Wednesday, August 17, 2016

IS JESUS A REPUBLICAN, DEMOCRAT, OR SOMETHING ELSE? - By Ted Carnahan


Thomas Jefferson wasn’t much of a Christian as most would consider 'historic Christianity.'  One time he set out to free Jesus from the supernatural and miraculous stories surrounding him.  Taking in hand the New Testament and a razor blade, he literally cut out everything that seemed to him to be at odds with his view of the real Jesus.

Unsurprisingly, the so-called “Jefferson Bible” paints a picture of Jesus Christ that looks remarkably like Thomas Jefferson.

Since the founding of the American republic, people of all views have invoked the name of God over their particular political positions and persuasions.  But with the coming of the “Moral Majority” in the 1980s, a fairly narrow segment of Evangelical and Fundamentalist Christians (claiming to speak for all ‘real’ Christians) loudly voiced a particular political platform: anti-abortion, anti-gay rights, anti-immigrant, pro-school prayer, pro-Israel, and so on.  Pretty soon, both Democrats and Republicans turned “Christians” into just another voting bloc.

Today, Democrats and Republicans alike strategize on how to use religious values to manipulate people into voting for them.  Democrats propose programs to assist immigrants and the poor.  Republicans advance public morality and personal responsibility.  Both say they are motivated by their Christian faith.


When we let any other framework or platform become the lenses through which we view Jesus, the message of Jesus becomes distorted.  If you are a Republican or a Democrat first (or anything else first) and a Christian second, you will invent a Jesus who looks remarkably like you – along with your politics, your preferences, and your priorities.


We have words for a Jesus like that: Idol. 
False God.
Disappointment.

If the teachings of Jesus don’t challenge you, no matter what your political persuasion or how long you’ve been following him, you haven’t been taking him very seriously.

Monday, August 15, 2016

PRAISING IN THE STORM - By Rebecca Krishnamurthy


A year ago my world turned upside down.  To give you some background, I have always loved Jesus.  I met Him when I was four years old and distinctly remember sweet encounters with Him as a child.  I had times of rebellion and experimentation as a teenager, but never stopped loving Jesus.  I believed very firmly in His power, His comfort and His desire to draw close to us.  I had a rocky family life growing up and often turned to Him for comfort.  I also had seen many miraculous things. I have seen my sibling’s trajectory change when my Mother cried “Jesus!” and fall into a laundry basket of clothes instead of a hardwood floor.  I have seen healings over and over.  I have experienced miraculous healings for things as small as a hiccup to a headache.  I ate an entire bottle of my grandfather’s heart medication when I was two.  When they pumped my stomach in the ER, there was nothing.

My brother was born with Down’s syndrome and had three holes in his heart.  We took him forward in church and were overjoyed to find out before his heart surgery that the holes were gone.  He also had Grand Mal seizures as a baby.  Through an experimental vitamin treatment they were healed completely.  At the same time, there are many aspects of his condition that have not been healed.

That is why my world turned upside down a year ago.

My 20 month old son began regressing from an active happy toddler to being unable to crawl or function independently in a four month time span. We don’t know why.  We have seen specialists in multiple hospitals.  We are waiting on test results.  The doctors are stumped.  We have the small possibility that my son will have a treatment option available to him, but every doctor or therapist we speak to thinks this is a lifelong journey, with the possibility of a shortened life span for my son.

I’m scared.  Who wouldn’t be?  To say that hearing this is hard is an understatement.  My heart breaks.  My spirit groans and screams for healing.  I have often wondered why my mother has not done more to take my brother to places where he could be prayed for and we may see healing.  I understand now.  There’s nothing left.  Between the ridiculous numbers of doctor appointments, to the sheer physical demand of caring for a quadriplegic, there’s no energy left to think about taking my son across country to visit that place I might have heard of that has healing services.

“Where is Jesus in the midst of this?” You might ask.
Didn’t He miraculously heal people in the Bible?
Isn’t He alive and active today?
Why did my brother experience miraculous healing in certain areas but not others?

I have asked these questions.  I have screamed them internally.  I have despaired and had hope.  I have had moments where I thought I would fall apart and moments where I was ready to fight.

The one constant in the midst of this is Jesus.  
He is my comfort.

That seems like such a small word, right?
It’s not.

When was the last time you allowed yourself to be comforted?  Like really comforted?  While your eyes are streaming, your body is heaving with sobs, you flail and cry and pour out every thought that’s in your brain.  Knowing full well that on the other end of it, there will be no offense taken, no instruction to hold it together, no reprimand for being too extreme.  Just a peaceful, quiet voice saying “I’ve got this. I’ve got YOU,” - with a smile.

Isaiah 40:11 says that God leads gently those with young.  I think He knows how hard it is to carry small children both physically and emotionally.  A hundred years ago, many children didn’t live past the age of two.  My son would have not survived then.  The incredible inventions that we have in the medical field make miracles happen every day.  I have often been convicted for being dissatisfied with that type of miracle.  I want the one that comes and returns everything to normal in an instant.  I don’t want the process.  I don’t want to have to carry the weight of grief as I watch my son progress and deteriorate, to have hope and then despair.  I know Jesus is healing my son.  I know that the breakthrough is coming.  He has shown me in my dreams.  He has said so in the Bible.  He did it on the cross.  Right now I’m in the battle.  I’m in the “now & not yet” realities that we live in on this earth.  How I handle it is what is most important.

I don’t mean to keep my chin up and keep going until the breakthrough happens.  I mean that I fall apart on God’s lap.  I scream at him, I cry and flail and grieve.  He grieves with me.  He screams with me.  He flexes his arm and sends angels to assist in the battle.  I have seen mountains move in my journey with my son.  Miracles have not come in the way that I want, but they have come.  I have seen doctors the next day that didn’t have openings for six months on their schedule.  I have had tests come back in 4 days that should have taken 2 months.  I have had family and friends bend over backwards to serve my family and to meet any need that we had.  I have had every need met.

I know that God is answering and he’s answering with a vengeance.
He’s got me.
He’s got this.
He’s doing it so I can fight this battle.
He’s taking my sword and my shield when I’m too tired to fight and he’s fighting for me.
He’s doing it so I can stand with Him on the battlefield and win.
He’s my defender and my strength.
He’s my partner and my friend.

If you are going through a similar situation, don’t try to do it all.  Don’t try to be strong by yourself.  We were never expected to be.  The Bible says that those who mourn will be comforted; those who are weak will be made strong.  Trying to fight a battle alone is ineffective at best and a sure way to lose.  Take time to be comforted.  Take time to grieve your situation and let God whisper his love and comfort in your ear.  Let him be God for you.  Let Him be strong for you.  Let Him take care of things when you’re tired, and when you’re ready to get up again, fight the battle with everything you’ve got.  Don’t reserve your energy in case you need it later, give it your all and then go rest.  I have had many people ask me if I’m taking care of myself in the midst of this.  I have had to learn how.  What that really means is that I make time for Jesus to take care of me so that I can take care of other things.  He loves you.  More than you can know.

Wednesday, August 10, 2016

FOR THE LOVE OF GOD, SING! - By Melody Kuphal


We’re supposed to sing in worship.  At least, the majority of the churches near me are asking the congregation to sing in worship.  Some use an organ, some use a piano, some use a band, and some go with voices only.  So, naturally, everyone attending churches in my area sings every song – 100% participation – right?


Not right?
Well, why not?
Have we concluded that singing in worship is optional?

OF COURSE a music person thinks it’s important to sing in worship! With the name “Melody,” my opinion is going to be biased, so let’s check a different source.  How many times does the word “sing” appear in the Bible?

Well, to be honest, I haven’t personally counted, but it seems like a lot.  So I did a non-scientific study - I Googled it!
According to Ask.com, “sing” appears in the Bible 121 times with the count rising to 209 using the New English Translation.  If God asked us to do it dozens of times, I would think it was important, but we’re talking over one hundred times!


So, if someone is not singing in church, why not?

Reason #1 - “I don’t know the song.”
OK, that’s not a bad reason, but let me ask you this very personal question: Does that stop you in the car or in the shower?  Now, we could really have some fun quoting mispronounced lyrics or reenacting times when you jumped in with both feet on a song you didn’t really know because you were having fun.  I don’t know how your church is programming music, but we try and pick songs that have a lot of repetition in them and we make sure each worship service has a heavy diet of “familiar” music with some “newer music” sprinkled in – usually being introduced in the prelude or the offering slot about a month before we ask the congregation to sing it – until the new music becomes part of the “familiar.”  In addition, we’ve got Spotify links with each weekend’s worship songs.  I’d encourage you to give it a shot!


Reason #2 - “I’d rather listen to the professionals/band/choir.”
That’s a talented group of gifted leaders you’re talking about.  They put in a lot of hours of preparation to lead the congregation in song.  


But here’s the thing: it’s not a concert – it’s a worship service.


Yes, there are times music groups offer a presentational musical gift (for our church, that’s during the prelude and the offering) but, if your church is providing lyrics, that’s the part of worship when you’re supposed to sing. Besides, singing with really great musicians is really fun!


Reason #3 - “I Can’t Sing” and/or “I’m embarrassed.”
Well, friends, you are in good company.  But, your Daddy -  your Perfect Heavenly Father - asked you to.  If you don’t think he’s given you a voice sufficient to praise Him, well, I’m pretty certain you are mistaken.  If you have a little one in your life – a child, grandchild, etc. – how talented do they need to be for you to want to hear their song of praise about YOU?  Factor in that our God is the Perfect Parent and He loves to hear songs from His children (Yes, this includes those who communicate without their voice.  If you have never witnessed worship using sign language, I encourage you to find an opportunity!).

Maybe you just don’t like to sing in worship.
You may not like the people near you.
You may not like the music your church chooses.
But this is your church family.
God called you into corporate worship for a reason.  Don’t confuse your preferences with obedience to what your Loving Father has instructed you to do.


Friends, I am encouraging you to step out in faith, lifting your hearts and voices in song.  I’m not asking you to LEAD the singing – not everyone is equipped to do that – but God has given all of us a voice more than sufficient to praise Him.


Please, join us in singing!
Melody L. Kuphal is the Director of Music at Hosanna! Lutheran Church in St. Charles, IL. She has recorded six albums, four of which are specifically aimed toward kids singing in worship. Melody is also currently working on her doctoral thesis from the Robert Webber Institute of Worship Studies. www.MelodysMusic.com

Monday, August 8, 2016

ARE YOU ON THE LIST - By Heather Homan


Washington D.C. The networking capital of the world.

So many people in the DC area pride themselves on being included on “private” evite lists, being invited to the latest “exclusive party”, and being part of the “inner circle”.

When I first moved to DC, I too got caught up in the political and socialite whirlwind circle of exclusive parties, high-profile galas, and invite only events.

Having worked in politics for over a decade, including a stint on Capitol Hill, I was in the thick of it.

Often, being on “the list” was synonymous with networking survival in this town.

Sure it was fun for a season, but it pains me how much time I wasted focusing on things that didn’t really matter.

Truly, none of that stuff matters in the end. None of it.

And more importantly, there’s a whole other world out there.

If Jesus were walking the earth today, where would He focus His time?
Would he care about being served fancy appetizers at black-tie events?

Jesus came to serve, not to be served.  He dined with sinners.  He talked to the adulterous woman at the well.  It’s not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick.

During the past few years, God convicted me to focus on what really matters and I’ve started to readjust my priorities.

It wasn’t easy.  I gave up things I loved.  Romantic relationships I knew were not equally yoked.  A political career I had spent over a decade fine-tuning.  Material possessions that were weighing me down financially.  Yes, I loved these things.  But I loved Jesus more.

I know God’s not done with me yet, and I still have many character defects, but I am confident God will finish what He started.

My greatest fear is living a dull, mediocre life.  I want to be bold and on fire for Christ’s kingdom.

A boldness so real I can face the world fearless and feel His strength running through my veins, daily.

I want to hug and comfort orphans who have been abandoned and show them the love of Christ.  I want to pray with the sick and those who have suffered from emotional and physical trauma.  I want to comfort those who mourn and offer a kind word, or even a hug.

None of these things I want can be done in my own strength.  To live out these desires, I’ll need to be overflowing with the love of Jesus, or else face burnout and crumble under the enormous weight of self-sufficiency and false humility.

My heart is to go out on the international mission field, full-time.  To the remote corners of the world.  To the places most people don’t want to go.

Christ shows up big-time when we’re bold.  I’ve seen it.

He doesn’t call us to live isolated from the world in our own comfort bubbles.  I realize your calling may not be international missions, and that’s okay.

But embrace the brokenness around you, don’t run from it.  Talk to the addicts.  Feed the homeless.  Reconnect and repair damaged relationships.  Love hard.  Say you’re sorry.  And when you’re wrong, promptly admit it.  Be humble.  Stop wasting time.  At minimal, be kind.

We’re all broken.  Some more than others, but we all have our battles.


If you’re on that list, praise God.  Now, I want to encourage you to devote your time to bring as many people along with you.

We only have a finite amount of time.

Build your network for eternity.  In the end, that’s the only list that really matters.

More from Heather Homan

Wednesday, August 3, 2016

NOT WORTHY, BUT WILLING - By Rick DeVries


I love my parents.  I give God thanks that they raised me to love Jesus and love others.  

Are they perfect – no.
Am I perfect – far from it.
Have we had our heated disagreements over the years – yes.

Ten years ago when I was called into full time church ministry out of the corporate world, I sought feedback from my family as part of my discernment process.  My mom wisely said “son, you are too prideful to work at a church.”  

She was right.  

Just a few years ago in the heat of a nasty argument, my dad heartily told me “you don’t love your family like you need to and have no business working at a church.”  

He was right.
Did I mention that I love my parents?

The emotional response to my mom’s statement was, well, prideful, “Oh I’ll show her, I’ll be the most humble staffer that ever walked the halls of a church building.”  

By the way, I’m still working on it and I’m nowhere near where I need to be in the humility department.  But the emotional response to my dad several years later was strangely different ... no bitterness, no hurt, no pride.  I prayed about what he said and as often happens in my relational interactions with God - I cannot explain it - Judges 6 came into my mind.  As I’ve learned to do, I promptly opened up the nearest Bible.

Here was the tale of a Hebrew peasant farmer by the name of Gideon. His story can be read in about 15 minutes in the Old Testament book of Judges.  This man’s people had strayed off of God’s path and as a result, the ruthless heathen Midianites had conquered and ruled over them – burning and pillaging their lands in an attempt to starve them out of existence.  We meet Gideon secretly working on making flour in order to help feed his family.  He was putting himself and his family at great risk, when a stranger appears out of nowhere catching him in the act.  Picture Gideon’s reaction, expecting the worst, when the stranger pipes up and says, “Mighty hero, the LORD is with you.”  We can imagine a Twitter post from Gideon’s account in the moment:

LOL, lowly captive, cowering, farmer, me, Gideon a mighty hero? #GetRealDude :-/

Not recognizing the stranger as an emissary of God, Gideon gets a bit belligerent, accusing God of forgetting about him, his family, and the Hebrew people.  And strangely, I can relate.  Pride?  Bitterness? Understandable reactions?  But now that he had Gideon’s attention, the stranger then piles on, telling Gideon something he could have never expected – God has chosen him to defeat the Midianites and rescue the entire nation of Israel.

More than slightly overwhelmed by the enormity of the challenge given to him, Gideon backpedals ... explaining why he is the least qualified individual, in the lowest family, in the smallest tribe of the whole country.  He’s a farmer, not a warrior.  He has no gift of strategy, no training in battle tactics.  Then through the spokesperson, the voice of God says, “I will be with you.”  An interesting mix of fear, reverence, and confidence flows through him; but to say the least, ‘wishy-washy’ best describes his reactions for the remainder of his story ... and I will leave it to you to read the rest of the account yourself.

The bottom line take-away for me after reading through Gideon’s story, (and as it related to my reactions following my dad’s statement,) was that like Gideon I’m in no way prepared to be the spouse, the parent, the friend, the mentor, the leader that God needs me to be.  None of us are prepared – everyone has baggage ... bad decisions, harmful habits, hurtful words or actions, deep emotional wounds, consuming guilt, poor self-image, fearful anxiety, lacking resources or abilities, quick temper, misplaced priorities, and the list could go on.  

Gideon was a mess, I am still a mess. Maybe you are a mess too.

In the days after Jesus’ resurrection, Christ met with his followers giving them their marching orders prior to his ascension up to heaven. This passage has become known as the Great Commission.  This talk closes with Jesus making the same promise to us, his followers, as God made to Gideon: “I will be with you”.  You see, in God’s eyes – because of the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus – our messes don’t matter as long as, like the peasant farmer-hero, we have a single grain’s worth of faithful obedience.  In fact, the New Testament writer of the book of Hebrews mentions our reluctant hero hundreds of years after Gideon’s story unfolded.

You see, thankfully, God can work through us in spite of our weaknesses.  Gideon didn’t feel he was worthy to be used by God, but he was willing to give it a try.  Yes, mom and dad, I certainly am also not worthy, but I prayerfully keep trying to be willing and am a work in process.  If any of you aren’t sure God has a plan for your life – rest assured that he does.  Crawl out of your self-imposed hiding place mess, lean into Jesus’ promise that he “will be with you”, and get ready for an adventure.

You don’t have to be worthy, just be willing.

Monday, August 1, 2016

THE WHYS - By Kristen Gorski



Whenever I need a reminder of how much good there is in the world, I look at my son.  He reminds me, over and over again, what love looks like.  In the fall, he collects acorns and leaves them on our front step for the squirrels.  He always worries they won't have enough food to make it through winter.  When his brothers are sick, he gathers up his favorite stuffed animals and offers them as a get well soon present.  He wakes me up in the middle of the night, just to say, "Mom, I can't stop thinking about how much I love you."   He has a big heart filled to the brim with goodness.

Which is why it is so hard for me to see him struggle - and he struggles a lot.  He has what we in the special needs parenting world refer to as an alphabet soup of disorders.  They all have important, scary sounding names and they all mean that my son's brain isn't wired to easily function in the chaotic, confusing, complex world we live in.

Everyday life is a challenge for him and it can be gut-wrenching for me to watch him face it.

I have believed in God all my life, but when my son was first diagnosed five years ago, I decided God and I were on a break.  I unceremoniously cut Him out of my life.  Armed with a 19-page neurological evaluation and a list of recommended next steps, I was ready to go to battle for my son - and God wasn’t invited.  Instead, I filled up all the places where He used to be with determined self-reliance and a rather large dose of “righteous” anger.

In the weeks and months that followed, I was on a mission.  I enrolled our son in a special needs preschool.  I speed-read books about developmental disorders and highlighted the important parts for my husband.  I researched therapies, medications and specialized diets.  I filled our calendar with therapy sessions and doctors’ appointments.

I didn’t talk to God about any of it.

Then came the day when I finished everything on the list of recommended next steps.  “What should we do next?” I asked my son’s behavior therapist, “What else can we do?”  “You’re doing everything!  You’re doing all the right things,” she told me, “I wish that every parent would be as proactive as you.”  I know she was trying to reassure me.  Instead, I was devastated and terrified.  We were doing everything we could possibly do…and my son was still struggling. He might always be struggling.

Suddenly, after months of having nothing to say, I couldn’t stop talking to God – yelling at Him, actually.

Why would you let this happen to my son?
Why would you do this any child?
Why don’t you make it better?”
I raged “WHY, WHY, WHY… ???

Infuriatingly, no matter how much I yelled, God remained silent.

One night, my son was going through a period of exceptionally awful sleep and I had been up with him for hours.  He’d finally drifted off stretched out across my lap and I just sat there in the dark, staring at his perfect little face, experiencing that lost and lonely feeling that is so easy to stumble into at 3:30 am.  “Where are you, God?” I whispered, “Where are You?  I’m scared.  I don’t know how to do this.  I need you to help me, but I don’t know where You are.”

A few days later, I got my answer.

We had eaten dinner at my parents’ house and were rushing to get home for bedtime.  Tired and overstimulated, my son refused to put on his shoes.  He didn’t like the way his socks felt.  I sent my husband and two other boys out to the car and knelt on the floor, straightening and re-straightening his socks until the seams finally lined up perfectly with his toes.  I shoved his shoes on and ran out the door, leaving my purse behind.  When I came back in to get it, my dad stopped me and said, “I can’t believe how patient you are with him.  When did you get to be so patient?”

My Dad and I have a lot of things in common, but patience has never been one of them.  Yet, somehow, I had become patient - endlessly patient - with my son.  Where had all that patience come from?  It became obvious that even though I had cut God out, He hadn’t cut me out.  I’d been so busy running around trying to fix everything myself that I hadn’t noticed He’d been busy too.  While I’d ignored Him and then spent months bombarding Him with angry outbursts and demands for an explanation, He’d quietly been filling me up with patience.

I understood in that moment that God had always been right there with me.  I’d just been too angry and scared to realize it.

I wish I could say that was the last time I ever let anger and fear separate me from God, but that’s not the case.  It’s something I struggle with all the time.  When the sick get better, when anger gives way to forgiveness, when help finds those who need it – it’s easy for me to see God at work in our lives.

But sometimes there isn’t a happy ending; things don’t always get tied up with a neat little bow.  Sometimes diseases aren’t cured and relationships fall apart and help doesn’t come.  Life can be messy and complicated and hard.  It’s easy to lose sight of God during the messy, complicated, hard stuff.  It’s easy to get stuck on the “whys”.  At least for me it is.

Here’s the thing though:  God never promises us life is going to be easy or fair.  He doesn’t promise that we are always going to understand it.  What He does promise, is that if we put our trust in Him, He will never abandon us.  He promises When you go through deep waters, I will be with you.

So when fear and doubt creep into my life and start to pull me away from God, I try to focus less on asking “Why?” and more on asking “Where are You, God?”

Because the answer to that question is always, “I am here.”

Whenever I feel defeated, whenever I feel like I can’t make it through, I remind myself I don’t have to try to do it on my own.  As long as I turn to God and put my faith in Him, I will never walk alone.