Friday, December 29, 2006

You Are Not the Spotless Lamb of God!

One of the major maladies of people is a preoccupation with guilt. Shame, embarrassment, depression, and anxiety are just a few emotions that come from being burdened down by guilt. This leads to endless attempts to hide, blame shift, or atone for one's own sins.

Remember, it was the serpent that whispered to Adam and Eve that they should be like God. That is the way the whole mess started - swallowing the lie that perfectionism is the way forward.

You are not the spotless Lamb of God! Embrace your guilt and shame and die to your need to atone for yourself. Jesus, the true spotless Lamb of God, has made you at-one with Him, the Father and Spirit. At-one-ment is what the Lamb of God has succeeded at and, believe it or not, you are accepted!

Speak boldly to your guilt and shame that there is One who has taken away the sin of the world (of which yours were included) and be free. Go one step further and, in the community of believers, confess your shortcomings and learn to stand in cofidence that Christ is for you, in you, and with you - a sinner.

Proper guilt, or conviction, is like an arrow. It is straight and to the point - piercing the heart and pointing to a new way of living free in the embrace of God. It corrects and inspires you to live out of a life of love and helps you to not take yourself too seriously.

False guilt, or condemnation, is like a shotgun blast. It peppers you from all directions and dogs you out. It turns you in on yourself and makes you feel lower than dirt. "You're hopeless! And you call yourself a Christian?" You find yourself dazed, confused and paralyzed or frantic in your attempts to make yourself acceptable.

God has not called you to be a spotless lamb! He has searched you out, lost and wandering lamb, and put you over his shoulder and brought you home. It is the Shepherd's job to clean and tend to His sheep, not the sheep's .

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

God Has Spoken... Rest!

I was teaching a Sunday morning lesson on the power of Jesus on our behalf, explaining what it meant that Jesus has accomplished all the work of salvation and has rested from the work. Our response to his success is to rest!

As I was expounding on this, I made note of the following verse from Hebrews:

"For the word of God is living and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, it penetrates even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow; it judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart."

Hebrews 4:12

The point I was making is that when you hear the declaration of Christ's success on our behalf, it exposes just what we are clinging to. Does the call to rest and trust scare you? If so, you are probably going to throw up a few "just in case" prayers or works to get in tight with God "just in case" what Jesus did and who He is isn't enough.

The word of God's passion for sinners exposes our perceptions of Him and creates a crisis for us. What (or who) are we going to believe about God? Are we going to accept a relationship with God on God's terms or on ours? What are God's terms? Rest and let Him love you!

What are your terms? Maybe a whole lot of praying, or a chicken sacrifice, or a holding your spiritual tongue just right. Maybe you feel more secure holding onto your sinner's prayer, repentance and your commitment to follow Jesus and be a "Good Christian".

The fact that God has spoken in Jesus and He is faithful (Heb. 10:23), is a summons to trust and rest from our works of righteousness. Abandon whatever you are doing to get God to accept you and trust that He already has. Walk away from your endless attempts to gain forgiveness and accept that before you even sinned, you were already forgiven.

That may be scary for you, but let the scalpel of God's declaration of love for you do its surgery and release you from fear. A life of trust is a free life. A life of fear is bondage.

Side Note: Sometimes the word of God is threatening like a sword. When I taught this, a religious type that had been on me for not teaching enough holiness challenged me.

"Don't you think this verse is talking about the bible, the inspired cannon of scriptures?" The withering look of shame on his face directed at me let me know he felt the sting of the sword. He clutched tightly to his BIG black bible and was ready to pounce.

"No, I don't think it's talking about the inspired cannon. Mainly because you can't read that verse in its context and arrive at that interpretation AND the cannon wasn't established until 300 plus years later." I answered the question and he didn't like it. He still accuses me of not believing in the bible but the fact is I just don't believe in the bible as he interprets it, which is nothing more than a rule book and text book on how to get in tight with God.

God has spoken in Jesus.... Rest!

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Mark Simpson, LMFT
LifeChange Counseling Centers
www.lifechangedaily.com

Tuesday, December 26, 2006

Get Moving!

I dropped my wife's car off at the shop this morning for new tires and a brake job. I thought I would wait around and let them do the job quickly. Fat chance! Instead, after waiting about 45 minutes I was told that the car wouldn't be ready until late this afternoon. What did I do? I walked home.

The nice man offered me a ride home, but I only live about a mile and a half away and I hated to miss out on a nice little walk. Walking home, I realized how thankful I was for the ability to walk and not get winded.

Almost three years ago, I could barely run a quarter mile and I decided it was time to get moving. Before my thirty-eighth birthday and after eight months of training, I ran my first marathon. Now at 41, I have completed three marathons and am about to start training for my fourth. (http://www.marathonmakeover.com/)

We are so quick to take the path of least resistance and as a culture it is killing us. I read today that within four years there will be a pill to make you lose 12% of your body weight. Wow! That is great for those at risk for heart disease or diabetes, but why wait for 4 years?! Start today and get moving!

Small steps will compound over time to give you massive results and four years from now you won't need a fat pill. 2007 is almost here and you can make a life change and get healthy! Go for it!
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Mark Simpson, LMFT
LifeChange Counseling Centers
www.lifechangedaily.com

Monday, December 25, 2006

Merry Christmas

"You must understand why it is that the Word of the Father, so great and so high, has been made manifest in bodily form. He has not assumed a body as proper to His own nature, far from it, for as the Word He is without body. He has been manifested in a human body for this reason only, out of the love and goodness of His Father, for the salvation of us men. We will begin, then, with the creation of the world and with God its Maker, for the first fact that you must grasp is this: "the renewal of creation has been wrought by the Self-same Word Who made it in the beginning." There' is thus no inconsistency between creation and salvation for the One Father has employed the same Agent for both works, effecting the salvation of the world through the same Word Who made it in the beginning."

St. Athanasius
On the Incarnation of the Word of God

Friday, December 22, 2006

Good News!

From Robert Farrar Capon's book - Kingdom, Grace, Judgment: Paradox, Outrage, and Vindication in the Parables of Jesus.

"But the Gospel of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ is precisely Good News. It is the announcement, in the death and resurrection of Jesus, that God has simply called off the game - that he has taken all the disasters religion was trying to remedy and, without any recourse to religion at all, set them to rights by himself. How sad, then, when the church acts as if it is in the religion business rather than in the Gospel-proclaiming business. What a disservice, not only to itself but to a world perpetually sinking in the quagmire of religiosity, when it harps on creed, cult, and conduct as the touchstone of salvation. What a perversion of the truth that sets us free (John 8:32) when it takes the news that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us (Rom. 5:8), and turns it into a proclamation of God as just one more insufferable bookkeeper."

Well said Father Capon!

Thursday, December 21, 2006

Lessons Gleaned from Sex

Nature is full of lessons if we have eyes and ears to see and hear. When I think about the sexual relationship of a man and woman, there is much to learn about how relationships need to work.

A woman's reproductive system is an open system - a man's is closed. An open system is the most vulnerable, for the sexual experience occurs within her body and is most susceptible to harm. The closed system of man means his sexual experience occurs outside of himself and there is less chance of experiencing violation.

In order for a woman to safely and successfully receive a man she must experience patience, security and tenderness - anything less hurts or potentially harms. The woman is created to respond and receive after being cared for.

The man rises to the occasion and brings his power to the woman. He is not able to consummate the relationship if he is not potent. Whereas the woman is created to respond, the man is created to lead - but his leadership must first be attuned to serving.

I have had many men and women frustratingly ask why the two are so different. The man is instantly ready and the woman takes time. As I have thought about that I am mindful of Philippians 2:5-11 which states:
"Your attitude should be the same as that of Christ Jesus: Who, being in very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness. And being found in appearance as a man, he humbled himself and became obedient to death-- even death on a cross! Therefore God exalted him to the highest place and gave him the name that is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father."

If the husband is to love his wife as Christ loves the church, then following the lead of Christ he must set aside his needs to minister to hers. Christ laid aside his greatness and served us. By doing so he was exalted and his greatness was all the more magnified. In the same way, a husband who dies to his instant urges and "marital rights" and serves his wife, providing her a safe, intimate setting, will be lifted up and ultimately exalted in the sexual experience - it will be a shared experience of intimacy not a one-sided grab.
[Side note: Serving a wife is not being enslaved. I've often said that every king must serve his queen but he must never become her slave. Only eunuchs can be slaves to the queen and that is too high a price.]

It will be a frustrating experience and unfulfilling to a woman if she allows a man who hasn't risen to the occasion to enter into her inner world. She will never be satisfied by an impotent man. In the same way, it is a frustrating and unfulfilling experience to try to enter into the world of a woman too insecure to trust and receive.

So what's the point? Am I just getting my kicks writing about sex? Not really - there is a point.

Ladies, protect yourself! Wait for a man to rise to the occasion and demonstrate servant leadership - true power. If you allow a man into your inner world that hasn't demonstrated power and doesn't know how to die to self and serve others, you will live with him being hurt or frustrated.

Men, learn to lead with power! Rise to the occasion and put on the mantle of Christ. Face the "death of self" square in the eyes and don't flinch. Give OF yourself, but don't give UP yourself. Make it your aim to protect and serve and create an environment that fosters intimacy - "into-me-see". Be careful not to enter into a relationship that requires you to be a slave (remember the eunuchs) or where she is incapable of trust - you, too, will be frustrated and harmed.

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Mark Simpson, LMFT
LifeChange Counseling Centers
http://www.lifechangedaily.com/

Monday, December 18, 2006

Hungry?

If you come to the Lord's table with a physical appetite, the little cup and the small bit of bread will sorely disappoint; however, if you come to table with a spiritual hunger you will be more satisfied than what a ten-course meal could provide. Communion is a sacrament - a sacred physical experience with a spiritual experience or demonstration of grace.

Marriage is a sacrament, too; and, just like communion, if you approach it with a physical appetite you will be disappointed. Come to marriage with a spiritual hunger and you will taste the most delicious thing this side of heaven.
-------------------
Mark Simpson, LMFT
LifeChange Counseling Centers
www.lifechangedaily.com

Friday, December 15, 2006

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Born Again...

For starters, read John 3:1-21

Religious people are always thinking that they have what it takes to impress God and gain His acceptance. They like how they are "can do" types that live up to all the religious requirements to earn salvation or secure their place in heaven.

Nicodemus was one of those types. He was a Pharisee, a religious marine, who came to Jesus at night to get the scoop on just what he needed to do to shore up the requirements of God. What we miss in the John 3 story is that Nicodemus wasn't coming looking for salvation, he was coming looking for instruction. Salvation says, "I can't do it - do it for me!" Instruction says, "Give me a few pointers and I will show you what a good student I am!"

Jesus wasn't the least bit interested in teaching Nicodemus, if he was the "Master Teacher" wouldn't have left old Nick so dazed and confused. Jesus was interested in utterly striking him out with sinkers, sliders and spitballs. Jesus wanted Nick to go down swinging and lose his balance and fall face first in the dirt.

His goal is not to shame us but to release us from our shame. Shame hinders the operation of grace in our lives by causing us to hide from God and strive for acceptability. Either way - hiding or striving - we think that our relationship with God is on our terms. If I strive, I've earned God's favor. If I hide, I've presented a false self that has tricked you or never drawn near.

Jesus succeeded in striking out Nicodemus.

"Hey Nick - the Kingdom isn't in your hands just like your birth wasn't in your hands!" STRIKE ONE - "You had no control over your water birth when your mother's water broke and you arrived on the scene. You have to be born once to be born a second time!"

Hey batter, batter swing - "Nico - the second birth is like unto the first - out of your control and you get no vote in the matter. This is the Spirit's job and you can't control it just like you can't control the wind." Whoosh - STRIKE TWO - "Did you feel the breeze of that fast ball flying past you?"

You suck batter! "To make matters worse, my friend Nicky, you are snake bit and don't even know it! The venom is already coursing through your veins and times running out." STRIKE THREE - "Why do you think you are running around trying so hard? You're trying to suck the venom out of you with all your religious busy-ness and you can't do it."

Back to the dugout - "Let me show you how it's done, Nicodemus. Do you remember the story of when the Israelites were overrun with poisonous snakes and were dropping like flies, bitten left and right? They had been complaining about God's lack of help and His intention to harm them? You do remember the story, good. If you recall, God instructed Moses to make a bronze serpent and place it on a pole and lift it high in the assembly area. He then instructed the snake-bitten-condemned to look at the snake on the pole and live. What a crazy strategy! Waste time looking at that cursed thing and give up on my own efforts to save myself? That was the plan."

"Oh you with an abysmal batting average, that is the way this whole thing -entering the Kingdom - will work. I will become the snake and be lifted up for the whole world to see. Whoever looks at me won't perish but instead will experience the Kingdom life now."

"I didn't come here as the snake to bite you - you are already snake bit - I came to rescue you from the venomous curse by becoming the curse. If you don't want salvation from death's bite, then all you have is yourself and your sucking strategies to remove your venom by self-effort. Go for it but don't think I will have anything to do with that fiery end - you chose to look the other way instead of looking at me - the accomplisher of new birth."

"This is where the gavel hits the judge's bench Nicodemus, I'm the light that has penetrated the darkness and there are some who will shut their eyes and refuse to let me flood their soul with illumination. They will hate the thought that they can't save themselves and will turn their back to what I'm doing."

"That's what evil really is Nick, ascribing what I'm doing to evil and rejecting grace. Those hell bent on doing it themselves, just wanting instructions not salvation, hate truth and grace because it exposes the futility of cutting and sucking their snake bites. They are too prideful to admit that they can't do it so they keep their eyes tightly shut all the while I'm there right in front of them providing salvation."

"But those who will come to the truth that they can't do it will have their eyes wide open to what it is I'm doing and the light of my grace will flood their soul and rescue them from the venomous condemnation of sin. The snake bites will no longer have the sting - no longer have the ability to separate them from God - they will just look at me when bit and there I will be with arms outstretched demonstrating God's heart. He really does so love the world!"

"The funny thing about those that will be saved from the snake bites is they will realize they weren't the ones who did it. Plain and simple, they will realize that God was the one who did it. No fancy prayers, no promises to avoid the snakes, no commitments to follow God more closely. Nope, Nicodemus my friend, they will just open their eyes to what I have done and will live fully now and forever."

"So what do you want - instructions or salvation?"

Here is the Good News - look and live!
"Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who according to His great mercy has caused us to be born again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, to obtain an inheritance which is imperishable and undefiled and will not fade away, reserved in heaven for you, who are protected by the power of God through faith for a salvation ready to be revealed in the last time."

I Peter 1:3-5

To ALL who read this, listen! You have already been born again by Jesus - done, finished, complete! Open your eyes to the truth and let it do its healing work in your snake bitten soul. God is for you not against you. Your days of striving, cutting and sucking are over. Rest, for He has done it!

Thursday, December 14, 2006

I Believe in Divorce!

As a Marriage & Family Therapist, I hear people say all the time "I don't believe in divorce!" and they are usually people whose marriage is falling apart and are facing divorce. It's almost as if they think that if they declare their disbelief in divorce they can avoid the whole subject.

I believe in divorce! I see it all around me and know too painfully that it is an all too common event in far too many people's lives. When I say "I believe in divorce" I am NOT saying that I think it is a great thing - I'm just saying that this is a reality folks and declaring our disbelief in it is not enough.

What most people probably mean is "I don't believe in divorce as an option for solving my marital problems." That is better but it is still not enough. Focusing on the negative doesn't help much.

I would love to hear people saying "I believe in loving, honoring and cherishing my spouse" not "you vowed till death do us part!" The focus of our vow is on what we will do in our marriage, not how long we have to stick together. NEWSFLASH - If you love, honor and cherish your spouse you will most likely never experience a divorce.

Couples need to recognize that divorce is a possibility and take steps to protect their relationship, not in a frantic, insecure way, but in sober, mature way. Couples do not need to play fast and lose with their relationship - it can be hurt!

Consider your marriage as being like a beautiful cut-glass piece of Waterford crystal - shaped like an egg and very expensive. Friends come over and want to play a game of football. There is no football so they head for the egg shaped heirloom and hit the back yard for a game of touch football and you oblige. STOP!!

Of course you wouldn't let that happen. You would protect the crystal from the inevitable harm of playing around with it. The crystal isn't fragile, but it is breakable so you would honor and cherish it. Your marriage isn't fragile, but it is breakable so honor and cherish it.

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Only Twenty Pages

What does it take to master a given topic? Believe it or not, if you will read only twenty pages a day on any given topic, in five years you will be in the top 5% of those who know something on that topic.

Read twenty pages a day for five years on the subject of landscaping and you will know more than 95% of the population. OK, maybe you're not interested in landscaping but what about marriage. Would it be a worthy pursuit in your marriage to spend thirty minutes a day reading twenty pages learning how to be a better mate? I think so.

Think of how it might change your relationship with your children if you chose the topic of parenting. What would your health be like if you read up on diet and exercise science (and put it into practice)?

You might be thinking there are not enough minutes in the day to read twenty pages on all the pertinent subjects - you're right! Instead of being an over achiever go for the top 50% and read 5 pages a day on the important subjects. It really won't hurt you if you spend thirty minutes to an hour reading each day. It is a discipline and well worth it.

Benjamin Franklin once stated that if he had 10 hours to chop down a tree, he would spend the first 8 hours sharpening his axe. (I read that!) Think of how much easier you would do in life if you took the time to sharpen your mental and spiritual axe. READ!!

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Merry Anti-CHRISTmas?

I heard a preacher recently teaching about the "real" Christian life and boy was it interesting. He went to great lengths to talk about the deeper, more mature life "in the Word" and how, when we were ready for it, he would let us in on the meat. This preacher talked as if he had arrived and he wasn't quite sure if we had. There was what I interpreted a spirit of superiority.

What confused me was how he kept talking about "the human side" of him. I kept thinking - "What part of you is not human?" Is he part alien, canine, monkey or elf? Then it dawned on me - this guy was functioning within a Greek dualism/gnostic paradigm. This belief holds that there is a human side (flesh/bad) and a spiritual side (eternal/good) to people and that the ultimate goal is to escape the flesh and ascend to the spiritual world through "being in the know" - gnosis -Greek for knowledge.


The early church dealt with this belief and the ensuing heresy of gnosticism [from Wikipedia: Gnostics regarded nature and the material world as flawed, corrupt, if not downright evil. They claimed that the natural world was created by a lesser deity, the Demiurge, not the true God who dwells in another realm outside space and time. The human soul, originating as a divine spark in the higher world, finds itself fallen captive to matter, exiled in the realm of the senses. Spiritual development means extricating oneself from enmeshment with matter and returning to the Source, the Light of God. Gnosis is the recognition of the presence of the Higher Self, the spark of Divinity trapped in matter, but only an elite few can realize this awareness and liberate themselves from blind enslavement to this world.]
The thing that chapped my hide was that this preacher was turning the Christian life into escaping the mundane life (in which we live) and climbing some mountain of mysticism and "Word play". Unbeknownst to some there, he was robbing the people of their lives by discounting their work, play, parenting, school, love-making, singing, golfing, cooking and friendships. The "real Christian life" sounded more like Harry Potter speaking words, manipulating the universe through the power of his spoken Word and living on a higher plain above us spiritual peons.

What's the problem? Jesus came to the mundane not to extricate us from this world but to fill it and us with His kingdom and glory. "Peace on earth, good will to men" and "They Kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven".

Read this:

"My dear friends, don't believe everything you hear. Carefully weigh and examine what people tell you. Not everyone who talks about God comes from God. There are a lot of lying preachers loose in the world. Here's how you test for the genuine Spirit of God. Everyone who confesses openly his faith in Jesus Christ - the Son of God, who came as an actual flesh-and-blood person - comes from God and belongs to God. And everyone who refuses to confess faith in Jesus has nothing in common with God. This is the spirit of antichrist that you heard was coming. Well, here it is, sooner than we thought!"

I John 4:1-3 The Message
Jesus came in the flesh and the spirit of antichrist keeps trying to get away from His fleshiness. They want a Jesus that let's us opt out of loving one another in community and focus on the more important job of singing, praying, word studies, prophecies and mystical experiences.

Remember this Christmas season - Jesus came to us here! Jesus moved into our neighborhood and lived with us. Religion has us trying to escape the neighborhood and has us movin' on up, Weazie. But Christianity has the Eternal, Divine Relationship (Father, Son, Spirit) earthed in Jesus in order that we can have overflowing, eternal life now.

God didn't run from our humanity - He ran to it (incarnation). He hasn't divorced Himself from our flesh - He converted it (cross and resurrection) and filled it (Pentecost).

May you experience Immanuel - God with Us - this season. Merry Christmas!

Monday, December 11, 2006

Love Requires Getting Real

The Apostle John wrote to his church that he pastored three recorded letters in an attempt to heal that Christian community. It seems that little church was experiencing a break down and love was not flowing freely anymore. What was the cure?

John tells the people to get real and to quit acting as if they had it all together. It seems that the only way to experience healthy love in community is not by being perfect but acknowledging frequently how imperfect you are. This was not encouraged as a means to shrug off unloving actions and attitudes - "Hey, nobody is perfect" - but to ensure that we would grow toward being a healthier community.

God tells us all that we are sinners - we fall flat on our faces everyday - and He does this not to humiliate us or shame us but to set us free. Here is how he does this - bear with me:

God loves sinners...
God reconciled sinners to himself in Jesus...
God forgave sinners in Christ and no longer holds their sins against them...
God loves us not because we are good but because He is good...
God only loves sinners, which were the ones He came for....
Therefore, if you aren't a sinner God doesn't love you!

Wait a Minute! God loves everyone!

Yes!

And everyone is a sinner; BUT, if you don't quit pretending you have it all together and get real you can't experience God's love. You are presenting to God a "non-you" to be loved and therefore the real you will never experience God's love.

Take a deep breath, face your fears of rejection for being imperfect, and confess your sins to God - get real! You will experience a faithful, just and forgiving God and His loving embrace and acceptance of the "real you" will cleanse you of all un-realness.

Then, with the acceptance of the real you, you are free to graciously love others just like you. Community can begin to take place when real people show up.

Thursday, December 07, 2006

More Crazy Days!

These are crazy days for me and I am trying to catch up. I will resume blogging next Monday.

Friday, December 01, 2006

"Be" not "Get" - Part V

Have you ever seen one of those car bumper stickers that states, "Get right or get left!"? The sticker is a feeble attempt at saving souls by scaring the hell out of people by threatening hell, or better, getting left behind in the rapture. The message that these "ambassadors for Christ" are spreading is a fear-based one.

My question is just how do we "get right"? I'm guessing we are supposed to acknowledge we are sinners, swear off our sins and commit ourselves anew to following God so we won't get left. Right?

My difficulty is that it seems like a whole lot of "getting" to get done to in order for God to book us on His out-of-this-world-rocket-flight. Sounds like works!

Paul, in wrapping up his discussion of God's work of salvation in Jesus, brings us to the church's role in salvation - an ambassador for God to the world. Read this:


"We are therefore Christ's ambassadors, as though God were making his appeal through us. We implore you on Christ's behalf: Be reconciled to God."

II Corinthians 5:20

Do you see what I see? Our message to the world is not "Get right!" but "Be reconciled to God!" and being is a whole lot different than doing or getting. In the previous verses, Paul states that God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself - done...finished. The "getting" is completed in Christ. Reconciliation has been accomplished and now God is calling the world, with our participation, to BE that which He has already re-created us to be in Christ.

"I have reconciled you - now be (live, rest, play, dance, love, work, etc.) in the reality of your embrace. The war is over, I've won you over in Christ - don't resist my attempts to love you!"

Bruce Wauchope from Australia puts it this way (paraphrased):

God says: Let me love you!
We sin by saying: NO! You can't love me.
We repent by saying: OK, love me!
We live by resting in the embrace of God!

Our response doesn't make God love us - it opens our heart up to the reality of what is already going on - His never-ending love. Be who you are:

"God made him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God. "

II Corinthians 5:21

Be who you are - the righteousness of God in Christ - you are His beloved in whom He is well pleased!

Thursday, November 30, 2006

What's Your Ministry and Message? - Part IV

What do people say about God? Have you ever been told that God can't have anything to do with you because your sin has separated you from Him and He can't tolerate sin?

People go to great lengths in telling others about how they can have a relationship with God. But instead of being newsboys we become bread men. Instead of sharing Good News we market a product of salvation that we can hand out after people follow the steps we lay out.

In this study of 2 Corinthians 5:14-21, we come to verses 18-19.

"All this is from God, who reconciled us to himself through Christ and gave us the ministry of reconciliation: that God was reconciling the world to himself in Christ, not counting men's sins against them. And he has committed to us the message of reconciliation."
2 Corinthians 5:18-19

Paul has just stated that the new creation work of salvation ,that we have ALL been included in, is accomplished in Christ and now he calls us to focus on the author of salvation - "all this is from God...". God is the one who does the work of salvation - not you or me. God reconciled us to Himself through Christ. We aren't reconciled to God when we pray a prayer, when we commit our lives, when we join the church or are baptized. We WERE (past tense) reconciled to God through Jesus in His death and resurrection.

Isn't that amazing? Take a moment and soak that in. God has reconciled you to Himself. God has, through Jesus, reestablished a close intimate relationship between God and you. In Jesus, your life has already been restored to Father God. What Adam lost for you in his disobedience has been restored to you in Jesus. God is for you not against you!

This is the ministry and message God has given us, the church, to the world: "God was in Christ restoring you and the whole wide world to the Father and He doesn't hold your sins or anyone else's sins against you!"

You are forgiven! The Lamb of God has already taken away of the sins of the world. God doesn't keep a ledger sheet and He doesn't grade on a curve. Grace, grace and more grace!

The church isn't the place to dole out God or salvation. The church is the place where people, captured by the Good News of God's philanthropy, go far and wide announcing like angels (who were messengers):

"Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace to men on whom his favor rests."


This is the message we have been entrusted with. When was the last time you told a stranger with confidence: "God's favor rests on you. He loves you. He has forgiven you. He is well pleased with you!"?

Don't let those using sales pitches and memorized scripts selling fire insurance shame you into backing down from telling everyone you meet the Good News of God's favor in Jesus. You will here them say; "You're giving them false assurance. If they don't sign on the bottom line and commit they are an object of God's wrath."

The Kingdom of God is like a farmer who wastefully scatters seed willy-nilly everywhere and lets the seed do what it's going to do. Spread the news, plant the seed of hope and truth, water lives with grace and have a harvest celebration when one sinner wakes up to the truth - that when they were dead in their trespasses and sins God made them alive with Christ and raised them up and set them in the Father's lap.

What a message to spread!

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

How Do You See Me? - Part III

What lenses do you look through when you look at another person? Do you see their skin color? Do you hear their dialect? Do you observe their economic standing? Do you judge whether or not they are a beautiful person?

We all bring a pair of glasses to our relationships. We look and judge and generalize our findings into nice, neat little categories. We do this so we can esteem some and demean others. Now on this third day of teasing out II Corinthians 5:14-21, we come to verses 16 & 17:
"So from now on we regard no one from a worldly point of view. Though we once regarded Christ in this way, we do so no longer. Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; the old has gone, the new has come! "
Paul has just stated in verse 14 that he was convinced that when Jesus died, ALL died (implicit is our participation in His resurrection, too). And, that we all need to surrender to this reality and live for Jesus and not ourselves. Now we hear Paul say that it has totally transformed the way he sees everyone. He goes so far as to state that to see someone excluded from Jesus is to have a "worldly" perspective and not a Christian (or Christ-centered) perspective.

To paraphrase Paul -"I can't look at anyone and see them apart from Jesus Christ and His all encompassing work of death and resurrection. Everyone I see was included in Christ's death and resurrection and to think otherwise is to deny His lordship - which is just what the world does and I once did, too!"

To see Jesus as He is, as Lord incarnate, is to have your prescription lenses completely overhauled which revolutionizes the way you see the world around you. To know that Jesus Christ is Lord tells you the secret (mystery is the biblical language) that is hidden in everyone you meet. It drives you... compels you... constrains you... to tell the folks you encounter the Good News of who they are in Christ.

The passage further declares that everyone is a new creation in Christ!

What? That's not what it says, Mark. Someone only becomes a new creation IF they are in Christ and you can't get into Christ unless you pray the prayer. Only after that are you included in Christ and then you are recreated and old things pass away and everything becomes new. You have to get into Christ and only the saved are in Christ.

Hold your horses, that is not what the passage states. I realize that most of us evangelicals were raised hearing the verse, "if anyone is in Christ..." on the heals of praying the prayer or extended as a promise of what is to come when and if we say the prayer, BUT just because we have always heard something doesn't make it so.

Verse 17 starts with the word "therefore" which means that everything that is about to be said hinges on the preceding thought. "Based on all that I have just said, the following is true." What did Paul just state? Who did Paul just say was in Christ dying? ALL! All are in Christ already. He states it again in Colossians 1:17:

"He is before all things, and in him all things hold together."

Therefore, carrying forward the Christological argument he started, he declares if the preceding is true then it stands to reason that in Christ's death and resurrection a whole new creation has been birthed in the person of Jesus. The old man was taken down in Christ and the New Man has arrived in His resurrection.

Peter echoes this in his first epistle, chapter 1:3:

"Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who according to His great mercy has caused us to be born again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead..."

How cool is that! Jesus didn't just come to do the work. He is The Work. Ephesians 2:15b-16 says:

"His purpose was to create in himself one new man out of the two, thus making peace, and in this one body to reconcile both of them [Jews and Gentiles] to God through the cross, by which he put to death their hostility."

In Jesus Christ, and through His death and resurrection, old has been destroyed and the new has been ushered in!

Do you see His new creation in you? Have you trusted in the message of truth? I know it's hard. Everything else around you says something to the contrary. The cold, hard facts of your existence tell you a different story.

But which word will you believe? The word of this world which is passing away as we speak? Or the Eternal Word, Jesus Christ, who has overcome this world and your death and has made all things new?

Tomorrow: What's Your Ministry and Message?

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Those that live... Part II

Yesterday I began my discussion of II Corinthians 5:14-21 by discussing the driving force and conviction of Paul - love and the belief that ALL died in Christ. I finished the discussion by sensing that some of you may have been champing at the bits to have some folks excluded from the work of Christ. I've heard the questions before:

"Are you saying that all are saved and going to heaven?"
"Isn't that universalism?"
"So people don't have to do anything - they are saved but just don't know it?"

Now before I answer the questions that may be whirring around in your head let me digress by first asking you a few questions. What would be so bad with that if it were so? Would it thrill your heart if all in the finale got grace and mercy and not flames?

"But, Mark, the Bible doesn't leave us with that option - some are going to burn!"

OK, OK, that's fine, you can have your hell. But don't be so quick to rush there and start throwing people over the rail into the bottomless pit. God is not quick to anger or to judge and neither should we be. When our focus is on punishment and people getting their just desserts, I fear we run past love and treat it as a minor bit of sentimentality and believe somehow that we need to help God with by dabbing the corner of his eye with our tissue.

"Now, now, God, I know you are a loving God but remember you are also a wrathful and judging God and we can't let people forget that! Hurl a few lightning bolts and remind them whose boss - we don't want any spiritual slackers. Besides, fear will really get our conversion numbers up."

Let me remind you - Zeus throws lightning bolts at people he doesn't like - our Father sends His Son out of love for the world (John 3:16).

All that being said, let's get to verse 15 which states:

"And he died for all, that those who live should no longer live for themselves but for him who died for them and was raised again."

I hope this answered those questions above - there is a "should" in the discussion. Paul has just laid out his strong held conviction that Jesus' death included everyone... yes everyone.. and now he turns to our response - "Don't live for yourself but for Jesus who has redeemed you in His death and resurrection."

The statement assumes that it is possible to live for yourself instead of Jesus. As a matter of fact, I would go so far as to state that it is impossible to live for anyone but you if you dismiss Him.

The sad truth is that all of us are under the harassing assault of this world's system and it has not left us neutral or passive. It has driven us to unimaginable depths of brokenness trying to find our cure. The greedy, lustful, slothful, gossiping, cheating and killing schemes we have tried are all born out of a diseased heart, mind and soul desperately trying to save itself from death's inevitable clutch.

All our attempts are destined to fail. None will satisfy and rescue us.


"What? What's that you said?

Jesus has overcome my death?

When He died I died? When He was raised I was raised?

How can that be?

He's Lord? What does that mean?

All things, including me, are held together in Him?

What becomes of Jesus becomes of me?"


There are two possible responses:

"Yeah right! Nice try! You think you can dupe me with that stuff? I see what's ahead of me and I can handle this on my own. I don't need charity - I can do this myself. What you're after is control and I ain't giving that away. I'm the captain of this ship"

Or

"This is amazing grace that I don't deserve! God loves me that much? Where is He? I've got to tell Him thanks. What? He wants me to hang out with Him and learn how to be free indeed? Sign me up; put me down, whatever it takes. I'm His!

Our response to the Good News doesn't make it true, the Good News is already true - Immanuel. Our response just allows us to experience the fullness of the truth. The scriptural language for that is "salvation" and it is liberating! What do you get if you don't live for Him but for you? Your get your self - and whatever capabilities you have to save yourself from death.

So, back to the questions:

Q. Are you saying that all are saved and going to heaven?

A. Yes, all are saved. But no, it doesn't work that way. If heaven was just a geographical issue it would work that way, but heaven is a relational issue. To say you can have heaven without faith is like saying you can have health without taking medicine. Only those who take the Gospel medicine into their heart are healed by it - the beginning of heaven (which is relational). Those that leave the Gospel medicine on the outside of their heart are not changed by it and they are left with themselves - the beginning of hell.

Q. Isn't that universalism?

A. No. Universalism denies that there is a you in the equation. Universalism says that your will doesn't matter, and your wants will be violated. That to me is like spiritual rape.

I hope that when it is all said and done God's love will win over the hearts of everyone like it has mine, but I am doubtful. Scripture keeps showing us that there are those who don't want God's love and grace in Jesus. Sad! They perish in vain.

Q. So people don't have to do anything - they are saved but just don't know it?

A. If you're asking if we must do something to seal the deal, the answer is no - just receive, with a happy heart, the grace of God. It is finished and you were included. And yes, in a way people are already saved; they died and were raised in Jesus 20000 years ago. But ignorance isn't bliss - it's lost-ness. (Go back to the paragraph above on broken schemes.) Salvation is just life, and it begins when those saved by grace respond by faith to the truth and are set free. (Ephesians 2:4-10)

How beautiful are the feet of those who go, like Paul, with the driving force of God's love and the burning message of inclusion and Christ's accomplishment and call all people to believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and be saved.

Tomorrow - How do you see me?

Monday, November 27, 2006

A Favorite Passage - Part I

One of my favorite passages in the Bible is II Corinthians 5:14-21. This week I am going to tease out my understanding of this passage and its implications for life.
"For the love of Christ controls us, having concluded this, that
one died for all, therefore all died;" II Cor. 5:14
Paul is the author of this letter to the church in Corinth and the two things that jump out to me is motivation and conviction. Paul reveals that the motivation for his missionary zeal is the love of Christ. He has encountered in Jesus a love that blew his circuits and drove him to the uttermost parts of his world. Why does he preach? Jesus' love drives him!

Paul then gives us a glimpse into his thinking when he tells us that he has concluded something. In the NIV translation, it states that he has become "convinced". When Paul states that he has become convinced of something, I tend to take notice. What is this conclusion that he reveals?

"...having concluded this, that one died for all, therefore all died;"

Could this be true? Does Paul really believe this? The implications are huge! Who is the one who died for all? Jesus, of course.

I have found that most people do not have a problem accepting that Jesus died for all - unless they are of a theological persuasion that believes that "all" only means "all of a chosen few". We remember the words of John 3:16 that states that "God so loved the world" and most agree that world means world - every last person that has lived and will live, Jesus died for.

What do we do with the next conclusion of Paul's - "therefore all died"? Could he actually be saying that in Jesus death, you, me, your neighbor Earl and Kareem Abdul Jabar all died with Him in His death? How could this be? The implications are too staggering and we start to crawfish.

"No, that can't be so. He must be talking about the church... after all, he is writing to the church."

OK, let's go with that. If he is talking about only the church dying with Christ, then it is only for the church Jesus died. That ought to satisfy the Calvinists - Jesus only loves the elect and only died for the elect and only the elect died with Jesus. I don't buy it!

All means ALL! Jesus died for ALL and ALL died. This tells us something enormous about Jesus and about you, me, your neighbor Earl and Kareem Abdul Jabar. It tells us that Jesus is way bigger than we give Him credit for and there is more going on with us than we ever imagined.

Paul expounds on the amazing greatness of Jesus in the first chapter of Colossians - go read it. You can't read his letter and not conclude that Paul really believes Jesus is huge - Jesus is Lord! At the same time, you can't observe Paul's missionary zeal and conclude that he doesn't see people in a new and different light.

You can see why I like this passage, it has the potential to upend the sock drawer of our neat little conclusions and scatter our exclusionist socks all over the floor. But then again, it seems that when we encounter Jesus he does just that. He overturns our tables and calls for a thorough cleansing of our temple - His temple - and our lives will never be the same. When we meet this Jesus and believe this Jesus, it changes the way we relate to Him, yourself and others.

I know what some of you are thinking. Your "yeah, but's" are starting to explode. You are reeling at the notion of everyone being "in". You want to make sure that some get left out in the cold (or heat).

I'll talk more about this tomorrow, after all, I have a whole week to blog and I have only touched on the first verse.

Monday, November 20, 2006

Too Salty!

Saturday night Robin and I went to see the latest James Bond movie - Casino Royale - and had a great evening... except the popcorn. I took out a second mortgage for a small bag of popcorn and a 20 ounce bottle of water.

As I watched the 15 minutes of previews (actually one of my favorite parts of the movie experience) I dove into my bag of popcorn, "Boy! This is some salty popcorn!" I said to my wife. I kept eating.

I don't know why I do that, but I kept working my way through the bag of super-salty popcorn until... until... I bit into one piece of popcorn that must have been rolled and battered in salt. Ughhhhh!

"Where's the water!? Give me a few Raisinettes to balance me out!" That was a close call.

As I reflected later on my experience, I thought about how the Scriptures tell us to be salt in this world. Salt that flavors and adds to the experience of life and brings out the mystery of Christ hidden in this creation and waiting to be revealed. BUT...

How many times are we too salty and instead of whetting the appetite of unbelievers for the sweet flavor of Christ, we turn them off with a choking glob of self-righteousness? When we go overboard, all we do is compel the world to go on a low or no sodium diet.

Be salty and yet be careful to not stump your toe when flavoring your relationships with your relationship with Christ.

Thursday, November 16, 2006

Something

"I'm sorry, I already have something on my calendar."

Do you ever wish you could respond that way truthfully when someone asks you to do something that you would rather not do? Do you find that time you wish you could carve out for yourself or your family always gets dumped to satisfy someone else's request?

Here is an easy solution! Go through your calendar and determine what times and dates you want to set aside for you or your family and in that space write - "Something".

When someone asks you if you can do something at that time, look at your calendar and state, "I'm sorry, I already have something on my calendar."

Problem solved.

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

Take, Bless, Break, Give - Part IV

Give - Jesus gave the bread to His disciples.

Jesus takes what we bring to the table, blesses it, breaks it and gives it away to the world.

Most of my life I thought that my Christian journey was about my ability to perform the Christian disciplines that I had been taught. Efforts to produce the fruits of the Spirit always seemed to fall short and never flowed from the center of who I am. The continual effort to manufacture this Christian life only led me to the place of frustration and despair.

I remember coming to the place of being sick and tired of being a hypocrite and in essence telling God that I would get back to Him when I could muster up enough faithfulness and commitment to follow through on my end of the deal.

In essence I was a functional Unitarian. Yes, Jesus had saved me from my sins BUT it was my responsibility to hammer out my personal relationship with the Father and earn his approval and please him with my demonstrated devotion. I was a failure!

I was given a book by C. Baxter Kruger, Ph.D. - God is For Us - and in that book Baxter talked about the vicarious humanity of Christ - ministering in us and on our behalf. It shook me to the core - I wept! Christ in me the hope of glory!

The word that jumped out at me was participation. Participation not performance is the way of Christ. He takes my failing life, blesses and offers it as His sacrifice, breaks and transforms it and gives it to the world. Christ (everything) is working through me (nothing) to do what he wants to do here and now.

The idea of sharing in what God is doing - participation - so hit me that my wife said that in the middle of my sleep I would be saying - "It's about participation!"

"I have become its servant by the commission God gave me to present to you the word of God in its fullness--the mystery that has been kept hidden for ages and generations, but is now disclosed to the saints. To them God has chosen to make known among the Gentiles the glorious riches of this mystery, which is Christ in you, the hope of glory."

Colossians 1:25-27


The most amazing thing about the Christian life is that Jesus shares His life and ministry with us and allows us to participate in what He is doing. As we present ourselves (just as we are!) as living sacrifices, He takes, blesses, breaks and gives us to the world and through us is the ministering Spirit of His grace to the world.

Open your eyes and ears to what God is doing in the world - in and with and through you - and give yourself freely to participate in His mealing sharing life of grace.

Monday, November 13, 2006

Take, Bless, Break, Give - Part III

Speaking of Break - I needed a break last week and took one.

Break - Jesus Broke the bread.

Not only does Jesus take what we bring - sin, brokenness and failures - and bless it - offers it to the Father for us as an appropriate offering - He also breaks it in His sacrificial death and transforms it into the currency of the Kingdom of Heaven. (Currency may not be the best word to use here but is the only one I can think of at the moment.)

The Apostle Paul said that Christ came to set free those who all their life had been enslaved by the fear of death. Kingdom life takes the best shot that sin has to offer - death - and turns it into the way that the Kingdom is advanced.

The bread, with its crusty shell, must be broken. It cannot be allowed to stay in its present state. It cannot be passed along whole and untouched and do the work that it was designed to do.

When our lives remain comfortable and untouched by brokenness, we are unable to truly touch this world of failures, faults, grief and despair. We cannot connect with those "less fortunate" and all we have to give is platitudes and self-help steps of human potential.

But what we see in Jesus is that he does not run from the cup of brokenness and he doesn't deny its pain. Jesus knew full well the extent of the bitter drink of brokenness and asked the Father to remove it from Him - if it was His will. It was not and he drank deeply from the cup of our brokenness and by His brokenness we are healed.

The quiet comfort of Emmanuel - God with Us - in our pain, brokenness, sin and failures heals us as we submit to our own death. In the same way, when we stop fighting brokenness as part of the ministry of sharing at Christ's table we are able to quietly comfort others in their pain, brokenness, sin and failures.

My dear friend Rod can minister to an alcoholic better than I can because he has drunk from that cup of brokenness and can minister as one touched by that disease. BUT... not before submitting to the brokenness of it!

He had to submit to the powerlessness of death and brokenness and let God - as He understood Him - transform his life into a sane slice of breaded humanity that God could use.

We must all submit - give ourselves freely - to the brokenness ministry of Jesus and not resist His breaking us in order that He can give us to the world as a taste of Jesus working in our midst. We are the Body of Christ that is broken for the world and given to the world that they might know the presence and fellowship of Christ in the suffering that this world offers.

If we shy away and refuse the cup, we don't have anything to share with the world but platitudes and empty promises. Our brokenness is not a sign of God forsakenness but His solidarity with us in our pain and His resurrection to new life in us.

How beautiful is a recovering alcoholic, a grieving widow, a dying cancer patient, a downsized middle manager that drinks deeply from the shared cup of Christ's brokenness and says, "not my will but your will be done."

They are now pieces of grace ready to be given to the world!

Tomorrow - Give.

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Take, Bless, Break, Give - Part II

BLESS

As I mentioned yesterday, it is the material we bring to the table that Jesus uses in salvation. Five loaves and two fish are taken by the Lord and transformed into a meal with twelve baskets left over. Jesus takes what we bring and calls us to come just as we are.

But what does He do with our hodge-podge ingredients of sin and brokenness that we bring to the table? He blesses!

Our High Priest takes what we bring and offers it up to the Father as only he can do. In our name and on our behalf he takes our offerings and turns them into something right and good and usable in the economy of God's gracious work of salvation.

Have you ever played basketball? You're dribbling up court or the ball has been passed to you and there before you a shot opens up. You take aim, launch the ball toward the hoop and... and... nothing - AIR BALL! The embarrassment - the shame - you fell short of the glory of 2 more points on the board.

Rewind the tape - You're dribbling up court or the ball has been passed to you and there before you a shot opens up. You take aim, launch the ball toward the hoop and... and... on your team is Shaquille O'Neal. Your shot is still an airball but Shaq takes your airball and ALLY-OOP slam dunks it for two. Two points are registered and you go down in the record books as having an assist.

An ally-oop is nothing more than an air ball made good by the center under the goal. And the blessing of our air ball lives is that we have "Shaq-Jesus" under the hoop taking all our air balls and slamming them home to the Father for us. He succeeds with what we have to offer and it goes down graciously in the stat books of heaven as an assist.

We hear "Shaq-Jesus" say to us at His table - "I'm open! Just it throw it up and I will bless it and take it home for you!"

We often forget that it was the murdering soldiers and religious leaders who received the prayer of forgiveness from Jesus - "Father, forgive them. They don't know what they are doing." and it was their conniving actions that were used to bless the world through his death that he willingly sacrificed but that they tried to orchestrate.

They didn't take His life - He laid it down. He took their failure and used it to bless the whole wide world! The worst day of human history - the day we killed the Son of God is the very material that Jesus used to bless the world with salvation.

The worst of human air balls does not hinder Jesus from taking it and blessing it for His glory and the outworking of His Kingdom.

Jesus takes what we give Him and blesses it. Jesus takes our failures and transforms it into something that he can use... but not before breaking it.

Tomorrow!

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

Take, Bless, Break, Give

I'm reading a great book by Eugene Peterson (translator of The Message) entitled Christ Plays in Ten Thousand Places, and in this powerful book Peterson discusses how Jesus follows a similar pattern when dealing with people and meals.

"When he was at the table with them, he took bread, gave thanks, broke it and began to give it to them."

Luke 24:30

Take - Bless - Break - Give! Jesus did this at the last supper, the feeding of the 5,000, the feeding of the 4,000 and at other times recorded in the scriptures.

Over the next several days, I will tease out these four words and the ministry of the Eucharist that Christ draws us into.

Take - Jesus took the bread!

Jesus invites us to participate in His life and what He is doing by taking what we give Him. He calls us to table fellowship (acceptance) and takes what we have as the material of salvation.

A widow's mite, five loaves and two fishes, a short man who extorts his countrymen by collecting taxes for the occupiers, a porn addiction, a kind word, an aborted child, giving to the poor, a 20 year struggle with alcohol, teaching Sunday School for 30 years, adultery, pride, religiosity, faithfulness, love, peace, feeble legs, one hundred yards rushing, divorce, marriage, success and cancer. All the material of humanity - the mixed bag of beauty and shame that we carry in ourselves is the stuff that Jesus takes from us.

The invitation to Christ's table does not come with a dress code and does not require that we bring our best - just bring what we have. It is our failures and successes that Jesus beckons us to offer and he takes it ALL!

The Lord's table has been misunderstood and abused throughout the ages. You can eat, they cannot. Are you a believer? They are too young! Have you joined the church? Do you have unconfessed sin in your life?

Don't come to the table unworthily!

The fear of defiling the table has led many to not come to the table because what they have to offer falls short of a defined grocery list of acceptable ingredients. All I can bring to the table is faithlessness, doubt, failure and sin. "I am unworthy to come to the table. My five loaves and two fish can never feed the crowd."

The early church made the mistake of turning the Lord's table into a demonstration of the "have's and have-not's" and the poor were left out while the rich gorged. Paul rebuked them and told them their actions were denying the oneness we share in Christ and denying the fact that we feast on Christ not our well-prepared meals.

I believe that we come to the Lord's table unworthily when we come to His table thinking we are worthy. Thinking that our stuff that makes it to the table is placed there because we demonstrated a spiritual culinary flare that impressed Jesus enough to say - "Now this is good home cookin', let's dig in!"

No! The reason any of our stuff makes it to the table is because Jesus takes it - Ritz crackers, fallen cakes, burnt toast and cheese souffles are the things that Jesus takes and invites to His table and begins the process of saving us with those things. But first He blesses!

We'll pick up there tomorrow.

Monday, November 06, 2006

Only As Sick As Our Secrets

We've heard it said that confession is good for the soul. It's true! However, we really don't buy it. We hide ourselves behind masks and performance to cover over our hidden shame. Like Adam and Eve, we are skilled at the art of fig-leave deflection - "Look over there! - whew, I thought you might see me."

God's call to confession is not for the purpose of beating us down and embarrassing us into straightening up and flying right. God's call to confession is in order that we might be free from the things that lurk in the shadows of our lives.

When the doctor left the dirt in my arm after I broke it, the concealment allowed the bacteria to thrive. It was anaerobic (thrives on no oxygen) and spread feverishly in the closed spaces of my arm. His attempt to spare me further pain resulted in the loss of my left hand.

Secrets of hidden shame are our attempt to spare ourselves and others from pain. The only difficulty is that it results in destruction thus leading to more pain. But why do we hide so? What is at work in us?

One of many reasons is that we have a sinful definition of sin. What? Bare with me on this one.

I really believe that sin is first and foremost a "missing the point". That, of course, begs the question - "what is the point?". The point is that we are loved with an everlasting love by a good God - Father, Son and Spirit - and that NOTHING can separate us from that love that has been demonstrated and secured in Jesus Christ. This kind of permanent, unconditional love summons us to rest, relax, abide on a day-by-day basis in the embrace of such an amazing relationship.

To miss that point (Truth as the Bible calls it) does not leave us neutral. It leads down a path of fear, pain and anxiety and into various strategies to manage that pain. Pick your poison.

What is it that you do that salves the pain of your soul? Religion, food, sex, gosssip, people pleasing, greed, adultery, pornography, drunkeness, getting high, working 18 hour days, perfectionism, TV, exercise, shopping, etc. are all possible self-management schemes to quiet the stirring pain in your soul.

Our pet strategies eventually turn on us and instead of offering relief begin to condemn us. More pain and more hiding follow and the vicious cycle continues. Because we believe we are no good, no count, worthless and disgusting we apply more and more anethestic fig leaves to the wounds and hope and pray that no one finds out what miserable wretches we are.

"If you knew me - you would see how unlovable and unacceptable I really am and you would run from the room (relationship) screaming." Secrets!

I wrote the following poem after meeting with a pastor who told me of his painful isolation and turmoil dealing with hidden sins and struggles:

Suffering in Silence

Silence is my friend
Silence is my foe
Silence -
Suffering in silence.

You would never know what I am going through, silence!
You will never know what I'm going through, silence!
Some say silence is golden and I would tend to agree
but silence is also deadly and it might be the death of me.
Silence! Suffering in Silence!

Oh, how I long to be free from this body of death
but the hands that are attached to the Body of Christ might
throw stones instead of help in healing me.
Silence! Suffering in silence!

Just to scream aloud the secrets that scream in me
and to experience embrace not another back turned from me.
Silence! Suffering in silence!

If I dared share my heart would you still look at me?
I don't think I can risk it,
So I'll be what I think you want me to be.
Silence! Suffering in silence!
Confession - the way out of Sickness

When we come to see that the root cause of our problem is our failure to rest in the unconditional love of Christ for us and that our broken strategies don't define us we become free to come out of hiding and share with others the truth of who we are and what we struggle with.

One man says - "When I lose sight of who I am in Christ I drink."
A lady says - "I forgot the truth of my acceptance and tried to gain it by tearing down my friend through gossip."
A teenager declares - "I got so afraid that I'm not loved and God isn't looking out for my future that I forced the timing of love and had sex with my girlfriend."

And together they say - we missed the point! God is good! Jesus loves us! Let us return to the Truth and be set free from our sick strategies born out of a lie.

In Him we are loved! In Him we are acceptable! In Him we are all equal.

I have a confession to make - I am a sinner that misses regularly the truth of how special I am in Christ and I medicate my pain through materialism, lust, food, control, greed, slothfulness and anger.

I need to return to the point - Jesus loves me this I know, for the Bible tells so!

Note to self: Rest, relax, abide in His embrace!

Friday, November 03, 2006

Even More Q&A

Q. How do I get back to a point where I love my husband?

A. That is a great question, many couples face the painful awareness that they have drifted apart and no longer have those loving feelings for their spouse. At the point that it becomes obvious to you it can really scare the bejeabers out of you.

What do you do? Do you believe the Righteous Brothers and just accept that it’s gone, gone, gone, whoa? I hope not. I love that song, but it is not an accurate understanding of love.

First of all, let’s define love. I think the thing that most people are referring to when a question such as this is being raised is romantic fondness. What do I do when I no longer have romantic or emotional fondness for my spouse? Al though this is a significant aspect of love, it is not love.

Love is the act of the will to extend ones self in the best interest of another. Love is not an emotion it is action. Now things can be done and said that hurt and change our level of fondness. The scriptures say that if you want a friend you must show yourself friendly. And that goes for marriage, if a marriage is to be full of fondness and connection there must be kindness. You can’t tell your wife she is fat and expect her to warm up to you when you approach her for affection. That won’t happen.

So how do you get back? There are a couple of steps. First of all you have to do a stop-loss investigation. Just as businesses have to see where they are bleeding ink and stop the losses, couples need to take an inventory of their relational patterns and determine what is depleting them of their emotional fondness. Usually it involves a combination of criticism, contempt, defensiveness and stonewalling. These areas have to be addressed in order to plug the holes in your marriage that are causing your love to leak.

After you plug the holes in your love tank. You have to invest and refill the love tank. That doesn’t mean that you then look at your spouse and say, “Well, what are going to do now to make me feel loved.” It means you say to yourself, “Well, what am I going to do to make my spouse feel loved.” The Scriptures say that where are treasures are is where our heart will be as well. We need to begin to invest in our spouse. Invest what? Loving Actions. When you invest loving actions, loving feelings will follow if you are or have worked to plug up the leaks.

What are the loving actions? Focus on what he does right rather than what he does wrong. Be quick to catch him doing “good” and express your gratitude. Talk with your husband rather than at him. What I mean is, engage in chit-chat, small talk, friendship talk that has you turning to him and sharing your life with him rather than dumping on him all your feelings and thoughts in a long drawn out monologue of pain.

Cultivate common interests. Willard Harley in his book “His Needs, Her Needs” says that husbands desire a recreational companion. You don’t have to spend every waking moment with him, but find things the two of you can do and enjoy together and watch your fondness increase.

Go to bed at the same time. It’s not for what will happen in the bed but having the time to be close and allow for times of connection. When couples don’t go to bed at the same time, they miss out on the opportunities to talk and feel close. Try not to sleep in separate beds or bedrooms. If the only time the two of you go to bed at the same time is for physical intimacy, then you will begin to feel more used than loved.

And finally, if you want to get back to the point of loving your husband or feeling fond of him. Take walks together and stay at the same pace. Robin and I, during our courting days walked all over Clinton together. We weren’t going anywhere, just wandering around connecting and enjoying each other’s company. Our love was literally built on the streets of Clinton, Mississippi. Spend the time together and watch the fires rekindle in your marriage.

So, once again, plug the holes in your love tank, then fill your love tank with loving actions and thoughts and you will find those loving feeling return, return, return, yeah, yeah, yeah..


Q. Can God actually encourage divorce?

A. My answer is “I don’t think so.” If you read throughout the scriptures you find that God’s plan and desire for all couples is to stay together in a loving, honoring relationship. When a marriage comes to a point where it has violated certain significant boundaries, God allows for divorce but I don’t think He’s saying, “I want you to get a divorce.” What God desires is repentance, a transformed life through a changed heart and mind. This transformation would lead once again to a loving, honoring marriage.

But sadly, many times one or both spouse refuses to repent and leaves the marriage with little hope of living up to God’s plans and desires. You see God struggling with this and His love relationship with Israel in Jeremiah 3. Israel was unfaithful and unrepentant in her idolatry that God label as adultery. God brokenheartedly gives Israel a certificate of divorce recognizing her heart and will and yet still calls for true repentance and offers assurances of forgiveness and love to her.

If God forbids divorce, as some say He does, he went against himself. God hates divorce, He states that in the Bible, but why? Because it does not reflect His desire and plan for us. It is always the result of someone’s hard heart and refusal to live in a way that reflects God’s life and love.

God is both Idealistic and Realistic. God puts forward His ideal life and tells us of the blessings that will flow by living in sync with His plan and He recognizes our will and is realistic in that He knows that we will all stray and bring upon ourselves the consequences for not living out the ideal. Thank God that He sent His Son, Jesus to be our salvation, for none of us are ideal, except Him and that which he has done and does is for us, giving us a share in His ideal relationship with The Father. If you are struggling with whether or not to divorce, I would encourage you to consider a few things.

First, is your relationship where it is today, because of what you have done or are doing? If so, begin the process of repentance. You may need help with that, and Christian counseling can be a resource to help you turn in the ways needed for restoration of your marriage.

If your marriage is where it is today because of your spouse and they refuse to turn and participate in the marriage in a loving, honoring way, it is not your responsibility or duty to hold them against their will. Just as God acknowledged the heart of Israel, you may have to acknowledge your spouses heart and give them a divorce. I hope that, like God, you will also show his love with the call to repentance and return and the assurance of love and forgiveness.

I have three daughters and I hate skinned knees. Why? Because I love them and hate how it hurts them. God loves us and hates divorce because it hurts us and His desire is not for us to live in pain. If you are facing the possibility of divorce, don’t rush through this, seek Godly counsel and take your time. This is a huge step and should only be the last step after all attempts for repentance and reconciliation have been tried.

Thursday, November 02, 2006

More Q&A

Q. What do I do when my husband wants me to forgive him and drop an issue but in order to do so I need to talk through it first?

A. Many times it is hard to move on with an issue until things are sorted out and we have a sense that things will change.

For many guys it is hard to discuss things and you may hear him pull the FIDO maneuver –you know - Forget It and Drive On. But it may seem next to impossible to drop something if you feel that the two of you haven’t arrived at a consensus.

I know this is a generalization but ladies tend to be consensus builders. Their conversations are peppered with, “Don’t you agree?” or “Do you see what I’m saying.” You are used to entering into conversations with other ladies and working hard to hear each other’s points. You look to share an experience if you will.

Guys use language for a totally different purpose, to gain position. Here’s another generalization, but men tend to use conversations to win and one up. That’s why when a group of guys are standing around telling war stories or jokes you will hear things like, “You think that’s bad, wait till you hear this...” or “You think that’s funny, get a load of this…” Positioning is occurring in these encounters.

For your husband he may feel as though you are trying to gain a “one-up” position over him and make him look bad. Something men tend to avoid. That’s is why you will probably hear him say, “ I said I’m sorry. What else do you want from me?”

Now you may say that is ridiculous but it won’t help you work things out with your husband. Accepting the way things are and then learning to work with what you have is the way forward. Remember, Judo doesn’t work by blocks but by taking ones movement and direction and using that energy to move them where you want to go. I’m not talking about being manipulative, I’m saying you have to work within the framework of what works.

Let’s face it, you want to discuss the issue for a couple reasons, the primary one being security. You have been hurt and you want some level of assurance that he understands what you have gone through and won’t hurt you in the same way again. So the way forward is your attempt at consensus building. Instead of hitting your head against the FIDO wall, I suggest you take another approach.

Gary Smalley has some great resources on communication and he recommends using words pictures. This works cross-gender in both directions, but men tend to respond exceptionally well to this approach. If you tell him a story that communicates your experience, you will have a much better chance of him hearing you, considering your feelings and remembering. Just think, much of Jesus’ teaching was in parables or word pictures.

Let me give you an example:
Maybe you have worked hard all week to get things in order just so you can have free time with your husband. Although the two of you haven’t discussed it, your hopes are to spend time together doing something special or just goofing off. Without asking he calls you Friday afternoon and tells you he’s invited a coworker and his wife over Saturday to cook out on your new deck. Your crushed, you feel so excluded and disrespected. He didn’t ask you or consider your plans; he just assumed you would be up for his plans.

You bring it up to him and he gets mad, says something about calling off the cookout, you say no, the two of you tensely entertain on Saturday and as the night progresses he warms up to you. After the guests are gone, and the house is put back into some form of tidiness, he snuggles up to you in bed and you are tense and hurt. He asks what’s wrong, you begin to tell him, and he blurts out, “I’m sorry!” and expects you to be filled with glee and give him a huge kiss. It ain’t happening! You need to process and all you get are his sighs.

Happens all the time. But how do you use a word picture? Here goes one:

“Honey what if you worked all week knowing if you got the big project completed you were going to receive an all expenses paid round of golf at your favorite golf resort with your best friend. And after having busted it, you finally pulled it off and on the way home to pack, you get a phone call and are told by your boss, things had come up and they decided to give that bonus to someone in accounting. How would you feel? What would you do?”

It is at this time you let him talk and after he responds, you say simply, “That’s how I felt this weekend when I worked hard this week to play with my best friend only to have my bonus given to your coworker.”

Then it is important to add the following, “I think this is how I contributed to the problem. I never told you what I was working for; I just assumed and didn’t discuss it with you.”

Now drop it, don’t try to point out what he did wrong, you did in the story. Let the story work and by acknowledging your part in the problem and not his, his defenses aren’t as peaked and he is more inclined to look at what he did wrong.

Stories will get you heard, don’t look for consensus, look for communication and word pictures will translate.

Wednesday, November 01, 2006

Q&A

Q: Mr. Simpson, I was listening to your online "Help I have a Teenager" and I have a different dilemma than most parents. I've been smoking pot with my son and feel so guilty that he has no respect for me now. What should I do?

A: First of all, good for you that you are taking steps to make amends for past unwise decisions. That is the hardest step!

Your son has looked for you to set limits and you have not done so. It will take a lot of work to rectify this situation. I always say it would have been a lot easier to have kept Saddam out of Kuwait than to kick him out later. You have a battle on your hands.

For starters, you stop smoking pot. You can only lead when you have moral authority. You may have to say, "Son, I was wrong and I let you down but I am going to change that." It is at that point you have to stop feeling guilty for past mistakes and do what you needed to do all along - be the parent.

You would probably benefit from some professional help to get the car back on the road and out the ditches. You can always give us a call at 601-924-3311

Q: How do you get a spouse to open up and speak after they get angry and stop speaking?

When a spouse stops speaking during or after a conflict it probably means that they are experiencing a great deal of pain emotionally. There is actually a term for that behavior – it’s stonewalling. Stonewalling occurs when you someone feels someone feels so overwhelmed by their experience that the only thing they know to do is survive, and survival comes by hiding behind a great wall. Men will tend to stonewall when they are angry, physiologically distressed and feel inadequate. Research shows that men experience greater physiological distress by conflict than do women.

Women tend to stonewall when they feel unsafe and ill equipped to argue with their husband, who may be using his quote “logic” to run the conversation. Either way, stonewalling shuts down all things.

So what do you do? For starters, take a break. Usually a 30-minute time out will help the situation settle and allow the body to resume to its normal level of functioning. Secondly be gentle. If you saw the movie, The Two Towers in the Lord of The Ring series, you may recall the scene where The Fortress Helms Deep is being attacked by the dark forces. The feelings of despair inside the fortress intensifies as the attackers begin to use their tactics to either scale the wall or blow a hole in it. Emotionally that may be what your spouse feels when you are attempting to get them to open up once they have begun stonewalling.

You cannot fight or pry your way into your spouse’s Helms Deep, this will be experienced as an attack and will only serve to intensify the stonewalling. Instead, after the time out, come gently to your spouse and try and enter through the gate without any hidden weapons or zingers. Come in peace.

Honor the wall and say something like this, “I notice you have shut me out and that says to me that our argument was painful for you. I also realize that closing off is your way of trying to protect yourself and our relationship, thank you. Would you share with me what it is that is troubling you and maybe we can find a better way through this keeps us connected and has both of us winning.

This is not an easy task, but it is necessary. When stonewalling is present often, take it seriously. John Gottman labels it as one of the Four Horseman of the marital apocalypse.
You may want to consider seeking marital counseling if your attempts to enter in through the gate are not successful, because self-protective stances are probably pretty entrenched and over time they will only be fortified.

Monday, October 30, 2006

Blow by Blow

As a child I learned the following scripture verse from Luke 2:52:
And Jesus grew in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and men.
It seemed the perfect verse for a child to learn that helped me see that Jesus, like me, grew up, too.

Somehow my idea of Jesus growing up always left me with a vision of Jesus primarily floating through the life stages, sans pimples and temptations of lust, and the whole ordeal for him being a passive experience. I guess my mental images were formed by the emphasis of Christ's incarnation being so heavily focused on his SINLESS humanity.

Don't get me wrong, I believe Jesus lived a sinless life. My difficulty rested in the lack of discussion of His HUMANITY. Christ becoming flesh seemed to be played off as a "Cocoon-like experience" where he was robed in skin but if you tugged on his eyelid beams of light would shoot out.

Humanity and growing was a formality not a hard-pressed reality. Appearing to be human and being human are two different things and it wasn't until I got a closer look at Luke 2:52 that I appreciated Christ's enfleshment.

The word "grew" in verse 52 is not by any stretch a passive endeavor. The Greek word means "to beat forward - to lengthen out by hammering (as a smith forges metals)".

Do you see it?

Blow by blow Jesus forged a life of love and obedience to the Father inside a broken, twisted frame of human existence. With every urge and temptation to say "NO!" He said "Yes!" to His Father and walked in step with the Spirit's leading. All the warped experiences of human angst, at every developmental stage, he took and blow by blow beat forward a faithful response to the Father.

What does that mean?

Jesus has felt what you feel at every level and most likely to a deeper level AND was able to find the Father in it and through it. His SINLESS HUMANITY wasn't a cake walk but a hammering out faithful Sonship within the fallen, buckled heap of flesh. He was (and is) faithful completely and like a blacksmith who plunges his steel into the water, He plunged His (your) hammered out, faithful life into the hissing bucket of death and solidified permanently His stroke of gracious genius - your salvation!

The book of Hebrews says that we have a High Priest who is able to sympathize with us and deal gently with us because he has been through what we are going through. In your struggles, know that Jesus is not far off but has entered into your struggle and has forged a way through in Himself. Trust in this one with all your heart, and don't lean on what you understand, keep focused on His life for you and you will experience his sustaining hand along all paths.

Left-Handed Power

I was reading a while back in Robert Farrar Capon's Book on parables about the difference between right-handed power and left-handed power.

Right-handed power is the way the world uses power. Win through intimidation - might makes right - management techniques of Attila the Hun. This power is effective and so easily picked up. It is the road that people continued to push Jesus toward and is the path that he so thoroughly resisted.

Left-handed power is the power of the person and is a dismissed by the world. Live by dying - lead by serving - win by losing. Nonsense! Ridiculous! How can it make any sense to let so much potential go to waste!

"Jesus, you can turn every last stone to bread and feed the world. Your reign will go down in the books as the most humanitarian in history."

"What power you have, Jesus. Look as far as you can in any direction and with what you have we can rule the world!"

"Amazing! Jesus, you have to show them what's in your bag of tricks. With your spectacular moves and our marketing strategies, all people everywhere will see and believe."

Left-handed power is so counter-intuitive and so embarrassingly unsophisticated and yet the humble God of the Universe considered equality with God not something to be held tightly to, humbled himself and became a servant. I don't get it!

All that to say, I began to pray about this and asked God if he would show me how to live a life of left-handed power. The irony was too hilarious! I started to laugh - I'm praying for left-handed power and I don't even have a left hand, God!

"Exactly!" I heard God whisper. "Your weakness is my strength. The things that are not is what I use. Your brokenness is the instrument I use to heal."

I look down to the left side of my body and see nothing there; however, whenever I'm in public the empty place at the end of my arm is all that most people stare at.

What a paradox - what is not there gets the most stares. What is my loss has become my greatest gain. My weakest place is God's most powerful instrument.

Left-handed power - you amaze me God!

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Friday, October 27, 2006

Husbands Love Your Wives...

What does it mean for husbands to love their wives as Christ loves the church? Just what does it mean for a man to live out the calling of Ephesians 5? I think this is an important question. Over the years I have had the opportunity to ask many men what it means to love their wife as Christ loves the church and almost without fail I hear an answer that sounds like this. “Well, I’m supposed to be willing to lay down my life for my wife.”

Now that is a high and noble calling, but I have to ask, how often is a guy called on to lay down his life for his wife? How many times a day is he really confronted with the need to take a bullet for her? As a husband I am quick to pledge my willingness to die for my wife, but realistically, I, and most husbands, will throughout our whole life never have to prove our pledge of protection.

But when it comes to the wife’s call, to submit to her husband in a way like unto the church submitting to Christ, that appears to be a daily call. The call seems to be much taller and greater than a chance meeting with a thug in an alley. But are we thinking properly about what it means to love a wife as Christ does the church? Maybe we are missing the forest for the trees.

I realize that a significant aspect of Christ’s love was his sacrificial death for us on the cross, once for all. But let me challenge you with another thought. While Jesus did lay down his life for us, what is his relationship with the church today and every day? His love for the church is one of a shared life.

Let me remind you of a passage. Do you remember the wedding feast of Canaan? Jesus was attending a wedding and to Mary’s apparent frustration, the wedding feast is caught in a potential disaster. They have run out of wine! There were no corner package stores to run to and pick up a case of Dom Perignon and save the day. They were stuck! And yet Mary knew to turn to Jesus. “Jesus, do something about this!”

I love the response Jesus gave Mary, “Is that any of our business, Mother – yours or mine? This isn’t my time. Don’t push me.” In other words, “I will serve no wine before my time.” But like only a mother can do, she went into action and told the servants to do whatever Jesus instructed them to do.

Nearby there were six stone water pots that held twenty to thirty gallons each and Jesus ordered the servants to fill the pots with water. They did just that, right up to the brim. Now think about it. There were no water hoses, no running water, just wells and hot, Mediterranean heat. This was no easy task and you only imagine what they were thinking, “We are out of wine, not water! Has this Jesus lost his mind?”

But being servants, they did as they were told and having completed the task was told by Jesus to fill up their pitchers and take it to the host of the wedding. Now the host didn’t know what had happened and was blown away by the great wine, but the scriptures say the servants knew good and well what he tasted. He tasted miracle wine and they had shared in the miracle.

Can’t you hear the discussion in the household of the servants that evening after work? “You’ll never guess what I got to participate in today! I got to participate in Jesus’ miracle! He shared his glory with me!” I suspect they told that story all the days of their lives.

So what is the point? I think the point is Jesus is so secure in himself that instead of drawing all the attention to himself, he shares his life with others and allows them to have the joy of sharing in what he is doing. Every day Jesus calls his church to share in His life and labor. Isn’t that the true way God loves us. He shares his life with us. The point of God’s love was not to die for us but to secure a place in his life in order to share it with us even if it killed him. And it did.

One of the hardest things for me to do as a husband is share my life with Robin. I want to hoard my life and keep control of it. The struggle to let go and open up is tremendous and it is for most husbands if they are honest. Why is that? Well there are many reasons but probably primarily the fear of having to face one’s inadequacies. What if I open up and you disagree? I will have to be open to other perspectives, receptive and actually give you my life. What will you do with my life? Will you dominate me, control me, or reject me?

A husband’s laying down his life involves opening it up to be shared. And ladies you know that one of the things you desire most in your marriage is to be a partner. To be included and shared with. This is a real struggle; a struggle to share on the husband’s part and a struggle to be a part on the wife’s part.

Headship and submission have gotten a bad wrap for many reasons, not the least that these two things have been abused. In trying to live out faithfully to the call of a Christian home, men have pulled rank and tried to keep control by running the show. And ladies having been controlled for too long have bucked under the heavy thumb of autocratic leadership.

But let’s look again at the lens through which we are to understand this giving. It is the lens of the Father, Son and Spirit. Jesus says that the man is the head of the woman as the Father is the head of Christ. What an interesting perspective! If headship and love is given to us in the context of the Triune relationship then we must ask some important questions.

Are the Father and Son equal? The answer is yes! Does the Father rule over the Son? The answer is no! The Father rules with the Son. As a matter of fact, we read that the Father has given all judgment over to the Son and the Son doesn’t do anything that he hasn’t seen the Father do. The quality of relationship of the Father, Son and Spirit is not of structure and chain of command but one of shared life. The book of Colossians tells us that the Father created all things in and through and by and to the Son in the power of the Spirit. What a shared life! The Father didn’t create the universe behind the back of Jesus and tell him he was on a need to know basis. Absolutely not! The Father planned and implemented all of creation with and through and by and for the Son in the Spirit.

If we see anything about God, He is very comfortable sharing life. God can’t think of doing something alone. Not because of insecurity and he needs someone to hold his hand, but because he knows that it is better to give than receive!

Men, we need to so find ourselves in the shared life of the Father, Son and Spirit that with confidence and boldness we are set free to open our lives up to our wives and their participation. When we do not do that it is the result of insecurity.

Now wives I would like to speak directly to you. One of the reasons your husband is afraid to open his life up to you is because he fears you freaking out. Many of you are not ready to share a man’s life. Why do I say that? I have seen it all too often. When he opens up the struggles and trials you get scared and your security needs are threatened and in your anxiety you try to control.

Now I’m not saying that women are controlling any more than men. We are all controllers when we get anxious. But think of this; when Jesus calls us into his life, do you know what he tells us to expect? Suffering, trials and persecution are the experiences we are told to be prepared for. We all know that there are those that want to share in the blessings of the Lord but not his crucifixion. Fair weathered friends of Christ. But Paul says that he wants to share in the fellowship of Christ’s suffering.

I know many women want to know what their husbands are struggling with, but just as you are asking for some interesting time if you ask to share in Christ’s life, including suffering, you are also asking for some interesting times if you really want to share in your husband’s life. Every man’s inner life is to some degree tortured and full of suffering. That is the curse of the fall. “By the sweat of your brow you will toil.”

If your husband begins to share his life for you and the inner battle that he is waging, he needs to know you are not going to freak out and leave the battle field, rejecting him, condemn him.

What does it mean to love your wife as Christ loves the church? It means to open yourself up to her and give, share your life with her. Share in her life as well. It is to let your dreams and her dreams to become one and the two of you, Lover and Beloved in Love form a living expression of the trinity as you share in the life of the true Lover, Beloved and Love – the Father, Son and Spirit in the life they are sharing with us.

What does it mean to submit to your husband? It means to give yourself to his shared life and bring all your thoughts, and dreams and wisdom and discernment and strength to his life and be a partner, a co-laborer with him in the good times and trials of life. Submission is not being a doormat! It is like Christ, who in his strength and power submitted to the Father’s will and brought all of His fullness to the Father in love and offered it as a living and dying sacrifice to the One he knew loved and shared with him fully.

I challenge you to struggle with these words and experience the life-changing power of a shared life!