Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Reason I Believe in the Resurrection of Jesus


Paul says that everything we believe as followers of Jesus hangs on the fact of his physical resurrection following his crucifixion (1 Corinthians 15:1-8, 17-19). What evidences can be advanced to support this claim?

Four Strong Evidences For The Resurrection Claim:

#1: The Empty Tomb
#2: The Eyewitnesses Accounts
#3: The Easter Prophecies
#4: The Enduring Church

#1: The Empty Tomb

There is a missing body. What happened to it? If the emptiness of the tomb had not been established as a fact for all concerned, the claim that Jesus was raised from the dead could not have been maintained in Jerusalem for even a single day. So what happened to the body?

Three Popular Theories:
Someone Removed It
 Wrong Tomb
Jesus Didn’t Really Die

“Someone removed it.” If so, who did it?
Robbers?  –But the most valuable thing- the burial shroud- was left behind
The Disciples?  –But the tomb was under Roman guard (Matthew 28:11-15)
The Romans?  –They really didn’t care what happened in this matter
The Jews? –Why wouldn’t they have produced the body if they were responsible for removing it?

Did The Women Go Back to the Wrong Tomb?
Mark says they saw where he’d been laid (Mark 15:27)
This was a well-known family tomb of a rich man, Joseph of Arimathea
If this were a geographical mistake, we’d expect the Jewish authorities to waste no time finding the correct tomb

Maybe Jesus Didn’t Really Die!
John Crossan of the Jesus Seminar says: wild dogs probably ate Jesus’ body
 The traditional Islamic view is: Jesus was caught up into heaven and Judas Iscariot died in his place
Schonfeld’s famous “Swoon Theory” (first proposed earlier by Venturini) says: Jesus was crucified but he did not die; he only 'appeared' dead after a great loss of blood but he later resuscitated while in the tomb

A Reasonable Response: Could Jesus be a sickly 'Lord of Life'? 
“It is impossible that a being who had stolen half-dead out of the sepulcher, who crept about weak and ill, wanting medical treatment, who required bandaging, strengthening and indulgence, and who still at last yielded to his sufferings, could have given to the disciples the impression that he was a conqueror over death & the grave, the prince of life, an impression which lay at the bottom of their future ministry.”      
~ Skeptic David Friedrich Strauss

John Records Postmortem Evidence of Jesus Death: Both blood and water flow from the side of Jesus (see John 19:34):
“Clearly, the weight of the historical evidence indicates that Jesus was dead before the wound to his side was inflicted…  Accordingly, interpretations based on the assumption that Jesus was dead before the wound to his side was inflicted… Accordingly, interpretations based on the assumption that Jesus did not die on the cross appear to be at odds with modern medical knowledge.”
~ William D. Edwards, MD. The Journal of the American Medical Association- March 21, 1986

#2: The Eyewitnesses
Women
Multiple Appearances
The Disciples

The Testimony of Women
  “Women were on a very low rung of the social ladder in first-century Palestine.  There are old rabbinical sayings that said, ‘Let the words of the Law be burned rather than delivered to women’ and ‘blessed is he whose children are male, but woe to him whose children are female.’  Women’s testimonies were regarded as so worthless that they weren’t allowed to serve as legal witnesses in a Jewish court of law.”  ~ William Lane Craig, PhD

This is some strange marketing strategy! Who would fabricate a story knowing that the star witnesses would be viewed as having nothing credible to say to those being targeted with the very message? Not only does the Biblical record say that the first eyewitnesses were women but one of these women was either a former prostitute or a woman of questionable character (allegedly filled with demons).

Multiple Eyewitness Appearances
There are 10-recorded appearances
Involving over 500 people
Paul’s readers are encouraged to personally speak to these eyewitnesses (1 Corinthians 15:6)

Were all of these simply hallucinations? If so, how do we explain away an event involving 500 witnesses at the same time? Also, recall that doubting Thomas and others had to be convinced that Jesus was alive (Luke 24:36-43; John 20:14-21)

Consider the Disciples Themselves: What caused these men to go everywhere telling people the message of the risen Christ?

Examine the Personality Transformations
Simon Peter  –From “Shifty Clay” to “The Rock”
Thomas  –From “Doubter” to one who cries “My Lord & my God” (John 20:28)
James, the Brother of Jesus  –From believing Jesus to be mad to calling himself “James, a servant of the Lord Jesus Christ” (Mark 3:21; James 1:1)
Saul Becomes Paul  –From Zealous Persecutor to Passionate Preacher

Look At Their Self-Deprecating Style
The disciples do not hesitate to present themselves as wishy-washy, weak-kneed losers denying Jesus at the most critical of moments 
Don’t people who make up stories (who lie) generally present themselves in the best possible light?

The Ability of the Early Church to Forgive Saul
Paul, formerly Saul, murdered Stephen and many of the family members of the earliest followers of Jesus
Without the belief in the resurrection, how can we account for the willingness of the early church to forgive Saul except that they truly believed he had experienced an encounter with the risen Lord?

The Powerful Evidence of the Martyr’s Blood
Peter- Crucified up-side-down
Andrew, James son of Alphaeus, Phillip, Simon and Thaddeus- Crucified
James, Jesus’ half-brother- Stoned to death
Matthew and James brother of John- Killed by the sword
Thomas- Pierced by a spear
Paul- Beheaded

Was This Simply Religious Fanaticism? What about the September 11th hijackers and the Palestinian suicide bombers? Weren’t they willing to die for what they believed in? Does this validate the belief system upon which they based their actions?

Response: The 19 hijackers were placing their confidence in the claims of another.  The Disciples were motivated by what they personally claim to have seen with their own eyes. What might they have gained by making up a lie? What explanation is there to account for their behavior?

#3: The Easter Prophecies

Over 600 years before Jesus walked the earth (in some cases over 1000 years), Old Testament prophecies foretold many of the details of Jesus’ life, death and resurrection with amazing accuracy. Many examples can be provided. Here are a few:
His Death Was Prophesied: Isaiah 53:3-5, 9; Psalm 22:1, 14-18
His Resurrection Was Prophesied: Isaiah 53:10-11 (Dead Sea Scrolls contain this text pre-dating Jesus’ birth)

#4: The Enduring Church

Day Of Worship Changed From 7th to 1st
The Continued Existence, Durability & Vitality of the Church
Over 2000 Years of Testimonies of New Life Found in Jesus
Christ

CONCLUSION:

If Jesus has been raised, then our faith is not in vain!
We really do matter to God and there is real purpose and value to life
Jesus is the Way, the Truth and the Life; and salvation is found in His name
We can know for certain that Jesus does have power over sin, death and Hell
We can be sure that Jesus will…
Return to earth as He promised
Give His Holy Spirit to those who ask
Provide a future for us with His Father

Monday, April 18, 2011

Deep-Time Eyes


Many Jesus followers operate on the assumption that the human project as we know it is coming to a close- i.e. "The End is Near!" But is this actually true? Is our little boat approaching the horizon of human history (about to fall off the edge of time) or have we only just started on this amazing journey? Is it as angels allegedly sang, "Late in time behold Him come"; or, was Karen Carpenter correct, "We've Only Just Begun"? 

If human history were to continue to march forward for another 100 years,10,000 years, or 100,000 years, what might this mean for Christ's church? The thoughts that follow, written by Gil Bailie, have got me thinking about these things.

“It was not those closest to the historical Jesus who first gave the gospel its geographical breadth and theological depth. It was Paul, who had never known him. In addition to that, impressive achievements in biblical scholarship have, in many ways, brought our era closer to the constituent events of the Christian movement than were, say, the Gentile Christians of the second century. If the life and death of Jesus is historically central, then people living a hundred thousand years from now will be in a better position to appreciate that than we are. Furthermore, when they look back they will surely think of us as “early Christians” living as we do a scant two millennia from the mysterious events in question. They will be right, for the Christian movement today is still in the elementary stages of working out for itself and for the world the implications of the gospel. There isn’t the slightest doubt that the greatest and boldest creedal assertions are in the future, not the past. It may be only at rare moments that this flawed and unlikely thing we call the “church” even remotely resembles something worthy of its calling, but it is nonetheless embarked on a great Christological adventure. Even against its own institutional resistances, it is continually finding deeper and more profound implications to the Jesus-event.” 

~Gil Bailie, Literary Critic/ Historian/ Lay Theologian

Thursday, March 24, 2011

God of the Gaps


Many people have a ‘God of the gaps’ theology. God is presented as their answer for everything unknown to humankind. The problem with this approach is that humankind is constantly learning more and more about the world and many of its mysteries are being solved or finally understood- and, I must say, at an amazing rate. Surely there will always be mysteries to be solved, but is this fact simply because of the present limitations of our collective knowledge, understanding, or skill?

If the only place for God is to be our answer to things we currently do not understand, then, the more we learn about our world, the less relevant God becomes to us. This may be why many Christians ‘kick against the goads’ of our growing scientific body of knowledge and are forever trying to demonstrate that scientific evidence is 'no evidence at all' (just a conspiratorial attempt to sidetrack the God question evoked by the supposed 'gaps')

What if folks are wrong to embrace the God of the gaps in the first place? What if God gave us our various gifts for inquiry and our determined curiosity because God desires for us to better understand the workings of God's world? What if God delights in seeing humans peering into the wonders of God's amazing creative work and even tinkering with it in order to understand how God did it and how to join God in God's creative work? What if the only thing missing in many laboratories is praise and glory to God at the end of a good day's work (and most everything else is a noble pursuit)?

No. In the end, I do not find the God of the gaps to be a very mighty ‘God’. God is Lord of everything, not simply 'the gaps'.


*For more on this theme, see Bonhoeffer's, Letters and Papers From Prison (Tegel- 30 April 1944).

Friday, March 18, 2011

Universalism


I've reprinted a comment made by author and Episcopal pastor Robert Farrar Capon. I noticed that Rob Bell suggests to his readers that they explore a book by Capon (The Mystery of Christat the end of his Love Wins. Funny this is, as I was reading Bell's book (my first time reading Bell), I actually thought: "This guy must have read Robert Capon at some time." My sense is that Bell and Capon are basically on the same page. (Capon is quite imaginative, poetic and engaging- like Bell). Here's what Capon writes on the subject Bell explores in Love Wins:
“I am and I am not a universalist. I am one if you are talking about what God in Christ has done to save the world. The Lamb of God has not taken away the sins of some — of only the good, or the cooperative, or the select few who can manage to get their act together and die as perfect peaches. He has taken away the sins of the world — of every last being in it — and he has dropped them down the black hole of Jesus’ death. On the cross, he has shut up forever on the subject of guilt: “There is therefore now no condemnation. . . .” All human beings, at all times and places, are home free whether they know it or not, feel it or not, believe it or not.
“But I am not a universalist if you are talking about what people may do about accepting that happy-go-lucky gift of God’s grace. I take with utter seriousness everything that Jesus had to say about hell, including the eternal torment that such a foolish non-acceptance of his already-given acceptance must entail. All theologians who hold Scripture to be the Word of God must inevitably include in their work a tractate on hell. But I will not — because Jesus did not — locate hell outside the realm of grace. Grace is forever sovereign, even in Jesus’ parables of judgment. No one is ever kicked out at the end of those parables who wasn’t included in at the beginning.”
I find this statement very thought-provoking: "But I will not — because Jesus did not — locate hell outside the realm of grace." 

Monday, February 14, 2011

Mwana Wa Muzungu

My heart was deeply touched when an Ugandan friend first shared a photo of Rachel and told me her sad story two years ago. Rachel and I have been friends ever since. She is one of the many Ugandan women mutilated by evil men who poured acid on her face and upper body. The acid removed her nose and eyelids, damaged her lips, and scarred her face and chest. To this day, Rachel does not know the identities of the three men who did this to her under the cover of night. The destruction of her physical appearance and the problems associated with the mutilation have forever changed Rachel's life (for more on this problem, go to: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acid_throwing).


After the loss of her job as a secretary and all income (solely due to her physical appearance), Rachel began to experience severe depression and alienation by her family and community. Paul, a friend of mine and a pastor, eventually led Rachel to Jesus. Rachel is now a joyful, loving follower of Jesus seeking to use her story as a means to draw others to Christ. 
For two years now, Over the Wall Ministries has been providing $75.00 a month to help Rachel with her physical needs. My friend Rick Schryber and I met with Rachel while visiting Uganda February 5-13, 2011.

Rachel sends her love and gratitude to all of my Over the Wall supporters who through their giving have helped Rachel live a healthy and more fruitful life. Rachel says she is now called by a new name in her home townb: "Mwana Wa Muzungu." It simply means, "Child of a White Father." I guess that's me. 

What a privilege to know this amazing women who is so strong in her faith and forgiving toward those who destroyed her physical beauty.

Sunday, December 19, 2010

"Wonder of Wonders" by Sidlow Baxter


     One of my favorite Christmas poems was written by the old Australian pastor and theologian, Dr. J. Sidlow Baxter. Even though I read this poem every year during Advent, I never weary of the beautiful manner in which describes my "indescribable" Savior....

     “Was ever a gift like the Savior given? He leaves the bosom of the eternal Father, and comes to the bosom of an earthly mother. The Son of God becomes the Son of Mary. The Infinite becomes an infant. He who holds the world in His arms is held in the arms of a frail woman. He whose garment is space, whose house is the universe, whose chariots are the clouds, and whose diadems are the stars, is wrapped in swaddling bands, and laid in a manger.     

     “He leaves the palace-beautiful of heaven, for the stable, the work-bench, and having ‘no where to lay His head’.  He lays aside His celestial insignia, for the peasant dress and the purple robe.  He puts aside His scepter of universal sovereignty, for the reed of mock royalty in Pilate’s hall. He who is Prince of life bows His head in death.  He who is without sin becomes Sin-bearer.  The Christ of God becomes the Crucified.  He who is the Father’s delight becomes the God-forsaken.  He who lit the stars lies in the dust.  He comes, He toils, He hungers, He thirsts, He weeps, He suffers, He bleeds and dies! – for God so loved the world that He ‘gave up’ His only-begotten Son.”

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Taking Back the 12 Steps

I am becoming increasingly saddened by the lack of personal honesty and brokenness in the church these days. It seems that everyone wants supernatural power, more blessings from God, spectacular experiences of worship and extraordinary spiritual guidance, but few are committed to developing a genuinely broken and serving community of 'powerless' lovers who focus on giving and dying for the world.
What if we- in the church- learned back from 12 Step groups what the founders of Alcoholic Anonymous originally learned from the Church? What if we had the same sense of brokenness, urgency, and life-long commitment as those who 'hit bottom' and then find ways of helping one another to rise above our inclination to live self-centered, faithless, hopeless, and loveless lives? What if we built back into the 12 steps the Christ-centered roots they came from so that we could honestly and repeatedly say– through our church experience– for the rest of our lives:
1. We admitted we were powerless over our inclination live for ourselves at the expense of others.
2. Came to believe that Jesus could restore us to spiritual sanity.
3. Made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as he has revealed himself in his written and living word.
4. Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves.
5. Admitted to God, to ourselves, and to another human being the exact nature of our wrongs.
6. Were entirely ready to have God develop within us the attitudes of Christ.
7. Humbly asked him to do in us what we cannot do for ourselves.
8. Made a list of all persons we had harmed, and became willing to make amends to them all.
9. Made direct amends to such people wherever possible, except when to do so would injure them or others.
10. Continued to take personal inventory and when we were wrong promptly admitted it.
11. Sought through prayer and meditation in the Scriptures to improve our conscious contact with God, praying only for knowledge of His will for us and the power to carry that out.
12. Having had a spiritual awakening as the result of our shared accountability, we committed ourselves, with God’s help to carry this message to those who are still as hopeless as we once were without Christ, and to practice his principles in all of our affairs.
My question to you is this: Is there something about these 12 steps that could help us to be more realistic about ourselves, while at the same time raising our expectations and hopes for one another? Do you see anything here that might have been lost along the way for the church in America? I certainly do.
My gut tells me that 12 Step programs are growing because the church is falling short of doing what it is intended to do for the broken and hurting of our world. These groups may be living closer to the life God intended for the church than the church is now living.

Thursday, December 09, 2010

Grace and Characater Defects



            “I’m selfish, impatient and a little insecure. I make mistakes, I am out of control and at times hard to handle. But if you can’t handle me at my worst, then you sure as hell don’t deserve me at my best.”  — Marilyn Monroe
Many of us may share Marilyn's attitude. We are unwilling to be changed. But let's face: Change does not come easily! There is a Chinese saying which goes something like this: ‘It is easier to reshape a mountain or a river than a person’s character....' I've found this to be true even in my own life. How about you?

In my experience, and the experience of millions of others, it is only God who can ultimately remove my character defects. If this true, then what is my role in being changed? 


Well, as I see it, my role is first of all to notice (develop self-awareness) and then admit my defects honestly (the obstacle, of course, is my pride). I must surrender to God (the obstacle here is my spirit of self-reliance and independence), and pull on His grace (the obstacle: my general unwillingness, laziness, or my desire to hold on to them). I must be willing to 'be changed' (this can happen if I become tired of living a lie or weary of the effects indulging my defects brings into my life and the lives of those I love). I must be willing to accept the leading (the will) and grace of God (his divine enablement and power) for that change.


At the end of the day, it is noticing and honestly admitting our weaknesses (to self, God, and others) that may be the greatest challenge for most of us on the road to change. 


By the way, remember that 'nature abhors a vacuum'; it is not enough to remove a character defect- something new and better must take its place. God is ready to help in this matter as well.


That's how I see.



Sunday, October 24, 2010

Is Big Faith Always Biblical Faith?

On every turn, American preachers encourage us to ‘DREAM BIG!’ We're told that this is the very nature of faith- FAITH IS BIG! (That's why it can bring in "big money, big meetings, big miracles, big, big, big!").  But, is this really the nature of Biblical faith? 

It is true, we do have a BIG God, a God who performs BIG works. We need only to consider the scope  of God's Creation or the long story of Christ's Redemption to see that God is a BIG God. Having said this, Biblical faith is not essentially something we focus outwardly on our own personal 'visions' or dreams. Biblical faith is directed Godward. It is grounded in what God has said, what God has forever accomplished in Jesus Christ, and in what God aims to do in the future. Simply put, Biblical faith is focused on God's DREAM (His Kingdom Dream), not our own dreams.

So, where in Scripture are Christians encouraged DREAM BIG in their personal lives and ministries? Certainly we'd all like to have more, be more, do more, and see more. Maybe this is the reason why such message is so appealing. The question remains: "For what reason do we wish to have more, be more, do more, and see more?" Is it really for Christ or for us? If it truly is for Christ, then perhaps we ought to surrender our personal dreams (or our church's dream) and settle for His Dream alone.

Did you know that most ‘dreams’ (visions) in Scripture were focused on the glory and the holiness of God? Some Biblical dreams were focused on the need for faithfulness from God's people or on their need for repentance before God. The Apostle Paul’s dream was quite simple. It did not include big buildings, big programs, big crowd counting, or even making a big name for himself (though his name is now VERY big). Paul's dream was this: to preach Christ crucified and risen- to preach it everywhere to anyone and everyone- until his life would end (and his personal dream would be realized- to be with Jesus). 

I suspect that “BIG-Dream-Faith” may simply be ‘Faith American-Style’.  What do you think? Like Paul, let’s do our part in God’s One BIG Dream- His Kingdom Draem. Let's take Christ's name everywhere to everyone and let’s do it faithfully, joyfully, eagerly, lovingly (which is, in large part, what it means to ‘do’ our part).

Saturday, October 09, 2010

Depression Gives Birth to Truth

William Cowper was a British poet and hymn writer (1731-1800). My grandmother often quoted his most famous poem when mystified or troubled. It's first line became widely known and the poem later became a classic hymn: "God moves in a mysterious way, His wonders to perform."

Amazingly, this great poet, like many of us, struggled throughout his life with depression, doubts, and fears. Some of the most influential people- both in and outside God's Church- have waged this battle throughout their lives. In the end, it was always Cowper's faith that carried him out of his inner isolation and darkness.

Read Cowper's poem reflectively the next time you're facing a dark season of your own. And keep this in mind: it was written from a sanitarium (the precursor of our modern psychiatric hospitals). I think you'll agree that this fact alone gives added weight to Cowper's powerful insights..

"God moves in a mysterious way,
His wonders to perform;
He plants his footsteps in the sea,
And rides upon the storm.

Deep in unfathomable mines
Of never failing skill,
He treasures up his bright designs,
And works his sovereign will.

Ye fearful saints, fresh courage take,
The clouds ye so much dread
are big with mercy, and shall break
In blessings on your head.

Judge not the Lord by feeble sense,
But trust him for his grace;
Behind a frowning providence,
He hides a smiling face.

His purposes will ripen fast,
Unfolding every hour;
The bud may have a bitter taste,
But sweet will be the flower.

Blind unbelief is sure to err,
And scan his work in vain;
God is his own interpreter,
And he will make it plain."

Friday, October 08, 2010

Love-less Virtue

Love makes all other virtues acceptable to God. Without love, compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience, are basically self-serving. 'Love-less virtue' (if there is such a thing at all) may make a name for me: "He's a good person, a kind old soul." It may serve to make for a better and safer world to live in. It may help to convince me that I am benevolent in nature or that I am better than others around me who live differently than I do. Yet none of this makes love-less virtue acceptable to God. Wisdom lovingly reminds me, "Without love, I am nothing but a clanging gong."

Sunday, September 26, 2010

The Kingdom of God is Relational in Nature

After a day in Brussels with good friends and the church body to which God called them, I am once again struck by the fact that the life of God's Kingdom flows through relationships just as life flows through a vine wherever the vine goes. 


Our God is a relational God- Father, Son and Spirit in relationship. God is also relational with respect to His Creation- especially with those He has made in His own image (an image in us which includes our own relational nature). 


Jesus Christ became one of us in order that God might invite us into a deeper, life-giving intimacy with Him [a profound relationship of 'oneness'] and with one another. 


The best thing God's people can offer others is a life-giving relationship where God's life working in them is free to flow through them to others as a blessing. This is truly 'grace at work'.


Wherever possible, whenever possible, we ought to never exclude anyone from this gift God seeks to give to the world through us. God says through John: "Beloved, let us love one another. For love comes [to you, through you] from God."



Friday, September 24, 2010

Creation Paradigm Shift and Genesis: A Response to John Piper Video

I just watched an interesting short video by John Piper on what a leader must believe about Creation to be an elder at Bethlehem Church. It saddened me to discover that I may not qualify for such a role in his church. After watching the video, I wrote a response to John and discovered that the video comment section would only allow me to place a sound bite of my thoughts on the page. If this subject interests you, consider watching John's video and then see my response and concerns below.

Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oCF47U4lzr4


"Come on, John. There is certainly a great deal more evidence for evolution than your position or your church is allowing. Let's face it, this is a tough question and it should not be glossed over with statements that suggest everything we believe will fall apart if we were rethink Genesis. Gallileo heard the same kind of statements from those who could not (or would not) seriously consider the evidence he was presenting. I read John Sailhamer's Genesis Unbound long ago as I studied with him while also studying with you at Bethel College. It is my understanding that his book is no longer in print. I suspect his novel approach to Genesis did not really have much staying power in the face of what we have been so rapidly learning about the physical history of life on this planet.

"Many of us who have long been followers and lovers of Jesus are already starting to do a paradigm shift on this subject. Rather than parroting the old company line, I appreciate those who are actually dialoguing on the real finds of science and are not afraid to admit that we do not know all that there is to know about Genesis and how it once functioned (and is to now function) in the life of God's people. For me, one of the most helpful authors on this subject has been Professor Denis O. Lamoureux, Evolutionary Creation: A Christian Approach to Evolution. The book is not the finest piece of writing but its author is asking the hard questions others are content to gloss over or ignore. Lamoureux and other contemporary Christian thinkers are demonstrating that we must reckon with the fact that our O.T. text is delivered in the packaging of ancient science.

"I wonder if the real issue for us is that we are afraid to do some reworking of our doctrine of Scripture. This will be most difficult for those who, like you and me, have made a particular doctrinal approach to Scripture the very heart of all of our teaching and preaching ministries. After 30 years of ministry, I and many others I know are beginning to ask a number of important questions we've never really considered about the nature of God's Book and how we have been reading and interpreting it.

"One day, not long ago, I was thinking about what it might be like to sit down for a day with the Apostle Paul and off-load a list of questions I've carried along concerning his powerful insights and experiences. I then realized that Paul, God's great revelator, would be just as fascinated to talk with me about what we present day Kingdom citizens have learned concerning God's work of in creation. Paul would be amazed (and likely not phased- but moved to worship... "O, the inscrutable wisdom and knowledge of God") in just the discovery that the world is in fact a sphere and that the Universe is immense and beyond imagination in it's scope and design.

"Please don't join the chorus of those who are trying to shut down the conversation. This is a real matter of interest and concern for many us- not only to resolve the issue for ourselves but to effectively communicate Christ in these days where the old pat answers are no longer sufficient for those who take an interest in matters of cosmology, biology, geology, paleontology, anthropology and all the other 'ologies' (including theology)."

scott@scottvj.com

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Hold On For God's Best

Life can be a little bit shopping for an antique oak table. Let me explain...

About a month ago, Becky and I did a road trip out to the Midwest. We traveled with money in our pockets hoping to find an antique oak dining room table- a table we'd been envisioning for the Bryce Mountain house. After foraging through a dozen or so shops from Ohio to Minnesota, we struck gold. The shop where we ended our search was in a lazy river town appropriately named 'Stillwater'.

Entered the house of timeless treasures, we immediately came upon a beautiful oak table. I thought we'd end up ferrying the piece back to Ol' Virginia until we decided we'd move further into the bowels of the old building. Up on the third floor, back in the corner, we discover that the musty old place had a half dozen more tables- some were in much better condition than the first table we saw and most were more to our liking.

An experience like this is a good reminder for me. Sometimes I settle too soon- stopping short on my search for true treasure. Sometimes I envision a thing that will satisfy but it is less than what I might otherwise have if only I knew what was really out there. And finally, the best things of the greatest value have been out there waiting for us- for a long time.

Friday, August 20, 2010

Everybody's Got A Hungry Heart

Bruce Springsteen joined the sages when he penned the words: "Everybody's got a hungry heart." But how does the heart recover when love seems lost forever, when hope is gone and dreams are shattered on the floor? Time and sleep pave the way for new days to come and new loves to be born. Yet only with time does such a truth become known to the heart that feels its most precious love lies stillborn. 

Hungry hearts like hungry lion cubs lie in wait for the mother’s return. She carries the kill, bloodied and bruised, to her little ones that feed with a fury lest any surrender his part to another. And so hungry hearts feast on whatever is presented- getting their fill but rarely the reward of true satisfaction. 

This is why I would prefer to sing of the deepest love one can know- a love rarely enjoyed, precious beyond words and comprehension- "love divine, all loves excelling." Only God can truly satisfy the famished human heart. This is because the heart was made for God. The heart's home- it's destination- is God alone. Yet, like the cub when mother comes, we must open wide to feed lest we fail to get our fill. When other loves lie stillborn, faith must rise to God if love is to be born in and through us.

Biblical sages and ancient saints would proffer this bit of wisdom: Feed furiously like a hungry cub on the grace of God and you'll get abundant love your heart longs for- not simply the fleeting, lesser love Springsteen and lovesick sages routinely sing about.

Monday, August 09, 2010

Your Spiritual Garden

Our spiritual lives can be likened to a garden. What kind of garden are you cultivating? Isn't it true that we have much to do with the nature of our garden even though God is the only one who can really cause life to flourish?

Consider Three Gardens (like three different people):

The Trellis after Part 2: "Designing Your Trellis."
The Private Garden: Closed to the public- reserved just for God; the rest of life has little to do with what takes place in this garden- "Public Not Allowed."

The City Park: Open 24/7 to the public; always busy with few resources for maintenance and starting new plants; God occasionally shows up in the crowd but it's hard to make out his voice.

Gated At Times But Also Open to the Public: A well-maintained garden; special, private gatherings with God take place; when the soul has had its fill of solitude, feeding, conversation, and renewal, the public is welcome to come and enjoy the beauty of this ever-growing, ever-changing garden.


I just finished a series of two messages at Oakbrook Church. The series is called: "Your Trellis." If you'd like to take a fresh look at your Spiritual practices, go to the following link and spend some time on your garden.  God bless you.  http://www.oakbrookchurch.org/download/

Wednesday, August 04, 2010

Roller Coaster of Life

The iPhone has a crazy app called "Roller Coaster." The app simulates the wild, visual experience of one of my favorite amusement park rides. 


Life can be a bit like being on a constant roller coaster- the ups, downs, all arounds, and ups again. It's true of stock markets, politics, human emotions, you name it. Even love has it's twists and turns along with it's highs and lows.


History and human nature suggest that things probably won't change much as time goes on. Perhaps it is best just to sit back, throw our arms up in the air (giving thanks to God that we're alive) and enjoy the wild ride.


If you have an iPhone, you might consider downloading the app as a spiritual 'therapy tool'. The next time you're little coaster car takes a hard right turn or begins a nasty descent, play with your little app and be encouraged that what goes down usually goes up again- and there are a few wonderful pauses in the ride when the car actually jeaks backward- moments provided for catching one's breath.

Saturday, July 31, 2010

Dangerous, Beautiful World

I was reading in yesterday's news about the bear mauling in a remote region of Yellowstone. What a horrible thing to wake up in the dark being attacked by a grizzly you cannot see. One ranger said, "We need to realize we are both in their world and in their food chain." So true. 

God gives us an amazing world to explore. Yet, there are risks for explorers: there are bears out there and we are sometimes drawn into their habitat. Too bad for God, though. God will likely get the blame when things go terribly wrong. We say, "Why didn't God protect my love one from this vicious, random act?" 

Part of God's gift to us comes in the form of a brain- a brain that weighs risks (or, at least ought to) and a brain that accumulates wisdom (or, at least ought to). We continue to build our homes in hurricane alleys, our cities on ancient fault lines, and venture out among the grizzlies. We just do. Why? We are drawn to explore this amazing world full of risks. That's all. And... great beauty often lies in dangerous places.

Thursday, June 03, 2010

The Power of Hate

The world is on fire and much of this is due to religious and political indignation. It all seems to have to do with entitlement. Who is entitled to the Holy Lands? Whose religious perspective has a right to set the world’s agenda? Who has the right to decide what is right in America and to set its political and moral agenda? Amidst the many narratives human beings live by, which one will dominate the earth?

The problem with religious and political indignation is that none of us are truly righteous. We all have it inside of us to become like the enemies we hate.  In the human heart, hate always breeds and breathes an atmosphere of violence or disdain, even when it is birth in what we are prone to call ‘righteousness’.

As for the followers of Jesus, he urges us leave all vengeance to God. Instead, we are to follow his manner of life- to live a life of love, mercy and forgiveness. I always remind myself that Jesus never asked his followers to use violence in order to remove the evil Roman rulers from the land. Instead, he said: “If you live by the sword, you’ll die by the sword” and “love your enemies; do good to them.”

I read an interesting interview between Krista Tippet and Yossi Klein Halevi. Halevi knows the moslem fundamentalist mindset from the inside. Now an outsider, he has an interesting perspective on his former life. Reffering to the American goal of “hunting down” terrorists, Halevi spoke of how American efforts are doomed to failure, certainly against these current enemies. He said, “You can’t outhate a fundamentalist. They will win.”

And how do they win? In her book, Speaking of Faith, Tippet shares a conversation she once had with military chaplain, Major John Morris. Morris witnessed the awful days of fighting in Fallujah. Standing before the charred bodies of four American contractors hanging from the bridge across the Euphrates, Morris said that fury consumed him, along with the certainty that the people who did this did not deserve to live. “They were animals.” He would be the agent of God, the wrath of God. Then, something happened in Morris’ heart. As the conviction seized him, he understood that he was at an abyss that would render him capable of the very actions he hated. “God help me and have mercy on me,” he prayed. “Save me from becoming a debased, immoral human being, and save my soldiers as well.” One man’s hero is another man’s terrorist. 

When hate has taken hold of the human heart, it easily leads us in a direction away from life and distorts our vision of God and his ways. We must never surrender to the power of hate, nor the power of worldly power seeking. If we are to remain true to our calling as followers of Jesus, and, truly ‘humane’, we must surrender instead to the power of love, mercy, and forgiveness. We must ‘do good to our enemies’. That's the only way out of this mess we're in.

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Scott's Top Ten Christian Authors on God, Science, and Origins

1. Denis Lamoureux, Evolutionary Creation: A Christian Approach to Evolution
     -http://www.ualberta.ca/~dlamoure/evolutionary_creation.pdf
2. Gordon Glover, Beyond the Firmament
3. John Haught, God After Darwin; Making Sense of Evolution: Darwin, God, and the Drama of Life
4. Francis Collins, The Language of God: A Scientist Presents Evidence for Belief
5. Kenneth Miller, Finding Darwin’s God: A Scientist’s Search for Common Ground Between God and Evolution
6. John Walton, The Lost World of Genesis One: Ancient Cosmology and the Origins Debate
7. John Polkinghorne, Quarks, Chaos & Christianity: Questions to Science And Religion
8. Alister McGrath, Science and Religion: A New Introduction
9. John Sailhamer, Genesis Unbound (though out of print, AMazon sells used copies from time to time)
10. Meredith Kline, “Because It Had Not Rained,” Westminster Theological Journal 20 (1958):146-157.
     -http://www.asa3.org/ASA/resources/WTJ/WTJ58Kline.html