Affected by Numbers

21 08 2008

70,000 - Number of people killed in an earthquake in Sichuan, China. 5 million are still homeless.

84,000 - Number of people killed in a cyclone that hit Myanmar (Burma). 2.4 million are still in need of aide.

14 - Years that civil war has been raging through Sudan.

230,000 - Number of people displaced due to the Georgia-Russian Conflict.

10,000,000 - Number of refugees worldwide. Half are children.

3,000,000 - Number of people who die of malaria each year.

33,000,000 - Number of people infected with HIV/AIDS. 2,000,000 died from AIDS complications in 2007.

25,000 - Number of children that die each day from malnutrition.

27,000,000 - Number of men, women and children held as slaves.

2,000,000 - Number of children trapped in forced prostitution.

80 - Percent of human trafficking victims that are women or girls.

32,000,000,000 - Dollars of profit made each year by the human trafficking enterprise.

300 - Number of Christ-followers killed each day because of their faith.

25 - Percent of Christians in North Korea held in prison.

50 - Percent of US marriages that end in divorce.

21,000,000 - Number of Americans suffering from major depression.

17,600,000 - Number of Americans that have a problem with the overuse of alcohol.

Next weekend, our church will hold services in which we will focus on intercessory prayer. These facts, along with others, will serve as the focus of our prayer time.





Ten Learnings from the Leadership Summit

9 08 2008

There were so many great take-aways and things I am going to need to process/implement/chew on/wrestle with/think about, but here are ten of my learnings from the 2008 Leadership Summit:

1. “What happens if we invite people into our churches and they never change?” - Then you’ll be like Jesus. Jesus invited Judas in to his inner-circle and he never changed. (John Burke)

2. Sometimes you do everything for God…and die. Happiness is not the key. (Craig Groeschel)

3. Successful ministries have a “laser focus.” More ministries don’t make your church better. Better ministries make your church better. (Craig Groeschel)

4. Reach out and love across EVERY barrier. (John Burke, Effrem Smith, Bill Hybels)

5. “Jesus didn’t come to make us safe. He came to make us brave.” (Gary Haugen)

6. When non-believers ask hard questions (i.e. “What’s your church’s stance on gays?”), there are deeper questions being posed. (John Burke)

7. Pray this: “Bring it on, God.” (Catherine Rohr)

8. Sacrifice privacy for accountability. (Catherine Rohr)

9. “When Jesus returns, that is when true justice comes…but until then, it’s just us.” (Efrem Smith)

10. Don’t allow yourself to become a full time pastor (or church employee) and a part-time Christ-follower. (Craig Groeschel)





Values and Simplicity

29 07 2008

John Maeda reflects on the Glass House and how it relates to his theories on simplicity. The best line, though, is about halfway through: “When we all have values, life is simpler.” Interesting thought.





I Once Was Lost

10 07 2008

In his latest book, co-authored by Doug Schaupp, Don Everts explores how people come to Jesus in today’s postmodern culture. I Once Was Lost is based on the stories of two thousand postmodern people and how they found their way in to a following of Jesus. Everts, whose books Jesus With Dirty Feet and The Smell of Sin are absolute must reads for any Christ-follower, will be speaking at Journey this weekend as part of our July at Journey series.

One, of many, learnings from the new book was this: Act more like Paul. We (Christians) need to begin “affirming kingdom impulses” that skeptics have, and then point them to Jesus. Everts and Schaupp write:

“We [Christians] struggle to emulate Paul in this. We fear affirming sin in our friends and so we say nothing, or we judge. Maybe we turn a blind eye and naively tell them, ‘It’s all good.’ We might be shocked if God showed us today how many non-Christian friend’s values are worth affirming: the gay activist’s commitment to equality, the Muslim coworker’s sacrificial weekend involvement in caring for the poor. Unfortunately, these often go unnoticed.” (p. 45)

How would our efforts to reach out be altered if we thought this way? How would we respond to our non-believing friends? How would we change by examining our friends inherent goodness (”God-ness” even)?





God at the Movies…in Albania?

7 07 2008

If you follow this blog, you know that Journey just finished up a six week series called God at the Movies V. (More on that series here.) It’s one of our favorite series to do each year, and is, arguably, the most popular series of our ministry year. Apparently, it’s popular around the world, too. Our programming team received this email:

“I thought you’d enjoy seeing how God is working in Eastern Europe.  My pastor friend…is doing a “God at the Movies” series this week in southern Albania.  He was inspired by what was happening at Journey during his visit.”

How cool is that? Below is our poster (left) and the Albanian poster (right). It’s incredibly flattering, and, simultaneously, a huge win. We really hope that the Church (worldwide) is always thinking and growing and stretching the way they leverage popular culture. My prayers are with this church as they reach out in new and unique ways to help people find this amazing grace found in the person of Jesus.





Prejudice

6 07 2008

Sarah gave me this a few months back, and has been something that has resonated so deeply:

“One of the hardest spiritual tasks is to live without prejudices. Sometimes we aren’t even aware how deeply rooted our prejudices are. We may think that we relate to people who are different from us in colour, religion, sexual orientation, or lifestyle as equals, but in concrete circumstances our spontaneous thoughts, uncensored words, and knee-jerk reactions often reveal that our prejudices are still there. Strangers, people different than we are, stir up fear, discomfort, suspicion, and hostility. They make us lose our sense of security just by being “other.” Only when we fully claim that God loves us in an unconditional way and look at “those other persons” as equally loved can we begin to discover that the great variety in being human is an expression of the immense richness of God’s heart. Then the need to prejudge people can gradually disappear.”

Henri Nouwen





Inspiration, again.

2 07 2008

One of the best books I’ve read this year was The Myths of Innovation, by Scott Berkun (for more on that book, read here). The Guardian had an interesting article on how to write a movie, and the following excerpt reminded me of a lot of what Berkun talks about:

“I think people see inspiration as the ignition that starts the process. In fact, real moments of inspiration often come at the last minute, when you’ve sweated and fretted your way through a couple of drafts. Suddenly, you start to see fresh connections, new ways of doing things. That’s when you feel like you’re flying. The real pleasure of any script is the detail. And a lot gets lost in the process. Put it back in at the last minute.”

Replace all the talk of screenwriting with any other sort of creative output, and you will still have great advice.

[via Kottke]





Musings on Grace

18 06 2008

Two weeks ago, as part of our God at the Movies V series, Journey’s Teaching Pastor, Ed Noble, looked at the film Amazing Grace. My opinions on the low-quality film-making aside (I was one of two on the Weekend Design Team who didn’t like the film), Ed’s message and the overall flow of the service was something to cause awe. Heading in to the series, we knew we wanted to create a package in which the notion of grace could be experienced, not just talked about. What culminated was nothing short of a God-inspired moment. Looking back, it was one of those moments of wonder - moments we are always striving to create in our weekend services.

One of our pastors, Rod Kaya, set up the package, reminding us that, while grace has a definition, it is very rarely understood. It is something that we can think about, but it is harder to grasp, let alone experience through words. From there, we played a video piece that set-up some of the history of the hymn “Amazing Grace” and John Newton’s legacy as a slave-trader turned priest, a true story of God’s grace. The piece was synced to Yvette Flunder singing an a capella version of the prolific first verse.

Following the video, was a dance wonderfully choreographed by Pamela Turner and performed by she and Megan Merk. Pamela did a wonderful job in capturing the essence of grace. It wasn’t a “pretty” dance - something her and I both did not want for the piece. However, it was a dance that capture the raw emotion and picture of grace in people’s lives. (Rod posted a sort of bootlegged recording of the dance here).

When the dance finished, the lights faded and we returned with another video piece. Inspired by Philip Yancey’s What’s So Amazing About Grace?: Visual Edition, the piece was an experience of grace in the most visual way (selected images below). Combining text and black & white photographs (and Jonathan Elias’ moving composition “Move”), the video expressed the scandalous nature of this thing called grace.

Now, in the interest of full disclosure, I must admit that I am the creator behind the piece. Most people didn’t realize, because it flashed for just an instant, but I included myself in the myriad of images of people touched by grace (third image below). I am not writing to brag about the piece or to gain attention for my work. I am writing this post to say that I am a person who has learned to better understand grace. I am writing to say that, along with images of Martin Luther King, Jr., Adolf Hitler, members of the KKK - stands my photo - a person marked by sin; yet, a person who grace is afforded. I do not fully grasp its entirety, but because of circumstances and the path of my pursuit (and at times anti-pursuit) of God I have come to gain a more deep and real knowledge of grace. I have learned it’s wrinkles. It has become palpable, known, experienced.

Such grace causes me to have “a wretch like me” understanding that Ed mentioned in his message. Such grace causes me to face the fact that I am not the sole receiver of this grace. Scandalous grace, grace that melts ungrace, is given to members of the Ku Klux Klan, transsexuals, Christians, philanthropists, children and drunks. I have learned that the limits of grace’s reach are endless. It is precisely that fact that affords me grace. I have learned that grace, in an unfair and illogical way, is afforded to all…even to someone like me.





The Plenitude

29 05 2008

During the last year of his life, Rich Gold wrote the text for what would become his book The Plenitude: Creativity, Innovation, and Making Stuff. Part of John Maeda’s Simplicity: Design, Technology, Business, Life series (MIT Press), the book is a convergence of the mind of a artist/scientist/designer/engineer - and his thoughts on the ecology of created stuff (The Plenitude).

It’s a quick and enjoyable read (only 110 pages). A sort of hodge-podge of information from an innovative and brilliant thinker - the book serves as a sort of essay on what it’s like to be a creator of stuff - and how a creator should respond to the ever-growing pile of that stuff.

Gold begins by examining the four creative hats he has worn (artist/scientist/designer/engineer) - looking at their interrelationships (both their love for and hate of each other). For “creative types” it is a nice treatise on the creative mind - and how we exist within the four boxes, and both the contradictory and complimentary nature of the four types.

Gold continues by laying out seven patterns of innovation - valuable pieces of knowledge. But, it is the the Plenitude that consumes most of this book. Gold commits half of the book to a discussion on the “stuff.” To write a very coherent examination of this discussion would be futile. However, Gold’s thesis on the Plenitude is worth the reading.

More than an examination of the wealth of stuff, The Plenitude serves as lessons from the creative professions. It is equal parts memoir, exposition, and essay on moral philosophy - a must for any creator.





The Myth of a Christian Nation

14 05 2008

In his book, The Myth of a Christian Nation, Gregory Boyd evaluates the effect of joining religion and politics and argues that, in a pursuit to merge the two, Evangelical Americans are destroying both institutions. The book was incredible and deserves the attention of anyone in the evangelical church. Boyd argues that we can never combine the “power-under” kingdom of God with any “power-over” kingdom of the world:

“We have lost the simplicity of the kingdom of God and have largely forsaken the difficult challenge of living out the kingdom. We have forgotten, if ever we were taught, the simple principle that the kingdom of God looks like Jesus and that our sole task as kingdom people is to mimic the love he revealed on Calvary.” (p. 64)

The book is a liberating [sic] experience for those of us in the church who do not necessarily always tow the “Christian Conservative” line. At the same time, it is a powerful, and biblical, argument as to why the church (American, European, whatever) should never become co-opted by governments or kingdoms of the world.

“My critique is rather toward the American church. We expect nations to be driven by self-interest, but we shouldn’t expect kingdom people to applaud this fact, especially when the national self-interest involves taking lives! Isn’t our central calling as kingdom people to manifest the truth that this old, self-centered, tribalistic, violent way of living has been done away in Christ? Are we not to display the truth that in Christ a new humanity has been created, one in which there are no ethnic, nationalistic, gender, social, or economic distinctions? Aren’t we called to ‘live by the Spirit’ and thus put away all ‘works of the flesh’ - including aligning ourselves with various sides of ‘dissensions [and] factions’?” (p. 90)

While Boyd asserts that the kingdom of God shouldn’t be combined with any government, he doesn’t advocate an uninvolved or pacifist mentality. He says that our beliefs should inform the way we vote and our political views - but, we can never fully place our faith in our political systems. We must pursue a better world, through law and order - but as Christ-followers, we must always remember that the only kingdom we have total allegiance to is that of God. We must always keep in mind that our mission is to reflect the love exemplified through Calvary. In fact, in the example of Jesus, we find a person who wasn’t out to topple the worldly kingdom…but rather, he chose to change the world from the bottom up - by serving the poor and caring for the unwanted:

“Did Jesus spend any time and energy trying to improve, let alone dominate, the reigning government of his day? Did he ever work to pass laws against the sinners he hung out with and ministered to? Did he worry at all about ensuring that his rights and the religious rights of his followers were protected? Does any author in the New Testament remotely hint that engaging in this sort of activity has anything to do with the kingdom of God?” (p. 92)

Seriously…an amazing book.