Posts Tagged ‘Church’

When the Ground Shakes

Sunday, June 26th, 2011

On April 5, 2009, Giampaolo Giuliani, a researcher attached to Italy’s National Institute of Nuclear Physics, announced that an earthquake was imminent.  Emissions of higher than usual amounts of radon gas detected at four meters he had placed around his hometown of L’Aquila convinced him that an earthquake of at least a 4.0 magnitude would occur within 48 hours.  Naturally he began warning the people of L’Aquila through the Internet.  Authorities decided he was a contentious crackpot causing unnecessary panic, so they placed him under an injunction that prevented him from issuing public alerts.  Authorities even removed notices he posted on the Internet and threatened him with imprisonment if he reposted or made public announcements.  Restricted in what he could do, Giuliani went house-to-house warning neighbors, friends and family.  Once night came, he, with his immediate family, went to bed fully dressed, prepared to escape the anticipated earthquake and to help those who would survive.  Just before daylight he awoke to a series of violent quakes that were not a 4.0 magnitude but 7.0.  By the end of the day, a total of 308 people had died and 80,000 were left without shelter.[i]

To the inhabitants of L’Aquila, life had appeared stable and safe, calm and certain, and yet forces in the depths of the earth were shifting in opposing directions and tension that had been building for some time suddenly erupted into a massive earthquake.  Surely they thought, ‘How could such a cataclysmic event happen in our town?’ (more…)

Living Toward a Wider Vista

Saturday, March 26th, 2011

For those of us who are ministers and leaders in the local church, there is a long list of things that we do.  Included are activities such as preaching and teaching, praying for the distressed and sick, visiting people in the hospital, providing activities for children and students, planning worship, dealing with personnel matters, creating opportunities for fellowship, managing finances, and the list goes on and on.  While good, worthy, and necessary, these ‘must do’s’ can at times become ends in themselves, unless broader and ultimate purposes are kept clearly in view. (more…)

Which Mission? Whose Mission?

Thursday, January 20th, 2011

The world as we know it is rapidly changing.  Current economic, demographic, technological, and political changes can cause our heads to spin.  Yet, one change that may not be as obvious is that the American context is becoming less and less Christian, especially in the way Christianity has been traditionally understood and followed.  People are asking such questions as “Why bother with church?”  “What has the Christian faith to do with the real problems of life?”  In some quarters, the questions are not as benign.  These people aggressively ask, “Why are Christians so bigoted, narrow-minded, and anti-everything?”  Studies show that while there is a growing interest in matters spiritual, Christianity and the church are increasingly viewed as irrelevant or passé, especially when it comes to our collective lives as Americans.

So, how are Christians to respond to this new reality?  (more…)

Jewels

Wednesday, December 1st, 2010

As I am currently reading through term papers, I occasionally come across jewels from students or from teachers of the past.  The following is from a dead teacher, Lesslie Newbigin …

The Church is the pilgrim people of God.  It is on the move – hastening to the ends of the earth to beseech all men to be reconciled to God, and hastening to the end of the time to meet its Lord who will gather all into one.  Therefore the nature of the Church is never to be finally defined in static terms, but only in terms of that to which it is going [...]  When the Church ceases to be one, or ceases to be missionary, it contradicts its own nature. Yet the Church is not defined by what it is, but by that End to which it moves.  And the power of the End now works in the Church, the power of the Holy Spirit who is the earnest of the inheritance still to be revealed. (The Household of God, pp. 18-19).

Thank you, Chad.

Globalized Answers

Monday, August 16th, 2010

As moderns, we have the tendency to globalize when it comes answers.  We want to find the one method, the one strategy, or the single solution that will answer every situation, for every location.  We want to find the ‘silver bullet’ or discover the ‘mega-strategy’ that will work whether we are in Los Angeles, Munich, Nairobi or Hong Kong. (more…)

Don’t Judge Me!

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

Judge you?  Of course not!  You and I are brothers, sisters – we are community. (more…)