Monday, November 25, 2019

680 - Thanks Any Way


Spirituality Column #680
November 26, 2019
Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

Thanks Any Way
By Bob Walters

“…give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.” Apostle Paul, 1 Thessalonians 5:18

“Every blessing I don’t turn back to praise turns into pride.” – Rick Grover, E91 Pastor

Some years ago in this column I made the point that I’d broken myself of the habit of saying I was “proud” of this or that because too often, pride is a sin.

Life has presented to me its share of successes and failures, but Christian and biblical study later in life has made it plain that rather than be proud of this or ashamed of that, pride and despair aren’t where I want to spend my time.  Satan smiles when we dwell there, but I think “be thankful and pray a lot” is the far better way of Christ.

It is a common human station – when we come to a full encounter with the truth of our salvation through the sacrifice of Jesus – to want to look at the sin and problems and fear in our lives through the lens of guilt and shame.  True and present as all those items may be, and surely they are why Jesus died on the cross, our lives won’t really change if we remain mired in the neurosis of our misbehaviors.

Jesus came to break that chain: to give us hope in the Kingdom still to come and confidence in the eternal truth of God.  We mustn’t miss the blessing of not only our restored, original relationship with the Father through Jesus the Son, but the truth we know through Jesus of God’s love, goodness, and righteousness.  Pride blots that truth.

So I’m thankful … thankful for my wife and her many talents, for my sons and their many successes, for my church and its steady fellowship, for purposeful work to do, and for so many more blessings and challenges.  Praise God for an interesting life.

Pastor Rick’s quote above came in Sunday’s message he delivered about gratitude as a heightened virtue when blessing becomes praise.  He used the familiar story of the ten lepers in Luke 17:11-19, where ten were healed by Jesus but only one, a thankful Samaritan, returned “praising God in a loud voice.”  Leprosy, Rick explained, kills the feeling in our bodies leaving us susceptible to the worst kinds of rot and infection because we cannot feel pain. 

Two things occurred to me. 1) The other nine were more interested in showing the priests they had been cleansed than in praising God, and 2) Jesus the great healer knew their (and our) pain, which the Jewish law – and Jewish leaders – did not.

We don’t know how many of the ten were and were not Jews, but the great lesson is that it was a pagan Samaritan – not a Jew – who most appreciated the gift and glorified God with his thanks and praise.  While Jewish Law was occupied with “clean and unclean” and the other nine focused on the priests, Jesus focused on the cleansing, and the Samaritan – who didn’t need the priests or the Law – focused on praising God. 

Our thanksgiving to Jesus shines because our spiritual “feeling” is restored and the spiritual rot in our lives is replaced by the great, gracious spiritual cleansing and renewal we are afforded in Jesus Christ.  In Him, by Him, and through Him we are assured of God’s loving truth, the reality of His Kingdom, and our eternal home in it. 

I’m always thankful for a good meal, but a full stomach is no match for a full heart.  My prayer is that no matter what Satan tempts, what this life presents, or what my own pride attempts, I’ll hold tight to Jesus and say “thanks,” any way and every way.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) notes: happiness is when you get stuff; joy is when you give stuff. Happy Thanksgiving! … and pass the stuffing. 
BTW … here is a link to that “pride” column from 11-26-13, #367 - Pride, Peace and Thanksgiving. Six years ago to the date.  Hmmm.  Coincidence.

Monday, November 18, 2019

679 - 'I Didn't Need That'


Spirituality Column #679
November 19, 2019
Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

‘I Didn’t Need That’
By Bob Walters

“That’s life in the NFL.” – character Sean Parker in the movie, The Social Network

Let’s talk about the NFL last week, starting with … Sheesh.

My old mentor and minister Russ Blowers was often heard to say, “God loves to see His kids play!”  But that helmet-swinging, head-kicking, beat-down, street-fight melee at the end of the Steelers-Browns game last Thursday I’m sure doesn’t qualify.

Who needed that?  I can’t possibly be the only person who viewed replays of the carnage and thought all of the NFL was in desperate need of either a deep, general soul-searching suspension of play, or at least a serious come-to-Jesus reckoning.

For full disclosure, I’ve mostly tuned out the NFL since the Colin Kaepernick protests. I was a sportswriter in my career which included a brief turn as PR Director of the Colts when they first moved to Indianapolis, so I completely “get” the grandness of high level sports and human endeavor for excellence.  It’s such a great platform, and I believe Russ is right.  God does indeed love to see His kids play.

And then the thug ethic of unconstrained and unthinking criminal mayhem bursts into bloom.  This destructive moment on national TV and the ensuing, endless televised and social media replays sully the sport’s grandeur into the gutter.

Yet … there are also NFL players like Nick Foles.  Remember him?  He was the 2017 MVP quarterback for the Lombardi-Trophy-hoisting Super Bowl LII champion Philadelphia Eagles.  Foles eloquently witnessed for Jesus Christ after the win.  Not, “Jesus wanted us to win,” but “My purpose in life is Jesus, not football.”

Foles started this NFL season in Jacksonville with the Jaguars but broke his collarbone 10 plays into the first game.  Just last week he returned to practice and in the interview afterwards a scribe asked him about coming back, inquiring, “…I know you are a man of faith but you’re also human and didn’t you ever have any doubts?”

Nick responded, beautifully: “No.  Right when I felt this thing break and going into the locker room I realized, ‘God, this isn’t exactly what I was thinking when I came to Jacksonville.’ [But] at the end of the day if this is the journey you want me to go on I’m going to glorify you in every action, good or bad.”  Now that is life in the NFL.

“You know, I still could have joy in an injury,” he said. “People say ‘that’s crazy’ but when you believe in Jesus, and go out there … it changes your heart.  And you only understand it when that purpose is in your life.”  Talk about “come-to-Jesus” reckoning.

Foles added, “Just like when I hoisted the Lombardi Trophy [after the Super Bowl win] the reason I’m smiling is [because] my faith was in Christ and at that moment I realized I didn’t need that trophy to define who I was because I was already in Christ.

“That’s my message when I play; the same thing happens when I get injured 

“My purpose isn’t football; my purpose is impacting people, and my ministry is the locker room. … I’m a better person than I was before because of the trial that I just went under.  I know that’s a sermon in itself.  [But] it’s not always about prosperity.  I don’t believe in the prosperity gospel.  Read the Bible; there will be trials along the way. …”

The video link is here: Nick Foles Jaguars Press Conference.  It’s wonderful.

The reporter’s question, “You’re a man of faith but you’re also human; didn’t you have doubts?” begs a subtle point: did you ever notice that in Jesus … we doubt less?

Trophies? “I didn’t need that,” Foles said.  I’m sure God loves to see him play.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) would rather see replays of Foles than the fight.
Monday, November 11, 2019

678 - Reasonable Faith

Spirituality Column #678
November 12, 2019
Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

Reasonable Faith
By Bob Walters

“Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have.” – 1 Peter 3:15

I had a zillion Bible and theological questions when I became a serious, baptized, born-again Christian back in 2001.

At age 47 I was a blank slate when it came to Jesus.  Thankfully, God put some great people close to me early on – Russ Blowers, Dave Faust, George Bebawi, John Samples – who could field any question.  I needed answers and definitions and in that season of my life, for better or worse, I was blessed with time to read the Bible.

And I mean, I read all of it.  Genesis to Revelation.  I cheated just a bit skimming some of the repetitive sections in Deuteronomy and Chronicles, and I didn’t always read absolutely every name or place in every chapter.  I discovered that reading Psalms – in order, en masse – was counterproductive.  Better to take them one-at-a-time; better to pray over them, better to let them soak in, better to pray them to God as you go. Slowly.

Anyhow, Russ – who died 12 years ago this past weekend, Nov. 10, 2007 – loved people and taught me to see chaos in the world not as punishment but as evidence of a fallen world, hence the need for Christ, hence the hope of eternal joy.

Dave, the church pastor who baptized me, taught my first “Bible study” and suddenly this “old book” (that’s what I used to call it) that made no sense to me earlier in life came vibrantly alive.  I met God and Jesus on its pages.  The Spirit turned out to be no joke.  Life’s moment-by-moment “reality” shifted to solid reliance on eternal truth.

George – good grief, where would I be without George Bebawi? – laughed when I asked him early on, “Why was evil allowed to enter the Garden of Eden?”  “Bob, it is a story” he answered in jovial assuredness.  That response threw me at the time but when we realize, unquestionably, that God communicates in stories, it was a perfect answer. I learned to focus less on Satan, sin, and the snake and more on the truth of the story: that God is righteous but gives His created beings freedom to love Him or not.

Why?  God is good and God is love, but love cannot be coerced.  Neither can it be defined.  When we define love, we lose it because we have given it limits.  Neither God nor love has limits. I wrote recently that love is never a list but that truly divine and sacrificial love allows us to join God’s grace, obedience, and example that we see in Christ.  Jesus is the model for God’s perfection of humanity.  Our joy is chasing it.

John Samples – pastor, friend, counselor, and encourager – has trusted me with teaching his Bible study class and standing in a small pulpit for him, preaching Christ.

All this is to say that, more than what we will ever “know,” it is our relationships that magnify a walk with Christ, just as they illuminate the eternal community within the Holy Trinity – Father, Son, Spirit.  In our relationships we taste, briefly, the obedience, grace, love, and glory of Kingdom life.  It is real, though I cannot – and have learned that I do not need to – define it beyond the great peace and hope of knowing Jesus.

Yes, learn about the Bible, the Church, history, tradition, and 2,000 years of human intellectual and spiritual investment that tells us when we know Jesus, we know truth exists.  But I’ve learned that the reason for my faith is not what I know.

The reason for my faith resides in the relationships my faith has created.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) notes that 1 Peter 3:15 (above), says to give an answer for “your” faith; not the faith of others around you … that’s the Spirit’s job.
Monday, November 4, 2019

677 - Let's Do This


Spirituality Column #677
November 5, 2019
Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

Let’s Do This
By Bob Walters

"Jesus never asked anyone to form a church, ordain priests, develop elaborate rituals and institutional cultures, and splinter into denominations.  His two great requests were that we 'love one another as I have loved you' and that we share bread and wine together as an open channel of that interabiding love." - Cynthia Bourgeault.

That quote/meme showed up on my Facebook feed recently and I thought, “Hey, true enough.”  We do tend to complicate and encumber our simple faith in Jesus with a great many earthly and “un-requested” human structures and rules.

And Lord, we do love structures and rules.  Then I looked at it again thought, “Uh-oh.”  Am I alone or do you see the problem, too?  What’s up with “requests”?

I couldn’t resist and immediately posted this Fb reply: “So true … so simple … but those are commands, not requests.  John 13:34, 1 Cor. 11:25, RSV.  We call it ‘Maundy’ Thursday because it means ‘mandate.’ As in … ‘do this …’ It’s not a negotiable.  Oops … sorry. Got carried away there.  But Jesus didn’t say ‘please.’”

There it is.  We are pretty crummy slaves of Christ if we think He is asking us for assent to His will and purpose.  Jesus wasn’t one for small talk or begging for approval.  Everywhere in the Bible He speaks, he speaks with authority.  And it is not just the authority of knowing His material, but the tacit Godly authority of, “This Is How It Is.”

Now, the miracle and mystery of Christian faith is that we have total freedom to accept or reject Christ.  We are not slaves by coercion; we make ourselves slaves because we see in Jesus not only God’s grace and glory, but we understand that His message is, if I may offer an apt, homemade summary of all Jesus’s teaching:

“Here is how divine things will go best for you. I speak the truth. I Am the Truth.”

We have no idea what the informal, cajoling, conversational Jesus might have sounded like, because we never see it in the Bible. At the wedding at Cana, He speaks in direct tones.  With Nicodemus in the night, He speaks of rebirth.  With the woman at the well, He speaks of living water and her own life.  With the Pharisees, he speaks in vexing parables revealing their failures before God. With Pilate, He is mostly silent.

What we never see is a request.  What we never read is, “Hey, do you agree with this?” or “Yeah, I see your point.”  Jesus is quite comfortable with His own counsel.

I’m aware modern culture hates the “S” word – slave.  But it’s appropriate here because in Christ or really even in the world, our greatest freedom is our freedom to choose that to which we will bind our love, our loyalty, our industry, and our faith.  If it is within my God-given freedom that I can choose to honor my fiercest obligations, then I’m happy to pledge my life to Christ regardless what you call it.  This is my identity.

So no, Jesus isn’t requesting that we “follow Him.”  Our life is on the line, period.

I Googled the quote’s author, Cynthia Bourgeault.  She is an Episcopal priest and expert on contemplative prayer.  That’s the “going deep” kind of prayer that plumbs our deepest consciousness rather than our superficial, on-the-fly reactions to the world.  I watched her “one-minute explanation” and was struck that she mentioned the Dualist “yin and yang” but not God, Jesus Christ, or the Holy Spirit.  To me, that’s a problem.

Her sentiment about institutional religion bears merit but I can’t help noting the attendant irony of her station within the Episcopal Church and the absence of Christ.

Let’s just say that when it comes to Jesus, I’d rather do this, not that.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) loves history and tradition … but Jesus most of all.

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