I had the unique privilege and educational opportunity to spend a portion of my day talking with a principal of, what is in my opinion, one of the great design firms and innovators currently out there today. Sometimes life throws us those neat little treats, the gifts that we get to enjoy. I have had the chance to experience their work, be surrounded by the spaces they have designed that were inspired by dreams. It is a unique experience to both enter into and be moved by a space. By the placement of walls, windows, colors, and other stuff that elicits feelings and response. Since that conversation I have spent time praying over the dream here at MCChurch. The possibilities, the future, the impact, the role we will play in God’s grander story of His Kingdom and His people yesterday, today, and tomorrow. Just to spend some time wondering what is it that God is inviting us into, what is it that He will do, what chapter of the story is He about to author.
I was struck by what a unique and wonderful gift it is to dream. To wonder, to be captured by an idea that knows no bounds, that can’t possibly fail, that will change lives, possibly even change the world. Nothing can stop us in our dreams, possibilities are limitless, boundaries non existence, the world is our oyster.
I began to think about what God was dreaming and what he already new before the world was ever formed. When He could have done whatever He wanted when water could be purple and the sky orange, and meatballs could rain from the sky, and a warm summer breeze smell like chocolate. Yet the world we live in is His dream spoken. Form put to ideas, a universe that cries out to the nature of it’s created order and points in worship to it’s creator.
I have spent a lot of time reflecting on Joshua in the first chapter of the book that bears his name and have wondered what it must have been like to hear the voice of God so clearly. And then to look across the river Jordan into a new land, a land God promised to Abraham, and to wonder, to dream about what it would be like to finally live there. To lead the people there, and see God build His people there. What did Joshua dream? How scared was he? What did he pray? How alive did he feel in that moment.
Sadly, to roughly quote one of my favorite authors, we experience most of our dreams in our sleep… Few dare to dream wide awake, to live to see the reality of a dream come to life, to risk communicating the dream, to chase the dream, journey toward its realization and experience the exhilaration of victory and the sting of failure along the way with all the lessons to be learned and stories to be told.
I pray for myself, my family, my Church, and for anyone else who should stumble across these random thoughts. I pray for the boldness to dream wide awake and to be willing to risk to live the dream. And I hope some day to hear the stories, because the good Lord knows they will be great stories.
To quote Steven Tyler “Dream on”
Feeling a bit cheesy now, until next time
The Great Divide — Directors Cut
As we have embarked on our weekly study of Corinthians I am using this blog space to expand on the series, answer follow up questions, and include information that just sometimes does not fit into the context of Sunday morning.
In today’s episoded of Director’s Cut (because I cannot think of a better name for it) we find ourself taking a second look at a tough passage that gets in the face of us Church goers and hits at sensitive areas. And whenever you dig at that sensitivity you expose pain, and pain is just no fun.
This morning is no different. We are doing a complete study of 1 Corinthians and in so doing we are gonna tackle some tough subjects for us all. Paul charges straight out of the gate in his letter at one of the biggest problems that plagues the Church at Corinth and has plagued Churches for centuries. Divisions over leaders, style, methods, and theology. In this case our passage looked at division over leaders. These divisions will pop up again later in the book as we see how the Church was not loving one another but rather causing hurt.
That being said I may have come out of the gate a bit strong myself, this morning. Being that this mornings message was a tough one, I went right after it. Unfortunately I was made aware that I caused a question or two concerning the possibility of a larger problem at MCChurch and may have come off a bit harsh. I did not intend to imply any problem through my strength in tone.
Let me first be really really clear. There are NO major divisions at MCChurch or issues, at least that I am aware of. We are simply human like everyone else and can easily have our little things, and do occasionally have our little things.
Did I have any specific thing in mind no. Did I use a specific example or two from the past, yes, because I felt it served a purpose and exposed that sometimes even our Church can get caught up in this stuff and that we all can do damage even with the best intentions.
Let’s face it we all want to believe we go to the best Church on earth that has no issues and totally handles everything with Grace and Love. It is just not reality on this side of eternity even though we strive for it to the greatest degree that God allows. I had also hoped by using examples from our community to appropriately set the expectation of open and authentic conversation drenched in love that we can understand because they are ours.
In fact allow me to applaud my MCChurch family for their unity in the face of challenges over their history that easily could have ripped us apart. Instead they have been an example of grace and love with their eyes firmly fixed on Christ as we journey together in knowing Him more. I am proud to say I have experienced the best the Church has to offer at MCChurch and wish the same experience for everyone anywhere the Lord may find you.
Now I did keep it personal to us as a Church and to Christianity in general for the sake of reflection in hopefully our journey to be open, honest, and self aware of the things that can drag us apart. But here is where I think an important part of the context may have been missing in my method and perhaps my madness.
I have had a front row seat to two powerful ministries make unfortunate errors in handling situations that could have easily been addressed in a much healthier and holistic fashion (in my opinion, others may disagree). The fall out was a significant body count of people who left those churches, some who fell away from Christianity all together, and even more who bare the scars of being wounded by those unfortunate events. The root, going way back to the beginning was the lack of acknowledging and dealing openly and lovingly with differences that when left untouched in the dark festered and turned into division, and resulted in split.
In addition I have sat through sermons that spent more time trashing every other Church in the local area than it did focusing on the context of scripture or the personal application to the folks sitting right there (this thankfully was not at MCChurch). I have heard of pastors from Churches in the same community be unwilling to talk with one another never mind find a common cause to work toward in serving their community. I have heard of one Church calling another Church terrible names, and for what. That is not good enough! Followers of Jesus can do better and should do better. And my hope, prayer, and deep deep desire is to see Churches be beacons of love, known for their uncommon unity and solidarity in purpose.
So this mornings topic was personal to me because I have felt the effect of what seemed like innocent differences remain unacknowledged, unowned, and undiscussed turn into chasms that could not be crossed. I have walked with friends, good friends, who were crushed under the wheels of it, and have felt the separation of broken relationships because of these things. And I want and pray for better at MCChurch and your Church too. It’s just not worth it.
So I went a little strong today because it’s personal, because I love my MCChurch family too much, and I love my brothers and sisters out there and their Churches too much to see it happen anymore. Lord willing MCChurch will see God’s work continue to be made even more alive in our weakness and any source of potential division will be the catalyst for innovation, and the bedrock for creativity as God takes the things in us that could make us weak to show His strength. My prayer is that if God convicts the things unspoken will move from darkness to light, from unspoken to spoken, from hidden to exposed, because that is the place that God works, convicts, reconciles and heals.
I pray everyone would experience a healthy Church that is marked by love and understanding even when we take on the not so fun topics. May we prayerfully be guided by God to unity by humility.
My prayer is the appeal of Paul in 1 Cor. 1:10 that we would be unified in mind and thought. The picture here is that of a fishing net being mended together. Bring two pieces together for one purpose (catching fish). What a cool picture.
I guarantee I will not always get it right, but I will do my best to make it right as I am a work in progress.