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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