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Showing posts from December, 2012

The Journey of Missional Community

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The experience of missional community in small groups, in mid-size groups or in networks of small groups is a journey, not a destination. The journey is one of "growing in love" so that we become a community that puts love where love is not. This short video speaks to this and introduces some of the key concepts that I write about in the opening chapters of Missional Small Groups . One of the keys to journey of missional community is the shift from treating people as objects to treating them as loved by God. What do you think? What's the difference between between treating a person as an object and treating a person as if they have inherent value as a creation of God?

Blessed are the Poor in Spirit: Beatitudes Pt 6

“You’re blessed when you’re at the end of your rope. With less of you there is more of God and his rule." (The Message) Recently, I read a writer about his take on the beatitudes. He tells a story about a woman he met who's son had walked away from Christianity because he was a successful businessman and he did not want to have to live out Jesus' words in the Sermon on the Mount. The writer then goes on to explain how this self-reliant businessman did not have to embrace the beatitudes as his own. Instead proposes that Jesus' words were exemplary, in that he was pointing to the Jewish crowds that surround the mountain who were obviously poor in Spirit. He was using them as an example to teach the disciples about the fact that they were blessed because God's kingdom is for them.  By contrast, Dietrich Bonhoeffer wrote about what it meant to be a disciple. He stated, "They [the disciples] have neither spiritual power of their own, nor experience or knowledge...

Dancing Transformation: Beatitudes Pt 5

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Life is a dance. We can dance according to one of two rhythms. Our dance steps can be conformed to the rhythms of this world or they can be transformed to the dance of God. Romans 12:1-2 reads: Therefore, I urge you, brothers and sisters, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God—this is your true and proper worship. Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will. The rhythm that follows the pattern of this world is something that we dance quite naturally. These are the patterns of life that we simply do because they go unquestioned. We live the way we do because that is just the way the culture around us does life. Most of us grow up dancing these rhythms without our ever knowing it. When the dance floor is the world you were born into and everyone around you is dancing the dance of the...

What Does Jesus Mean by "Blessed": Beatitudes Pt. 4

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"Blessed are ..." What does Jesus mean? If we fail to ask what he meant by "blessed" then it's so easy to insert our own cultural meanings into this word. Yesterday, I received a copy of a new book by Intervarsity Press entitled Sermons on the Beatitudes by Gregory of Nyssa . This is a great paraphrase of the insights of one of the Church Fathers that helped to set the agenda for what we call Trinitarian Orthodoxy. (For previous post in this series on the beatitudes, click here .) In it we read, "I understand blessedness to be a state of unconditional happiness and contentment. Sometimes it is easier to learn the meaning of something by comparing it with its opposite, and such is the case with the meaning of blessedness. The opposite of blessedness is extreme unhappiness, which is the undesirable experience of anguish that is the result of unbearable misery. The attitude of a person experiencing blessedness is significantly different from that of t...

An Alternative Way of Life, Be-attitudes Pt 3

When I first started meditating on the beatitudes a few months ago, the reality that Jesus calls "blessed" that which we do not assume to be blessed hit me out of the blue. I had never seen this fact before, primarily because I had always tried to merge Jesus' blessings' list with the common way that we see blessings. (See previous post on this subject if interested.) I had never seen the beatitudes as a contrasting way of life to the common way of life that we assume to be blessed. So I comprised a list of of things that we commonly hold up as praiseworthy in our culture, so that Jesus' alternative would be more clear to me. This is what I came up with: (Add the word "Blessed are ..." before each line.) Jesus                                              ...