Multiplying Jesus Work

April 18, 2011

John spends a lot of time recording Jesus’ teaching during his final week. Jesus has spent about three years gathering disciples, that is people who emulate his lifestyle and teaching.

Now Jesus sees that the end is near. All of the various political/religious factions that had something to fear or to lose because of him have now come together in one massive conspiracy.

Many people think Christ is Jesus’ last name. But it was a title. We use Christ, which is derived from the Greek for “anointed one” which in turn was a translation of the Hebrew Messiah, “the anointed one.” What were you anointed for? As King of the Jews.

So, Rome in the person of Pilate did not want a King to rise up. The Pharisees didn’t agree with Jesus view of holiness. The Sadducees who wanted collaboration with Rome as a strategy for the survival of the Temple and the nation, didn’t like the way he stirred up the crowds. In fact, the crowds wanted someone to lead them to victory over the Romans.

The only way out was for Jesus to die. So, he had to prepare his disciples for life after him. It is interesting that several times he tells them to bear fruit. Jesus himself didn’t travel over about 30 miles during his ministry. After he is gone, each disciple will multiply Jesus’ ministry and reach thousands all over the known world.

We are part of that legacy. Because they each went to work forming communities of believers, and the communities begat new communities, we are now followers of Jesus.

And our job is to continue to bear fruit, because there will always be those whose life has strayed and needs the love and power of Jesus. It’s up to us to do the work begun by Jesus’ death.

Love one another

April 15, 2011

John records Jesus’ last few days with his closest friends as a time of instruction. Jesus was preparing them for their life without his presence.

Twice John records Jesus saying he is giving one command–to love one another. The second time he said it, he added, and this is true love that you give up your life for another.

If that was Jesus last command (and he said in between that if you love him, you’ll keep his commands), then have we ever forgotten that command! You don’t even have to look back at the sordid history of the Christian church. Just look around today.

Do you belong to a church where there are critics and sometimes even fractious behavior? Are people prone to call other Christians “non-Christians” because they don’t believe the same set of propositions?

Who has a lifestyle of helping others? Actually we know a few. Right? And we think they are saints. But why aren’t all of us that way? Maybe we forget. Maybe we get caught up in ourselves and we forget what Jesus taught and what he did. And that we are supposed to emulate him. That’s what disciples do. And we’re Jesus’ disciples, right?

I wonder what would happen if all Christians would practice this command. Would people outside the church be attracted to the church? Would more people want to become Christian instead of being cynical about Christians?

Maybe this is something we should try.

Tell Me Where You’re Going Jesus

April 14, 2011

It is only a few days until Jesus will die. He tries to tell the disciples. He says, “I am going away soon to be with the Father.” Peter asks where Jesus is going as in what village. Thomas says if you don’t give us the Google Maps itinerary, we don’t know where you are going and we can’t follow. Phillip asks just who is this Father you’re going to visit. Can you show him to us?

They have been with Jesus for some time, probably from two to three years. Yet, they still think literally instead of spiritually when Jesus tells them something.

He tells them that they will have God’s Spirit with them when he is gone. Then they will understand.

Jesus left. The Holy Spirit came with great power (think Pentecost, which was only a few weeks later). They understood. And then they did great things.

Sometimes you think you know what will happen in the future. You think you’ll know the experience. You think you know how you’ll act. But you don’t. Really.

Sometimes it’s after the experience, when you have more experiences. You reflect on the experience and ask God to enter your being and guide you. Then, you understand.

People of the early Church, gathering in small communities to pray, eat, teach. learn, all experienced Jesus as present in their group. He was real to them.

When is the last time Jesus was real to you? I’m not talking psychological delusion–although we have many deluded people in our society. If you are in tune with God’s Spirit, it is truly a different dimension. The first followers had to stop thinking literally and start thinking spiritually. When they did, they were alive and full of power. That experience did not end with them. History is full of examples of people who opened themselves to God’s Spirit and led powerful lives of great benefit to others.

Jesus died. We remember that in preparation for Easter celebration. But he lives. And the Spirit continues to be the most powerful force in the world.

How do you react to situations

April 13, 2011

For some reason the personalities of Jesus’ closest friends has been on my mind this week. We like to look at Peter’s reactions and criticize his lack of consistency and his denial under stress. We think we’d be better. I doubt it. Honestly. I don’t deal with authority figures well. Just ask my wife about times she tells asks me to do something. How about in a life and death situation where the authority figures have weapons and legal right to use them–on you?

Aside from Judas, the only other glimpse we have at a friend in this crisis situation is John. I have a feeling that whereas Peter was borderline manic/depressive–subject to mood swings and impetuousness–John was more balanced. He seems to have had more control over his emotions, was accustomed to leadership (probably his father was in the Jewish elite) and more “spiritual.” (I’ll define that someday.)

It was John to whom Jesus entrusted his mother as he was dying. (One wonders where Jesus’ brothers were.) John was the stability that is sometimes needed, whereas Peter was the forceful personality that, when harnessed and guided correctly, propels a movement.

Jesus picked people carefully. He obviously saw a need for both personality types. He saw that Peter had trouble coming to grips with his thoughts and feelings. But he knew that once Peter had fully digested the situation he would be the rock upon which all could stand. And he know that John would bring that stable, intelligent, unifying force to the movement.

We have different personality types. They are neither right nor wrong. They need to be understood. Weaknesses need to be addressed and strengths emphasized. Personality types are not for judgement about whose is better. They are to be understood so that you can assume your proper role in the furtherance of God’s kingdom.

Ask yourself honestly. How would you react? Are you a Peter? A John? Something else? How can you absorb the experiences of Jesus’ dying and use it to the glory of God?

Anticipation of God

April 12, 2011

When I was young, I played on a baseball team. I have memories of summer rains on game days when it would rain all day and I’d be inside and wishing I were out. The memories returned yesterday. It rained all day. I seldom have the time or opportunity to play golf anymore. But I’d been invited to sub in a local league.

I thought about waiting and anticipation. Remember waiting for Easter in anticipation of large family dinners, dressing up, candy, more candy? I’d forgotten.

We know the end of the story–that there is an Easter. When our teacher and pioneer in the faith actually died and then returned. He was more than teacher, but he was really the pioneer for us.

The first followers didn’t know the end of the story. For them, the waiting was over. The game was cancelled. It was only rain. They didn’t know what was next. The anticipation was probably more akin to dread. It was only a few days. But any who were able to keep emotionally stable in that time were not human.

From the joyous entry only a few days ago to the sudden secret arrest, quick trial and execution. It all happened so fast. Humans cannot digest all those emotional swings and combine them with the final week of teaching that rapidly. It takes time.

But then news trickled in. First then grave was empty. Then reports of sightings. Then there he was. I bet those first Christians awoke every day of the rest of their lives anticipating relationship with Jesus. I wonder how many of us do.

Betraying a Friend

April 11, 2011

Betrayal. What is it? Judas betrayed Jesus. He visited the Jewish religious/political leaders and offered to betray Jesus for money. Jesus said that one of his inner circle would betray him. But I don’t understand exactly what it meant.

We know from the Gospels that the religious/political leaders were threatened by Jesus. They wanted him out of the way. That meant, they needed him killed. Even though he had not organized a movement, he led a loosely organized protest movement that could get out of hand at any time.

Then Jesus used theater (always a good protest movement tactic) to enter Jerusalem in the manner of a newly crowned king at the beginning of a holy time when the population was greatly expanded due to the presence of pilgrims in the city. Sort of like pouring gasoline on the flames. But the removal of Jesus had to be done quickly and quietly lest the pot get stirred any more.

Here’s what puzzles me. Jesus taught openly in the temple. He was arrested by the temple police. I cannot believe that the leaders of the police did not know who Jesus was. But, what we know about what Judas did was that he led the police to where Jesus was when he was away from the crowds, late at night, in a quiet place. He identified Jesus to the police and the arrest was made.

People have speculated about why Judas acted this way. John says it was because he was greedy and wanted money. I guess I’d believe a guy who was there rather than someone speculating about psychological motivations without ever meeting the person.

I guess the act of betrayal is one where someone trusts you and you act against them. I wonder how often I’ve let some need of mine get in the way of the needs of someone else. I wonder what would happen if we all acted in such a way that we noticed that we were about to betray a friend by gossiping about them or not being there when they need help or working to prevent them from doing something they want to do. Would we all get along better and live with more justice? Would God smile?

Should the Church be led by Scholars?

April 8, 2011

One reason I like to read Donald Miller (Blue Like Jazz and other books) is that he takes the time to think and has the courage to write ideas that I’ve played with for years. Or at least ask the questions.

In a blog post this week, he asks if the church should be led by teachers and scholars. As he puts it, the early leaders were fishermen, tax collectors, at least one political activist (Simon the Zealot–that being a radical political party).

I do not subscribe to the popular theory perpetuated by scholars that these were uneducated, illiterate peasants. But I think they were students, not scholars The teachers and scholars of the day were the Pharisees and scribes (as identified in the New Testament).

Think about today. You pretty much have to have a Master’s degree to be a church leader. That is a symbol of scholarly achievement. But Miller points out that much of the division of the church is a result of scholarly disagreement or “academic divisions.” He says, “The reason I don’t understand my Lutheran neighbor is because a couple of academics got into a fight hundreds of years ago. And the rest of the church followed them because, well, they were our leaders. So now we are divided under divisions caused by arguments a laboring leadership might never have noticed or cared about.”

Miller says that we think Christian growth comes from studying more. But Jesus pushed his disciples out and said something like, “you know enough, you have a guide, go out and teach the world to obey my commands.” It’s actually the doing that leads to the growing.

I teach. But I’d rather be a guide than a scholar. I gave up that life path many years ago.

You can’t witness to theory. You can witness to what you’ve experienced and then reflected upon. This Lent, perhaps you should become less reliant on Scholars and Teachers for your growth and go out and do what Jesus wanted. After all, that’s one reason he died.

You Are How You Dress?

April 6, 2011

I haven’t seen so many dark suits, white shirts and ties since the last funeral I attended. I’m at a trade fair in Germany. the Europeans typically dress very conservatively. My boss told one guy, “It’s in Gary’s contract that he doesn’t wear ties.” <sigh>

Then this morning at breakfast I listened to a bunch of Americans dressed in their funeral suits as they talked about the beer garden last night. I thought, “The only time Jesus talked about appearance such as that was to talk about those who thought too well of themselves–remember the ‘cup that’s clean on the outside and dirty on the inside’ phrase?”

(I’m writing this at 9 am my time, 3 am for those of you in the eastern US.) When you get up to go to work or whatever. How are you dressed. Are you a slob on both the inside and outside? Or is your outside appearance masking a darkness inside?

Me? Another day with no tie 😉  But Lord knows, I’m no saint, either.

God’s Purpose Is Hidden

April 5, 2011

A beautiful sunrise over Machsee (kind of a lake) in Hannover this morning. That’s always an aid to meditation.

Reading in Luke this morning. No particular reason. That was open when I opened the New Testament on my iPad. But there Jesus was explaining to the disciples about how he would need to die and then be resurrected to complete his purpose on Earth.

But the disciples could not comprehend what he was saying. The meaning was hidden from them. I don’t think that passage means that God purposely withheld meaning. I think it means that sometimes we don’t know things. And we aren’t going to learn them–we also say things like “uncover the mystery” or “find the hidden meaning”–until our experiences and education/study prepare us to understand.

I would not criticize the disciples for not understanding. They were simply not quite prepared. Jesus was teaching them a little bit at a time. They would not fully understand until the experiences of the death, resurrection and subsequent teaching happened. Even then, it probably took the Pentecost experience where they openly began preaching to fully unlock the mystery for them.

We are not unlike that with our kids. We teach them certain things. But it is only in their heads–intellectual knowledge. Until they have the experience, they won’t really understand.

Just so with us. Many of us are brought up learning the Bible stories. But until we experience God, we don’t really know. That is where the “Spiritual Disciplines” help. Such activities as prayer, study, worship, community and others set us on the path to be open to God. “Some things must be believed to be seen.” It’s true in science, and it’s true with God. But when you open yourself to God, you open up the possibility to experience God. Trust me. It works.

Teach Me Wisdom

April 4, 2011

I’m in Germany this week, but fortunately no early morning meetings. I can keep my regular schedule for the most part. Except maybe Thursday when I’m flying down to Austria to visit a company for the day. It’s good to travel and experience other cultures. I’m at a huge international trade fair in Hannover (in the north). It’s a chance to meet many of my friends from around the world.

Psalm 51 is amazing. There is so much packed into these few verses of poetry. You really get a look into David’s soul and how devastated he was when Nathan pointed out how bad his actions were (the stories around Bathsheba).

“You desire truth in the inward being, therefore teach me wisdom in my secret heart.”

There is an ancient piece of advice, “Know thyself.” Until you can look inside and see the “real you”–or probably more accurately, until you come to realize the way you have thought and acted, you can live in a dream world of your own choosing.

David is saying here (among other things, I’m sure) that God wants us to acknowledge the truth or our inward thoughts that cover up what we’ve done that is wrong. Only when we see what we’ve thought and done will God start to teach us wisdom.

It is sickness to dwell on your past wrongful thoughts and actions, but it is healing to realize what you’ve done and then to deal with the consequences.

We’re in Lent–the traditional time to reflect on our failings and wrong thoughts and deeds. It’s also a good time to seek healing from the consequences of our wrongs. Jesus died to do that, but we have to relive that every day as God teaches us wisdom–the acknowledgement of our shortcomings and the growth that springs out from that acknowledgement.