Week 13 Prediction

•December 12, 2010 • Leave a Comment

Bears 17 – Patriots 14

Haven’t made these predictions for the past couple weeks, but I had a couple of people asking (and I actually feel good about a tough game today), so I thought I would throw this out there.

I’m not imagining it will be easy, but a combo of their defense…their defense at Home…their defense at home in Bear Weather will make a tough road for Tom Brady and his wide receivers.  I’m hoping for a just a enough from the Bears offense…and maybe a kick return from Devin Hester with Patriots defenders sliding all over the field.

The Perfect* Christmas

•December 9, 2010 • 31 Comments

That is the title of our two-week message series starting Sunday:  The Perfect* Christmas

I need your help:  What do you need/want to make Christmas perfect for you this year?

Tell me what it would be for you in the comments section below.  Thanks!

 

 

On Big Thinking

•December 8, 2010 • Leave a Comment

Blog Readers…I read something from a friend last week that spoke very powerfully to our culture…and to me.  I think it is worth your time.  It will take some time to read it…and it is written by a guy in Speedway, IN so you’ll have to work through all his references that may seem vague to you about Indiana High School Basketball.

I made many very good friends in my two-year fellowship with other pastor-colleagues from around the state.  Kent was a big part of that for me who both encouraged me and challenged me in many ways.  The picture is Kent and I seated on a “back waters” boat trip in India (with our friend Dave relaxing too).

 

On Big Thinking by Kent Ellet

You know where Milan is.  Its between Pierceville and Moore’s Hill. Not too far from Deleware and Elrod.   OK.  It’s toward Cincinnati.  But everyone in my parents’ generation knew about Milan, and to this day they can tell you that Milan won the State Basketball Championship in 1954.  The day after Milan’s victory, over 40,000 people descended on Milan, (population of a little over a thousand) lining hwy 101 for 13 miles, welcoming the team home from Indianapolis.   Nobody remembers now the victories of Vincennes Lincoln, Terre Haute Gestmeyer, Lafayette Jefferson, Muncie Central.   Good grief who wants Ben Davis to win one more State title?  Those huge schools did not (and do not) have to bear the indignity of every year– year after year– being beaten up by the strong. Oh I suppose a few of the people who went to school at Muncie Central remember their wins.  But even they can’t remember the year. And nobody else cares.  40 times the population of Terre Haute doesn’t show up to celebrate Gerstmeyer beating up on Linton.  They don’t make movies about that.  That story is tired and well worn.  They make movies about little Hickory winning it all, because we want to believe the there is real dignity for the small girls, real value in the out-of-the-way boys–something deeply profound about the weak and the overlooked.   In the name of God, the Galileans want the powerful to know that there something good that comes out of Nazareth.

 

We all know what natural selection does to the weak.  It consolidates them–it takes the school center of little communities, and watches those communities die.  It de-selects them.  Strengthen, centralize or die.  If you believe anything about evolution you have to believe that creatures evolve in ways that fit their own adaptation to the world–that fits their own self-interest.  It’s just another variation on the tired story of the strong squelching the weak–this time the powerful hide behind a scientific myth which sanctions the selfishness of the strong.  That is the reason Jesus said the greatest is a servant.  He took his arms and cuddled a little kid.  Mark 8-9 is all about that.  He taught that the last shall be first.  That the least are invited and given special places in his honor–that the least effective workers hired at the last hour if they are faithful are given much.  This is a radical story–this is good news to all but those who are protecting their privileged turf.

 

We all know what the first-born males do–they get a double portion of the inheritance–the women are stuck. We have to raise money to get them married off.  Give us a boy so our family can gain wealth.  Billions of Chinese know all about that.  The oldest and the boys dominate families–But the God of Deborah made it clear numerous times–it was the older that would serve the younger. It was not the seven strong brothers but the little shepherd boy that God wanted, and that Samuel picked to serve him in the mightiest of ways.

 

We all know how much attention the politicians pay to the weak–that’s the reason workers united with other interests and formed powerful political action committees that could <span>not</span> be ignored.  Our founding Fathers in America knew that in a republic the tyranny of the powerful was simply exchanged for the tyranny of the majority. And so the little states wouldn’t ratify the constitution without a bill of rights.  The little states would not let Virginia run over them.  to this day Deleware has as much a say as New York, California, and now, Texas, in the United States Senate, because our forefathers believed that “Democracy” was a <span>bad</span> word–it was synonomous with the tyranny of the majority.  That’s why Gideon’s force was widdled down to 300.  That’s why when Jesus offered the possibility of a popular uprising–a real democratic coup–he went on the other side of the lake to pray.  And when he did invade Jerusalem, he did so not with a ready mob, but with a children’s choir.  His story is about the empowerment of the weak–the the giving of grace to the humble. (1 Pet 5:5)

 

We all know how much the intellectuals at Harvard, Yale, Stanford and Princeton listen to the homespun wisdom of the farmers in Iowa.  C students, who are gifted in profound ways, sit through one academic honors program right after another and either, refuse to care, pretend they don’t care, resent the attention given to the “elites” in every community… or they berate themselves for being a 1-2 talent person.  But God is the champion of left-handed Ehud’s cause, he makes sinful Samson victorious and makes a chief Apostle to the gentiles out of a blasphemer and a violent man.  God selects the sick to heal the world because he is telling a different story–a story about how his power is made perfect in weakness. (2 Cor 12:9)

 

We all know how crushing slavery was and how cruel racism is.  We are sick to the point of death–literally to the point of lynching and church bombing–with the powerful’s triumph over the powerless.  Why oh why, the atheists want to know would God choose an out of the way boy, and an out of the way culture, a long time ago in an infinite universe in order to reveal himself to the world.   “Forget the stable in Bethlehem,” they are asking.”why not the throne in Rome?”  Why announce his incarnation to dirty and despised shepherds and not to soldiers in the Praetorium?  For God’s sake, why resurrection appearances to women and not to diplomats?  For the same reason Martin Luther King was not a plantation owner.  Because it was Abel’s blood crying up from the ground to him.  Because it was the cry of slaves 400 years in Egypt to which he was responding, because it is not the healthy who need a doctor but the sick.  (Mark 2:17)  It is a story that will appeal to all the beat up communities like Milan.  He chooses the little because he wants the headlines to be big.  A cosmic upset–redemption from the slave power.

 

Immigrants certainly know the skoop of the old, damned story.  Nobody hated the Irish in the 19th century more than the urban middle class.  They were taking jobs.  And nobody hated free blacks more in the late nineteenth century than the Irish–they were taking their jobs.  God, we are sick and tired of the same damnable story –keep the bums out.  Yes, show kindness to strangers–you entertain angels unawares, but not <span>those</span> kind of strangers, please.  God ain’t telling that kind of exclusive story.  He’s telling the story of Job, and Jethro, and of Ruth and of gentiles coming into the church and God tearing down dividing walls of hostility, and telling us that he has sheep from a different sheep pen–and the Lord says about those we like to call fire down upon,” those who are not against us are for us.”

 

We all know what the powerful with a guilty conscience do–they pass laws that forcibly take money away from everyone and gives it to the poor–they start government agencies to take care of the people whom the powerful ignore–further shaming and reducing and handicapping the least so the money making at the expense of others can go on.  Babylon the Great is alive and well.    In the midst of a world of almsgiving and bread and circus, the King of Kings gives the empowering words to the cripple– take up your mat and walk.

 

We all know what the religious pharisees of our day do.  They tell everybody who they should hang out with and why.  They are the equivalent of so-called Christian mean girls.  But James’ hero of faith is Rehab the prostitute.  Jude 22 says be merciful to those who doubt, but today’s pharisees shame and condemn them.  Paul asks us if we don’t realize that it was “God’s kindness that leads us toward repentance,” (Rom 2:4)  But they seem to live in fear and that fear drives the essence of their lives.   We are so sick of little children being bullied by the religiously powerful.  My God, just once we want little Milan to win.

 

But I must say that it is not just for the poor and the least and the little God came.  He came into the backwoods so that everybody can remember the state championship with a difference, when David slew Goliath, when Senacharib was beaten by the beseiged.  And this just anticipated a day when the crucified suffering servant would became ruler of all–rich and poor alike.  Jew and Gentile, young and old, men and women, slave and free.  How shall the rich and the powerful cotton on to this back woods gospel?  How can we trust in something so small when we now know that the universe is so exceedingly huge?

 

First let me say this question is not new.  Ptolemy–whom every learned Christian read throughout the darkest period of church education–knew that the earth compared to the universe was like a single point on a huge line.  People have known how small the world is compared the universe for a very long time.  We don’t know how God is saving the rest of the universe, or if it needs saving.  At any rate saying something can’t be true because it is small and out of the way is like saying big people are better than little ones.  Its as ignorant as that 1970’s pop classic “Don’t want no short people.”  Small people and small places are actually more rememberable in the end–Milan’s victory resonates for generations like no Ben Davis championship ever will.  (no offense to the Giants–but everybody likes David better)  Milan’s victory is a victory for all the little people and for helping us all understand that is who we are before God–the little people.

CS Lewis did a lot to illustrate the profound importance of God’s activity among the simple and the humble can ill   He was asked if he thought people had to go to church to be Christian.  (p 62)  At first he hated church-especially the fifth rate hymns.  But then

 

“he came up against different people of quite different outlooks and different education and then gradually my conceit just becan peeling off.  I realized that the hymns w(which were sixth rate music) were nevertheless being sung with devotion and benefit by an old saint in elastic-side boots in the opposite pew, and then you came to realize you were not fit to clean those boots.  It gets you out of your solitary conceit.”

 

Clive Staples Lewis did more to help me when I was 19-20 than any other human being.  He was smart, creative, insightful, and able to speak to an untrained mind.  But he was made great–morally and spiritually great–by the simple singer with elastic side boots. This man–this simple singer may have saved my soul for his witness saved Lewis’. The poor, the least, the little, the marginalized they are not objects to be pitied–they are rich victors–overcoming the world in Jesus Christ.  When we see that Milan is really not any more out of the way than Indianapolis–just equally different latitudes and longitudes–then we may be humbled enough to be as great as CS Lewis.  We may then begin to understand why it is a blessing to all that…

 

1 Cor 1:27-30 God chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise; God chose the weak things of the world to shame the strong. 28 He chose the lowly things of this world and the despised things — and the things that are not — to nullify the things that are, 29 so that no one may boast before him.

 

<span>I’ve always wanted to think big.  But now I like to think little, too. Neither should you despise your little, and sometimes uneventful life in which you can be overlooked.</span>   I’m not ashamed to “think little” any more than I’m ashamed of the gospel or its power to save. (Romans 1)  The exultation of the humble is a story the little and great remember alike, and in so doing they are all saved together at the level ground beneath Calvary’s cross.  That’s the reason God is revealed in the feed trough in Bethlehem. That’s why he reveals himself to those humble enough to make the trek up the Mount of Beatitudes. That’s the reason it is a slain lamb upon the throne.  For it is this out of the way God who makes it possible for us to end our proud comparisons and be at one– all recipients of an unmerited, but powerful grace.

Am I crazy to LOVE staff meetings?

•December 7, 2010 • 1 Comment

Do you love staff meetings at your job?  Mostly I hear people complain about them. (This bingo game is hilarious for anyone who has had brutal corporate staff meetings.)

We had our monthly all-staff meeting today.

Yes, we have to cover some of the same mundane stuff any team does. On Today’s agenda were watching our postage costs, limiting copier use on Thursdays, cuts we made in the 2011 budget, and a reminder about the staff Christmas party – which actually comes after the first of the year when we all can breathe again!  Those things aren’t exciting, but as I tell our team it is important to “Respect the systems” that help us function well together.

And most of it isn’t mundane. We celebrate birthdays (this month…Kay and Diane!).  We worship (thanks for leading well today Nash!).  We talk about not burning out volunteers who give and give and give (Jeff, Charlie, Gail, Beth, and Larry came up in our conversation today).

The best part? We catch each other up on stuff we missed over the last month.   Today we heard about:

1.  Children’s Ministry had a an outreach event to make gingerbread houses Friday evening.  We had 100 RSVP’s and 180 showed up. (Suncrest people have a long history of a disease that apparently doesn’t allow them to RSVP!) 🙂  Our team loved every minute of it!

2.  Our first Thanksgiving Dinner was marked with INCREDIBLE generosity and an out-pouring of help.  We had so much stuff that one of the volunteers decided she would just take some meals into the city to share with some who are homeless and gather under a bridge she knows.  Amazing.  And, we are bouncing around the idea of doing it in Hobart next year instead of St. John.  Perhaps we could meet an even deeper need there with this building that has been given to us.  The best part was that this was entirely volunteer-led (Thanks Marlena!).

3.  The Walkerton Campus is only a couple of months old, but about 800 people came through a Community Christmas Walk and our campus there got to host the stop at the Library with cookies, a Santa visit, and giving away pictures.  I love it when our campuses integrate themselves into the life of the community.

4.  I found out that “Morning Grace” women’s groups adopted single moms/their kids at Suncrest for Christmas.  And they poured their heart into it, including at least one group who hosted a party in one of their homes for one of the families.

5.  And, of course, we stopped to thank God for what happened Sunday (See yesterday’s post).

If your staff meeting isn’t as fun as mine…change it!  I know you might not be in charge, but you could probably find a story that let’s the team celebrate why you do what you do!  You’ll be amazed at the energy (and enjoyment) it brings to a room.

 

Decisions…Decisions…Decisions

•December 6, 2010 • 1 Comment

I know I’ve been AWOL from blogging for a week or two, but I couldn’t think of a better post to come back on!

I knew yesterday was going to be a good day, but I didn’t know it would be this good.  We’ve spent five weeks talking about who Jesus is…that is always a great start. But talking is easy.  Deciding to draw a line in the sand…make a decision…live your conviction…that is much, much harder.

So yesterday, we challenged people to decide whether or not they would give their life to follow this Jesus.

As you might expect, most (though far from all) of the people gathered at Suncrest have already decided at some point in their past that they would be a “Christ-follower” with their life.  And yesterday, hundreds of us across 4 campuses said we were renewing that vow.  That we would…and are…choosing it all over again.

I don’t mean to move past that too quickly because it is significant for everyone who expressed that decision.  Still, our passion burns  for those who are seeking but have not decided to give their whole life to Christ.

Yesterday…again across all 4 campuses…people did just that.  Almost 60 people decided to follow Jesus.  They were committing their life to Jesus for the very first time or committing to go beyond just wearing the cultural or family label of “Christian” to actively follow Jesus.

Love ya, Suncrest!  Love the way you give people space to work through their stuff.  Love the way you contribute by serving.  Love the way you celebrate baptisms (like you did yesterday).  Love the way you personally sacrifice for the sake of the mission.  Every decision made yesterday is part of your story.

All of a sudden, I’m in the Christmas Spirit… 🙂

Another Reason I love you…

•November 21, 2010 • 1 Comment

I know our church loves to help people, but in the fall I always get a very small concern that we are asking too much.

It seems like the fall is full of our major projects serving the community (Rebuilding Together and Great Day of Service).  People give of their time and skills to make a real difference.  This year, we added hosting a thanksgiving dinner for anyone who is lonely or lacking in this season…and the response to help has been phenomenal.

We also see the chance to help people in need financially.  We are gearing up for our Christmas Eve Offering that entirely goes to help people facing financial needs and crisis.  If this year is anything like the last few years people will give tens of thousands of dollars.

As if that isn’t enough, you now have a chance to adopt a child locally at Christmas through our Angel Tree AND we just finished collecting “Shoeboxes” full of gifts that will get sent to children on the other side of the world.  I love it, Suncrest.

Two cool things about this year.  First, I just found out our boxes are going to India…where I just got home from.  And, more importantly, Suncrest collected them across all campuses this year and we ended up with 371 – over 100 more than last year.

Way to go…in ways large and small, you are letting God use you to change a life!

Week 11 Prediction

•November 18, 2010 • Leave a Comment

Bears 13 – Dolphins 10

There is still a lot of work to do to make me a believer in the 2010 Bears, but they did look good Sunday against Minnesota and I think they will win tonight in a Thursday night game against the Dolphins.  The key factor is still believing in the Bears Defense against a Miami team that will likely start a 3rd string QB due to injuries.

If you are looking for the game and don’t have NFL Network (where they show Thursday night games), it will also be broadcast locally on WGN.

Week 10 Prediction

•November 13, 2010 • 7 Comments

Bears 21 – Vikings 20

Love this picture.  Someone loves Photoshop.

The Bears had a pretty weak win against a very weak Bills team last Sunday.  The Vikings looked equally poor except for a dramatic last quarter turn around.  I guess I look at this game as a test for both and I actually think the Vikings are even more dysfunctional than the Bears.

And I want to see Favre lose!

Leadership Failures (An Argument from Yesterday)

•November 12, 2010 • 7 Comments

It’s interesting the conversations a blog post generates. Some people loved yesterday’s post about Getting Undeserved Credit.  Others wanted to argue.  Next time they should do it in the comments section so we could all enjoy the conversation!

For the record , no one was arguing with the fact that we should praise God for all good things or about making sure we give credit where it is due.  The main objection was that I was letting failing leaders off the hook when I implied we shouldn’t assign blame too quickly and that good leadership and fruitfulness don’t always correlate directly.

I get that.  I do.  Some people (out of both genuine kindness and accountability-avoidance) want to prop up poor leadership.  They want to say the leader doesn’t bear responsibility for the health and direction and success (however you measure it) of their tribe.  That, of course, is ludicrous.  If you are the leader, you better own every one of those things.  It is why…(drum roll)…you are the LEADER!

I guess I just want to take a fair approach to it.  And have some grace.  All circumstances, history, people, and challenges are not equal.  I was set up for “success” at Suncrest by the foundation laid, mentoring I received, and culture established.   It would be silly to demand the same outcomes from a different set of circumstances.  Sometimes patience is called for.

And sometimes impatience is called for.  If you believe in your mission at all, it can’t just be OK to see your tribe under-achieve. I’ve seen some (probably can’t call them leaders) who didn’t get that.  Their common attributes?  They have excuses, not reasons.  The deflect responsibility instead of owning it.  And they demand grace for falling short.  Grace is beautiful when it is given, but ugly when it is demanded.

You may have just read that last paragraph and already disagree, beginning to think of reasons why I’m wrong.  You aren’t evil. You probably just aren’t a leader.

So…for all my “Type A” Leader Friends, I hope that is satisfying.  🙂  Even if it isn’t, it’s what I believe. I’ll leave this discussion here with a great quote about leadership, credit, and blame someone passed on to me.

A good leader takes a little more than his share of the blame, a little less than his share of the credit. -Arnold Henry Glasow

Who gets the credit?

•November 11, 2010 • 2 Comments

This post was prompted by something that happened on the stage Sunday.  I’ll fill you in on the story in a minute.

Whether it is a President, CEO, head coach, or pastor, for a long time people have debated how much credit or blame leaders are actually responsible for when it comes to the performance of their company, team, organization, etc.  I think the conventional wisdom says we probably assign both credit and blame to them too quickly…but where else can you put it? (And we CRAVE to put it somewhere.)

Full disclosure here…I’ve thought about this from time to time about myself.  I’ve definitely had good seasons and not-so-good seasons of leadership and fruitful and not-so-fruitful seasons of ministry.  (Interestingly, they haven’t always correlated.)

Lately, I’ve been thinking about what an incredible place Suncrest is and how good God has been to us for all 16 of our years.  It is something most churches and pastors dream of.  I’ve been able to live it.  The last few years have been wild at Suncrest with expansion and (most importantly) story after story after story of people experiencing God at work in their lives.  And now, I’m finding people are directing credit at me.  Sometimes in ways that are almost silly.  Often in ways that are just kind and encouraging.  And usually…incorrectly.

On Sunday at the St. John Campus, people applauded spontaneously when Charlie Talley mentioned a group that formed to help him learn how to read…and read the Bible.  He said he’s learned more about the Bible in the last 2 months than his previous 48 years.  Very Cool. (You can read the background of this story here and an update on it here.)  Then he said something like “I’m so thankful to Greg for getting this group started.”

And I sat there very uncomfortable.  I know a few people worked really hard to make this group happen.  I’m just not one of them.

Encourage it? Yes.

Give it some promotion? When I was asked.

Responsible for it? Only if “not getting in the way and screwing it up” counts as great leadership!  🙂

On our staff, Bobby ran with the idea and Laurie did much of the legwork.  Volunteers who attend various campuses make it happen each week.  I know them.  They don’t do it for praise.  But if credit is being handed out, they deserve it.

And that happens all the time around here! Campus launches have been incredible because of Campus pastors and launch teams.  Over 100 women are finding connection at Morning Grace because of more than a dozen leaders and co-leaders.  We are busting at the seams with Students on Tuesday nights because of Brendon and many adults who REALLY love teens. Churches will get planted in Liberia because of David and his team.

The list could go on…forever.  And in the midst of writing it, I’d probably make the same mistake others make about me.  I can hear David saying right now, “I don’t deserve the credit.  I’m just grateful for Rod, Gordon, Denise, Jenny, Bobbie, and Dan.”

I know it sounds simplistic, but in the end I think the answer is to just…Praise God.  Give him the credit.  Never forget that He works through us AND in spite of us to really do the changing in people’s lives.

And do thank people. You should probably look at least one “layer” below what seems like the obvious place.  And not even for anything they have done, but just for putting themselves in a spot where God can use them.