Updates from May, 2011 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Mark 9:33 am on May 12, 2011 Permalink | Reply  

    Table Questions 

    One of my favorite habits we have in our house church is “Table Questions.”

    It isn’t anything super formal.  We gather in the evening time each week, and begin by sharing a meal.  We share, laugh, pass the potatoes, and catch up on each other’s lives and missions.  It feels like a family reunion of sorts.

    And then, before finishing up our meal and moving on to a time of prayer and worship, someone shares a specific question at the table that helps guide the conversation into a time of discovery, worship and common reflection.

    Table Questions are something you can do in your missional communities, house churches, small groups, or simply your family’s dinner each evening.  It is reminiscent of Jewish practices, where a question is asked at table and there is dialogue and learning – both for the children and adults.  This is where family learning happens!

    The table is a place of safety, a place of unity, a place for partaking in food and each other.

    To be honest, Table Questions, not carefully thought through before asking them, can lead to disaster.  Allow the potentially divisive question to wait for another time - Table Questions draws people out, it doesn’t recoil them into hiding.  It offers a simple starting place for each person to contribute no matter their faith maturity or intelligence, which will help them find their voice later in the evening as you all share in a “worship potluck” (1 Cor 14:26).

    Pass around the responsibility of Table Questions to new leaders in your community.  Give lots of people the chance of fascilitating meaningful conversation.  Even non-believers in your gatherings can lead this!  It gives all a sense of ownership, and helps the group cultivate new leaders for new churches not-yet-planted around other kitchen tables!

    How to ask a Table Question that leads to life:

    • Understandable. Think about the specific words to use.  Say the question once, and say it succinctly.  Make it easy to understand, and folks will be happy to answer.
    • Perspectives. Ask questions that point not to hard truths, but to one’s experience.  For example, don’t ask a question starting with, “Is it right to…” but instead, try, “When have you ever experienced…”
    • Value-Driven. Draw on questions that might lead to values your community holds.  For instance, ask, “What does love look like in your life?”
    • Collaborative Questions. Avoid trial matters.  Avoid doctrinal matters.  Avoid political positions.  Again, these things can wait for another time, perhaps later in the evening, or at another gathering all-together.  The aim here is to cultivate collaboration, not competition.
    • Have Fun. Give people opportunities to tell their own story.  Ask them to share favorite memories, challenging circumstances, and more from their own life.  Keep a playful spirit about you.  And always give people the chance to ‘pass.’

    Great ways to start a Table Question:

    • “When have you ever…”
    • “How might we…”
    • “In your experience, what does ______ look like?”
    • “If you could say one thing to someone else in the room that would build them up, what would you say?”

    The table is a sacred space for humans.  It is where our LORD waits for us – a great banquet table.  I am sure there will be many questions asked at that table (mostly, us asking God all those BIG questions we have for him…), imagine your Table Questions as an echo to that banquet feast coming soon in Heaven!

    Share
     
  • Mark 9:52 am on April 24, 2011 Permalink | Reply
    Tags:   

    The Wrong Newscasters 

    Today:  a strange story about a few hysterical women who come running in from the edges of town with an unbelievable story.

    Something about their Rabbi’s corpse is missing?  In their day, their words wouldn’t even hold up as reliable in a court of law.  Why would a story so central to an emerging faith community under Imperial rule allow the first witnesses to be women?  Why?  Because that’s how God loves to poke fun at us. :)

    Yes, women in the First Century had no more reliability than children when it came to reporting an incident, and yet they were the first witnesses to the Resurrection.  They were the first evangelists – the first missionaries.  In a way, Matthew, John and the other Gospel writers made a choice to include the women as part of their re-telling of this crucial story.  As Christianity spread around the Roman Empire in their day, would anyone in their culture believe this rag-tag group of wild-eyed believers when they heard that it all rested on the testimony of some lower-class women?

    In fact, this “fragile” part of the story is exactly the kind of way God wants to bring his news to folks.  Later apologists would reflect on God’s means to win back his creation:

    1 Cor 1:27 Instead, God chose things the world considers foolish in order to shame those who think they are wise. And he chose things that are powerless to shame those who are powerful. 28 God chose things despised by the world, things counted as nothing at all, and used them to bring to nothing what the world considers important. 29 As a result, no one can ever boast in the presence of God.

    “Jesus is risen!” Scream the winded women as they catch their breath at the door of the disciples rented home.  And the men  have a choice.  Do they go along with the social norms of this world, and pass up what these ladies are saying for favor of living with the way they currently understand the world to work:

    that women can’t reliably tell us the truth…

    that our dreams and hopes are crushed by those in power…

    …that people who are dead stay dead…

    Or will the disciples choose to live in a new kind of world – one where hope overcomes fear, where men and women learn to watch for God together, and…where He is Risen…Indeed!

    The choice is still being made today… in you, and in me.

    Share
     
  • Mark 7:16 am on April 18, 2011 Permalink | Reply  

    Adventures in Missing the Point 

    We humans are pretty funny creatures.

    We hold in us the very essence of the Divine, the purpose of all creation.  We are the very focus of God’s love and his mission.  We were important enough to him to put everything else in the cosmos on hold so he could live and dwell among us as our friend.

    He dined with us; he died for us.

    And still – we have this funny habit of majoring in the minors.  What more does the Church bicker about than Communion / the Eucharist / the Lord’s Supper… see!  We can’t even agree on what to call it!  :)

    I suppose we shouldn’t be surprised.  When something of that magnitude – dining with our Creator, is handed to us mortals, we have a tendency to shoot off in unimportant rabbit trails, just like the disciples did on that final evening with Jesus in the upper room.  As Jesus is sharing the elements of bread and wine, washing feet and calling them “friends,” they are busy bickering about who will desert Jesus – and we have been bickering ever since.  Right in the presence of Jesus, we have all these ‘adventures in missing the point.’

    Its almost as if we have some mechanism in our minds that numbs us from approaching what is real – and we choose instead the tertiary, the tangential and the temporary.

    It is like Mary hiding in the kitchen preparing the food to the neglect of her guest – Jesus, Immanuel…God with us.  God may be ‘with us’…but are we with him? Or are we just in the other room, finishing up the dessert?

    When it comes to Communion/Lord’s Supper, whatever you want to call it – (don’t call it anything!), let that be the one time when formalities don’t have to matter.  Who cares whether there should be leavened or unleavened bread, one or two cups of wine (grape juice?)

    Maybe its time to re-institute the holy sacrament of playfulness, of friendliness, of devotion to the one thing that matters.  Is it worth giving up your connection to Jesus to decide whether or not to pass a plate of bread around the room, or to come to the front to receive it?

    I’m done majoring in the minors.  I’m done focusing on the steps of the dance, and instead simply enjoying my Dance-Partner.  I’m interested in looking squarely into Jesus’ eyes and letting him remain the center of my life – where he wants to be anyway.  I’m ready to have some fun in my friendship with him – to let his love be the driving force of my theology, my liturgy, my life.  Its so much more fun!

    How about you?

    Share
     
c
compose new post
j
next post/next comment
k
previous post/previous comment
r
reply
e
edit
o
show/hide comments
t
go to top
l
go to login
h
show/hide help
esc
cancel