a row, to an audience of the over-churched (known as the pharisees), in response to church people talking smack about the lost gives these three stories a much dire inference.
Jesus wasn’t talking to the lost… He was talking to the found. He was making it very clear that found people find people, the radically rescued rescue radically and that if we are going to be like Jesus we have to be about His mission: to seek and save the lost.
So, here’s what we are going to do: pray for those you know who are not going to church, invite them to services with you (again and again and again), serve them in whatever ways you can that will draw them to Jesus, and talk to them about what Jesus means to you.
By the way, on that last one, you can’t really mess up your own story… it’s your story, so, have no fear.
Whatever church you attend, make sure that you are on a mission. This weekend, bring someone with you because if you are going to be like Jesus, you have to make your passion, mission and desire seeking what He is seeking.
God WILL give you more than you can handle
I love watching Mythbusters. Tackling urban legends and misconceptions, putting them to the test with high speed cameras, hands on testing and real science… it’s an Addis family favorite.
Can you save yourself by jumping upward in a crashing elevator? Is it possible to fly using a lawn chair and helium filled balloons? Can ninjas really catch arrows shot at their head?
Now that’s some high quality entertainment!
One of my favorite parts of that show is the fan (or ‘not so much’ fan) letters they receive. It’s crazy to me how some people will dogmatically hold to a belief in something that is undeniably proven BUSTED. Or, how some will completely refuse the reality of something that was crowned PLAUSIBLE and has 60 minutes of video footage to back it up.
“I don’t care what the Mythbusters say, you can pop popcorn with your cellphone… I’ve seen it on YouTube!”
Continue reading “God WILL give you more than you can handle”
