Monday, December 31, 2012

Living Grace - December 31

While God giving and we receiving grace is essential, I think we should see this as the beginning and not the end of the story. This may be a new way of configuring grace, but it is crucial. Here’s why.

The apostle Paul points out in 2 Corinthians 8-9 that received grace is to be passed on to others. He passionately shows his readers that grace is not merely to be experienced as passive, but is to be an action from those who have received it towards those in need. This is living grace, as both verb and adjective. God’s grace is living and it is to be lived. Quite simply: grace is giving to others for it to be fully grace. When there is an overflowing reception of grace, there should be an overflowing giving of grace. Grace is not a private matter, nor is it something to keep within the walls of our bodies, houses, churches, or computers. If you’re on the verge of giving grace to another, then go ahead – complete the action – release grace out into the world.

This grace of giving, it should be noted, is to take place in the context of freedom, which allows each to give according to their means. Paul will have none of the strong arm or calculated manipulating tactics that often identify so much of contemporary Christianity. There is a great deal of deception in today’s world, and it can all tend to be about money, money, and more money.

Let’s move in another direction. Living grace, grace, and more grace. Giving grace is not to be done grudgingly, but out of a joy to help. God loves a cheerful giver because this is the attitude from which giving is to take place. There are no stipulations concerning quantity here. It doesn’t matter. What’s important is attitude – a living grace attitude.

The God of grace is able to make grace abound, so that we will abound in every good work. And we will be made rich in every way in order that in turn we might be generous to others and through this bring thanksgiving to God. His superabundant manifestation of grace should produce an abundant manifestation of grace, which will result in enlarging and increasing our harvest of righteousness.

The key to unlock the door to all this grace is interchange. “For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, so that you through his poverty might become rich.”

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Shame? - December 31

Melody recently sent me an e-mail asking how to cope with the shaming that goes on in her more traditionally minded church. Every time she says something about the teaching, she’s made to feel sub-human, yet she has excellent points to make. Now experiencing a deep sense of shame in even asking questions, Melody is suffering from an idiotic ignorance concerning her gifts and as a result is facing spiritual starvation. Here’s what makes it more difficult. She has nowhere to turn. Family and friends attend this church, and Melody thinks she has to stay. What’s your advice?

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Saturday, December 29, 2012

Sunrise in the Alps - December 29

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Cross Country Skiing below Les Diablerets - December 29

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Sunrise in the Alps - December 29

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Sunrise in the Alps - December 29

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Monday, December 24, 2012

Reflection for the Week - December 24

I hope the 50 or so Reflections of the Week and other posts in 2012 have been helpful, challenging, and spiritually illuminating. A special thanks to you all for taking time to ponder the thoughts expressed here and for your support of my work. Be blessed in Christ this Christmas season.

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Thursday, December 20, 2012

The ZigZag Café - December 20

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

Do you wrestle with any control issues in your life, and if you have attempted to change, what has that looked like?

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Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life - December 19

Control freaks tend to surmise that they must choose one of these false options – to not be in control or to be in control. The former is seen as dangerous and the latter as bliss, yet control is still at the core of both. Irony is, neither of these is a valid position to embrace, as they each promote self-deception in placing ourselves at the center of our lives. Being self-deceived is not a virtue, but a problem for oneself, the other, the world, and God. Letting go of control issues that perpetuate vicious circles of domination and defeat begins to open up the receptivity to redemption, which frees us to move in the direction of another perspective. This salvifically shaped outlook, a major feature of God’s rescue mission, allows us to challenge self-deception, and eventually to see its power diminish, as transformation shines its piercing light onto our fears of relinquishing that which is false and misleading.

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Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Mourning? - December 18

Why are we mourning the deaths of children and adults in Connecticut? The tremendous outpouring of sadness over the senseless killings in Newtown is striking. No doubt what took place in this quiet little city was a catastrophe of the highest order. Yet, and here’s the point, thousands of young children, teachers, and parents die daily from incurable diseases, lack of available organs for transplants, or healthy at birth. Death brings about devastating separation, annihilates present relationality, and deprives here and now loving and being loved. On this account, mourning ought to be an ongoing part of our lives, not a cell phone or sound bite media moment concerning horrific tragedies like the Sandy Hook Elementary massacre. Are we mourning? Yes, and we should always be, but still, there is more; so much more.

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Monday, December 17, 2012

Reflection for the Week - December 17

Someone mentioned: “I’m frustrated with what is often portrayed today as Christianity. There is so much that is trite and superficial, without any concern for depth and a connection between truth and love. How can we move in new directions?”

My response to this was: “Seems to me, you should be frustrated. The current portrayal of the Christian faith, in many circles, is not only frustrating to you, but no doubt to God as well. From what I can tell, God doesn’t appear to endorse the shallow and trivial. If that’s the case, you’re right to protest, seek fresh insights, and a realistic credibility. God is on your side. What is passed off as ‘Christian’ today often goes against the very core of what it means to follow in the footsteps of Christ – the Crucified and Risen One. Somehow we’ve lost the vision that love and truth go together. To move in new directions it is imperative to understand that Christianity is about as deep as it gets. First and foremost it’s about being in community with God, through Christ, in the power of the Spirit, and being in community with the other – from there we are then called to live in love on the basis of the truth of redemption and forgiveness situated in the reality that the God of Scripture exists, has created this world, and sent Christ to restore it. There’s real depth here: deep love and deep truth, in contrast to the trite and superficial.”

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Thursday, December 13, 2012

The ZigZag Café - December 13

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

What’s the value of relationships?

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Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - December 12

Rigorous self-examination is important, but it’s not the end of the story. To be right or wrong; a trusting or suspicious self, has significance in a multiplicity of ways, yet there is more. Our limits concerning who and what to trust and what and who to be suspicious of are drastically restricted, when we attempt to be self-determining agents. Try as we might, in strength or weakness, we discover that such efforts are unlivable. There is a genuine need for wisdom and discernment beyond the pale of merely self-decision. This brings us to the necessity of Divine light, which in real manifestations of God’s grace breaks through and shatters pretensions of self-authority, challenging us to think again, as spiritual arrows of love flow through, among other dimensions, people, texts, art, and nature, calling us out of the mire of our feeble efforts to authenticate ourselves. Freedom from being alone in the world is shocking, since it always enlarges our horizons and comes with increasing responsibility for knowing more and living better, albeit with less restraint.

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Monday, December 10, 2012

Reflection for the Week - December 10

To see the significance of Picasso attempting to paint a painting without any trace of Picasso in it should give rise thought. Could he do it? Was it possible for him to be so disengaged from the work that its meaning and interpretation would be entirely up to the viewer? Picasso, intriguingly, may have set out to accomplish this, but I would wager he failed. What he was attempting – a total distinction of the subject from the object – is a deceptive goal. Neutrality is not a plausible option for us, as intentionality is unrelenting. After all, being erased, unnoticed, excluded from participation would not be human. We are present, involved, leaving traces of ourselves in time. This truth amounts to the gift of a perspective of the world and humanity that shows us the subject and the object are commissioned to interact with each other. Meaning and interpretation, therefore, cannot ever be reduced to the viewer, as the painter always plays a role in what’s painted.

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Thursday, December 6, 2012

The ZigZag Café - December 6

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

How do you give a person a world, instead of drawing this person into or imposing your own?

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Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life - December 5

Being transparent or staying hidden before others are frequently mistaken for ideals. When one should hide and when be transparent is a mantra that reverberates around inside and incites a fear of doing the wrong thing, and if one does, having a sense of shame for doing so. Goes like this. Oh no, I should have been transparent. That would have been the right choice. Oh no, I should have hidden. That would have been the right choice. If one is transparent – shame – shouldn’t have been. If one hides – shame – shouldn’t have been. Not only are these false options, but this way of relating to oneself and others effectively shuts God out. Result: a vicious cycle of condemnation. There’s no place for overthrowing deception with redemption in this scenario. Failing to meet the false ideals and experiencing the heavy blows this inflicts is taking the primary position and therefore it supersedes anything that might put into question one’s relational fear of losing control. And control just has to be maintained or one might quite frankly be lost and not know who one was anymore. This means Fear! is the plot and one is the only character in one’s own story. Letting go of one character stories grounded in the plot of fear is essential, and taking on a new multi-character story found in the subversive recounting of biblical narrative will open up possibilities for an encounter with the Divine and sustainable change.

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Monday, December 3, 2012

Reflection for the Week - December 3

Memory bears the marks of time. We have such a fascinating potential of recognizing phenomena and then to be able to remember people, places and things related to it. Life, both consciously and unconsciously, is continually changing. It’s so saturated with texture and richness that our gaze can barely take small, but nevertheless significant pieces of it into our stories. We are both shaped by and shapers of each element and can marvel at our capacity to integrate this interaction in a coherent fashion that forges continuity with what has taken place previously. Remarkable. Telling memorable stories about what once was, is meeting the challenge of taking disparate parts and making them into a unified whole. The restoration of a faithful resemblance, however, will remain a fragile matter of trust and suspicion, as temptations to false testimonies plague us and seek to undermine the truthful ambition of memory in its reaching out and grasping the flow of life back when.

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Thursday, November 29, 2012

The ZigZag Café - November 29

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

Does it seem to you that humans are not just interpreters of, but are interpreted by objects in the world, and texts, and works of art, and others?

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Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - November 28

The spirit of fear, not the Spirit of Christ tends to dominate in many Christian circles today. Fearful of being carried away by the spirit of the age, the faith can grow narrow, lack credibility, and become lifeless. While it is true that believers want to be cautious about adopting the cultural, philosophical, or scientific trends of any given moment, there is an important place to engage new ideas and to be somewhat open to where they may lead. The Spirit of Christ casts out fear and releases us to a new configuration of confidence and humility. This Spirit allows for discussion, questioning, and, investigation. To have received the life giving Spirit who inaugurates community with God, over against a spirit that leads to a separation from him, means that we are free to seek, find, and follow truth where it may be found. Fear not, says the Lord, for I am with you.

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Monday, November 26, 2012

Reflection for the Week - November 26

A crucial theological question is central to spirituality. Our concern here is not with something that we feel or experience as “beyond” or “transcendent,” but with the issue of who is speaking and acting, who is calling, and who is addressing us. Of course, impersonal entities neither speak nor act, and if we have little or no accurate information about the referent of our spirituality, we should have some serious questions. A real and genuine spiritual connection, through the redemptive work of the crucified One to the personal God who is actually there, results in release from sin, a changed heart, and a transformed mind—life amidst the divine community. From Living Spirituality: Illuminating the Path.

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Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - November 21

Who am I? What is real? We are and are meant to be interactive agents in time. We interact with ourselves, God, others, and the world. Our brains, for example, are material multi-taskers that fit us for life on the planet. We are geared and finely tuned in such a complex way that we can’t be conscious of it all. What we do, and are plenty conscious of however, is both deceive and tell truth to and about ourselves – to ourselves, to others, and even to God. To be truth telling does much good and does not appear to be problematic, but to be deceptive carries consequences that we are unable to deal with entirely on our own. Countering self, other, and God deception alone is a monumental task, something like a vicious story with the same plot told again and again. We need to find and embrace a better narrative, notably the portrayed in time biblical recounting of redemption, which will begin to free us from the labyrinth of deception and bring us into growing spheres of truth telling.

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Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Autumn sky from the chalet

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Winter hike - Les Diablerets

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Climbing in La Suisse - Valais

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Monday, November 19, 2012

Reflection for the Week - November 19

Christians all too often reject or ignore the material and physical, promoting a heaven like picture of reality that borders on idealism. Too much of an other worldly focus can lead to a denigration of our actions and relationships in this one. Surely, this is an inappropriate trajectory. Being re-directed towards what God has created and is out to renew will help us keep our feet on the ground and to be engaged with the matters at hand.

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Thursday, November 15, 2012

The ZigZag Café - November 15

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

Can there be any such thing as ‘good death’ in a biblical world view?

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Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - November 14

One of the major fallacies that many Christians embrace is that they don’t have biases, problems with ideas, or serious shortcomings. If anything undoes the necessity of the cross and resurrection of Christ, it is this kind of perspective. When we are pointing the finger at everyone else and arguing they’re influenced by secularism or materialism and therefore have it all wrong, we forget that critique needs to start at home and that our own views also have to be examined, evaluated, and assessed in order to help us sort through our own blindness, before offering a real vision to the rest of the world.

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Monday, November 12, 2012

Reflection for the Week - November 12

God invites us out of the bomb shelter of safety and into the battle for life. Self protection, while appropriate in many circumstances, can be a one dimensional and destructive cycle that prevents us from encountering an-other. Depriving the other of oneself and guarding oneself from the other becomes deceptively secure within insecurity. Yep, secure in one’s own insecurity. Breaking down the walls of falsehood is a formidable task, but the call to relate and connect draws us into a world of reality, love, and truth that knows no end. Engage and choose life – it’s costly, but it’s worth it.

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Thursday, November 8, 2012

The ZigZag Café - November 8

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

Do you think that people you know who don't have faith in God have faith in someone or something else?

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Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - November 7

To not have faith in God is to have faith in someone or something else. There is no neutral place available for us to be without faith. If this is the case, which appears likely, then if we don’t have faith in God, the question becomes who or what we do have faith in, and does this who or what merit our trust. It is essential not to stack the deck in favor of one world view or the other and to be willing to entertain the same kinds of questions and implications for whatever our faith position may be. Faith, it appears to me, is a feature of being human and a choice - something like a relational justified true belief. Whatever and whoever this belief is in would require a holistic (not reductionist or compartmentalized) interactive connectivity, which is capable of coherently flowing through and making sense of a web of important matters, including self, other, world, and God.

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Monday, November 5, 2012

Reflection for the Week - November 5

The power of despair is highly significant and provocatively tempting. One of the realities we most desire – to be known – is what we tend to fear. Being known is a dangerous enterprise that challenges our control over ourselves and the other. The risk factor appears so momentous, we retreat and dare not expose who we are. De-relationship though brings us further and further into deception. This direction is often embraced because we assume it’s safer to be unrelated than it is to connect with the other. Better to deprive ourselves, before we allow anyone else to do it to us. But this is one of the worst forms of attempting to be a self that will ever come across our paths, as it will only produce death. A turn towards an-other, however, while it will no doubt be a challenge, has the possibility of generating life, since life is deeply rooted in real relationships with all their perils and joys.

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Thursday, November 1, 2012

The ZigZag Café - November 1

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

Neuroscience is starting to show that religious belief may be a natural part of who we are. What do you think?

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Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - October 31

A soft glow drifts over the open sky and points to the horizons of far off worlds. In this distant and mysterious land, light is tethered to the gentle breeze that flows through the deep. This appears to be like a tender whisper from beyond the savage pulse of the long night of conflict and rage. There are no perfect pictures of illumination, or anything else for that matter. Given pictures are partially opaque, yet relevantly clear, as the sufficiency of this world morphs into others as possible worlds that present new ways of being, seeing, and living.

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Monday, October 29, 2012

Reflection for the Week - October 29

A Christian view of spirituality affirms the truth that there is a creational spirituality. That is, the created world is a world that we are to explore, care for, and sustain as stewards of what has been made. Living and true spirituality does not reject the material world, but engages it in service of God. We are, therefore, to imaginatively participate in the earthly and contribute to bringing goodness to all areas of life. As God has not left creation or humans to desolation, decay, or ultimate death, neither should we consent to dying forms of spirituality that have no capacity to redeem and renew the created.

From Living Spirituality: Illuminating the Path.

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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - October 24

Reading strategies for Scripture, self, other, and the world should have a similarity. That is, not too objective, nor too subjective. These phenomena are not to be mere objects of analysis and study or simply personal subjects of possession and control, but understood as related and distinct in tension. Falling into compartmentalized or collapsing approaches will lead to a short circuiting of making necessary tensional connections that will enhance and deepen our spirituality. These connections will help us to recognize that there are new possibilities and fresh discoveries that pave the way for drawing closer to God, his truth, and love, which are then to be lived out into the world.

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Monday, October 22, 2012

Reflection for the Week - October 22

The aim of the Christian life is not to spend enormous amounts of time and energy trying to figure out how and when God answers prayer, especially “for me,” but to love God, follow in the footsteps of Christ, love others, and to be and do this in the power of the Spirit. It seems likely that God responds to prayer in accordance with his Kingdom purposes – not offering parking places closer to the mall or providing special effects in the sky on an afternoon walk, especially “for me.” God, in my modest estimation, is not doing everything in micro-managing the world on my behalf, nor is God on stand-by doing nothing at all in response to prayer. If that’s the case, the line of Divine action is not fixed, but is a moving dynamic that has the capacity bring about God’s purposes through the very guts of the material world that God has caused to exist in the first place. How and when that happens, it seems, will remain a mystery that goes beyond human representation.

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Thursday, October 18, 2012

The ZigZag Café - October 18

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

How would you describe the role of the Holy Spirit today?

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Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - October 17

The incisive depiction of self-deception found in the biblical text is striking. We are never the selves we simply assume ourselves to be. Consequently, self-designation for good or ill is severely limited, leaving us adrift in a sea of useless options. There can be no doubt about it – we are in need of more - being and becoming new selves. Receiving the gift of a new self anchored in a call from beyond generated by the love of the Infinite One, deconstructs the death force of manipulative power strategies of exploitation and sets one on the pathway to life with all its detours and complexities. Vistas of past, present, and future now opened up along the journey are breathtaking, as time and story coalesce and separate in the glistening horizon of the Divine promise of redemption.

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Monday, October 15, 2012

Reflection for the Week - October 15

Unfortunately, in our context today, the defense of the gospel all too often becomes a matter of self-interest, which is akin to defending one’s own position at all costs. In this scenario, there is little or no understanding of or openness to pertinent questions that may undermine what is so tenaciously held on to, and different interpretations of the biblical text and natural world are ignored or dismissed without serious consideration. Empty heads are assumed to equate full hearts, but in my assessment this configuration is more likely to be an “apologetics of the uninformed self,” which tends to hold sway in many evangelical type circles and amounts to the blind leading the blind. Challenge and engagement are the new directions for apologetics, as our credibility and integrity are on the line in a culture that is fast becoming post-Christian.

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Thursday, October 11, 2012

The ZigZag Café - October 11

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

C. S. Lewis, like Paul Ricoeur, views imagination through its capacity to understand the depths of reality, and to facilitate a mode of being in the world that is also directed beyond it. Imagination is not the organ of truth, but its condition. What do you think?

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Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - October 10

Telling one’s own story is insufficient for knowing who one is. One’s own story will surely have little traction if it seeks to be the referent for itself, as self-referring story implodes in discounting the other, and is inevitably unsatisfactory in that it always returns to the same. Only when one places one’s story within the context of God’s story, recounted through the biblical text and the natural world informers, does one begin to discover more about whom one truly is. True knowledge of oneself therefore, is dependent on the God who makes contact and in connecting up one’s own recounting with this Divine storyteller.

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Monday, October 8, 2012

Reflection for the Week - October 8

The force of various biblical genres such as narrative, prophecy, letter, hymn, law, and wisdom is that each offers a unique way of perceiving God and reality, which in turn form a hermeneutic of ‘contact’ that names God, though not in a comprehensive manner. This intertextual ‘contact’ framing requires a dialogical orientation between one genre and another, while at the same time it presents significant, though worthwhile challenges to the formulation of an integrated perspective. ‘Contact’ opens up possibilities for a wide and imaginative trajectory of interpretation, as it turns out that God and reality are always more than any single textual representation can offer.

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Thursday, October 4, 2012

The ZigZag Café - October 4

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

Authenticity can mean a variety of things, including honesty, integrity, and credibility. If these meanings are understood as connected to the meaning of authenticity, does authenticity have, at least partially, to be given and received, or can we attain it on our own?

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Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - October 3

The eschatological plotline of the biblical narrative is deeply connected to our ability to imagine. God’s promised future can only be accessed through our imaginations, but this picture helps us live lives of imaginative faith, love, and hope in the present, where redemption and renewal are real possibilities to be embraced and embodied. Since we are tethered to the already and acquainted with the not yet, this gives us a new perspective for ‘seeing’ reality in a fuller, yet not complete way. While the parts and the whole imaginatively fit together, there is always more to be imagined and lived, as the relation and distinction between them will never entirely disappear.

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Monday, October 1, 2012

Reflection for the Week - October 1

Many chemical companies and drug manufacturers couldn’t give a rip about us. They’re in it, bottom line, for the money. The logic probably runs something like this. “We’ll make more millions by selling this crap before it’s found out to be toxic, than we’ll ever be fined for producing pollution, suffering, and death. Go for it.” Indeed, while this idol of wealth cunningly operates behind the closed doors of power and in the hidden halls of greed, we’re fed the worthless public rhetoric that a concern for humanity and for the environment are at the heart of corporate efforts to make the world a better place. Beware! Evil does not go unseen or unaccounted for.

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Thursday, September 27, 2012

The ZigZag Café - September 27

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

Someone recently said, “nothing is the way it’s supposed to be.” What are your thoughts on this?

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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - September 26

Living spirituality, deeply anchored in and tightly tethered to love, challenges us to break down the personal, cultural, and religious barriers that produce a lack of love. This will never be accomplished by mechanical formulas or fleshly mandates that attempt to be ends in and of themselves, since this dismantling is indeed first and foremost a spiritual enterprise without limit or condition. Charting the course of love will be a costly, but joyful enterprise. There will be pain and rejection, but also wonder and acceptance, as being loved by God opens up true possibilities for loving God, self, and other. Surely, we should recognize and embrace this magnificent trajectory, as we attempt to follow in the footsteps of the Crucified and Risen One, and seek to be an expression of divine love in a world that is so deficient of it.

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Monday, September 24, 2012

Reflection for the Week - September 24

When it comes to the discernment of diversion from the gospel, we require a fine balance between trust and suspicion; trusting trust and suspicion and being suspicious of trust and suspicion, in relationship to the referents for both. Cunning rhetoric and lofty speech are powerful players that can divert believers’ attention from sincere devotion to Christ. To receive someone’s words is therefore a continual challenge; a task and a joy. We want to be listening carefully, as there are multitudes of ways in which people portray the gospel; health, wealth, and consumerism being just three of a diversity of bogus representations that are set in place as substitutes for the real thing. Let’s face it, in our day and age, gospel can mean just about anything people want it to, unless it is diligently described and its sense and referent tracked by careful research and study of the biblical text.

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Thursday, September 20, 2012

The ZigZag Café - September 20

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

“God is good.” Do you think this affirmation needs to be nuanced, somehow modified, or changed all together?

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Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - September 19

The plight of much of the Western church is that it has been highly influenced by its political, economic, and social context. Instead of always following culture, Christians need to take the lead and find biblical, creative, and spiritual ways to bring the truth and love of the gospel into culture. Redeeming our political, economic, and social relations is a crucial, even urgent task that requires our serious attention and our devoted time and energy. As far as I see, this can begin on a local scale and grow out from there. Change is possible – the status quo is death – we can make an effort to bring our communities and churches life, as we seek to apply God’s redeeming love, biblical truths, and a renewed worldview.

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Monday, September 17, 2012

Reflection for the Week - September 17

Sunrises and sunsets are filled with beauty. When we perceive the reds, blues, and oranges, we’re struck to the core and feelings of awe and wonder majestically flow through us. At the same time, these natural world phenomena are connected to the mechanism of the earth turning round the sun. Such pictures of reality are composed of these two dimensions and much, much more. Sometimes we will want to have a greater focus on one aspect and at different times, the other, but if we attempt to live off mechanism or feelings alone, we will surely die. Intriguingly, in this sense, the complexity and integration of reality promotes life and having it more fully. In something of a mysterious way, we’re tethered to reality, yet reality is tethered to us.

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Thursday, September 13, 2012

The ZigZag Café - September 13

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

Do you think the embrace and implementation of faith, hope, and love are risks that make us free?

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Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - September 12

There are three prevailing worldviews that tend to dominate the glocal context today. First, matter matters. This is the notion that all there is―is matter. Scientific hubris is attempting to capture what is, but in its reductionism and anti-theism is doomed to fail. Life is more important than matter. Second, money matters. Consumer strategies and corporate values teach us that all that’s real is―money. When money becomes a god in church, politics, economics, and society, everything is sacrificed on the altar of death and redemption is left lying in the ashes of the meltdown. People are more important than money. Third, power matters. Cutting down and shredding responsibility or anything else that stands in the way means that all that counts is―power. Explicit claims and acts of terror oppress and de-dignify an ethical imperative that is trampled by images, bullets, words, and bombs. Love and justice are more important than power.

Such a lamentable concoction of worldviews is devastating, even catastrophic. Might I say - apocalyptic; borrowing a metaphor so often used to describe the fallout of what’s happening to this planet and its people at this particular moment. As, truth, love, and justice decline, partially due to the woeful state of so many churches who fall into one of the trinity of current views mentioned above, we are left to weep with the Creator and Savior. But tears should promote action to re-establish the viability of the Christian worldview and its capacity to proclaim a refiguration of the present world and then through an eventual face to face encounter with the Infinite and the Crucified and Risen One, lead to streams of never ending life.

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Monday, September 10, 2012

Reflection for the Week - September 10

Betrayal and rejection in the face of love is an awful thing. My wager is that, if and when this horrific experience happens to us, it is also in tears, one of the unenviable ways we are closest to God.

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Thursday, September 6, 2012

The ZigZag Café - September 6

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

Some have said, the reader’s response it not to the meaning, it is the meaning. What’s your view?

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Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today – September 5

Early Genesis makes room for cocreativity. God endows the natural world with the capacity to be part of a creative process that is a massive enterprise, which far surpasses what we can fathom or imagine. It appears that God releases nature to be distinct from God, while God nevertheless remains sovereign over its creationality processes and its ultimate destiny. This picture of God and nature can be partially filled in from both sides; the biblical and natural world informers paint in a startling diversity of colors more luminescent, mysterious, and creative than any eye has seen.

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Monday, September 3, 2012

Reflection for the Week - September 3

Looking for contact with God can sometimes seem to be an arduous task. Often we expect something direct – a clear pathway opening up between God and us, like the wrestling Jacob, the law receiving Moses, or the barren Sarah, yet are disappointed when this does not usually take place. Perhaps, our vision would improve if we begin to reflect on the indirect ways in which God, through nature, the trustworthy other, and Scripture, can likely create conduits that contribute to bridging the distance that we may be experiencing. Being attuned to the manifestation of God through these configurations opens us up to new ways of seeing and perceiving the multifarious touching points between us and the great and mysterious I Am.

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Thursday, August 30, 2012

The ZigZag Café - August 30

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

What is hope like?

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Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - August 29

I recently talked to someone struggling with very low self esteem. Question: Who are you? Answer: I don’t know. It turns out that she was measuring her worth by all kinds of false standards. She vainly tried to measure up, but continually failed. This caused unusually high levels of stress, anxiety, and eventually depression. Then, I asked her what connection her view of herself had with belief in God and she confessed that she hadn’t thought about this. The importance of a God connection and its ability to shed light on her life had been masked by self deception, which is enticingly subtle, yet radically perverse. Being a believer in God and his offer of redemption in Christ are crucial for the whole of life generally, and in particular, for self identity. Don’t forget to connect with God to start to answer the question: Who are you? if you hope to find true standards of love, acceptance, and self worth.

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Monday, August 27, 2012

Reflection for the Week - August 27

Breaking through the complex web of lies and distortions is a monumental task that may take someone years to accomplish. Surely, after many failed attempts to save one’s self, it becomes all too painfully clear that we mess up our own and the lives of others in the charade. But it may take time, so much time, to begin to admit and accept this truth. Somehow the false is a power structure that cycles and recycles through us again and again, leaving us debilitatingly safe, yet deceived. Self-deception is one of the major defeater’s that covers and closes us into a shroud of secrecy. Uncovering and openness, however, become the way ahead for a new depiction of being and doing, which are ultimately rooted in the reality that what we so desperately need is a redemption that comes to us as an invitation from the Sacred One.

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Thursday, August 23, 2012

Zinal - Valais - Suisse - Matterhorn

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Zinal - Valais - Suisse

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Zinal - Valais - Suisse

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Samnaum - Engadine - Suisse

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The ZigZag Café - August 23

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

My assumption is that desire seems to get a bad rap in many Christian circles. Why?

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Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - August 22

Desire is a pre-given part of who I am. Its expression can be constructive or destructive, but this does not explain its existence. I am not in control of desire, but merely its outcome, as it’s already there before I am conscious of it. If this is the case, it’s one more nail in the coffin of the prominent, but wayward proposal of a self-authenticating self, which attempts to be the founder of itself and the final foundation of meaning and knowledge. A more accurate hermeneutics of self is one that takes into account the truth that I am a mediator of that which precedes me; that which is given, and that my accountability is connected to what I do with this, not that I make it be in the first place. For example: to desire is not a choice, but what to desire is. This portrayal of selfhood should make room for the transcendent and in doing so therefore, ultimately open up a very real signpost to God.

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Monday, August 20, 2012

Reflection for the Week - August 20

The patron saints of reductionism and polarization in contemporary Christian thought frequently dominate disputes over language, philosophy, theology, and interpretation. Let’s move in a different direction. We want to be part of communities that establish a space for dialogue, mediate one-sided extremes, and offer a hermeneutic of relation and distinction rooted in love, which depicts a new vision for engaging with these contested issues. It’s time to be challenging and insightful, opening up possibilities that invoke a perceptive wisdom going beyond modernist and postmodernist perspectives, affirming the tension-filled and organic character of Christian truth.

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Thursday, August 16, 2012

The ZigZag Café - August 16

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

Has the created world always been both a safe and a dangerous place?

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Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today – August 15

A poetics – being, doing, and making true stories plays a significant role in understanding life. Taking disparate and unconnected events and dynamically shaping them into a mysterious whole is tied to a plot that we are already submersed in, yet not enslaved to. Stories break the status quo and help articulate who we are, what we are to do, and why we are here. They embody possible worlds and on the trajectory of our creative imitation impulse, we are involved in the emplotment of scenarios that function more as breathing pictures, than mirrors or windows. Swept up into a dialogue with God, Scripture, self, and other ought to lead us in the direction that the stories of creation, grace, justice, hope, and redemption are the centrality of poetics. In this narrative recounting, love surpasses knowledge and living is a work of art that is portrayed on the canvas of imagination and projected out into the world.

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Monday, August 13, 2012

Reflection for the Week - August 13

Wisdom emerges in our lives slowly and sometimes painfully. It invites reflection, question, and struggle. It covers everything from advice on how to take care of daily tasks, to the absurdity of them all. For true wisdom relates to living spirituality as it deals with facing life in all its ups and downs. God graciously meets us through living, as we shape the contours of every day routines and choices, so that we might learn to wisely follow the path to life and goodness. The fear (awe, reverence) of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom. This saying targets a two-dimensional reality: wisdom as internal; focused on the individual who be’s and do’s, and as external; situated in a variety of social contexts in the world. Life is to be filled with the gift of the wisdom of God, which applies to the whole of human activity, as we forge ahead on the journey towards our destiny.

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Thursday, August 9, 2012

Up at 3,000 meters - Nauders, Austria

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The ZigZag Café - August 9

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

Do we have any right to demand how someone should love us?

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Alpine lake - haute Engadine - Suisse

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Thousands of meals have been prepared with loving care in this kitchen!

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Thousands of stimulating and challenging discussions have taken place in this room with a view!

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Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today – August 8

In many Christian circles, making something of ourselves is seen to be unspiritual. As it goes, “if you just do what God tells you to do and remove yourself from any responsibility, then you’re on the heavenly road to the highest form of what a spiritual person looks like.” One of the major problems with such a configuration is that most of the time people spend enormous amounts of energy searching for what they’re supposed to do and how to get rid of themselves, which is easier said than done. Doing and not being is the mantra that controls this picture. But going round and round in circles, not knowing where we’re headed, will not develop a living spirituality. Being in community with God, however, is always to precede doing and making. God has offered us plenty of portraits of who to be, what to do, and how to make something out of ourselves from what has been given and when we act on these he is clapping his hands and saying, “well be’d, done, and made.”

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Monday, August 6, 2012

Reflection for the Week - August 6

Relational break ups and downs destroy both the strong and the weak. Devastating losses accumulate over the years and attempt to numb us and rip us apart. Left in bitterness and despair, we weep over what once was and what could have been, but now is not. This being driven to tears though, slices through to the core, and can open a space for hope. Yet, such a hope passes through a sharp knife that cuts the throat of the lamb, spilling blood everywhere over everyone, presenting us with the problematic of a choice.

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Monday, July 30, 2012

Reflection for the Week - July 30

One of the most significant questions we all face is – how can we be a ‘real’ self in the midst of the strong and influential currents of the modern and post-modern world? It seems evident that we all exist in time and story, so we are neither entirely transparent, nor completely opaque to ourselves. Unfortunately, our legitimate fears of being deceived may lead us to trust and embrace the ultimate authority self of modernity or the lost and alienated self of post-modernity, instead of finding a mediated place and space to be and be with others. The old modernist perspective that there are only facts and the new post-modern one that there are no facts only interpretations leaves us in the quandary of being either masters or slaves. In a diversity of ways, neither of these options fit, as they represent unrealistic polarizations, which by the way are always enticing, yet dangerously flawed. Let’s say a better formulation would be something like, there are only interpreted facts, as far as we know. This calls for a worldview of subjective objectivity, which allows us to know something of ourselves and reality. If this is the case, it means we will always be situated selves, but in seeing this we will find there is an open possibility for a trust in the Infinite One, who will not deceive and who frees us to be real. God’s gracious offer of creation, redemption, and new creation invite us to be truer selves, as we begin to live in his picture of trust and suspicion and his economy of exchange and gift. As a result, we will need God’s wisdom to help us have a clearer picture of who we are in the context and framework of a given life that is beyond us to control or define.

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Monday, July 23, 2012

Reflection for the Week - July 23

As the famous French philosopher Albert Camus once commented: ‘the meaning of life is the most urgent of questions.’ Taking Camus seriously, there seems little doubt that we are fragile agents in time and story, groping for a picture of our lives that makes sense. Our plots may include shifting dimensions of hurt, suffering, despair, and healing, joy, and health, but these very spheres of our narratives leave us in a world that’s way too small. Faced with continually discovering that we are not able to emplot a self-determined existence, we stumble along and are forced to ask this burning question again and again. The truth is there is far more to the meaning of life than our present circumstances may be able to recount. Surely, in some areas this is widely accepted, but just as surely in others it is not. There are many instances where we readily acknowledge there is more, while in some situations we still tenaciously grasp at the illusive power of being the ultimate authority. Thus, we all too often continue to demand to tell the key parts of the story our own way, but in attempting to do so, this simply leaves us short of meaning that is sufficiently able to address and cohere with a world that is not of our own making. Following on from this, we begin to recognize the need for a bigger story – the biblical mega narrative – which appears on the horizon, not as a totalizing account, but as a meaning-full telling with the force of explanation and new understanding that takes us to the limit.

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Thursday, July 19, 2012

The ZigZag Café - July 19

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

Does God take risks?

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Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - July 18

Too often it seems that what concerns us most is the Empire idol of socio-economic status and prosperity. Such a mesmerizing charade works like a scalpel, cutting off vital pieces of our brains and hearts, and will lead us nowhere. Let’s get real and start thinking again. Once we get our brains and hearts back we can join the conversation, and then generate action, powered by the Spirit in alignment with God’s mission. Credibility and authenticity are to be found in following the Crucified and Risen One, which leads to forging communities drenched in the theodrama, where we all have a part on the grand stage of social, racial, political, economic, and cultural redemption.

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Monday, July 16, 2012

Reflection for the Week - July 16

We are invited to be wary of self-deception, fiction making, power plays, exploitation, and control tendencies that inevitably result in us making it up as we go along, and which will only lead us into the landscape of hopelessness and despair. A God focused holistic hope, by contrast, pertains to self, other, world and the destinies attached to each. Self = a new self being transformed into the image of Christ – the other = a person loved by God and one who has weight concerning who one’s own self is; oneself as another – the world = a redeemed and renewed planet breaking away from all that is not good. Such a trinity of destinies is breathtaking in its features and scope, in that it is sacrificially offered by the Divine One, who encourages us to be released from competing networks of manipulative interests, since this spewed out grace, which infuses us with new identities, illustrates a redemptive trajectory that inaugurates a dwelling place in his space.

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Thursday, July 12, 2012

The ZigZag Café - July 12

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

Would you agree that there are no facts – true statements about reality – only interpretations?

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Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - July 11

Recent relational theological trends tend to identify all too closely divine and human emotions. Be it love or jealousy, the notion is that if we’re this or that way, then God must be. My term for this new direction in theology today is relationalism. There is a deep and somewhat understandable desire to have a God like us, yet this longing may create a god of our own making. It seems to me that we frequently make it up as we go along and in so doing shape God into our own image. The biblical God, however, is the Creator and Redeemer who is faithful. God, therefore, is utterly unique and does what God does for the realization of his purposes of covenant fulfillment. This God is neither weak, nor vulnerable, but an agent of power, who through a commanding passion will bring about his own love and justice for his people and the whole world.

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Monday, July 9, 2012

Reflection for the Week - July 9

Renewed and being renewed selves are to be saturated in hope. This hope is best pictured as a virtue – a good character trait, made possible by God’s grace – the key that unlocks the direction towards that which is worthy of hope. Feelings of hope may be valid, but they must undergo a dialogue with the notions of trust and suspicion, in order to evaluate their referents. But even when feelings of hope are considered trustworthy, they are not to be embraced as ends in and of themselves. This happens to be the case, because hope is more than feelings. Hope reflects, therefore, a deliberate way of viewing life and destiny that translates into a state of being, which promotes a holistic configuration of selfhood and a confident looking forward to all that’s good.

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Friday, July 6, 2012

Friday Poetry - July 6

Edging towards the finely grained and exquisite contours of the love of God, while living in the arena of death, is a monumental enterprise that knows no end. Being loved and loving restores and rescues our confidence from the silhouette of fear and anxiety, as God's powered love illumination seeps into recesses of existence and frees us to meet at the gates of the garden.

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Thursday, July 5, 2012

The ZigZag Café - July 5

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

Does God need the cosmos?

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Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - July 4

Learning to imagine redemptively is one of several key features that pertain to following Christ. As important as it is to realize that imagination is a crucial dimension of being human, it is all the more essential to begin to understand how necessary it is for belief in God and for living the Christian life. To imagine as a believer, is not to make it up as we go along, but to be able to access God in a fuller and richer ways that can be formulated into pictures, scenarios, and stories, which reflect this reality out into the world.

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Monday, July 2, 2012

Reflection for the Week - July 2

Receiving the gift of a new self, anchored in a Divine call from beyond and a Christo-redemptive act from within, deconstructs manipulative power and conniving selfishness, setting us on the path to life with all its detours and complexities. The vistas opened up along the journey are breathtaking, as God’s promises for the past, present, and future begin come into focus and to coalesce in our lives. As a result of this reality taking place, novel ways of seeing, being, and living sear the landscape of the whole of who we are, encouraging us to begin to let go of self-defeating strategies of control and exploitation, and to embrace God’s project of genuine love that is out transform us and the world.

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Thursday, June 28, 2012

The ZigZag Café - June 29

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

Does being loved carry with it any legitimate expectations as to how this love must be given and expressed?

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Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - June 27

At the emergence of creation, God is depicted as the Divine Transcendent One, who imminently orchestrates a symphony of words. These words become vehicles of creating something aesthetically marvelous and intricately complex, although not free of risk. Creation is a wild and diverse marvel, a purposefully directed wonder, and God is the Speaking Sculptor who speaks and it unfolds. This God, the Genesis God, is the God who sees, names, replies to, and proclaims that what is created is good for its purpose.

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Monday, June 25, 2012

Reflection for the Week - June 25

Proof-texting – taking a verse here and there from the Bible – can be a dangerous enterprise when it comes to understanding God, self, other, and world. Random reading leaves too much to chance. No doubt sometimes God can use his word in this very selective sort of way, but most of the time if we want to understand better, we need to be informed about the historical, theological, and literary context of a passage, before assuming that it is speaking directly to and for us. Surely, this more careful approach is part of what it means to hold a high view of Scripture and to honor God and his revelation.

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Thursday, June 21, 2012

The ZigZag Café - June 21

The ZigZag Café - June 21

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

What do you see as the building blocks for the biblical narrative in Genesis 2-3?

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Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - June 20

Recently, on a hike through the Swiss Alps nearby our chalet, I was struck again not only by the beauty, but also by the problematic of perception. Winding my way up the mountain side I kept reflecting on how at different points in the walk perceptions change, yet the goal to get to the top of the mountain remains the same. Being in community with God, I believe, has some inviting similarities. When we are in a particular place in the journey, life appears to be one way, but then a different vista opens up and as we go further we see more than we did before. Gradual climbing and clawing our way along can be arduous, but new perceptions invite us to continue on the path towards our destiny of being transformed into the image of Christ and seeing God face to face.

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Tuesday, June 19, 2012

There's actually a cliff right behind me, so this was good prep for my Friday Swiss L'Abri lecture on a cutting edge topic!

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After Lunch - veering to the right at 2,500 meters

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Lunch while Hiking -in front of the Dents du Midi

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Monday, June 18, 2012

Reflection for the Week - June 18

There are at least two ways a personal crisis of hope may express itself. First, pessimism: cynicism overtakes us and we decide to take matters into our own hands. Second, optimism: naïve idealism saturates us and we decide that God will resolve it all for us. Neither of these false options has much to do with Living Spirituality and both will leave us hopeless. Yet, this may not stop us from spending significant amounts of time and energy floating from pessimism to optimism and back, attempting to solidify and barricade ourselves in one unlivable perspective or the other. Life with God, however, is never this simple, as it will challenge these tendencies and in so doing, refigure the false options into growing opportunities for developing a realistic hope, which affirms that two realities are true at the same time: God is at work and we are to be at work. Embracing and living out the salvific possibilities of redemption in the present is both gift and task, as we await the ultimate realization of God's promises in the future.

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Thursday, June 14, 2012

The ZigZag Café- June 14

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

Is poetry as important as history in the Bible – what are your thoughts?

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Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms for Today - Who am I? - June 13

In addition to Freud's atheism, there are many others, including Nietzsche, Barthes, and Foucault, who argue that God is a contradiction to life, for the death of the Author, and that the strategic alignments of power interests are out to control, knowledge, relationships, and truth. While these thinkers have some salient insights, their wayward conclusions have contributed to the cultural construction and propagation of a cynical, pessimistic, and decentered self. Yet, in the face of such views, the counter-cultural and always avant-garde perspective of Christian promise and hope defies this manufactured status quo. Destroying idols and listening to symbols is one of the keys that unlock living spirituality and possibilities for engaging the God of love and truth. When this takes place we are no longer trapped within a network of self – other power plays that exploit us, but we are embraced by a Divine love without measure, where freedom leads to redemption and transformation. Being loved in this manner supplies us with a new self and an identity that goes far beyond any of our own making.

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Monday, June 11, 2012

Reflection for the Week - June 11

A crucial theological question is central to spirituality. Is anyone there? Our concern here is not with something that we merely feel or experience as “beyond” or “transcendent,” but with the issue of who is speaking and acting, who is calling, and who is addressing us. Of course, impersonal entities neither speak nor act, and if we have little or no accurate information about the referent of our spirituality, we should have some serious reservations concerning its viability. A real and genuine spiritual connection, through the redemptive work of the crucified and risen Christ, can be formed with the One who is there beyond us. This union results in a release from sin, a changed heart, and a transformed mind—life amidst divine community, towards the other, and in the world. From my book Living Spirituality: Illuminating the Path.

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Thursday, June 7, 2012

The ZigZag Café - June 7

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

The legalist mantra runs deep. When this happens, doing and more doing to validate who one is becomes difficult to dismiss. What might be a fitting response to someone caught in this scenario?

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Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms for Today - June 6

Our obsession with ME subverts the truth that the death of Christ is a key event in the establishment of God’s rule. Why did Christ die? Christians often respond, “He died for ME and my sins.” While this is astonishingly true, there is a caveat—Christ died for far more than that. The whole of God’s reign is at stake in Christ’s death, as he takes the covenant curses upon himself. The Kingdom of God has burst on the scene, and the death of Christ is first and foremost about inaugurating this rule. Christ’s death is not about less than ME and my sins, but it is always superabundantly about so much more—God’s establishing his rule and restoring all things. And that is what we miss.

When I put myself, ME, at the center, the death of Christ and living spirituality are considerably impoverished. There is a place for me, but it is important to say no to ME being at the center. This involves a real battle—the battle with sin. Life and death are at stake. And if we choose to center on ME, we are facing the significant danger of embracing forms of spiritual impoverishment—notably, idolatry and self-deception.

Christians are called to live otherwise: for the Other and others. We are not called to constantly focus on ourselves. The scriptural mapping speaks of loving others and serving them. It speaks of evangelism, social action, and putting others before ourselves, as illuminating the true path toward living spirituality.

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Monday, June 4, 2012

Reflection for the Week - June 4

The desperate search for who I am often appears to lead to a dead end. Faced with no future, the failure of the past, and the suspicion of the present, selfhood is a question without an answer. When the self-centered ultimate authority self or the self-decentered entrapped reduced self collapse, drifting begins to emerge as our only option. The supposed inaccessibility to knowledge and truth, portrayed today as merely subjective forays in the dark, plays into this and tends to leave us without a place to be. Selfhood is stranded, seeking someone or something to be with and belong to. But God’s love generates the possibility of welcome and embrace, inviting us into community; a space to be in and with, which is deeply connected to the power to forgo the self-centered and decentered selves and to be caught up in being recentered, through redemption and the gift of a new self.

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Friday, June 1, 2012

The ZigZag Café - May 31

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

Does the Bible forbid a believer to marry an unbeliever?

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Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - May 30

The longing for validation and the fear of invalidation often creates a powerful dynamic that risks surpassing human norms. That is, these two emotions can be considered a part of being human and therefore appropriate, yet when they operate in such a way that they dominate our lives, we have been deceived into being selfish and short circuiting our spirituality. Duped into false ways of relating to get what we want from the other does them violence and is ultimately unloving. These oppressive and dominating power mechanisms need to be confronted by a power that is greater than they, notably Christ and the agency of the Holy Spirit, which will lead to transformation and fresh ways of relating that re-connect us to our spirituality.

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Monday, May 28, 2012

Reflection for the Week - May 28

Christians are taught to find themselves or to find God. This is an inadequate way of teaching what is true. In actuality, we have a deep need to find both God and ourselves. Questions about who I am and why I am should not and cannot be ignored, yet in order to discover answers to these important matters, we can only go so far without also asking who God is. Being attentive to finding both God and ourselves reaches a meeting point— a symbiotic configuration that has the capacity to and is a catalyst for recognizing that each has its dynamically appropriate place.  God is first and we are second.

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Friday, May 25, 2012

Friday Poetry - May 25

Long time have human ignorance and guilt
Detained us, on what spectacles of woe
Compelled to look, and inwardly oppressed
With sorrow, disappointment, vexing thoughts,
Confusion of the judgement, zeal decayed,
And lastly, utter loss of hope itself
And things to hope for! Not with these began
Our song, and not with these our song must end

Theirs is the language of the heavens, the power,
The thought, the image, and the silent joy
Words are but under-agents in their souls;
When they are grasping with their greatest strength,
They do not breathe among them: this I speak
In gratitude to God, Who feeds our hearts
For his own service; knoweth us, loveth us,
When we are unregarded by the world.

These salient words by Wordsworth in The Prelude, 1850, Book 12, invite us to explore beginnings and ends and all that’s in-between.

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Thursday, May 24, 2012

The ZigZag Café - May 24

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

What is heaven ?

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Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - May 23

Who am I? I am a human being who exists in time and story. I am a creature. I love and am loved. I am knower and known. I am limited. I am finite. I am sinful. I am not self-sufficient. I am not ultimate authority. I do not have the capacity to exclusively self-determine what actions I am free to do, nor what actions I am constrained from doing. I am a human being. I need Divine sources and referents to give wisdom as to how to be and be with others. Being human is subjectively objective – both I and outside of I have a role in telling me who I am, but they don’t have the same degree of say so. Being human is to practice a hermeneutics of trust and suspicion across the whole of life, including my own I am. It simply won’t do to trust I and be suspicious of everyone and everything else. I cannot bear the weight without pretending and cheating. But who will see; who will invite me to a genuine integrity? Questioning my own perspectives of what I trust and what I suspect in light of a greater calling is an essential part of being human and it begins to respond to who I really am.

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Monday, May 21, 2012

Reflection for the Week - May 21

Quitting church is reaching epidemic proportions. Caught in the vice between those who exchange the gospel for a social code and those who market it as a consumer product, streams of people are flowing out of churches. From what I can tell many of them long for God, love, truth, credibility, justice, and redemption, but are disappointed with what the church is offering. Bagels and coffee, and promises of health and wealth are limited and breaking down. Thus, today’s pseudo–gospel is having less and less traction and for this we should rejoice. Yet, the fallout is serious, in that the legitimate questions people are asking are not being addressed, nor are these folk being provided with a place to dwell, which has more to do with living spirituality, than merely finding a geographical home. Rich and diverse gospel centered communities are essential to renew and redo the faith in what appears to be the demise of what has been known as church for all too long.

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Friday, May 18, 2012

Friday Poetry - May 18

Imagination! lifting up itself
Before the eye and progress of my Song
Like an unfather’d vapour; here that Power,
In all the might of its endowments, came
Athwart me; I was lost in a cloud,
Halted, without a struggle to break through.
And now recovering, to my Soul I say
I recognize thy glory; in such strength
Of usurpation, in such visitings
Of awful promise, when the light of sense
Goes out in flashes that have shewn to us
The invisible world, doth Greatness make abode,
There harbours whether we be young or old.

Wordsworth’s salient words are striking and worth pondering more than once. From The Prelude, 1805, Book VI (525-537)

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Thursday, May 17, 2012

The ZigZag Café - May 17

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

How do you hear from God?

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Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - May 16

When it is understood that Jesus Christ is the gateway to living spirituality, there are new and momentous opportunities that open up for us. We are given community with the Infinite-personal God by tasting living water, and experiencing a new birth of the Spirit through faith in the Crucified and Risen One. When we accept the invitation to walk through the gateway, our world explodes because we confess that it’s no longer centered on ourselves. And it is then that we start to find our place in living spirituality and to discover the true meaning of life in all its richness and mystery. This is something like moving from darkness to light, being released from a cage, or coming out of an illusion to reality.

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Monday, May 14, 2012

Reflection for the Week - May 14

Living spiritually is enhanced and enriched through the Psalms and their frequent affirmations of and appeals to God’s covenant loyalty. Many of these writings, however, may shock us with their realism. In the midst of our sometimes automatic pilot spirituality, where everything is supposedly bright and happy, some of the Psalms remind us that community with God and the path to life are far from straight forward. There is and will be brokenness, mystery, dark times, judgment, desperate searching, and much more. Though these circumstances frequently lead to illumination and new understanding, arriving there means going through—not taking a detour around—facets of spirituality that may not fit our desired schemes, notions, and expectations of God. The path may become difficult and the destination may seem far away, but God is faithful to lead us forward. The Psalms are a richly textured slice of life with God, and they offer us revelatory insights into humanness and living spirituality. From my Living Spirituality: Illuminating the Path.

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Saturday, May 12, 2012

Reaching new heights?

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Looking for the Path?

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Friday, May 11, 2012

Friday Poetry - May 11

Resembles Life what once was held of Light,
Too ample in itself for human sight?
An absolute Self--an element ungrounded--
All, that we see, all colours of all shade
By encroach of darkness made?--
Is very life by consciousness unbounded?
And all the thoughts, pains, joys of mortal breath,
A war-embrace of wrestling Life and Death?

I like these words from Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s What is Life? around 1805. Rather than secondary, ornamental, or aesthetic renderings of writing; metaphor, symbol, and story may be first order forms of discourse that need to be taken seriously as we seek to understand God, ourselves, and the world. Poetry, for example, may be a fuller expression of truth than mathematical formulations and imagination may prove a reliable guide to discovering the real over the unreal.

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Thursday, May 10, 2012

The ZigZag Café

The ZigZag Café

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

Some say all that’s important is to do what Jesus did. Would you agree or disagree and why?

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Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - May 9

Living in a post-trust culture means that cynicism and apathy reign. So many people are infected with an overdose of suspicion, which amounts to being caught up in the cycle of the same. Suspicion produces suspicion, which produces more suspicion. While it is true that it is sometimes appropriate to be suspicious, it is even more important to realize that trust is always primary. That is, God has created humans in such a way that they can’t escape trust - even if it's trusting our suspicions. Problem is that we trust and are suspicious of the wrong things and this is where we need direction. A dialogue of trust and suspicion will be instructive, yet it is insufficient to produce sustainable insight as to which is which. Therefore, if we want to break out of the cycle of unknowing who and what to trust and where and why to be suspicious, I suggest that we turn to God as the Divine One who can enter into the dialogue and provide a helpful illumination that will lead to discernment and a new possibility of beginning to live the dialogue in a more redemptively accurate and appropriate manner.

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Monday, May 7, 2012

Reflection for the Week - May 7

God has given us precious creational and salvific rhythms to live by. Order and beauty shape and frame the world, while the death and resurrection of Christ extends reality and brings it into an entirely new dimension. These rhythms shake, rattle, and roll us off our seats and in so doing invite us to take part in the groove. Imagine dancing to God’s rhythms and learning to keep time with his beat. Join in the Divine concert. Get the rhythms, get the rhythms, get the rhythms and gooo! Get the rhythms, get the rhythms, get the rhythms and gooooo!

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Friday, May 4, 2012

Friday Poetry - May 4

Thus I fared,

Dragging all passions, notions, shapes of faith,

Like culprits to the bar, suspiciously

Calling the mind to establish in plain day

Her titles and her honours, now believing,

Now disbelieving, endlessly perplex’d

With impulse, motive, light and wrong, the ground

Of moral obligation, what the rule

And what the sanction, till, demanding proof,

And seeing in everything, I lost

All feeling of conviction….

 

I like these words from William Wordsworth’s The Prelude 1805 Book X (889-99) where he expresses the detrimental effects of rationalism.

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Thursday, May 3, 2012

The ZigZag Café - May 3

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

Should our experiences in the world have any bearing on our belief in God?

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Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - May 2

We are a question to ourselves that we don’t have a complete answer for. While God graciously gives us a sufficient picture, it nevertheless lacks a pristine focus and a crystal clear resolution. This means that we have ample room for exploring contours and adjusting angles, as we grow in our faith. Seeking God’s illumination to better understand the mystery that we are gradually leads us to a carefully configured dynamic of confidence and humility that can be lived with each other and out into the world. In being and becoming testifying agents of the Supreme One - tethered to life in Christ, we are creatively and imaginatively given an ever expanding image that certifies, in spite of not seeing precisely who we are or will be, the deep experience of the mercy and love of God.

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Monday, April 30, 2012

Reflection for the Week

Western culture is saturated with idols. In our context, there’s no need for pagan temples or shrines to promote idolatry. Money, possessions, sex, the human image, and so forth are constantly dangled before us with the persuasive message – “you and what you have is what it’s all about.” Idolatry may portray itself as subtle, but it has radical implications for what and who we worship and value. There’s no place for being naive on this subject. Be aware, cautious, and critical, as the asymmetry between the living God of Scripture as Creator of the world and lifeless idols couldn’t be more sweeping and thorough. The total incompatibility here is vast and unbridgeable, which should give rise to careful thought about the risk of losing the reality of who we are and the presence of the God to whom we belong.

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Friday, April 27, 2012

Friday Poetry - April 27

We shall not cease from exploration

And the end of our exploring

Will be to arrive where we started

And know the place for the first time

These salient words from TS Eliot in the Four Quartets set the tone for reading early Genesis. Poets, like Eliot, have ways with words that configure worlds and how we view them. Thus, they are creators of powerful images of innovation and impertinence, which careen off the walls of time and sweep over the landscape of life, calling us to re-envision where we started. Being engaged in the intricate and inquisitive art of exploration is a perpetual challenge, which comes to an end with a new perception of the beginning.

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Thursday, April 26, 2012

The ZigZag Café - April 26

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

Someone told me recently, “I am always ashamed of myself. I have to do the right things to be liked. I search for who I am – my identity, but only find self-criticism.”

Any thoughts?

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Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today, April 25

Edging towards the finely grained and exquisite contours of the love of God, while living in the arena of death, is a monumental enterprise that knows no end. Being loved and loving restores and rescues our confidence from the silhouette of fear and anxiety, as illumination seeps into recesses of existence and frees us to meet at the gates of the garden.

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Monday, April 23, 2012

Reflection for the Week

As readers of the Genesis creation accounts today we must realize that we are foreigners to the text and its ancient Near Eastern context, which may strike us as strange and unfamiliar, yet we are not excluded from engaging with its God, narration, and drama in a somewhat recognizable pattern. Refigured lives then become a real possibility for those readers who are grafted into the revelatory story of God’s sculpting in time, both through creation and the ever-present redemptive outpouring of love in Christ, which graciously offers us a place and a role on the stage of the cosmic drama still in progress. This poetic and theologically-loaded biblical world production not only includes a narrative concordance that supersedes discordance with respect to time or changing portraits of the actual world, but it also proclaims that life triumphs over death and will continue to do so throughout God’s ongoing story.

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Thursday, April 19, 2012

The ZigZag Café

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

How, if at all, might Divine love vary from, or feel different than, human love?

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Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - April 18

Epistemology, ontology, and ethics are blended together and carefully nuanced, as nowhere else in a Christian worldview. Stripping away reductionism and embracing a dynamic relation and distinction, Christianity offers a highly coherent and intriguingly mysterious picture of deep reality. Followers of Christ are given a new perspective that opens up an encounter with life, as it is found. God, self, other, and world now have a challenging connection, yet are not the same. This configuration of truth and life makes sense and is viable at a polyphony of levels, including knowledge, being, and actions.

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Monday, April 16, 2012

Reflection for the Week

God's way of reconciliation is configured in the death of the Crucified One, which results in not reckoning people's sins against them. God has done everything that there is to be done from his side in order for us to be reconciled. This "logos" of reconciliation has been downloaded into new covenant, which through God's initiation, is written on human hearts and not tablets of stone. But the absolutely massive context for all this is God’s reconciling the world to himself in Christ. God’s story is big – a mega-narrative going far beyond personal individualistic salvation, culminating in a new heaven and earth. If God is reconciling the world to himself in Christ, we are to be ambassadors of this reconciliation, as those through whom God makes his appeal to others.

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Thursday, April 12, 2012

The ZigZag Café - 12 April

ZZ is closed for today and will re-open on the 19th of April. I’m looking forward to renewing the conversation and dialogue then. For now – Bonjour.

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Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today - April 11

I talked recently to someone struggling with very low self esteem. Question: Who are you? It turns out that she was measuring her worth by all kinds of false standards. She vainly tried to measure up, but continually failed. This caused unusually high levels of stress, anxiety, and eventually depression. Then, I asked her what connection her view of herself had with belief God and she confessed that she hadn’t thought about this. The importance of a God connection and its ability to shed light on her life had been masked by self deception, which is enticingly subtle, yet radically perverse. Being a believer in God and his offer of redemption in Christ are crucial for the whole of life generally, and in particular, when it comes to self identity. Don’t forget to connect with God to start to answer the question: Who are you? if you hope to find true standards of love, acceptance, and self worth.

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Monday, April 9, 2012

Reflection for the Week

Life often appears to be like a flickering candle flame, dancing in the textured and stark shadows of nightfall’s gentle breeze. In spite of our frailty, uncertain existence, and fear of being extinguished, the resurrection of Christ gives us great hope for victory over death. Practicing resurrection is being a new creation and embracing ordinary and everyday matters of humanness, while seeking to live a spiritual life aligned with our destiny.

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Thursday, April 5, 2012

The ZigZag Café

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

Should Divine love feel like something, and if so, what?

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Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today

Living spirituality, deeply anchored in and tightly tethered to love, challenges us to break down the cultural and religious walls produced in our own and other people’s lives by a lack of love. This will never be accomplished by mechanical formulas or fleshly mandates that attempt to be ends in and of themselves, since this dismantling is indeed first and foremost a spiritual enterprise without limit or condition. Charting the course of love will be a costly, but joyful enterprise intimately connected to living spirituality. There will be pain and rejection, but also wonder and acceptance, as being loved by God opens up true possibilities for loving God, self, and other. Surely, we should recognize this trajectory, as we attempt to follow in the footsteps of the Crucified and Risen One and seek to be an expression of divine love in a world that is so deficient of it.

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Monday, April 2, 2012

Reflection for the Week

The wisdom of God consists of God’s plans for the world, including the past (creation), the present (everyday life), and the future (new heaven and earth). The details of the present find their meaning in the whole, which unfolds as past and is projected as future. It’s not as if this wisdom for us can be put in a plastic container and stored away for safe keeping. Wisdom is too big and too explosive for that. First and foremost it is as treasure given to fragile human beings who are to pass it on in various ways. Thus, the wisdom of God can never remain a matter of simple reception or possession. It must be acted on and flow into all areas of life. No doubt this action will be, at times, challenging, difficult, and costly, as it was in the stories of our predecessors Job and Qohelet, but following wisdom will lead us onto the path of life and help keep our footsteps moving in the right direction.

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Saturday, March 31, 2012

Alpine Signs of Spring

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Alpine Spring arriving

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Spring is coming in the Alps

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Thursday, March 29, 2012

The ZigZag Café

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

What do you think an appropriate self-love might look like?

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Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Spiritual Rhythms of Life for Today

Enacted love is the cornerstone of obedience. Christians are often enamored with flights of fancy that result in them assuming that when it comes to God, it is “to do” that really counts. To merely obey, however, throws us into grave danger of missing the deep relational component of faith, which insists that true doing streams out of being – being a child of God. The personal and paradigmatic core of love of God and others finds its prime expression in Jesus’ courageous obedience. His cross marks the how, but his love explains the why. This means, for us, that being in community with God is being loved by God and loving God, which is the dynamic center and final integration point for the rest; obedience, justice, and doctrine, are never ends in and of themselves.

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Monday, March 26, 2012

Reflection for the Week

We are increasingly facing uncertain times today. As natural disasters, financial chaos, and unprecedented tragedies proliferate, please pray for all those who are suffering. Pray that relief efforts would actually be able to get to the people in need and that the power and truth of the gospel forges its way into all the earth. Yet, remember that we have a significant part to play in God’s unfolding drama of his mission to humanity and the world. Seeing ourselves with others as part of this dramatic story is imaginative, challenging, and rich. May God help us to be presently living in the light of the return of Christ, so that our actions towards social, political, and ethical transformation will gain credibility, as we await the redeemer who will renew all things.

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Thursday, March 22, 2012

The ZigZag Café

We will be convening here at the ZigZag café, Suisse, on Thursdays for conversation and dialogue. I invite you to stop by every Thursday for the question of the day. Your thoughts and participation are most welcome. Pull up a stool, avec un café, un thé, ou un chocolat chaud, et un croissant, and join in here on Thursday at the ZZ café.

For today:

What is wisdom and where is it to be found?

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