Sunday, December 15, 2013

Define "Neighbor"

I love the holidays. The reasons for this are probably no different than anyone else’s; family, friends, festive music, white lights, and numerous mugs of steaming cocoa. It truly is the most wonderful time of the year, in many respects. As I’ve been living in Colorado for over a year and a half now, the holidays provide a wonderful opportunity for me to head home, and touch base with the ones I hold dearest to me. Entering back into doing life with a grown-up family of eight means many things. We all stay up late and watch endless amounts of movie favorites, discuss deeper topics like college loans and automotive maintenance, and enjoy savoring the delights of realizing that some things will never change, despite our ever maturing family. Things like shoveling.
Growing up in the snows of New England, shoveling is one memory that seems to supersede most others as I look back on the winters during my more formative years. My driveway then, (a small fraction of the one we now have), was to me a small runway that would require most of my morning’s attention, as it seemed my  brother and I were clearing that strip of pavement for daily eternities. Even then it seemed our work was never truly done, for our Dad would, without fail, turn from our completed driveway and go and begin shoveling several others, those owned by older members of our community. Perhaps it was conscience, perhaps it was duty, but regardless, my brother and I would join him in taking care of our neighbors. People would drive past and comment on perhaps that’s why we have six kids in our family; to help with various chores such as this. We would smile politely and laugh like it was the first time we had heard such a joke, and comment to the effect of the weather being too lovely not to enjoy or the pleasure of finding a reason to work out or something to that effect. Really we all knew that it was something different. It was an understood responsibility that we had to our neighbors.
Who is my neighbor? The rich young ruler asked this of Jesus in Luke chapter ten. That’s a question that perhaps few of us think about and perhaps even fewer takes the time to answer. Yet how we respond to this question determines a great deal of how we live. I looked up the dictionary’s definition and found it described as such: ‘1: one living or located near another, 2: fellow man’ (Merriam-Webster). The term ‘neighbor’, therefore, implies a few things: first, it applies community. You don’t have neighbors on deserted islands. It requires ‘one’ and ‘another’. Second, it implies relationship.  In the broadest sense it simply acknowledges a fellow human being; at least a shared experience if nothing deeper. And lastly it implies situation. Location, location, location. So even though someone in Tokyo shares my human experience, Mrs. Crocker across the street is much more my neighbor as the result of the location we both inhabit. Though perhaps not shared in the same way, the definition of the term widens our understanding of who are neighbor is to pretty much…everybody.
But wait, that’s too broad, too overwhelming, too costly. Jesus answers the rich young ruler’s question with the parable of the Good Samaritan. The neighbor in the story is the one who saw the need of another, and was able to meet that specific need. In the context of that story it makes sense. Why then is it so difficult to see that in my own life? Do I love my neighbor as myself? What does that even mean? Perhaps the question I should be asking myself is, what are the needs I see and which are the ones I’m able to meet?
Last week we got more snow. Western NY is about as forgiving as Massachusetts in regards to accumulation. Shoveling is once again the name of the game, and I joined my dad outside for our common task. Upon completion, without neither hesitation nor conversation, we walked across the street to our new neighbor’s house and began to shovel. I’m grateful for this legacy of particular faithfulness my parents have lived out before me so well; that our neighbors deserve our compassion and help because that’s what it means to not only be a neighbor, but what it means to be a servant of Christ.  More and more I’ve seen an increasing trend in how our society regards our neighbors. They’re the ones that have the nicer car. They’re the ones that have the obnoxious dog. They’re the ones who need to mow their yard once a century. We know something of the peoples whose lives surround ours but there is little intersection beyond possible awkward waves and exchanging of mis-delivered mail. Sadly enough even as believers, our neighbors receive little more than our half-hearted considerations. Yet the call beckons us all the same, “…love your neighbor as yourself.” (Mark 12:31). Jesus says that of all the 613 commandments in the Old Testament, the greatest one is centered around this idea of loving God and loving others. It is our joy as much as it is our responsibility to love well. The holidays can be a time when we kid ourselves into thinking we’re more giving and caring towards our fellow man. Charles Spurgeon wrote, “…perhaps, you say, “I cannot love my neighbours, because for all I do they return ingratitude and contempt.” So much the more room for the heroism of love. …and if they are hard to please, seek not to please them, but to please your Master; and remember if they spurn your love, your Master has not spurned it, and your deed is as acceptable to him as if it had been acceptable to them. Love your neighbour, for in so doing you are following the footsteps of Christ.”

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Another Moment



Life is made up of hundreds of millions of moments. Some naturally grand and others quite insignificant. Yet each one, when given its proper recognition, chastens its participant to stop, breathe, and drink it in. I’m learning, however slowly, to take these moments as they come.

One such moment happened about two weeks ago, as I once more boarded a plane that would take us to our next speaking engagement. This time somewhere in the great state of Ohio. I don’t know about you, but one of my favorite parts of flying, (other than the obviously delicious, free snacks), is when the plane reaches its “cruising altitude” and the captain alerts all passengers that it is then safe to use portable, electronic devices. That directive really only means one thing to me: music. I love music. It speaks to me and beckons my imagination to follow wherever it may lead. I don’t know if it’s simply the music, or if it is the magical combination of cloudy vistas and beloved melodies, but somehow listening to music while flying has always been one of my favorite things.

So at 30,000 feet; somewhere between St Louis and Memphis, my mind begins to wander, pulled along by a familiar James Taylor melody. What a rich three and a half months it has been here with Axis. A mental slide show begins to play images of schools, churches, students, teachers, parents…each one with a story that in God’s amazing grace I have now become privy to. I smile at the jokes and the silly things I’ve experienced whether it be a learning a cheer routine in Houston, TX or using mac-and-cheese as dip for Tostitos in Seattle, WA. Conversely my heart begins to break as I recall the stories I’ve heard of struggles, suspicions, and sins. I look out the cabin window and witness the passing of another plane. I wonder if there is anyone on board there watching us pass them as well.

These are beautiful memories that I hold. I think back to the five days we just spent in New Iberia, Louisiana. I am hard pressed to think of a more beautiful place that we have travelled to this semester; to wake up in the morning and have my devotions on the dock alongside a lazy bayou; after trips to the Northwest, the sun and temperature there were welcome realities. But more than just the lovely local of Louisiana, (and some of the best food I’ve ever had), we were blessed by such amazing host families once again. Axis would be a much lesser ministry if it lacked this aspect of living life together with people in the community. Because now the story of Axis is enriched by knowing people like the Mahoneys and Prentiss’. And we pray that their stories as well have been blessed, as our lives have connected with theirs.

The day before we left, Dr. John took us out on his boat to explore the bayou. On the back of that boat, there is chair that, (because of its relative height in relation to the others and not because of any real prestige due it), was reserved for who Dr. John called “The Queen of the Bayou”. I’m sure you can imagine who sat there. Yup. Another moment. As we sped down narrow water ways lined by cypress trees and cat-o’-nine tails…my soul welled up with hallelujahs.

What a gift this semester has been. Yes, it has been challenging. I don’t think I’ve ever been so frustrated or proud of myself. It’s incredibly hard to build relationships that earn you the right to speak hard truths into a person’s life, yet with knowledge of having to say goodbye in such a short amount of time. To be constantly “on”, be it physically, mentally, emotionally, or spiritually is exhausting and there have been moments in which I’ve doubted my ability to just do the next thing. Yet God has blessed every step of the way, with His infinite grace and boundless love. Not because we are deserving of it. But because that is Who He is. GK Chesterton once wrote, “The cross opens its arms to the four winds; it is a signpost for free travelers.” The grace of God is free to all! May the weary sojourner find rest in the One who paves the way before him. As I sat on the plane, gazing out on a penetrating blue sky, faint strains of David Crowder’s “O for a Thousand Tongues” echoes somewhere in my subconscious, calling my attention to the reality of the boundless love of God that would call someone like me, or an organization like Axis, to join Him in pointing others to the signpost of the cross.

Jesus told his disciples, “Freely you have received, freely give” (Matthew 10). I am reminded of what I have received. How could I hold on to it as if it mine alone? If the very Son of God did not consider His deity something to frantically cling to, and instead took upon himself our broken form in order to present us redeemed before Almighty God, how much more so should I be willing to simply take the glorious free riches made available in Christ and share them with all I meet? Why is the call to deny myself so difficult?! It’s not because I don’t want to share. But there is a fear that somehow in the end I’ll be “used up” myself. To obey God is only as hard or as easy as it is to believe His promises. May my heart be overcome by the truth of God’s great and precious promises, and in turn may I be quick to obey and freely give what I have undeservedly received.

I start up from my reverie to a line from a favorite Rich Mullins’ song,
“Oh you meet the Lord in the furnace, a long time before you meet Him in the skies.
Where you are, ain’t where you wish you was.
Oh your life ain’t easy. And the road is rough.
But where you are, is where He promised to be.
From the ends of the world. to every point of a need.”
As my soul clings to this promise of God’s eternal presence; may my quick obedience surely follow.

I’m grateful for moments like these. Perhaps it was an emotional stirring brought on by a view of stunning clarity coupled with favorite songs. Perhaps. But maybe that’s why I enjoy hearing music while I fly; it stirs up the artist within me. Not necessarily to create. But instead to think beautifully.

Monday, April 8, 2013

The Most Excellent Way



(Just as a side note, this has been sitting on my computer since the end of February...didn’t’ realize I never posted it until today!)

I have been thinking a lot about love recently. It didn’t help that grocery stores and Kay commercials had been reminding me almost daily that Valentine’s Day was only just around the corner…though somehow that elusive corner starts presenting itself the day after New Years. Funny. But that’s not actually what has me thinking about love. Axis has. I spent the last 3 weeks speaking in Canada, Washington, and Seattle, and at the end of every venue we do, I get to talk about this concept of love, and what if that’s really what it’s all about.

In one of our Axis presentations we look at the Jewish tradition of the “Shema” which is found in Deuteronomy chapter 6 and it reads as, “Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one. Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength.” According to the Talmud, (Jewish law), as soon as a child is able to speak he is taught to say the Shema once in the morning and then again at night. So it’s fair to assume that Jesus, growing up in the Jewish home that he did, would also have had to learn this himself. It’s interesting to note that Jesus references the Shema early on in his ministry when asked which is the greatest out of all 613 commandments found in the Old Testament. Jesus’ answer to the question is this, “The most important one,” answered Jesus, “is this: ‘Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one. Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.’ The second is this: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ There is no commandment greater than these.” (Mark 12). So here we have the Son of God, saying that of all the commandments, the greatest centers around this idea of love: loving God and loving others. It would follow then that I should be learning to do everything in love.

But am I? Is love at the center of why I do, what I do, and how I do it? The Apostle Paul says in his 2nd letter to the church in Corinth that we should be compelled by the love of Christ. This is to be our motivation. I have to ask myself, is this true of me? Sometimes it’s just easier not to ask that question…

I learned a lot about love this past trip. While we were in Canada, I happened to mention to the principal of the school we were speaking at that on my bucket list was to try curling. Now for clarification, my bucket list is not what one might term “practical”. Mostly it’s made up of silly wishes that I’ve accumulated over 24 years of existence. I knew that being in Canada, there was probably ample opportunity to experience the sport that has intrigued me for many winter Olympics. Just a side comment in a conversation, nothing more, and yet the next day I found out that she scheduled an outing with the High School students to…you guessed it…a curling rink. I learned two things during that hour curling: 1) even when you learn how to play, it’s still a confusing sport and 2) that this was a picture of love: taking another’ simple wish and doing whatever it takes to make it come true. They bought us shoes, taught us how to play, and all because of an insignificant bucket list. And we were there to love on them! To encourage and bless them! And here I was on the receiving end of such lavish love. It is incredibly humbling.

Love is messy. It runs over the broken edges and cracked places of our lives. As the hymnist wrote,
What wondrous love is this, O my soul, O my soul!
What wondrous love is this, O my soul!
What wondrous love is this
That caused the Lord of bliss
To bear the dreadful curse for my soul, for my soul,
To bear the dreadful curse for my soul!
This is the love that is to compel us to love our God and to love others as ourselves. I confess that I cannot even begin to grasp the depth of so great a love let alone hope that my own comes even close to it. “Now faith, hope, and love abide, these three; but the greatest of these is love (1 Corinthians 13). As I have experienced the reckless, raging fury that they call the love of God, and as I have received lavish love from others, my heart longs to love in the same way. Reckless, lavish love. For love is the most excellent way.

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Reckless Immersion



There is something to be said for just jumping in. To walk along the beach is wonderful; to feel the waves lap the shore line and explore the salty pools left reluctantly behind by passing tides. But perhaps for me the greatest sensation has always been the plunge after a long summer day that occurs when, without prior thought or contemplation, one simply runs headlong into the water and completely submerges in its chilling depths. The swim in and of itself is renewing, but for me, it is the run that stimulates. The complete abandon that compels me to action…

As I write this I am sitting on a plane heading back to Colorado Springs after almost 3 weeks traveling and speaking all over Texas. My first Axis trip is almost complete and what an experience it has been! For those of you who don’t know, I was not even supposed to be on this trip. In fact this entire time I was supposed to be back in the Springs; training and researching presentation material. But the day before we left, I found out I would be on this trip instead. What better way to learn how to swim than simply diving in? I confess there was that moment where I was convinced that there had to be a better alternative. Perhaps it would be the better option to request more time so as to study more about swimming, or to practice swimming techniques in my room, or even to beg God to give me a greater ability to swim than I knew I already possessed. It wasn’t that I didn’t want to swim…I just wasn’t sure I was ready to see myself drown.

Yet in God’s amazing grace, He has not called me out of the boat simply to watch me struggle. Rather, He beckons me so as to share in His amazing ability to save. I hold an insignificant gift and yet somehow He does not reject it. Rather, He makes it beautiful. My first time speaking was before an audience of almost 300 students. I wish I could say that it was flawless; that my passion for what I was doing somehow covered a multitude of sins. But I must decrease so that He may increase. There was frustration in my imperfection, which I concluded had to be a disappointment to my Maker as well. And yet…somehow…it wasn’t a failure. The odd reality is is that this whole thing is not about me. Strangely enough it never was. Or ever will be. My heart cries out with Mary as she proclaims, “My soul glorifies in the Lord and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior, for He has been mindful of the humble state of His servant.” I sit here amazed and incredibly humbled, that God would allow me this opportunity to share in what He has always been at work doing; drawing people unto Himself.

We got to speak at 3 schools in the Houston area and one in San Antonio altogether reaching over 1,000 students. To speak in front of students is one thing. I understand it is a privilege that I do not deserve. But then there are those blessed opportunities to talk with them outside of the sessions; to listen to their hopes and dreams, and often times their failures and fears. To then be able to speak God’s truth and grace into their lives? Lord, I am amazed by You! One student told me after lunch one day that she always wanted a big sister, and after only the few times of interacting with her, she felt like for the first time she had one.

I’m ready to rest. And there is time for that before I leave again. But I am learning that the plunge is addicting. There is a new adrenaline pumping through me that is born out of an abandonment to do what God has called me to! Yet may I not be as the disciples, who after the first time they were able to cast out demons went running to Jesus exclaiming with joy, “Lord, even the demons submit to us in Your name!” They were stoked out of their minds at this new ability they found they possessed. And yet here their Savior simply replies, “…do not rejoice that the spirits submit to you. Rather, rejoice that your names are written in Heaven.” May my boast never be in what little I am able to do in Jesus’ name. But rather may the joy of my life be grounded in the blessed assurance that my life is hid with Christ on high.