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  • Mark 11:11 pm on April 20, 2006 Permalink | Reply  

    I am not ordained to preach 

    One day through the primeval wood,
    A calf walked home as good calves should;
    But made a trail all bent askew,
    A crooked trail as all calves do.

    Since then three hundred years have fled,
    And I infer, the calf is dead.
    But still he left behind his trail,
    And thereby hangs my moral tale.

    The trail was taken up next day
    By a lone dog that passed that way;
    And then a wise bell-wether sheep
    Pursued the trail o'er vale and steep,
    And drew the flock behind him, too,
    As good bell-wethers always do.
    And from that day o'er hill and glade,
    Through those old woods a path was made.

    And many men wound in and out,
    And dodged, and turned, and bent about
    And uttered words of righteous wrath
    Because 'twas such a crooked path.
    But still they followed -do not laugh-
    The first migrations of that calf,
    And through this winding wood-way stalked,
    Because he wobbled when he walked.

    The forest path became a lane,
    That bent, and turned, and turned again;
    This crooked lane became a road,
    Where many a poor horse with his load
    Toiled on beneath the burning sun,
    And traveled some three miles in one.
    And thus a century and a half
    They trod the footsepts of that calf.

    The years passed on in swiftness fleet,
    The road became a village street;
    And this, before men were aware,
    A city's crowded throughoufare;
    And soon the central street was this
    Of a renowned metropolis;
    And men two centuries and a half
    Trod in the footsteps of that calf.

    Each day a hundred thousand rout
    Followed the zigzag calf about;
    And o'er his crooked jouney went
    The traffic of a continent.
    A hundred thousand men were led
    By one calf near three centuries dead.
    They followed still his crooked way,
    And lost one hundred years a day;
    For thus such reverence is lent
    To well-established precedent.

    A moral lesson this might teach,
    Were I ordained and caled to preach;
    For men are prone to go it blind
    Along the calf-paths of the mind,
    And work away from sun to sun
    To do what other men have done.
    They follow in the beaten track,
    And out and in, and forth and back,

    And still their devious course pursue,
    To keep the path that others do.
    They keep the path a sacred groove,
    Along with all their lives they move.
    But how the wise old wood-gods laugh,
    Who saw the first primeval calf!
    Ah! Many things this tale might teach -
    But I am not ordained to preach.
    - Sam Walter Foss

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  • Mark 6:02 pm on April 19, 2006 Permalink | Reply  

    It’s as Simple as That. 

    What does it take to see someone move from a non-committed relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ, to a committed relationship with him? What does it take to see that person then continue in the process of transformation to becoming a lifelong believer and Lord-listener? What does it take to see that person then raise a community up around him/her and start the process over again?

    Our evangelistic efforts traditionally have taken people to an intital point of commitment. We have virtually no healthy skills or history with the lifelong, arduous process of "discipling" (in fact that word more often than not incites suspicion and doubt on account of the only people who have even attempted forms of discipleship have been "cults"). And we are really treading on new turf when we start to think that the average Christian (if with the Holy Spirit there is such a thing as "average") could begin guiding a community him/herself.

    However, if we do not have answers to these questions, then we are doomed to repeat the mistakes we have made for much of Christendom: "WE will help THEM know the Lord."…*time passes*… "WE have done so much! Look at what we're doing for THEM!"…*more time passes*… "WE are in way over our heads! WE need to bring more 'stable' Christians into our midst to help with the instable converts who are floating out and back into the fallen world."

    We will never see spiritual healing as long as we think we are the doctors.

    I am learning to pray daily that the Lord of the Harvest would "raise up workers for his harvest field". I believe now that it is through the lifelong art of following God, and showing others the way is the basic process of discipling. It's about being in a community in pursuit of God, and in time, calling new communities to follow down new paths so that they in turn can begin their own communities of Godly-pursuit.

    How do we see a continent touched by vibrant communities in desperate pursuit of the Lord? If the process is not self-sustainable, and replicatable, we are wasting our time with foolish methods that will be lost in the translation.

    Simply follow God, and invite others to follow with you, and teaching them to invite still more.Walking feet.jpg

    Simple church: It's as simple as that.

    Simple church: It's as messy as that.

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  • Mark 6:23 pm on April 18, 2006 Permalink | Reply  

    Paul’s Idea of Community 

    aero14.jpgHave our churches given up on the Spirit?

    I just finished a paper on Paul's idea of community and church leadership in the book of Ephesians.  Writing that paper has totally blown me away to my understandings of how Paul hoped his churches would function.  If you were to break it all down, Paul hoped that the Spirit would ultimately lead the church.   Just look at 1Cor 12:4 – "There are different kinds of spiritual gifts, but the same Spirit is the source of them all."  Check out Eph. 4:7, "But each of us was given grace as Christ apportioned it." And later on in that chapter, "Now these are the gifts he gave to the church: the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists, and the pastors and teachers.  There responsibility is to equip God's people to do his work and build up the church, the body of Christ."

    Facinating!  So if every person who has been given the gift from the Spirit has a responsibility to help equip the rest of the church to build it up into a mature body of Christ!  Every believing person that I come into contact with is someone I should deeply respect, as someone I could learn the eternal mysteries of God from, because they hold within them the gifts of the Holy Spirit.  Maybe they have the pastoral gift, or an evangelistic one…or something else entirely.  I am learning that even and especially those who seem least likely to teach me something about God have the most to say – they are gifts from God to his people. 

    What do I do to myself when I hole myself up in a seminary that pens me in with people who look/act/think just like me?  'Course, we have our differences, but I don't normally come across people with wildly different backgrounds, polarized opinions on major theological or political issues, or simply someone who just became a Christian days earlier.  They have more to teach me in many ways than I have to teach them.  

    These are exciting times for me.  I'm finally moving away from ALL education, and starting to really live into the sloppy, messy world of life with God.  Where will he take me?  Who will be his teachers in my life?  All believers have been given God's Spirit, and have something to contribute.  I'm listening…

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