Monday, November 11, 2013

Forgive?


Nothing happens without forgiveness.  You cannot maintain a single human relationship without the continuous flow of forgiveness.

The same should be emphasized with regards to our relationship with God.  How could we maintain some resemblance of fellowship without the continuous flow of grace and mercy?  

Our relationship with God begins from a place of sin and the absence of relationship.  Resolution comes from the compassion of God, shown through the passion of Christ, His death on the cross and the victory of His resurrection. On the basis of this gospel He offers forgiveness, a cancelling of debt and the subsequent freedom.

So we are faced with a crisis of the will: A decision to be made, a loss to be suffered.  Should we seek our own form of justice and revenge?  Should we seek compensation for those harsh words and unfair treatment?  Certainly, Jesus could not have realistically expected us to “turn the other cheek”, to allow someone to get away with their sin.

Matthew 18:32 and 33 shouts at us all, “You wicked servant,’ he said, ‘I canceled all that debt of yours because you begged me to. Shouldn't you have had mercy on your fellow servant just as I had on you?’”


Enough said.

Friday, October 18, 2013

Agustin and Maria…

Yesterday, we met Agustin and Maria…

A concerned neighbor came by the coffee shop a couple of days ago.  She was concerned about the living conditions of an elderly couple living near her street.  They are both in their 90s and live without any source of income.

This lovely lady was simply trying to get them one of our Ecocinas, the efficiency wood-burning stoves.  She was right; it is a great solution for a few of their problems.  So, we innocently agreed to visit the elderly pair to investigate their situation.  We were not prepared for the despair.

Doña Maria and Don Agustin are not really a couple.  More than a decade ago, he allowed her to come and live in his home since she had nowhere to go.  She helps take care of him.  He has been in a wheel chair since childhood, a victim of polio.   She was well known on the streets as a seller of cheese and cream.  She is adorable.  They both are…

Their roof does not really deserve the name.  It probably only slows down most of the water that enters every part of their home.  There are roots growing down from the dirt that has accumulated on the teja roof.  It feels like a cave.  There are catholic relics hanging on the walls along with the spider webs and trash bags.  Their floor is so wet and dirty that I am not sure if it is cement or simply the ground.

Their cooking fire was cold.  Dona Maria tried to convince me that she had cooked something during the day, but the evidence betrayed her.  I saw no evidence to suggest that they had eaten.

So, here’s the thing, I thought that I recognized his face, with his overwhelming beard.  His twisted hands made me think of something that I had seen before.   During the conversation with his neighbor, I realized that I had seen his face on an emotional video that someone posted a year ago.  He was THE Don Agustin, the guy who is making a helicopter out of throw-aways.

Later in the day, my friend, Noel, who grew up in that neighborhood, told me that everyone in that barrio had learned to ride a bike because Don Agustin had made a wooden bicycle several decades ago.  He also remembers earlier attempts at the helicopter.

I am convinced that we have to do something.  We must improve their living situations, their health and welfare.  Certainly, a community can pour a concrete floor and put on a new roof...provide some food and care.  The compassion of Christ must move us….

Check out the documentary made about Don Agustin:

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Missionary Vaccines



I confess.  I read Wikipedia looking for a simple definition.  I quote, “Vaccination is the administration of antigenic material (a vaccine) to stimulate an individual's immune system to develop adaptive immunity”.

If you wonder how my brain translates that, here are my own words, “if you give the body a little bit of something dangerous it will figure out a way to defend itself.  That way, you avoid the real thing.”

I think that short-term mission trips can sometimes act like vaccines.

When trips are done well, they stimulate discipleship relationships; they challenge a deeper walk with Christ and an increasing investment in the spread of God’s Kingdom throughout the world. They challenge current world views and bring about an awareness of the majority world.  They burst bubbles and challenge the selfishness of the human heart.

Kathee and I were dating when we went on our first trip to Central America in 1989 (enjoy the pic). The realities of rural Guatemala broke our hearts and showed us a field of ministry that we had not imagined.   Since 1994, we have been missionaries living and ministering here in Siguatepeque, Honduras.  Our hearts still break for the spiritual, emotional and physical needs around us.

When short-term trips are done in a mediocre way, Christian tourism, they may very well serve as vaccines against the real thing. We all long for real mission, real life-moving, life-changing purpose.  When we get a little taste, it should stimulate hunger for a greater life and move us to a greater purpose and commitment. 

However, when a mission trip is superficial it can have the opposite effect.   The travelling spectator may see this missionary life from a distance and assume that perception is reality.  No need to be challenged or changed.  The status quo is just fine.

However, you may need a booster shot each year to keep the dangerous stuff from really taking hold!

Monday, September 30, 2013

Brats?


Have you ever spotted spoiled brats?  The cereal aisle at your local Wal-Mart is their natural habitat.  The parental choice of healthy over sugary brings out their rage, hissing and showing of teeth, their violence revealing their savage hearts.

What happens when a child receives everything that he / she wants at exactly the moment that they want it?  What happens when the need for care and provision is replaced by a sense of rights and privileges?  What would happen to you if God, your Father, gave you everything you desired at the push of His button?  Brats are the most miserable humans in the world.

In response to their pleading, Jesus taught His disciples to pray.  They must have witnessed the richness of His relationship with the Father and desired the same intimacy.

Immediately following His model, the “Lord’s Prayer”, He shared the short parable of the persistent friend (Luke 11).  Who knew that impertinence was a valuable characteristic in the Kingdom of God?

God is not asleep and he is not reluctant to provide for your needs, no matter how small or seemingly insignificant.  He is, however, more concerned with the maturity of your character than with the realization of momentary comfort or pleasure. 

He will most certainly answer prayer and come and inhabit the human heart with His supernatural presence.  What could be more important or more necessary?  What could possibly express more clearly the love and compassion of our Father? 

 "If you then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!"

So, the attitude of prayer is very important.  God is my Father.  He longs to provide that which I really need.  He longs to see me grow and mature.  He also longs for intimacy and knows that He alone can fulfill our deepest longings.  So, He values impertinence, the type of insistence that will knock the door down desperate to know Him more intimately. 

He is our Father.  We can be “bold” in His presence.  We can express our hearts, our confusion and our desires knowing that He accepts us completely.


But, He is a loving and wise Father, who knows better than to spoil His children and so for many answers we wait….growing and maturing, becoming the children who not only know their Father, but honor Him through the character molding and revealing moments of every day.

Monday, September 16, 2013

The Hardened Heart


The seed is wonderful and miraculous, absolutely perfect.  It is sown by the master gardener, the maker Himself.  It has the capacity to break through the soil and create infinite results of transformation and beauty.  But the fruit depends upon the condition of the soil, the willingness of the human heart to be infiltrated and changed.

Jesus ‘parable of the Sower is the key to understanding the transformation power of His Kingdom. Since the word of God is perfect and life-giving, the sole variable is the sinful heart.

“A farmer went out to sow his seed.  As he was scattering the seed, some fell along the path, and the birds came and ate it up.”  How did the path become hard, impenetrable? Could it be that it has been walked upon for many years, developing a tough surface that protects it from threat and pain? Have we ever considered the difficulties that others experience, the atrocities and the torture that shape the psyche?

Our defensive reactions to the proclamation of the Gospel may seem justified and even honorable, but they may simply make the ground harder.  What would it take to soften a heart that has been battered and beaten by years of deceit and abuse?

Jesus says that the hardened heart will not receive the word of God and the good news will quickly be erased from memory, no time to contemplate the beauty of Christ. The body of believers, the church, exists to be a permanent reminder of the grace of God, a safe community of peace and healing. Would acceptance and friendship help to “break up the fallow ground”?

Certainly, beating our swords and weapons into plowshares is a result of end-times fulfillment, but wouldn't it be helpful to skip ahead and stop using our weapons against people who are struggling and find creative ways to love them and allow God to create marvelous fruit in their hearts?


At the very least let’s not be so quick to shake the dust off of our feet and move on…

Tuesday, September 10, 2013


The guy really should have known better.  He was a teacher of the law.  He should have recognized Jesus as the authority, the Word Himself.  But, he chose to question Jesus about the requirements for eternal life.  It would seem like a teacher of the law would have already worked through that issue. But, that’s the way it is with religions. They always leave you wondering if you are in or out.

Without warning, Jesus throws the question back at him, “What have you read? What does the word say?  What has God demanded? What is the foundational truth that you religious folks recite several times every day? Is it not clear?” The lawyer stutters through the traditional response and somehow realizes that he has painted himself into a corner.  What must have been racing through his mind?  Did he really think that he loved God with the all-encompassing passion that He deserves and demands?  How arrogant would it be to assume such a standard or settle for such mediocrity?   So, he must skip this part and jump straight to the horizontal relationships.  “Do I love my neighbor? Now, that’s a better question. Of course I love my friends and family. They love me in return, but what about all those other people?  Some are quite rude and hateful.  Some don’t think like I do or look like I do.  Do I really have to love them?” 

So, in his panic, he creates a diversion.  “Jesus”, he says, “just who really is my neighbor?” That is quite the loaded question that reveals too much of the human heart.  “My arrogance and ignorance lead me to believe that I love the sovereign creator of the universe in an adequate manner, so let’s just skip that part of the exam and go straight to my real concern.  Whom can I hate?  Certainly I don’t need to love everybody?”

So Jesus tells a little story, a beautiful story that we have unfortunately used as an example for helping one another.  The story that we have titled “The Good Samaritan” is not a feel-good event.  It is an immaculate indictment against the sinfulness of the human heart.  There is not a single human being (apart from Christ) who could ever love his neighbor to the extent that the Samaritan sacrificed.  The story was perfectly designed to show the teacher of the law that he had missed the point.  He was incapable of loving both God and man.


Without God’s personal indwelling, you and I will never be able to attempt to love God with any kind of real passion, nor will we serve our neighbors with full-out commitment.  Jesus, the great story-teller, creates for us a painful story that reveals the darkness of our sinful hearts and points us to saving faith in Him.  (Luke 10)

Monday, September 2, 2013

Be careful how you hear...

 “No one lights a lamp and then covers it with a washtub or shoves it under the bed. No, you set it up on a lamp stand so those who enter the room can see their way. We’re not keeping secrets; we’re telling them. We’re not hiding things; we’re bringing everything out into the open. So be careful that you don’t become misers of what you hear. Generosity begets generosity. Stinginess impoverishes.” Luke 8:16-18 (The Message)




As a church we are working our way through the parables of Jesus. What strikes me as ironic is how familiar they are as little snippets and how startling and demanding they are with their full meaning.

Jesus was and is a brilliant story teller, teacher, a craftsman of words and phrase.  Makes sense that John the Apostle would use the philosophical word "logos" to describe Him. "In the beginning was the Word"....the order and reasoning of the universe...the meaning that under-girds it all.

So immediately following the parable of the Sower...which by the way is the key to understanding much of Jesus' teaching, He speaks about lighting a lamp and the absurdity of hiding it.

If you want to grasp Jesus' teaching and His miracles, change your lenses and try to see everything through the long-term plan of preparing His disciples for future ministry.  He was whispering in their ears...but He would soon expect them to shout it all from the rooftops.

Which brings us to the parable of the lamp.  Who would light a lamp with the idea of hiding it?  Certainly, God would not.  His investment in you, the truth He has shared, the grace He has lavished, the salvation He has poured upon you....would they not all be for some greater global purpose?

"Take heed therefore how you hear"....was the old English version of saying.."don't be stingy with the truth and grace that you have heard and experienced." Spread it around.  Shine your light so that others can keep from stumbling around and stubbing their toes....or falling off a cliff. Don't you want to help them find their way to Christ, the source of truth and life? 

Can we not see that God has long-term ministry plans that will produce eternal results?  "You are the light of the world..."