One of our Burlington City Church college students, Kevin Valentin, shared this video with me today. I’d say Kevin gets what God has called us to do as His church in this city. Please pray for Kevin V and others as they pray about launching a Home Fellowship in the downtown/university area of Burlington in the coming months.
Discipleship
Transforming Power
I was prayer walking around Burlington this past Thursday and decided to stop at Battery Park where I could gaze across Lake Champlain towards the Adirondack Mountains in the distance. It was a perfect place to meditate on scripture and pray- early in the day and just cold enough that I had the park to myself. Continue reading
Random Tuesday Morning Strategic Thoughts
Over the past couple of weeks, I’ve spent some time digging into what the Apostle John records Jesus saying in John 6 and 7. This morning two major points stuck out to me about how Jesus approached ministry:
- He was terrible at giving a sales-pitch.
- He was 100% against self-promotion. Continue reading
King & Kingdom
This past Sunday in our Home Fellowship we took a look at the wise men, scribes, and King Herod in Matthew 2. One big point of discussion was how these non-Jewish wise men traveled cross country prepared to worship the King. One side note we briefly discussed was how all “kingdom work” scripturally is somehow rooted in worshiping Jesus as King. It made me think about how in modern evangelical Christianity we throw around the term “kingdom work,” yet we somehow can still separate this idea from the King Himself. So, what does “kingdom work” practically mean? Continue reading
Can “cultivating community” become idolatry?
“Cultivating community” has become a buzzword (er phrase) within my generation of Jesus followers. We want authentic, transparent, deep, and meaningful relationships with other people. We want to share our lives with each other. We want to share our time, energy, resources, and abilities. We want to create a relational space that serves as a safe haven to be loved, accepted, known, and to know others. All of this sounds great! But if we’re not careful, cultivating community can quickly become an idol that draws us away from Jesus and His mission. Continue reading
Your will be done… maybe
I woke up this past Saturday excited to be alive and why not?! I had just awoken from seven plus hours of sleep on my memory foam mattress. I was relaxing on the couch, sipping freshly brewed coffee from my french press, looking out the window at Lake Champlain in the distance. I quickly caught up on the weekend’s news on my iPhone’s USA Today app. I could hear my two year old son, Jude, beginning to stir and call “Daddy, you downstairs?” It would only be an hour until my wife and infant daughter came down too. I could not help but think, “isn’t it wonderful following Jesus in Burlington, VT.” It’s so easy to pray your kingdom come, your will be done under these circumstances. Continue reading
Giftedness meets Focus & Discipline
This morning I was reading an interesting USA Today article about wrestler (think Olympics not WWE) Cael Sanderson. The article stood out for two reasons. Number one, as some of you know, I was a wrestler in high school and an exhibit of athletic mediocrity. Continue reading
Making Disciples-Asking The Right Questions
As I continue to pray through the issue of making disciples, I’m increasingly convinced that the average Jesus-follower in America today has little idea how this works. On a personal level, I’ve been burdened by this question: with all the time, energy, and resources that I’ve poured into “doing ministry” (teaching, organizing worship services, serving the community), how effective have I been in equipping others to make disciples? Continue reading
Thoughts on Making Disciples
I’ve been thinking a lot lately about the whole concept of making disciples. Maybe it’s the discussions my Home Fellowship is having as we dig into the gospel of John. Maybe it’s the byproduct of researching the role of the 1st century rabbi. Maybe it’s praying through who God wants me to invest in and how that should look. Continue reading
Better message than Better Morals
As followers of Jesus we have a better message than “our morals are better.” Unfortunately, that’s often what our neighbors and cultures think our message is all about. Several weeks ago I read an interesting Easter post by Ricky Gervais (the humorous yet irreverent comedian who hosted the Golden Globes) which really made me think about this. His basic premise is that if the 10 Commandments give an overview of what it means to be a good Christian then he passes the test. He states, “I am of course not a good Christian in the sense that I believe that Jesus was half man, half God, but I do believe I am a good Christian compared to a lot of Christians.”
I wonder as I’m seeking to follow Jesus in the midst of a moral revolution if this is the message my nonChristian friends hear: I’m right and you’re wrong… you’re bad and I’m better…if you follow Jesus, he’ll make you a better person just like me.
Let me just say, though, before someone declares me a heretic: morals matter. From scripture we can see that God is holy and cares greatly about integrity, character, honesty, justice, compassion, righteousness, and right vs. wrong. I do think sometimes as Christians, though, we market our “better morals” at the expense of the gospel of Jesus. So, here are a few thoughts I’ve been chewing on:
1) Focusing on our “better” morals makes us the heroes. Unwittingly, we can shine the spotlight on our ourselves as we talk about what we can do and the good we’ve accomplished. We can quickly come across as those who like to sound the trumpet as they give to the needy or pray on the street corners so they may be seen by others (Jesus’ words in Matthew 5). No one likes it when someone rings their own bell anyway. Also, as followers of Jesus we should know by now that we are not the heroes in this story- someone far greater is.
2) I’m not certain that our morals are always better. I have a Muslim friend who is an excellent husband and father. He displays compassion, integrity, and work ethic exceeding that of many Christians I know. I also have homosexual friends who are incredibly benevolent to the poor and disenfranchised. The message of better morals rings hollow in these situations. When we place the focus on others’ sin and shortcomings instead of our own we lose credibility and the privilege to speak into their lives.
3) Letting the pendulum swing to embracing tolerance is not the answer either. UNESCO gives this definition for tolerance: Tolerance is respect, acceptance and appreciation of the rich diversity of our world’s cultures, our forms of expression and ways of being human. Tolerance is harmony in difference. Here’s my Kevinized definition: tolerance says I’m ok, you’re ok, we’re all ok, so let’s just stay that way and enjoy each other. Here’s the BIG PROBLEM: we’re not OK. If we take an honest look at ourselves and the world around us we’d know it and tolerance does nothing substantial to solve the ripple effects of our sinfulness.
4) Grace is a much stronger message than better morals or embracing tolerance. Grace takes the focus off of how good we’re attempting to be and places the focus where it belongs: the goodness of God. Grace also offers a much more radical acceptance than tolerance. Grace says to come as you are, let’s see the real you—the good, the bad and the ugly of who you are—and by the way you get to see the good, bad, and ugly of my life too. I’m messed up, you’re messed up, we’re all messed up, but we don’t stay there—we recognize that because of the death and resurrection of Jesus, God has something better for all of us to pursue…and we are going to pursue this with God together.
Should we care about living lives of character, integrity, morality, and justice in the midst of moral relativism? Yes.
Should we set the pace in the way we sacrificially serve our neighbors and especially the poor and disenfranchised? Yes.
But we must always remember none of this is because of who we are and what we have done but all because of who Jesus is and what He has done. Our good works are merely the overflow of a life being transformed and overflowing with the grace of God.