Have you ever been hiking at night? If the woods are dense enough, almost no moonlight or starlight penetrates the thick canvas of the forest roof. When you turn your headlamp on, the immediate area in front of you lights up, and everything else is draped in blackness. You can see clearly for maybe thirty feet, then after that it tapers quickly back into pitch black. There’s a certain amount of faith that you have to walk in when you are night hiking. You have to trust that the trail will take you where it is supposed to go. You have to have faith that the trail itself is safe, even if it runs alongside a step cliff or next to a rushing river. You trust that the noises you hear are really just big squirrels and not hungry bears looking for tasty, out of shape and slightly plump, stray hikers. So you hike in faith, knowing for sure only what lies 30 feet in front of you and hoping that you’ll reach your campsite before Roscoe the Mountain Man jumps from the shadows to demonstrate to you his deep knowledge of the movie “Deliverance.” It really is exciting. Believe me. Try it sometime. Well, I am on a night hike of sorts right now, figuratively speaking. All of us that have entered into this amazing adventure that is following Christ are on night hikes. Our destination is certain: the Kingdom of God. Our trail is firm: the Path of Righteousness and the Way of the Cross. Our light, The Holy Spirit, illuminates all that we need to know in order to navigate through the world that is shrouded in the darkness of sin. The path that I am currently on is not one that I ever thought that I would take. It is a crazy trail that already has seen miracles, struggles, leaps of faith, and mighty acts of God. And we're only at the beginning. My hiking companions are my wife Brandie, and my three sons, Sam, Jack and Luke. It is a journey that we would love to share with all of you, if you want to read along.
Thursday, September 16, 2010
MIssional Holiness
How do we move from one model to another? Dr. Tennent suggests, and I agree, that faith and fruit have to be wed. This is what we find in Wesley's theology. So much pop theology today ends with the death and resurrection of Christ: the beginning and end of our relationship with God is faith in Jesus. But Scripture moves past the Gospels and into Acts and the Epistles. Here we see that the Holy Spirit was poured out on the Church and the Church became the incarnation of Christ in the World...and it still is today! In other words, Faith in Christ is the beginning, but it must progress to an endless production of fruit in our lives by the Holy Spirit
The Church doesn't just proclaim what Christ did for the world, the Church is what Christ is doing in the world today! Because the Spirit has been poured out on the Church, we are made to be fruitful, to be Holy just as He is Holy (Lev. 11:44, 1 Peter 1:16). As we grow in Christ, then the Spirit matures us and we become more and more fruitful. Faith and fruitfulness. Without fruit, our faith is meaningless (James 2:14-17).
One final note from Dr. Tennent's address: "Holiness is the mark of the Church. The world will not be won with unholy people." First God called Israel to be his holy people. That calling carries over to the Church, for in Christ we become Abraham's descendants and members of the Kingdom. If we refuse to carry the mark of Holiness, then we refuse to belong to the Kingdom of God. If we are not part of the Kingdom of God, how can we fight for it? This is Missional Holiness. Missional Holiness leads us from seeing church as something that we go to, to being something that we are.
If you want to hear Dr. Tennents address, click here, and look for the September 9th address. One note about the address: Pneumatology is the study of the Holy Spirit.
P.S. Sorry that my post is late this week. Only a week and a half into the semester and I already feel behind! I'll try to be on time next week.
Monday, September 6, 2010
This Weekend
Maybe it is a little too early to begin thinking about a name, but I can't help it. I am open to suggestions, so offer any bright ideas any of you may have. I have mixed feelings about naming a church,and since I process information by thinking out loud, I will think "out loud" while I'm typing:
On one hand there is the school of thinking that would say to shy away from anything that sounds too "churchy". No Saint names, no denominational tags, no biblical geography: Mt. Zion, St. Peter's, or anything that ends in Anglican Church (or Methodist, or Baptist, or whatever) would all be out of the question. The thinking is that all of these carry such negative connotations with un-churched or the disenfranchised. Names that are vague like South East Community Fellowship or The Journey are cool because they sound a little more open and don't suggest dogmatic, uptight, and hypocritical people reside on the inside.
And I can see the point here, I really can. But I have also really come to appreciate the art of naming something. Naming a church St. Patrick's carries with it the Celtic churches traditions, a church named St. Jame's hopefully would try to embody the truth of Jame's epistle, and so on. There is meaning in a name, and people and places live into that meaning.
OK. I really am no closer to coming to any conclusions. Maybe I should name it Gainseville's North Georgia Journey Anglican Community Fellowship. Any help?
Keep praying. Our meeting is at 3:00 on Saturday. We really are underway!