what I’m reading: Judges

Category : God, bible, feeding my brain, miracles

  

Sometimes when you think of the Bible you have two different pictures of God.  There’s the hippy, happy-go-lucky God from the New Testament.  And the mean, angry, I’m-going-to-smote-you God from the Old Testament.  At least that’s how I used to picture the Bible before I actually started to read it.

That’s why I really enjoy books from the Old Testament like Judges – it challenges those misperceptions.  There are two themes in Judges that really resonate with me.  The first is that you can be a total screwup and God will still use you.  The second: God has ridiculous patience. 

The book of Judges takes place after Moses (and Joshua), but before David and the Kings.  It’s a time where Israel kept getting “distracted” by the cultures around them and getting into trouble.  The pattern goes like this:

1.  Israel becomes prosperous and begins to worshiping pagan gods
2.  God gets (justifiably) angry and removes his blessing from Israel
3.  Israel is promptly invaded
4.  Israel (eventually) turns back to God and asks forgiveness
5.  God forgives them and sends them a deliverer (a Judge)
6.  The Judge, with God’s help, delivers Israel
7.  Repeat step 1

Usually at Step 7 I want to yell, “Hey Israel!   Haven’t you learned yet?!”  And it’s usually at that point I remember on most days I haven’t learned either…  It makes Israel’s plight very personal.

Books like Judges teach me that God’s blessings do not depend on my perfection.  Samson (the guy with long hair and super strength) had a weakness for women and prostitutes.  Another Judge tried to manipulate God.  Almost all of the judges have some trait we’d consider “bad” in today’s world.  But God still worked miracles through them.

Doesn’t that mean he can do the same through me?  And through you?

the choices we make

Category : God, choice, sin, taking action

   

“But the LORD God called to the man, ‘Where are you?’” (Genesis 3:9)

   

Have you ever wondered why God – the same God who just finished creating the universe – would need to ask what happened to Adam and Eve?  I mean, doesn’t it seem a bit strange that God didn’t have any problem creating the universe, but he lost a couple of naked humans in a garden?

Well it seems strange to me!  Which is exactly why I’ve spent a lot of time wondering about this! 

What I’ve come to believe is that God was giving Adam and Eve a choice.  He wanted them to decide on how they would respond once they sinned.  Will they want to hide from God?  Or will they admit what they’ve done?

In many ways, this is the very same choice we are faced with today.  When we sin (defined as anything against God’s will) do we run to God?  Or run from God? 

From the very beginning of the Bible, Christianity is a religion of choices.  Adam and Eve had a choice to make.  But just because Adam and Eve royally screwed up their choice, God didn’t revoke our choices.  In fact, the Bible is filled with people making choices.  Both the right ones, and the wrong ones. 

Israel had to decide if they wanted to worship God or pagan idols.  Jews had to decide if Jesus was the Messiah or a false prophet.  The Disciples had to choose to follow Jesus and spread his message or live to see old age.  Even today God gives us choices to make.  We are given the opportunity to help those in need, to show compassion to those around us, to reach out with a helping hand.  In short, to actively show the kind of love Jesus talked about.  Or we can turn our back on all of those things.

God never forces us to to follow him or to act in his name.  He always leaves that decision up to us.   

So why should we choose to make decisions that God approves of?  Because knowing God is more important than anything else.  At some point everything else in this world will let us down.  But God will not.  God will always be there, demonstrating his patience and his love.  That alone is enough for me to strive to make the right decisions. 

I don’t want to pretend some of the choices we face are easy.  Most of them aren’t.  And a great many of them involve giving something up.  Often times something we value a great deal.  That’s not always easy to do when you’re tired, hurting, or distracted.  Heck, it’s not always easy when your rich, prosperous, and healthy! 

Of course I certainly make more than my fair share of bad decisions.  But even in my sin I always come back to one thought: I want to run towards God, not away from God.  Sometimes I just take a longer path. 

does God exist in the dentist office?

Category : God, choice, taking action, trust

   

Sometimes I want to believe that my faith will make my decisions easy.  That somehow believing in God is this magic elixir that makes everything work out.  To be honest I’m not sure where this idea comes from.  I don’t remember ever sitting down and learning this.  It’s just this thought that my mind is always drifting towards.  Of course if you look at the Bible it becomes obvious that the people closest to God are almost always those with huge challenges (some may call them disasters) in their lives.  Jonah was eaten by a whale for cryin’ out loud!

Today is one of those days where I feel like I was just eaten by a whale.  A whale named ‘the dentist’.  I went in for a routine cleaning and learned I had a cavity.  Now the real issue is that this cavity is on the same tooth I paid $250 to get fixed a few months ago.  A tooth that was part of a $5000 dental package involving removal of wisdom teeth, filling cavities, and getting a crown.  And for those of you scoring at home, it was as much fun as it sounds.

That was hard to deal with because, well, I don’t have $5000 laying around in a bucket marked “doing nothing”.  But at least in some way I felt like it was my fault.  I had skipped my regular visits to the dentist for a few years.  So in a way I thought I at least deserved some cavities or tooth problems.  Maybe not $5000 worth, but there was still some culpability there.  In my mind I told myself “lesson learned.”

Today is a different story.  Since that initial visit I’ve had 3 cleanings, I brush 2-3 times a day and floss regularly.  I’m conscientious of my diet, I don’t drink pop or coffee.  I do everything I’m supposed to in order to protect my teeth.  Sometimes I wonder if I’m too obsessive.  But it still wasn’t enough.  Now I’m staring at $1000 bill and a wasted $250 from last year.

Right now I have a choice to make.  I can choose to get the tooth fixed or I can ignore the problem and do nothing, telling myself it’s not fair. Depending what I decide, each choice comes with its own set of consequences and problems.  And while one is an obviously better solution, I am free to choose to ignore the cavity.  No one is forcing me to make the “right” choice. 

But there’s another choice for me as well, one that may not be as obvious.  I can choose to be angry, (a highly tempting choice by the way), or I can choose to accept reality and turn to God so I can demonstrate his love even though I don’t feel much like doing it.

Again each of these choices comes with consequences and God does not force us to make the “right” choice.  We have to decide for ourselves what path we want to follow.

Often we are confronted with situations where we don’t feel much like behaving like Jesus.  We don’t feel much like ascribing worth to people.  And we don’t feel much like embracing God.  But it’s in those times that it becomes crucial.  Because it is these choices that set us apart as Kingdom people.  It’s actions like this that show others we’re not just people who say nice things – but only when our lives are going well. 

The Bible is filled with choices people had to make in order to follow God.  Often times these situations were less than ideal.  And their choices cost them friends, family, money, and even their lives.  I’m sure Jesus could have escaped his fate on the cross if he chose to.  He could have called down angels or lightning or a swarm of fighter planes to protect himself.  But he chose to die. Choice is how you explain Stephen’s ability to pray for forgiveness for the very people who were throwing large rocks at him so that they could kill him.  He chose to emulate God’s love and sacrifice for all people – even those who hated him. 

There are many examples of people sacrificing everything to choose to follow God when the choice not to follow him was so much more appealing.  It kind of puts my $1000 of dental work in perspective.  But even so, I still have a choice to make. And sometimes making that choice is still difficult.

what I’m reading: This We Believe

Category : book review, feeding my brain, sharing faith

    

When I first realized I had become a Christian, I had no idea what to do with that knowledge.  So I did what came naturally to me – I began to read as many books and articles as I could about Christianity.  I figured if it was a good enough technique to learn psychology in college, it was good enough now!

Of course I didn’t really know who or what to read.  I had no frame of reference.  I suppose I could have asked someone, but I didn’t.  So a lot of what I’ve read over the last few years has been trial and error. 

One of the first books I bought (for $2.97 baby!) was “This We Believe“.  It is a book of themed essays from many evengelical Christian leaders.  Probably the two who are best known are Ravi Zacharias and Lee Strobel.  I read half of it and then got sidetracked, and it was only this last week I picked it up again. 

What drew me to this title was my desire for someone to explain to me what Christianity meant.  I wanted to know what Christians believed.  And that’s exactly what this book does.  It lays down a foundation of evengelical beliefs through a statement of faith.  Each chapter looks at, and addresses, one aspect of that statement.

So what did I get from this book?  It forced me to think about how I try to explain what I believe.  In some small way it’s probably partially responsible for this website.  How do you explain what you believe is one of the questions I am always thinking about.  And this book was one of the first to address that very question.

what is my ministry?

Category : God, different, mission, sharing faith, taking action

   

If you’ve ever spent time in, or around, a church it won’t be too long before you hear about this thing called “ministry”.  A lot of times people understand that to be a formal ministry, such as working in a soup kitchen or going door-to-door talking about their faith. 

As a kid I thought the only two ways you could show your faith was by visiting nursing homes and hospitals.  To be honest those ideas really turned me off to Christianity.  Not because they aren’t worthwhile, but because they are so far outside of my skill sets that they are intimidating.  I’m just not an empathetic person.

This caused a great deal of guilt.  On the one hand Christians are called to go out and explain their beliefs to other people.  On the other, my skills and abilities weren’t very well suited for nursing homes and hospitals. 

It wasn’t until recently that I’ve realized that’s not what ministry is.  Ministry is living every aspect of your life through your faith.  Gregory Koukl has said “ministry [isn't] something you do. Ministry [is] something that you are.”  For some the natural extension of that is visiting nursing homes and hospitals.  But for others it’s simply hanging out with friends who don’t know Jesus.  For still others it is being available to listen to someone who needs an ear.  For me it is my writing.

What is it for you?

reader comment: loving your enemies

Category : love, reader comments, taking action

   

A reader sent in this comment regarding the previous post:

“A few weeks ago I heard an interesting statistic about anger: our bodies allow us about 7 seconds to decide whether we’re going to get angry about something (i.e. a person cutting us off on the highway).  If we choose to get mad, our body releases chemicals that then linger in our bodies for 3-4 hours!  It seems to me, then, that anger is truly a choice, and rarely is it the appropriate choice, especially for situations involving mini-vans (my personal peeve) or Ohio drivers.”

love your enemy (and fellow drivers)

4

Category : God, different, love, taking action

 

What if we’re supposed to love our enemies not for their sake, but for ours? I’ve always wondered exactly why we are to love our enemies. In my mind it was because loving them showed them that God was different. And praying for them would allow God to enter their lives – as if he needed our permission.

But what if I have that backwards? What if the biggest reason we are to love our enemies is to keep us moving in the direction of God?

Undoubtedly there is a real need to love our enemies for their sake. God is not into forced behavioral changes, he wants people to change because we desire to know him. The only way to accomplish this kind of change is through love.

But the more I’ve actually tried loving my “enemies” the more I’m convinced God is working more in me than these other people. Now I admit, my life is filled with very few “enemies” and certainly no one who is out to do bodily harm. But it is filled with people who irritate me and people who treat me without respect.

I can’t say for sure why I started doing this, but one day after being cut off in traffic (for the umpteenth time) I started praying for the drivers. To be sure my prayers were often crowded by thoughts like “police officer” and “speeding ticket”. But I really worked at praying for every maniacal lunatic in a 4-wheel death trap driver that would threaten me with their driving. I didn’t want to pray generically for each one (although sometimes I do). I wanted to ask God to bless something meaningful in each of their lives. I wanted to reach out and try to find something that might really mean something to them.

That’s when this realization started to dawn on me – what if prayer for our “enemies” isn’t so much about them as it is about us?

God is a God of relationship. He wants us to have a relationship with him. Anything that furthers that relationship is good, anything that distances us from that relationship is bad. That is why loving our enemies is so important. When I get angry, and don’t love people I become less open to God. I stop wanting to listen to him and to talk to him. As the Bible says my heart “hardens.”

Strangely I found that praying for people who anger me or who cut me off in traffic prevents this very thing. While I often hate saying those prayers, and many times they feel forced, the result is taking a step closer to God instead of a step away. And with each step closer I become more open to what he wants to do in my life.

Jesus tells us to “shake the dust off [our] feet” when we’re rejected (Luke 9:5). He wants us to forget about our rejection and not let it become part of who we are. He’s warning us to not let others’ opinions and reactions form the basis of our self-worth.

Praying for my enemies is how I shake that dust off.

is the Bible real?

2

Category : Bible reliability, sharing faith

   

Growing up I never questioned if the Bible was real.  That’s not because I accepted the Bible as truth, it’s just because asking that question never occurred to me.  Why would I study a religion that while I sort of believe in, never had any impact on my life? 

But life has a funny way of making you ask questions that you should.

After many years of not caring about Christianity my views began to shift.  I began to wonder “what if…?” What if the Bible was true?  What if there is a God?  And the biggest what if question I had: What if I should pay attention.

I eventually found my way to a local church.  After a few months of sporadic attendance I vividly remember sitting in a service when the person on stage began to talk about the Bible.  Ok, so that’s not totally unusual.  But they were speaking as if it was something true and real.  And more shockingly…something historical.

For the first time in my life something about the historical nature of the Bible caught my attention.  A slide was shown stating essentially this:

  author               –  gap between    –  # of copies
                           original & copy 
Homer              –    400 years         –    643
Plato                –   1,350 years        –      8
Demosthenes    –    1,400 years       –     200
Caesar              –  1,000 years        –      10
Pliny Secundus   –    750 years       –       7
New Testament  –    50 years         –   5,366

McDowell, J.  (1999).  Is the New Testament Historically Reliable? The New Evidence that Demands a Verdict ( p. 38).  Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Publishers.

I have always considered myself a scientist at heart – someone who was swayed by empirical evidence.  I remember sitting there in shock.  I couldn’t believe it.  There was no way the Bible could have so many manuscript copies.

As I came out of my surprise, and realized my mouth was actually hanging open, my mind raced.  Two thoughts occurred to me.  First, why didn’t someone tell me this earlier?!  Secondly, I could no longer pretend Christianity was merely a set of interesting philosophical questions.  I had to make a choice.  For the first time I realized there was actual evidence to make true/false or yes/no decisions.  I could no longer tell myself it was simply a philosophy that “sounded good.”

I won’t pretend that the historical evidence we have is 100% conclusive.  But I also can’t pretend that there isn’t any evidence to support the Bible.  So as any scientist does when confronted with an interesting dilemma I began to study the “problem.”

What you do with this knowledge is your decision.  You can embrace it.  You can disagree with it.  You can just think about it.  But the one thing you can’t do is ignore it. 

  

God is bigger than me

Category : God, miracles, trust

   

“Now the Jordan is at flood stage all during harvest.” (Joshua 3: 15)

It may be obvious that God is bigger than me, but somehow I keep forgetting that fact. Instead, I spend much of my time trying to bring a problem to God that is “manageable.” I’m the Goldie Locks of prayers. I don’t want to give God a problem too big in case he can’t handle it. And I don’t want to give him a problem too small, because I should just suck it up and do that one on my own. Instead, I want a problem that’s just right. Something “do-able” for him, but too hard for me on my own.

Of course that’s not how God works at all

After Moses died Joshua was selected by God to lead the Israelites into the Promised Land. His first act was to take them across the Jordan river. Of course God wasn’t content taking them across the Jordan at any time of the year. Instead he chose to cross the Jordan when it was at it’s most powerful.

God was showing both the Israelites and the Canaanites that what they considered powerful, he did not.  He showed them that what they considered a challenge, he did not. God didn’t want there to be any confusion about who was the one true God. To do this, God was willing to demonstrate his power.

The Canaanites worshiped the god Baal, who had achieved “head god” status precisely because he had beaten the sea-god and could control the water. By crossing the Jordan at the height of its power (and therefore Baal’s power) God was directly challenging that claim to god-hood!

But he was also sending a message to the Israelites. They were shown (once again) just what God could do. They were going to see a major miracle to prove (once again) that God is the God of the amazing, and that nothing was out of his reach.

I can only imagine how I would have responded if I were Joshua.  I would have been right there bargaining with God saying, “isn’t there a better time to do this?  Like, oh, I don’t know…maybe in the middle of a drought?!”  My natural reaction is to find a way to make the problems I face easier for God to solve.  But that’s not how God operates. God is constantly doing what we consider the “impossible.” In fact, you might consider him an expert in the impossible.  He doesn’t want us to be content with just a “normal” crossing, he wants us to know he’s still God when things are at their most difficult!  He wants us to know that our success doesn’t come from ourselves, but from our dependence on him.

God operates in this radical way. He’s not into expectation management.  You’ll never see God under-selling and over-delivering.  God always does the miraculous and amazing.  I hope that some day this lesson will actually stick in my brain, and I won’t try to limit God’s power just because I can’t see how he’s going to solve a problem.  

shame

1

Category : God, shame

 

Why is it that we hate feeling shame so much? Can’t shame serve as a reminder that we’ve done something we shouldn’t have? Isn’t that all the more reason we should pay attention ? When we get down to it, isn’t shame something that’s good? Of course I know I hate feeling shame because it means I’ve made a mistake. It means that I’ve done something I shouldn’t have – and more importantly, I know it! For me there is almost nothing worse than being wrong. Every time I make a mistake I’m one step closer to someone telling me I’m not necessary. That I’m no longer needed.

Because of that reaction, whenever I feel shame I go to great lengths to minimize that feeling. I’ll try to justify it, or ignore it, or argue about it. Just as long as I don’t have to deal with it. But by doing those things I give shame power over me. And as soon as we give something power over us, we are distancing ourselves from God.

There are many days where I put avoiding shame as my highest priority. Something even more important than God. How can I hear God call to me when my number one priority is to not feel shame (or embarrassment, or fear, or <insert your own emotion here>) The more I think about that, the more I realize how unhealthy that is.

While I’m sure I’ll never enjoy feeling shame, I need to find a better way to deal with those feelings. That’s why I want to look at why I feel shame and ask God to show me what I should learn. I want to give my shame to God so I can grow closer to him. I want God centered in my life, not my feelings of shame.